Mon 28 Apr 2025
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Welcome, Truthseeker. It's not easy to discern truth from fiction on holodeck Earth. Grand Theft World is a fire hose of illumination and inspires the hearts and minds of truthers seeking freedom in a world environment of manipulation and control. Richard Grove and special guests take a deep dive into the people, places, and events that have shaped our world. Through a lens of critical thinking, to polish the gems and sort the chaff, to reveal the true machinations behind world events. Piece by piece, podcast by podcast, a portrait of reality emerges that we can use to take educated action in the fight for consciousness, 
truth, and freedom. Grand Theft World episodes include clips from the brightest and best podcasters and articles every week. A weekly special guest brings their expertise and knowledge. Join the vibrant GTW community of researchers and like minded peers to collaborate on solutions and how we can truly create change. Take your first step on this adventure. Join now. And welcome back to the Grand Theft World podcast, hosted and sponsored by the members over at grandtheftworld dot com, where we do special things like get together and have a weekly or biweekly town hall. 
This week in Grand Theft, world news history. Is there a looming race war brewing in America? Carmelo Anthony's story continues to kinda evolve out of control. There's a lot of false and misreporting on that. People taking up, emotional stances before they've even reviewed the evidence. Evidence being withheld so that people artificially fight with each other. We're gonna have to take a look at that. But, also, in World Economic Forum news, Klaus is out at the World Economic Forum, and, his replacement might be just as bad or maybe even worse because we don't know enough about him yet. He's on the scene doing his thing behind the scenes trying to make another pandemic. We're We're gonna have to see how that works out. The deep state has deemed Donald Trump illegitimate. That comes from O'Keefe Media Group formerly, Project Veritas before they kicked him out of his own project. We have a special guest tonight. Her her her voye 
her voye Moritz. I practiced so hard before the intro and still I booted it, but he won't mind because geopolitics and empire has been featured prior on Grand Theft World. So we're gonna have a nice talk about geopolitics and empire, I'm guessing, to this this evening. Also in Koleon Noir news, it's the second amendment variety. Is it legal to shoot drones in Florida? Yet, they got a bill that might let people shoot them with shotguns if they're within two hundred feet of you. So, the world's getting to be a more interesting place. We're gonna have to see what what is to be done about this robophobia that's going on. 
Also, Israel is saber rattling with Iran with us in the middle. It's kinda making the United States, uncomfortable in that position because the Iran conflict has been artificially brewing ever since operation Ajax in nineteen fifty three when the CIA and MI six overthrew democratically elected doctor Mohammed Mosaddegh, and installed their own government. And ever since then, Iran's been kinda like this, convenient enemy from afar. It's, it's like a bigger bigger version than Iraq. 
In fact, Iran is, like, three or four times the size of Iraq. If you've ever looked at it on a map, you would see it's a sizable foe, and you shouldn't be saber rattling with sizable foes unless you mean to do them harm. Ironically, just earlier today, Iran had some of its ports mysteriously explode. So we're gonna have to see what the fallout is from that. But there's also fallout going on from the Joe Rogan, Dave Smith, Douglas Murray debate. It's been continuing, and people continue to chime in like Jordan Peterson and make the the situation just that much worse. So we'll have a later in the wee hours of the morning, we'll take a look at that. And m h three seventy, did it disappear into a wormhole? Some people seem very certain 
that such things are ongoing in our reality, but I think these may might be specious claims, but I would be ignorant to dismiss them prior to observing them. So we're probably gonna take a look at that toward the end of the show. So we've got a lot packed into tonight. So at this point, I'd like to welcome my cohost, Scott Armstrong. How are you doing, bro? What's up, guys? Glad to be back. Back in the studio, back in, Tennessee. It was a wild weekend last weekend, and I'm just, grateful to be back. Thank you. Coming down from that Infowars high? Yeah. There was there was some crazy stuff. And I got to go to Del Bigtree's birthday party. Like, Rob invited me to Del Bigtree's, and I got to have a 
conversation about Terrain Theory with Del after he'd had a few drinks. It was very lively. A good time. It was a great time. I was pretty far out. And also joining us from the, the great white north of Canada, as they said in the movie Strange Group. I think that's how that went. How you doing, Paul Virge? I'm doing quite well. Thank you so much for having me, and, good to be here. I'm excited for tonight's show. And if you guys don't know the Strange Brew call to action, you really need to watch that movie because it has some Ewan Cameron, MK Ultra undertones 
too, the whole, you know, kind of farcical comedy that, was produced out of the was it SGTV days back in the day? That was the comedy troupe that anyway, Strange Brew was, a longer version of a shorter skit once upon a time about, the Mackenzie brothers who, might or might not have put a mouse in some Elsinore beer to try to get some free beer. You know, the, origin of the Mackenzie brothers is actually the Canadian government came to the SCTV producers and said we wanted to do more identifiably Canadian content. 
And so Rick Moranis and Dave Thomas decided to come up with the most stereotypical Canadian caricatures that they could possibly think of. And these two guys caricatures are famous to this day, man. Yeah. There you go. Alright. So I I don't think we have time for Mackenzie Brothers history, but it is is quite because, you know, it later led to things like, Michael, Michael Myers? Mike Myers? He did the so I married Axe Murderer, which was kinda heavily based on, a similar theme of the Mackenzie brothers and how they had this dad who was, like, the dad in the Strange Brew movie. These none of this stuff's on the show card. So we should just get going. We have a opening salvo clip from Steven Crowder. He has a thought piece for you. It's about them brewing up a race war in this country 
that doesn't naturally exist without the perturbation of the mainstream media and the occlusion of relevant substantial meritorious facts that should be considered in a way. If you get these things off the battlefield, you can get people to go crazy emotional over half truths and gaslighting and all this sort of stuff, and I don't think we need to really go that far. We're not gonna be able to play the whole clip, but I'll give you a flavor for it. And as always, you can go to grand theft world dot com. You can get the show notes, and you can watch the entire clip at any time because it's not about, like, the part we show it to you. It's a it's like that is there so you know it's there so you can go see the whole thing if you're interested and wanted to know more. Because I think a lot of today's news is very short attention spany. 
Right? And if we wanna outgrow the status quo, we need that longer attention span to learn more than the average bear, as they used to say on the Yogi Bear show. I watched a lot of cartoons as a kid. So, some of these ideas are still relevant today. You know, don't be the average bear. You wanna be like Yogi the bear and, get yourself some picnic baskets. Anyway, we don't have time to put a band aid on that, boo boo, but we can go here to Steven Crowder and see how he can patch up and maybe triage this, fomenting race war situation. 
Let's hear some thoughts, and I I can't help but notice he's gone with, like, a biker mustache type of thing lately. So, handlebar, hold on. Let's go to Crowder. That's why this has captured the public attention, is the gleeful the gleeful harassment of the family of the victim who happens to be white. Anyone acting as though this was justified, anyone who is saying anything other than I cannot believe this happened, this is another senseless killing. We need to look at why this is happening 
and how this came about. Anyone who's saying anything outside of that is a piece of shit. Let's get to Carmelo Anthony, Austin Metcalfe. We covered this when it happened. We covered some of the misinformation as it was coming out. Yesterday, we had a pre tape on the the the mayor, the globalist mayor, installment that we did. So I wasn't able to talk about all of these developments. Some of it also happened kind of leading into the weekend. For those who don't know, Austin Metcalfe was stabbed. White kid, young Black kid Carmelo Anthony. Okay? That's what happened. He was stabbed. It was murder. 
Now when it happened, we thought, okay, the media doesn't wanna cover this because of the races involved. We didn't know how fast they would actually race to venerate the murderer. In this case, nothing that the Black Lives Matter, that the racist left, that the professional race baiting activists try and use as a def none of it holds water. This is not a young man, Carmelo Ant this is, well, first off self defense. The court will rule on that. I bet you he's gonna be tried as an adult and probably spend most of, if not the rest of his life in prison. 
He's not a victim. He is not from a poor family who's had to struggle. And in this case he wasn't wronged. There wasn't some racist police officer. There wasn't some racist kid. So a lot of components here. A lot of components and I will also tell you, look, I'm gonna let you know where we're going. I'm not thrilled with the behavior and response of the father. At first, hey, great. Good to forgive someone. But let me tell you this. If my son 
were killed needlessly, purposelessly, just killed with disregard for human life, snuffed for no reason, for nothing. I'd hope that I do a lot more than say, I forgive the killer and then blame white people responding to professional race baiting hucksters for dividing our country. I would hope I would do more, and I certainly would hope that my father would do more if that have happened to me when I was a teenager. That's just my hope. I don't think he's being a very good dad on this, and I think that he deserved privacy 
until he decided to wait out into the public eye and make his political statements, appeasing crocodiles as futile, and it does more harm than good. So Monday, Carmelo Anthony, his first appearance was before a judge after being released on Bond last week, which, of course, was lowered. Tonight, seventeen year old Carmelo Anthony, who was charged with first degree murder and the fatal stabbing of a teen at a track meet earlier this month, is out on bond. A judge today reducing the teen's million dollar bond to two hundred and fifty thousand at the request of the defense. The lower bond comes amidst rising tensions in the community after the stabbing during a high school track meet on April second that led to the death of Austin Metcalfe. End result, he stabbed my son in the heart and killed him. 
Okay. And he went on to say that he forgived I think we have a clip of that, forgave the, the the the killer, Which when we talked about it, a lot of people, hey. That's, you know, more than I would do. But I I think I told you guys, yeah, it's not just about forgiveness, so justice does matter. You can forgive and also seek justice. This whole thing has become a circus. The family hosted a press conference. We'll get into their representative who is not a lawyer, their public representative, who is not a lawyer, I don't believe he's a professional anything other than, child abuser, 
convicted, by the way. So I'm not just making that up. That's not hearsay. I don't need to say allegedly. They held a press conference. I believe the clip is with this piece of crap talking. And all I'm going to say, so it don't be asked later Great. Is that was disrespectful and just shows you all the character who was not invited, he knows that it's inappropriate to be near this family. 
Okay. So those of you who don't know, and there's a lot of misinformation out there, let me just give you a rundown of this man. So this tells you right away where the family of Carmelo Anthony is lining up. First off, they didn't come out and respond the way that Austin Metcalfe's father did. And, hey, we're so sorry. And our heart goes out to him most of all that our son murdered his son. No. They hired a professional race baiter who condemned the father of the murdered victim for showing up at a public press conference. Yeah. And in that press conference, he used every single tired racist, black activist trope in the book. Let me give you some key facts here on, this man who was there, the representative. 
He is Dominique Alexander. I wanna make sure I get his name right. Dominique Alexander. He's the founder of Next Generation Action Network. He's been organizing protests for more than a decade. He's also, by the way, a hardened criminal. So their representative, which you'd think they could pull out someone who doesn't have a rap sheet. It's almost like they're baiting because they want they wanna pull out someone who's a criminal. So you point out that the guy's a criminal and they say that's racist. Are you saying all black people are criminals? We're going, no. No. No. There's a million black people. That piece of shit's a criminal. Check forging. 
Leading police in a high speed chase. Auto theft. Falsely claiming auto theft. He was sentenced to five years in prison for violating parole. His character witnesses at his own trial didn't even know him. Oh, that's mean. And by the way, this is all these are all things that happened after he was arrested for likely shaking, lying about, causing serious bodily harm to a two year old baby, 
which he blamed on the lesser known book by Jordan Peterson, twelve rules for shaking babies. Well, you've come a long way and changed my views. Rule number one, don't shake babies. End of book. Make your bed. The right form when you're shaking a baby. Yeah. Make Baby's like a lobster. Lobster. It's got a hard shell. Don't make your bed and, you know, if you take in all the facets of all the variables, don't don't shake a baby. Now This is so fucking voided. Let's, let's go into that. And there was also commentary you heard from the family, and you heard from this at this press conference. This is the next trope. I guess you can hit key fact here, Tim. We're going in a non sequence order. 
I think it's two. So I'll hit two. Where they said, it shows that black men still struggle in America. But just so you know, it's not that hard of a struggle to not stab people who aren't who aren't trying to kill you. Yes. I mean, you got the knife with you. You're really itching. Well, wasn't he captain of his football team too, Carmelo? Like, he it's not like he was, like, you know, being held down and Well, they're trying to talk about the struggle. Right? The struggle of the black man in this country. And many people do. By the way, a lot of white people do too. A lot of Asians do too. A lot of Latinos do too. You don't have 
this you don't have a monopoly on struggle. And there's some misinformation out there where people are saying the family right away took the from the give, send, go and bought a house. That's not true. Doesn't seem like they purchased a brand new Escalade. That doesn't seem to be true, so people who reported on that and maybe do your due diligence. But I also understand that they're being quite murky with what is going to happen with the money. They're saying, we didn't have access to the money. Yeah. But if, you know, you have a half million dollars coming in in two days, you put it on the credit card. So when they talk about struggle, this is a family that have been renting a nine hundred thousand dollar home in a very upscale Frisco neighborhood. K? The home value that they're about two times the value of Metcalfe's home, just if we're talking about racial dynamics, when they translate it's not crime, it's poverty, it's about the black struggle. This family, 
I mean, this family, they they be pimps too. They posted pictures of family cruises, Vegas new cars all the time. I mean, how many cars do you need? GMC, Yukon, a new Lexus. And they just they still, they still have to, while race baiting and while raising money for a murderer, you see Anthony's mother who I'm sure is obviously upset rightfully so that her son's life is ruined. That doesn't change the fact that her son ruined it. It is his fault. But according to her, the family 
of the murder, they're the victims. The lies and false accusations that have been said about us, especially over the past week, has been overwhelming. The lies and their amplification put my family in danger, as well as everyone in our community, everyone involved in the investigation from the police, the attorneys, and the court staff. Our address and my husband's previous employer's address has been put on all social media platforms. 
And that sucks. Yeah. Take a leave of absence because he's afraid what may happen to our family. My his mental health is deteriorating day by day. Oh, accountability is We have endured death threats. Yeah. Metcalfe and Dirk Geth. Thirteen year old daughter is afraid to sleep in her own bedroom because she's fearful of what might happen to her. And by the way, that sucks. It does. The daughter didn't do anything, and I understand I don't know how much the parents did. I don't know how they raised this young man. I know they claim that they're both in the home as opposed to Metcalfe who seems to have his parents separated, but seems to be an upstanding young man. Carmelo Anthony does not. But victims, this whole the black struggle, they they had to share a Yukon Denali. You have any idea how much planet has to go into that shit? 
Yeah. And there there aren't exactly mean streets of Frisco. No matter where you are in Frisco, it's not that rough. And I'm sorry. Like you said, that for the thirteen year old, as a parent, you never want the child to have fear in their own home. Like, that that is a huge you should be pissed off at Carmelo. You should be absolutely furious with Carmelo. And you should be furious with the black community. Let's be clear about this. Not all cultures are equal. And when people when people say something that you say is racist, they're not even talking about all one billion black people. I think it's one point two billion black people. They're talking about 
American black culture that venerates and praises gangbangers Yeah. And whaps. And, I mean, there's there's there's nothing good. It used to be black culture. You're talking about the blues. You're talking about rock and roll. I get it. No. Let's lift it. We're sorry. Motown. That's not what's happening right now. It's not. It's a problem with the black and by the way, the race hucksters who you hire. You should look at the actions of your son. Mhmm. You should look at the crime statistics, which we'll get to, and acknowledge the statistical reality that white people are at significantly 
greater risk in being the victim of a crime at the hands of black people than the other way around. But ratio of, like, twelve to one, it's not even close. At what point do we go, okay. You guys wanna talk about the struggle? What struggle? Are Lynching? No, you guys are assaulting and killing white people in record numbers. And by the way, your own people, black people. What do you mean? Oh, you're being held at No, there's affirmative action. Look at the grants in college. Look at DEI. Look at There's none of that for a guy like Austin Metcalfe. I'm sorry. None of it. Laws are not being applied equal. You know what happens when you do that? When you when you absolve people of accountability 
on a little thing here and a little thing there and a little thing no. You don't need the same SAT score. No. You don't need the same extracurriculars. You know what? Yeah. We'll let you steal up to nine hundred and fifty dollars You know what? Yeah. Catch and release. Guess what? You absolve them of accountability on the little things, and you have a group of people, largely young black men like Carmelo Anthony, who believe that they can avoid accountability on all things. Those threats she mentioned, by the way, not confirmed by the police, contrary to the swatting of the Metcalfe family. Yeah. The Anthonys also had a give, send, go for their son, the murderer, which raised five hundred and fifty thousand dollars so far. Though to be fair, they did lose twenty thousand dollars with their take steal loot fund. That just goes gave you money. 
The donations include comments like this on their give send go, I support your son. It's difficult raising black males in this country. Thank you for standing strong for your family. Is it difficult, though, is it difficult, though, with a Yukon and a Lexus and a Cruz and a Vegas vacation and a nine hundred thousand dollar house? Is it that difficult to make sure that the kid doesn't become a part of the statistical reality in stabbing an innocent white is it really that difficult? Hey. You know who doesn't think it's that difficult? 
Most white people in this country. You guys see the beating that was administered at Temple recently? I'm just gonna come out and say it. Most white folks don't fight like that. Do you know that? Most white folks don't jump on a poor black guy like a jackal and in the middle of the street and beat the shit out of them. But they're not emulating the same kind of culture. Now at one point, you might have had the Jets and the Sharks, but some of them were Puerto Rican, so half of them were white. My point is it's a different culture. Someone posted this to sending this because Zimmerman was able to defend himself. Quotations. He did defend himself. Oh, wait. You mean it's not defending yourself? When a guy has mounted you and is pounding your head into the pavement, I guess I'm a little murky on the rule book of self defense. 
Didn't didn't this son claim self defense? Yeah. Touch me and see what happens. Okay. What if what if Metcalfe was on top of your son, bouncing his head off the pavement like a basketball, which was happening to Zimmerman? I don't care if he was a dick afterwards. We're talking about self defense. This guy said, Zimmerman was able to defend himself and so was Kyle and every other police officer who killed our people. Great. Name him. Name let's do that. Name them. Every other police officer, just pull the names out. Give me give me five. 
Give me five names. We should be able to defend ourselves as well. From what? From being asked to move? See this, the reason I'm reading this is this echoes the culture that allows someone like Carmelo Anthony to think he can be a piece of shit and get away with it. Here's another comment. I will always support black bodies as we continue to be attacked by this yet to be United States of America. Really? Yet to be United States of America? Let me give you a few realities here as far as 
crime statistics. Black Americans. Okay? Black Americans, they kill white Americans at twelve times the rate that white Americans kill black Americans. References available and I'm going by rote here. If you know this actually, an armed white man is far more likely to be shot by the cops than an armed black man. Yep. The stat they use is unarmed black men. Here's why. Black men also commit assaults of police officers far more than white people. Did you know that? Did you know that? So if it's a standoff and they're armed and it's not someone beating the shit out of a couple of white guys, more likely to be shot. 
Everything they tell you is based on a lie to justify racism in this country and then blame you for responding. And that brings me to the point here where, yeah, look, I think this father should have just rode off into the sunset if he wanted his privacy, but he didn't. He didn't. He's waited into this and what he's doing is worse than saying nothing. The ideal scenario would be reacting to and and and honestly addressing the criminal realities 
in our country, but I take being silent across the board as well. The one thing that is unforgivable, which is condemn the people out there who are pointing out the statistical realities regarding crime in this country and criminality. And, yeah, you know what? People are pissed off now because we had to endure it since COVID in the summer of love and the police officer assassinations in Dallas, Texas. So we're gonna start speaking out. Nope. We're not saying all black people. We're saying there are enough black people right now 
who are venerating a murderer, a murderer, and acting as though he's a hero. That's why this has captured the public attention, is the gleeful, the gleeful harassment of the family of the victim who happens to be white. Anyone acting as though this was justified, anyone who is saying anything other than I cannot believe this happened. This is another senseless killing. We need to look at why this is happening 
and how this came about. Anyone who's saying anything outside of that is a piece of shit. And it's not lost on me that I'm saying a whole lot more, but that's because we have to respond now to the lies. So this brings us to the father, Jesse Metcalfe. Okay. Good. Initially, when asked as always, you can see the rest of that clip. It's on YouTube, and it's on Rumble. It's all over the place. So, the I think it's really the cleat sharpener that's responsible here. If they didn't make cleat sharpeners, 
this whole thing wouldn't have happened. And I also think that Carmelo is the new Luigi. What do you guys think? Yeah, man. It's kinda funny. So I was in I was in Texas last weekend when this whole so, you know, that rally that they held where it was the the Carmelo supporters, and then there's a big rally of Austin Metcalf supporters. They're supposed to meet at the same place at the same time. And I was out to dinner with, John Bowne, and he was, like, telling me about it. He's, like, showing me all the stuff. He's like, bro, like, the race war is kicking off tomorrow. And I'm like, dude, that's kinda crazy. In Frisco, Texas, like, you know, a few hours away. 
And so I I was paying attention to it. Keep it out. Thank you for clarifying because when everyone kept saying Frisco, Frisco, Frisco, I just thought, like, he's a it's San Francisco suburb or something like that. So I thought this was, like, a West Coast thing, but you're now saying Frisco is a place in Texas. Frisco, Texas is where this all went down. Yep. And so, anyway, so I was kinda paying attention to it. And, yeah, I think there's a lot of stuff going on, and it's pretty awful that the the killer is being propped up. And, you know, I honestly to be completely fair, like, I'd love to see it all flesh out in court. Maybe it wasn't deliberate self defense situation. I don't know, man. But the way it's, like, looks is it's pretty egregious and pretty one-sided. 
But I also see two opportunistic people on the other side coming in. And Oh, yeah. Well, I mean, just the lawyer. The lawyer for Carmelo Carmelo Anthony, how he he had, he had abused the two year old and caused, like, cranial damage. And my comment was I don't know how he made it out of prison with doing something like that to a child. No. That's that's legit. Yeah. I wanted to play a clip here real quick. I'm gonna test some of my tech, see if this works. This is from the that rally from last weekend, the the rally I was just speaking about. And this is somebody on the other side who 
is using and I have some comments to make about the father's position, but I'll do that after this. So, basically, this is this is this guy, Jake Lang, who was leading this rally, and, he he is taking the position that this is, you know, an extreme affront to white the white race. So he's using the white race card. Like, this is an attack on the entire white race, and white people need to come around. And so this is a conversation he was having with the with the father of Austin Metcalfe on the phone. And, let me know if the the sound is not Oh, yeah. I did see I saw a part of this clip. Go ahead. I was gonna play this real quick. Just a little bit of it, but 
Would you be willing to stand by me in a press conference or in a individual interview and talk about this issue that is larger than Austin at this point? God rest the beautiful young man's soul that would have been one of our strongest voices if he was still alive today. Yes. I am, sir. We're not hearing his I think, the Zoom noise canceling is cutting it out. Okay. Well, basically, if you if you saw the okay. So, basically, the the dad's on the phone, and he says, 
you are the effing problem. You are the one in using my son's name to instigate this further divide racial violence for your own for your own agenda and your own position. And I know that that the father is taking the position of he's a Christian. He's practicing forgiveness to the person. And I've seen examples of this in you know, I saw this really powerful clip where it was like this this serial killer was being sentenced to, you know, in a in a courtroom. And there was one victim after the next, and they were berating him and saying, like, I hate you. I hope you die. Burn in hell. Everything. And then there's one old man walked up, and he just said, I forgive you. And then that the killer just was devastated. It just, like, eviscerated him. And I was like, woah. Like, the power of that is unfathomable. 
And it's kinda goes to ties into what we saw with the Herbois Morch documentary a couple weeks ago talking about the the story of Richard Wurmbrand, you know, being tortured in prison. And the guards were trying to break him, and they couldn't break him. And he was like, you know, a a a a Catholic father. And he was like, I was brought here to speak the word to you, and they're, like, converted a lot of people. You know? So anyway, I'm just saying, like, the the power of that is very, very powerful. 
Hey. I gotta He's attacking his principles, man. And it's like, and and I think that it's not fair to attack him for doing that. And so there you go. There you go. Wow. Oops. Excuse me. I didn't I didn't remember that name the first time it was mentioned a couple weeks ago. But when you just said that, I was like, oh, I have one of his books. It's a very interesting book. Okay. An interesting character. I'll have to look into that. That's awesome. I did send to order that book, the Tortured for Christ book that her boy was talking about. But it's like you know? So that's what I'm seeing. And I do 
I do see how both sides are capitalizing on this to instigate race war. Whether or not they're being charged to do it, paid to do it, put in position to do it, we know the agenda is to create a race war, and it's that perfect time of year. It's almost race war season. And I will point out this Jake Lange guy, is he even white? Because he's Jewish. So in in today, in this situation, he's choosing to represent the be the leader of the white race, I guess. So That's interesting. There might be, some civil war history crossovers with just what you observe right there. There might have been some third party stirring ups in the past. 
I don't think first off, person a was in a tent. Person b came in. Person a said to person b, like, where does black and white come into this? Where does race come into this unless it's racially motivated? At which point, you would have some evidence and be like, here's evidence that it was racially motivated and premeditated, and then it's introduced in the conversation. Otherwise, I don't think I don't think the addition of race, color, creed, religion to the circumstances and actions that took place 
I mean, sometimes you need context for who did what. But when it's, like, automatically, because this person was this color and this person's this color, now there's twenty million people who are, like, eyes on the situation and, like, going at each other. I don't think that's helpful. I don't think it's mature. I don't think it's civilized. I don't think it's logical, reasonable, rational, or ethical, to to say the least, moral. I mean, all these things that have character and quality for our society, it is none of these things. And yet, all these people are are making, 
you know, they're making fire out of it. And they're firing at each other, and they're swatting, and they're you know, there's all sorts of other antics going on. So it goes back to the secessionists and the abolitionists both had extreme factions, and they drew the normal people to those extremes, like centrifugal force. When a wheel spins around, the you know, things get attracted to the outside. And that's what they did to stir up the first civil war in this country, and we've been talking about that. Like, I started talking about that Solomon Dirac's book, like, in twenty seventeen. I'm like, hey. I've noticed 
an incline in them talking about racism out of nowhere, and there's also this parallel in history to how that that's the key to how they got us to go to civil war in the first place. And that took America back. I mean, it took America off track in many ways and and altered its development permanently going into the future. When anytime they assassinate presidents, it's usually a big deal. Abraham Lincoln was called a thief by the banking family who funded the confederacy. Like, these are just facts on the table. I'm not drawing conclusions from them. But if you follow the history through, you can see an ominous continuity 
of things they don't want you to be aware of, and that means they're not on your side. They're not on your team. So find your teammates is the is the gist. Yeah. I think there's also the aspect of they're trying to manufacture as much outrage as possible. Yeah. So of all the different ways to divide and conquer physical characteristics that you can't change that aren't necessarily ubiquitous. You know, not every white person or black person has the same experience or the same life experience. And so whenever I see someone say they're speaking on behalf of one group or another, I find it comical 
because I'm like, who appointed you, bro? Like and there's a logical fallacy called hasty generalization and the genetic fallacy. And it's when we act like one person or one individual speaks for, acts for, represents the totality of a group, and that's where stereotypes come from. Right? So in this case, it could just be two assholes. One of them happens to be white. One happens to be black. But there's a whole bunch of people with an agenda who wanna push you to hate 
and join one tribe or the other in order to essentially take this tragedy and milk it for points for whichever tribe you subscribe to. And so when I see the father saying you're part of the problem, I think he's talking about anyone who's subscribing to the tribalism and trying to use this tragedy, his son's death, to score points for their team. It's kind of disgusting because it's dehumanizing. And it's, like, turns his death into, like, a cheap political, 
like, piece of theater instead of the actual lived tragedy that the guy's experiencing. Like, if I said when he referenced part of the problem, I thought he was promoting the Dave Smith podcast just like that. The paid ad. It was a paid little native ad there. There you go. I was just doing an example of what Paul was talking about so that you can understand. It's called teaching. Alright. So, that tragic situation aside, I hope it doesn't spark off a larger set of George Floyd type of events over the summer, 
as we've had in the past. Because what is the key to getting millions of people to be, like, reacting simultaneously in one of two ways? Like, that's a function of indoctrination from schooling. That's the whole point is that when you are presented with a a stimulus that you react in a predictable way such that it suits the the the plantation masters. That's what it's all about. So, I would also agree with Metcalfstad in that case. Like, don't be part of the problem. 
Be part of, like, the fire crew that's putting out the fire, not the people bringing gasoline and saying, hey. Can I contribute? Speaking of the struggle for self defense, our next clip comes from Koleon Noir, whose real name is Collins, but he has a sense of humor. So, translate that into English if you will. He has the news story about being able to shoot down drones in Florida. Florida has a bill. He's gonna tell you all about it, and, I would expect other people 
in other places around, not Florida, probably get to do the same thing eventually because privacy is a thing. And if it's within two hundred feet that you can get it with some birdshot, then shame on you for being a bad drone driver, I guess. I don't know. I mean, you're shooting video. I don't have video. I got buckshot. Maybe that's a fair exchange in the marketplace of ideas. We'll have to see. Let's go to, this is one of the early reports. Now to follow this up, it's not in this report, but we did talk about it a couple months ago. 
Using shotguns for drone defense is a real legitimate military technology that has been explored and evolved over in the Ukraine conflict, for instance. And there are a variety of ordinance ordinances now available for a shotgun to either, use a variety of methods. Some of them are little nets with, like, the BBs in the shot attached to, like, a little Kevlar net or something that grabs around the rotational propellers and things like that. Others might have a electromagnetic 
effect and look to short out the machine. Others might be a projectile that looks to dismantle the machine. But there is a variety of these types of things, and I was really surprised at how many various YouTube creators from respect, like, respected people in their industry of second amendment have done, presentations on the use of shotguns against drones. So, DeSantis isn't super original, but he he is, like, on the vanguard of, like, get my state one of those bills so we could shoot down drones. That's freedom. Alright. So let's go to Colleon, noir, and learn about, 
shooting drones legally, question mark. So apparently, we've reached a point where the second amendment might apply to drones. Not in the Skynet is real way, yet at least. But in the this floating peeping Tom is hovering outside my window, and I'd really like to make it stop kind of way. See, Florida, land of gators, sun, and Florida man headlines, is now cooking up a law that would let homeowners use reasonable force to deal with the drones hovering over their private property. 
A bill making its way through congress would allow people to shoot down drones near their property. It allows for people to shoot down a drone with a legally obtained shotgun if it's flying at or below two hundred feet above their property. So you're telling me if a drone is hovering low enough for me to hit it with some bird shot, I can treat it like a clay pigeon with a camera. Look. I'm not saying I want drone hunting to become a casual Saturday activity, but if it's outside my window recording my business like it's making a documentary about what noir reads at night, yeah, that drone's catching buckshot. 
But obviously, there's nuance here because just like everything fun in America, the federal government steps in and says, hold on, Maine. Drones are considered, aircraft, manned or unmanned. You cannot mess with aircraft. So just because the state legislature, provides for being able to use reasonable force does not mean that, that that you won't be violating federal law if you do that. And there it is. The classic state versus federal tug of war. Florida says, take that thing out of the sky. 
FFA says, touch it, and we'll see you in court. So if you're a homeowner thinking about getting into the drone defense game, you might wanna lawyer up first. And look, this whole drone debate, it's a perfect example of how crazy things have gotten when it comes to information and bias. You've got one side yelling about defending privacy and the other side warning about falling drones in public danger. And you, you're just trying to figure out if your sunbathing session counts as a federal offense. That's why I use ground news dot news forward slash to subscribe. Use my link and get forty percent off the Vantage subscription and support my work directly. Again, Ground dot news forward slash 
Click the link in the says. In PC Magazine, they explained that the Florida senate bill fourteen twenty two would allow homeowners to use reasonable force against drones within five hundred feet of their property. But reasonable force is about as vague as a politician's campaign promise. There will not be another foot of wall constructed on my administration. In a stunning reversal, the Biden administration is about to begin building a new border wall in Texas. What counts? A net? A rock? A shotgun with birdshot? 
Then you have Gizmodo pointing out that this could directly conflict with federal law since the FAA classifies drones as aircraft. Interfering with them, even if they're spying on you, can trigger federal charges. And then you have American military news which brings up a key issue. This bill opens the door for homeowners to argue privacy defense, but without specifics, it could lead to lawsuits and chaos. And then Fox News reminds us that Florida already has laws protecting privacy. That there are laws on the books already. This is just an addition to it. This bill just adds a little heat or rather 
firepower. Now let's go full tinfoil hat for a second. What if this pushback from the Fed isn't just about falling drones? Think about it. If federal agencies are using drones for surveillance, wouldn't it make sense for them to one, all drones, commercial or government off limits? Hide their own among the crowd. You can't shoot any of them. So now, they get to fly unnoticed. It's the surveillance version of where's Waldo. But Waldo works for the NSA. Now what's funny is I just did a video about the Mossberg nine ninety Aftershock, which is basically a semi auto sawed off shotgun. And let me tell you, this little thing 
might be perfect for dealing with a drone. Let's be honest. Nobody wants to sit by a pool with a full sized tactical shotgun like they're guarding Fort Knox. But the aftershock, this guy here, toss a laser on it, add a red dot, and boom, you've got a portable drone deterrent that fits your lifestyle. Imagine lounging by the pool, sipping something cold, and then buzz buzz buzz, privacy breach incoming, and then boom. Problem solved. I'm sure Drake probably wishes he had one when that drone flew up to his penthouse. 
Whether that video was real or not, yeah. You get the idea. If this bill passes, I wouldn't be surprised if aftershock start flying off shelves in Florida. Might even see TikTok montages of folks blasting drones mid flight. And you know what? In some cases, you might not even need to fire it. Just showing the shotgun might be enough to send that drone operator scrambling. Nobody wants to lose a thousand dollar toy to a pissed off homeowner with good aim. So, yeah. On one hand, I love the idea of being able to shoot a drone that's invading my privacy. 
On the other hand, I also don't want to catch a federal charge for living out my dumbass family. This whole thing boils down to one key question. Where is the line? Where does privacy defense end and reckless endangerment begin? Because what we're really talking about here isn't just technology, it's boundaries. And let me know what you think. Would you shoot a drone if it was hovering outside of your house? I don't know if I'd shoot a drone if it was hovering outside my house, but I reserve the right to have the instruments to do so in case that's a thing. 
I was leafing through this Richard Wurmbrand book since it was mentioned, and, it looks like this. And, so I was just reading through, and there were some interesting parts. And, you know, is he's one of the points he was making is that after Joseph Stalin read Darwin, he became a revolutionist, because he saw that everything was based on survival of the fittest, so the most ruthless and cunning and greedy kinda rises to the top. And then 
I happen to find an interesting section in here on somebody that we talk about on the show all the time, and his name is Moses Hess. And, there's a section in here on Zionism, which has been, like, a topic lately in some of the news if you've, been paying attention. So I'll just give you what Richard Wurmbrand was writing in his book, Marx, and Satan. Moses Hess's false Zionism. To complete the picture, we will consider Moses Hess, the man who converted Marx and Engels to the socialist ideal. 
So that's a pretty big deal because Moses Hess, of course, wrote where's the book, bro? Where is it at? He wrote Rome and Jerusalem, the last nationalist question in nineteen sixty two or eighteen sixty two. So right as the Americans are kicking off the civil war, Moses Hess, the father of utopian socialism, is converting, Marx and Engels to socialist ideal. There is a tombstone in Israel inscribed with his words with the words, Moses Hess, founder of the German Socialist Democrat Party. Hess expounds his beliefs in the red catechism for the German people, and then he quotes that. And I thought that was interesting. 
But then he had these couple other points here on the next page. Marx will surely chase God from his heaven. So they brought out this specific brand of Zionism. Thus, Hess, the founder of socialism whose aim was to chase God from heaven, was also the founder of a diabolic type of Zionism that was to destroy godly Zionism, the Zionism of love, understanding, and and concord with surrounding nations. He, who taught Marx the importance of class struggle, wrote in eighteen sixty two these surprising words, race struggle is primary. Class struggle is secondary. Now we were just talking about the race struggle and class struggle a little bit earlier with Carmelo Anthony's story Still going on 
today. He had lighted the fire of a class war, a fire never extinguished, instead of teaching people to cooperate for the common good. The same Hess the same Hess then breeds a distorted Zionism, a Zionism of race struggle. As we reject satanic Marxism, so also must every responsible Jew or Christian reject this diabolical perversion of Zionism. Hess claims Jerusalem for the Jews, but without Jesus, the king of the Jews. What need has Hess of Jesus, he writes? So, anyway, there's other passages that gets on and but my point would be, like, these ideas from back in the eighteen sixties 
are still instrumental in world events, you know, ongoing this week in the news. So it's kinda like the absence of some of these conversations in the public domain, that go on that caused the problem. But, that's just one of my thoughts on what we just watched. Well, that's interesting. Nice tie in there. Dang it. Yeah. Great great great call. Grace Warr and Richard Wurmbrand. So that was that was a good pickup that you had, there, Scott. Because you you mentioned it because it was from Tisa's 
appearance a couple weeks ago that we watched the clip with her voye. Exactly. Is her voye here? Her voye here? Anyway, yeah, man. I'm I'm really excited to start shooting drones out of the sky. This is gonna be awesome. I'm surprised to usually, Tennessee is so far ahead of everybody else when it comes to laws like this. Like, we're the ones to ban geoengineering. We're the ones to ban mRNA lettuce and mRNA meat and death penalty for child molester. So we're usually ahead of the curve on stuff like this, but, 
like, Florida, apparently, is a A drone hunting state. They got robophobia down there. Yeah. Florida's taking our piss, man. We gotta we gotta step it up. I gotta get with my people, and it's actually funny because I've I'm friends with it. I know the people that got the geoengineering bill passed, the the lettuce bill passed, they call it. So I need to get with them and be like, yo. We need to start shooting some drones. She got this for sure. So there you go. Her voye, thanks for making it out tonight. Coming out to play. How are you doing? I'm doing good. Thanks for the invite. And, you know, I was thinking, 
I know you're a busy man, and I've sent you a few requests, interview requests in the past, but it's funny how the universe conspires, and it seems to always happen. You know? I had I had Corbett on my podcast, and then he invites me on his show. And then, I think, you know, the lesson here is just sort of to wait, for the universe to conspire, in your favor. Well, that's what that's what Thies brings to the table. He's like how the universe conspires and gets that stuff moving into The show is literally called conspiracy synergy. Look at the synergy happening here, guys. Look at that. 
