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Computer.
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0:00:03 --> 0:00:[privacy contact redaction]ors for COVID. Ethics in
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today's discussion, we have two speakers. This group was founded
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0:00:11 --> 0:00:[privacy contact redaction] over three years ago. I'm Charles Kovetz,
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0:00:16 --> 0:00:[privacy contact redaction] speakers from where so we have people
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from all around the world and professionals from all around
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the world. I'm going to truncate this introduction so that so
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our speaker can speak who's in a in a airport at the moment. Many
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of us thought the vaccines were okay. Now many of us say we're
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proudly passionate anti-vaxxers. If you're new here, please
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introduce yourself in the chat. If you publish anything and you
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want to promote it, put it in the chat. Most of us understand
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we're in the middle of World War Three, and that the medical
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science battle is only one of 12 battlefields. The other one is
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the is the information battle line. I will share those 12
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0:01:02 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction] of us understand the development
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of science and the science is never settled. The meeting runs
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0:01:12 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction] speaker will speak for
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about an hour, and then we'll have a second speaker which who
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0:01:18 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction] asks the first
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0:01:22 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction]ion each time it's a free speech environment and we don't
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0:01:26 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction]ry. So if you're offended by anything,
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we lovingly don't care. We come with an attitude and
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0:01:34 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction]ive of love, not fear. Fear is the opposite of love.
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Fear squashes you love on the other hand expands you. The
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0:01:41 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction]ianity is loving people who don't agree
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0:01:45 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction]e who don't behave how you want them
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to. It's a big challenge. These twice weekly meetings and not
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0:01:52 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction]inary range of actions and initiatives
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have been generated from linkages made by attendees in
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0:01:57 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction] a solution or product put it in
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0:02:01 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction]ed and is uploaded on the Rumble
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0:02:03 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction] two presenters today as I said the
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0:02:06 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction] is going to remain anonymous and we thank him for
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for being willing to speak to us. He is a film producer and
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0:02:15 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction]or, a well known film producer director who's going to
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share his experiences and truth around January [privacy contact redaction]ivities
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in Washington DC. Our second speaker is Andrew Bridgen, the
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0:02:28 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction]anding up for what this
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0:02:32 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction]ands up for which is truth, justice, ethics, freedom,
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and real health. And finally, thank you, Stephen Frost again
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for creating this group over three years ago. Okay, over to
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0:02:43 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction]ease speak up.
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Charles, how do you know he's here?
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Okay, there we are. Okay, sorry. Talk about timing. I was I
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got in here really early. But the took me an hour to get
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through the security line. And I was at the beginning of the line
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0:03:07 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction] popped through it. So there. So anyway, yeah, go ahead
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tell me what you want me to say or ask questions or whatever.
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Excellent. Well, how do you want us to address you?
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0:03:21 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction] whatever I don't know.
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Mr. Film Producer.
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That's right. Mr. Film Producer. All right. Well, first of all,
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0:03:32 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction] the intro and I'm glad you got through
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security. And we run we're totally happy to run as a
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0:03:41 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction]ions. Why don't you share five minutes, you know your story
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in terms of the 24th on the sixth of January 2021. And then
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we're great at asking questions.
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Mr. Mr. Filmmaker, you may help you if if I told you that this
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0:04:01 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction] that in 2020, there was a
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global coup d'etat in in in March 2020. So that may help you.
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So we know about treason. And we know that treason took place in
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all these countries. So if that's helpful.
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Yes, actually, my, my wife is from Brazil, and they had a very
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0:04:27 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction] identical situation that even even more crazy, like more
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0:04:33 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction] couldn't do anything about. And, but
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0:04:37 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction], on the the other one, I was just, I don't know, I was
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0:04:41 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction], I've done a lot of documentaries, this and that. And
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0:04:44 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]l a lot. I've been all over the world and filmed in
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India, Africa, China, like Europe, so all over. And so
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0:04:53 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction], I'm just a curiosity type person. And that day, we
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were like, you know, some of my friends were like, you know, we
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should go tomorrow. I don't know, just think like history's
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going down or something. And that's it. Didn't have any
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particular reason other than that. We were just like, I do a
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me and some friends. And one of my friends was a stunt man. And
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he was, he's like, Oh, you're gonna go, I'm gonna go. He's he
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was from the other part. And he said, I got to go to LA after
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that. But I'm gonna go by there. I'll ride my motorcycle up
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0:05:26 --> 0:05:[privacy contact redaction] met with a bunch of people. I'd been to the
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inauguration. And so I knew like, you got to get there super,
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super early to get anything. And so I went up there. And it was
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like, three o'clock in the morning, we went up so we
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wouldn't well, when I got there, there's like people on the
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there's already a line, you know, so it's a lot of people,
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you know, a lot of people, but already aligned, but it's three
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in the morning. And there's people on there with like
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filling out, writing these big signs, like tons like stacks of
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you know, Trump, you know, Oh, go Trump, blah, blah, blah, you
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know, just generic signs. But it was like, a couple of people
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writing dozens and dozens of signs, you know, so I thought
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that's kind of weird. And at that point, the only thing that
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I thought because we arrived the night before, and it was late at
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night, and we saw some of these what we probably anticipated was
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Antifa or something. And, but that's the only thing that I in
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my mind, I thought I probably, if anything, and Tifa people
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0:06:30 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction]ir up something. But we, we ended up.
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So in that line, that guy that had the, the, I can't even
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remember the name, the moose horns, or he happened to walk
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by. It's funny, because all these characters that ended up
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a small range. Well, then the other guy that was literally
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next to us in line, this is like, you know, two hours later,
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we're just waiting because there was only certain amount of
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0:06:59 --> 0:07:[privacy contact redaction]e they would let in the front part by the stage. And
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that's the only security there was no police. There was no zero
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police all day. There were no food trucks, the city had I'd
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nothing. So there was no access to anything and no police at an
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event, which they're expecting hundreds of 1000s of people.
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And I don't know what the actual number but probably you know, in
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the neighborhood of 300,000, you know, on just basic, visually,
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and then this guy in front of us, he's like, ah, ff Trump, you
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know, just like angry, we're like, weirdo. And then his two
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look like sons, maybe they came up, and they they had a bunch of
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Trump swag. And all of a sudden, they just started started
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putting on Trump swag that they bought from a local little, you
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know, dealer thing. And then, so they all and then they just all
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dispersed, you know, and, and so I was like, these are
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troublemakers, you know, and so at that point, that was still
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0:08:08 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction] be like that kind of troublemaker
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0:08:11 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction]e. So go through the thing. My friend Trump was
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speaking and my friend was like, Oh, man, you could tell
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he's he's not fiery, like he usually is. He's, he can already
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tell what's going down is he's kind of sounds defeated, you
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know, like this is not going to change anything. So he knew it
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was kind of a, so he's like, Hey, I'm gonna go ahead and take
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out of here, because I got to go drive across the country. He's
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like, he said, so we're like, Okay, cool. Well, since we've
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been there since 3am, everybody's cell phone. So
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ironically, we could not upload anything. And this was early,
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early on, like literally, you know, 5am before the mass
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crowds really got there. They wouldn't even allow us to
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upload even a photo like so the internet from the entire area
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0:08:58 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction] from a event standpoint,
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0:09:04 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction]ion where you you know, so I was like, they don't
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want anybody to know what everybody sees here. And I just
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thought it was the speech or whatever. So there was only a few
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cameras out of all the cameras on Trump. There was only a few
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0:09:18 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction]ually covering the speech. And I thought it was a
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rather small amount of cameras to be considering this was such
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a talked about, you know, day. And so anyway, and they would
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never turn around and show the crowd. So it was just an even
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jump, I believe pointed that out in a speech like, Hey, why don't
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you turn around and show the crowd? You know, this is math,
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you know, amount of people up on the hill. So anyway, my phone's
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going not here, but that day was going dead. And so I said, Hey,
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my friends, I was like, we get separated or anything. Let's
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0:09:52 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction] meet at the Washington Monument. After this is over,
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like, you know, noon or whatever. And so and sure enough,
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mine off because it was I'd been there so long. And so that was
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0:10:08 --> 0:10:[privacy contact redaction] thought it's pretty much over. And we were
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like, I don't know if I want to go over there and stand there
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because I was like, we got a long drive. So but I was like,
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I'm definitely hungry. Well, finally, we saw a food truck.
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And it was like some chicken wings probably saved me a lot of
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grief in my life by being there. But the so it was it was from a
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and the Capitol. And so I said, I don't care. At that point, I
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was famished. I mean, like, I don't care if I stand in line
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for two hours. Give me some chicken wings. And so I got in
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line. And that's when my brother called. And he said, Kyle,
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where are you at, man? And now he wasn't at home. And so
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0:10:52 --> 0:10:[privacy contact redaction], he said, he, and he was like, he goes, whatever you do,
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don't go to the Capitol. They're having an insurrection or
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something. I was like, what are you talking about, man? I'm
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standing here, I can see like, you know, I was a couple of
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0:11:08 --> 0:11:[privacy contact redaction]uff. I couldn't see anything from there. So I was
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like, Okay, but it was my brother. So I was like, Okay,
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yeah, I'll stay. I'm not going anywhere anyway. I'm sitting
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here. So then we can't get there's no internet at this
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point. So there's no, you can't get on. There's no news. You
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don't have any clue of anything's happening. So
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ironically, at this point, I don't know the time I can't
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remember, because I'm not great on numbers. But sometime it was
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early afternoon, and there's still no police and this is
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supposedly when so then I get another call from a friend. And
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he goes, Hey, he said, Hey, where you at? And I was like, Oh,
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I'm over here at the he goes, Oh, yeah, yeah. Oh, now this is a
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guy I hadn't seen there yet. And he's a manager of a famous
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somebody who's a famous liberal. Ironically, he's a conservative
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guy, but he was at this event. So but he has contacts in the
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media because he's, you know, connected to famous circles. And
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so and well, they don't know that he's conservative, though.