So, geopolitics and empire, what gave you a highfalutin idea like that that that was something like, did was it a guidance counselor in high school who said, Herveje, your future is geopolitics and empire? Or how did you find your way into, like, such an interesting niche of ongoing unfolding of world historical events? Yeah. It's basically, you know, I I, graduated, I got my master's in Geneva two thousand nine, and then I was looking for jobs around the planet, and I ended up in Mexico. It's like that, Red Hot Chili Peppers song. Right? Soul to squeeze. 
Where I Go, I Just Don't Know. I might end up in Mexico, and it happened. And, I was about two years in, to teaching, international relations at the university in high school. And I just kinda got bored, and I'm all I'm always trying to sort of push the limits. And I just decided to sky and, you know, the real reason for me starting it was just wanting to talk to people and to learn and to know. And I just decided to start Skyping, folks into my university classroom with my IR students. And my first guest was, it's on my old Dissident Thinker channel. It's still linked to my geopolitics YouTube page. 
Corporal Jesse Thorson. I don't know if you guys remember him. He was pulled up by Ron Paul, on stage. And what happened with him was crazy. He was messaging his friends and family privately, like, on Facebook about how he was beginning to question nine eleven and stuff like that. And the feds, they they basically you know, black vans come to his home. There's video of it, and they they rendition him. They throw him in the, in the van, you know, because he was a military veteran. And, and John Whitehead of Rutherford 
Institute actually got him out. And then, you know, years later, I ended up having John on the podcast. And so it started with that. You know, I got a whole bunch of Paul K. Roberts, Michael J. Murphy of What in the World Are They Spraying? I had him on the podcast in those early years, John Perkins. So I I really wanted to talk to these people, and then I just decided to formalize the podcast in twenty fifteen as geopolitics and empire. And I have the book, somewhere around here. There's a book called, there it is, by Kearns, Geopolitics and Empire. I just I thought for me, you know, it it kind of covers what what's going on, globalism, right, empire, and and and geopolitics. 
So It's kinda like around here. You find a book that really resonates with you, and then you you go with it. You go with that for the title of the the project. Alright. So you were in, like, a semitraditional you're in a traditional role. You got, like, a master's degree. You teach in international relations. When did you first come across the concept of international relations? You know, probably, like, a a decade earlier going down the rabbit hole. You know, loose change two thousand and three. Okay. But, you know, two thousand and three loose change and then, you know, Alex Jones and then, Ron Paul and then Edward Jared Griffin with the Federal Reserve. I had about a year, two thousand seven, two thousand and eight, where I I I had a easy job. I I come back from Mongolia Peace Corps and before I went to Switzerland, and I just bought thousands of dollars of books on Amazon. I was just just devouring them. And so it was a bit of a process, maybe like a decades long process of, 
you know, really, really going from one extreme to the other of normie to being being awake. And, yeah, just basically going through all these people's books. And I I you know, I've been lucky to have all of my intellectual heroes on my podcast. You know, I've talked to William Maingdal and Daniella Ganzer of Gladio fame and Ron Paul. I mean, you just name it. And through that process, it's kinda like, okay. Now I get what's what's going on. When did you first learn to do interviews? I I still sort of feel like I'm still learning. Oh, we all. Aren't we all? 
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. But yeah. I mean, it was from twenty, you know, twenty twelve, basically. Twenty fifteen, I was just flying by the seat of my pants. So just teaching full time and just moonlighting with the literally moonlighting, like, mid midnight hours editing the podcast, getting it out before having to get up in the morning and go teach. I I had a few guffaws. I had on Marin Katusa. He's this Canadian Croatian investor, that was not recorded. I Pepe Escobar, I interviewed in twenty thirteen. That that ended up not being recorded. So, you know, you you you learned Of course. You learned your lessons. Of course. But I guess the point I'm trying to make for the audience is, like, they can make the transition anytime they want. Because at a certain point, you had watched enough Alex Jones. You'd been in the Ron Paul movement. You saw other people doing these things. You're like, hey. I could do that too. Oh, they bought a microphone, and they recorded it on m t m p three and uploaded it? I could learn how to do that too. 
And the liberating aspect is you went from, like, reading all these books to now you have a place to process it, interview people, get more information, and get the output out to people, and then they find that valuable. They'll organize because the data's out there. There's unlimited data for free. But it's the organization of data that makes it valuable in the marketplace. And so by packaging it up and doing these interviews over the years, you've really, like, there's nothing new under the sun. So it's not like you invented the interview, but you leveraged it in a new way with a specific focus where it needs to have that information in the in the public conversation. 
And without platforming people and bringing them to your show to ask them the questions, you can't get the answers, you know, out there in front of the audience. So I just wanted to, like, lower the ramp for everybody, and it's not just for us. And just to add to that, you know, it really crystallized about a year ago. I was at Anacapulco, with Patrick Henningsen, of twenty first Century Wire. It's a great work. And we both had a show on on TNT Radio for two years. I think I had Scott, on there, and he gave a great speech where he said 
and, you know, he's he's giving advice for you're talking about people wanting to produce content. Right? Podcasting. I mean, there's there's all sorts of content people can create, documentaries like these or whatever. And, Patrick said, you really gotta put in, like, ten years of of of work. And then I I realized, like, I started in twenty twelve YouTubing the podcast, so I kinda start from twenty twelve. And in two thousand twenty two, you know, my contract, where I was teaching in Kazakhstan finished in twenty twenty one. In twenty twenty two, I got, the job offer from TNT full time pay 
because of that exactly those ten years of work body of work that I built up for free. I didn't get really paid for it, which landed me this this paying gig. And then right after TNT, this is my first full year. I'm so far being able to do this full time. It's being able to pay the bills of the podcast. So it's kind of just use that as an example and, you know, anyone listening. You know? Do you take, sponsors? Do you have memberships? How do you keep the podcast, like, paying for itself instead of it, like, being a hobby out of your pocket? Memberships. Yeah. So Substack really, 
saved the day. Substack paid memberships. I do a few perks. Like, I I realized I I I I I started doing this without, you know, I haven't listened to regularly to Grand Theft World because it's so long. It's like seven hours. But, every week, I try to do what you guys do in a space of an hour and a half for paid subscribers, and then I organize, like, Zoom calls where we just shoot the breeze off the record every week or two, things like that. And then I have a few sponsors, but it's people that I know or or stuff that I trust and some donations. But, yeah, that 
that's primarily how I've been doing it. But, you know, I had run ins like, twenty twenty one. I got taken off of Patreon, and it's funny because that was the same week. I mean, it's a bit of a backstory. I've told it before, but I've been the first Corbett and Whitney got taken off Patreon too back then. I'm pretty sure it was around the same time. It was a COVID related thing, and it wasn't even anything they posted on Patreon. It's stuff they said on other sites. Yeah. And Patreon told me I had to delete from the entire Internet my interview with Robin Monotti and doctor Mark Circus, and I'm like, I'm not doing that. But but the timing was interesting because I've been the first to get doctor Francis Boyle's opinion on on COVID in January twenty twenty. And then a week a a year later, the Associated Press did a hit piece on Boyle, and they mentioned my podcast. 
And that was cowritten. That piece by AP was cowritten by Atlantic Council, which is Nate NATO's Think Tank. Yeah. For sure. And that same week, I got tanked from Patreon. And then April twenty twenty two, when they rolled out the disinformation governance board of the DHS, that same week, consortium news, Mint Press News, and I got taken off of, PayPal. So and, you know, that's exactly when I was trying I've made a new website, and I built the membership option. I linked PayPal and Stripe to it, and then they removed me from PayPal. And you know how it is when people subscribe. It's like Sisyphus pushing the rock up the boulder up the the mountain. 
When people get kicked off of PayPal, some of them don't resubscribe, and so you gotta sort of rebuild, a bit again. I imagine Sisyphus being happy, though, in his endeavor because he had a good stoic philosophy. Alright. So I wanna show you this real quick because you brought up the Atlantic Council, and we are already talking about international relations. When I looked into this topic and had to start becoming self educated on it, I asked questions about the concept of international relations and where does it, like, triple trickle down to us today. And you mentioned the Atlantic Council, 
and these are one of the kind of Anglo American institutions. It was created nineteen sixty one, so it's been around since right before Kennedy. And from the Atlantic Council, if you just, like, take a little sample, like, what do they do over there? Right? Oh, Anne Marie Slaughter, she works over there. She wrote books. What did she write? A new world order. Well, that's just conspiracy. Oh, wait. Wait. Woodrow Wilson School of Government, Princeton oh, gee. Oh, this is this is they, them, those talking about their plan. Right? So between the Aspen Institute, 
the Atlantic Council, these other aspects, Council on Foreign Relations, Royal Institute of International Affairs, they had a history. So there was, like, the War and Peace Studies project that kinda preceded some of these things coming around. And, of course, the Council on Foreign Relations has a long and dubious history that, got inserted in this country right after World War one. Very successful endeavor. They they're still in business, apparently. I I I've managed to interview, I I I try to get globalists on. I've I've interviewed, 
the one of the ex directors of the Royal Institute, Victor Bulmer Thomas and Mark Leonard, who I think he's still the founder and executive director of the European Council, on foreign relations. So I try to slip in as many, as I can. Yeah. I mean, do they even have a sense of the history that they're participating in? Because I wouldn't think that unless they're read in by a previous generation to be like, look. Here's what we're doing, and this is what we would like you to do. Right? Otherwise, people are coming from, like, not nepotism, and they're working their way in, and they're like, that would be a good place. That sounds very prestigious. I wanna be the head of that place. And you make yourself a useful, you know, cog in their system, and then they promote you up through. So the guys you talk to, were they like the insiders whose families have been doing this for a long time, or are they people from the outer circle who kinda work their way in? I I think it's a mix, you know, all across academia, 
the NGOs, diplomacy. You know, when I was in Geneva, after I finished my year, I didn't wanna stay. I just got so disgusted by the globalism. You know, it's all corrupt. You know, the there are you know, if if you can stomach it, we need people working in the US government, at the EU, UN, even though I wish they'd all go away. But most of the a lot of those people are very opportunistic, very, narcissistic. They want money and power. But, you know, one example for me came to mind regarding what you're saying. You know, Robert Pastor, right, the father of the North American Union, 
he I I still live near to the university where he used to teach. It's the top university in in Mexico. The Mexican millionaires send their kids there. It's the only university in all of Latin America that attends Davos, World Economic Forum. So they're linked to Davos. We've had, Al Gore came to campus ten years ago. During COVID, they had the online graduations, and Bill Gates and Hillary Clinton spoke there. So that just kinda tells you what's going on. And about a decade ago, I met pastor twice. He visited the campus twice, and then I interviewed him on my dissident thinker channel. And I went back, and I cited to him, I you know, because when you interview globalists, you can't just come out and say, hey. Tell me about the new world order. They're gonna, like, hang up on you. You gotta 
walk a fine line. And you you read their own I interviewed ambassador Stuart Eisenstott maybe a half year ago. He's buddy buddy with Biden and Victoria Nuland. And I read his book, and he mentioned new world order. So I just kind of slightly cited it back to him. You know? But but but with pastor, I asked him about the Bilderberg group because there was the nineteen eighty, Bilderberg meeting. And in the nineteen eighty meeting, they specifically mentioned we need to create a North American union, economic union. 
And I I asked him, and he just you can people can go listen to the old recording. He just scoffed at me. Oh, that's conspiracy theory. And then I went back. You know, I have a monthly roundtable with Monica Perez and and Parallel Mike that we do. And she mentioned this that in, pastor's, early working paper, I think that that that was the basis for this, he actually mentions Bilderberg in, the CFR paper. I forget the the the title of the North American community. And so he actually discusses it. But when I ask him about it, oh, he's like, oh, conspiracy theory. But then, you know, he actually talks about it. So I think he was disingenuous there. So he he he had to have known what he was, you know, promoting. 
Yeah. I think so too. And, the gaslighting nature of people who do stuff like that is pretty impressive because they're used to doing it all the time, and they're used to people not resisting it. You could just have read David Rockefeller's memoirs, and you could walk up to David Rockefeller and say, hey. You know, in this chapter about international, you know, internationalism, you you made this admission, and he would just tell you no. No. He didn't. That you misread it. You misunderstood it. You misconstrued it. It wasn't there. Like, they they're not gonna address the thing that because they said it obviously in the book. They said 
it. They're just wanting you to not have to, like, bother them with the details. And a lot of them do do use phrases. Like, HG Wells wrote a whole book called the New World Order. So at least for people to be like, that's conspiracy theories, like, are you illiterate or just ignorant? Because it exists. You could say that exists and it has no relation to the idea of taking over the world, but the guy you know, then I would counter back, like, who was HG Wells, and what role did he play in British Empire psychological warfare and operations 
and envisioneering. A lot of the things that were created in the last hundred years were envisioned by you know, or at least immortalized. They could have said, hey, Wells. Can you work in this theme of, like, a world encyclopedia that's electronic, and it's like everyone has access to information? Or, you know, before they had airplanes, he wrote the book War in the Air. And then a couple years later, they had airplanes and they used them in World War one. So it's like these are very prescient kind of predictions that he has, but he's it's not because he has a a a a Palantir. He doesn't have a magic ball, like a crystal ball. I think he's just around the people that are, like, funding projects that are getting 
no resistance. So you know that's gonna happen. You know? If somebody talks like they're gonna put a chip in people's brain and that that person who's talking about it has the ability and the technology to do that, they're probably gonna do that unless people step and say, maybe we don't need chips in our brain. Or maybe it helps some people in medical cases, but it shouldn't be like a commercially available thing, because you start to lose the human experience. Right? So you should keep technology at arm's length as it were. So all these types of new philosophies pop up when you can have a genuine conversation about these things. But the ideas of international relations 
has usually been one group bringing their idea to dominate over whoever gets in their way or has stuff that they wanna take for more war making. What has been your experience in understanding, like, the international aspect? Because we think in, like, terms of nation states, like US versus Iran or whatever. But, like, when you get that there's a group of people playing with the entire world, that they're they're controlling capitalism and communism and using it as a vice to squeeze everybody in between. Like, how did you get a handle on that back in the day? Was it just, like, from books and Alex Jones? Or, you know, what was the, like, the secret ingredient mix? 
You know, I I do gotta say, I think I listened to one, podcast interview you gave maybe a year or two ago. It was two hours in length. And, you know, for me, you know, you're, like, in the in the top three when it comes to this stuff because my biggest interests are world, government, algalocracy, right, the the the the technocracy and the it called sort of new age angle. And I'm coming at this from a biblical Christian. And so, you know, first, what started me off was the Bible and the the prophecy elements. Right? Book of Daniel, Matthew, and and and our revelations, which implies 
our end, you know, state is gonna be a world to tell Syrian state. And so I'm just kinda reverse engineering from there. And then you you have the book of Daniel, which which has this prophecy about ten kingdoms. And now you're beginning to see these regional unions form. And, you know, you guys know all about this. You cover this ad nauseam. But as of late, I've been fascinated by, this North American union that's forming, the Technate, Trump pushing Canada to integrate with Greenland and all the way down to Panama. The Mexican administration has openly been saying, yeah. We're we're on board with the EU style, 
North American Union. You we've seen Bukele of El Salvador. Like, I've I've been the only person that I know pointing out how Bukele specifically he gave an interview. I've got the link here in twenty twenty two where he said we need to copy the EU and make a Central American Union. And then the ex ex Ecuador president, Rafael Correa, gave an interview in, two years ago. He also said we need to copy the EU and make a South American Union. And Dugan, Alexander Dugan, last week wrote a piece for Arctos journal where he's calling for a macro state, Eurasian 
Union. And so it's kinda like it's that's all at play, and then you have the whole bricks. And and just going back to the regional union, you you know, you've got Clarence Strait of nineteen thirty nine. I've been looking at that a lot recently. Union Now, which he published. And he's talking about, integrating Europe and North America to create this Atlantic Union, which will be the basis for World Union. And now you you constantly see on Politico and these mainstream papers, they're like, can Canada join the EU? As if it's like some new random idea. I'm like, you guys have been planning this for a century. What are you what are you talking about? And then I I I believe bricks and multipolarity 
is is a psyop. And I think bricks is actually, the next push towards the integration of the planet. And they need to what they're doing, that's their way of taking the global south, which is not as developed, developing it with the infrastructure for technocracy, and and it's a propaganda. You know? They planned emotions often where the the people of the global south, they have a righteous indignation, right, of what the Western Empire has done. But now it's like they're but they don't realize they're being sold the the the the sword, you know, the rope to hang themselves. 
Yeah. So And that's what the IMF and the World Bank and all those sort of things were set up to do in the first place. It's kinda like the gangster capitalism that, you mentioned what's the the guy? John Perkins. John Perkins. Thank you. Thank you. I was too busy fumbling through Clarence Street, over here because the UnionNow project, I would agree, like, that's still what they're doing. And it's a Rhodes Scholarship led Cecil Rhodes roundtable driven type of project that the Atlantic Council and all these other groups are in on. So I'd say, yeah. You're you're hitting on a bull's eye right there. That is what's going on. And I agree that the multipolarism, 
is is it like a it's like a destabilization or like a delamination method, if I'm thinking construction terms. It's like it's like a bifurcation method. It's almost like using a wedge to split a log. Could be a divide and conquer type thing. So, yeah, I would agree on those as well. Paul, did you have, observations or questions for Herboje? I just wanted to say huge enjoy of your work. But, also, how much do you think they they hide all these plans in plain sight, but they also obfuscate it in banality 
and, like, quote, unquote, boringness and, like, trying to make it as so fist sophisticated as possible. So I I was gonna ask you about when you're interviewing actual globalists who come on, how much you have to navigate around the sophist rhetoric to get to asking them questions, Not not quite gotcha questions, but questions you already know the answer to and then seeing how they try and spin it. But, you kinda answered that, I guess, with, Yeah. My my goal is sort of not to let them know, 
where I'm coming from. Like, Andreas Bommel, he heads the democracy without borders, I think, project, and they're hardcore pushing for world government. And he's got a book on world parliament. And I asked him on it was maybe five years ago. I read the book, and I think he assumed that I was a globalist and then that I wasn't an anti globalist. So my thing is just kind of for them to you know? In general, my thing with my podcast is to get my guest's digital download. Like, just, you know, tell tell me what you think. You're the expert. Just let us you know, tell us what you think is most important. And so that's what I what what I try to do is try to get them to reveal as much as they can from from their side instead of challenging them. You know, sometimes I get people who say, why why didn't you challenge your guest? You know, I had on recently a Christian 
evangelical Zionist. I let him speak his piece. Then I have, you know, Chuck Baldwin, who's an anti Zionist. I had on Edward Luttwak, who's a renowned historian, who's a Zionist. And if if you challenge them too much, it's like they're just gonna double, triple down ninety nine percent of the time, and they won't you know, they'll just hang up, and you don't you don't get anything, out of that. So And you end up alienating yourself, and then it cuts off future access, and then the word can spread. So I think it's a really good approach that you have, almost like Joe Rogan letting the curiosity guide you and not being, like, having your own personal identity at stake with whatever their ideas are at. It sounds like you have a really mature 
approach to just, like, let's discuss the ideas. The person is less interesting than what the ideas behind all these things are, and so I'm I'm really glad that's, you get to the root of things. I I I twice twice, I almost had the chance to get you know David Rubinstein? He's, like, up there. He's he's, like, cofounder of World Economic Forum and Carlyle group Carlyle Group. And it happened twice, so these agencies, PR agencies, pitched me guests. And they pitched me David Rubinstein. He had a new book, and I'm like, yeah. Yeah. I'll have him on. I I I confirmed, like, that tell me whatever date and time. I'll send you the Zoom. We're we're good to go. And so they, you know, contacted me first, and then I'm like, yeah. Yeah. And then they responded like, oh, sorry. He can't come on. And then a year later, he puts out a new book or two years later, he's like, hey. You wanna have Dave Rubinstein on? I'm like, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. You know? And the same thing happens. It's because they don't do their homework. So they see, you know, geopolitics and empire. This is 
a certain ranking, and they're like, oh, let's get him on. And then when I confirm, they take a second look, and then they see one of my recent podcasts where we're talking about the world order. Serious. You know, I I did a I did a search of my history blueprint, and I do have David Rubinstein in there, probably when I was doing research and modeling for George Walker Bush, who's in the show later tonight. Carlyle Group, I I had that connection. So maybe I was modeling out Carlyle Group, and I came across him. But, yeah, that's that's fortuitous because I didn't think I didn't think he was gonna be in there, but I searched anyway. And that's usually how I learn stuff. I'm incredulous, and then I search, and then I find some stuff. Yeah. Here he is over here. 
David Rubinstein, Carlyle Group, equity firm. Own principal owner, Baltimore Orioles. Oh, that's pretty good. He owns a baseball team. But I'm sure if we went into his early life and education, we could start to see where oh, it's, Phi Beta Kappa. You know, it's a do you ever look into the Phi Beta Kappas? Do you ever look at people who are, like, in that super smart club? Because one time, after seeing that in a bunch of people's kind of, 
bio, I went and modeled a bunch of Phi Beta Kappa people. Here's, Dave Chappelle's mom, doctor Yvonne Seon, who was also in the Congo when, Lumumba was not living anymore. Avery Dulles, Ashton Carter, Rhodes Scholar who wrote the the nine eleven, catastrophic terrorism document with Zellickow and Deutsch. So when you have Rhodes Scholars that were instrumental in writing the catastrophic terrorism article in nineteen ninety eight November foreign affairs that foreshadowed the PNAC document, 
that foreshadowed nine eleven, like, there's that ominous continuity popping back up. You've got, some skull and bones people in here, Archibald MacLeish. You had, Dean Acheson, Dean Rusk, another Rhodes Scholar. So, anyway, there's a there's a a lot of Rhodes Scholars happen to be phi phi beta kappa and also happen to be into international globalism. So at one point, maybe the Greek fraternal system is there for beer for a lot of people, but it's also used as a a recruiting element for the political and intelligence 
communities because there's there's, you know, Louis Freeh. There's a lot of notable John Foster Dulles, Jeb Bush, John Dewey, John d Rockefeller, Fulbright, who's the American Rhodes Scholar System for the Fulbright Scholars. Those are just American Rhodes Scholars after Fulbright himself was a Rhodes Scholar. So there's I don't know. I'm not saying it's like this is the group of people, but that group of people definitely participates heavily. And not all Phi Beta Kappas, of course, would participate in such things, but some do. And there's a a a good overlap between some of their membership groups like the Skull and Bones and, the Rhodes Scholars in that group. Now hold on a second. Internationalism. Go ahead. Is is Dave Chappelle's mom a top secret assassin? Is that what you're saying? No. No. Damn. I think she's probably a very cool person and well well educated on how the world works. Right? 
And, yeah, I remember learning that there's a Katanga crisis. I might have learned about that. It might be in a G. Edward Griffin movie because he had a movie called the Katanga crisis. So I don't know if I don't think that connection's in that movie, but that's where I learned about that. And then when I learned about, you know, whatever her work was later I was like, oh, Dave Chappelle's mom was like a diplomat. Where was she at? Oh, in the Congo. Oh, Lumumba, CIA. I mean, they they were working in biolabs. There's a whole bunch of interesting stuff going on down there. 
And, yeah. I'm not making accusations or drawing correlation. Course. But but still, hey. This is juicy. I'm gonna make a note. Fascinating. She could've worked around some of those people because there was a whole deal in Leopoldville, and there probably is a movie. Look. There was x oh, so ex agent, from the CIA, John Stockwell, was talking about this in connection to the JFK assassination. And then there's a book called The River, a Journey to the Source of HIV and AIDS by Edward Hooper 
that goes into the origin of AIDS being coming from what was formerly an MI six CIA type of bio lab in Africa. So, anyway Fascinating. Wasn't my primary line of study, but you learn things along the way, and that's a good way to remember them is to add them to your model of understanding. So you have an ontology, a map that reflects reality instead of what they give us. Now geopolitics and empire helps people have a better map for reality. Right? You're helping people to better understand the political landscape 
in a way that CBS and NBC and, you know, all these other channels never could afford to do for their audience. So do you find that to be difficult, invigorating? Like, how how do you treat the challenge of it? They don't want you to do this. Is that enough for you to go do it? Or, like, how do you embrace the challenge y Sisyphus nature of our our work? It It's the best of times. It's the worst of times. I think the thing is I still have that curiosity. You know? I still that that doom scroll. I you know, there's people who can't handle it, but I just love I saw a meme the other day with a wizard, 
you know, looking at books and and about just constantly searching for knowledge. And that is the first thing I think that drives me is I just I gotta know how the world operates, and that that just never goes away. And, yeah, part of it is when I get pushback, that just makes me double, and and and triple down. And it's, you know, it's also not easy. You know, it's at the same time, it's it's it's fun doing this, being an entrepreneur and trying to build this out. But, you know, I'm like a skeleton crew, one man revolution, one man, 
operation. I know many people can, relate to that. And so, you know, it's it's it's difficult trying to juggle a million things. But at the same time, it's kinda like, you know, I've gotten like I said, it took ten years for the initial spurt, and you look back and you're like, wow. You know? I I I accomplished stuff like, you know, I I I have all sorts of things. You know, Francis Boyle's last book, the first chapter is the transcript of my, interview with with him, you know, finding myself and people. You you you brought Boyle on the spot back in, January of twenty twenty, like, weeks before Infowars did. So did did Alex see your interview, and he's like, that needs to be a wider audience or what? What what happened? I mean, that that was one of those things. Like, it's just such a wild ride 
doing this. So I did that interview, and I published, I think, January thirtieth. And the next day, my I still have some screenshots, and there's on Band Video, they have the original, but that day the the the day after Jones' show, my face was on the front page of Infowars, and Alex Jones was doing a play by play of my interview with, Boyle. I I did kinda get slightly annoyed, Alex, when he would say he had been the first to, interview Boyle. And I think, actually, Boyle corrected him once saying, no. No. It was UFO with the extended empire. But, you know, whatever. No hard feelings. But, yeah, it's just wild ride, you know, get getting caught up in all this stuff. And it got it hit three hundred and eleven thousand views on YouTube, 
and it got taken down. And then I've I'm pretty sure it was seen by millions. It got reposted. Great game India really popularized it. So, yeah, fun times. Yeah. I've read that site a bunch over the years, great game India. I learned a lot about, like, the East India Company, opium trade, and whole bunch of really interesting geopolitics and empire topics over there. I think that, you know, there's those of us who are in the muck and we're doing research. Call us muckrakers maybe. Right? And, like, your observe your interview with, Boyle was just a couple days after Whitney's DARPA, 
publication, calling out DARPA, right around you know, because it's they're the owners of mRNA technology. So right at the beginning, you got the people at the top of the mountain doing the thing, and then you got the people with larger audiences who eventually get that trickle down, and they're like, well, just because they said it, no one heard it. I'm gonna say it where everyone can hear it. Or you have someone like a Tim Dillon who's like an ombudsman for, like, a Whitney Webb work. Like, he'll be out someplace and mention her book. Or even Ian Carroll, couple times has dropped her name, you know, doing interviews and things like that. Right? So, 
not not enough people drop Ryan Christian's name either. Right? Because he he does what you do, but it takes him three hours. And it takes me seven hours, so you're really the most efficient and effective of the lot. Well, I will say this too. Corporate. This is a little this is what I always tell people because they look at the totality of the show. It's, like, seven, eight hours, and they're they're automatically I'm like, look. Just think of it as, like, I don't have a week. It's a daily show. One hour a day, every day for the week. You'll get through the whole thing. Like, don't don't just come on, Joe. Pace yourself. Freedom is a super marathon, not a sprint. Just because we have all the food for the week doesn't mean you have to sit down at one meal and eat it all. But, also, those who do have that longer attention span, they learn a lot more from each episode because you can't get what we do. You can't well, you can't get the work of art in sections. 
But when it's there, you can get the callback jokes and the references from the educational of things. Like, we heard this in hour one, and now the loop just closed in hour five. And if you were paying attention to everything in between to make sense of that, like, that's a serious educational opportunity. But, again, when I started podcasting in two thousand six, everyone told me a podcast had to be twenty minutes. And my first one was two hours, and then it went to twenty hours at one point. And then I just stopped listening to, like, what the expectations were because I had already done so many things that people say you can't do that. 
You can't make a living podcasting. You can't support yourself podcasting. No one will listen to a podcast longer than an hour at the most. And then Rogan came out and validated that years later. He's like, hey. Three hour interviews. Boom. Right? So long form content, I think it helped me get started. I listened to huge chunks of content at the beginning. Huge like, for hours and hours and hours and hours. Like, I had just one archive, had seven hundred hours of, like, interviews and research on it, and I listened to that many times. I could verbatim repeat some of that stuff. Were there pieces of artifacts or evidence early in your research career that kinda, like, 
gave you grounding or, like, gave it teeth so you could, like, dig in and get traction? In in in what sense you mean, like, quote like, for me, I saw this presentation one time called the brotherhood of darkness by Stanley Monteith, and I was incredulous the whole way through. I was like, no way, bro. I worked on Wall Street. If this was going on, I would know about it. And I have a college education, and you're talking smack. But then I did. I went and looked that stuff up, and I was like, it was a game changer because what he was saying was accurate. It was a a little bit, 
frilly. Like, it had a lot of decorative language around it, you know, and ethos, and he's reading the poetry and all that other stuff. You know? So, anyway, that was something where the incredulity of that man's presentation at the prophecy forum sometime in the nineties that was filmed on VHS and transferred to DVD and sold to me on eBay with a bunch of other conspiracy videos that I bought fifty at a time, right, led me to discovering the book Tragedy and Hope, and then I didn't believe Quigley. I was like, this guy's talking smack, and let me prove him wrong. And then I discovered Anthony Sutton, and I was like, oh, quickly. And then I discovered, you know, Brzezinski's 
referring to Sutton, so he's a legit person to take reference from because Brzezinski says in the footnote in Technitronic era, if one wants to know about Soviet technology and Western development, the author like, the scholarly authority on that's Anthony Sutton. So then you start piecing together, like, there are hand holds, footholds to get from here to there, and they're telling you along the way about these things. And then you can go read their various memoirs and autobiographies where they admit it. So it's like that one little presentation for me unlocked a whole bunch of other doors. Do you remember something in the past that was, like, the thing that helped you like, you mentioned loose change. 
Was that those guys, like How did you get red pill, Durborian? How'd you get Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. A bit before I answer that, I just wanna go back to what you were saying. The the two x speed, is your friend. So you can listen to Grand Theft World in three or four hours if you two x. I just tend to two x everything because there's too much, content, and I also listen in Spanish and Croatian and and Need more inputs. You're a polyglot. Yes. And and, I'll I'll even listen to there's a great Russian intellectual on almost got him on my podcast, forgetting his name now. Fursov. Fursov is his last name. But, 
that is detrimental because that then, leaks over into the real world where I start speaking to x speed in real life. And then when I'm listening to people, I I kinda lose attention because, like, where's it to x speed? And and also this schematic you you you put out, I I was thinking about this recently. I think you're right, about the different tiers in podcasting where peep you know, everyone does something different, which is great, which is what we should be doing. And I I just love what what you're doing. And I you know, time wise, it's difficult. You know, I gotta, I've I've got a family. I'm trying to edit the shows, produce the shows, record the shows, and I wanna, you know, at some future point, write a book. I wanna, 
make courses, and it's kinda like you need to that would require less podcasting and more time to sit down and read as immensely. And and your way to recall yeah. I was listening to the last few episodes of GTW, and I don't know how you can recall so much information. But going back to your question, yeah, it was basically, you know, loose change on nine eleven and the idea of false flag operations. And as you laid out, you just go you you look at the footnotes, which leads me to books by all these other people. I often like to say Ed Griffin's Creature from Jekyll Island is like my economic bible. Right? He flushes it all out there then, you know, it's I I I I don't know if I mentioned. And it's just funny. You know, I read that, like, maybe two thousand seven, and then I volunteered. 
He used to call it unfiltered news before he changed it to need to need to know news. And he was gonna write a second book, which he never ended up publishing, and that was, like, two thousand eight, nine. And he looked for volunteers. And while I was in Geneva, I'm like, hey. I'll volunteer to collect news with a few other folks for him. And then twenty eleven, I ended up going to LA to see I was a huge Soundgarden fan when I was a kid, and and they broke up in nineteen ninety seven. And I got to see Chris my first concert was Chris Cornell, I think, in nineteen ninety nine. And then Soundgarden came back together, and I got I was going with my family to LA, and I just Soundgarden played. I saw them, and then I told Ed's assistant, hey. You wanna have coffee? Because I was having the communication with her, and she's like, hey. Ed wants to take you out to lunch. And I'm like, okay. Well, that was, 
amazing. So, yeah, it was basically, you know, nine eleven stuff, and then you learn about the economy and then, you know, stuff like Operation Gladio, Daniela Gansor. And then in my courses years later, I would assign they'd give me courses, like, on foreign policy, Middle Eastern politics, whatever, US foreign policy. And I'd assigned the students to read the actual thirty page TPAJX, you know, CIA MI six paper and how they overthrew miles a day. And, you know, in there, it says that they they use the BBC, for propaganda purposes. And and and they actually say in there that they carried out the false flag, 
operations where they blame Mosadei for carrying out attacks, I think, on the mosques. And then, you know, I had assigned the the NSA declassified, I think, in two thousand five, George Washington under, university, the National Security Archive published it, the Gulf of Tonkin. The documents would show nothing happened. So I would, like, assign the kids the this stuff, and you just go down the line. It's like every war, you know, Lusitania, World War one, Pearl Harbor. I've got the book Day of Deceit, behind me, which shows that they knew it was gonna happen, and they stood down. And it it's it's just funny. You know, once we had a know what the reference is for that? Like, what's what's the source material for it? For which one? 
That the British knew that Pearl Harbor was gonna happen, and they didn't tell us. Well, so so for first, where it started for me was I had a great Hungarian professor that, knew a lot of this stuff in in Geneva. And he he taught us that the US deliberately painted Japan into a corner, like cutting off their oil. It was like a sequence of six, seven, eight steps, and they they they do this often, you know, the the Western Empire where they basically put Japan in a corner and they wanted them to attack Mhmm. First. Right? And so, basically, that's what I forget all of the details, but in the book, I think they talk about how many people in the US government knew that the attack was coming, and they didn't tell, you know, anyone. So so that's one side of the story. The the Americans painted the Japanese into a corner, so the Japanese had to attack us, then we had to drop bombs on them. But also and 
the British were running spy rings in Japan and Germany in World War one and World War two. So by the time they get to World War two, John Cecil Masterman is the head of MI six, and he's running the Doublecross System, which is the title of his book. Now he gets it published in America in nineteen seventy one with Norman Pearson, who's an Anglo American and Yale guy who's friendly to the endeavor. So in nineteen seventy one, the savvy American reader could find on this very specific page that I can't find. It's at the bottom 
of the page. I probably didn't highlight it because it's such a rare book. Let's go. Come on, man. Come on. Do it live. Do it live. Do it live. Kenny, do it. There's some highlighted part. Is that it? Alright. So I'm gonna put my glasses on. We're gonna do this right. Let's see. The twenty committee. So the double cross so let's let's start here. X x is the Roman numeral twenty, but it also is called the double cross. And it's, used throughout history as a symbol, 
when you have these two crosses. There's the double cross in the Exxon logo. There's a double cross on Magnum in Magnum PI, the original series. He had a secret society ring with the double cross on there. So there's a whole long history of the double cross. But to confuse people, they will also call it the twenty committee. So you don't know it's double crossing Americans through the system. Americans' version of this was x two, which was, like, James Jesus Angleton interfacing with the British. So he's, like, the British mole in our intelligence system. He's also the Israeli mole. And there might be a connection between the empire 
and Israel, but we'll learn about that later. So lay in this book, they're talking about the double cross system and its origins. And at a certain point here, he discloses that they had spies that were being run, and there was agent Tricycle and there was agent Garbo. And that in August of nineteen hundred and forty one, the British knew that the Japanese were gonna attack Pearl Harbor, and his comment was right here. Alright. So it's not highlighted. I should probably highlight this because I refer to it. So this is in the double cross system. This is page eighty. 
Let's see. Tricycle was one of their operatives along with Garbo, as I mentioned. Tricycle was to operate in the United States generally and would presumably be for some length of time in the eastern states. It is therefore this is the director of MI six at the time. It is therefore surely a fair deduction that the questionnaire indicated very clearly that in the event of the United States being at war, Pearl Harbor would be the first point attack, and that plans for this attack had been reached had reached an advanced state by August nineteen forty one. 
Obviously, it was for the Americans to make their appreciation and to draw their own deductions from the questionnaire. So the British came here, and they're like, we're they told us, but they didn't really tell us. So they they're like, hey. We have this thing, but it doesn't mean anything, and it's not trustworthy. And so Americans ignored it, and John Cecil Masterman, director of MI six, is like, yeah. We were running the spies that were putting together the whole operation. We knew about it ahead of time. We, with greater experience and a few more years work on the special relationship, getting back together with America, we should certainly have risked a snub and pointed out to our friends in the United States what the significance of the document might be. 
But in nineteen forty one, we were still a little cherry of expressing opinions and a little mistrustful of our own judgment. So basically saying, oh, you know, if we had been working with America a little bit closer, we could have told them about Pearl Harbor ahead of time just like they warned America about twenty times that Osama bin Laden was gonna attack the World Trade Center's, you know, warnings from MI six that came in. So there's a there's, again, a pattern in history of people with senior experience in intelligence and espionage and international relations kinda using America's naivete 
as, like, the younger cousin that's not read in on the whole great game story that's going on. And all of a sudden, after they get rid of their partners in the old great game, they bring America in for the new great game, which starts with, like, the over overthrow of Mosadde. I'm gonna say it like you say it because it sounds smarter. Operation Ajax in in nineteen fifty three because that's where, like, Kermit Roosevelt gets together with these other MI six guys who have been overthrown countries for a long time, much more senior intelligence organization that came from the East India Company's intelligence organization. 
So they know how to, like, subvert societies through narcoterrorism. But in today's society, you're not supposed to know anything about that history, and it leaves people to just think that, like, Kissinger Associates must be a consulting group, not the inheritors of the East India Company's narcoterrorism monopoly. Yeah. And, you know, yeah, you had the Guatemala in fifty two. I I called it peanut butter success. That document was BB success. Yeah. BB success. With all bands. Yeah. And then you go down, you know, the Gladio, 
you know, as you said, you know, you find the primary sources for these documents. Like, for the Gladio stuff, I still refer to it often. If I have to make tweets and when something comes up, like, in nineteen ninety, you go to the EU parliament or EU commission. On the official EU website, they had a hearing or something, and they effectively admitted that, like, yeah, NATO and security intelligence of your our countries were carrying out undemocratic sort of terrorism, but we we're just gonna hope they don't do that again. And since, you know, you have all of these, 
examples and, you know, we talk about color revolutions. I was living in Kazakhstan from twenty seventeen to twenty twenty, and I was, working at the Nazarbayev intellectual school. So Nur Sultan Nazarbayev, who was president for, like, thirty years since the fall of the Soviet Union. So he created in twenty, two thousand nine, the Nazarbayev University. That's actually where Xi Jinping in twenty thirteen, I think, first announced the belt and road. And then he created twenty intellectual schools for high schools that were trilingual, Russian, Kazakh, and English, and I taught, 
into May. And when I got there, you know, I wrote my thesis on color revolutions. And so, yeah, you know, you you know the whole format. Right? Open Society, USAID, National Endowment, which got which has four sub agencies, the Albert Einstein Institute, so on and so forth. And, you know, the early iterations like Serbia in two thousand, was it Ukraine in two thousand three, the Orange Revolution, the Rose Revolution, the Saksvili in two thousand four, on and on it goes. And I was actually warning the Kazakh government of 
color revolution because one of my students, at she was a high school student, and this is like rural Kazakhstan. It's like one hundred clicks from the Russian northern border to the north, and she's taking part in some, Kazakh NGO, and she's talking about human rights. You know, all this shtick about human rights. And Yeah. And so she shows him, like, she had some she got some certificate. I'm gonna show it to me. And I can read Cyrillic because I used to live in Mongolia. And it says at the bottom, she got the certificate from National Endowment for Democracy. And I'm like, what? Tell me what NGO this is. And I I have it bookmarked somewhere. I think it's called Miskin. I go to their website, and it literally says on the bottom, financed by open society USAID, NED. 
And I tell one of my supervisors, and they because Kazakhstan is an authoritarian light state. They will shut off the Internet on on on on weekends. They try to get everyone to install a spyware browser certificate, which would allow the government to literally see everything you're doing, your passport. And, you know, they couldn't succeed because Mozilla and and Google said we're not no. You know? And so, then I had the head of the entire city, like, internal security, take me out to lunch. And he spoke perfect English because Kazakhstan has a program where they sell send, 
for for master's degrees, smart people to, like, England to to to study. And it was kind of like in in in a movie, you know, where he's he he sees, I'm this foreign teacher. I've got three passports. He doesn't know if I'm like a triple agent. And he's asking me and I'm telling him, like, I'm concerned that my country, America, is trying to overthrow your country. I don't want that. I want countries to be sovereign. You know? And that was, like, twenty eighteen, twenty nineteen. And then if you go back January twenty twenty two, there was this attempted color revolution, which the Kazakh government, Tokayev, 
stopped. And it's funny, Tokayev, the current president, he was actually the honorary dean of my Geneva school the year after I left. So it's kinda kind of a small world, but it was just fascinating to actually see in real time these these attempts, of of regime change and color revolution. Sponsored by American taxpayer dollars, bro. I mean, not the Open Society stuff, but the the the National Endowment for Democracy. Like, that's that's taxpayer dollars. And I think it's also good to show that the state department and Open Society Foundation is, like, lockstep on their their plan of globalism and internationalism, 
and they've been running color revolutions all over the place. But I think Soros' most, like, specific callout was, you know, his partnership with NATO in nineteen ninety three where he specified, like, here's the future of Europe and the new world order. And that's still going on. And Victoria Nuland and Jeffrey Pyatt and all those other people that have played a role in, the the, like, the twenty fourteen coup and, the the Maidan coup back in the day. Like, all these things that have precipitated, it took them, like, thirty years to get to where they are now. But for NATO to continue to encroach on Russia, that, again, is like 
America cutting off Japan for all those things to it's provocative. It's a provocative thing, almost as if these people only gain power through making war and killing people, ritual sacrifices, something like that. How close do you think we are to this World Federation? It seems to just be moving ahead. And like I said, they've got these plans for these regional there's African Union, which is already working on a Pan African parliament, and regional currencies. And I think one of the goals with everything that's happening in the Middle East is to create again, I I mean, you go back ten years. I found recently from foreign affairs council for relations 
these papers talking about creating an EU like Middle Eastern Union and a NATO like security military structure for the for, the Middle East. And they actually said the pretext to be able to push this forward would be war with, Iran. So I think that's you know, we've got these Abraham accords, and then you've got, the Shah's son, Reza Pahlavi. Right? He he was at Nat NatCon, National Conservative, you know, conference, and he's talking about the Cyrus accords, which would include Iran. So it's kinda like they've got the Gulf countries are all in on it, and and Israel, they took out Syria. So the only holdout is Iran. 
And then once they take out Iran, they can then upgrade Abraham Abraham Accords to Cyrus Courts and then have their little neat little Middle Eastern Union. I think they're all examples of nonlocal accountability, which is the essence of slavery. Because when the people ruling over you aren't people you can go and face face to face and, like, you know, air your grievances, when it's, like, some nebulous World Health Organization or United Nations or someone over there said to come over here and take your stuff. That needs to be resisted at all costs at all times in human history. 
So if they wanna get together and and do those sort of things without infringing on our rights, that's fine. But I think their plan the whole time is to infringe on our rights, and that's why they're doing these things. You know, their power corrupts and absolutely, absolute power corrupts absolutely, and they're at the absolute power corruption end, where they're on the other side of printing the money that everyone chases after. You know, they're after power and control, not money because they they print the money to get more power and control. Seems to be the game. But it's ongoing, and it's exciting. 
And, I think that the flavor that you bring to the table is much needed. And the trickle down effect, like, it's it's it's noted among people who, know, like, trust, and respect you. How about say it like that? Right? So even if you don't always get credit where credit's due, discerning people figure out where where the fresh water comes from. Yeah. And I think that's an important lesson because, anyone out there, you'll develop, a style and and following where people like 
the way you think, you know, because I'm more Christian oriented. There's a group that like what I'm doing, and they're gonna support me. And it's I think it's like a win win situation. So, you know, you go do your thing, and you're gonna get your sort of, subscribership. And so I think there's room for, everyone. Yeah. And, I I I Jay Dyer is gonna be on Piers Morgan tomorrow, and I I was thinking, what is the topic? But it's probably, like, Orthodox Christianity versus some other. Because, there was a phrase I wrote down earlier that we were talking about, 
but, basically, it's like the the conflict market. I mean, the fact that Rogan took Piers Morgan's name and made, like, an adverb out of it, and he's like, yeah. You're being all Piers Morgan y, and people talk over each other and argue. Right? Like, there's a there's a big marketing dollar for peers in doing such things out there. Right? And he gets to remain, like, seemingly neutral as he has people come out there and, like, yell at each other and call each other names. So I don't know. It's like it's like low it's low brow humor for intellectuals. I thought it was tag team podcasting. 
Tag team podcasting. Wrestling match where it's just, like, chaos and somebody's trying to referee it. But, you know, as opposed to this, like, very well flowing and, like, everyone's very respectful discussion, none of us are trying to gotcha anyone. Do you guys have any questions for her voyeur before he plugs this site? I mean, just thank you, man. I appreciate you coming on. I I admire your work quite a bit. You know, we've had a lot of chats over the years, and, I just I love I love how just the broad scope of everything that you cover and you bring in. Like you said, the globalist. You know, we've talked about all this stuff before, so it's just, like, hats off to you, man. And I do have to say too, like, 
when we featured Tisa's documentary on the show and I saw it for the first time, I literally was, like, moved to tears. Like, literally, like, your story about Richard Wurmbrand, like, hit me on such a deep, profound level, and I've been, like, really kinda ruminated on that. So just thank you for that. And I've been, like, applying that to what I do in my life too. And I'm just like, wow. So thank you, man. You know, Wurmbrand had a big effect on me, and I was actually amazed how teased like, I couldn't believe it. What I had said from my recollections of tortured for Christ and and devouring the warmband stuff, 
Tice actually went out and found that film, and it actually matched what I was saying unbeknownst. I was like, wow. I I couldn't believe it. And yeah. And and by the way, it was fun. You know, I I we we met, I think, twenty twenty three at the American Liberty Awards. American Liberty Award, baby. In in Austin, that was a lot of fun. So Yeah. Hey, Grant. That was voted, best analytical podcast nominee, but we didn't win. Hey. Hey. Yeah. I was I was trying to get I was trying to get Frank Cavanaugh's a a hero for having such a conference. There you go. Yeah. That was awesome. I wish I would have been able to spend more time with you before I had my earpiece in running around stage managing new stuff. But that was such a cool event. I mean, the fact that you both got to go there, like, that's a 
in the twenty first century history of the struggle for liberty and freedom of these movements, I've seen nothing like that. And that was the first and only event that I've seen that it was, like, upbeat, and we are optimist mystic, and we can we're gonna figure out how we're gonna win, but we're gonna win. Like, it was it it was a sight to be seen. And if the only person I'm talking about, go watch, like, the the red carpet and all the people. It's like it would be like the shallow celebrity red carpet thing, only these people were talking about, like, anti, you know, tyranny and antislavery 
type stuff. It was like this microcosm of a real thing that should exist on a much wider basis and usurp this hollow celebrity culture that is precipitated on everybody, but it hasn't done that yet. But you're, like, you're seeing the first blip of it. So the fact that you guys are there, that's that's piece of history right there. Yeah. That was really cool. And and you can still watch the replay, American Liberty Awards dot com. I gotta tell just a quick anecdote. It's really funny that you mentioned that. I don't think I've mentioned this on this show. But, you know, it was a really powerful event, and I'm glad that that's how it affected, you know, how that you see the importance of it. The only person in the whole world 
that did not like it and was violently opposed to it was Alex Jones. He was going through a lot at the time, bro. It was but it was so funny because, you know, it was in Austin. And so a lot of the Infowars crew was, like, helping us out with it. Like, John Bowne was helping us. Of course. A lot of the other guys behind the scenes. And some of the guys were caught doing, like, promotional like, making up promotional graphics on the clock at Infowars, and he lost his mind. We went there to Austin too. We were, like, gonna go in studio, Matt Baker and myself. All we we're gonna go in studio to promote it, and then just Alex just shut down the whole thing. We we had the category for the, lifetime achievement awards that we were gonna give to Alex. 
He boycotted it, didn't go. His son Rex was there and accepted the award, so that was cool. And then, like, two days later on the air, Alex goes on this rant. He's like, in these damn award shows, everyone's grabbing each other's asses, kissing each other's asses. I'm trying to fight the damn globalist. He's like, I will never go to an award show. I would rather be killed. And we're all just like, Alex, man, we did it for you, man. Like, what the fuck? This one, like, broke my heart. It was like he's like, I'd rather be killed. And we're like, dude, we did it for you. Anyway, that is really funny. 
I mean, he gave a a lifetime achievement award to Ed Griffin at the Red Pill Expo here in Hartford, and nothing like that happened. It was it was totally cool. So it doesn't it doesn't always blow up, but if Alex is involved, you never know. Good. Her Voyage, you're gonna No. I mean, the the the thing I'm I think we need I wish we would you guys someone, we, you, would continue with this sort of thing, like a second American Liberty Award. I know it takes so much. Well, it's in the works. There was kind of a falling out amongst some of the committee members. I'm still cool with everybody, but some of the people are still cool with each other. So I was like, whatever. So it's like, little things. But, yes, you're right. It's it's a seed. 
And and but one of the points is a lot of us know each other in the virtual space, in the algorithm ghetto. And, you know, that's when I I met you. I met, you know, I'm walking around. I saw the Inforce people, Rob Du, Owen Shroyer, Charles Geiser, and then I meet a lot of my TNT Radio, folks. Some of them were Hescher from Boiler Room. Charlie? And then I meet Charlie Robinson. And then you're Charlie Robinson and and Brian McClain of, Hescher. We we go out after where we're eating tacos till, like, one in the morning. There's people vomiting behind us. This crazy parade. It's like this Parade pride parade right outside the door with all, like, the biggest Christian, like, conservative meat. Like, Stu Peters was there. I was like, if they only knew what was going on inside that that building. And and then I'm sitting and I'm sitting with, like, Bryce Castamaza five times in August. I had him on my podcast, and he's just, like, chilling with me at the table. And then Chris Sky is standing behind me. I'm like, hey, Chris. You're supposed to come on my live TNT show, and you you you you left me hanging the last minute. You know? Like, that wasn't cool. But, anyways, you know My guy's, like, this tall, by the way, just to let you guys 
know. Anyway but, no, that was great. That was great. That was great. So awesome. Paul, did you have any questions before we wrap up? I was just gonna ask, like, tomorrow is, another piece of the puzzle that's gonna be put in place because the potential prime minister of Canada is gonna be replaced and have a central banker installed, essentially, who is head of the Bank of England, Bank of Canada. So I just wanted to know if you had any opinion on a gentleman named Mark Carney. The the consummate Davos man, as I call him. 
Yeah. I think we're I don't know. I'm I'm I'm, you know, legal man, Lee Gullman, of Jones Plantation. I was shocked when Charlie told me. Like, I had him on a podcast, legal man. And then Legal man is so good, dude. When he came out public, his actual name was, like, Lee Gollman. It was, like, right there the whole time. But, I was gonna say, he says he's cyanide built, legal man. So I'm kinda more like legal man, and I think we're screwed. I just hear I'd like just to compare. Like, we see what's going on in Canada, in the US. Here in Mexico, the algorithm ghetto just moving along. Like, I I met an old student just today, and he's telling me they just increased increased further gun restrictions here in Mexico. 
And just over the weekend, they're introducing this telecommunications bill in Mexico where they want you to force to register your information for to to be able to use your SIM card. They wanna have control the Mexican government to, for the digital platforms to take down stuff. And then we got Mark Carney coming in, and it's it's like this pincer attack for the North American tech Nate. And, yeah, it just it just it doesn't look good. I think we're you know, the momentum, we're on this train, like Snowpiercer, headed for for for the concentration camp, and it's building up speed. 
And, you know, we gotta do all we can to slow it down. But, historically, when it's picked up this momentum, it's not gonna stop until it hits the wall. So, you know, brace yourself. Bet down the hatches. That's when we need wormholes. So we'll cover that later just in case we need to get out of such situations and just engage or donate to transport. It was Scotty in the transporter room. I mixed up my Star Trek, so sorry about that. Alright. Horvoye, where can people learn more about geopolitics and empire? Well, the links are in the description. Geopolitics and empire dot com. There, you'll find them. I'm I'm I'm everywhere I can be on all the audio podcast systems. I think seven video, platforms, x, substack, 
bit bit bit should break you on Odyssey Rumble. I got kicked off of Rockfin when the recent right wave. And and and if if people wanna support, they can donate it or the best thing is to become a paid subscriber. And I'm active on my ex, and, Telegram channel. So Since you still wear all the hats as an entrepreneur or producer, do you use Content Safe? I've heard about it, but no. I I have one of my reservations, I I saw you guys, the the recent interview that you did with him. And I know a lot a lot of the other folks that I that on whose shows have been on, like, I think, Ripple Effect. 
Yeah. Ricky. Ricky. And and then another Charlie. Yeah. Yeah. I I I'm just so paranoid where I can't I I just feel nervous about giving my login credentials to anyone, and not necessarily for No. I feel you. But if they can be hacked, you know, or something like that, and then there goes my YouTube. There goes Yeah. Yeah. For sure. So what I would recommend is, because I see your concern, and that's a valid concern. I had that concern, but at some point, I was like, I have to get past that concern. And so I did turn over passwords to select trusted people who've been uploading and distributing because I don't have time to do that. So if you wanted to keep your YouTube and, like, they could just copy from upload to Odysee or they could take from your YouTube and put it other places. But the point is, it's, 
a simple enough thing. Like, once you start, like, it just runs in the background. And so I see my videos in places. I'm like, oh, I didn't even know we posted there, but look. There it is. Thanks to Content Safe. So, I helped Matt and, Daryl develop that idea years ago. And so I just saw that you're you're wearing all those hats, and, you know, if that helps you get it out there and put more focus into the research or interview, you know, selection, that sort of stuff, it could just be like, I didn't know if it was on your radar. Yeah. It's been a lot to think about it. And and, Scott's clip genie, I mean, so many crazy good things are are are going on. Yeah. Yeah. Let's talk The more tech we can leverage, the better we can get, information out to the audience. So I don't make any money from Content Safe. I don't even know what Matt charges for it, but, like, I know it pays for itself over and over. So, 
yeah, expeditious publication is what, people like us need. So I just wanna make sure it was on your radar, and now you got freedom. Hervoje, thank you for making time in your schedule for coming to this, late night type of party, for staying up. And, thank you so much. I'm gonna have you back again. And I apologize if you've reached out in the past, and I didn't see the emails because my correspondence is all over the place. So, anytime, you wanna do something, I get you hooked up with, my chief operating officer, and she'll be getting on my schedule. And you you gotta make an appearance on one of the independent media, 
alliance panels. At least one, I think. I think Let me know. I'm there. I mean, I I have a busy schedule, but I also have prioritization capability because I'm my own boss. Yeah. I couldn't make the last one, but I think on, Friday, it was Catherine Austin Fitts and a whole bunch of people. So yeah. Oh, she's wonderful. She's been doing it a long time too. Yeah. Yeah. For sure. Alright. Have a good rest of your night, and, we'll check-in soon. Awesome. Thanks, Roy. Thanks for chatting with you, Roy. Been, yeah. Same here, and, privilege, honor to be here. So, hasta la vista. Stay stay safe. Stay stay sane. Stay sanitized. I'm just kidding. Acorn la vista, baby. See, it's a robophobia reference from Terminator. I got it. Yeah. 
Alright. Scott, that was good that was good lining them up for tonight. Dude, you're one of my favorite people. You just Yeah. And the fact that Tiese had made that documentary piece and was here to show it a couple weeks ago, like, it's just the universe working through us, I think. You know? Yep. Yep. I'm stacking the deck, folks, all the way into June. We got some guests coming up, guys. I want you to also, find Warren Smith. We're gonna play one of his clips later tonight. I like his analyses. And anything that's logical and reasonable like that that helps us understand the geopolitics and empire is also, 
useful and invited because we're gonna we gotta widen our networks in twenty twenty five if we wanna beat the globalists. Because right now, they're they're stewing up the next pandemic. They're trying to get us upset about the bird flu. There's all sorts all sorts of nonsense going on. Vimeo, unfortunately, doesn't have transcript for what we're about to show you, so we're just kinda diving into the clip in the dark as Al Pacino said in, Scent of a Woman, I believe it was. This is an interview I shot in DC. It's an unpublished interview as are many of my interviews that I shot and just didn't have time to edit because I kept shooting interviews. This is Jeff Steinberg, 
one of the coauthors of Dope Inc, Britain's Opium War on the World. And the argument in Dope Inc is that, Kissinger Associates inherited the East India Company's narcoterrorism empire. I'm not making that claim, But what I'm seeking from Jeff is there was a specific part where I was incredulous, and he was telling me about the origins of the Bilderberg Group. And since we were just talking with Hervoye about the Bilderberg Group and international relations, I want you to hear it in like, not secondhand from me, 
about the origins of the Bilderberg Group and, maybe an international banking family that was not just instrumental in creating a country. But a couple years after they made that country, they made a global engineering group to dominate, kind of a global dominance type of strategy. So this is raw footage. This is not edited footage. So, Colby, jump into it, like, thirty seconds in because I think we were still arranging microphones, but then he starts talking. And, we'll we'll play a couple minutes of this, and we can make it available to Grand Theft World members. You could see the whole thing, 
but I'm not gonna publish it publicly because it's supposed to be part of a movie that I haven't also finished because I've been busy. I get lots of stuff done, but not always everything gets done right away. This is Jeff Steinberg. Interview taken, with John Massaria, Nick Kiecki in DC twenty sixteen, I believe it was. Let's go to, let's go to the tape. Connecticut. Yeah. Sure. You know, that would be ideal because he is you've seen Alright. Scrub forward. Yeah. Sure. Yes. With William Bain. And, That's still John talking. 
Graduate there. And, he just basically said, the end of the Bretton Woods system, now everything is gonna be vectored in the direction of the, Wall Street London gamblers. Productive investments are gonna be eroded, and, it's not gonna be called fascism, but under a liberal guise, that's the direction we're gonna be heading. And we gotta do something about it. So that's what started. Yeah. Exactly. And I, you know, 
I I was impressed by that and did a lot of reading and, you know, thought about it and sort of came in on the ground floor of It it all leads to the same place if you start reading the same books. Yeah. You know? And you go through the history. If they if they get rid of the movie, the history Just scrub through till you see I sit down and ask questions because that's where the interview will start. We might had a looks like I'm changing memory cards there, kids. Alright. So we've got a Jib crane. We got all sorts of highfalutin cameras and microphones and lights in this little hotel room. And now the art of the interview by Richard Grove. 
They're competing against each other, the German Empire, the Russian Empire, the British Empire. They're all interrelated. They're all, being funded by the same central banking ideas, these international bankers. Let's talk about the East India Company's penchant for opium. And, maybe something like David Sassoon, the opium magnate from Iraq back in the day. And they were known as the Rothschilds of Iraq. Right. This use of opium, this illicit drug trade, and how it ties into the banking 
and, transforms over years to even this day. I'm sorry. Yeah. What do you got? What do you got? Sitting here, Richard. Yeah. I think you nudged the camera a little bit. I was cutting off the shoulder a little, so I just push it back a little bit. Awesome, dude. Thank you. Well, look. The within this system of empire, there's always a sort of a internal tension. And so let's just take the history of the British Empire. You've had 
commercial interests associated with the city of London, with the big trading companies, and then you've had the monarchy per se. And there have been long periods of time where, you know, quite frankly, through too many generations of inbreeding, you had idiots on the, you know, British throne. But then there have been other periods where you've had, you know, occasions where the monarchy has reasserted and has been the dominant force. Well, beginning at the 
basically at the time of Shakespeare when the initial royal charter was given to the, British East India Company, that group of merchants, a lot of it, you know, sort of modeled on already the existing Dutch East India Company, set up a massive military shipping operation that extended all the way to the Far East. If you wanna know why the Gulf Emirates are so slavishly loyal to the British, 
you have to go back to the seventeen hundreds when the, trade going eastward towards China, by ship needed a stopover point midway for resupplying and things like that. And so the British worked out agreements with tribes in all of the countries that now make up the GCC, the Gulf Cooperation Council. Those treaties in many cases go back to the eighteenth century where, one particular tribe was backed up militarily by the East India Company, 
was installed in power, and they immediately signed treaties that ceded over all of their foreign defense and financial policies directly to the East India Company. So, you know, long before there was oil, the British had a deep hook into the whole Persian Gulf region because it was the way station on the way to India and then eventually further on the way to China. So at a certain point, the British had enormous interests in two things. Number one, 
in accessing, critical goods that they wanted to obtain from China. And number two, they wanted to exert control over a country that already back then was geographically and population wise many orders of magnitude bigger than the British. So the development of the opium trade in India, the production of opium in India to be marketed in China became a part of the double edged strategy of the East India Company 
towards China. On the one hand, opium was the product that they wanted to trade for silk and, you know, tea and other things like that, and that were very high value added goods to bring back to Europe. And number two, the addiction became part of the social controls. Remember, the Chinese referred to that entire epic of the British East India Company as the, you know, the the the lost century where China was down, 
whereas it had historical periods in the past where they were a great power. So opium was both a weapon of social control as well as a trading commodity. And when there were objections to the spread of drug addiction in China, at that time, the East India Company had a better military force than the British crowned it. And so they used that military force during two opium wars. And, you know, when you got to the latter phase 
of the nineteenth century, you had queen Victoria's son, prince Edward Albert, who, emerged as a sort of a, you know, oligarchical genius, if you will, who had a much better grasp of how to play the different factions in Europe and globally, and who was also very concerned about the growing economic power of the United States. And the fact that the US was in Europe, was in Asia, 
and was adopting a very different approach, building railroads, giving economic advice on how to create national banking. And so Prince Edward Albert decided that it was time for the monarchy to take a dominant position over the company. Mhmm. And so, you know, what you saw in the final decades of the nineteenth century was the reemergence for the first time in a long time of a powerful monarchy that basically put the city 
under the control of the crown. You know, these are interesting internal histories within an overall system of empire. This is the internal give and take side of things, but it doesn't change the fundamental character and the underlying policies of the British Empire. At the end of the nineteenth century, they also came to realize, that empire was sort of losing its luster, and they developed the concept of using the Commonwealth, 
the British Commonwealth as the alternative to empire. And they invented the idea of phony independence. So they created basically saccharitable states that were controlled by those people that were dominant, were educated, were controlled in various ways by these oligarchical institutions, and the people who stood in the way were very often executed, just simply, you know, butchered and killed. 
You know, the history of assassinations of nationalist leaders around the world, you know, is really another element of the story of empire. We published a pamphlet a number of years ago that was just called why the British assassinate American presidents. And if you go back to, you know, the Lincoln assassination, Garfield, McKinley, Kennedy, you know, the attempts that either didn't succeed or others like Hamilton who was killed in the duel with Aaron Burr, who was 
an employee agent, a lawyer for the British East India Company. You get an idea of of, you know, how these things work. They were developing more sophisticated methods of social control. In the twentieth century, beginning in the nineteen twenties, they really began using mass psychology as another instrument for imperial control. The Tavistock Institute became the sort of flagship, and they set up satellite 
operations all around the world. The Frankfurt School in Germany, the Wharton, you know, school has a whole branch of Tavistock University of Michigan ISR. They they, you know, sort of honed down the skills and the applications of new emerging technologies to maintain imperial control, but the basic principles have really remained the same over time. So you've got yes. You've got leading families that are key instruments of it, 
but it's it's the system itself. It's the concept of empire and who emerges as the most effective practitioners of that who will tend, you know, to sort of dominate the scene. You shut off, John. Don't worry about that. Rudyard Kipling, Cecil Rhodes, Freemasons. So we've got the system of empire that's facilitated by banking, that's kind of upheld by opium production. And, the British Freemasonry was used basically as a way of soft colonization and setting up the new territories. 
Right. And so you've got Cecil Rhodes who says, look, I see what's going on. I'm funded by the Rothschilds. I got the De Beers, gold mines, diamond mines in South Africa. And he has his last will and testament where he says, I wanna leave my fortune to create a secret society for the purpose of bringing America back into the British empire. Yep. Oh, and by the way, let's create Rhodes Scholar so we can turn these cowboys in America into British gentlemen. Mhmm. So how does, you know, the ideology of Freemason couple up with Cecil Rhodes and what does it mean to America? Because again, this is something that we're not taught about. 
Well, you know, they they went a number of steps further in that period immediately after the creation of the Rhodes Trust and the scholarship program and all of that. Teddy Roosevelt was an inflection point. Mhmm. Because, Roosevelt and a number of people around him, Brooks Adams wrote a very famous book in, like, nineteen hundred about this idea of a kind of remarriage of the Anglo American forces as a kind of a unified, 
operation. The Encyclopedia Britannica was a very, very important sort of intelligence and propaganda element for spreading this idea of the, you know, British view of the world. And the Encyclopedia Britannica was ultimately moved to the University of Chicago as they were building that up as a major sort of hub of British Fabian penetration into the United States. 
You know, Masonry, you're right. It's a it's a form of seduction to, you know, bring people in to a system that ultimately preaches loyalty to this concept of empire, in particular British empire. Of course, there were there were rival Masonic lodges that people like Franklin set up at the time of the American revolution to sort of mimic the form, but with a completely different concept. In order to make a revolution against the powerful oligarchy, we need to have our own secrets and be able to organize our own sort of protected 
plans and conspiracies against empire. So, you know, the Masonic thing gets complicated as you sort of burrow down into the details of the history. But I think the idea of creating institutions to promote the love of the British and the British system of empire in the United States. The Rhodes program is obviously one of them. The creation of the council on foreign relations, 
is another one. The University of Chicago was particularly, you know, created as a major center for the promotion of this kind of British ideology and for recruiting and training people. Obviously, many other universities as well. But Chicago was a kind of a a flagship, and that's why the Encyclopedia Britannica wound up, being based out of the University of Chicago as part of this 
multifaceted project of reintegrating the United States. Remember, in the nineteenth century, the British on two occasions tried to reconquer the United States by war. The war of eighteen twelve, which was a close call because Jefferson was so hateful of any system of empire that he allowed our defenses to be basically drawn down to the point that we were we were vulnerable, and we got over that. And the eighteen twenties was a period 
of substantial economic expansion of the United States to where it became a lot more difficult to destroy us and take us back over again. The civil war was the ultimate British game to basically split the United States to promote the slavery and cotton economy of the south. And the irony is, that if you if you know the history of that period, one of the factors that was indispensable 
in preserving the union in Lincoln's victory is that Lincoln had cultivated a very close relationship with the Russian czar Alexander the second. And there was an obvious danger that Britain and France would come into the war on the side of the Confederacy or try to step in as neutral mediators and say, well, face it, the North and the South, they'll never get along. So accept separation and we'll broker a good deal. The Russians sent their entire navy 
to New York and San Francisco, And the commanders of those fleets had secret orders that if the British entered the war on the side of the Confederacy, the entire Russian Navy would go under Lincoln's command. So the Civil War was really a a global war in the same way the American Revolution was, and it was the last opportunity that the British had to militarily defeat the United States. And the greenback policy, the mobilization 
of the economy of the United States, from the point of the civil war onward, reached the level where the British couldn't even pretend that they had the military resources to defeat the United States in a war. And so they opted for the next best thing, coopation, manipulation. And so, you know, that's been always the other side of the imperial strategy. If you can't defeat an adversary 
militarily, figure out ways to subvert them and take them over. And so the Rhodes program, all of the, you know, different, Anglo American fronts that were established. The remember, during the time of the civil war, the top Rothschild representative for the Western hemisphere was August Belmont Mhmm. Who came to the United States and for about twenty five years was the chairman of the Democratic party. 
So they were already, even at the time of the civil war, looking for ways to establish points of subversion, soft underbelly coopation. And then, you know, you have other organizations that seem to have very little political identity, but like the English speaking union and things like that that really encourage, you know, some kind of idea that there's a common cultural heritage as if, you know, somehow or other 
accepting empire was a precondition for the United States to be part of this Anglo American arrangement. Rich, I'm sorry. Put it again. Flash away again. Should I show the camera? End the file. It's like turn off recording. Yep. Then turn off the camera and just and let it cool. Let's just what time does your heart stop? Like, twenty after. It's ten of them. Okay. Another half hour. Let's talk about Dope Inc. Okay. This book that was written in the eighties. Seventies. Seventies. Yeah. Wow. Nineteen seventy eight, seventy nine. How did you guys who who all wrote it? Like, it wasn't just you. You were a co author. Oh, yeah. There's a tremendous amount of research in here. Yeah. I had it on my shelf for several years. I didn't read it. I was like, oh, Dope Inc. Whatever. Yeah. Then I did all this other research, found out about, you know, Quigley's Tragedy and Hope, the Anglo American Establishment, the Pilgrim Society, HSBC, the 
Yeah. Opium, EIC, East India Company. And then I read this book and I was like, wow. Someone else someone else gets it. Yeah. And I'm not saying everything in there is completely, you know, I would rewrite things. Yeah. You can write it as you go along. But there's a serious point to this book that escapes ninety nine point nine nine nine percent of people in this country. Yeah. How would you explain it to folks at home? Well, let's go back to why the book was written. You know, this is the, the Jimmy Carter 
Trilateral Commission presidency. There was a major push for, across the board, drug legalization at the time. We knew that we were at the beginnings of a new opium war in the sense of the transfer from Southeast Asia into the Afghan Pakistan, Iran area. Operation cyclone. You got people like Zbigniew Brzezinski Yes. Who along with Kissinger were mentored by Rhodes scholars like William Yandu Elliott. Yep. Exactly. 
And so, you know, LaRouche basically said to a bunch of us, he said, this is a fundamental issue of national security. If we allow an opium war to devastate the population of the United States, we were already aware of some of the control mechanisms over the counter culture. For example, you know, the the organization came out of the, SDS movement in the nineteen sixties, and we had a bunch of people at Columbia University. And they were 
closely aware of the process by which the Weather Underground came into being. And they happen to be close enough into some of those people that they knew that the whole operation was bankrolled by the Ford Foundation Right. Through Herbert Marcuse's nephew. Mhmm. And so it kind of offered an understanding of how things work that's very different than the way most people would assume things work. So we had a kind of a natural 
tendency methodologically to wanna take a look at these things top down and to look behind the scenes, behind the curtain, and figure out how this stuff works. So, you know, myself and about a dozen other people, we got a really broad mandate to just simply let's just take this slice of it. Mhmm. Let's just take the hypothesis that there is now an opium war directed at the United States. So let's go back to the historical record. What was the original opium war? Who did it? How was it organized? You know? And, again, 
what comes out is a top down structure. After the East India Company per se was sort of downgraded, a bunch of institutions were given royal charters, Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation, today's HSBC, you know, Jardine and Matheson, Standard and Charter, you know, our the S and O, where what is it? The steamship line. All all of those Sure. British entities 
were created for the purpose of having a permanent structure for carrying out opium wars. And so we did the historical research. We went through the archives. We found the letters of Lord Elgin, who was one of the British ambassadors in China in the settlements area, talking about social control as a core concept behind the opium wars. We had some people at that time who were, working on this project with us, who happened to come from families that were part of this whole apparatus. We had one guy whose father was probably the MI six station chief, 
in New York City and who was in this whole circle of the New York Times, the banks on Wall Street, the intelligence services, the whole anglophile apparatus. And we had several former CIA guys who had been on the ground in Southeast Asia and had been tasked to actually follow how the opium trade was working in the Golden Triangle. One of our sources actually coined the term the Golden Triangle 
and literally drew the map of the mountain areas where all the opium was being grown. When that map got back to Washington, Kissinger, who was secretly negotiating with Mao at the time, ordered the entire section of the triangle that went into Chinese territory to be removed from the map as a way of covering it up. So we we were in a kind of a privileged position to get certain firsthand information, an enormous amount of historical 
research. At that time, we were given a copy of the Permindex papers and sort of folded that in as another indication sort of post World War two, how NATO had an embedded structure of a kind of assassination bureau and how that worked in tandem with the British, with the intelligence agencies that worked on these various projects. So, you know, we we literally spend a year and it, you know, it was a luxury 
to have a team of, you know, more than a dozen people, reaching out, talking to people who were, you know, whistleblowers in our own government, going to some of the countries that were victims of these opium wars, looking at the historical archives, the British archives, the US archives. And so our our idea was we have an over overall concept that this global oligarchy now centered 
for the last several hundred years in the British Empire, the British monarchy, that apparatus, they're sort of So the idea of geopolitics and empire is essentially social control, which is something that has been worked on for thousands of years by various rulers and various empires. They've laid it down for other rulers to emulate. And then you got people like Machiavelli along the way who write handbooks for people who might enjoy power on a a different level. But the the essence has been and continues to be social control 
because they even though they argue that you don't have free will, that you don't have a soul, they have to act in reality as if you do. So they have to afflict your free will because they don't control you. They have to make all these attempts to improve their abilities of social control. You know why? Because they don't control you until you acquiesce your intellectual self defense in many cases. So, recurring theme, it's gonna continue to recur because it's the main driving force in the world we live in today, and it's the historical narrative that pulls all these other sections together in the most credible way that I've seen thus far to date, but I'm free to change my mind. 
As new evidence arrives, what do you guys think? Yeah, man. Well, first, I think we need to put together a coalition to get all of your unreleased interviews out in the public. Right? There's different levels. Yeah. Exactly. I have been working on my Rothschild book series, though. That's awesome, dude. That's so cool. That's gonna be revolutionary for sure. You know? And and so I really so on my list is definitely the Dope Inc book because that just ties everything together so much. You know what I mean? Good I have two versions of it, bro. Yeah. I haven't unpacked that whole thing, but it's like it's the same thing where it's like even in modern day, you know, it's it's the CIA funded through 
heroin opium trade. It's just so crazy. And the other the other thing that really just like something I've always said is that, like and so we've probably the biggest, in my opinion, the biggest, movement forward in the history of the world for human freedom is the American second amendment. The the the creation of that has created this check and balance throughout the whole world where they can't just do their old tactic of, as he said, taking over militarily. You know, they just can't do it. And as long as America has the first amendment, everybody has there's more guns than people here, they have to use these subversive tactics because, you know, they wanna roll out this world government plan as Herbois was pointing out, and we talk about all the time. 
But they can't do that all over the world, yet having America over here being all free, so they have to have this subversive strategy to take America down a few dachas. And so We are the only country that has been so uppity against authority that we're like, we'll give people the second amendment. You imagine how crazy that is for some guys who just created their own country to be like, let's give everyone the same rights we have. Yeah. It's, like, unprecedented in human history that anything like I don't remember anyone back in Sparta being like, hey. Y'all are on the same level, and we're all together. I don't think that I think it was an idea they mighta had at some point, but they never enacted. 
Not the way they did, in seventeen seventy six through seventeen eighty nine. Like, there's a lot of changes in those first thirteen years. Yep. A lot of presidents too. Exactly. That's why we have to just hold on to that with everything we got because the only reason why there's any degree of freedom anywhere in the world is because of the American second amendment, I believe. So it's just, like, it's just so crazy because they have to use other tactics because they can't just steamroll us. Do you guys think Pop, quiz question real quick. Who after the declaration of independence in seventy seven seventeen seventy six, who was the first president? 
Damn. After George Washington? Before George Washington. Oh, George Lazenby. Oh, sorry. Thinking of a wrong series. No. But he's a onetime Bond movie person from nineteen sixty eight. You got it. George Lazamy. Samuel Huntington. I remember because he's a coauthor with Zbigniew Brzezinski on one of these Anglo American, you know, William Yandell Elliott type of training books. 
So there's a book where's it at? Is it the New World Order book? Yeah. I think it's Sean Stone's book. It's all about William Yandell Elliott. So he's a Rhodes scholar who trained a whole bunch of other Rhodes scholars and Brzezinski and Kissinger for the Rockefeller family. So once you find, like, this one luminary of their agenda, then you just find, like, who who trained under that guy. And then it's like, oh, the the movers and shakers of twenty twentieth century history. So, that's why Sean Stone's book, New World Order, a strategy of imperialism, 
is illustrative of geopolitics and empire. See, we got a recurring theme tonight. Maybe it's not robophobia, but the drones are a thing, and so are the algorithms, and so are the humanoid robots, and all the other things they're cranking out while you're not looking. It's not gonna be just Alexa. They're gonna give Alexa a body and legs and the strength of ten human beings. It'll have a real polite voice, though, as it oppresses you. It'll gaslight the crap out of you. And then ring you up with a bill. That's what they're gonna do. Do you guys think that the, the current fentanyl crisis is, like, a reverse opium war, or is it, like, a continuation? 