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But he goes, I'm in the Capitol. And I was like, What are you
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doing in there? And at this point, I still don't I said my
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brother said something bad. He goes, Oh, no, no, they, they
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opened up the gates. They said, there was some bomb threats in
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the nearby buildings coming here, you'll be safe. And I was
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like, Okay, he goes, Why don't you come over here? I was like,
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Nah, I'm waiting here for food. I don't. At that point, there
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still wasn't other than my brother, there was still wasn't
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any visible signs of anything that was going on from a, you
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know, from a distant perspective. And so he's in
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there on the bottom floor. And he's just like walking around,
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you know, and then so at that point, then my other so then
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there was this big like, wait, this is where I thought, okay,
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something's wrong. But I thought it was like Antifa all the way
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I've been in television and stuff my whole life. I mean, not
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my whole life, but my career is, I was like, there were cameras
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everywhere around the Capitol. Now, I didn't know exactly how
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many till later when I got back and saw the news. But there were
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they whoever whoever the teams were, they they anticipated to
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the event was not Trump speaking, but it was the
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Capitol. Even though there was nothing scheduled for the
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Capitol, it was just a, you know, a people going to stand
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sitting there, and then still no police anywhere to be found.
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0:13:52 --> 0:13:[privacy contact redaction]uff's going down. And then I can't see
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anything at that point. And all of a sudden, there was these big
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0:13:59 --> 0:14:[privacy contact redaction] around from the entire from the entire around the
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Capitol, from like a U shaped horse shoe where everybody's at
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0:14:09 --> 0:14:[privacy contact redaction]osions. And then you hear I
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hear all this noise and it looked like some kind of gas or
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something in the air. Well, basically, it was they tear
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gassed, you know, 30,[privacy contact redaction]arted
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shooting from the Capitol, basically shooting rubber
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bullets into the crowd. So ironically, the incitement was
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not. So I was thinking, of course, if now first we thought
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was this like a bomb or something Antifa related, but
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I'm kind of from a distance. So I'm not in the middle of it. But
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I can see what's going on. You know, it's like sitting on the
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front bleachers at a football game, you can see what's going
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on in the field, but you're not on the field. And so and I was
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like, what in the world is going on? So anyway, all of a sudden,
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all these things go around. Well, that's when evidently like
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some more chaos. Now from a farther perspective, the chaos
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0:15:08 --> 0:15:[privacy contact redaction]ill later, what we saw was upfront, you know, close. Well,
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0:15:11 --> 0:15:[privacy contact redaction]e who were literally
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shooting rubber bullets and tear gas, 10s of 1000s of people. So
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if you're doing that with a group of a lot of who are
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rednecks and veterans and everything else, you know, your
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intention is to inside a crowd. So that was so anyway, at that
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point, one of my other friends, called the guy that was on the
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motorcycle. And he said, Hey, man, my friend, he said, he
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said, Get out of there. He goes, if you're still there, get out
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of there. This is you did not want to be that place. He's a
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military guy. And he said, So anyway, now at this point, it
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still doesn't look like there's any chaos. There's still
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literally like grandma's pushing cars with little kids toward the
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crowd. And so we would say, Hey, man, I want to go up there. I
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0:16:04 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction] something bad's going on. Oh, okay. And they just kept
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0:16:07 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction]ance other than that one big, you
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know, kind of like tear gas explosion kind of thing, couldn't
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see anything going on from back here. And so I started we just
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take our time. We're just walking away. I'm like, well, we
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can go get our car. So but at that point, there's still no
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cell phone. There's no I mean, you could call them cell phone,
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but there's no data. It was so throttled because I tried to
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0:16:32 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction] a photo from the monument and it took like 30
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0:16:36 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction] So the internet was so
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0:16:40 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction] an impossible to get
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anything online. So now we go so we run back to the hotel. Well,
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then when we're at the hotel, across in the Arlington way,
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that's the first time suddenly I see what the rest of the world
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is seeing. And I was like, Oh, no, as we're about to leave now
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this is this is like the after the supposedly instructions been
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going on for two hours. There's still no police officers there.
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And then all of a sudden, like a B movie, Steven Seagal movie,
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here come the police and force like there's both sides of the
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road, which were all closed down. All of a sudden, I don't
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know how many probably 2030 40 police cars. So I was sitting
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there thinking like, these guys have been sitting sitting
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somewhere all day, waiting in a part of the game lot waiting
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for a phone call to say, come, come, you know, where were these
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guys out if it's on national TV, for two hours, if there's this
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0:17:41 --> 0:17:[privacy contact redaction]ion, you would think the local, the Capitol police
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or whatever the DC police, I don't know which one you would
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think they would be there the second but they weren't so they
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were waiting somewhere for a phone call to say okay now, and
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they all showed up and it was like it was like a production.
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0:17:59 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction]rated. Well, when I get back to the and
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that's what I thought at that moment, I knew like, this is a
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big, fat, orchestrated event, like from a reverse coup sort of
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standpoint, you know, and so I go over and so at the hotel,
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0:18:17 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction]e are Oh, my goodness, I can't
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believe that it up. And then we're like, wait a minute, my
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0:18:22 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction] camera was inside the
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Capitol, somebody breaking in through the window. And from the
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the Capitol. Well, my first thought being in production is
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number one, that's an area that's closed off for the
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Congress for television for anything, there's nothing to be
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go on there. So why is there a camera from that angle shooting
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0:18:45 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction] in a closed off area of the Capitol, where there
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is no suspicion. So I was like, that camera was there from the
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beginning. And that's the only way you would have caught this
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0:18:57 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction] break in. So I was like, all these people that were
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absent over at the other part, they were all right there. And
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they were already they already knew like they everybody on this
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thing, they knew here's the shots we need to get, we need
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to get the break in shots, we need to get this this. And so
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that's what they did. So anyway, they took and so at that point,
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we're gone, we're at the hotel, and we're like getting on the
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road. And, and then my friend, who was inside the building, he
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got out and he was like, don't, don't call me don't. He was
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like, he was scared now because he realized what just went down
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from the inside. And so of course, he's afraid. So
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ironically, he had texted the head of two major news networks.
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0:19:45 --> 0:19:[privacy contact redaction]ion the day before. And
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he said, Hey, I'm going to be at the Capitol. And so he said,
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if you want me to get any footage for you, I'm going to go up
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there tomorrow. So had he not done that right now, he would be
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probably sitting in prison. But because he did that one thing,
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the next morning, which he screenshotted his screen the
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next morning, the hit all of his text threads on his phone that
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0:20:13 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction]e were erased offside. So he there was
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they erased every single text message that he had sent to the
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heads of networks. So there was no even trace of communication
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to them, which made him also be afraid again. But at the same
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time, I know that's why he was on the protected list, because
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0:20:36 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction]ly with the presidents of networks. And
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0:20:40 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction], so we that was that was in a basic sense, that's
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that was our experience. It was kind of from a distance, but I
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watched what I saw was, and as I saw the news then, and it was so
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0:20:53 --> 0:20:[privacy contact redaction]ive of what actually went down, and
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how they and this is what they do in the military, they, they
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entrap, and they draw in, and then they flip the script, and
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then they inside. And so it was so it was so well orchestrated.
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0:21:09 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction], I think to the point, they were elated that it went
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0:21:14 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction]anned. I think their plans was
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0:21:17 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction]e to break in. And that's what those guys in the
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day, and there were hundreds of those throughout the crowd that
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were there from since 3am. They had some swag on the head
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0:21:29 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction]ants. And they were there. And
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that their job was to create that little star. And then when
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the shooting happened and everything else, and then the
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shooting the crowd and check. That's when it all went into
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chaos. And I think the powers that we were probably elated
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about that. So that's it. That's about basically my story.
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That's, that's a pretty compelling story. And how amazing
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that you had to get there 3am, which you did. Now, we have
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0:22:04 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction]ions. And we know that we're
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0:22:09 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction] through the hour. So thank you so much for
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0:22:12 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction]ory. Those of you who have questions,
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0:22:15 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction] And we're Steven
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0:22:20 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction], Colin. Steven.
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Yeah, I'm here. I'm here. Sorry. I'm here.
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Okay, go for it, Steven.
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0:22:26 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction] two seconds. I'll get the video on. So thank you, Mr.
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0:22:32 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction], I wanted to ask you, how would you
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0:22:35 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction]erize so you may I can hear some interruption.