Because it seems like it's a similar modus operandi, just different families get rich. One could look at it as China getting back. Yep. That's what I'm saying. However, America didn't give you a century of humiliation. And the people that did might have taken control of China and still hate America, so use China as a proxy to erode our foundations and getting people into situations where people who have never done fentanyl before, come into contact with it and die from it. 
Like, never having even, like, you know, purposefully introduced it into their life. And because the amount of fentanyl is so minuscule, they could have that type of capacity. It's like a a lethal unknown lurking that doesn't need to be there, but it was Kissinger and Mao because those secret projects, David Rockefeller said in New York Times, Tales from a China Traveler nineteen seventy eight that, like, he was very proud. Mao was one of their best best experiments. And Zbigniew Brzezinski, who worked for David Rockefeller and also cofounded the Trilateral Commission, also said, 
very high speaking things about Pol Pot, who had the killing fields in Cambodia, where if you had a pair of eyeglasses, you were the intellectual to be killed. So, some of their projects really racked up the demo side count in the twentieth century, and I think that needs to be weighed on the scale when considering their ideas otherwise. Yeah. You know what's interesting about fentanyl, like, having worked in that field, like, there are a lot of people who that's their primary drug of choice is fentanyl. Like, there's this misconception that, like, if you get one little drop of fentanyl in your weed, then you're gonna die, which there's some truth to that, like, in your cocaine, and that happens a lot. But it's interesting because, you know, a lot of people get hooked on opiates because they get when I was a lot of my clients, the majority of the heroin addicts 
started off, like, breaking their leg, getting a prescription, and they would get addicted to the prescription. They would try to get off the prescription, then they start buying OxyContin on the street. That it's eighty dollars a pill. And so that gets too expensive, so they revert to heroin, which is a less expensive way to achieve the same desired effect. And then fentanyl comes around, and fentanyl's an even cheaper way to get a more concentrated dose to achieve the same effect. So now people are with fire where they're actually using fentanyl as their primary like, injecting it as their primary drug of choice because they've that they're that far down the rabbit hole. And I had lots of clients where that was their 
oh, that's what they would seek out was fentanyl. Like, I you know, I I that blew my mind because I was under the propaganda that, oh, if you get inhale one speck of it, you're gonna die. It's like, no. These people are actually looking for it and injecting it straight up, dude. It's crazy out there. And I I'm so glad I got clean before the whole fentanyl situation. Like, I I didn't have any experience with that, but it's, like, it's carnage out there. Literally just carnage. Well, it's cruel and unusual to have it introduced in your society in a warlike fashion without your government putting up a a defense mechanism for it. But in fact, 
cooperating with those cartels, which is historically, the storyline from this book right here. So this was the this is the first edition copy, the book that drove Kissinger crazy. And it was this book in the early eighties that drove Saturday Night Live with Jon Lovitz to make fun of Lyndon LaRouche, the intellectual, luminary for these ideas, in a way that made Queen Elizabeth into a global drug dealer and Prince Charles into, like, 
who John Lovitz played, as, like, the bumbling idiot who delivers the drugs all over the place. So it was a caricature of an idea that is actually true, but through the caricature, they're telling you you'd be stupid to believe this. And that's how they can intellectually undermine a large audience. So this book in its original version, as you see, I have many pages that I thought were very important because the red pages are more important than the yellow tabs. And you see there's just a couple yellow tabs, and it's mostly red tabs in that book. And then there's a a second updated version, Dope Inc, with a more direct subtitle, Britain's Opium War Against the World. So it's not just us. Like, so don't take it personally. They're doing it everywhere. They've been doing it. They did it openly in their society. Like, the British Empire was openly doing this, and everyone in in on the island of England's cool with it. They're like, ah, it's just China over there getting addicted. Right? It wasn't like, 
their kid's football coach from down the street who had a knee problem and now is an addict at the corner expressway begging for change or stealing or breaking into people's houses to get the eighty bucks a pill type stuff. Right? Those types of, addictions, it's like fifth generation or fifth, yeah, fifth generational warfare. It's war on a scale that you don't realize you're at war and dealing with those type of consequences. Just to say it's kinda like how they do the excitotoxins in the food. When you make an artificial food taste better than the real food, what do you think is gonna happen? You think sales go up? Yeah. Maybe. You think stock price goes up? Yeah. Maybe. You think you're getting people to like things that aren't natural? Is that part of your agenda for Eugenia? Yeah. Probably. Because these people think that nature is not a a in, you know, a creation of intelligence, but something to be manipulated for their own ends. And that goes back to Richard Wurmbrand's book, Marx and Satan, because that's what he's talking about right before he got to the 
social eugenic utopia part of, what's his name? Moses Hess, father of utopian socialism. So, basically, here, it's chapter seven. Marx was Satan's chosen tool to make man lose his self esteem, his conviction that he comes from a high place isn't is and is meant to return to them. According to Marx, man is primarily a belly, which has to be filled and refilled constantly. 
The prevailing interest of man are economic in nature. He produces in order to satisfy his needs. For this purpose, he enters into social relationships with others. And in an attempt of social control, you have to afflict those relationships. In the descent of man, another master stroke, which makes men forget their divine origin and divine purpose, Darwin said that man springs from the animal world. Man was dethroned by these two. Satan could not dethrone God, so he devalued man. Man was shown to be the progeny of animals and were a mere servant to his intestines. 
In this strange coincidence that the nineteenth century gave to the world three leading personalities opposed to Christianity, all bearing the name of Charles. Karl, German is for Charles, Marx, Charles Darwin, and the French poet Charles Baudelaire. The latter wrote Abel and Cain. So that's where we picked up on, the next page of Moses Hess. So just in case you're interested in reading a book like this and I haven't thought about this book in probably, I don't know, twenty years since I bought it. But, the topic of Richard Wurmbrand, 
which hopefully the AI transcript gets accurately so you could search it. And the clip genie, has been very popular tonight and, might be mentioned again. We'll see. I think to Herboye's point, he was talking about bricks in the last segment. Yeah. And it kinda seems like, you know, despite all these different kinds of wars that they're setting up, that part of this at least seems like the hollowing out and sort of controlled demolition of the Western economic structure, the end of Bretton Woods, so that the next next stage can be introduced, 
which could be everything from, like, the blockchain based UBI thing with, you know, if you vote the wrong way or say the wrong thing, sorry, we gotta freeze your bank account kind of thing. Yeah. And so like Scott was saying, the only thing that stands in their way, that's the the softest kind of force. Right? Or the, like, coercive tactics that the government can use where they're like, it's we're still not actually, like, touching you. And in the States, it's like, well, if everyone's armed, they're just not gonna stand for that. You know what I mean? Meanwhile, we have a bankster taking over in Canada 
who has been one of the architects of freezing people's bank accounts, taking away people's firearms, and taking away people's free speech. And he wants to unify with Britain and the United States. And you can imagine, like, whose system is gonna maintain the priority if those mergers are to happen. Right? That's the thing. I I would rather Canada take on more American rights granting. You know what I mean? Get our get a first and second amendment here than for the states to take on Britain or Canada's 
structure of government where they chuck the first and second amendment out the window and say it's for your own protection. Yeah. That's how you know that this whole narrative of, like, us going and invading other countries around the world to give them our freedom. Right? Who can in the grand scheme of things, who cares if Iraq has freedom? We want Canada to have freedom. Like, let's invade Canada. Look. If Canada wants freedom, we laid out the playbook. You write a letter to the king, and you say, we would like these rights, and he he gives them to you. Oh, wait. That's not how it went down, is it? 
Oh, okay. Thank you. Because he's another one of those Charles'. It's all the Charles' you have to worry about. You guys are like, how do we have a second amendment revolution if we don't have a second amendment in the first place? Once upon a time, farmer farmers had tools. Right? Hunters had tools like they were just tools. So there's different tools being developed today. I think the communication tools, the media tools are like the new canons on the on the battlefield. Right? If you have a a launch interview from, like, Tucker Carlson or Alex Jones, it makes like it's like Big Bertha from World War one. 
Oh, that shit went off over there, and I just heard it. It was thirty miles away. I heard it. Right? When they had those the rail cannons back in World War one, like, these giant things that could log projectiles, like, dozens of miles, those are, like, mainstream media influencer platforms today. And one side was totally armed. The, like, the new world order side, the globalist side, they had a lockdown, but then they wanted us all to have surveillance technology in our pocket. And we were like, hey. We can make YouTube uploads with this. 
And so b for Vendetta. There's an arms race. Yeah. You centralize all of the media into one thing so you can wield it all at the same time, and that single fulcrum point becomes your biggest weakness because if it gets subverted, boom, you just got the the wrong message out to the the whole group of people. Sir, you told me to be connected to all the systems. Get me in the control room. That was a great movie. I really thought things were gonna change after that. I was like, everyone will get it now. Yeah. That that and loose change came out in the same year. I was like, well, we don't have to do any work anymore. The revolution is certain. Yeah. Well And and then you can go to party consultation. It's over now. Yeah. I mean, 
then we just discovered, like, oh, it's gonna be a long haul. Yeah. That's what aren't gonna get it so fast. That's what Teece was saying. I can't remember if it was on the show or not. It might have just been him and I talking where he was saying his his movie Blindfold about, the nine o the girl that makes the presentation in her classroom about, her elementary school classroom about how nine eleven might have been a false flag inside job, and the whole town freaks out. He was telling me when he was producing that movie or he was writing it, he was like, all this nine eleven truth was coming out. He's like, oh my god. I gotta hurry up and put this out because in in a few weeks, it's gonna be passe and hacky. Yeah. Everyone knows about it. Love truth. Everyone's gonna know by then. And so, like, and here we are. Nope. 
World Trade Center seven didn't kill itself. Yeah. It didn't Epstein itself. I'm sorry. That's what I meant. It didn't Virginia Guffre itself. Oh, Virginia Giuffre. That's another person that, like, I heard at first from Burmas years and years and years ago before anyone was even talking to Epstein. Like, he was on that. Just like he was on like like, the first conversation I remember with Burmas was I went to visit those guys in upstate New York. So they had just made, like, loose change, and they were probably on loose change three by that point. And they're living, like, 
like, college kids roommate, like, situation. Like, so, you know, we went in, and, we were in Dylan's room, and he's showing us so he had this whole, like, organizer for his mini DV tapes. So he had all these tapes. I was like, oh, this dude has he's looking he's got a camera. It's, like, five thousand dollars. He's got all these tapes. He's you know? I had, like, a mini DV camera, but it used the same type of tape. Right? So So I was like, I'm getting there. And then he's, like, scrubbing through footage. He's like, check this out. Check this out. And Burmas was sitting on the bed, and he's like, you know what I can't get over? Goddamn pope's a a baby rapist. And I was like, what? I was like, that's an interesting non sequitur or whatever. And then I knew a little bit about it, but he was like, yeah, dude. The whole sexual Vatican thing, and he just went on it. I was like, 
it's interesting. So I went home and did some more research. I was like, oh, yeah. Current pope. What was he? He was in charge of covering out the pedos or whatever it was back then. Long sorted history. And then I went back and researched, like, there was a pirate let me let me take you to the history blueprint because I once upon a time, I put these things in here. There's a pirate who became pope. So if I type in pope oh, let's go. We have to crawl back in time. Right? Because there's a line of popes, and I thought I had them one in front of the other. 
Alright. So let's jump out. Let's jump back out. Once upon a time, there was a Barbary pirate slave trader type dude. He built up a bunch of wealth, and then he bought himself the seat of the pope. And then right after that, the Medici family, the controlling ruling family of, like, Venetian black nobility cats over there that, people like Joe Pink will tell you about. They said we would like our guy to be pope. And so the Medicis bought two pope seats, Julius and Clement the second. 
One of those two popes, there are some sorted pieces of history where they would paint little naked boys with gold paint and have them pose like cherubs on the the dining tables and stuff until they, like, died of exhaustion or what. Whole bunch of child abuse nonsense that was going on amongst the group of people who claimed to represent the good lord. So Sounds like the podestas. Literally. Yeah. That the the Podesta artwork with the decapitated 
Wow. Statue looking thing. Someday, Madeleine McCann's murder will be solved, and that's all I have to say about that. Yeah. Just I mean, the sketches. Just look at the police sketches and get back to me on that. Alright. So, I'm sure they never they were never there. They don't have the ability to travel places without going through customs. They just don't have that type of power or influence or access to Epstein type jets. They don't. So it's impossible for them to have been involved 
with, a little girl's disappearance from a resort in Spain. It's just coincidence. Nothing more. Yep. Nothing to see. How's that reading the transcript? Does it look like yeah. It it looks good. Alright. So, coming up next is a not so happy story, but we will go to a happy story, uplifting story after this one because we need to pace it. You know? Freedom's a super marathon. We gotta refresh ourselves every so often. This is not the point of refreshment. This is a point of disgust 
and a story that my wife said, hey. Did you listen to such and such talk about the clip? And I said, no. I hadn't seen it. And I've seen a lot of stories like that, and I'm probably not gonna be too surprised. But then I started listening to the story, and I was like, we gotta play this clip into the record because there's been some things going on in the past couple years that are being done in our name with the tax dollars that we contribute from our hard work that is then it's not taken without our consent because we do have a responsibility in playing that game, but we only play that game for fear of being incarcerated in a prison, 
like the count of Monte Cristo. So I think that we all get why we pay taxes and play that game. This is done with taxpayer dollars. Human trafficking among adults should not be a thing in our world. And, traditionally, that's what, like, the civil war was about. It was the human trafficking of adults for purposes of labor. What we're about to hear is a very tough story. So if you're watching the replay and you're not having that type of day where you can internalize this type of information, don't be ashamed to fast forward past it, but I'm putting it in a time capsule 
because this is a highly organized stove piped, compartmentalized, Nazi like operation. And here's what I mean by that of human trafficking. Here's what I mean. When Adolf Eichmann was being questioned as to, like, how did you guys lead this extermination effort of fellow citizens of your country? How how did you guys do this? And he said it was very simple. We just used official language, 
and you depersonalize everything, and nobody knows enough to, like, to really take notice of it. And the word he used is called Amptssprache, a m p t s s p r a c h e. It means official language if you take it literally. It was brought to my attention, I think, in the ultimate history lesson with John Taylor Gatto because I had to look it up. And I'm like, what is this word? It means official language. And what Eichmann was saying was that by using official language, all these atrocious 
type of human events went on. Similarly, in this Kim Iverson clip titled exposed, how Joe Biden turned America into the child trafficking, and then it cuts off. So we're gonna have to see what the rest of the title was. But the point is, you're gonna you're gonna hear people who are just following orders, people who are just doing their job, you know, the the person's here, and they deliver them there. And they're not supposed to know that it's, like, a men's strip club or whatever that they're delivering these little kids to. They're not supposed to put two and two together because they only get two. They don't get to see the plus whatever else. 
Right? So these people are just showing, oh, I'm just an Uber driver or I'm just whatever. I'm delivering this person from the airport to this address. There's a huge cartel from the top down, from national security down with taxpayer dollars running this, and it is not an American ideal. So who else is running agendas in our country? Could it be the globalist? Could it be the internationalist? Could it be the ones who are trying to homogenize the world right now? Right? They're not just doing it in America. They're doing it in Canada. They're doing it in Australia. They're doing it in England. They're doing it in all the Commonwealth countries of the Anglo American establishment. 
I don't see Russia taking a bunch of people from South America and saying, hey. Move here. We're gonna change up our population. Right? And not to talk down or up about Russia because I don't have a lot to do with that. But you just heard Jeff Steinberg say, hey. When America's ass was on the line or when their cojones were on the chopping block, the czar of Russia stepped up against the other great game families, the French and the the British. Right? So if there's an axe to grind with the British who, like, Russiagate, what did we say earlier? Russia made up a bunch of lies and blamed it on rush 
Britain made up a bunch of lies and blamed it on Russia. There's an ongoing feud between those entities, And one may have had something to do with subverting the czar, the czar's family being assassinated and bringing in a Bolshevik revolution over there because that also might have started with the good people over in Great Britain in MI six. So there's a lot of interesting history that, you know, if you think you know the good guy, bad guy, but you don't see who's funding it, I don't think you know, like, if you like the stage play, I encourage you to look above the stage, back stage, below the stage, and side stage because there's more interesting stuff going on behind those curtains than what's going on in the stage that they show you. I guess that's the point. So exposing the wider stage of the theater, here is Kim Iverson with her guest expounding upon this very systematic 
and purposeful, not accidental, cartel of human traffickers of young people into this country for sexual abuse. We're now gonna dive into one of the darkest, most underreported crises in the world today, child sex trafficking, and the role our own government may be playing in fueling it. Our guest is Ryan Mata, a documentary filmmaker and investigative journalist. He has been on the front lines for in Malaysia, Thailand, Guatemala, El Salvador documenting how vulnerable women and children are being lured, kidnapped, and sold into sex slavery. He's been sounding the alarm on how America's becoming the global capital 
of human trafficking with over three hundred and fifty thousand migrant children missing, many of them trafficked through a pipeline built not by cartels alone, but by NGOs and government neglect. Ryan says our leaders have no real plan to stop any of it. Let me play for you a trailer from his documentary, what is treason. I'm gonna take you on a journey, a journey that's gonna prove that Joe Biden and his administration are traitors, and they have committed treason against America. I only have one question for you. But before I ask that question, I wanna take you back in time. We're gonna transport everyone back to January nineteenth twenty twenty one, the day before Joe Biden takes office. And I'm gonna stand before you, and I'm gonna say I came from the future four years from now, and I'm gonna tell you what this man's gonna do. First day in office, he is going to sign ninety four executive orders to eviscerate 
every immigration policy Donald j Trump has put into effect. He will take take a border that was the most secure border in American history and turn it on its head. Within four years, Joe Biden will have arrested over twelve million people. Two hundred and fifty thousand of them will be special interest aliens, which in other words, in layman's terms, terrorist. They'll be arrested and released since the time he's become president and the four years Joe Biden has created the world's largest child sex trafficking organization in modern history. He will have arrested and released over five hundred thousand unaccompanied alien children called UACs. 
Their ages are from infancy to seventeen years old. They just release them. Release them to a nation that is the number one consumer of child pornography. Connect the dots. Our government is destroying America from within. I will not stand by and allow it to happen. That's why I'm gonna go to across the nation, and I'm gonna show you the manifestation of this treason. You're gonna see crime that you can't even fathom. You're gonna see a degradation of the social benefits and welfare for American citizens being ripped from them and given to illegal aliens. You're gonna see cities like Chicago, New York, Boston, 
Philadelphia. You're gonna see them divert tens of millions of dollars. In New York City, they're gonna divert almost twelve billion dollars for illegal aliens. The city of Chicago has fought to its knees. Social welfare, murder, crime, you can imagine hundreds of millions of dollars for illegal aliens, and I don't care about my residents. They get all pound sand. We are living in a world where our government hates us, and I'm gonna go on a journey. And I Okay. This conversation is not for the faint of heart, but it is necessary because if we don't face what's really happening, we become complicit. 
Ryan, welcome to the show. Thank you so much for being here. Kim, I'm so excited to be here. Thank you for having me. Okay. Three hundred and fifty thousand missing migrant children. How do we know that there are this many? So these are the numbers that are coming from HHS's official website, and you can go all the way back. I think it was March thirty first of twenty twenty one, about seventy days after the Biden administration took office. HHS had openly admitted to losing twenty thousand. By the end of twenty twenty two, it was eighty five thousand. That was when the New York Times broke that port that there was eighty five thousand missing children. Then fast forward a little bit into twenty twenty four, and we the number moved up to three hundred and twenty five thousand. That's the official HHS number. Three hundred and fifty thousand is the last number that was reported by Tom Holman on December fourteenth of twenty twenty four. Wow. 
Where did they go? I mean, how do we when they say missing, what is what's the process that has caused them to go missing? So because of the public private partnership that Alejandro Mayorkas and DHS has created with the Mexican cartels and the public private partnership that Alejandro Mayorkas and Xavier Becerra and Robin Marcos have created with these NGOs, they've turned America they've created this quasi public private partnership that's turned America into the child kidnapping traffic trafficking capital of the world. So over the last of last four years, four hundred and fifty two thousand one hundred and twenty one migrant children ages zero to seventeen have arrived at our border. So what's happening is the cartels are literally branding these children like cattle. They're putting a phone number and name tag, and they're safety pinning it to the child's shirt, or they're writing it on in permanent marker on the child's arm. And when they bring these children to the border, they're just handing them over to border patrol agents. If your audience just searches on Google, cartel drops child over a border wall, you will see c t CCTV video after video cartel bringing children over to a border wall. That is their merchandise and just dropping it over the border, and then border patrol picks up the child. So when border patrol picks up that child and processes them, they are then putting that number and name into the child's file as the sponsor. Then border patrol calls up HHS. HHS comes over, picks up the child, takes them to an HHS intake facility. That's where the HHS case coordinator or the case manager is assigned to the child. Now that's her job to vet that sponsor and find a good home for that child. So while they're vetting the sponsor, the child goes to an NGO. HHS continues to vet that sponsor. And once they're done vetting the sponsor, they call up the NGO and they say, hey. You know, we got Ashley. She's going to Kim in Minnesota. 
You're gonna meet her at the Minnesota airport at eleven PM tomorrow morning at baggage clinic. Okay. Cool. And the NGO then delivers that child to that adult. Now the three hundred and fifty thousand missing children, these are children that our government vetted the adult sponsor to, delivered that child to, and now we can no longer locate the adult or the child. Those are the three hundred and fifty thousand missing children that our government delivered into this network of, quote, unquote, pedophiles. And your next question is gonna be, how do you know that they're pedophiles? Well, because we have HHS whistleblowers that have came forward. One apartment complex in Texas, 
we delivered five hundred and thirteen children to one apartment complex. The apartment complex only has fifty units. That would be about seven to eight children on average per room. We're talking about twenty two of those rooms are one bedroom apartments. The math doesn't add up. We had Betty, Bonnie Rice as an HHS whistleblower came forward. She was the one who found out we got a list from a whistleblower of eight thousand addresses, and Bonnie started to cross reference those addresses. And she found out that we had delivered at least four children to strip clubs. So that means a grown man, an adult, applied to get a migrant child. Our government vetted that adult and then authorized the delivery of that child to said adult when he gave them an address of a strip club. 
Okay. So when you say that Majorcas, did a public private partnership with cartels, Explain that accusation. So when you understand that, when they're Joe Biden is going to the border and you have ten thousand bodies a day coming across a single port like Eagle Pass, and with one single phone call, the entire flow of migrants stops and it's all coordinated. The photo op stops, and then boom, the migrants come. We're talking about Jeff, gosh, Jeff Rainforth was in Arizona when Katie Hobbs went to the border to do that photo shoot, that photo op. She went down to the border, like, one time for one day. You said it was so bizarre. There was a thousand to fifteen hundred migrants coming, like, every three to four hours down this one path. He goes, like, clockwork. It stopped. Katie Hobbs' team basically rolled in. And then as the dust was settling off the tracks of her SUVs, 
way in the distance miles away, you could see the migrants starting to come over the brim again. So we have somehow our government has the ability to coordinate directly with these NGOs and these, cartels to stop the flow of migrants so that they can do their photo ops and stage whatever they want. Unless you had a direct line to the cartels, you don't stop that traffic. When our border patrol agents work, they work when our cartels wanted them to work. During the Biden administration, when the cartels wanted the border patrol agents to traffic a child from them, those border patrol agents went to work, and they trafficked the child. They did exactly what the with what the cartels wanted them to do. Whether they knew it, whether they were complicit in it, they did the work for the cartels. Right. I mean, it sounds like there would be potentially, 
cartel members in border patrol is what it kind of I I I mean, to to say that it goes all the way up to the to the top, like it's being, created or, you know, organized by mayor Mayorkas, you know, at that level of government, do you what wouldn't it be more plausible that it's, you know, you got these border patrol agents, they don't make a ton of money, they're there, cartels contact them and say, hey, you know, they're able to be corrupted. 
So corrupting these border agents and then getting them to be, you know, to facilitate all of this, do you think that's more plausible, or do you think it really does go all the way up to the top? Well, it's the policy. Right? So when you have a policy that states that a border patrol agent is gonna receive a child, and and then he's gonna take that information that that child has and put it into the system as a sponsor, and we know that eighty per seventy to eighty percent of the children, women and children that have came across that border have been raped and sexually assaulted on their way to America. So most of these children have been raped and they're being abused. And now when they see a man in the uniform, these children are coming from areas where the man in the uniform is a lot of the time the person raping them or trafficking them. So they don't see that man in the uniform as a savior or somebody that they can trust. So when that cartel member who had just got done raping that child tosses him across that border and he says, you're gonna tell this border patrol agent that this number is your dad or your uncle, that kid's gonna tell that border patrol agent that that's their dad or the uncle. And because of the policy, it is that border patrol agent's job to put that number into the child's file as his sponsor. No additional note saying he looks like he'd been trafficking, nothing, just the sponsor. So then when HHS gets the child, HHS is just going, I just gotta file and my job is to vet this sponsor. It is so decompartmentalized, 
and the system is so well designed that the border patrol agents I'm not saying they're directly involved and know that they're one hundred percent trafficking, but they are trafficking these children. They are picking up the roles. When we talk about child trafficking, there's two really dangerous parts of the journey for the child trafficker. The second most dangerous is bringing the merchandise across the border. The first most dangerous is delivering that merchandise to a buyer in America. The cartels under the Biden administration no longer had to smuggle that merchandise across the border. All they had to do was brand it and deliver it to a border patrol agent, and that merchandise was going to get to the final buyer in America probably ninety to ninety five percent of the time. 
Okay. So, the policy the policies that they've implemented, what would be the alternative policy? DNA testing. Incidentally. Trump's already admitted it. It is the single most important decision that this entire administration has ever made, and it happened on March fourteenth of twenty twenty five when they reimplemented DNA testing at the border. DNA testing completely throws a wrench in this entire opera apparatus. And I had I had sent you a sheet. So this is a perfect time to jump into that actual, not the spreadsheet, but the other one, the, 
what did I call that? The sponsors. You released yes. The release, the sponsors. This one. So what we're looking yeah. So what we're looking at here on the screen is this is month by month, the amount of children that those border patrol agents were processing, handing over to HHS, and HHS was actually delivering to what I call a buyer. Right? So in October, it was five hundred and eleven. November, five thousand three hundred and forty seven. December, five thousand three hundred and ninety two. January, Joe Biden's last month in office is last technically, I got we can call it a full month, but five thousand one hundred and fifty one migrant children were delivered to a grown man. Ninety five percent of these grown men they are delivering these children to are undocumented illegal immigrants. So these immigrants that are invading our country are then able to go and apply to sponsor children. So ninety five percent of these children were going to illegal immigrants who just came into our country. Let that sink in. Now Trump's first full month in office, February, it went from five thousand one hundred and fifty one down to one thousand eight hundred and fifty eight. That is a sixty four percent decrease his first month in office. 
Second month, down to three hundred and forty three. That's a ninety three percent decrease. So the amount of children that were getting delivered into this this pedophile network, the Trump administration has decreased that by ninety three percent. Now let me pause there and say this, Kim, they have decreased the amount that our government is involved in this, But this entire machine, this entire child trafficking apparatus that our government has created, we've created a network that can absorb three hundred and fifty thousand migrant children and vanish them into thin air that nobody's looking for. So there's the the demand of it. I just got done interviewing Bonnie Rice again yesterday. She's boots on the ground in California with these NGOs and 
law enforcement agencies. And she says now we're starting to see a wave of children coming in, not across the border, not through ports of entry, but they're now bringing them back in tunnels and planes and in trucks now. So we have this huge monster that we've created, and now the cartels have this pipeline that we've created all throughout our country that can absorb this many children. So the demand is still there for it. Right. But we our government has basically, Trump's removed our government from taking over those most two dangerous legs of the trafficking journey for the cartels. So now it's smuggling. So before it was just as simple as take the child, write some names on them, drop them across the border, and the government had a policy to take that child and deliver to the sponsor. 
Now, the government is saying, no. We're gonna do DNA testing with that sponsor to ensure that they're actually a relative. So now the government can no longer be the funnel for this child sex trafficking. They have to find another way, and now they're doing smuggling operations is what you're saying. Absolutely. Because, look, if I brought a child to the border right now, we're not gonna kick it back. We're not just gonna turn it back to the cartels. We're gonna take that child and absorb it, but that child is never gonna get delivered to an unvetted sponsor. So the cartels are still just as incentivized to brand the kid and drop them over the border wall because our government would still put them into this network. But in order for them to get to the person who's buying them, they would have to pass a DNA test, which leads you to believe that most likely about ninety three percent of these children were getting delivered to people that were not their relative. Right. Right. Okay. So then, 
what do we do with these kids now? I mean, we're not so they're not even doing it? You're saying that the cartels have just completely stopped throwing kids over the border practically, ninety three percent? Roughly. Yeah. Okay. Yep. The the ones that do get thrown across the border, I mean, what if what if the cartel I'm just curious what the policy is now. I mean, I know it's DNA testing. So if the kid, though, goes into the system and the sponsor is not a blood relative, what happens to that kid now? That's the scary part. So then they're put into what one of these long term care facilities for these children. These they're basically have used these NGOs 
to take what the prison industrial complex had created, and they're now trying to create almost like the prison prison industrial complex for migrant children. They're figuring out a way to get our our government to fit, fund basically migrant child detention facilities. And now these aren't like a, like, a prison or a camp where the kids are, you know, in cages or in cells. You know, they're they have, soccer fields in there. They have pool tables. They have video games. They have, teachers. But if you just Google Southwest key programs lawsuit with the DOJ, you'll find a lawsuit from our DOJ, Merrick Garland's DOJ, to be be exact. And if it if I wanted to read you all of the charges for the employees who had raped children inside these facilities, Kim, we would be here for thirty minutes. It is so long, and it's so disgusting hearing the stories about how these employees at these facilities were raping these migrant children and getting away with it, not just raping them after the child was raped. Their solution was just to move the child to a new facility. 
That's how disgusting this is. So that's where the children are going, and that's why I say there's such a big problem. And I say that there's so many of these children are most likely getting raped to death. We can get into that if you want. Yeah. Because the environments that they're getting into are are horrid, and we don't have a plan or a solution or any good way. If we did go rescue the three hundred and fifty thousand missing children, what would we do with them once we rescue them? And this administration, as far as I know, and I talked to all of the experts in this industry, has no solution and no plan to do this. And if they did, just to implement one would take six to twelve months just to get the facilities ready to take in these children. Right. Right. Okay. 
Alright. Let's talk about the the you know, this is a a a gruesome, to to say that these children are being raped to death. When I hear that, my first question is, do we have autopsies? Do we have bodies of children? It's one thing to have these missing children and to not know where they disappear to. It's another thing to say they're being killed. They're being raped to death. So there would have to be for me to truly believe that horrific, notion is I I would need to know that there's autopsy reports and dead bodies that are actually showing up at the morgues. Is that happening? 
So we found they found children at the border with twenty one different samples of semen inside this other girl. They found another little girl at the border. I think she was five or six or seven, and, she had been savagely raped so many times she needed thirteen different surgeries just so she could urinate properly. Basil Baz rescued one girl. She was five years old. She was chained in the man's basement where she was raped seven to ten times a day. And every night, that man brought her food down in the basement. He would throw her food on the floor. He would rape her. And when he was done raping her, he would put a cigarette butt out in her arm. When they rescued this poor little girl, her arms were covered in scars, and the and the agent asked him why he did that. He said, just in case she ever got away or I got caught, I wanted her to be reminded of how I savagely brutally raped her every night, every time she looked down at her forearms. So these are the conditions that these children are being put into. So when we take a look at FBI statistics, and we're talking about human and child trafficking, 
once a child hits what they call the child trafficking pipeline, your audience has probably seen the movie traffic. Right? I think his watch, he said thirty six hours. He had thirty six hours to go and save his daughter because once she hit that pipeline, there was once less than a one percent chance that she's ever seen alive again. Now I just interviewed Steve Friend. He was the FBI whistle or he was the FBI whistleblower who was in working on child porn and was pulled off child porn to go actually hunt down innocent January sixers. And I asked Steve I wanted to fact check myself on these statistics. I said, Steve, when a child hits that trafficking pipeline, how many hours do you have to locate him before there's basically a zero percent chance that kid will ever be seen alive again? And he said, it's forty eight hours. And after forty eight hours, there's less than a one percent chance you'll ever see that child alive again. And I said, what does that child's life expectancy go to once he hits that pipeline? And he said thirty six months. So that means that once these children were delivered, every one of those three hundred fifty thousand children that was delivered to this pipeline, 
the second that they got delivered in that pipeline, the time clock starts. Their expiration date starts because their poor, fragile little bodies cannot sustain being chained in the basement and raped seven to ten times a day. And these are poor little children, and they're getting raped by these savages. How long till the little seven year old's riddled with STDs, and she's got seven different UTIs and three different tract infections, and she can't even urinate properly because it burns so bad when she pees? How about when a guy gets too rough with her and breaks her jaw? You think they're taking that little girl to a hospital to get her jaw fixed? Uh-uh. So when I say three hundred and fifty thousand children are missing, you can't tell me that they haven't been raped to death. You can't tell me that they're still alive. I can tell you that we can't locate them, and we have to assume the worst. We have to. These are children, and assuming or waiting isn't an option. Put it this way, Kim. So since the Trump administration has taken office, right, we've been in here for ninety days. In that ninety day period well, let's start and begin. So we have three hundred and fifty thousand missing children over a four year period. That's one thousand four hundred and sixty days. And if you throw that spreadsheet up on the on the screen, your audience can see the math on this. So if you divide three hundred and fifty thousand by one thousand four hundred and sixty, that gives us an average of two hundred and forty children per day. So every day during the Biden administration, our our government delivered two hundred and forty children into this network of adults were undocumented 
illegal immigrants who just invaded our country, and they did no DNA testing to make sure that that child belonged to that adult. In Biden's last month of office, you can see that number a hundred and seventy nine on the bottom left hand screen. That hundred and seventy nine is because that on that last sheet I showed you, the the data sheet was five thousand one hundred and thirty one children. Divide that by thirty days. That gives us an average of a hundred and seventy nine children. So even Biden's last date last month in office, our government was delivering a hundred and seventy nine children into this network of pedophiles. So now if you look at the top number in the orange that says two thousand or twenty one thousand five hundred and seventy, that's how many migrant children have hit their expiration date since the Trump administration has taken office. So because we do not go out guns blazing and kicking in doors and and raiding all of the homes to grab all these children and save these children, roughly two twenty one thousand five hundred and seventy five children have hit their expiration date as of April twentieth twenty twenty five. Total, if you go based off of those that thirty thirty six month expiration date statistic, out of the three hundred and fifty thousand children, a hundred and nine thousand and seventy five children have hit their expiration date. And let's say I'm even wrong, Kim. Let's say I'm completely wrong on this. 
What if I'm ninety nine percent wrong, that means that as a Trump administration taken office, a hundred and sixty two migrant children have been raped to death if I'm ninety nine percent wrong. Are you okay? So put it this way. You tell me how many more days you wanna give cam Pam Bondi, Kash Patel, and RFK, and I'll give you an estimate of how many children are gonna be raped to death or potentially raped to death. What do you want them to do? We have the geolocation data of every one of these migrant children. So when the adult was applying to get this child, he was communicating with an HHS coordinator for weeks via month via via WhatsApp. We have their geolocation data. We have their last known address. We can go and start kicking in these doors. We've had muckrakers and independent journalists going door to door, and you should see some of these abandoned houses that these children were quote unquote getting delivered to. You wouldn't let your best friend go over to your friend's house on a play date if you were supervising the play date with him because these neighborhoods and these areas where these children were delivered were too horrific. 
So we have unlimited resources. We have militaries that are overseas fighting these pointless wars. Our soldiers are getting blown up. Bring our soldiers back home. Create a task force that offer that responds only to Donald Trump. You build an academy by somebody like Basil Bass who said he can do it in thirty days. This is one of the world's leading experts, and he goes and kicks in the door and saves these children. He said he can build an academy, put academy together in thirty days, have trained soldiers that are experts in hunting and saving children. And then you put a task force out and you go out and you save these children. While you're working on that, you need to be putting people like Bonnie Rice in charge of building out the facility so when you do save these children, we have a safe place to bring them home and put them in. I'm no expert at this, Kim, but I just know that this is America, and we don't let children get raped in our country. We don't support it. When our government was behind it and funneled it and put these children into these situations, 
we have to go save these children. And doing nothing and just putting our heads in the sand isn't an option. I don't have all the answers. I wish I did, but I'm gonna be keep speaking up and being as loud as possible because I think this is one of the most egregious crimes ever committed by the United States government. Oh, no. Absolutely. Absolutely. This is one of the most egregious crimes. We should absolutely be focusing on this rather than all of our foreign wars or, you know, whatever it is that we're antisemitism? What's that? Sorry. Antisemitism. Right. Yeah. Exactly. Like keeping you up at night. So Right. Focusing on that and saying, oh, we gotta crack down on college universities and antisemitism. No. We need to crack down on these children that are being trafficked. I mean, that is, that 
yeah. It's terrible. Tell us about the people who are buying these children. So if the United States has become the global capital of human trafficking, who are the buyers? You know, Kim, that is a great question. That is one avenue that I have never became an expert in because I'm so terrified to even start looking for those people. Because if you even come across by accident a child porn website and you open it on your phone, you're guilty. Right? So how do you look for how do you hunt for these guys without really putting yourself at risk or danger? I'm not I'm not positive, but I am going to stake out this summer, and I'm going into 
I don't wanna say where I'm going because I don't wanna tip anybody off, but I'm going to the worst epidemic of the child trafficking crisis where you can go and have sex with a, child for fifty cents to a dollar. That is the going rate to pay to have sex with the children a child in this country. And I'm gonna go film for about a week, and I'm gonna stage in this, this apartment that's across the street from where these children are out on the streets working. And I'm gonna film and document a bunch of these scumbags. I'm gonna bring you back images of who exactly is buying these children and sleeping with these children outside of America. Yeah. We have a child porn problem. We've had a child porn problem for a long time in this country, and Pizzagate was kinda pointing toward that problem until it became, 
a topic that was persona non grata. Now to understand the type of people who do go and hunt those, types of, predators, there's, ethical white hat hackers like Ryan Montgomery who, go about collecting the legal data that they need to SWAT team those guys and get them off the market. However, that's kinda like beating at the branches to get to the roots. So going back to who has the money to buy 
human beings on a regular basis? What types of people, movers and shakers, would have the type of money, but also have the type of money to make public private partnerships to human traffic to feed their needs. It's almost like a vampire supply line. And then I thought, I do have a book by one of those good vampires out there. This guy is called Klaus Klaus Schwab. And, building an international institution for public private cooperation sounds like the name of the game there. 
And, you know, if you look inside a book like this, you're not only gonna see this is printed in twenty fifteen, but, they start off with the Davos manifesto. Davos manifesto in nineteen seventy three. Who made the manifesto? Well, you got this, Italian industrious industrialist who works with, David Rockefeller, and you've got this former SS guy called Prince Bernard of the Netherlands. But they're just trying to make this little World Economic Forum, and it has nothing to do with human trafficking or taking over countries or creating cartels or, you know, really internationalizing 
the world because none of the movers and shakers are participating in these types of events over the years. It's all just a bunch of nobodies who, you know, just sit around and do nothing all the time. So there's really nothing to see there with public private partnerships, human trafficking, children, in a very kind of ritualistic, well organized type of way, almost as if they have a big, you know, either blackmail buyer base. I don't know. Something like that. But I don't think we should really pay attention to anything that goes on over here because these guys, obviously, 
for the past fifty years, are not up to anything whatsoever, you know, because they've always wanted peace. And it's always been a reunification of the world in as part of their agenda. The public private partnerships are not a way to drive a wedge into America and split it in half, whatsoever. So I just wanted to say that. And it doesn't matter because Klaus retired. So I'm sure all that stuff that was in that book and his other books, there it's all stopped because Klaus stepped down now. 
So there's nothing to worry about. Absolutely. You know? Well, Pizzagate was very useful to their narrative that, oh, all this child trafficking stuff is just a bunch of hocus pocus. Like a comic book. It's, like, silly. It's like, come on. And, you know, I I do believe that the majority of child abuse happens, like, in the home or relative, like, the percentage wise, but there's still a phenomenon worldwide that's such a taboo. Institutionalized. Institutionalized. Yeah. And and and and that's exactly the word. And you realize after looking at this topic for any amount well, for a significant amount of time, they realize that the institutions 
literally, in a lot of ways, exist to cover up this whole phenomenon. And I'll I'll throw something in here. I I think I've talked about this before. It's not a primary source, but it's something that'll that opens your eyes to a lot of these these cases. This is a documentary. It's, like, really only on BitChute. It's, called Imperium. You type in Imperium, parenthesis at twenty eighteen. And it's a part one and a part two. And it's a ten part documentary series that that's basically comprised of several documentaries. And it includes, like, the Franklin cover up. It includes Pizzagate, 
the Mark Dutrow case out of Belgium, the Franklin scandal, everything. It kinda gives you the full overview of several of these and for for further investigation. And by the and and really the center of the the kind of hypothesis of the whole thing is each one of these cases centers around when governments get involved and leverage their and, like, the Mark Detro case out of Belgium is a really good example of it, where the government steps in and uses all of its resources and power to cover up these large child trafficking rings. And so that's when it really kinda hits home 
where you realize that these institutions, almost to a degree, like, at the center, at the core of the power structure exist to cover up this activity. And and this is a great example, like, with with this Biden regime and everything that happened in the last few years, you really see another clear example of how like, I'm sure in the coming years, we'll get a full or a better understanding of actually what went down here. But if that you know, what this guy's talking about is consistent with other evidence that that I've seen and and stuff I've heard. And so you realize it just happened right under our noses, but there's a large narrative going on out there to dismiss it by saying, oh, you silly conspiracy theorist. That all happens in the home. And and, you know, this is all just Pizzagate stuff. 
Like, the Jon Stewarts and the Jimmy Fallons of the world to take an idea like Pizzagate and just throw this whole notion that this thing even exists, brushes it to the side just by invoking the Pizzagate word. Well, because they use a straw man argument. Yeah. They try to make people they're like, these people are so stupid. They believe that there was all this abuse of kids going on at a pizza shop. That's not the argument. That's not what comes out of the WikiLeaks regarding those topics. That is the jump to conclusions to discredit something that is very credible, very real, and that's probably the reason they went after Assange so hard. It wasn't even the collateral murder. 
They could get over that. They did not like him pressing on those sensitive points right before the election that they thought they had in the bag for the deep state globalist candidate. I'm I'm surprised John Podesta didn't get in more trouble for having a password that was password and then to attribute the hack as, like, you know, pretty much the simplest piece of ignorant, negligence that he could have done. And people were able to just pour through those emails and find 
all these weird references to expensive pizza and hot dogs while the FBI has all these code words listed that tie the idea of cheese pizza with, pedophiles and child trafficking rings. So it's not even a baseless accusation for people to start putting connecting these dots together. It's really they had to use the appeal to ridicule fallacy to and and these straw man arguments to try and reinforce that anyone who brings this up or questions these things, even in the face of Epstein being a confirmed child trafficker, 
this other group of child traffickers, no. No. No. They would never do that even though there's all this corroborating evidence. A lot of it's circumstantial, but that point to this kind of thing. And, yeah, all this information on on the Podesta brothers is out there, all these different conspiracy theories. And you have to wonder, like, why has there been no even now that Trump's in charge and supposed to be okay, all these guys are gonna get investigated, you would you would think that would be, like, a prime area for investigation because there's this huge paper trail. Untouchable. 
Untouchables. And then if if the media was actually doing its job, like, they would ask about I just pulled up here the the the famous email where it's about, Bonnie will be Uber serviced to transport Ruby Everson and Mav Lozato, Maeve Lozato eleven nine and almost seven. So we have further entertainment. So they're gonna heat the pool. They're Ubering over some young children for his entertainment. It's like, can can ABC News be like, hey, John. What what what was that exactly about? Can you can you explain this a little further? I'm sure it's nothing, 
but can you just help us gain a little bit understanding? Because these conspiracy theorists are going crazy over this one. Can we just get a little clarification, please? But To Paul's question about, Podesta using password as his password, rumor has it that his safe word is ass word, so that he just added a p to the beginning of that and so he could easily remember it. But that's just rumor on the street. I don't know if there's any credibility to that hypothesis whatsoever. If it was on four chain, it's confirmed. If it was on four chain, it was definitely concerned. Yep. Concerned and confirmed. Confirmed. That's right. Concerned and confirmed. Alright. So we're gonna switch gears because that was a real downer of a story, and that's still going on out there. So, 
everyone, keep your family safe. And now we're gonna turn to one of the highlights of the week. Once upon a time, I used to work in a video store back in the nineties. Maybe a year, couple months. I I did it for a while. It was easy money, and I like movies, and you had access to movies. I did it did have a porn section, now that we're talking about that, which I found interesting as a clerk at the VHS store. Every now and then, you gotta go put something back in that room. And that room's kinda gross. It had a little curtain when you go back there, and there's, like, a bunch of adult movies. What I found interesting was, 
what my professors at the university were renting from that back room and then not always realizing that I'm one of their students. So like, you could see some like, my psychology professor who's a famous guy, he had famous, like, citations and cases. He did the Kitty Genovese case where she yelled fire and nobody helped her. Or she yelled rape and no one helped her, and so they you have to yell fire in those situations. So, anyway, I I got to learn that type of stuff. But I also got to see and appreciate movies by independent film directors that, otherwise, I would have never come into contact with. And back in the day, 
one of the more popular movies that had just come out was called Desperado. I was like, this is one of the coolest movies ever. It's like Antonio Banderas, and there's some, you know, Cheech is in there, and Tarantino's in there before he was even, like, a person out there. Right? So that was pretty cool. And then, then one of the guys at the store is like, you know, that guy made another film before that. It's called El Mariachi. I was like, what's that mean? He's like, the guitar player. Like, it sounds lame. So you go back and watch El Mariachi, and that's a good film. It's a good documentary of, not documentary. It's good independent film, and it's very entertaining. 
And, it's also kinda is there some funny parts in there? So, anyway, I lay that experience down. I don't know too much about the guy who made the film. Right? But later, I met this guy called, Paul Virge. And then he was teaching me how to film and use a tripod and put camera on the tripod, and you hook up your microphone, you put your lights on, you ask questions, people say stuff, and making content was a thing. And so I wanted to get more into this because 
I'm an intellectual, and I I wanna read about the thing I'm trying to do and learn. And I bought this book. And this book became like my bible of learning because nobody gave this guy permission. Nobody gave him a gave him an invitation. No one said, ye ye are being elevated to a Hollywood filmmaker. In fact, they didn't really want a whole lot to do with his situation. And this this character who wrote this book, his name is Robert Rodriguez, and he is one of the 
most no excuses type of guys out there. And he made El Mariachi with, like, one camera, one person, one take. He did all these things that you can't do that people say that's impossible. And then he made his whole career out of, like, doing things that are impossible. He has his own studio in Austin, Texas. He makes all these multibillion dollar films, like, in a little studio that's probably not he said in the interview with Rogan that it's probably not much bigger than, like, the space that you're in by the time you get to, like, what the actual stage is outside the lights and all the other things that have to go on to make those things. So 
having read this book and found it so useful and instrumental in my early filmmaking days, and also, like, he gives you he had a pretty rough story. Like, he sold himself to medical experimentation in order to make the money to buy the film to put in the camera that he, like, borrowed. Like, it's just crazy, like, no excuses. Like, this dude was making a movie, and there's no way you can stop him. And then he went out and made a whole bunch of other movies that are much more, like, highly polished and high quality and stuff like that. But you gotta go back to, like, where did he cut his teeth? He cut his teeth carrying the camera around, like, wearing strapping it to him and, like, doing the thing 
and knowing how to do all the things because he couldn't afford to hire anybody. Right? So the whole time that he was on Joe Rogan this past week, I thought, this is I don't know if it's one of Joe's best interviews ever. It's probably one of my favorite interviews. Like, I I was enthralled the whole time. And the other thing was everything that Robert was talking about through the whole time were, like, things that we teach people in autonomy about self reliance, the attitude of gratitude, the optimistic, what can we make of this, how can we be creative, how can we be inventive, 
How can we get ideas out on the note cards and write them down and make them into things? Because that's how he did his shit. Right? This guy has made the Spy Kids. If you guys have kids, you ever your kids have seen Spy Kids. It's like it's a fun type type of James Bond movie, and the kids are doing spy stuff, and it's so cool for the family. Like, he has all these different franchises and genres that he's been able to just, like, I wanna go do that, or I wanna go do that, or I wanna work with these people over here. And he's he's very affable and humble, 
and I was trying to think of, like, which would be a favorite part to share with you guys so you could just catch a little glimmer of what these types of skills are like in the environment where it's like you can write your own ticket for success Even if people don't want you to be successful. Even if success has never happened where you are, you can make it happen there. And it was, like, three hours of that. So I wanted to point this out to you guys. I gave Colby a little time code here. This is where he was talking about creativity and trying to understand the process that he'd already been doing. Right? 
Getting another layer of evolvement on a craft that he's been mastering for all these years. So my question was, did he have, it's not down here. It's called, it's by John David Garcia, creative transformation. It's a book about the creative process and how everybody has it innately. Like, John Garcia is very much for creativity, like what John Taylor Gatto did for public schooling and education. So that would have been a question. If I was in the room there, I would have just interjected, like, dude, do you ever read Creative Transformation? 
But he might have it on his list, or someday he might hear Grand Theft World and look it up on Clip Genie and find that we talked about him and that book. So Creative Transformation by John, Garcia and, several other books, I think, are available for people to kinda glean that, a, you have this ability innately. You had it until you went to kindergarten and it got programmed out of you. You are naturally creative. You are a problem solver. You are unstoppable if you learn how to use the tools in front of you. And Robert Rodriguez is someone who, 
regardless, like I said, it wasn't like anyone came on a silver platter at any time and gave him anything. He took it. He wanted it, and he took it, and he didn't violate anyone's volition as far as I know from the book and from the interview. It seems like he's, a legit guy who actually did the thing, and that's why it's worthwhile to take a couple minutes and say, yeah. We want that too. Well, you can do that too. You deserve that too. You can earn that too. Right? But no one's entitled to it. You won't hear a bit of entitled thinking or talking or scarcity mindset. 
It's all about what can you do from here, not like, oh, woe is me. I I shoulda shot two angles on El Mariachi, or I shoulda said yes to this other deal over here. Like, this is a guy who's talking with no regrets. And that comes from a intentional step by step, like, willingness to engage with the unknown, to meet it with your methods, and to make it into something that is, like, the raw materials plus your productivity. Now you have, like, a manufactured product for the marketplace. And that's also what it's about because, otherwise, like, he'd still be getting his money from donating his money to his body to science. 
It's an incredible success story. So we're gonna jump into a few minutes of the Joe Rogan podcast. And since we're not streaming on YouTube, I think we got booted from the last pirate channel. It's not a big deal, so we can play as much as as as we want. Colby, let it fly. And, everyone who is not familiar with Robert Rodriguez, introduce Robert Rodriguez. Fun. Right? Love it. Because it's just it's not you. You know, you start drawing and then suddenly What how when did you learn that as a I don't think I knew that. I think I was doing that, but I didn't know it. Wow. And until I started reading about it, like, the the concept of the muse, the concept of the Right. Right. Like that you'll you just have to sit down and do the work and it comes to you. Yeah. Well, it started when I was nineteen doing the comic, but then it kept getting repeated. But you realized it at nineteen. I realized it at nineteen that that was that it wasn't it it was It felt like something else, but then it really hit me later on. 
And I'll get to that one. It's a it it really hit me later on where I kinda put it all together around two thousand one, two thousand two when I was doing a movie where I was, again, kind of going back to the way I did Mariachi. I was on a big movie though. I was the the writer, the director, the producer, the cinematographer, the editor, the composer. I was doing all these things. Plus, I was doing the production design now, and I was taking on more jobs to make it more like a handmade film, more like a lot of factory movies are being made. I said, I want people just to feel different. 
I think they'll they'll get a feeling from it they don't get from, you know, a McDonald's process. You know? They're still good, but, you know, there's something about a home cooked meal. And I didn't even know how to read or write music. And I was writing music for a hundred piece orchestra. And I was like, how am I figuring it out by notes going, it's only twelve notes. Even less than a scale. So you hit three notes, four notes. That's not bad. That's a bad note. Okay? That's pleasing to the ear. And I was just writing it note by note because it's a kid's movie, so I figured it should sound like a kid wrote it, and I'm like a kid. It should sound like that. And I was writing pretty complex stuff, but not knowing what I was doing. I go, how is this even possible that I'm doing all these jobs I wasn't trained in? So I went on Amazon, and I looked up 
any book that had the word creative or creativity in it. I just ordered it. I don't know what section it came from. They just arrived. And I'm thumbing through them, and one of them was really speaking about the creative process, how it worked. And I'm like, wow. Wow. That's how it is. That's how it is. And then it said gels and mediums. And I was like, oh, this is a book particularly about painting. Mhmm. But it applies to all the other things I'm doing. That's when I realized that it's all linked. Yeah. That creativity is ninety percent of any of those endeavors. Ninety percent of it is just being creative. The technical part, like write reading or writing music, and there's a lot of great musicians who don't read or write music. They're fantastic. The technical part, you can fudge that, like how how how to shoot the movie. You can you can fudge a lot of the technical stuff. Ninety percent is creative. And if if you know how to be creative, you can literally jump from job to job and do it really well because you're coming with your own experience, 
your own point of view. That's why I teach my actors to paint on the set, because they've never painted before. And they're already being creative by acting, but in between takes we'll go paint a portrait of their character, where I take a photo of them in character and have them paint a background. So just pick up the paint, you can use these three methods, any color you want. The paintbrush is gonna know where to go. Even though you've never painted before, it's gonna know where to go. And they do it, and I put a stencil of a line drawing of their face over it. I'll show you some. You're not gonna believe it. Josh Brolin was way into it. Lady Gaga did one. Bruce Willis did one. And it's just like magic how it comes together. And it's to teach them that you don't have to know. You know, we always think, I need to know this, I need to know that. 
What about the other side? Half half of the battle is knowing. What about the other half? Not knowing, I think, is the more beautiful and where the magic is because you don't need to know what's gonna happen. You just need to show up. You just need to pick up the pen. You need to do the keyboard. Yeah. Because it just starts coming through you, and they see it, and it helps them go back to the set and solve any creative problem because it was much harder in the paint room figuring out gels and mediums and all this stuff. They go back to the set and they can solve any problem instantly. And and you'd think that they're already in a creative mode by acting, but it fires off a whole other part of your brain to go do something else creative at the same time. I remember on the set, Josh goes, 
is it okay I'm still thinking about the painting? I go, I think so. I think it's alright. Let's see. Let's see. That sounds like something he would say to you. That's so funny. That's a, like, a Miyamoto Musashi quote from the book of five rings. Right. Once you know the way broadly, you could see it in all things. Yeah. You start to see and then so that's where I started piecing together that it was something because I I really wanted to look it up because it would feel like when I would go to write the music, I don't have to write very many notes before it feels like I'm being pulled by the hand. Mhmm. Like, I didn't make that. I didn't make that. Right. I didn't do that, and I didn't do that. A lot of it. And you shouldn't say that, and a lot of comedians say that too. Well, if you ask any all the disciplines. Yeah. Like, I go I asked Jimmy Vaughn, how how did you play that, 
disciplines. Yeah. Like, I go I asked Jimmy Vaughn, how how did you play that, lecture? That solo was amazing. Did you have that worked out? It's kinda like tuning a radio. You know, if you get it just right, you can't even believe what's coming through. Yeah. You know, you always hear everyone's version of that. And so I called it something. I thought, I'm gonna call it the creative spirit. Like, there's a creative spirit. Imagine the creative spirit that's assigned to you, and if you're someone who's just like, I don't think I can I don't think I can do this or that? And they don't and they don't pick up the pen. They don't they don't actually start. How frustrated that script is being Hovering 
over the top of the oh my god. Will you just pick it's not you. It's not you. You just let me through. And it's crazy that that concept has been around forever. This concept of the muse, but yet still Even though it like that where it's like takes it still feels like you have to do a lot. About it. You just go, I also need to be a pipe. Yeah. A clean pipe, a conduit, so more stuff comes through. And that means take your ego out of it. I mean Just just do the work. Just show up and start. Yeah. Pressfield literally thinks that it's like like an angel or like some sort of a divine presence that presents you. I I think 
I think there's something to it, man. Yeah. It's it sounds so kooky, but if something is super successful for amazing people Yeah. And they're all telling you the same thing, like, why do you have to nah, man. I'm not stupid. I'm not gonna believe in the concept that whatever the fuck it is, there's something that happens when you're creative where you feel like an antenna. You feel like you just take these ideas are coming to you. They're entering into your mind. It's not physical effort. It's not like you're picking up bricks and stacking them on the wall. Like, something is happening 
to you. Yeah. You're tapped into, I had a friend of mine, Tim Ferris, who's over at my house, and I was telling him about some kind you know, it's very creative house, really, because it's that's where I do a lot of my creative work. And a lot of creatives like coming to this place. So you have to come check it out so you can see the Frizzetta's I have. Oh, you have original Frizzetta's? Yeah. Oh, yeah. We'll get we'll get to that. We'll get to that. Oh my god. But, it's just totally totally you got so much your favorite Frizzetta's. Totally creative place. And I like people to come there, but it's it's just inspiring to be in an environment where everything around you is is about creativity because then you get in that headspace Yeah. And you're able to do more because you realize it's not you. It's just coming through you, and you just gotta and you just have to witness it. And it just takes a lot of the load off you. A lot of people can start easier if they know, oh, it doesn't have to be me. Like, my kids are like, oh, it's not I don't have to do it? I just have to actually pick up the pen? Yeah. It's it's very freeing. 
Yeah. It's, it's something that everyone should learn. If with anything in life, anything that you're doing in life is just to take action and trust this process that happens. Yeah. But you you have to do things. You can't just sit and wonder, and it's that procrastination, the anxiety about starting It's like crippling for people. It keeps them from getting off the ground. And they're doing that to themselves. You're literally doing this to yourself. Yep. So when you say, well, I don't know if I you just chopped off your leg. Yeah. Right on the at the beginning of the race. Right. Right. Right. Where you go, well, I tried it once before. You just cut the other one off. I mean, you're literally doing you're you're your own worst enemy. I had this one gal in fear of failure. This is the base the best thing. 
One one gal that went on the talks, she said, okay. You're all positive. But what do I tell myself when I just spent a year and a half doing something and it didn't work out? I said, well, that's a very negative way to ask that. Can you rephrase the question first, then I'll then I'll attempt? And she went, I learned a good lesson the hard way. I said, no. That still sucks. If you're focused on the failure, if you followed your instinct and it didn't work out, it doesn't mean you're wrong. Sometimes the only way across the river is to slip on the first two rocks. It's the only way. And if you just stay there, you're not gonna go. So you have to embrace the failure. Because if you're going on instinct I mean, you're doing it literally on instinct, not like someone said, hey. Go over there. There's a money making scheme. Go do that. Literally, you had the instinct. And my best example is Four Rooms, 
a movie I did with Quentin. Because if you study the ashes of your failure, you'll find the key to your next success. That was the movie where there was four different stories playing simultaneously. Four different movies, four different stories. And I love short stories because I had made a bunch of short films. I thought, oh, I wanna do that. So when Quentin asked and I asked the audience. I like asking the audience. How would you answer this? Quentin goes, hey. I'm gonna make a movie called Four Rooms. Four different directors. You gotta use the bellhop. It's New Year's Eve. You're in a hotel. You can't leave your hotel room. You wanna do it? Hand goes up. Now just on instinct. Now I ask the audience. Was I wrong to just go by instinct or should I study it a little bit? 
Nobody really knows the answer. What would you say? Would you study? Are you more strategic or more are you more instinctual than you? Hundred percent. Yeah. Primarily instinctual. I figured because that's why you're here right now. Because we're not that smart. I'm not that smart. I I couldn't figure this shit out. It's because I was just at an instinct to go that way when everyone else was going that way. And you're gonna stumble, you're gonna fall, but you're gonna stumble upon. You're gonna stumble upon ideas no one thought of because you're going the way that's not picked clean already. Right. Right. So I would just like four rooms. I said, yeah. Now if I had just studied a little bit, I would have seen that anthologies like that never work. Like, even when it's Scorsese, 
you know, Woody Allen and Coppola, they did one. Nobody goes to see it because they don't know how to wrap their head around. What? Three movies? Anthology? It doesn't work. If I had studied first, should I have changed my answer? Nobody knows how to answer. Well, I'm gonna go on instinct. I'm gonna say I say instinct anyway. Movie bombs doesn't do well at all. Now I could be really upset about that and go like, wow. I gotta be really careful now going forward. I have to tiptoe around as an artist. Well, that's that's not the state of mind I was when I won Sundance. I was throwing stuff out. Can I offer a counter to that? Sure. I only bombed financially. Okay. Oh, no. No. I'm not I'm not done with the story. Artistic is a very good movie. There's a lot of great stuff in it, but this goes even better than that. My whole thing is 
examine the ashes of your failure. And I don't find one. I find two keys in there to my biggest movies directly from that experience. So my instinct was right. But again, sometimes the only way across the river is slipping on the first two rocks. I was on the set. Had to be New Year's, so I dressed everybody up in tuxedos. And Antonio had just done Desperado. The next week, he came and appeared in there. The little boy from Desperado, he had a little brother, so I hired him. And then I just found the best little actress who's a half Asian girl, Asian American, so I cast an Asian mom. So it would look like they were a family. So I'm seeing Antonio and Tamela and Tamida 
all dressed up to deny someone. Wow. They look like a really cool international spy couple. What if they were spies and the two little kids that can barely tie their shoes don't know it? They get captured and the kids have to go see them. So Spy Kids, there's five of those now. The other key to success that I got on that set was I love doing short films. That's why I signed up for it. It didn't work, but I'm gonna try it again. Not four stories, three stories like a three act structure. Not four directors, but the same director. I'm gonna try why on earth would I try it again? Except that I had just done one and I figured out there might be a different approach. That's Sin City. So Sin City and Spy Kids directly came 
from that thing you would call a failure. If you if you focused on the failure. Wow. Wow. So go back and look tell everybody. Go back and look at something that you had a real instinct for that you did and it didn't work and sift through the ashes of it, and you're gonna find either that you've already had the success from it and you didn't realize it. What you really need is a boost of confidence in your instinct, or you you will find something that will be the key to your success. Well, that's also the the magical part of the creative process is that it's not always gonna work, and that's actually good. That means when it does work, it could be even more rewarding. Yeah. I mean, mariachi didn't work. This episode is brought to you by BetterHelp. 
It's the end of taxi you made it. Mea culpa. Mea culpa. Alright. I just wanted to say Robert Rodriguez was not referring to phoenix rising from his ashes, the autonomy case study. He's definitely not talking about that. He's talking about the esoteric creative process, which is, a primary function of being able to solve problems. 
If you can't imagine what a better solution would look like than this pile of dung in front of you, then you're not gonna do anything constructive with that, pile of raw materials. Right? But if you know there's a value in the market for manure, then you might start shoveling it out and call yourself MSNBC. No. Maybe that's not what I I was I was thinking more of that back to the future where they dump it on BIF in his car, type of metaphor, but it didn't it didn't work out. So creativity in the esoteric process juxtaposed to objectivity in your exoteric process, 
it's the understanding an understanding of the esoteric and exoteric that makes a complete human being whereby you can use inductive and deductive reasoning to take actual things from reality and then, bring them up to your consciousness as universals. Like, this is book. But if in objective reality, this is a specific book with specific number of pages that is a specific size and measurable and all these sorts of things. So we have to be able to adjudicate or or, like, make 
choices and decisions based on taking things from the general to this, the specific to the general and the general back to the specific. That is a part of education of the self. It's a rite of passage that it seems some people get accidentally and kinda ad hoc, but this could be delivered to each and every individual on a schedule when you so desire to make those types of changes. And the learned helplessness that is displayed so widely and prevalently by the average person 
just tells me how much of the school system actually works. It does work. It totally taught you that you can't solve your own problems and you have to be dependent on authority, and it's done a really good job such that even when people come to you and say, hey. Here's this amazing learning system that can help you elevate your game for the rest of your life. You're like, I can't do that. That's not for me. You know? I have a lot of students in Autonomy that have heard about the offer for years before they actually had the courage to, like, figure out how to get in. 
And once they do get in, then they start self alleviating on their own schedule. There's no rule like, there's rules of be excellent to each other, but there's no test. There's no grades. There's nothing mandatory. Like, once you get in, then you can take your own learning journey. You know, I had a student come in last week from Denmark, and he's coming in a couple weeks into the course. And, I was like, hey. What's your situation? And he had heard about autonomy for many years at this point. But recently, life threw him a curveball, 
and he got something called severance pay, which means he gets paid for a couple of weeks, you know, but then he's gotta figure out a new plan. And then all of a sudden, the offer of autonomy was suddenly relevant and highly prioritized in his world. So, you know, you can, wait till, like, the train is moving and then get on and and run and get it. And you can do that, but you can also get on the train when it's just sitting there and taking, and you could choose your own seat as it were. Right? You don't have to try to, like, catch up. You can deliver yourself to salvation 
on a schedule that appeals to your own calendar. So I just wanted to say that I think the world would be a better place. If there's more people with creative mindset to solve big problems because I think the world needs these types of problem solvers and values them now more than ever in a variety of ways. And I think that also any of my media producing colleagues are innately problem solvers. They're not only solving their own problems, but they're solving their problems to get a message to you 
that freedom and liberty is, preferable to the slavery, despotism, and tyranny that they've been cooking up and continue to cook up through their public private partnerships. So, yeah, I just wanted to put it out there in case anyone needs that type of life preserver, sooner than later. You know? Yep. And then once you've achieved a certain degree of autonomy in your life, then you can utilize your surplus of time to focus on your creative projects, and then maybe even leverage your creative projects into 
income and a business and all that stuff too. So there you go. Well, that doesn't happen accidentally. And there's a lot like, most businesses go out of business because they don't do the things they need to do to stay in business, but those things are never really disclosed to people. And they get a couple of them right, but then they get a couple of them wrong, and it sinks everything. So it's a balancing game. And, usually, it's not done so easily when you're wearing all the hats of that operation. You need to eventually delegate, systematize, get some standard operating procedures, and grow so you can help more people faster. 
Otherwise, we go freedom goes the way of the dodo bird, which you probably didn't hear about because it's extinct. They're not around anymore, apparently. They were too big and slow and easily clubbed over the head is what I heard. Yeah. You gotta adapt to the, changing landscape. And that's one of the reasons I think Robert Rodriguez is such a powerful and influential artist. At least for me before I met you, he was really the biggest inspiration for me in my teens to learn someone could make a film for so cheap. Seven grand he made, El Mariachi. 
And from him, I learned the concepts of, you know, working at the speed of thought. Right? Being able to create at the speed of thought. And he he's the one who explained to me that there's creative people and there's technical people, but a lot of the technical people don't have the creative spark. He's like, the most powerful people are the creative people who can learn the technical side because then they are practically unstoppable. Yeah. There's a funny part in that interview where he's like, so, like, one of the things he expressed that is, 
is, like, self evident is when you do cool things, you get to hang out with cool people. And everyone's got their different projects and, you know, you help each other out because you're peers and you don't really have any other support group. No one else like, when Rodriguez was saying, he'd asked the audience and no one had an answer because no one has the experience to give him some feedback. Right? So, like, he's hanging out with James Cameron, who he calls Jim, and, we we talk about Jim Cameron at some point. But the point was, Roger, you guys are just like, yeah, man. I'm running my own Steadicam. 
And that I'm I'm fond because I have my own Steadicam vest too, and I know how to run a Steadicam. So he and I can have a conversation, like, on peer level. When you try to say something like that to Jim Cameron, he says things like, yeah. I'm reverse engineering the Steadicam to improve it. Like, he's he's building his own, which he did because he's he's a badass. You know? He's made he made Titanic, though, which I think was just the foreshadowing of the economic collapse of the early two thousands. But masonic symbolism in cinema aside, because that's a whole different podcast. That's that's Monday nights at eight o'clock. We do that. 
That aside, I think that Rodriguez has set a good, example. And what he's proven is is not that he's a leader, but he has influenced and changed Hollywood. Hollywood didn't wanna be influenced or changed by him. He's a person whose creativity when under his own purview because he has his own studio, he could do whatever the eff that he wants. Like, people will come to him and they'll do the thing. So he's able to take his creativity over there, and Hollywood needs creativity. So they have to follow where he goes. And if creativity is flowing toward the low pressure area of freedom, 
then those people who have been oppressing us with that type of propaganda, they have to come along for that ride. They don't have a choice. They have to go where people's attention are and then try to recapture it with their own imitations, which thus, you know, whether it's the news or the cinema, like, all that stuff's going on going the way of the dodo because they're behind the they're behind the wave. They're on the wrong side of the wave. They're on the part going out the sea instead of the part going toward the shore at this point. And that bifurcation happened because of the democratization 
of technology that they developed to enslave us and surveil us. And just, you know, a few people using it for freedom style type stuff can change the future of, you know, freedom, which is the title of my unfinished documentary featuring Jeff Steinberg. So there you have it, Wrapped with a nice little bow. Oh, last but not least, his mention of Jimmy Vaughn was interesting because, there's autonomy students from my noon q and a still in this meeting here. We talked about Michael Badnaric 
and, how he said running for libertarian president of the United States was the worst thing he ever did. That idea was brought to him by Jimmy Vaughn, Stevie Ray Vaughn's brother, funded Badnaric's presidential campaign in two thousand four and also inspired Baden Eric more recently right before his passing to create a, constitution course for, like, high school kids for Jimmy Jimmy's daughters, I guess, needed that type of education. So Jimmy's like a freedom guy? I didn't know that. Right? He's he's right there. He's right there. 
K. Maybe he should be holding that, freedom conference awards conference. Where's he at? Jimmy, can you come out and play? That's what we're asking. You don't have to play guitar. I just don't like to come out and throw the ball around with us. That's all. So few freedom minded people out there. You got to get gotta get to know one another because life's too short to go through everyone traveling in their own lanes. Right? And Ghostbusters, it's time to cross the streams. That's what it is. We need to beat this marshmallow? No. It doesn't translate. Alright. I'll stop there with the Ghostbusters. 
Now we do have other important news to cover tonight. I was watching Piers Morgan, Dave Smith, and some other propagandist type dude on, the Piers Morgan show earlier today, and the title was, hypocrite. Now I don't have the exact time code in here, but I'm gonna slide it to Colby. This is how we're gonna do it live. The the guy between Smith and Weinstein, 
I wanna see his first remarks and how Dave responds to it because he's obviously a defender of the establishment who has not been read into the situation. So I guess, like, he just he holds the ball while Dave kicks it, I guess, is his job. And then I do wanna hear the comments, when he brings on Weinstein at the end of the show. So, really, we're just gonna catch, like, a little bit of the interaction. It's just like it's like a it's like a debate, between, the the defender and Dave Smith, and then cut to after they kick that dude off the show and they bring in Eric Weinstein. 
Please. Let's see how this works. Professional show would probably figure that all out ahead of time, but I just thought of it. So doing it live like Bill O'Reilly would want us to. Urban Warfare Institute, who took issue with a number of Dave Smith points and felt Okay. Pause it. Pause it. I'm sorry. He's from the or Urban Warfare Institute. There was, there was a time when I had the Peace Revolution podcast, and, Podomatic would have rankings of the top podcast. 
I'm still the number one ranked podcast in higher education, but I was always kinda besmirked by who was always number two back when I was actively publishing. It was like, it's like the British War College. It was like the War College of the British Empire was the number two podcast. So I always liked that peace the Peace Revolution was just one step ahead of the warmongers. This guy apparently comes from the Urban Warfare Warmonger Academy Institute, and he's a highfalutin graduate because that's that's the type of propaganda he spews. Go ahead and and, lay it back in there. Thank you, Colby. 
By Douglas Murray. And the other is Dave Smith himself, host of Part of the Problem, who's a comedian, a libertarian commentator, and he felt, of course, that he remained epically intact And we'll be joined a little later by Eric Weinstein. So let me start. First of all, Dave Smith, are you surprised, Dave, about the reaction to your showdown with Douglas Murray? And do you believe you won? That's not a factual statement at all because it doesn't even include the base information. So it's almost like, you 
know, you just don't know the information you need to know to make that judgment. And, you know, let's forget comparing it to a domestic situation like Dave continues to do on Joe Rogan, Lex Freeman, others. Like, if somebody killed my kids and I and I know where he's at and I go to that apartment building, I kill everybody in it, that's murder. And that's what Israel is doing. And that's not true. Even you, peers, have commented about Israel striking something and saying, look. Look at the number of civilians. That's not acceptable. That's not how war works. It's not even how you would assess that situation because it completely rules out what the law of war says about proportionality, about assessing 
what is the target, who is that individual, what's his value, concrete value, and then which a lot of people live I'll pause it for a second. Did Israel I always listen to these things and and think, what would I say? And right there, I was thinking I could act confused. I could feign ignorance and say something like, can you describe the uniform of of Hamas? Because it's you guys are fighting a military battle. Right? Do do do they have a army, a navy, a air force? Do they have uniforms? Like, what do they got? What do they got to come out and play war with you guys? 
Is it anywhere on equal par? You know? If if you saw, you know, one side's got, like, ping pong balls and the other one has, like, explosive grenades, you might not think that's like sporting if you were watching it as a observer. They have an inflatable condoms with a helium. Sponsored by our tax dollars is what they have. You know? It is not a comparison of military forces, So I don't know how there's, like, a war going on when half the population is under eighteen. 
And, you know, all the arguments have to be brought in after World War two because no one can talk about the real colonization that we have shown on this show ad nauseam. Like, hope hopefully, you guys know this chapter and verse. The international banking family from both France and Britain collaborated through the Sykes Picot treaty to take away a bunch of people's land that was wasn't theirs. And then they gave it to a third party who received stolen goods 
and continues to this day to carry out ethnic cleansing and genocide. But, you know, if you wanna pretend, we can pretend, which is what this guy wants you to do. Go ahead and continue to let it play. Take. Like we just saw recently of calling everybody in the building and saying, look. The terrorist is using this building for a military purpose. You you must leave. You must get out of this area or all the other steps, these civilian harm mitigation measures. So that one's a really huge one, but there are other ones. Like, when Dave said that there are more children to have died in this war than any modern war. That's just of course, Douglass called that out. But there is a whole list of them from the blockade, from the occupation. Like, 
all of these things were just counterfactual and not a logic that leads to a conclusion, but he's really convincing. And and and that's what I have about it. Pause it. Alright. So this is one of my favorite parts because this is where the guy's like, Dave has no step by step method of thinking that leads to his conclusion. That may or may not be true, but I have a step by step method that leads to a conclusion, and it includes a whole bunch of things that guy would not wanna talk about in an interview. 
If you're gonna talk about, people breaching borders and doing that sort of stuff, like, what's our time frame? What's our time frame on this discussion? Does everything start on ten seven? Because I would argue, the the jurisdiction of that showcasing because I think there's credible, relevant triggering events that had gone on well before ten seven. So you can't judge nine eleven by what happened on that day just like you can't judge ten seven by what happened on that day because there were triggering events that happened leading up to that. And when you have triggering events, 
that's one thing. When you have military stand downs in both nine eleven and ten seven that are convenient to advancing a military agenda that the other side was not asking or prepared for, that, again, seems like bullying. If you take a country that was just beaten up in World War I and then you build them up, let them remilitarize, encourage them that you're gonna help them and be their ally, they start a fight and then you're like, I don't know what you're talking about. You could research Rudolf Hess and his his time in Spandau Prison 
because I think there was, another devious culprit in World War two who is not held, with his name in infamy. And it might be a guy like I don't know. Do I have to dig out a book by two? This Piers Morgan show is like the modern day equivalent of the Jerry Springer show, man. Yeah. I mean, Winston Churchill, if you think he's all his, rosy, like, there's there's some, you know, there are some dirty deeds done dirt expensive back in the day. He but he comes from a long family line of that. Randolph 
Churchill was quite a mover and shaker before Winnie got on the scene. So there's a heredity. There's a genealogy. There's a long, ominous continuity of history of people like him thinking that the English speaking language should dominate all peoples of color. If you're looking for the roots of institutionalized racism, it comes from the people that employed this guy to be their prime minister. So there is, some credible evidence on these topics that should be talked about in a public forum and not just, like, dismissed or poo pooed by people like Douglas Murray, 
who obviously is Oxford educated and, you know, so you can't say he's never been there. He's been to Oxford, and that's the, the central organizing culprit in the Cecil Rhodes legacy of globalism. So, yeah, don't get gaslit by people who've been there and done that and refuse to tell you that it exists. And I've been there. Never been there. I thought we were a little lost. Still wear as well. I I missed I gotta throw in some of those this week because I missed out last week. You guys You gotta say it like butthead, though. Bean. We've never beaned there, baby. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. That's pretty cool. Yeah. Alright. So now I want to cover. Mike Judge, filmmaking history and movies. Thanks. 