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This the this the
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airport noise going so
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0:22:46 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction]erize what you saw? You're an experienced
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film producer, director. How would you or do you want us to
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0:22:54 --> 0:22:[privacy contact redaction]ions? So
353
0:22:58 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction]ion. I mean, yeah, I just thought it was like
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0:23:00 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction]ion, you know, like they they, you know, the
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bombs go off in this building. This pushes people, they open
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0:23:07 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction]e up into the galley. They say, hey, come on in. This is
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safe. They they close them off inside. They're all inside. They
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don't know. And then on the upper level, then they they bring
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in their little cronies and break some windows. And, and
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then that was the setup. And then there was all along, like
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we got to make him to a criminal. So like it, from the
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get go, it was just like, how do we do this on a big scale, all
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the cameras were already there. There was no reason to be in the
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Congress at that point. They were already in shot all of
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them. And so they had cameras everywhere, all around the top
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edge of the building. The other thing that was whenever I left,
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they had full control of the social media, because they
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0:23:46 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction] So as I was leaving driving down the
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0:23:48 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction]ate, all of a sudden people who were also leaving were
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0:23:52 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction]ing videos across TikTok and you know, YouTube and whatever.
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Well, so I saw one I was like, Whoa, this crazy look at this.
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This is what we were in. Well, then I went to show my brother
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and within minutes, that video was gone. And so everybody that
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0:24:09 --> 0:24:[privacy contact redaction]ing any video that was not from the narrative side,
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they were out of can't imagine how massive of an amount of
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0:24:18 --> 0:24:[privacy contact redaction] to take to to our algorithm or whatever. So
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0:24:22 --> 0:24:[privacy contact redaction]er from YouTube or
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0:24:26 --> 0:24:[privacy contact redaction]agram, but TikTok is algorithm differently.
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So it's based on similar, similar things. So they were
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popping up. So I downloaded an app, and I started downloading
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videos, I downloaded probably [privacy contact redaction]e as they
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0:24:42 --> 0:24:[privacy contact redaction]ing them, because I knew within minutes, they'd be
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0:24:44 --> 0:24:[privacy contact redaction] like, because the people on the
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grounds videos were, they were all over the map, but it showed,
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you know, people were like walking in, oh, yeah, here's
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this. There's people, the police officers letting them in. And
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here's this and that, you know, so it was a, it was a too clear
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0:25:01 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction]ive. So it was definitely coordinated between
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the social media companies, between, oh, and here's the
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other thing. And this is this was what, as I was like, okay, to
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me, the biggest standout was like, okay, the police, you
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know, why that that was, to me, well, so I looked up who the
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guy was, I don't remember now, you know, years ago, but like,
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0:25:23 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction], he evidently stepped
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down the next day. Well, he was never questioned, never on the
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news, never anywhere. But he decided to resign the next day
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quietly. Well, then fast forward years or two, you can look it
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up. I don't know exactly when but right about the time that,
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0:25:43 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction]ify, he conveniently died
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of natural or something, you know, whatever they die. And so
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ironically, because he was the guy who had direct connection to
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whoever the Speaker of the House or whoever would be the person
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that calls the Capitol Police. And so he was conveniently
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retired and then conveniently died before he could ever tell
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anyone or say or be forced to tell anyone. Obviously, he was
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part of it.
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How long after six of January did it take him to die?
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That was like a year or so later, because he just kind of
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0:26:22 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction] that they were
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0:26:26 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction] a trial and he was and then and then that's that
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was the only time I'd ever heard of it. I didn't look dig into it
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much or anything. At that point, that was a long time later.
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0:26:36 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction]e around the world. So the sixth of January is
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important because it's inauguration day for it was
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inauguration day for President Biden. Is that right?
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0:26:50 --> 0:26:[privacy contact redaction] the day that they were
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going to say if if
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Trump had if if Mike Pence was going to do the the votes to
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extend the I don't even know I'm not a general sense not a
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political person. So like, you know, political savvy as far as
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terminologies, but it was but it was that they were he was going
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to see if the vote had gotten certified or not. And that and
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that Pence was the that was the day that Pence was. So it was
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0:27:22 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction] a rally to show support so that sometime in the afternoon
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they were supposed to and they didn't know when it could be two
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three, five o'clock. But by the end of the day, they would know
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if the votes were certified or not. And so that's why it was
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there as a yes.
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0:27:39 --> 0:27:42
So inauguration day is the 20th of January. Is it a from
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memory? Oh, yes. Yeah. Yes. So the importance of it is that
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so on the sixth of January, President Trump was still in
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power, correct?
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Yes, yes. Yes. So all this happened under Trump's watch,
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allegedly. But it looks like it didn't. So
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0:28:06 --> 0:28:10
this was the Wait a minute. This was the when did this happen?
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0:28:10 --> 0:28:10
What year was it?
437
0:28:12 --> 0:28:14
Was January 2021?
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0:28:14 --> 0:28:20
2021. Okay. Okay. Yeah. So this was after let's say, yeah, 2021.
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0:28:21 --> 0:28:23
Yeah. Okay. Okay. This is the end of that. Okay.
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0:28:25 --> 0:28:29
Yeah. So the point I'm trying to make is, how was all this
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organized with Trump in power? So an apparent insurrection,
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which wasn't an insurrection was organized at the highest level
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0:28:38 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction]ill in power? How could that happen?
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0:28:41 --> 0:28:45
Well, I mean, you're dealing with people who all day, every
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day, they're, you know, military run operations, no one ever
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knows about and you know, half the world operations stuff
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0:28:52 --> 0:28:55
nobody ever knows about. So like, you know, I think I mean,
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0:28:55 --> 0:29:00
even Time magazine, a year later came out with a pay look, and
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0:29:00 --> 0:29:03
they were kind of at that point, I almost bragging about it, not
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0:29:03 --> 0:29:06
not about January 6. But it's about the election of how big
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tech and the big companies and the politicians, everybody got
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together to make sure Trump didn't get in power. And they did
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it, Time magazine literally did an entire article, huge write up
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front page of all about how they all got together and work
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together to make sure that Trump and it worked and they saved
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democracy and blah, blah, blah. And so it was even they're
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0:29:27 --> 0:29:[privacy contact redaction] of look what we essentially
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what we pulled off. Yeah.
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0:29:31 --> 0:29:34
But essentially, it seems to me that it was a coup d'etat.
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0:29:36 --> 0:29:38
Oh, yeah, that's that's what that was our sense when we left,
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0:29:38 --> 0:29:41
we were all sitting in the car. We're like, we just we just
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0:29:41 --> 0:29:45
watched the coup of America. But like, that's what we felt in a
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in a visceral sense of like, we watched history go down in the
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0:29:49 --> 0:29:[privacy contact redaction] possible like we were in, you know, Cuba or something,
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you know.
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0:29:53 --> 0:29:58
So then they then they blame Trump for supporting
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0:29:58 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]ion, which wasn't an interaction. It was
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0:30:01 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]ured by evil forces. It's I see. Yeah, maybe I'm not
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0:30:06 --> 0:30:10
I'm not. So we've got three, we've got three people with the
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0:30:10 --> 0:30:14
hands up who are all American citizens. So I'll let them go
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0:30:14 --> 0:30:18
ahead. So I'd like to know what David Holland would like to ask
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0:30:18 --> 0:30:20
you. And I'd like to know what Glenn Macco in particular.
473
0:30:20 --> 0:30:25
Okay, well, Rose. Excellent. Well done, Steven. Okay, Rose,
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0:30:25 --> 0:30:27
you're first and Dave then Glenn.
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0:30:29 --> 0:30:33
Oh, hi, I just have two quick questions. Have you been working
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with?
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closely?
478
0:30:38 --> 0:30:41
Well, yes, but that might identify him. Rose. So
479
0:30:42 --> 0:30:48
yeah, yeah, I have met. I don't know the other ones. But yeah,
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0:30:48 --> 0:30:51
actually, I've met both of them. But I don't know. I don't know.
481
0:30:53 --> 0:30:56
Okay, I just didn't know if you were helping contribute. And if
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not, I was gonna say, are you going to put out your own?
483
0:30:59 --> 0:31:04
No, I just, if I did, I gave over a bunch of stuff to people
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0:31:04 --> 0:31:10
that, that could use it to I didn't want to be on the it
485
0:31:10 --> 0:31:[privacy contact redaction] But the, but I did. Yeah, but but I did give everything I
486
0:31:18 --> 0:31:[privacy contact redaction]e that and has been popped up into some
487
0:31:24 --> 0:31:[privacy contact redaction]s. So you know, that that was
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0:31:35 --> 0:31:38
okay, Rose was after you have two questions you're done. Okay.
489
0:31:39 --> 0:31:39
Dave.
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0:31:42 --> 0:31:46
Yeah, sure. thoughts. Can you hear me? Okay. Yep. Yes. Sure.
491
0:31:46 --> 0:31:53
That's thanks for coming. How many cops would you say were on
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0:31:53 --> 0:31:[privacy contact redaction]imate?
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0:31:57 --> 0:32:01
Zero, the until, you know, three o'clock in the afternoon or
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0:32:01 --> 0:32:02
whenever it was like,
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0:32:02 --> 0:32:05
how many would you say were there? How many would you say
496
0:32:05 --> 0:32:07
were there? You know, sort of at peak cop hour?
497
0:32:10 --> 0:32:17
I saw probably 3040 cars, you know, pop in at the same time.