That'd be a good interview for Rogan. Has he interviewed Mike Judge? I don't think I ever saw him. I think I think so. Could've sworn. Maybe not. Well, that was Yeah. And then, Colby, queue up the last part of this episode with Weinstein, for after Paul and I talk here. Go ahead, Paul. Oh, I was just commenting that, yeah. Mike Judge has definitely been on Rogan, I think. Episode eighteen thirty five and fifteen seventy. Took the words right out of my mouth. Thank you, Scott. 
No. That's good. It's pretty good. Mike Judge is, like, one of the legends because he's, like, someone kinda like Robert Rodriguez. There's all these Austin talents that managed to break through into the Hollywood system, but they steadfastly refuse to go to Hollywood and actually live there and participate in all that stuff. And they somehow get this creative autonomy that allows them to create the projects they want, even ones that sort of bite the hand that feeds it. And, 
yeah, because their sheer talent and sheer will and perseverance, they just keep bringing all these awesome projects to fruition. You know, doing doing an an imitation of Beavis and Butt Head, I've gained insight into the the comedic vehicle of Beavis and Butt Head and why it is so ingenious because you're able to come from a position of just complete lunacy and idiocracy, if I dare use that word in context of Mike Judge. But it's like, therefore, you're able to provide a, like, a multilayer 
commentary. And so you're making fun of and satirizing, like, with what I'm doing, like, current events. But then, therefore, you're able to it's like a multilayer level of satire that is delivered from idiots, but it's just, like it's so complicated. It's just so genius that why Beavis and Butt Head because they're so dumb I don't know if I'm articulating this right. But, like, because they're so dumb, you have to be, like, super smart with comedy, and it just lands in a way that nothing else does. I think that's just the genius of Beavis and Butt Head is that it just, 
because it's so dumb, it's like you have to like, it has to come from, like, a genius spot to to resonate. So I don't know. Have you seen, Beavis and Butt Head do the universe? Yeah. Yeah. When they they go into the liberal arts college and they learn about white privilege? Chris, that's one of the greatest jokes of all time. One of the greatest bits of all time. Woah. We have white privilege, Beavis? Give me your food. Give me your food. I'm exercising my white privilege. Yeah. You're like, don't worry, ma'am. We have white privilege. It's so great. Things you can only do in a cartoon. 
Yeah. Yeah. Which I'm sure they'll make a movie at some point when people are too old to care or remember. They'll be like, oh, look. New Hollywood star in Beavis and Butthead. And then And they got Ryan Gosling. Ryan Gosling is, in the Beavis and Butt Head pair from Saturday Night Live, and that was probably one of their better sketches in the last few years. Nothing beats Jon Lovitz playing Prince Charles. That was such a a deep sixth 
clip that it took us a long time to be able to find it, but I bet we could use Clip Genie at some point tonight, and we could find the Saturday Night Live. That should be the only reference to Saturday Night Live in Grand Theft World's two thousand hours of history, but we should be able to find it with Clip Genie. G t w dot Clip Genie. No. We've we've referenced it before. To it. We've referenced it before because I remember I was dating this gal. She was awake to all Yeah. Yeah. That sounds hot. Yeah. It's very cold. But, she was, like, super cool, way into the anti vax stuff, but she was so into pop culture. 
And she wanted me to sit there and watch Saturday Night Live with her. She sent me clips Saturday Night Live. I'm like, I'm not watching this. Okay? I'm not watching it. It got to, like, a a point where I'm like, okay. You know what? I don't think this is gonna work out. Like, over, like, her pop culture obsession. Like, we sit there and watch reality TV. So I broke up with her, like, over Saturday Night Live. And then, like, that night on Grand Theft World, there was a Saturday Night Live clip. And I was like, oh god. I'm just kidding. I just thought that was really ironic and very following you. It was following you. But it wasn't this clip with Jon Lovitz. No. Definitely not. And, 
who else is in it? It doesn't matter. We'll see it at some point, and we'll be able to watch it. But, somebody plays Heinz because oh, Tony Danz is in it. Tony Danz is in it. That's right. Before Who's the Boss, I'm pretty sure that was back in the day when he was still doing Taxi. So we will find it with the clip, Genie, because the audience deserves the best of these types of selections. It's a very censored clip. They do not want you to watch this clip nor make the connection to the East India Company that there might be some validity behind the rumor that they spent 
a budget on s and l to to, like, to poison the well. That's exactly what the skid is. It's a poisoning of the well in case you ever came in contact with the narcoterrorism real history, underground history of America, which is another thing we should we we should cover at some point. The underground history of America, I'm not sure if we've shown that on this this broadcast system. But it's not gonna happen right now because we have to listen to Eric Weinstein, not Brett. Brett's with Heather. Eric's the other one who used to work with Peter Thiel. K? You gotta keep keep your Weinsteins separate, not related to Harvey, 
who might be exonerated through the work of Candace Owens. The strangest things happen in this news cycle. Anyway, this is still from the hypocrite Dave Smith on Douglas Murray on Joe Rogan debate. This is where Pierce kicks off the propaganda guy, and he tags in Eric Weinstein. And, they have a little interesting conversation, which also touches on esoteric and exo care exoteric knowledge, which I thought was fascinating in context of tonight's show. Under the intellectual dark web, doctor Eric Weinstein has just returned from his own research trip to Israel, and Dave is staying with us. So, Eric, great to see you. 
Just on that point, Eric, about platforming people, it seems to me Daryl Cooper is one of those characters out there at the moment who are promoting a something they know to be untrue. It's a bit like Alex Jones when he went after the Sandy Hook families and said it was all a a hoax. That they're promoting something that is deliberately untrue, but can be commercially very lucrative to them. Should those people who are making good money from perpetrating, 
in my estimation, obvious lies, should they be given platforms? That that was the question. Look. Everybody's doing something different online. I mean, somebody could say you're making good money from holding conflicts and shouting mass matches that, play into the inguinal desire for combat. You know? And in a certain sense, we're all making money doing something, hopefully. The problem is what is anyone's intention? 
And one of the problems of knowing Daryl Cooper is that the shitposting Daryl Cooper and the thoughtful Daryl Cooper are not always the same person easily reconciled. Many people talk about having sort of, yeah, this is the way I am online. This is the way I am, in a different place. And, you know, the odd thing about that is is that this mirrors a tradition in academics that is not much discussed, which is the esoteric, exoteric tradition in which, typically, a scholar 
behaves one way in the seminar room and another way when, his or her words, might influence policy. And so, even if you're in the heterodox movement, I'm I'm sure that Donald Trump is keeping his own counsel about what he intends to do with tariffs. He's doing an esoteric, exoteric routine. And so in part, the problem is is that we haven't reconciled ourselves to the idea that we speak one way in front of the world, another way behind closed doors, and that this is actually natural and normal. 
And as a result, you know, what we're doing is we're hauling out different people. We we see that Fauci and Collins are, you know, behaving one way behind the scenes a different way in congress. Daryl is the same way. I I no doubt have my own version of esoteric, exoteric, and we're just not comfortable with it. And so in a certain sense, we're all waking up on the same day to the reality that this is a not natural, normal part of scholarship, governance, civics, and personal life. Yeah. I mean, David, it's an interesting one because I like, I had Dan Balzerian on who was spewing repulsive anti Semitic crap to me for about half an hour before I finally ended it. But he has a big following, 
and they've been sort of going down slightly down that road, and I felt it was right to challenge him. And then there was a big debate afterwards about whether I should give given him the oxygen of being able to repeat this stuff on a big platform like uncensored. I would say it was slightly different to what I think because I think he he may genuinely believe what he was saying, and it may be that Daryl Cooper does too. I don't know him. In Alex Jones' case, I mean, Elon Musk canceled an interview with me because he saw a clip of me criticizing him for reversing his decision 
about whether allowing Alex Jones onto x, for example. His original position was he shouldn't be on x because Right. He was dancing on the grays of children deliberately and was deliberately lying to make hundreds of millions of dollars out of making the grief of those poor families immeasurably worse. And I felt it was wrong to give someone like that a platform again on x. Now it's an arguable point. But I I guess my question for you would be you're a libertarian. You clearly think Daryl Cooper should should be platformed, and I heard that strongly when when you were talking to Douglas. But is there anyone who shouldn't be platformed? I mean, where is that line for a libertarian? 
Well, I mean, I the libertarian position would be that, it's up to the people who own the platforms to decide who they want a platform and don't. And our only red line would be that the government should never be in the business of deciding any of this. Can I say, though, yes? I love Daryl Cooper. He's a a friend of mine, and I think his work is, phenomenal. I am really beginning to resent the fact that every show I go on, I get asked about Daryl Cooper, who somehow 
I'm I'm working as hard as I can to generate outrage and controversy. I've I've been on Rogan, like, fifteen times more than him, and still when I'm on, all anyone wants to talk about is Daryl Cooper. And by the like, look, I think this in and of itself just says something that's so fascinating. I mean, the guy had one almost throwaway line on the Tucker Carlson show, where, by the way, he caveated it in the beginning and the end. Said, I just say this to get a rise in on my buddy. I'm kinda ribbing him. Also, I'm being hyperbolic. And when I say Churchill's the villain, I don't mean that he committed the most atrocities or was the worst person. And it's like, my god. This sentence, the the reaction 
alone to it almost proves the point that which ultimately is what Daryl Cooper was making, which is that World War two has become essentially our religion. It is like, it down to the fact that if somebody were to say they're a devil worshiper, you wouldn't even bring them on your show, Pierce, because it's not that interesting. No one's even gonna wanna watch that. It's not No. But I think No. But hang on, Dave. But Dave. But if you're Yeah. But Dave, I would say If you're a Nazi No. I admire your defense. I admire your defense, but let's be clear. If someone is gonna say that Churchill's the chief villain of World War two, they deserve all that's coming their way because Churchill Again tried to defend Well, he didn't even really say that. From a Okay. From a genocidal 
maniac called Adolf Hitler. I don't think there's any debate. We have you when you do that, you're doing challenge, you are deliberately putting yourself in the fire. If okay. Fair enough. Fair enough. And maybe he could have been more precise in that comment. But to your to your, like, larger question, there's look. I mean, all of this stuff is somewhat debatable and somewhat arbitrary. I tend to air on the side of I think you were right to have Dan, on your show. And I think that it's like, look. This is if you think this stuff is bubbling up on the Internet and it's very concerning to you, okay. Well, like, look. We had a massive experiment between two thousand sixteen and then really culminating in two thousand twenty and then kinda died down after Elon Musk bought Twitter. We had a massive experiment in Internet censorship and deplatforming. 
Where did that get us? I mean, I think it's much healthier to air these grievances out and and give pushback where warranted. And I just I I think I I tend to to lean in that direction, but I will I will have the humility to admit. I don't know. I don't know. Maybe that's not the the best way to go. I I tend to be on the side of a free exchange of ideas. Eric. So the the concern that I have is there's no real solution if we 
try to solve this problem in terms of platforming, free speech, who's an expert, who is, and what's the credential. We're not even being genuine in my opinion about what it is that we're talking about. Let's give a simple example. I can essentially guarantee you that six million people on the nose, of Jewish faith were not killed during the Holocaust. I don't know what the number was, but the odds that it would have all of those round zeros and come in exactly where it does is negligible. Every time I hear somebody make that point, I worry. 
Right? Because the idea is it's like somebody picking at the asbestos who isn't looking like a a registered asbestos removal company. There's a way in which World War two settled in a particular way, which is, thank god we didn't appease infinitely. We had an absolute monster on our hands. There were extermination camps. Genocide matters is a word. We sat with Stalin despite our obvious differences, because sometimes you have to do. There's a certain sort of story about it. It's kind of directionally true if imperfect because it's too clean, it's too clear, etcetera, etcetera. What you see now is this mania for, hey. I found out all of these interesting facts. Did you know about the Rosenstrasse 
protest? What was that? Oh, where women married to half Jewish men got their men back by protesting, and Rosenstrasse is showing that the, Nazis could be made to relent. No. I didn't know that. You know? So now you're in a situation in which each kind of fact, whether it's the McCullough memo or the Rosenstrasse protest, is an opportunity to pick at the asbestos. And partially, it's not really a religion, and I talked to Dave about this this morning privately. There's a French philosopher. I think his name is Renan, whose great quote is a nation is a group group of people who have agreed to forget something in common. 
Unfortunately, we have a very simplistic notion at the moment that because we've been lied to by these elites, and boy is that clear over the last several years, we are now deciding that we are gonna pick at everything that might be a fiction, everything that might not be exactly true. And by the way, we have a new problem with x, which was formerly Twitter, which is that you cannot walk a foot, in it without, you know, being covered in anti Semitic leeches if your last name sounds like mine. And, Dave, I have understood the same thing has been happening to you. We are not finding the formula for a good life. It's not coming about by censorship. 
It's not coming about by false expertise, and it's not coming about by an anonymous free for all where everybody is, you know, sharing everything at an equal level, and we have no ability to discern what's going on. And it's not being settled through debate or combat, David. I I agree with you on it. And, Eric, what did you make of the debate with David and Go ahead. Only with I agree. It's not helping people toward the good life. But, last Friday in the autonomy lecture, there were several slides on how to get to the good life, and it had the expectations and qualities to build it, build your way there. I think it's something that everyone should 
be able to grasp and earn on their own, but you're not gonna get the good life following the rhetoric of racism and hatred and, xenophobia and a whole bunch of other nonsense that gets people fighting with each other when we have a lot more in common with any of these other groups than probably, we do with our rulers who are very premeditatively trying to put us all at war with each other so we don't focus on them and start pulling out the asbestos. Because that asbestos, I agree, it's a threat, and it probably needs to be removed. And I don't know that the experts are coming to remediate, 
this job site. So I think, you know, traditionally, people have learned to be self reliant and take care of these things themselves and not rely on authorities to come and save the day like superheroes. Superheroes don't really exist. It's a comic book cartoonish picture of reality that they want people to adopt. But, insights and thoughts from you guys. Let's see. Maybe I could be wrong. No. I think there's a good point raised in that once trust is broken, it it does cause a lot of people to pick at every little thing 
that they might have had a, inkling might be a lie. Right? And trying to find the hidden story behind stuff. And some stuff does legitimately have a hidden story to uncover as part of what we're doing here with Grand Theft World. Right? But then there's other areas like Flat Earth and these other things that may or may not be true, but don't have a lot to do with our survival and our ability to thrive. So they end up being these, like, time wasting rabbit holes that, for all we know, could come from 
the not disinformation governance board, but whichever that group that was started in twenty twelve with cast unseen, basically, when it say legalized propaganda, you noticed the the Internet was suddenly flooded with all these alternate theories, media on a whole bunch of different subjects that were taking you away from the Federal Reserve, away from Rhodes Scholars and all these other things. And they're they're interesting. They're titillating. They're intellectual in some regards, but 
they're also not the best use of time when they don't apply directly to our lives. Right? So rather than saying, you know, the the dangerous things we're gonna pick at are antisemitism, it's it's more like that is that a result of people learning the true history of Israel and Zionism and then not having enough information to realize not everyone's in on it. But then they apply that standard. Okay. Well, now I can't trust this entire group of people. 
And so yeah, I the the answer is not censorship. I think the answer is discernment. Right? People if you wanna have a good life, you have to learn how to discern between fact and fiction and then apply that to the information that you take in and especially where you apply your energy. So what do you think, Scott? Yeah, man. Well, I will admit I was I was finding that Jon Lovitz clip, which I got. I got in the chat there. I don't know if you saw that. But, 
you know, I was just really mostly really what caught my attention was Eric Weinstein, like, committed a horrible crime in the country of Germany and a lot of other countries. Like, he literally just denied that six million people died. Like, not exactly. Like, isn't that the law? Like, if you say it's not exactly six million people, then you will that's a crime. So Well, you can't say that in Germany. That's for sure. That's what I'm saying. Like, he just committed an an atrocious crime. It's a crime in Canada too. And Canada, dude. So it's, like, I hope I I mean, they should probably issue an arrest warrant for him for that. That was just, like, pretty egregious. 
How dare he? Yeah. Certainly don't look up the reference of that number prior to World War two. No. If it's ever been used before in certain propaganda campaigns as a means to move ahead a certain political agenda, there might be a lineage in history and evolution of that claim prior to World War two. But you'd never be allowed to talk about that type of research because asbestos is dangerous. And how does he really know? He's never been there. He's never even been there. You know where I have been? 
I was in the studio behind me teaching autonomy on Friday. And you know what I'm gonna do? I'm gonna let you guys see some of the secret sauce because it's too good to pass up. I gotta press this button now. Those are the slides. Alright. So I was at the point where I was trying to get people to picture their future self. You got these skills. You don't wanna choose what you want to do. You wanna choose what kind of person you wanna be. We always ask kids, you know, what do you wanna do when you grow up? And that's an unfair question that none of us really had a good or accurate answer to. So instead of trying to decide, like, what you wanna do, figure out what type of person you wanna be, and then how does that person support themselves? 
What do they have going on? Is it a nine to five job where they have a boss they hate, or can you figure out a better way with your creativity? And if you go a step forward, the idea is if you want the good life, you're not gonna find it accidentally. You have to define it for yourself. And so I had some ideas that I put out there. None of this is mandatory. This is just like what I've figured out for myself. You want health, happiness, competence, reliability, consistency, patience, persistence, appreciation, 
and that allows you to be a contributing value mem valuable member to your family and your friends, and you get to experience relationships and exchange of value in a form called love. And then you truly discover wealth and freedom from there. Because wealth isn't about numbers in your bank account. It's a state of mind that you can hold and maintain as you're doing the other things in that stack. So some of it is, like, foundational. Some of it is you have to build up to that part. So if you want those things, what what does it look like? How do you actually have to implement it? You have qualities 
on the road to the good life. On the way of getting there, how do you get there? It's the journey. You need to learn some talented skills that you teach yourself to make yourself indispensable. You need to keep your word to yourself. That's called integrity. You need to not just do the minimum necessary. You need to do what you indicated and set expectations accordingly with the outcome and do a little shine and polish. Do a little something thoughtful beyond there. Bringing an attitude of gratitude is something you can immediately be wealthy in every day along with your patience and persistence. 
But the culture of excellence, how you treat yourself is how you're gonna treat other people. If you're always speaking negatively to yourself with your learned helplessness going on all the time and all your fears ringing around, maybe a culture of excellence could be like the one eighty you're searching for because you also can afford to bring your best to every moment and interaction. Being prioritized, knowing where your values are and where you will and will not compromise is a very important aspect of being in a state of the good life. How about learning to be thoughtful, kind, and considerate? 
Do you have any limit on the nature of compliments and other legitimately bounded in reality type of expressions that you can give that type of positive energy to other people and help them have a better day? They just got frustrated. Maybe you could say something that makes them laugh about it, get over it, and have a better day where they're treating other people with excellence. You know, fear spreads through causality. You can also do it, you know, intentionally on the on the good side to to spread joy and insightfulness and invigoration 
and all these other types of creative ideas. Learning how to be visionary. Did we talk about that tonight? Wasn't that the whole Robert Rodriguez thing? It's like you're learning to see the thing and then map it back to reality. Alright. Let's continue. Creative. The ideas of creativity and, John Garcia and creative transformation were also discussed. Learning how to be focused. Focus on one course until successful is focus. It's learning how to say no to distractions. And along the way, learning how to do these things, now you can build strong family and friends and community 
because that is on the road to the good life. It doesn't happen straight away. Most of the time, who you're hanging out with is who you're a function of. And if you're hanging out with some people that are wasting time and they're in the beavis and butthead for all the wrong reasons, you know, not studying the script structure and what makes comedy work, but they're like, yeah. Yeah. Let's let's be losers. You know? You need to probably leave those people with their non schedules and non events behind and go put some things on your calendar. So when they say, hey. Let's go do something dumb. I'm sorry. I'm already booked. I already have, like, higher priority activities 
occupying my one hundred and sixty eight hours this week. This is how you get there. You don't get there by drumming up race wars and grandstanding on the on the bodies of dead children who just got stabbed and all these other things that we've seen in this show just tonight. You get it by intentionally saying, I will not tolerate this anymore, and I'm gonna do this thing and make it work because that's how this guy operates, and it's how a lot of other people operate who didn't even think to, like, put a book out or do a Joe Rogan interview. So for every one of these, there are millions of these types of people out there. You just don't know their story yet. You don't know their name yet, but your name can be one of them as well when you decide not to tolerate the status quo and to upgrade your life. So without any more being said, 
I'll give you one more slide. Let's do one more slide because it's fun. Defining the good life. Right? We had the ingredients, and then we had, like, the the the path to get there. The result. What what is it like, what is the result of you getting these ideas and getting on the road to the good life and building your life intentionally? What's the result? Self reliance, self confidence, self worth, self respect, healthy attitude, fortified diet, nutrified friend network, generous nature because you're not in scarcity. You know how to get more than you need, so you always have something to share. And you can be a savvy entrepreneur 
or employee with the skills to pay the bills. That's the good life. Because otherwise, you're gonna be wanting, you're gonna be in a victim mentality, you're gonna be stagnant, you're gonna be in learned helplessness, you're gonna be waiting for someone to invite you to play in the big game, and you're not gonna get an invitation from they, them, those who created this game. They don't want you to change the game. They want you to be subject to their game. So I don't think that our lives are games. I don't think our world is a toy to be played with. And I think that we can all do better, but it's not my 
right or intention to take away anyone's freedom, so everyone has to do it voluntarily. In order to do it voluntarily, the rescue effort has to go on, and people eventually decide, yes, please. I'd like to go on the lifeboat and not not struggle here in the drink because I don't see anyone else coming out here. Right? And we help the people who swim toward us. So we don't follow you around and be like, hey. Can we save you? Can we help you get these skills? Can we help you pay the bills? We're just letting people know this is a common theme of people saying, if I only had the money, if I only had the access, if I only had the methods, I could do these things. Those things are now available in the marketplace because savvy entrepreneurs have gotten together and brought solutions to the market. 
So get autonomy dot info if any of that resonates with you and you wanna jump up out of your status quo. Go ahead, Paul. Oh, I thought you were emotional. That was a motion of agreement. I thought I saw you like that. I was like, oh, he's got something. Alright. So I just happen to have those slides accessible. I had to go into the other production chat from Friday night. But this whole talking about the things that like, you can't go to Amazon and buy confidence. It's not on the shelf. They don't ship it next day. It's something that shows up when you show up for yourself and have integrity to the things that you said you were gonna get done this week. 
So it starts with getting things done, and then it continues with making friends and learning how to overcome bigger challenges and than you've known how to do prior to now. And if you could do it on your own, you'd have done it already. That's it. Now let's watch some funny stuff. Can we watch more fallout from the Joe Rogan, Douglas Murray incident? It's like this the podcast heard around the world. Well, Rogan savagely mocked Douglas Murray. And, we played a little bit of that clip last week, but then 
Kurt and Jimmy made fun of it even more. And so we're gonna share that, but then doctor Peterson calls for some guardrails on the Joe Rogan podcast. Talk like this. So it's half Kermit the frog and, like, half, strange brew, you know, like, those those crazy Canadian guys. And so, anyway, Jordan Peterson is gonna try to say, freedom of speech is good unless there's asbestos. And then he's gonna agree with the rest of the intellectual dark web because the word has gone out 
not to let the sewer monsters out. Now Douglas Murray might have been a little heavy handed in his totalitarianism, and people like Jordan Peterson and Eric Weinstein, they're gonna say it, like, in a nicer way, but still they're saying, don't pick at the asbestos. Don't let the swamp monsters out. Definitely don't talk about Rothschilds and early colonization of Palestine, a topic so incendiary they wouldn't even put it on the cover of the book, but it is on the title page, and it is published by Hebrew University. So these are facts that must go on the field, and it's not pulling asbestos 
to show that the prime movers in one of today's secret nuclear powers that might be a threat to world domination. Right? Because, Epstein was blackmailing people on behalf of who? Robert Maxwell was selling promised software with backdoors into our judicial system on behalf of who? So these questions do need to be answered, and I'm not just asking questions because I needed something to do. Some people blew up my coworkers one day, and then I discovered a thread of history that definitely needs to be fucking pulled on, bro. So I'll leave it there. Let's go to Jimmy Dore and have a few laughs. 
Hogan actually ripped, Charles Murray's bullshit. This the the almost the exact same way we were ripping it, which makes me feel good. So remember what remember he, he pretended to be shocked. When I was a kid, I used to watch the Marx Brothers, and there was a a woman named, Margaret Dumont, and she would go, I never. Yeah. Right. And that's the equivalent of what he does right here. Have you been to the crossing point? When were you last there at all? You've never been. Talking about an issue You've never you've never been. 
No, sir. I've never been. I'm gonna sell T shirts with the picture of mister Bean and his you've never been. That's that's my big idea. That's great merch. You've never been? You've never been. And so that's him You've never been. Where's my fainting couch? Where's my clutching pearls in my fainting couch? Dude. So he's acting there. That's that's called acting. 
And that's it's and that's why everybody picked up on it because it's so fake. You've never been. Yeah. That's what that English degree is really paying dividends. Yeah. And then he goes on to say, in a region, you haven't even had the courtesy to visit whilst developing all of these views about it. Yes. So the so miss so this guy has has handlers. He has IDF handlers. That's how he got to see 
he got to see Israel and Palestine because he was the IDF took him because I don't know if you know, about two hundred and three journalists had the courtesy to visit the checkpoints, and the IDF killed them, which was quite rude. You have the courtesy to dodge snipers. So, Charles Murray has handlers, and, his husband's going to be jealous when he realizes 
just how hard Douglas Murray's handlers have fucked him. I was gonna say his his handlers, they do not deserve a raise for this interview. Didn't handle it too good. He is the bait goat on a chain in Jurassic Park. You've never been. So Joe Rogan let's get to it. Joe Rogan made fun of him the same way that everybody is. Let's watch. Have you been there? Have you been there? That's a good point. Have you even you haven't been? By the way, how is he in all these war? Can I just go to wars? By the way, how are you elect are you allowed to just go to wars? 
Is that happen? You should at least Can you just go to fantasy of going. Can I just go to wars, or do I have to come back and say what people want me to say about the wars? Can I go to the wars and have my own opinions, or do I have to have the opinions? Not a Well, it's amazing that every war that Douglas Murray's ever been to, it's exactly what, he just said, that he came back with the establishment. He went to Ukraine. He was pro pro Ukraine. Yeah. He went to, Israel, Gaza, pro Israel. I I know he's written about Iraq. He was pro Iraq war. I don't think he went there. Maybe he did. He's pro Iraq war. He's written about Afghanistan, pro Afghanistan war. 
And I'm gonna guarantee you he was pro Syria war too and Libya. So I he's one of those guys. He's a neocon. He's one of those guy. He has a metawarr he isn't liked. If he took a tour of North Korea and that Kim Jong un gave him and came back and told you to have the courtesy to visit North Korea, this is, like, absurd. Yeah. The regime took you where they wanted you to go, and you think that that's like, I'm supposed to think that's something. The the the IDF literally dog walked him, showed him exactly what they wanted to show him. He gets an award 
from the from the Zionists for it in Israel. Yeah. And and he's been wrong about everything. There is a He checked his balls, had him raise his hindquarters up That's right. With his teeth. He's wrong about the Iraq war, wrong about there's a thing he's wrong about. Ukraine won't tell you the truth about it. He's one of those guys. He He calls it a conspiracy if you tell the truth about how the Ukraine war came to be, which was by the United States overthrowing their democratically elected government in twenty fourteen. You know what he is? He's, the equivalent of, the Gail King, Katy Perry astronaut crew. Yes. 
He is. Press the way they were crew. Like, he's not press. So let's listen to more of this. Let's let's let's start it again. Have you been there? Have you never been one. Have you even you haven't been? By the way, how is he in all these war? Can I just go to wars? By the way, how are you elect are you allowed to just go to wars? Is that You should at least Can you just go to to see of going. Can I just go to wars, or do I have to come back and say what people want me to say about the wars? Can I go to the wars and have my own opinions, or do I have to have the opinions? Not if you wanna go back. That's right. That's right. It's very interesting, this war tourism. How do I get on this war tourism? Yeah. I'd like to go to the Ukraine. 
I wanna go go. I wanna go. I wanna go to all this war tourism. Do you have any awards that they can melt down and make bullets out of? Joe, think about this. Do I seem like a guy that has a lot of awards? Didn't you get one of those YouTube plaques when you hit a hundred thousand I don't even know where they send it. I don't know where I don't know where they're sending those YouTube plaques. I've got a few of those. But I like this idea idea of war tourism. I like the idea of going to a war and then coming back, having having a very black and white view. Yes. I've been there. I get it, and I know and and and interesting. Okay. I like that. Yeah. I like that. I love that. You feel better than the other people because Well, of course, there's a lot of peep people it it gets very murky. Most people I know that have been to war have a very murky, complex view of things. Yes. But it is good to go to a war and then come back and be as sure as you were 
before The meltdown continues in the in the world of the Zionists. So they cannot lose control of the, of the narrative. Right? Because if they lose control of the narrative over the Israel Gaza, they will never be able to deploy an another army in the Western world ever. And that's coming from the head of Palantir, which I'm gonna show you in a second. But he here is Jordan Peterson. He's what back to try to rescue the Israeli narrative and shame Joe Rogan 
for so the same people who screamed about, you remember when people like Don Lemon and Andrew Cuomo would say we gotta have guardrails on podcasts. Now he's here to tell you the same thing because people are telling you the truth about Israel. And he gets paid by the daily wire. He gets which, Kurt, correct me if I'm wrong, that how much money did he get? What I heard was sixty million. That you heard he got sixty million. Yeah. And, that's why he's dressed like a tailor because he's going to try to sew up the narrative. 
Yeah. It's been, tearing. Anyone dressed like a movie theater usher in his day gold blazer is a pretender. But, anyway so listen to what he said to Joe Rogan. He says all the things that they complained about establishment meet corporate media is saying about Joe Rogan during COVID, they he's now going to do. But he does it in a very lot of words, lot uses a lot of words. Watch this. And and so the he so Douglas Murray was the bad cop, and now Jordan Peterson is the good the night's cop. He's gonna try and butter Joe up, but try to get him to put guardrails. Watch. You also set that conversation up, but it it it poked up and made itself manifest in that conversation. 
And the issue is, how do you identify the psychopathic pretenders? And it's even worse now. How how do I how do I identify the psychopathic pretenders in this argument? The people who justify slaughtering children for land. To me, those are the psychopaths. Anybody who justifies a genocide in Gaza has a bit of psychopathology in them. Would would you agree, Kurt? I mean, it seems a little bit, the pot calling the kettle black. 
I think he has guardrails on his lapels for this interview. So let here we go. You also set that conversation up, but it it poked up and made itself manifest in that conversation. And the issue is, how do you identify the psychopathic pretenders? And it's even worse now, and and then make a barrier. Right? Now the right was calling for the left to do that for decades. Right. And they didn't, and they couldn't. And the left is not good at drawing barriers, partly temperamentally. The right is somewhat better, but there's no shortage of monstrosity there. 
And and so then the question is, how do you how do you draw the line? And that's kinda what I was because I've been watching these right wing they're not right wing. These psychopathic types manipulate the edge of the conservative movement for their own gain. Right. And a lot of that's cloaked in anti Semitic guys. There's plenty of Oh, so so anybody who disagrees with the Israel narrative is a psychopath cloaking in an anti Semitic garb. 
I mean, come on. What's the what's my gain? What right. What is my gain? Guitar money. Right. I don't right. I don't get we don't nobody gets paid from guitar. Dave Smith doesn't get money. I don't get money. Joe Rogan doesn't get money for for going against Israel, which is the worst case. Problems. It makes things awkward. That's what it does for me. Makes things awkward. It makes just like me telling the truth about COVID. Didn't give me money. Got me the opposite. Telling the truth about Russiagate. The people who got the money from Russiagate are the people who wrote books pushing Russiagate, and they were invited on every TV show everywhere. 
That's where the money is. The money is in the establishment narrative. Right now, the money is I mean, according to Kurt, he got sixty million dollars from the Daily Wire, which that's gotta be Israeli money. Right? Where does that money come from, Kurt? I don't know. Jeremy Boring's poor management? Yeah. Okay. It's you know, it sounds like the gig comics go to in Israel where they overpay you and the crowd stinks. Okay? But they pay you, like, way more than it's worth for the show that you just did out there, and then they're like, hey. Please say good nice things about Israel. So it's just a form of, like, you know, propaganda work. 
I think when he talks about, like, how something poked its head out and manifest, I swear I think there's all his wild color suits is his cognitive dissonance at having to hold these two things Yes. In his head, and it comes out in his suits. I swear to god, I think that's what that is. How many more trombones does he have to add to dressing like a music man for you to figure out this is a performance? Let's watch. Let's watch. Antisemitism on the left too, by the way. So it's not unique to the right Well, particularly now. Yes. Yes. Yes. Particularly now. Right. And so, you know, you've let your curiosity 
guide you. Your curiosity and your desire for knowledge, this quest, you've you've let that guide you as a podcaster. And I'm by the way, I'm trying to work through exactly the same sort of thing. How do you know, given your rap radical increase in stature over the last ten years, how do you know when your curiosity and even your skepticism about the fact that things aren't the way that people say they are? Because that's certainly being demonstrated in the last ten years. How do you 
how should anyone decide what guardrails to put up? Like, what do you So, Joe, you're letting people come on and tell the truth about Israel. We've gotta stop. They're psychopaths. They're antisemites, and they're on the right even. So what? You gotta put guardrails up. You gotta stop this, Joe. You know, I would like to debate and not debate anyone. I would like them to convince me to not see the things I already just saw. Yeah. You know? Yes. Well, like 
This is this is real. Like, he's really doing he's like, how do you you gotta get some guardrails there. You gotta get some guardrails, which is exactly what Don Lemon used to say on CNN. It's exactly what Don Lemon told, of of Elon Musk. Do you dress like Captain Kangaroo to do it? Look for. Do you do you do you have a a conceptual system worked out for that? Like, 
what What what what what what in the fuck are you talking about? Yeah. Do I have a concept? How do I do? Joe Joe, you you've gotta have this is the old you gotta have standards. You gotta have guardrails. You got a sensor. You can't let anybody you can't just have free flowing conversations on your show. Joe. And he he loved it up until someone started telling the truth about what's happening in Israel, Gaza. And someone started telling the truth about Israel and how every war we've ever fought in the Middle East is at the behest of Israel. 
Iraq was because of Israel. Libya, Israel, Syria, all the whole thing. Now they want us to go into Iran, and they really gotta get us into Iran. And that's why they're doing this this is a full court press that's happening. There's a full court press by the Zionist. We gotta get into Iran. We gotta do it. We got it because they have the greater Israel project. Yeah. The that little bizarre neocon alliance, their two big projects were Ukraine and then the Israel thing. I I think that's what the mutual cooperation's about. And now that the pyramid scheme is collapsing, if you recall, what what do you have to do when it's collapsing? You have to go to war to get out of it. You know? 
Hey. We lost two trillion dollars. We gotta go to war. Hey. The the Great Depression, we gotta FDR's thing didn't work. We gotta go to war. It's always the solution when the bottom drops out of the pyramid scheme. So here's what Glenn Greenwald says. He says so many longtime champions of independent media now suddenly mimicking the most sanctimonious corporate media mavens. Rogan doesn't have sufficient editorial guardrails as soon as he hosts Israel critics. 
This show needs more vetting. Too much unfettered discussion. Why don't you invite them to be guardrails and then Jordan and Douglas Murray could be guardrails? They did. He brought on Douglas Murray. Guardrails, but you're not. You're going, you gotta stop this. You gotta stop it. Douglas Murray was right there. He's head on Gadsad. He's head on Douglas Murray. He's head on, Elon Musk. He's head on the biggest Israel cock of all, Donald Trump. That's just the Doctor Rich Voss. That's just yeah. Doctor Rich Voss. 
That's just that's just off the top of my head that he's had on in the last few months. Top but he brought on Dave Smith and oh my god. Cycle pack. If that is his real name or that's his real name. So this guy said Yeah. I continue to say that that audience is not ready for crossing the stream with this content, but we'll see see what the twenty twenty five has to bring this year. 
A lot of big things happening. Yeah. We'll see if they do another week of damage control. Like, it's like, are they I mean, I don't know. How long is this gonna go on? Another are they gonna do another week of bringing on people to just, like, talk trash about the Douglas Murray Dave Smith event? Like, what is going on, dude? I I feel like, Jamie would be hard pressed to be keeping up with the fact checking, and, Douglas Murray might have a conniption watching such things. So not I think we just need to get Richard on on Joe Rogan and just settle the score once and for all. 
Like, that's it. It's a can of worms, dude. It's it's the only way to be sure. It's the only way to be sure. It's the only way to be sure that, they have the power to Kanye me or what? Is that the only way to be sure? Go talk about the Rothschilds on Joe Rogan. Go ahead. Bring a hundred and fifty references, so it's beyond reasonable doubt, then see what happens. Just start calling yourself a comedian, and then eventually you'll get in that sphere, get on the show, be like, I'm not a comedian, I'm a forensic historian. 
And then you can be like, I've been everywhere. I've been there I've been with my books and my imagination, and here's the, the narrative that I've uncovered. I've been there, and I've done that, and I've collected the books. But, nobody reads anymore. Should I try and get Douglas Murray on the show here? I can try. I can legit try. We could promote his book. Is that Is that like we can promote your book? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah? I feel like her voye could probably get Douglas Murray on his show. I'd rather support him. I'll do some research on the Douglas Murray book for him and write the outline for the questions. Because I was just thinking, like, that sounds funny. 
Right? But then I would actually have to read his book and write questions for it and take my time up and then edit it. I mean, that's all you know, there are other things I'd rather do. Totally. I I would rather, take a nine inch sander, hold it over my head for eight hours, and sand popcorn ceiling than interview Douglas Murray on his current book. But, you know, I might end up doing both. We'll see. What if you gave Chat GPT Douglas Murray's book and and you're like, summarize this and give me all the things, and he goes, no. I'm good. 
I'm sorry. It's copyright. I can't comment on it. That's what it'll tell me. I'll be like, well played, chat GPT. Well played. But then we could ask Grock, and it would probably could could it write in a comedic sense? Because it has, like, that jovial personality they gave it now. Yeah. Yeah. You can dial the sarcasm up extra. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Dial up the sarcasm for sure. Because we've never even been there. Yeah. I like that you've never been with a picture of mister Bean. Not for nothing, but I think there's some ad execs over at Grey Poupon saying we should hire Douglas Murray. 