498
0:32:17 --> 0:32:21
So it's very small number. Yeah, yeah. Even at that point, it was
499
0:32:21 --> 0:32:24
small number. So I don't think they were, it was more like a
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0:32:24 --> 0:32:27
show like, oh, the police are here, you know, like, but this
501
0:32:27 --> 0:32:31
was like hours, like, unless no one in DC has the television,
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0:32:31 --> 0:32:33
then then everybody at the police department didn't know
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0:32:33 --> 0:32:35
there's something going on. You know, why weren't they there?
504
0:32:36 --> 0:32:40
Well, you know, there's only one reason. Yeah. Okay, so I'm
505
0:32:40 --> 0:32:44
gonna pop a cop. Yeah, my dad was a cop. Chief Deputy
506
0:32:44 --> 0:32:48
Sheriff's not there. But, but so I grew up around that. Yeah.
507
0:32:49 --> 0:32:52
I'm going to pop a few things out. You can bite on anything
508
0:32:52 --> 0:32:57
you want, or let it go by one is supposedly five cops committed
509
0:32:57 --> 0:33:05
to one died by some cause. Four cops committed suicide. Do you
510
0:33:05 --> 0:33:08
have any thoughts? Since you've been immersed in this, I thought
511
0:33:08 --> 0:33:[privacy contact redaction] thoughts on that. I'll bounce another couple off
512
0:33:11 --> 0:33:15
you. John Sullivan, the famous Antifa actor who also filmed the
513
0:33:15 --> 0:33:21
Ashley Babbitt shooting was filmed interacting with Ray Epps,
514
0:33:21 --> 0:33:23
the feds. So that's a plot thickener in case you have an
515
0:33:23 --> 0:33:28
opinion on that. Mike Johnson supposedly finally released the
516
0:33:28 --> 0:33:34
tapes from inside the Capitol, I'm told this weekend, but I
517
0:33:34 --> 0:33:38
haven't yet seen definitive evidence. And then the last
518
0:33:38 --> 0:33:40
thing I'd like to mention, if any of these catches your
519
0:33:40 --> 0:33:45
attention, the Ashley Babbitt Babbitt shooting looked to me
520
0:33:45 --> 0:33:[privacy contact redaction]aged. And I poured through hours and hours of
521
0:33:49 --> 0:33:52
videotapes of it. And the whole thing looks staged. And I was
522
0:33:52 --> 0:33:56
going to write about it. But it was very video driven. So I
523
0:33:56 --> 0:33:59
wasn't having luck. I showed it to some very smart friends. And
524
0:33:59 --> 0:34:03
they said, I see your point. But so I eventually backed away.
525
0:34:03 --> 0:34:08
Three years later, Cheryl Atkinson did the story. And she
526
0:34:08 --> 0:34:11
brought in two federal agents and they looked at the footage.
527
0:34:11 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction]uff. But they looked at the fitted footage and
528
0:34:14 --> 0:34:18
said, none of this makes sense from the perspective of a
529
0:34:18 --> 0:34:21
policeman. So if any of that rings a bell familiar, you want
530
0:34:21 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction] it love to hear it.
531
0:34:24 --> 0:34:29
Yeah, I mean, I've heard a lot of all that I don't I didn't. As
532
0:34:29 --> 0:34:33
far as like I'm just thinking from my witness side of like, I
533
0:34:33 --> 0:34:35
don't know what all went down in there. But I can tell you that
534
0:34:35 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction]e, at least on the lower level, they didn't know any
535
0:34:40 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction] that's why it looks like they're
536
0:34:42 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction] told like, here, go in
537
0:34:44 --> 0:34:48
here. Safe. Yeah. So like that's what the upper level people were
538
0:34:48 --> 0:34:52
the ones that there were the problems were and I and yeah,
539
0:34:52 --> 0:34:56
like you say, the FBI guys there. Ironically, even just
540
0:34:56 --> 0:34:59
recently, somebody came out with that video of them basically
541
0:34:59 --> 0:35:02
bragging about it. Like, oh, yeah, it's how easy it is to
542
0:35:02 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction]e and talking specifically about that. So like,
543
0:35:07 --> 0:35:11
yeah, I yeah, it's just a lot of like, I don't know why I was
544
0:35:11 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction]ly. Like I didn't have a camera or
545
0:35:14 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction] dead. So or was dead at that
546
0:35:17 --> 0:35:23
point. But uh, but I, so I don't, you know, I always think
547
0:35:23 --> 0:35:27
wherever I end up, I'm supposed to be there. And so I always I
548
0:35:27 --> 0:35:30
end up in like, Forrest Gump, my whole life is like Forrest Gump,
549
0:35:30 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction]s. I'm like, how did I get in this situation?
550
0:35:34 --> 0:35:41
And, and I, but, but I guess it was just to, to, to have
551
0:35:41 --> 0:35:46
witness to it, but then to share through, you know, connections
552
0:35:46 --> 0:35:49
or whatever things that could help maybe make a difference.
553
0:35:49 --> 0:35:52
And you know, all of us, we were like, wondering, like, why, you
554
0:35:52 --> 0:35:54
know, wow, what just happened? You know, it was it was one of
555
0:35:54 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction] things that you see in life, but you felt like,
556
0:35:58 --> 0:36:05
yeah, I felt like this overwhelming, like, wow, I don't
557
0:36:05 --> 0:36:09
think no one, nobody knows, you know, so except people there, I
558
0:36:09 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction] everybody there kind of had a pretty good idea of
559
0:36:12 --> 0:36:15
what happened. But then as they were even saying anything, they
560
0:36:15 --> 0:36:19
were censored, you know, so it's very, you know, dang, it's very
561
0:36:19 --> 0:36:26
China as sort of, you know, you know, our narrative is the only
562
0:36:26 --> 0:36:29
way. And they did it successfully as far as in a general sense,
563
0:36:29 --> 0:36:33
it's finally years later, starting to come out more stuff,
564
0:36:33 --> 0:36:37
but they pretty much, I believe, accomplished what they set out
565
0:36:37 --> 0:36:40
to do. And that was to frame him up so that he can, he was there
566
0:36:40 --> 0:36:43
was the goal, I think, was to frame him up as a criminal, so
567
0:36:43 --> 0:36:47
he can't run for president. And, and that was the intent. And
568
0:36:47 --> 0:36:51
that's what they pretty much did. And until just recently, I
569
0:36:51 --> 0:36:54
don't think much people even considered it anything else. I
570
0:36:54 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction] were like, I can't believe you're
571
0:36:58 --> 0:37:02
there. I can't talk to you ever again. I can't work with you.
572
0:37:02 --> 0:37:05
And, you know, you're an interactionist. And I'm like,
573
0:37:06 --> 0:37:07
no clue.
574
0:37:11 --> 0:37:18
So so for some of us Americans, the post j six response and other
575
0:37:18 --> 0:37:22
things after that the weaponization of the DOJ is a
576
0:37:22 --> 0:37:24
combination of both end of empire and the most treasonous
577
0:37:24 --> 0:37:28
things we've ever witnessed. I will yield the Florida Glen.
578
0:37:29 --> 0:37:33
Really? Yeah, absolutely.
579
0:37:34 --> 0:37:35
Thank you, David.
580
0:37:36 --> 0:37:41
Okay, great. So a couple things came up. Let me help clarify
581
0:37:41 --> 0:37:45
them. One was who was in charge. Now the Capitol Police is a
582
0:37:45 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction] than any of the other police
583
0:37:47 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction]etely controlled by the
584
0:37:51 --> 0:37:56
the house speaker. So at that time, it was Nancy Pelosi. And
585
0:37:56 --> 0:38:01
the the gentleman that was ahead of the Capitol Police spoke after
586
0:38:01 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction] to involve additional
587
0:38:06 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction], and his request was rejected by
588
0:38:09 --> 0:38:10
Nancy Pelosi.
589
0:38:11 --> 0:38:12
And yeah,
590
0:38:14 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction]ually going on. So they were
591
0:38:17 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction]oral college voting. And several states had
592
0:38:23 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction]e delegations that were disputing the the Biden set of
593
0:38:30 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction]ates. And what happens
594
0:38:35 --> 0:38:39
in that case is the Congress is responsible for reviewing the
595
0:38:39 --> 0:38:42
cases and deciding either to send it back to those states for
596
0:38:42 --> 0:38:45
review, and then the states, you know, coming back at a
597
0:38:45 --> 0:38:49
different time, or that the Congress reviews the actual
598
0:38:49 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction]e that are there and they say, No, this is good enough, we
599
0:38:52 --> 0:38:57
can pass judgment ourselves. And so the expectation was that the
600
0:38:57 --> 0:39:01
challenges were really quite solid. And that it was likely
601
0:39:01 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction]ates were going to be sent back to for
602
0:39:05 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction]ates, and then have to come back, you
603
0:39:09 --> 0:39:12
know, days or weeks later, to say that they, you know, that
604
0:39:12 --> 0:39:15
they went through that, that review process and concluded
605
0:39:15 --> 0:39:20
which of the of the slates were appropriate. So what happened is
606
0:39:20 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction]ivities that day, the
607
0:39:25 --> 0:39:27
Congress came back into session and say, Oh, no, no, we can't
608
0:39:27 --> 0:39:32
delay anymore, we have to push through the primary delegations
609
0:39:32 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction], and basically deny all the
610
0:39:35 --> 0:39:41
challenges. So that was kind of the mechanics of it all. Your
611
0:39:42 --> 0:39:46
commenting around no police around. So I'm assuming you
612
0:39:46 --> 0:39:51
would also agree that the absence of any DC police was a
613
0:39:51 --> 0:39:57
clear indication of intense to not be capable of controlling
614
0:39:57 --> 0:39:59
the crowd or controlling what was going on.
615
0:40:00 --> 0:40:04
Yes. And there was no up until the afternoon, there was
616
0:40:04 --> 0:40:07
nothing. So even though I saw all these people that early on
617
0:40:07 --> 0:40:09
that I thought, wow, these are troublemakers, there was no
618
0:40:09 --> 0:40:14
trouble in the crowd. So that I don't think they were there to
619
0:40:14 --> 0:40:17
be troublemakers during Trump's speech. They were there to be
620
0:40:17 --> 0:40:19
troublemakers later in the day, because obviously they hated
621
0:40:19 --> 0:40:22
jobs. God's in front of us was literally like f bombing Trump
622
0:40:22 --> 0:40:27
Trump, like like psychotic like f, f, f, f, f, f, f, f, f, f, f,
623
0:40:27 --> 0:40:30
over and over f, obviously, you know what the f, f, f, f, f, f,
624
0:40:30 --> 0:40:33
without saying it. But, but like, you know, so it was like a
625
0:40:33 --> 0:40:35
psychotic nature. So I don't, you know, I don't know who,
626
0:40:35 --> 0:40:[privacy contact redaction] as an observer of life in general. I
627
0:40:40 --> 0:40:[privacy contact redaction] like, okay, watch out this guy, you know, like, but,
628
0:40:44 --> 0:40:47
but then when you saw it was a bunch of them, and they all put
629
0:40:47 --> 0:40:50
Trump on, then you're like, okay, there's definitely
630
0:40:50 --> 0:40:51
something going on. And then nothing happened, you know,
631
0:40:51 --> 0:40:55
during the speech, after the speech, nothing, probably 90% of
632
0:40:55 --> 0:40:58
the crowd left, there's probably 30,000 out of the 300. Yeah, I
633
0:40:58 --> 0:41:01
don't know the sack numbers, but that were left, you know, there
634
0:41:01 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction] been 50,000 left. But you know, so it wasn't even
635
0:41:06 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction] kind of thought that's the event. And
636
0:41:08 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction] of them were just hanging
637
0:41:10 --> 0:41:13
around till, oh, let's see what they say, you know, it, they
638
0:41:13 --> 0:41:16
said, you know, it could be two o'clock and, or it could be
639
0:41:16 --> 0:41:20
later, you know, when they give the decision on what you just
640
0:41:20 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction]ates. And so, yeah, it was, it was just a, it
641
0:41:24 --> 0:41:30
was kind of a surreal sort of, like, you know, and I being a
642
0:41:30 --> 0:41:32
curiosity seeker, if I hadn't been so hungry, I might have
643
0:41:33 --> 0:41:39
been closer and not even talk in the room right now. So you know,
644
0:41:40 --> 0:41:43
I'm kind of thankful, you know, that I was from a distance.
645
0:41:43 --> 0:41:43
So
646
0:41:43 --> 0:41:48
well, excellent description from a technical viewpoint of, you
647
0:41:48 --> 0:41:51
know, so how people set up and, and film things and have camera
648
0:41:51 --> 0:41:56
shots set appropriately, from the various things that you
649
0:41:56 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction]ed.
650
0:41:57 --> 0:41:58
That's that's what I figure that's,
651
0:41:59 --> 0:42:01
yeah, there was my phone.
652
0:42:01 --> 0:42:04
No, let me finish the question from the things you collected.
653
0:42:04 --> 0:42:11
Had you able to get images of the camera persons that that were
654
0:42:11 --> 0:42:13
actually doing the official filming?
655
0:42:14 --> 0:42:18
Yeah, I actually got I gave it over to someone who was
656
0:42:19 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction]ed into Congress or whatever, just gave him my phone
657
0:42:22 --> 0:42:25
here, you grab anything you want off of it. Later, my phone
658
0:42:25 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction] it to him here, take whatever
659
0:42:28 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction], you know, the stuff
660
0:42:32 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction]ed from TikTok videos and whatever that I was
661
0:42:35 --> 0:42:38
able to grab from other random because after that, you know,
662
0:42:38 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction]ed once they can't accounts were banned and
663
0:42:42 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction]e's videos disappeared and all that very quickly. Then
664
0:42:46 --> 0:42:52
after that, they, you know, pretty much new cycles out
665
0:42:52 --> 0:42:56
nobody. So there's 10s of 1000s of people with videos on their
666
0:42:56 --> 0:43:03
phones to this day that no one's ever seen. Yeah. But I
667
0:43:03 --> 0:43:06
don't think on the place that was interesting is that the only
668
0:43:06 --> 0:43:10
security period at the entire event that I ever saw and I was
669
0:43:10 --> 0:43:13
looking because at that point I was kind of like, where's the
670
0:43:13 --> 0:43:19
police? It was the secret Trump secret service on the part that
671
0:43:19 --> 0:43:26
they were detail on they would do, you know, x ray machines
672
0:43:26 --> 0:43:29
like the airport going into the front lawn, which is where he
673
0:43:29 --> 0:43:33
spoke. So the everybody in there had to go through security, but
674
0:43:33 --> 0:43:36
it was not local security. It was it was like secret service
675
0:43:36 --> 0:43:41
security. So is the only the only security that I saw till
676
0:43:41 --> 0:43:45
later, obviously, there was there were people up in the
677
0:43:45 --> 0:43:[privacy contact redaction] that were shooting bullets and stuff.
678
0:43:49 --> 0:43:52
So they were they were there shooting rubber bullets, but
679
0:43:52 --> 0:43:56
they were there. You know, they weren't in the crowd. They were
680
0:43:56 --> 0:43:59
there. They were waiting at the Capitol basically, I know, like
681
0:43:59 --> 0:44:[privacy contact redaction]ant, I don't know. Yeah, I don't know. But from from
682
0:44:03 --> 0:44:[privacy contact redaction] a visceral point of view of like, I'm always looking at
683
0:44:06 --> 0:44:09
stuff and I'm always looking at shots. I was like, it was a very
684
0:44:09 --> 0:44:[privacy contact redaction], that you could have 300,000
685
0:44:12 --> 0:44:[privacy contact redaction]e and no police officers and nothing happened. Like that's
686
0:44:15 --> 0:44:18
pretty much my would be a definition of a peaceful event.
687
0:44:19 --> 0:44:[privacy contact redaction]ion, which wasn't an
688
0:44:23 --> 0:44:[privacy contact redaction]ion to hinder Trump from claiming voter fraud. Is
689
0:44:28 --> 0:44:[privacy contact redaction]erization?
690
0:44:32 --> 0:44:36
Yeah, yeah, I think that would be by thought process. That's all
691
0:44:36 --> 0:44:38
I could ever probably
692
0:44:38 --> 0:44:41
know was the whole exercise in your view, do you think that at
693
0:44:41 --> 0:44:[privacy contact redaction] is it reasonable to conclude that the whole exercise
694
0:44:45 --> 0:44:48
the whole fraud, if you'd like, was to hide voter fraud?
695
0:44:53 --> 0:44:56
You know, it could have been because it disrupted the the
696
0:44:56 --> 0:45:00
counting and all that, you know, and then one of and then it
697
0:45:00 --> 0:45:03
shifted the news. So after that, no one talked about that anymore.
698
0:45:04 --> 0:45:08
It was all about Oh, so they shifted the the one thing I give
699
0:45:08 --> 0:45:11
them, Hollywood and all everybody, they're great at news
700
0:45:11 --> 0:45:14
media, they're great at shifting narratives really quick, you
701
0:45:14 --> 0:45:19
know, when the Epstein list comes out, oh, you know, another
702
0:45:19 --> 0:45:21
news, you know, whatever, you know, if it doesn't fit there,
703
0:45:21 --> 0:45:24
whatever they're trying to do when I mean, Nashville, we had
704
0:45:24 --> 0:45:28
the, the transvestite that went in and shot up a Christian
705
0:45:28 --> 0:45:32
school and they, oh, well, we're sorry, another news, you know,
706
0:45:32 --> 0:45:35
like, whereas at first they were jumped on it, because, oh, wait,
707
0:45:35 --> 0:45:38
the school shooting, this is great for gun control, whatever.
708
0:45:38 --> 0:45:41
Oh, wait, wait, wait, nevermind. It's not that it's not. It's
709
0:45:41 --> 0:45:44
from our side. Okay, nevermind. That's not news. So they're
710
0:45:44 --> 0:45:47
great at that. Like they've done that effectively in the last
711
0:45:47 --> 0:45:49
50 years. So,
712
0:45:50 --> 0:45:53
but so all the checks and balances, re voter fraud in the
713
0:45:53 --> 0:45:[privacy contact redaction]ates were kicked into Chuck touch because of the
714
0:45:59 --> 0:46:[privacy contact redaction]ate of emergency, which the insurrection created,
715
0:46:06 --> 0:46:06
is that right?
716
0:46:07 --> 0:46:10
Yeah, pretty much it interrupted the the session and I mean,
717
0:46:10 --> 0:46:[privacy contact redaction]ill in there. That means they were still in
718
0:46:12 --> 0:46:15
session. And after that, who's ever, who's ever talked about
719
0:46:15 --> 0:46:18
that again? You know, like, oh, wait, what actually happened?