Remember those commercials? They do roll up into rolls of rice and put the window down because he's out of mustard, of course. Wayne's World's there's your there's your Mike Myers reference again. Wayne's World, they just did that up and down. It's great. But, of course. But, of course, who does number two work for? Some of the most classic lines, man. But, he also wrote about the Pentaverate. That is yeah. In both 
So I Married Max Murderer and then an actual Pentaverate silly Netflix show. Pentaverate. Yes. You must learn about it, Sonny. I can't do it. They put all the additives in your Kentucky fried chicken and make you crave it day and night. Tapestries. This is the castle. You must have tapestries. Oh, sorry. That's, like, some Last Crusade type of nonsense right there. We must be getting to the wee hours when we break out last crusade quotes. Let it go, 
Indiana. It's all search for the holy grail, which is really a merging of the exoteric and esoteric knowledge of self right of passage that most people didn't get. But you can get it for yourself at some place down the road probably. You know, someday maybe. That's a good plan. I always someday maybe stuff. That's how I'm successful. Alright. So we do have some interesting content to put into this time capsule considering the other exhibits of evidence already in last week's show and this week's show. We have the continuity 
of the underground history of Israel Palestine conflict for your edification, and it should elucidate a much talked about topic in a very clear, cogent, concise, fifth grade language type of way. So not only, I'm not worried about your conscious awareness. I'm sure you can get it. But it's your ability to give it handles and pass it on to others and let them know, likewise, international banking family colonized an area that did not belong to them, and then they funded a tiny mustache man to drive the colonization even further. And they had agreements the whole time, the Zionist did with the Nazis, as did m I six and the British government. So there's a whole lot more that the Americans have not been read in on. And We The People, we deserve 
the highest quality of truth that is available at today's, present evidence rates. That's how I have to say that. But before we can get to the continue continuation of the Israel Palestine saga, first, we're gonna have Colby do thank yous, and then I'll have you guys, plug your current projects. Alright. Thank you, Cole. Yeah. Let's see here. We had, over on Rumble, we had, a gift subscription 
from uncle Kenny. And then on Rockfin, we had, looks like we had twenty dollars from Michael T. And then we had twenty dollars from Lady, Diebleu, if I'm saying that correctly. Grand Theft Grand Theft World Day, Worthy. Thank you. And then we had a hundred dollars from Camilla Soule in memory of Rachel Kory and Kiki Camarena. Thank you very much for the support, the contributions. It means a lot. We also have a Grand Theft World Town Hall coming up 
soon. I'm not sure if it's this Tuesday or not. I have to check the schedule. Should've done that. Should've done it, but this show's not meant to be perfect. It's just meant to be excellent, and we leave the perfection to people who have that type of extra time in their in their schedule because that, perfection time, it's never made it onto my calendar. Thank you guys for the support. Let's go to Scott because you got lots of activities. Do you have any video footage coming out from the stuff you did last week down in Austin with all the InfoWars people? Yeah. So if you go to my well, let's see. Rumble channel, I posted the full I was on the American Journal, 
with Rob Du, guest hosting for Harrison Smith. It's on the band if you go to the Band. Io video and go to the Harrison Smith page, it's it's, scroll down a little bit. It's called, like, use this weapon to fight the new world order or something like that, but it's on my Rumble. I put part of it on my YouTube, the part where we're just talking about Clip Genie, the new Alex Jones Clip Genie. And there's some shout outs to, Grand Theft World on there too, so definitely go check that out. But, yeah, everybody everybody there seems to be impressed with it except Alex just can't I can't I can't quite break through to him. So my my goal this week is to brute force call in to the Alex Jones show and try and get on the air on the phone when the call ins and just be like, Alex, I need to tell your audience about this. So we'll see. That's my goal this week. But, anyway 
yeah, you guys. Thank you so much. You know, it's really cool watching the chat. So many people are commenting about how they're digging and vibing with the new format of the show. You know, as you guys can tell, it's like a deliberate effort to put, like, us doing our thing, primarily Richard doing his thing a lot more. And it's just, like, I think people are noticing that that's super awesome to be a part of. Like, it's so cool to watch and the progression and where we're at with the show. And, you know, massive tips tonight, and maybe it's a reflection of that. I just but I think 
I'm really grateful and excited to be a part of this project right now. Like, more just unbelievable. And now we got consistent guests coming on. It's just like we're hitting our stride, and I'm just, like, super pumped right now. So thank you all for tuning in. And please use Clip Genie to to share the show. You know? Take clips of the show. Find your favorite and you know? Yep. If you're incredulous and you find out something, share the clip with what you found out. If you think some people need to hear a certain part, then you just tune in on that, and you don't have to wait for us to put out the clip. Yeah. Because we put out clips every week, but it might not be the thing you need to show the person at work at lunchtime that thought the, you know, the thing and, you know, it's a it's a conversation starter, not a conversation ender. It's how you meet new interesting people because you're a new interesting person who's the learner 
instead of just being the person who's riding along and going wherever the bus is going. You're learning how to write your own ticket in life. You're learning how to be master and commander of your own ship. You're learning how to take some self responsibility and adult up to the situation that you've been born into. So I'm just saying don't don't hate the game. Learn to play it, and learn to play, against these people who are trying to rig it. Like, there's some legitimate, great things here. If we can tune down the noise of these culprits who are trying to take away our freedom while we're trying to live our one short lifetime. Right? This isn't a video game. This isn't Grand Theft Auto. This isn't a video game. I think there's a quote like that around here. It's probably plays at the end of the show. Right? Yeah. 
Like, we we don't get, like, ten lives. Like, you know, like, you gotta play hard. You gotta get up every day and play hard. You gotta bring everything that you got, optimism and enthusiasm and invigoration, and you gotta leave nothing. Like, you leave it all on the court. You're taking nothing back to the locker room Yep. Every day. And you can do that for yourself, and you do deserve that for yourself. And I can appreciate that you've been in an environment for fifteen thousand hours to convince you that you can't do anything like that for yourself, but I watch people do it for themselves all the time, and I just wish it was, you know, 
larger than just hundreds of people. Exactly. And that's my call to action this week is really do your part to share the show. I mean, we need your guys' help to get the word out about the show. If you're trying to grow your social media account, there's no better way than to grab clips of this show, put it on your social media, and just put it out there, man. And it's, like, I'm just super stoked. All my other stuff is at rebunks dot news. So thank you guys so much. Well played. What do you got, Paulie? Well, as always, you can check out my stuff at, youtube dot com at ChetSystem, c h e t s y s t e m. I wanted to say thanks so much for playing the Robert Rodriguez clip. That's like he's one of my big mentors 
other than you, Rich. And, yeah, his whole perspective, I think we could all use a little bit more of because he sees the creative spirit in every individual. He thinks every individual is capable. They just have to unlearn some of the destructive habits that we've been taught and had imposed on us and then relearn how to be more self reliant, how to teach yourself anything, and realize that you have the power to create anything that your mind can come up with. You just gotta invest the time and effort into learning how to do something. It's it's an amazing system, but it takes having a little faith in yourself and finding a little faith in other people because that's who you're gonna learn from and who you're gonna teach. So thanks again, and, yeah, it's nice to be here. Appreciate it. Yeah. Robert Rodriguez 
interview is the only Joe Rogan interview I will ever send to my entire mailing list, and thirty thousand people are about to get it this week. And it's just gonna say, watch this. Watch this. Glean from what somebody else can do, and then, oh, I'm gonna try something for myself. And that little spark of inspiration where you're like, I could do something new. I could learn something new. I could involve myself in new activities that lead to a place I actually wanna go instead of riding this bus that keeps going someplace toward tyranny and despotism and severance pay. That's the bus a lot of people are on. Waiting for the day that someone else made a decision about your future is not a fun thing to do, especially if you don't have the capability to, like, outswim the sharks. 
So, for those who need it, they know. And for those who don't need it or don't think you need it, we're gonna go to the rest of the show, which is the underground history of the Israel Palestine conflict. This is a presentation I prepared for Ed Griffin because he called and said, I'd like you to present Red Pill, and can you make it? I said, no. But I could do something virtual, and we talked about it. And I had a title, and he came up with the war without end. So as the title slide is gonna call this presentation, war without end, the underground history, the Israel Palestine conflict. I just make it, like 
like, the form and function of what it is. It's the underground history of the Israel Palestine conflict. Underground, it's what exists in the evidence that they do not want you to know. And this is not just like picking at a random thing and saying this is asbestos. This is someone who knows what asbestos looks like and saying, hey. This is dangerous right here, and we shouldn't have this around our families. So maybe we should remediate this and call this a level three. We're gonna ET up and put the zip tie the zip walls up and the plastic and the negative pressure, and we're gonna get through this, 
and have a clean space afterwards. We can't do that if everyone's like, asbestos doesn't exist. We could have that whole conversation about asbestos, by the way. There might have been a very safe, innovative product in the industry that was doing a a lot of good, and then somebody went to the other side and said, you know what? We can make it illegal. I could lobby against it, make it illegal, and then own the hazmat companies that have to remediate it at exorbitantly high costs. And if you watch this trend go through history, I'll bet fiberglass insulation is the next asbestos. And something that everyone used and handled and they were safe and they were fine will then, in a couple decades, be the persona non grata of business of building materials. 
They'll update the building codes and say any any place that has fiberglass now has to be remediated. In other words, it's a rigged game, and they're gonna continue to rig it until you start to see what's going on and withdraw your consent and participation and energy in that system. But you can't do that without a really good reason. So here's the second half of the really good reason why you might wanna be neutral at the very least until you learn more about the Israel Palestine conflict. Without further ado, thank you all for tuning in and not dropping out. Here is the underground history of Israel Palestine part two. This is the second half to play us out. Thank you. We'll see you next week. Enjoy the rest of tonight's feature because it does have a point if you pay attention. 
Alright. I'm an optimist too, and I'm gonna do an ad lib real quick. Nobody get worried. I got this. Alright. So I didn't have this in the slide set, but it would be appropriate to tell you, why the Cecil Rhodes round table worked with the Zionist and not the Arabs. And this is coming from the Anglo American establishment by professor Carol Quigley who also wrote oh, other shoulder. Tragedy and Hope, A History of the World in Our Time. This comes from page one hundred and seventy. Let's go ahead and zoom in real quick. 
The general attitude of the Milner Group. So these are the acolytes, the followers of Cecil Rhodes' last will and testament to bring America back into the empire to take over the world. That's what the Milner Group means. The general attitude of the Milner Group was neither pro Arab nor pro Zionist, although tending, if at all, toward the latter rather than a former. Meaning, that they liked the latter rather than the former, the pro Zionist over the Arabs. The group were never antisemitic, and not a shred of evidence in this direction has ever been found. In fact, they were very sympathetic to the Jews and to the legitimate 
aspirate aspirations to overcome their fate. But this feeling, it must be confessed, was rather general and remote, and they did not, in their personal lives, have much real contact with the Jews or any real appreciation for of the finer qualities of those people. Their feeling against antisemitism was on the whole remote and academic. On the other hand, as with most upper class English, their feeling for the Arabs was somewhat more personal. Many members of the group had been in Arab countries, found their personal relationships with the Arabs enjoyable, and were attracted to them. However, 
this attraction of the Arabs never inclined the Milner group toward the pro Arab romanticism that was to be found in people like w s blunt or t e Lawrence, Lawrence of Arabia. The reluctance of the Milner group to push the Zionist cause in Palestine was based on more academic considerations chiefly to a number. One, the feeling that it would not be fair to allow the bustling minority of Zionist to come into Palestine and drive the Arabs either out or into inferior economic and social positions. 
And two, the feeling that this would, have been in effect of alienating the Arabs from Western, especially British culture, and that this would be especially likely to occur if the Jews obtain control of Mediterranean coast from Egypt to Syria, which they later did. Britain failed to support Zionism and Palestine because of antisemitism. So there were charges of that. And then on this next page, it continues, and you can see how they resolved 
their feelings and eventually back the Zionist at the sacrifice of the agreements that, people like Lawrence of Arabia, t Lawrence, had made, with the people who helped them fight for their freedom. Alright. So that's Anglo American establishment. We wanna get back to these slides because we were in the middle of learning about the Balfour Declaration, and we now arrive at nineteen twenty. Now this is very important, and this is little known information. Because a lot of people have a lot of things to say about Churchill. 
And sometimes when people bring up Churchill, you have to bring up other Churchill because he's got a lot of quotes over the years. And you can see you can see he has, some negative things to say about the Arabs. We do have a quote in here that represents that. This is some things that are colorful that he had to say in his article, Zionism versus Bolshevism, a struggle for the soul of the Jewish people by the right honorable Winston s Churchill, 
February eighth nineteen twenty, page five of the newspaper. He had various sections. So I'm gonna read little quote from each section, so you have an idea of the representative entirety without having to read it all. Good and bad Jews. And it may well be that this same astounding race may, at the same present time, be in the actual process of producing another system of morals 
and philosophy as malevolent as Christianity was benevolent, which, if not arrested, would shatter irretrievably all that Christianity has rendered possible. That's a pretty strong statement. It would almost seem as if the gospel of Christ and the gospel of antichrist were destined to originate among the same people, and that this mythic and mysterious race had been chosen for the supreme manifestations 
both of the divine and diabolical, Winston Churchill. International Jews, in violent opposition to all this sphere of Jewish effort rise the schemes of the international Jews. The adherence of this sinister confederacy are mostly men reared up among the unhappy populations of countries where Jews are persecuted on account of their race. Most, if not all of them, have forsaken the faith of their forefathers 
and divorced from their minds all spiritual hopes of the next world. This movement among the Jews is not new. From the days of Spartacus Weishaupt, he's talking about the founder of the Bavarian Illuminati in seventeen seventy six, to those of Karl Marx and down to Trotsky of Russia, Bela Hahn of Hungary, Rosa Luxemburg of June of Germany, and Emma Goldman of the United States. This worldwide conspiracy for the overthrow of civilization and the reconstitution 
of society on the basis of arrested development of envious malevolence and impossible equality has been steadily growing. It played as modern writer, missus Nesta Webster, has so aptly shown, a definite, definitely recognizable part in the tragedy of the French Revolution. It has been the mainspring of every subversive movement during the nineteenth century. And now, at last, 
this band of extraordinary personalities from the underworld of the great cities of Europe and America have gripped the Russian people by the hair of their heads and have become practically the undisputed masters of that enormous empire. Now he's talking about the Bolshevik Revolution. I would reference Anthony Sutton's, trilogy on the topic. Wall Street and FDR, Wall Street and the Bolshevik revolution, Wall Street and Hitler. 
And you can see that the city of London and the New York banking class, had almost everything to do with the funding and positioning of those enemies. But we must continue on. Under terrorist Jews heading of Churchill on Zionism nineteen twenty, the same evil prominence was obtained by Jews in the brief period of terror during which Bela Hahn ruled Hungary. The same phenomenon has been presented in Germany, especially Bavaria. He was just talking about the Illuminati. 
So far as this madness has been allowed to prey upon the temporary prostration of the German people. Although in these countries, there are many non Jews. Every bit as bad as, every, width as bad as the worst of the Jewish revolutionaries. The, part played, by the latter in proportion to the numbers in the population is astonishing. So he's looking at people who are I don't know. He he would call them anarchists or people who have ideas of changing things by political terrorism. 
Terrorism used to be politics by coercion. So I'm not sure what definition he's using back then. But he has this section, protector of the Jews. So he's made a case, now he's bringing it home. It becomes therefore specifically important to foster and develop any strongly marked Jewish movement which leads directly away from these fatal associations. And it is here that Zionism has such a deep significance for the whole world at the present time. So he singled out, 
these are the ones to back. Okay. A home for the Jews. Zionism offers the third sphere to the political conceptions of the Jewish race in violent contrast to international communism. It presents to the Jew a national idea of a commanding character. It has fallen to the British government as a result of the conquest of Palestine, which was done during World War one, to have the opportunity and the responsibility of securing for the Jewish race all over the world, a home and a center of national life. The statesmanship and historic sense of mister Balfour were prompt to seize the opportunity. 
Declarations have been made, which have irrevocably decided the policy of Great Britain. The fiery energies of doctor Wiseman, the leader. Remember, we heard that he was run by the seventeen year old Dorothy Rothschild, Jimmy's wife. The fiery energies of doctor Wiseman, the leader, for practical purposes of the Zionist project backed by many of the most prominent British Jews and supported by the full authority of Lord Allenby are all directed to achieving the success of this inspiring movement. Of course, 
Palestine is far too small to accommodate more than a fraction of the Jewish race, nor do the majority of national Jews wish to go there. But as well may happen, there should be created in our own lifetime by the banks of the Jordan, a Jewish state under the protection of the British crown, which might comprise three or four millions of Jews. An event would have occurred in the history of the world which would, 
from every point of view, be beneficial and would be especially in harmony with the truest interests of the British Empire. Interesting. Not really mentioned when everyone blames it on Hamas. Right? Let's look at the British mandate of Palestine starting in nineteen twenty going to nineteen forty eight. We'll see how it ended up. Remember colonel Sykes? Well, he explained that the country was described as Palestine Palestine by Europeans. So it goes back to, like, eighteen eighteen o four that Europeans were calling this area Palestine and as Palestine 
by the Arabs. The Hebrew name for the country was the designation land of Israel, and the government to meet Jewish wishes had agreed that the word Palestine in Hebrew characters should be followed in all official documents by the initials, which stood for that designation. As I said after this, certain of the Arab politician suggested that the country should be called Southern Syria in order to emphasize its close relationship with another Arab state. 
Now on the left, you have the October seventh iceberg and what everyone's talking about. But if you start reading down in there, you might discover, it they just use a bunch of fancy words to cover up killing women and children to get and gain political and geopolitical, utilitarian industrial agendas that heretofore could not be accomplished so fast. But thankfully, Hamas stepped in, and, you see an Israeli soldier learning about Palestine, a place he didn't think existed, but, you know, you can maybe 
teach your old dog new tricks. I don't know. Looks hopeful. I'm optimistic. Here's a Palestinian passport for a country that didn't exist, and then a lot of people say it's not colonization. There are any number of news articles that talk about colonization. Here is one from nineteen hundred and forty five. Jews seek areas for colonization because Palestine entails so much uncertainty. Freeland league looks elsewhere. Back after nine eleven, 
there was a a writer from India. Her name is Arundhati Roy. She wrote a book called The God of Small Things. I remember seeing her do a speech, a lecture if you will. It was called, come September. There's a part in this timeline that I wanted to reference, and I thought what better artifact to reference than this part from the speech because you would have context now to understand it. September eleventh 
has a tragic tragic resonance in the Middle East too. On the eleventh of September nineteen twenty two, ignoring Arab outrage, the British government proclaimed a mandate in Palestine, a follow-up to the nineteen seventeen Balfour Declaration, which Imperial Britain issued with its army massed outside the gates of Gaza. The Balfour Declaration promised European 
Zionists a national home for the Jewish people. At the time, the empire in which the sun never set was free to snatch and bequeath national homes like a school bully distributes marbles. How carelessly imperial power vivisected ancient civilizations. Vivisection is a process of, doing, an autopsy while it's still alive. You're cutting open a living being to see how it works while it's still alive. How carelessly imperial power vivisected 
ancient civilizations. Palestine and Kashmir are imperial Britons festering, blood drenched gifts to the modern world. Both are fault lines in the raging international conflicts of today. In nineteen thirty seven, Winston Churchill said of the Palestinians, I quote, I do not agree that the dog in a manger has the final right to the manger even though he may have lain there for a very long time. I do not admit that right. I do not admit for instance 
that a great wrong has been done to the Red Indians of America or the black people of Australia. I do not admit that a wrong has been done to these people by the fact that a stronger race, a higher grade race, a more worldly race, to put it that way, has come in and taken their place, end quote. I think it's bad enough. You get the point. Nineteen thirty three, the transfer agreement. They transferred people. They transferred money. Who's they? The Zionists and the Nazis. So we're talking about a deal between the Zionists 
and the Nazis. The Nazis wanted to get rid of the Jewish population. The Zionists wanted the Jewish population to move to Palestine. They had some business items in common. This is nineteen thirty three. This is ten years before the destruction in the camps. Germany was to transfer fifty thousand Jews to Palestine. Jews were gonna give Germany their assets. Germany would then give Jews credits to use in Palestine for German goods, and that is the transfer. The transfer also included 
some bank accounts, and Edwin Black is the preeminent author on the topic. He wrote the book, The Transfer Agreement, the dramatic Zionist rescue of Jews from the Third Reich to Jewish Palestine, and it's a very interesting book, and I would highly recommend if you're interested that, you put it on your reading list. There are some artifacts from the transfer agreement. It occurred just as the Zionist were rejecting the boycott of the Reich. On the right hand side, you can see the commemorative coin. 
There's a one of these coins are in the Holocaust Museum. So there are artifacts to be out there studied on this. The commemorative coin of the Havara agreement, the Havara transfer agreement of nineteen thirty three between the Zionist and the Third Reich. The Hephara agreement was an agreement between the Nazi Germany and the German, Zionist Jews. They signed it on twenty five August nineteen thirty three. The agreement was finalized, and after three months of talks by the Zionist Federation of Germany, the Anglo Palestine Bank 
under the directive of the Jewish agency and the economic authorities of Nazi Germany, the agreement was designed to facilitate the immigration of German Jews to Palestine. While it helped Jews emigrate, it forced them to temporarily give up possessions to Germany before departing. Those possessions could later be re obtained by transferring them to Palestine as German export goods. Now my question would be, do I want German export goods? You're gonna take all my stuff and you're gonna give me German stuff back. But if you think about their situation, they were living in Germany and already accepting German goods in the first place. Might not have been 
as big a deal as it's been made out to be. That's interesting. That's just nineteen thirty three history. It does get crazier later. I'm just saying put nineteen thirty three in perspective, and it already starts to show you things that you're not being shown about World War two. They did have, as I mentioned earlier, Rothschild Bank in Germany. Mayer Amschel Rothschild was from a small place in Germany, around Frankfurt, and he served 
the, what would be a a a local king or royalty. They call them land graves. So the land grave of Hesse, and he made his money from renting Hessian professional soldiers to the British to use against America. So you follow that up hundred and twenty some years, and you got nineteen thirty eight. Germany arrests Rothschilds. And this is a really interesting story. Baron Lewis Rothschild, and you can read it in the various biographies and autobiographies 
of the Rothschild family. So again, these are not conspiracy sources. These are newspaper clippings and official family biographies and archive sites. World war three just World war two just happens to start shortly after the Nazis took over Rothschild assets in Germany. I'm not making the claim that the banking family started World War two. I am making the claim that things happened in a timeline in order. Nineteen thirty eight, you've got Hitler versus the Rothschilds. So you've got various 
elements of evidence that show, the seizure. And later, he was negotiated for he was kept very comfortable, and they would come in and negotiate. So it's an interesting story, but this is before United States gets into World War two. Zionism during the Holocaust is not just something that, happened after the transfer agreement. It's something that's covered in this book by Tony Greenstein. And the interesting aspects of it are 
some of the founding Zionists and their intimate relations with members of the Nazi party because of the alignment of their goals. We also have some quotes from around this same time like nineteen thirty eight. Some of these quotes are later in nineteen forty eight, but the the the gist is I wanted to show quotes around the time of World War two from the Zionist leaders about this plan that they were looking to kick off as soon as the war ends. This is a David Ben Gurion quote. Also, Kaim Weitzman, the Dorothy Rothschild, she was helping back couple minutes ago. He became prime minister 
of Israel. So she that seventeen year old girl was helping Chaim Prime. He got in charge of that country. But this is David Ben Gurion. He's the first prime minister of Israel. Quote, if I were an Arab leader, I would never sign an agreement with Israel. It's normal. We have taken their country. It is true god promised it to us, but how could that interest them? Our gods, not theirs. There has been antisemitism, the Nazis, Hitler, Auschwitz, but was that their fault? 
They see but one thing, we have come and stolen their country. Why would they accept that? Now, that's an after the war quote. Let us not ignore the truth among ourselves. Politically, we are the aggressors and they defend themselves. The country is theirs because they inhabit it. Whereas, we want to come there and settle down. And in their view, we want to take away from them we wanna take away from them their country. 
Behind the terrorism by the Arabs is a movement, which though primitive is not devoid of idealism and self sacrifice. Ben Gurion quoted in Chomsky's faithful triangle that comes from, a nineteen thirty eight speech. And then, the last quote, we must do everything to ensure that the Palestinians never return. That's Ben Gurion in his diary nineteen forty eight. So there was knowledge that Palestinians lived there, that it was called Palestine, and that they had to drive these people out, and that's the tip of the iceberg on that. 
Ben Gurion wrote in his diary on twelve July nineteen thirty seven, the compulsory transfer of the Arabs from the valleys of the projected Jewish state, we have to stick to this conclusion the same way we grabbed the Balfour Declaration. More than that, the same way we grabbed Zionism itself. On July twenty second nineteen hundred and forty six, the King David Hotel was bombed. Now, it was being controlled. Palestine was controlled by the British mandate, 
the proto Israeli founding fathers of Zionism. They were trying to drive the British out. They increasingly used acts of terrorism. That which Hamas has blamed on ten seven started back, you can say, in nineteen forty six, but there's incidents prior to this large one. Reading from the sign at the site of the bombing, King David Hotel. The hotel housed the British mandate secretariat 
as well as the army headquarters. On July twenty second nineteen forty six, Irgun fighters at the order of the Hebrew resistance movement planted explosives in the basement. Warning phone calls have been made to the hotel's dispatch, the Palestine post, and the French consulate, urging the hotel's occupants to leave immediately. So even back then, they were polite. They would tell people to leave ahead of time. The hotel was not evacuated. And after twenty five minutes, the bombs exploded. 
The entire western wing was destroyed and to the ear gun's regret, ninety two persons were killed. Well, you'd have to kill people. If you want the nation state to back off the mandate and go bye bye, you can't just bomb a building. You're gonna have to kill some civilians as they proved. And I don't know that it was to the Irgun's regret because when you look at the founding gangs, the Stern Gang, the Irgun, the Hagenah, they all conducted terrorist activities. Stern gang deal a lot with the Nazis, 
by the way. That's one of the key, gangs that was, creating the militarized movement to go up against the British during the mandate. So King David hotel bombing, that's an interesting story. Is there any evidence to it? Yes. In Grand Theft World, I think it's one hundred and eighty, we played video of the guy who did the bombing. He walks you through the rebuilt hotel. He's like, here's how I carried them in. Here's how I hid them. Here's how I hooked them up, and here's how I blew up the people. And they say, back then, we didn't mind being called terrorists because we were, you know, pushing out the Palestinians. 
So this is all on the record. This is not conspiracy theory. This is not rumor. This is not in your endo. The birth of terrorism. Terrorists blow up Palestine headquarters. Ninety three dead and missing in Jerusalem. Time bomb hidden in milk churn. Yeah. The guy says he carried in all these milk churns and put them around, and people just thought it was normal. I wonder if that's the last time or the first time they did that. It's interesting. Right? British arrest score of Jews as terrorists, hotel bombers dressed as Arabs. 
Didn't they accuse, like, Hamas, like, to dress no. Actually, it was the IDF that dressed up as Arabs. So I do see a repeating trend in this as well. How about this? Here's Jewish terrorists urge total war on Britain. Interesting. Total war on Britain. They're fighting for their freedom. The birth of Israel, nineteen hundred and forty eight. You can see Ben Gurion on the right. You can see the flag of the Zionist Congress hanging there. That became the official flag of the state of Israel. There's Theodore Herzl right above Ben Gurion's head. 
So there's a secular atheist who came up with an idea to group a bunch of other people who were secular atheist for the most part, and they would use the idea of the return to Jerusalem and and taking the holy land, and they would get religious Jews to move there and do the thing. As you noticed, Lord Rothschild and Baron Rothschild, they never moved to Israel. They didn't kibbutz. They weren't out there, tilling the soil. They sent people who didn't know how to do that, and they they failed in late eighteen hundreds. It's a horror story of what happened to those people. But they try try again in here in nineteen forty eight. It's all coming together. 
The Jewish state is born. Proclamation of Israel gets US recognition. Martial law in the Arab states. So here's the partition. You see that, we're gonna have some suggested borders in nineteen forty eight. We'll wipe those away in nineteen sixty seven and redraw the map. But this is what it started out as, and there's an interesting book out there. I mean, because we're talking about books and references and history. Right? What you have on your screen is a rare book. 
It's titled The Witness Tree. It's by an author who goes by the name of John Loftus. He's a lawyer for the Department of Justice. He was a Nazi hunter. He worked with the Holocaust Museum. He wrote a book called The Secret War Against the Jews, and he wrote a book called America's Nazi Secret. It's all in that screenshot, so you can see the titles. Very interesting evidence is illustrated through the witness tree. So what's in there? 
According to a Haganah agent, not just anyone, this is the one who blackmailed Nelson Rockefeller. Nelson's influence in the Latin American UN votes were exchanged for Ben Gurion burying the file provide proving that Nelson Rockefeller and friends funded the Nazi third Reich. So they made a trade. The agent was interviewed by Department of Justice lawyer, John Loftus. Loftus wrote about this in his book, The Witness Tree. The novel is based on real evidence, 
and the evidence is in the end notes of the book. Here are the samples so you know why you would wanna acquire such a resource. On these pages, the blackmail of Nelson Rockefeller is described in great detail, as on these pages, and then it goes into the UN vote. And this is how Israel becomes a state according to the evidence acquired by somebody with a cosmic level clearance. So this is the story, and then when you get to the back, it says, John personally interviewed the Haughtonaut agent who had firsthand knowledge of the blackmail of Nelson Rockefeller. 
Prescott Bush was up to his eyeballs in the Union Bank affair. They were funded the Nazis, and it continues on and on. There is a theme of a deep state that funded the Nazis, but also fought the Nazis. Almost like they're funding both sides. We're gonna have to learn a little bit more. In nineteen forty seven, the new or the proto Israeli state, started conducting the Nakba, and it continues into nineteen forty eight. These are where, these are events where Palestinians are expelled. This would be falling under the definition of ethnic cleansing to remove them, make sure they can't come back, etcetera. 
In nineteen forty eight, Zionist military forces expelled at least seven hundred and fifty thousand Palestinians and captured seventy eight percent of historic Palestine. Seventy eight percent. The remaining twenty two percent was divided into the West Bank and Gaza Strip. So, definition of a land grab could be put right there if one understood the facts from an objective angle. People who didn't live there came in and took the land of people who live there. 
Interesting facts. Here's another book. It's called nineteen forty eight, a history of the first Arab Israeli war. This is by Benny Morris. This is more of an official narrative, but he's such an excellent scholar and writer that it's good to read the official narrative. What it what is it that the official narrative is? Because even in the official narrative, there are war crimes and rapes of civilians and all the things that they accuse Hamas of going on back in nineteen forty eight. And it's not just Benny Morris. I also have shown footage of the men who participated in some of these acts bragging about 
the killings of innocent civilians, unarmed civilians, the rape of women, and it goes on in detail where they are not ashamed. These men were still alive and they were filmed in the nineteen eighties and nineteen nineties talking about the Nakba from nineteen forty seven. So when I hear about ten seven war crimes, I am sympathetic to the people that that happened to for sure. But I also wanna say, they didn't invent that on ten seven. And there might be a responsibility in the causality that people aren't looking at, and instead of looking at it, they're funding it so it would accelerate. 
So that's why we look at this. Nineteen forty eight Nakba, the Dyer Yasin massacre. The Dyer Yasin massacre took place on April ninth nineteen forty eight when Zionist paramilitaries attacked the village of Dyer Yasin near Jerusalem in mandatory Palestine. So this is not Israel yet. This is mandatory Palestine, killing at least a hundred and seven Palestinian villagers, including women and children. On the article, it cites two hundred and fifty men, women, and children, killed by the ear gun. Bodies were thrown down the well. Reports of rape and mutilation spread terror in the Palestinian population. 
There's much more to that. You can read Thomas Suarez's, state of terror for more graphic details, but I think you get the point. Six day war occurred in nineteen sixty seven. June fifth through tenth nineteen hundred and sixty seven. So America's thinking about Vietnam. We're getting, you know, Vietnam's going on. Over in Europe, over in the Middle East, over in Africa, North Africa, this is what's going on. So Israel, 
during this six day war, captures twenty seven thousand square miles. Right? They'd already gained seventy eight percent. Now they're they're expanding beyond their borders. What did they grab? Great question. Gaza Strip, took it from Egypt. West Bank, took it from Jordan. Sinai Peninsula, from Egypt. They later had to give it back, nineteen seventy three. Golan Heights from Syria, after LBJ said don't touch the Golan Heights. Well, today, 
Rothchild's Genie Energy with partners like Dick Cheney are getting those oil and gas concessions in the Golan Heights. There might be some energy in Gaza too. We'll see. East Jerusalem, they took that from Jordan. Interesting. Because they claim self defense, but they gained twenty seven thousand square miles from all these countries that maybe had a legitimate beef. I don't know. But this is, an amazing part of American history. Now, we have another amazing part of American history that most people don't know about. This is nineteen hundred and sixty seven. This is Israel's six day war, 
but they need something to happen on the second day of the war for the rest of the days to go on in the war. Right? They want four more days of war, but it's not gonna happen with this ship floating around sniffing all the intel. Now, this is the USS Liberty. A g t r five as it was labeled. It's an NSA spy ship. It's an NSA spy ship with British GCHQ on board. The Brits 
have a treaty with Egypt because they used to have the mandate over Egypt just like they had the mandate over Palestine. So if this ship if the NSA finds out that Israel is about to attack, then GCHQ knows, and GCHQ has to call Egypt. So the Israelis say, we gotta sink the USS Liberty. So they attack our enemy I'm sorry. Our ally attacks us and makes us into an enemy. Israel attacks USS Liberty. Thirty four crewmen dead. 
A hundred and seventy one wounded. This ship, the living members, that's the most congressional medals of honor of any ship in American military history. They were hit in international waters. They were five hundred miles away from the sixth fleet because they're a surveillance ship. They need to be in a quiet zone to pick up the signals of the people they're surveilling. They did not have Hebrew linguists on board. Isn't that interesting? We were not set up to spy on Israel, so therefore, we couldn't hear the attack coming from Israel. 
Israel had our codes and could hear everything that was going on. The life rafts were strafed. That's a war crime. They use napalm on the deck to make it worse and to kill more people, and there's no legitimate investigation of has ever taken place. And the family members and the living victims of this still want justice. Right. That's the view from the Palestinian side. Joining me now here in the BBC World studio is the former Israeli prime minister Ehud Barak, who's in London at the moment. Mister Barak, welcome to BBC World. First, your reaction 
having heard what's happened. At least four planes have been hijacked, and, there may be more. The world will not be the same from today on. I don't know who is responsible. I believe we will know in twelve hours. Bin Laden sits in Afghanistan. There is a source of terror. Identify though? Yeah. Because we're not saying he's responsible for this necessarily. No. We we don't say that he's responsible. Every simple step crossing borders or going on a plane or or on a a ship will become more complicated. It's a time 
to launch a a operational concrete war against, a terror even if it takes certain pains from the routine activities of our normal surface. This is the time to deploy a globally concerted effort led by the United States, the UK, Europe, and Russia against all sources of terror. Consistently, along six or ten years in Iran, Iraq, 
Libya, North Korea, this is the only way without this clarity of purpose. There will be no world order. No world order possibility. In the months leading up to the event, American negotiators had warned Afghanistan's Taliban that they were interested in securing right of way for proposed pipeline projects, and the US would achieve this with either a carpet of gold or a carpet of bombs. 
The Bush administration's first major national security directive, a full scale battle plan for the invasion of Afghanistan, including command and control, air and ground forces, and logistics, was drafted and sitting on the president's desk to be signed off on September fourth two thousand one, seven days before the nine eleven attacks. The invasion proceeded as planned in October. If you take out Saddam, Saddam's regime, I guarantee that it will have 
enormous positive reverberations on the region. The reverberations of what happens with the collapse of Saddam's regime could very well create an implosion in a neighboring regime like Iran. Has reported Israel's former prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu has publicly said the September eleventh attacks have been good for Israel. Netanyahu said, quote, we're benefiting from one thing, and that is the attack on the Twin Towers and Pentagon and the American struggle in Iraq, 
end quote. It was one of the most audacious acts of terror the world had ever seen. They used three fifty kilos of gel ignite and TNT, and they planted the bomb in broad daylight in a building full of people. The bomb killed ninety one people, and forty five others were injured. But little did the bombers of Jerusalem's King David Hotel back in nineteen forty six know that they were one day to be hailed as the founding fathers of a new age of terror. 
For their success inspired waves of imitators around the world. We didn't mind being called terrorists then because we actually used force such for the brutal force in order to, get rid of them. This is the story of the birth of modern terrorism, of the activists who invented it, and of how it has been appropriated and dispersed around the globe. 
Oh my god. After a bomb explosion caused by terrorists on the British headquarters of Jerusalem, one entire corner of the King David Hotel, a building of seven stories was raised to the ground. The stone floors were cut In scenes eerily reminiscent of New York fifty five years later, the Jerusalem bomb was the beginning of terrorism as a media event designed to capture the world's attention. The latest casualty list included sixty five killed, forty seven injured. 
The perpetrators, Zionist Jews, members of Manakim Begin's Ergun terrorist network. Begin, who would one day become prime minister of Israel, described this tactic as turning Palestine into a glass house where the entire world was looking in. I think it was one of these acts of violence that ahead of its time, I mean, in an era before CNN, before instantaneous news, was choreographed precisely to attract international attention. We were a minority, but we were a minority 
with a clear ideology that we must have a Jewish state. The Bonnet of the King David Hotel was perhaps one of the most significant terrorist incidents of the twentieth century. For many decades, it actually held the infamous record of having killed the largest number of people. In a fight for for liberty, you have always those who are more call them extreme or more, adamant or call them staunch, and they want it 
immediately not to wait for the messiah. The British military and administrative headquarters was here in the south wing of the King David Hotel in Jerusalem. The luxury hotel itself still functioned with guests, restaurants, bars, and Sudanese waiters. If we succeed, it's very important the whole world will will see that we can fight even the British. Begin and Ellis decided on a daring plan. 
They would strike at the very heart of British rule, the King David Hotel itself. If they succeeded here, the whole world would take notice. The terrorist bomb was hidden in seven milk churns and delivered in a hijacked pickup truck to the hotel's basement kitchen. We jumped out, and everyone took up their positions. I took the churn and started to run. I was thinking, how do I get to the place where I have to put the churn down? 