720
0:46:18 --> 0:46:21
Like everybody did y'all just, I mean, I don't know, did they go
721
0:46:21 --> 0:46:26
back and redo that? It was just like, okay, it's done now. Nobody
722
0:46:26 --> 0:46:27
cares anymore. Yeah.
723
0:46:28 --> 0:46:31
Well, yeah, because it was treason is clearly treason. And
724
0:46:31 --> 0:46:31
it was,
725
0:46:33 --> 0:46:37
I'm call it, they're not gonna treason themselves to a few
726
0:46:37 --> 0:46:40
weeks later, he's in power. He's definitely not going to treason
727
0:46:40 --> 0:46:40
himself.
728
0:46:40 --> 0:46:[privacy contact redaction]e, the American people
729
0:46:45 --> 0:46:47
should realize it's treason. That's what I'm trying to say.
730
0:46:48 --> 0:46:54
Oh, yeah, they Yeah, they should. In fact, I was in recently in a
731
0:46:54 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction]ually there for a sporting
732
0:47:00 --> 0:47:05
event. But the guy next to this sheet guy, and he was like, Oh,
733
0:47:05 --> 0:47:09
America, you know, I love that. He says I was, he goes, I loved
734
0:47:09 --> 0:47:12
I grew up on the movies, you know, and stuff and da da da. And
735
0:47:12 --> 0:47:16
then he goes, So I'm curious, is it, you know, Americans seem
736
0:47:16 --> 0:47:19
like, they're, you know, they're big, like, yeah, rah rah. He
737
0:47:19 --> 0:47:23
goes, Are they okay with how they're trying to internally
738
0:47:23 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction] under authoritarian
739
0:47:27 --> 0:47:31
global rule? And he said it so distinctly and so like, as if
740
0:47:31 --> 0:47:35
that, and I was like, you probably know more than 99% of
741
0:47:35 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction], it was just, it wasn't even a
742
0:47:38 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction]ion. It was literally from their perspective, like, this is
743
0:47:41 --> 0:47:44
what's happening. Are you guys okay with it? And I was like,
744
0:47:44 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction] part, Americans are okay with it, because they just don't
745
0:47:47 --> 0:47:48
care. They're, they're too.
746
0:47:49 --> 0:47:52
Because that's exactly what happened in the last four years.
747
0:47:53 --> 0:47:57
Absolutely. So COVID was a Trojan horse for totalitarianism.
748
0:47:58 --> 0:47:58
holiday.
749
0:47:59 --> 0:48:01
100% 100% Yeah.
750
0:48:02 --> 0:48:[privacy contact redaction]e of things. Mine is more of a comment. I know that
751
0:48:06 --> 0:48:11
he's going to have to go soon to catch a plane. I think that I
752
0:48:11 --> 0:48:[privacy contact redaction]age, not just in Washington, DC. And I
753
0:48:16 --> 0:48:19
think that this is something that since this is an
754
0:48:19 --> 0:48:23
international call, I think that we all need to be aware of this
755
0:48:23 --> 0:48:28
staging. Because I think that our world elitist are in the
756
0:48:28 --> 0:48:[privacy contact redaction]aging this in all over the world. And I do think
757
0:48:35 --> 0:48:41
that some of our so called conservative our our help groups
758
0:48:42 --> 0:48:[privacy contact redaction]ing data on us as we
759
0:48:46 --> 0:48:[privacy contact redaction] to be very much aware of that.
760
0:48:51 --> 0:48:[privacy contact redaction] a very dear friend who was
761
0:48:59 --> 0:49:05
in Washington, DC on that date. And it happens to be a she. And
762
0:49:05 --> 0:49:09
she had she was right there in front of Trump as he was giving
763
0:49:09 --> 0:49:15
his speech. And so she was going to go on up to the Capitol. And
764
0:49:15 --> 0:49:19
there happened to be an officer there in front of the podium
765
0:49:19 --> 0:49:[privacy contact redaction]anding in front of Trump. And he just touched
766
0:49:26 --> 0:49:31
her arm and he said, Miss, he said, Where are you going? And
767
0:49:31 --> 0:49:34
she said, Well, I'm going up to the Capitol with some of my
768
0:49:34 --> 0:49:38
friends here. And she he said, Please don't do that. He said,
769
0:49:38 --> 0:49:44
Because later on today, there's going to be trouble up there. And
770
0:49:44 --> 0:49:49
you really don't want to be part of it. So that was a warning to
771
0:49:49 --> 0:49:55
her. And that should also give us pause knowing that there were
772
0:49:55 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction]e within the law enforcement who certainly knew
773
0:50:04 --> 0:50:08
what was going to happen and what had been orchestrated. And
774
0:50:08 --> 0:50:12
I think that this is something that around the world that we
775
0:50:12 --> 0:50:19
really need to be cognizant of that this is something that
776
0:50:20 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction]rated everywhere. So that was my only
777
0:50:24 --> 0:50:29
comment. And thank you for coming on. We really appreciate
778
0:50:29 --> 0:50:35
it. I think it helps validate. I know I those who are had been
779
0:50:35 --> 0:50:42
imprisoned and are being persecuted in justly. I know some
780
0:50:42 --> 0:50:47
of you may be aware of Catherine McKinney. She's working very,
781
0:50:48 --> 0:50:53
very diligently to try to get information out. And she's
782
0:50:53 --> 0:50:57
dealing one on one with some of these prisoners who are being
783
0:50:57 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction]ive. And this certainly would be information that our
784
0:51:03 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction]ery person certainly would maybe want to share with her
785
0:51:08 --> 0:51:12
particularly. So thank you for coming on. And thank you,
786
0:51:12 --> 0:51:15
Stephen. We really appreciate everything that you and Charles
787
0:51:15 --> 0:51:15
are doing.
788
0:51:15 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction]ion and that is, were
789
0:51:19 --> 0:51:24
there any other prominent eyewitnesses? Have there been any
790
0:51:24 --> 0:51:27
other prominent eyewitnesses who've spoken out? Or are you the
791
0:51:27 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction] 10 say?
792
0:51:33 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction] of them have just been, you
793
0:51:36 --> 0:51:42
know, they were kind of algorithm down, I guess, you
794
0:51:42 --> 0:51:45
know, like, usually any anything, there's tons of people
795
0:51:45 --> 0:51:49
as I saw, posting videos, wow, this is crazy. This is this. But
796
0:51:49 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction] of them were, you know, eradicated, not not the people,
797
0:51:53 --> 0:51:57
but their content, or their stories. They just certain
798
0:51:58 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction] unless it went with
799
0:52:01 --> 0:52:03
their narrative. So there's fewer and fewer places that'll
800
0:52:03 --> 0:52:04
even
801
0:52:04 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction] wonder why you felt, you know,
802
0:52:08 --> 0:52:11
compelled, as many of us felt compelled to do something in the
803
0:52:11 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction] four years, why you felt compelled to to tell us about
804
0:52:15 --> 0:52:18
this. We're so grateful to you that you did do it. But I just
805
0:52:18 --> 0:52:19
want to
806
0:52:19 --> 0:52:28
be, I mean, I'm a truth seeker kind of person, but the the I've
807
0:52:28 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction]uff that's ticked off dictators and other stuff in
808
0:52:32 --> 0:52:36
other countries. And but when you're in your own country, they
809
0:52:36 --> 0:52:38
know where you live. You know, so
810
0:52:38 --> 0:52:42
we've had death threats from all over the different presidents
811
0:52:42 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction]uff that we've put out
812
0:52:46 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction]uff we put out with our name on us to
813
0:52:49 --> 0:52:54
move it wasn't. But nonetheless, and some of us affected. So I
814
0:52:54 --> 0:52:58
know that truth does penetrate, but sometimes it's figuring out.
815
0:53:01 --> 0:53:05
You know, some people, like, since then have met other
816
0:53:06 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction]e who were there that like one of them was smart enough, he
817
0:53:10 --> 0:53:15
had a VPN on his phone. So they never, you know, he was doing
818
0:53:15 --> 0:53:18
videos the whole time inside, you know, so like, there's the
819
0:53:19 --> 0:53:22
but, but he was playing too. I didn't even know he was there
820
0:53:22 --> 0:53:25
until like, two years later, and I ran into him. He's like, Oh,
821
0:53:25 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction], you know, so I think people are starting to, you know,
822
0:53:30 --> 0:53:34
as these like tapes and and security footage and this and
823
0:53:34 --> 0:53:38
that they don't they don't fit through the narrative. So as
824
0:53:38 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction]e can view it themselves, starts to put people's question
825
0:53:41 --> 0:53:45
in their mind, well, maybe it wasn't quite and I think, you
826
0:53:45 --> 0:53:51
know, sorry, sorry, gone insane with these overhead box. But
827
0:53:52 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction], that's my that's
828
0:53:56 --> 0:53:59
how much fear is there about speaking about those events on
829
0:53:59 --> 0:54:02
that day? Or is the fear dissipating with time?
830
0:54:03 --> 0:54:06
Oh, yeah, I think it's dissipating with time. But but
831
0:54:06 --> 0:54:11
also, I think I'm just in an industry that like you will, you
832
0:54:11 --> 0:54:16
know, the were you just if you're public about something,
833
0:54:16 --> 0:54:22
like I was asked by PR person to go on and go on the news and
834
0:54:22 --> 0:54:25
say this right after but they were like, you're not, you know,
835
0:54:25 --> 0:54:[privacy contact redaction] been but they, you know, it would probably, I'd
836
0:54:30 --> 0:54:32
probably be a homeless guy by now.
837
0:54:33 --> 0:54:35
If I wouldn't have been dead. But so
838
0:54:37 --> 0:54:[privacy contact redaction] So whereas I was like, hey, I'll
839
0:54:40 --> 0:54:42
provide you information, you know.
840
0:54:45 --> 0:54:47
What did you say? I didn't quite catch it. By by now. You said
841
0:54:47 --> 0:54:51
that I'd probably be something by now probably be a homeless guy
842
0:54:51 --> 0:54:[privacy contact redaction]ry that I work in.
843
0:54:58 --> 0:54:58
Yeah, yeah.
844
0:54:58 --> 0:54:59
Yeah.
845
0:54:59 --> 0:55:02
And so the thing is, I didn't feel it if I ever feel like
846
0:55:02 --> 0:55:05
it's something I'm supposed to do, I just do it. But I felt
847
0:55:05 --> 0:55:08
like I was supposed to be there. But I didn't exactly know why.
848
0:55:08 --> 0:55:15
And so and but I did, you know, I've given over footage to
849
0:55:15 --> 0:55:[privacy contact redaction]uff and put it in through
850
0:55:18 --> 0:55:[privacy contact redaction]s, it helps reframe perspective, just from
851
0:55:23 --> 0:55:28
stuff that I know, because so it's more of a behind the scenes
852
0:55:28 --> 0:55:33
kind of thing. But but then it is a project, so to speak. But
853
0:55:34 --> 0:55:[privacy contact redaction] of these a lot of these documentaries, they're people
854
0:55:38 --> 0:55:44
are so divided now, like, we put out some of this true and, and
855
0:55:44 --> 0:55:48
you know, the mainstream just says, Oh, it's conspiracy theory
856
0:55:48 --> 0:55:51
and no one even, you know, like, but there's a growing audience
857
0:55:51 --> 0:55:[privacy contact redaction]e who are figuring out that everything that you're
858
0:55:55 --> 0:56:00
showed is not real, you know. So, so there's, there's
859
0:56:00 --> 0:56:04
definitely both sides that I think a lot of people and we
860
0:56:04 --> 0:56:08
don't know how much but I think that's why they fear, you know,
861
0:56:08 --> 0:56:[privacy contact redaction] truth, they don't fear debates
862
0:56:11 --> 0:56:15
because they know they can win a debate. But people that that
863
0:56:15 --> 0:56:19
know they can't win a debate, they want to make sure that
864
0:56:19 --> 0:56:22
their debate doesn't exist or that the debate is eliminated
865
0:56:22 --> 0:56:27
before it happens. And so, yeah, yeah, so I guess you pick
866
0:56:27 --> 0:56:28
your thoughts. I don't know.
867
0:56:31 --> 0:56:34
Well, thank you so much for coming on. It's really good of
868
0:56:34 --> 0:56:38
you to do it. And also on behalf of your country as well. We need
869
0:56:38 --> 0:56:[privacy contact redaction]e like you. Thank you.
870
0:56:41 --> 0:56:[privacy contact redaction] leaving? Because
871
0:56:44 --> 0:56:47
Marv's got his hand up. There's one more question, perhaps if
872
0:56:47 --> 0:56:49
you've got time before you have to get on your plane.
873
0:56:50 --> 0:56:53
Yeah, yeah. I know there's probably people sitting around me
874
0:56:53 --> 0:56:55
looking at like, this guy's crazy. One of them is looking at
875
0:56:55 --> 0:56:56
me right now.
876
0:56:59 --> 0:57:03
But yeah, we're all about to we're about to board but I'm okay.
877
0:57:03 --> 0:57:03
Go ahead.
878
0:57:03 --> 0:57:03
So
879
0:57:04 --> 0:57:06
we're all crazy too. So it doesn't matter.
880
0:57:08 --> 0:57:14
Hey, would you would you describe those the the f Trump
881
0:57:14 --> 0:57:18
guys you met really in the morning their age their dress
882
0:57:18 --> 0:57:24
their their body or hair. What are those guys?
883
0:57:25 --> 0:57:29
They look very one of them now I saw tons of different people
884
0:57:29 --> 0:57:34
that were like, why are you in this line? You know, like, but
885
0:57:34 --> 0:57:39
the guys that were some of them were like 40 middle age kind of
886
0:57:39 --> 0:57:[privacy contact redaction]uff. The one guy was
887
0:57:43 --> 0:57:46
older probably 60s pretty scraggly look like maybe, you
888
0:57:46 --> 0:57:50
know, like a meth dude or something, because he was hit
889
0:57:50 --> 0:57:55
both of his sons are really scraggly and like, you know,
890
0:57:55 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction] very, you know, not thug, but I guess you'd call just
891
0:58:01 --> 0:58:06
white trash sort of looking dudes and so and then but you
892
0:58:06 --> 0:58:09
know, they had money to go buy a couple hundred dollars worth of
893
0:58:09 --> 0:58:14
swag. So some, you know, they and they're in but then other
894
0:58:14 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction]e they were built and they were making signs I mean, does
895
0:58:16 --> 0:58:21
100 you know, 100 signs on the ground. Thank you. So in early
896
0:58:21 --> 0:58:23
in the morning, he wouldn't sell on them. But then people would
897
0:58:23 --> 0:58:26
walk by. And then these and so I was like, but nobody needed
898
0:58:26 --> 0:58:29
signs like, you know, like, so it was almost like they were
899
0:58:29 --> 0:58:31
going, like, I got to make myself you know, it's like, if
900
0:58:31 --> 0:58:35
you're going to a Santa Claus convention, you better dress up
901
0:58:35 --> 0:58:39
like Santa Claus, or you're gonna stand out. You know, so it
902
0:58:39 --> 0:58:42
was like, it was kind of like over the top a little bit. But
903
0:58:42 --> 0:58:45
that's, you know, I don't know, there was a lot of chaos that
904
0:58:45 --> 0:58:47
night before we came in late at night, one, two in the morning,
905
0:58:47 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction]ove in for a dozen hours. And, and there were
906
0:58:52 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction]e unloading these, I don't know
907
0:58:56 --> 0:59:00
who they were, they were all pretty rough looking characters.
908
0:59:00 --> 0:59:[privacy contact redaction]e unloading people one o'clock,
909
0:59:03 --> 0:59:07
two o'clock in the morning down DC, you know, and so, because we
910
0:59:07 --> 0:59:[privacy contact redaction] got into town. And so, you know, so
911
0:59:10 --> 0:59:[privacy contact redaction] thought as no good going on, but you know, you can't I
912
0:59:13 --> 0:59:17
don't, I can't necessarily say who or what or why or where they
913
0:59:17 --> 0:59:[privacy contact redaction]opped them off in the streets. So they
914
0:59:21 --> 0:59:23
weren't there to stay in a hotel, I can tell you that.
915
0:59:28 --> 0:59:[privacy contact redaction]ers, you mean they were
916
0:59:32 --> 0:59:37
like, how would you describe were they like, motorcycle
917
0:59:37 --> 0:59:40
bikers or military looking guys?
918
0:59:41 --> 0:59:44
Now, I would probably say they were the expendables, you know,
919
0:59:44 --> 0:59:50
like the, you know, like the, the like, kingpins don't go run
920
0:59:50 --> 0:59:54
drugs, they hire little street kids to do it. And so that's what
921
0:59:54 --> 0:59:57
I think these guys were, you know, they were people that if
922
0:59:57 --> 1:00:01
they got pence, no big deal. It's just somebody with a record.
923
1:00:01 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction] And so that's, that's who
924
1:00:05 --> 1:00:08
I think the trouble makers were they weren't they weren't it to
925
1:00:08 --> 1:00:12
me, the ones I saw didn't look like ex military or anything like
926
1:00:12 --> 1:00:15
that. Now, I believe those are the ones who probably blended in
927
1:00:15 --> 1:00:19
better. You know, there's no one would know. But they look like
928
1:00:19 --> 1:00:23
criminals. They look like hired criminals. Yeah, like criminals.
929
1:00:23 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction] like a bunch of criminals. And you know, I don't
930
1:00:26 --> 1:00:30
know, maybe somebody gave him 500 bucks and said, here, go
931
1:00:30 --> 1:00:34
stall for trouble. You know, like, I don't know. But that's,
932
1:00:34 --> 1:00:37
that's on a surface level. That's what appeared to be it
933
1:00:37 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction]e that would lead to nowhere. Somebody
934
1:00:41 --> 1:00:44
got caught. But then again, if you're if you don't have to
935
1:00:44 --> 1:00:47
worry about cops, getting you, you don't have much to worry
936
1:00:47 --> 1:00:51
about. Do you? You know, like, if you're on the list, you know,
937
1:00:51 --> 1:00:55
somewhere, so but I think it's I think it was just expendable.
938
1:00:55 --> 1:00:58
So that's all people that they didn't care. They just knew it
939
1:00:58 --> 1:01:02
like, Oh, yeah, sure. I'll do something crazy for for some
940
1:01:02 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction]ugs. Yeah.