That's how I started. Anyway, there were lots of people around in the corridor, and we tried to move them out of the way. Here, there, to the side. But there were some who resisted, but we threatened them with our weapons. I wasn't dressed as a civilian or a soldier. I was dressed like an Arab. The bajalaba and the kafir with that ring on your head. You know, like, what's he called? The the leader of the Arabs. You know, Arafat. There were seven churns weighing three hundred and fifty kilos in all. 
I ran until I reached the place where I had to put it down with the churn on my shoulder. I carried on, carried on until I got to the place where the British people were. I saw a pillar that used to be here, and I put the churn down and ran away immediately. I waited in my position until all the churns were together, and then the time would come for the explosion. All the churns together were like one whole man, a complete bomb. 
The bomb went off at twelve thirty seven and was devastating. But of the ninety one dead, only twenty eight were British. Seventeen Jews died alongside forty one Arabs. Of all these, fifty four were innocent civilians, unconnected to the British authorities in any way. Once more, the civilized world has received a rude shock at the hands of fanatics whose wanton act is contrary to the dictates of all creeds alike and imperils the best interests of the cause that it strives to promote. 
The Irgun denied that they aimed at civilian targets, but one man at least had a different opinion. In nineteen forty eight, the British chief secretary in Palestine, sir Henry Gurney, wrote in his diary of how one Irgun attack was indiscriminately aimed at civilian targets and was designed to create panic among the population. Three years later, Gurney himself was to be assassinated. By nineteen forty eight, the British and the world community 
had lost their appetite for the fight against the Jewish terrorists, and the British abandoned Palestine. I was among the people that called the Aqov. When we were walking around, we had entered the flat. There was a pair of shoes of a small child, maybe two years old. They didn't have time to put on the shoes, so they left the shoes and they run away. They left everything. 
We found out that there was a systematic expulsion of Palestinians, and there was, as I said, there was an ethnic cleansing operation taking place. The most infamous campaign was the massacre at the village of Der Yassin, where over one hundred men, women, and children were systematically murdered. Villagers were expelled en masse and massacres occurred in many places. 
Once Zionist troops occupied the village that resisted them, they would round up all the men according to lists the intelligence officers would provide. On the whim of the local commander, they would either shoot them or march them away. The biggest expulsion and massacre happened in the city of Lidl Hamle. Fifty thousand people were expelled from the city in a single day. 
Four hundred and twenty six men, women, and children were killed by the Zionist forces. The general in charge of the occupation and expulsion of Lee Dromle was Yitzhak Rabin, who would later become Israel prime minister serving two terms. Early June nineteen sixty seven. The six day war in the Middle East between Israel, Egypt, Jordan, and Syria is underway. 
A spy ship, very lightly armed but bristling with antennae, steams into the Mediterranean to eavesdrop on the conflict. It is patrolling in international waters off the Egyptian coast. At two in the afternoon, on June the eighth, with the war reaching its climax, Israeli jets and motor torpedo boats launch an unprovoked attack on the ship. They drop napalm and strafe its decks with rockets, cannon fire, and armor piercing rounds before trying to sink it with torpedoes. 
We had no way to defend ourselves, and it was just we're just slaughtered. And they shot at the life rafts, that were put into the water, and they shot the ones that were still on board the ship. Bullet hose, shell holes everywhere, blood. The folks saw the front part of the ship was just red with blood. 
Throughout the attack, the ship flies the Stars and Stripes, the flag of Israel's closest ally, the United States of America. Its name, the USS Liberty, is freshly painted on its stern, and the bow carries the distinctive numbers of an American naval vessel. Out of a crew of just under three hundred, there were thirty four killed and a hundred and seventy two injured in varying degrees to 
life threatening, life debilitating injuries. So that was more than two thirds of the crew. By the time the Liberty arrived off the coast of Egypt on the eighth of June, the war had just two days left to run. Israel had seized the old city of Jerusalem, the West Bank, and the Gaza Strip. Jordanian forces were beaten, and Egypt was conceding defeat. Only Syria held out. The airwaves were dead. 
The only voices we did get were those of Israeli or Hebrew was what we were hearing. My name is, Bob Wilson. I worked for, NSA on June the eighth nineteen sixty seven. While we were trying to monitor, find something coming from the direction of of Egypt. There just was nothing. They owned the skies and the ground and everything. They I don't think there was anything moving at that time that they didn't know about. I was listening to the chatter the night before. They they knew it was American ship that came into the area. 
They knew who we were. For the first time, this and other evidence allows us to reveal the true story of what happened that day and what came after. When a deadly assault by one ally on another was covered up and an American president was manipulated by the secret agents of a foreign power, 
events that have shaped US Israeli relations ever since. They jammed radar sets at the US embassy in Tel Aviv so the Americans couldn't detect their jets taking off to launch a surprise assault on Egypt. Meanwhile, the USS Liberty was sailing across the Mediterranean into the war zone. Liberty was a state of the art intelligence gathering vessel of the time, and what we did is we listed. We were a listening ship. My name is Lloyd Painter. 
I was a research officer. We could send we could receive any signal that was out there, low band, high band, anything, intercepting it, recording it, and we did have on board some translators who could have immediate translation of what was going on. We would actually bounce signals off the moon back to NSA. Five fifteen AM, first light. The ship's log recorded an Israeli photo reconnaissance plane flying over the Liberty. That was easily identifiable as a Noratlas aircraft, and those are photo reconnaissance aircraft. 
Israeli records obtained by Al Jazeera show that their reconnaissance plane reported the Liberty as an American spy ship, hull number g t r five. Well, I was on the bridge. I'm John Scott. I was the damage control officer. I circled the ship kind of in a broad circle and headed back towards Israel. Israeli planes then continued to fly over the Liberty all morning. And they would do half moon passes over us, and we saw that they were Israeli. They were slowly lumbering over our ship, and we were waving at them. They were waving at us. They were sophisticated, almost as sophisticated as we were as far as surveillance and and technology. They had everything. 
We supplied it with all the technology to this day. And I felt that we were in we were in great shape because they knew who we were. They're our friends. We felt safe. Actually, it was a secure feeling to see them. There was one other thing which made the crew feel safe. We had an American flag flying the standard, and then we put up the holiday colors, which is a huge American flag. And it was a bright sunny day with the wind blowing, I don't know, five or ten knots. The flag was unfurled. You could see it for miles. Meanwhile, Israeli military jets were on their way. 
On the real time audio tape obtained by Al Jazeera, at one fifty three PM, the pilots asked their base control about the ship. The American sixth fleet, including two aircraft carriers, was five hundred miles away. 
Sun was shining, blue sky, clouds, nice, people sunbathing on the deck. We had lunch, and five minutes later, maybe here came the jets. And when nobody really knew what was happening until they started firing. The captain said to me, alert the forward gun mounts were under attack. And I tried to raise the, the two sailors in the forward gun mounts. I looked out and they were they were blown to pieces by the rocket. When the attack started 
and we realized that we needed help, we tried to communicate with the sixth fleet. They were jamming both our distress frequencies and our tactical frequencies. The tactical frequencies is alright, but the international distress frequencies is a violation of international law to jam them and the Israelis were jamming them. And we could not get a signal for us. Here's the question I have to ask, who would know the frequencies other than an ally? And who was the ally in the war? It wasn't Egypt, 
It was Israel. They would know, and only they would know in this conflict what our frequencies would be. Now cut off from the outside world, the crew on the Liberty was defenseless. We had four fifty caliber machine guns on board that were basically there to repel any borders that might come by, you know, a pirate situation. Certainly weren't designed to bring down, jet aircraft that were hammering at us. But you can't shoot a jet going six hundred miles an hour with a fifty caliber machine gun. It doesn't work. It was just a surreal scene. People who had been standing there earlier joking and laughing were now dead, dying, and with the walking dead and wounded. It was just unreal. 
Gasoline barrels stored on the deck of the ship burst into flames. The crew rushed to try to put out the fires. I was watching the aircraft as they circled around, and when they got to coming back towards the ship, I just holler at him down. They'd fire and circle back around. We'd jump back up and keep fighting fire. The rocket noise is horrendous. When a rocket explodes, you can't escape a rocket. I don't care where you go. What the crew didn't know was that at three minutes past two, the Israeli pilots were ordered to use a new much deadlier weapon. 
The napalm had burned, scorched almost the entire front part of the ship, the bridge area. The whole topside of the ship had been set on fire and was all charred. It was no longer navy gray. You have to stop the fires to stop the flooding to keep that ship afloat. That's your home. You got nowhere else to go. You can't pack up and go down the road because there is no down the road. 
Up above, the Israeli military argued about what should happen next and who should sink the liberty. I remember thinking I was in pretty good shape then. I I said, I think I can swim it to the shore. And then I thought sharks, and I thought a lot of things all all quickly. You know? At eleven minutes past two, with the Israeli jets running out of ammunition, 
the pilots were instructed to fly down and confirm the identity of the ship. The jets then pulled out, but three Israeli Navy motor torpedo boats were already on their way. At two thirty five, the Israeli motorboats fired five torpedoes. Four missed, but one hit. 
It had been over nine hours since the Israeli military first identified the Liberty. Israeli planes had flown over it repeatedly, and twenty minutes earlier, their control tower had confirmed it yet again as an American ship. 
Twenty five Americans were about to die in a single moment. This is what it looks like when a torpedo hits a ship the size of the Liberty. The torpedo threw us up in the air like a roller coaster. It felt like one coming down. Dead silence, lights all off, smoke and haze everywhere. I went back to the drinking fountain and filled it with blood, reached down to get a drink, and a black man stared back at me. 
And when it fell back to get right, it just kept getting wrong, kept sinking and sinking and sinking. And my job was to try to get probably twenty or thirty wounded sailors out to the main deck and to the life rafts. So I went up and looked out myself before I tried to get anyone up, and that's when I observed a motor torpedo boat, Israeli, machine gunning our life rafts. The crew of the Liberty were now trapped onboard their own ship with nowhere to run 
and nowhere to hide. The torpedo, boats came in closer and began to machine gun the, ship using armor piercing projectiles. The armor piercing the shells that they were using were leaving holes about that big around in the the metal plating. Just peel it out like it was orange peel. One of the radiomen had taken a reel of coax cable and ran it from one of the transmitters back there to that whip antenna 
and took some shrapnel in the process. He got out of Mayday. Firefox. Firefox. This is rock star. Rock star. Under attack by unidentified surface and naval air units require immediate assistance. The American sixth fleet was five hundred miles away and picked up the signal. So did the Israeli armed forces. The attack stopped shortly afterwards. The American aircraft carriers were in the middle of a nuclear weapons drill and had to rearm with conventional bombs before they could take off. 
Once the Israelis knew the US jets were in the air, they summoned the American naval, Attache, and told him there had been a terrible mistake. The American planes were recalled. Their plan was to take the Golan Heights starting on the ninth of June. This is the eighth of June. They couldn't communicate with their forces up there in Golan Heights without the liberty intercepting the messages. And so, what do you do? Well, if you're pretty sure that 
the U. S. Is going to have to let you off on this, you destroy the ship, you sink all the tapes as well and you destroy all the survivors so that you can go up on the Golan and not give the U. S. The opportunity to bang on you again and say, look, don't do it. In other words, in the Israeli frame of mind, it was better to ask for forgiveness rather than for permission. And that's precisely what they did. They went up in the Golan the next day. They didn't want us to know about it. They didn't want us to interfere with their plans. 
And that's one explanation. Now, there's another. And this is sort of gory. There is Alarish, which is up about a thousand prisoners. And prisoners are a real pain, you know, in Sinai. You have to feed them. You have to give them water. And it's a real pain. And so what happened here according to Bamford and these eyewitnesses is that Egyptian prisoners of war, there are about three hundred or four hundred of them in the coastal town of El Arish there in the Sinai, they were lined up, they dug their own grapes, they were shot 
and that's the way they took care of the Egyptian prisoners. Now the Liberty is patrolling directly opposite El Arish, okay, in international waters, but within easy range to pick up the intelligence what's going on there, okay. Line of sight, I mean, you could see Liberty big as big as it can be right off the shore. Now the Israelis are well aware of that, and that that wouldn't be terribly good PR to get back to the US. Israeli helicopters flew out to the Liberty. The US naval attache dropped a, brown paper sack 
on the deck in the forepart of the ship, weighted down with an orange, had a business card in it. It landed right next to the severed leg of one of the deck personnel. And the note said, Do you have casualties? As soon as the news reached Washington, the attack on the Liberty instantly triggered a domestic political crisis. 
According to documents released under the Freedom of Information Act, one solution suggested in American government circles was to sink the liberty so journalists could not photograph it and inflame public opinion against the Israelis. We know that the establishment of Israel was just and necessary, rooted in centuries of struggle and decades of patient work. But sixty years later, we know that we cannot relent, we cannot yield, and as president, I will never compromise when it comes to Israel's security. 
I want to thank you, Democrats and Republicans, for your common support for Israel year after year, decade after decade. I know that 
no matter on which side of the aisle you sit, you stand with Israel. Thank you. Thank you very much. Thank you all. 
You're wonderful. Thank you, America. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. I wanted to make the point real quick that 
without the US s liberty being attacked successfully by our good time ally Israel, you'd have no Gaza situation today. You'd have no West Bank settlers today because those lands were acquired in the nineteen sixty seven six day war. I also wanted to fill in the blanks because you might be saying, you know, how could the United States government be, you know, succumbing to a smaller nation state that's supposed to be our enemy? I offer you these two exhibits of evidence by Whitney Webb. One Nation Under Black Male volume one, the sordid 
union between intelligence and organized crime that gave rise to Jeffrey Epstein. Volume one goes from nineteen forty two to about the nineteen eighties. Volume two goes from the nineteen eighties up to Jeffrey Epstein in the present. You're gonna see a lot of overlap between the characters involved in Iran Contra, BCCI, all sorts of other drug smuggling, blackmail, skullduggery, and the recent twenty first century, elements that might lead up to some of the things that contain are contained in the rest of tonight's 
presentation. So let's go forward from here. That is Bryce Lockwood. He's the only marine to survive the USS Liberty. I spent nearly three hours interviewing him in great detail on what happened that day, And you can't put it into ten minutes like we just tried to, but we tried to so you would know why you would wanna invest three hours to listen to the man, one of the many men who were there, and you understand why they handed out so many congressional medals of honor to keep these gentlemen silent or at least to attempt 
to keep them silent. They and their families are still seeking justice. There is what's called a challenge coin from USS Liberty. Behind that, you can recognize the picture that you saw in that clip. And behind that, you can see Edmund DeRocchio peeping out just his eighteen eighties colonization efforts and what they've led to today. Alright. Let's meet the ethnic cleansing chief. During the six day war, there's a character named Moshe Dayan. He was the chief of staff for the IDF, and he was the minister of defense during the nineteen sixty seven war. He in the unclassified 
documents, declassified documents, is who is responsible for the Israeli attack on the USS Liberty. He has a couple other quotes that are worth mentioning though because we're here. Jewish villages were built in the place of Arab villages. You don't know you do not even know the names of these Arab villages, and I do not blame you because geography books no longer exist. Not only do the books not exist, the Arab villages are not there either. There is not one single place in this country 
that did not have a former Arab population. That comes from Haaretz, April fourth nineteen sixty nine. Next quote. We shoot at those from among the two hundred thousand hungry Arabs who cross the line to graze their flocks. Arabs cross to collect the grain that they left in the abandoned villages, and we set mines for them, and they go back without an arm or a leg. It may be that this cannot pass review, 
but I know no other method of guarding the borders. At the funeral of an Israeli farmer killed by a Palestinian in April nineteen fifty six, quote, let us not today fling accusation at the murderers. What cause have we to complain about their hatred to us? For eight years now, they sit in their refugee camps in Gaza. And before their eyes, we turn into our homestead, the land and villages in which they and their forefathers 
have lived. We should demand his blood not from the Arabs of Gaza, but from ourselves. Let us make our reckoning today. We are a generation of settlers. And without the steel helmet and gun barrel, we shall not be able, to tolerate to to, to lend a tree house. To lily to lend a tree or build a house. Sorry. I got cut off at the bottom there. That's a format, issue I I could've taken care of. Alright. So nineteen seventy three, 
fifty years before ten seven, the Yom Kippur War. Now in this war, those places that had land taken, like the Sinai Peninsula, Egypt took that back. Areas around, Syria and Jordan were also in dispute. So this is surrounding countries who are part of the one billion Muslim on the planet, and they have countries around the Middle East. This Yom Kippur War leads to many things. It led to Golda Meir saying, the quote about, 
you know, we hate you for making us kill your children. That's the gist of her quote. You can look that up. Nineteen seventy seven, there's a lot of strife going on. There's a new kid in town. It's the Israeli Likud party, and they had a charter. And the first part of the charter, the first line of the charter reads like this. Now this is from where did I take this from? I took this from, a Jewish encyclopedia website. So it's a encyclopedia for Jewish heritage. 
So it says, the right of the on their source was the Lukkud official charter. So I just wanna let you know where it's coming from. The right of the Jewish people to the land of Israel is eternal and indisputable and is linked with the right to security and peace. Therefore, Judea and Samaria will not be handed to any foreign administration. Between the sea and the Jordan, there will only be Israeli sovereignty. 
So that is their version of from the river to the sea, which is, if you if you look it up today in modern parlance, that's antisemitism because it's calling for the genocide of Israel. Because it's from Hamas. Ten years later, after the Israelis said it. So if you actually follow the timeline, yes, you should be allowed to say it, and it shouldn't only be attributed to one side as far as goals because it's right here in the charter. A plan which relinquishes parts of Western Eretz Israel undermines our right to the country. 
Unavoidably leads to the establishment of a Palestinian state, jeopardizes the security of the Jewish population, endangers the existence of the state of Israel, and frustrates any prospect of peace. So they're saying, look, we can't give the Palestinians a state, we're just gonna have to take it all from the river to the sea. Very clear. It's plain English. It was probably written in Hebrew. Nineteen eighty eight, Hamas Charter, probably written in Arabic. Nineteen eighty seven, 
twenty years after the six day war. The first Intifada from nineteen eighty seven to nineteen ninety three began as a resistance of Israeli occupation in Gaza and West Bank. Right? It didn't go on before that because, you know, they only grabbed the land in nineteen sixty seven. A popular uprising, the first intifada was led by multiple groups, including Palestinian Islamic Jihad and the Palestine Liberation Organization, PLO. That's Yasser Arafat. 
After receiving official recognition as the de facto government, the PLO began to seek a negotiated solution with Israel in the form of a two state solution. Now, what do we know from eleven years before? Likud says there's not gonna be a two state solution. So they would seek to undermine this position. They're gonna bring in Hamas. Right? Okay. In the form of a two state solution. A two state solution was deemed unacceptable to Hamas, the Palestinian wing of the Muslim Brotherhood. Now I could take you back in time to nineteen twenty four through nineteen twenty eight to explain to you how the Muslim brotherhood was created by a guy named Saint John or Sinjin Philby who worked for MI six, and he went Arab and took an Arab family and became the, 
mentor to Ibn Saud and helped to create Saudi Arabia and get on get their hands on all that delicious oil. We don't have time for that. I could tell you you could read it, in various books, but again, that's not the point of this presentation. That would be a whole other presentation. I just wanted to disambiguate anyone who'd say, that it's just an Islamic extremist group because if it's gonna happen naturally, why would you need four years of MI six grooming and creating that group to be brought about by nineteen twenty eight? I digress. 
Continuing on, and the charter was written to fill the ideological gap between the PLO and Muslim Brotherhood supporters. So they had to make a charter, they fill in the gaps, It's produced in nineteen eighty eight. They changed it, by the way, in twenty eighteen. Most people, they ignore that. Let me continue with some of the history here. In nineteen eighty seven, twenty years after the six day war, the original charter I'm sorry. I'm reading from the second part now. The original charter identified Hamas as the Muslim brotherhood in Palestine and described its members to be god fearing Muslims 
raising the banner of jihad armed struggle, end quote, the face of the oppressors, end quote. The charter defines the struggle to be against the Jews and calls for the eventual creation of an Islamic Palestinian state in all of former mandatory Palestine and the obliteration or dissolution of Israel. And that has a bunch of footnotes so you can look at that and see if that's really what it says. The charter has been criticized for its use of anti Semitic language, which some commentators have characterized 
as incitement to genocide. That may have been true. However, we live in twenty twenty four and the most recent charters from twenty seventeen, they removed the anti Semitic language and they clarified Hamas's struggle was with the political Zionists, not the religious Jews. I think that's an important disambiguation that is all too often overlooked by people who are arguing real hard about this situation. Now, let's go up to two thousand one. Again, this could be a whole different presentation called the underground history of nine eleven, 
and, we're probably gonna do that in the future. Right now, let's look real quick. Israel and nine eleven. Did you know that more than sixty Israelis were arrested after nine eleven for questioning in relation to the events of nine eleven? That they had moving trucks driving around with pictures painted of airlines flying into the twin towers that were obviously painted prior to the events to be driving around that morning. There were also, Israelis, that were associated with, 
attempted bombing of the George Washington Bridge. There's a whole lot of interesting clips, news, evidence from that day. The dancing Israelis were held for sixty days and then released, and then there's that, famous interview that they did on Israeli TV, explaining their situation. They were just there to film the event. Okay. Great. There's also insider trading on several of the companies affected by the explosions on nine eleven including bets against the airlines that intersected 
with those businesses. So both the businesses and the airlines inside of trading means, how did Al Qaeda do that? The exploit the exploitation of war games to create military stand down situations. On nine eleven, there was a military stand down. Number of cases where they dropped the ball, but no one got fired. Who's getting fired for ten seven? They stood down for six to seven hours. That's a long time for Hamas to go around killing your citizens without you responding. 
There were also numerous warnings by the allies prior to nine eleven, just like Israel's ten seven. There were plenty of warnings from allies. We had, the Israeli prime minister call for the war on terror. We played that clip. It was right before the King David hotel clip. And the Israeli nineteen ninety six clean break strategy led to the neocon new Pearl Harbor request from nineteen ninety eight's papers. So now we have foreshadowing, knowing of a plan ahead of time, the stand down, the insider trading. 
There's a lot of overlap between these two events, but I don't feel like I can give it more than one slide because we still have a ways to go. In two thousand four, the leader of the PLO, the Palestine Liberation Organization, well, he he died suddenly, and they didn't have a synthetic gene therapy available back then. What they had was, a little bit of polonium. Now, this is a hard article again to find. It's a Reuters article. It's a real news article. There's real evidence. There was real science, and it's pretty credible, 
but it's censored. And that tells me it's very credible. If they're willing to go through and hide it, it's a lot more credible than you wanna think it is. So you have to use the Wayback Machine to find it, and this cleared the way for the Israeli plan to empower Hamas and alienate the Palestinian cause. Because as long as Arafat's being reasonable, he wants to negotiate. Israel didn't wanna negotiate in two thousand four, two thousand five. So they moved out of Gaza, and they put Hamas in control. Hamas is a state sponsored 
terror group that they give bucket loads and literally suitcases full of money to support. And what do they do? They keep everybody who's a reasonable human being from supporting the Palestinians because who would support those crazy guys with green headbands creating terror on our best friend ally Israel, and the innocent people who live in its country, innocent people who live in Britain. So when I'm talking about various nation states, I'm not talking about all of us. We are subject to 
non elected rulers and we have that all in common. What I'm showing is the abuse of power by an international group that has interests in eroding and deleting our freedom around the world and making us all in the Palestinians and making this into planet Gaza. So Arafat's assassinated. Two thousand five, Hamas takes power in Gaza. After Arafat's death in two thousand four, coincidentally, a new election was held. How about that? 
Let's bring in some guys that definitely don't wanna negotiate. In March two thousand five, twelve Palestinian factions reached an agreement, the Palestinian Cairo declaration, which called for elections to be held using a mixed voting system rather than the majority electoral system used in nineteen ninety six. Let's see how that works out. In June two thousand five, the PLC legislated to give the, give effect to the Cairo declaration increasing its membership from eighty eight to one thirty two. So this is part of how when people say, hey, 
Hamas got elected. Yeah. It got elected once, and why haven't they had an election since? And when you look into the election, they change the election system in order to get this done. Hamas, playing the role of the bad guys that you could never support. So there's a little bit of history behind Hamas. It goes back. You could check it out. But the point is, having a bad guy that you can call a Nazi that can't fight back, and, basically, can give you the the cover of genocide and ethnic cleansing 
because it's like this. A pro Zionist might say, if we're committing genocide and ethnic cleansing, why are we so bad at it? Why is it taking so long? And the retort could be, because you're doing it as fast as you can without the world taking notice and put putting you on trial for war crimes. And on you know, to that effect, over the past seven months, I think they've jumped the shark. I think the world has taken notice. When you've got, countries joining South Africa in the genocide trial, it's not a good look. Like, you know, it's it's one thing if one country does it, but when a bunch of other countries are jumping on with that, you might wanna look at your bad guys and see if they're the ones with the black hats or the white hats. 
Because there's groups in this country that have political sway over our pseudo elected leaders. This is top down funding. This comes from APAC and CUFI. This is what's known as the Israel lobby. And I'd say probably about ninety percent of our politicians, are on the side of whatever these guys say, and they take the money and they cash the checks. And, the ones who, want to run against, you know, APAC will come in and drop a hundred million dollars on your competitor for them to win so that they can get support in your demographic if it's an important demographic. 
So let's get to lesson three, abolishing state sponsored terrorism because that's what we're talking about. Whether you're talking about Hamas or you're talking about the state of Israel, there's a lot in common there. And when you say that, it's not a blood libel, it's part of history. State of Terror, how terrorism created modern Israel by Thomas Suarez encapsulates a lot of the terroristic activities of the Stern Gang, the Haganah, the Irgun, the formulations 
of today's IDF. The tactics used are not much different than prior generations. They just have more technology and better public relations to cover up their activities. In fact, what would have happened if the Nazis made a rule that you couldn't criticize them for being Nazis? What would the world look like today? Here's some scholars to learn from. I mentioned them at the beginning of this discussion, but now you can see the programming in Palestinian, Palestine programming in Israeli schools. Right? So people will say, well, the Palestinians preach that the Israelis are bad. Well, likewise. So just weigh it on the weigh it on the scale that both sides do that. 
Ethnic cleansing of Palestine, Hamas may have attempted an ethnic cleansing genocide. That's what is claimed by, Zionist on ten seven. For a hundred years, there's been a war on Palestine and an ethnic cleansing that has been planned in a century before in the eighteen hundreds as we showed earlier tonight. Again, Norman Finkelstein, author of the Holocaust Industry Reflections on the exploitation of Jewish suffering because the people who created the Zionist movement, the people who financed it were not practicing 
a religion. They are practicing finance and politics. And as I just mentioned, Thomas Suarez, author of Palestine Hijacked How Zionism Forged an Apartheid State from River to Sea and State of Terror, How Terrorism Created Modern Israel. Last but not least, Benny Morris, author of nineteen forty eight, some opposing views, some agreeing views, it's all good history for your edification and enjoyment. Let's revisit ten seven now through the lens of having watched this presentation. Since ten seven, 
the death numbers have been lowered. The weaponized sex crimes have been debunked from multiple angles. The forty beheaded babies story is proven to originate with a group called Zaka, whose founder was a pedophile and committed suicide recently. The group does not have good credibility and destroyed the evidence that it claimed to, originate those stories with. Babies burned in ovens was never substantiated. In fact, hundreds of Palestinian civilians have been discovered in mass graves. And in fact, there is much evidence of sexual misconduct from the IDF on the Palestinian prisoners. 
So if anything, the claims of ten seven don't fit the side that's being blamed with them and fits the side that's accusing. There is a state of mind. Let me bring you over. Why? I'm not gonna bring you to that browser, but I'll read it out loud. It's called DARVO. It's an acronym. It's deny, attack, and reverse, victim, and offender. It's a reaction that perpetrators of wrongdoing, such as sexual offenders, may display in response to being held accountable for their behavior. 
Alternatively, they can say blood libel. They can say antisemite. They can say words, but those words really don't cover up these murders anymore from what I can tell. Let's revisit ten seven and the aftermath. When there are not one, not two, but dozens of mass graves being found, and this is just like they are not it's a war zone. Who has time to search rubble and find these things? This is what's being found now. The death toll numbers 
are far beyond what we're being told right now because those thirty five thousand numbers, they have to have a lot of information to get on that list. As was pointed out earlier tonight, in that tweet, the number of people who have died from this conflict is in the hundreds of thousands. The people who are denied medical care, died of starvation, died of cholera, typhus, whatever other diseases is going on in those unsanitary areas. So it's not just those who were killed from bombs, which is what's tracked. Right? So 
history is gonna continue to see these numbers grow over time. And the world is here to see it live on TikTok, and see the clips, and see it on their Twitter feeds, and see it on Facebook. And now, instead of arguing, we can work together and bridge these gaps and learn how to educate ourselves because I think that ninety nine point nine percent of people probably identify with the men, women, and children who are civilians being displaced, being starved, being bombed, being denied aid, and being propagandized 
by people who have much louder megaphones. So this is what we can do as individuals, is first off, we can stop being ignorant. We can start to know what we do instead of just repeating the party line. Evidence, I explained at the beginning of this presentation that you'll be presented with facts now. At the end, I wish to remind you, you were presented with facts and evidence which is objectively existent, not a singular perspective, 
and it's contradictory to the official narratives. The evidence is beyond reasonable doubt. They exist. There's a time, place, who, what, where, why, when, and how answer to all those pieces of evidence. It represents a preponderance of evidence too large for this presentation, but I gave you a good cap of the iceberg, tip of the iceberg. And that is now done and complete. If you wanna see the rest of ten zero seven inside job by John Hanke, it is available on YouTube. You have to sign in, improve your over eighteen, or you can find it over 
on BitChute, Odysee, Rumble, those sorts of sites. And that invisible hand that deleted the tapes, we had a lot of that in nine eleven. We also had innocent people who were sent in the buildings on nine eleven. You couldn't had a good war on terror without hundreds of firefighters being led into those buildings that everybody who was running it knew were gonna come down. Right? Nobody told the firefighters. But so that's interesting. They had the same sort of sacrifice, 
burnt sacrifice on ten seven, which is interesting. They knew ahead of time and when you, subtract the friendly fire by Israeli forces on their own people, the number of civilians is on par with Dyer Yassin. So I'd have to weigh those kind of equally. If you would like to know more, the official narrative of ten seven, exists on every channel of mainstream media. So over at Grand Theft World, we have the 
unofficial narrative. Here's the evidence that exists that is very inconvenient to the baby killers who are buying more bombs and sending them over to the people that they drop food to. You can learn more at grand theft world dot com. As I said, we have thirty plus episodes chock full of impeccable evidence for your education and your edification. There's two hundred plus hours of evidence on this topic. If you are aware of that, pass it on to other people. If you understand 
that you need a longer attention span to figure out what's going on, to understand, it doesn't take fifteen thousand hours of public indoctrination. It does take a couple hours of week, each week to process the news to actually get yourself an understanding so you can make better decisions, choices, and take better actions in life. So grand theft world dot com serves your needs once a week, and, we do a comprehensive long form podcast with notes and references unlike what you're gonna see out there. And if you'd like to know more about the Rothschilds, 
about the underground history of America, you can go over to the university of reason dot com forward slash t u h o a. And, for you, we've made it free to view. In conclusion, I wanna send you forth with a notion of love and mercy. And that's not just a Brian Wilson song from when he was playing piano in the sandbox. This is the words. And then Jesus said, father forgive them 
for they do not know what they do. That's recorded in Luke twenty three thirty four. But I also wanna point out, if they're unwiting, it's time for patience, politeness, and persistence in helping them to see the evidence that exists, part of which I've shown you tonight. But I'd like to note, Jesus didn't say to forgive it if they're doing it wittingly, on purpose, as part of a long standing plan of racial dominance. I don't think Jesus said, let's forgive and forget the baby killers. I don't remember him saying that. I didn't read that. So it's not accidental that we've been lied to. 
These events were concealed on purpose to provide cover for the continuing genocide and ethnic cleansing of the Palestinian people. Justice demands that the truth be made public. How can I start? Can't get the image out of my heart. When we've seen the bodies found in a mountain of parts. Netanyahu 
told you just another child of the dark. Clear it's gonna take much more than thousands to march. More than a speech, more than a poem, more than a track of music. Gonna take more than a sit down with Bassam Yousef, even bringing back ambassadors. It's an act that's useless long as you unboiled for Apaches and the tanks they're using. Freedom just beyond reach for people you cannot see. He's wheezing and cannot breathe and screaming through the concrete, looking for his four children. The bombs leave structures that I wouldn't wanna call buildings. My fingers pointed at this government. You all kill them. Tell me that you wouldn't take up arms if those with your children. Let me make the factor clear. Those bones were manufactured here, and they want to land upstairs because of natural gas in there. Throw death in the atmosphere while we happily stand and stare. And a little boy begs for his brother's strand of hair. Truth is, I don't know how anyone can live after digging for their dead kids, buried under bricks. Israel is a terror state, terrorists are terrorized. I testify on television, tele fights. I'm telling lies. This is not a war. It is systematic genocide. But whatever they try, Palestine will never die. 
They're not prepared to face the pain, so they're scared to say your name. They're not prepared to face the pain, so they're scared to say your name. They're not prepared to face the pain, so they're scared to say your name. They're not prepared to face the pain so they're scared to say your name. On churches and paramedics is hurting. The panic spread in hospitals where the doctors do c sections, not anesthetics. 
The pressure is manifesting. Humanity stands connected. Masters seem apathetic and actually just accept it. When our grandchildren ask us, what did we do to stop it? I'm determined to say, I did more than make music on it. That's why we shut down arms factories. You can try stopping us. Palestine actions the opposite of white phosphorus. We tell them on the television, but they never listen. Tell Piers Morgan that resistance isn't terrorism. They want them fled or missing, death or prison, endless killing. I've seen a father hold his baby up, the head was missing. Imagine demolition of home where your parents live and kings will say a thing, but at least we know that Yemen's with them. Ethnic cleansing, it ain't hard to see the stages, but Hazela is a graveyard of the invaders It's close to the savagery clear though and there's clarity The journalists and doctors are heroes of humanity The sordid and as gory as this story is for now And they get populating Hazif or Ben Gurion's canal 
Israel was a terrorist state. Terrorists are terrorized. I testify in my television televised. I'm telling lies. This is not a war. It is systematic genocide. But whatever they try, Palestine will never die. Not long after God 
destroyed. He was born into awareness 
on fateful Thursday. A sentient robot, first born renamed survival 
with E next to his side. While the robots and the robophobes wage war on their own kind. It's history is the story of history. It's the story of plunderers taking care of people who produce. They claim to take care of them through government, which doesn't give you anything it doesn't take away first. So it's not creating something out of nothing. It's very real what they're doing. They're taking your rights or taking some people's rights and adding more to someone else's rights. If you haven't heard about our Grand Theft World community membership, here are a few of the things you've been missing. A mobile app where you can access replays of the Grand Theft World podcast and show notes. Access to the Grand Theft World community on Discord where we crowdsource news and resources, and you can contribute to the show, the opportunity to participate in the Grand Theft World biweekly town hall, exclusive content from Richard Grove, including behind the scenes footage and future access to unpublished material, 
ninety three episodes of the Peace Revolution podcast, and the Grand Theft World newsletter delivered straight to your inbox each week. If you wanna stay ahead of the great game, visit us at grand theft world dot com, click or tap the button in the top right hand corner, and join a vibrant community of researchers blazing a new path to truth. We'll see you there. Long history so stupid as I unfold the proof. Tune in and not drop off. But to top off, the post biz, remove music. This wealthy cat was moving stuck a cash in sports cruiser, made your accent deals mover, promoted fast like homeschoolers. 
Then noticing one day some bills that went unpaid, those crumbs they lent one way, discovered some unfun game, Then he was called into a meeting to disrupt and expose. But that was the day that the world froze. So stuck in the traffic and then caught in the panic. He dipped out in a frantic speed to exceed the seed planet at the event. And what would soon come? Connecting dots to be revealed in Project Consolation. Big props to Maria cast it. That's where I'd hear and get hooked on the name of Richard Grove. What he's saying is hypnotic. 
Synchrony said he came out like chronic. All in full stride. Caught puppies around all sides. Seeking sources to provide solution. The heavy handed knowledges will be sang, the peace revolution never know when I was listening. The lesson, the heaviest session recorded and rebuilt the ultimate history lesson in this quest, and I'm a Midwestern who was rocking it dope. Subscribe to the And I win the defense so history doesn't repeat and make it complete. Catch bread, death, world every week. With Richard and Tony, chop it up with the homies. And I ain't talking about that public school baloney. And it's like you should know me. Quoting got it when the flow's not growing. And Elgie's bearded to show when the time capsule stack of stats is open. So spread it around. The show is ready to pounce. Audience that abounds, seeking out what's profound. 
I know it is challenging, ballast season to balance when a forensic story can end boring men while exhorting in examination, contemplation, meditation, revelation, celebration, destinations planned, targets arrived. A ton of crew of souls that survived, broke free from the nine to five, and we doing it live. Hey, with hope in our flow, where consciousness grows as opposed to You don't have to think about it, dude. Because it's a comedy show. Gotta be bombing truth, woah. Trying to make uncommon truths be more commonly known. And it's a grand theft world that I'm living in. Ain't no reptilian skin. Just some normal 
they seem so I'm fighting back and digging jack. Obtaining knowledge, mister McArtifacts. Artifacts. Artifacts. Yeah. Like that aspect that they lack. Yep. Trivium core to deal with that. Rebel bring them back because it's the 
world that's rolling out. Got the gold model, now tracing Guacafella dollars, stripped of clouds. SCC connections are hard to doubt, but most go the common route. Walking with their head in the shroud, deal with to grab them world that I'm peering at. The sky's like a pyramid. But those tune in and they be feeling that, revealing that. Things ain't what they see, so I'm fighting back. And digging Jack, obtaining knowledge, listing an artifacts. Artifacts. You should know it's not a video game. This isn't Grand Theft Auto, folks. This isn't a video game. This is Grand Theft World. 
Alright, LD. It's a Grand Theft World that I'm peering at the sky like a pyramid. The world's tuning in will be feeling it, revealing that exceeding what it seems on, by back, and digging Jack, tuning out wisdom and artifacts. If you need a single location to get cutting edge information and keep up with the rapidly changing world around us, 
tune in to Grand Theft World, where a forensic historian and a logic professor break down the week's news in-depth and in context. There's a ton more there, so go check it out. And don't forget to get your Freedom Vault on the home page.