941
1:01:07 --> 1:01:12
All right. Thank you, Bob. Okay, wonderful guests. Thank you so
942
1:01:12 --> 1:01:15
much. Happy trails. Thank you for being with us. Thank you in
943
1:01:15 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction]cumstances. You
944
1:01:18 --> 1:01:18
did very well.
945
1:01:20 --> 1:01:22
Thank you. I appreciate you guys.
946
1:01:23 --> 1:01:25
Carla Dean for organizing.
947
1:01:25 --> 1:01:29
Where are you going in Brazil? Oh, sorry. No, you don't need to
948
1:01:29 --> 1:01:33
tell me. Oh, yeah, I travel everywhere. But yeah, so I
949
1:01:33 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction]l all over the world all the time. So nobody could ever
950
1:01:37 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction] me. I don't think so.
951
1:01:40 --> 1:01:42
Which is your favorite country? Can you tell us that or not?
952
1:01:44 --> 1:01:46
I love America. But yeah, actually, the UK is one of my
953
1:01:46 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction]s to visit. And then but as far as if you were
954
1:01:52 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction]ay there a while but I love I don't know I just
955
1:01:54 --> 1:01:57
everywhere I feel I feel like I'm at home. So I don't really
956
1:01:57 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction]e and love travel and
957
1:02:01 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction]uff. So right. Thank you can
958
1:02:05 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction]ly. Yes. Thank you so much.
959
1:02:10 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction] a shot. Happy trials.
960
1:02:14 --> 1:02:16
Thank you. Take care. Thank you.
961
1:02:17 --> 1:02:19
Charles I don't know is some
962
1:02:20 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction] not here. But Jim's got his hand up.
963
1:02:24 --> 1:02:26
I've been watching I've been watching for Andrew Bridgen. So
964
1:02:26 --> 1:02:27
hopefully.
965
1:02:28 --> 1:02:29
Thank you.
966
1:02:29 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction] gonna ask him if he's still on Did he did he go which
967
1:02:32 --> 1:02:35
country is safe for which country? Some people rumor that
968
1:02:35 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction]ates may not be safe in the after 2027 or something like
969
1:02:39 --> 1:02:41
that. Which countries will be safe as he's if he's a world
970
1:02:41 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction]ler? He's gone. He's gone.
971
1:02:46 --> 1:02:49
If you email me I can pass it to you and we can ask him like that.
972
1:02:50 --> 1:02:51
I can ask Carlidine this one.
973
1:02:51 --> 1:02:58
So any thoughts on what we've learned from that eyewitness
974
1:02:58 --> 1:03:01
account of what happened on J six Peter.
975
1:03:04 --> 1:03:08
Sorry Charles I was muted. Yeah, I just wanted to answer that
976
1:03:08 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]ion.
977
1:03:11 --> 1:03:15
If he's looking for somewhere safe, I can tell you South
978
1:03:15 --> 1:03:17
Africa is definitely safe.
979
1:03:17 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]ive of all the rumors that it's a war zone and what
980
1:03:20 --> 1:03:25
have you. So welcome to South Africa, my friend you're 34
981
1:03:25 --> 1:03:32
degrees south. And I'll ask everybody. Can you guess what
982
1:03:32 --> 1:03:37
percentage of the world population live south in in the
983
1:03:37 --> 1:03:39
southern hemisphere?
984
1:03:39 --> 1:03:42
It's about 10% in a very small
985
1:03:42 --> 1:03:46
That's very close. Actually, Steve. Well done. You're the
986
1:03:46 --> 1:03:50
only person I've asked that question to that's got as near
987
1:03:50 --> 1:03:52
to it. It's actually 9%.
988
1:03:53 --> 1:03:56
There we go. Yeah. So as 1% out.
989
1:03:58 --> 1:03:59
You did very well, Steve.
990
1:03:59 --> 1:04:02
If you look at the map, you know, I've got a map in my head
991
1:04:02 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction] of the landmasses are above north
992
1:04:07 --> 1:04:08
of the equator.
993
1:04:08 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction] of the landmasses are above north of
994
1:04:11 --> 1:04:17
the equator. Yeah. And with the southern hemisphere is ocean.
995
1:04:17 --> 1:04:21
Is water. Yeah. That's where I feel safe on a boat.
996
1:04:22 --> 1:04:25
Yeah. And you're South America and you're Australia and that
997
1:04:25 --> 1:04:29
and okay, maybe Indonesia, you know, but but big population in
998
1:04:29 --> 1:04:33
Indonesia. Well, Australia has got a very big, but South
999
1:04:33 --> 1:04:37
America hasn't got a massive population either. So it's not
1000
1:04:37 --> 1:04:42
surprising. It's only 9%. But also, some so people live in
1001
1:04:42 --> 1:04:46
Stockholm, in Oslo, Norway, you know, and then Helsinki, they're
1002
1:04:46 --> 1:04:50
all at 60 degrees north. And then you've got Petersburg also
1003
1:04:50 --> 1:04:54
at 60 degrees north and Moscow a little bit further south. But
1004
1:04:54 --> 1:04:57
you try living in the southern hemisphere at that kind of
1005
1:04:57 --> 1:05:00
latitude at 60 degrees south. There isn't anything there.
1006
1:05:03 --> 1:05:06
That's absolutely nothing go south Georgia, but that's not
1007
1:05:06 --> 1:05:07
even 60. I don't think.
1008
1:05:08 --> 1:05:09
Elven Island, of course.
1009
1:05:09 --> 1:05:10
Yeah.
1010
1:05:11 --> 1:05:17
So it's really strange how human beings have chosen to live so
1011
1:05:17 --> 1:05:22
far north in the northern hemisphere, but then ignored.
1012
1:05:22 --> 1:05:25
Well, okay, there's not as much landmass, but even so, yeah.
1013
1:05:26 --> 1:05:29
And so that's my point really is that I think the globalist
1014
1:05:29 --> 1:05:31
probably won't notice as much.
1015
1:05:33 --> 1:05:33
Yeah.
1016
1:05:34 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction]ion. Yes, one more question about Africa. You know
1017
1:05:40 --> 1:05:45
how many invaders or immigrants are being brought into the
1018
1:05:45 --> 1:05:50
Five Eyes countries like Canada, United States, Australia, New
1019
1:05:50 --> 1:05:56
Zealand, are there a lot of invaders being brought in to
1020
1:05:56 --> 1:05:57
South Africa?
1021
1:05:58 --> 1:06:03
No, I can answer that. Certainly not. We've got some lovely
1022
1:06:04 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction]C, and they speak French. I see them very
1023
1:06:09 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction]s and they do a lot of security work.
1024
1:06:14 --> 1:06:17
They're absolutely lovely and I can speak to them in French.
1025
1:06:17 --> 1:06:21
Then we've got some very well educated and very bright
1026
1:06:21 --> 1:06:28
Zimbabweans. We've got people from Cameroon. But actually the
1027
1:06:28 --> 1:06:33
immigrants mainly are from Africa. There's very few
1028
1:06:35 --> 1:06:40
Europeans. I see the occasional American but not many and no
1029
1:06:40 --> 1:06:46
Canadians, no Japanese, a few Chinese on occasion. But
1030
1:06:46 --> 1:06:51
generally speaking, it's very much African orientated here.
1031
1:06:52 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction] this concept of Ubuntu, which is paraphrasing is
1032
1:06:58 --> 1:07:03
basically I cannot be rich if my neighbor is poor. They've got
1033
1:07:03 --> 1:07:09
this wonderful family, very well centered family orientation,
1034
1:07:09 --> 1:07:[privacy contact redaction]e in South Africa or indeed Africa, I
1035
1:07:13 --> 1:07:17
think generally, a very, very strong constitution, a family
1036
1:07:17 --> 1:07:[privacy contact redaction] Muslims, we have a whole range of just
1037
1:07:22 --> 1:07:25
about everybody, Indians, Pakistanis, we've got some very
1038
1:07:25 --> 1:07:[privacy contact redaction]ani friends and we all get on together and there's
1039
1:07:29 --> 1:07:33
not an indication of any racism, whatever that I've seen.
1040
1:07:34 --> 1:07:38
Peter, what's the dominant religious practice in South
1041
1:07:38 --> 1:07:39
Africa?
1042
1:07:40 --> 1:07:49
Well, the dominant one is Christian. We have the Roman
1043
1:07:50 --> 1:07:57
Dutch Church, which is very strong, very prostitutes. And we
1044
1:07:57 --> 1:08:01
have a lot of Muslims who a lot of my friends when I go and see
1045
1:08:01 --> 1:08:05
them at sort of midday, they're off to the mosque and one
1046
1:08:05 --> 1:08:09
having a laugh, a joke about that. But generally, the
1047
1:08:09 --> 1:08:12
dominant one I'd say is Roman Dutch.
1048
1:08:14 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction]ers open to other countries? Can you just walk in
1049
1:08:18 --> 1:08:21
and assume citizenship and get free housing like they do in the
1050
1:08:21 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction]ates now where they're being housed and free health
1051
1:08:25 --> 1:08:25
care?
1052
1:08:27 --> 1:08:33
Well, I wouldn't say free housing. We've got a lot of what
1053
1:08:33 --> 1:08:39
we call townships. The thing about our economy here is that we
1054
1:08:39 --> 1:08:44
have a 35% unemployment. I think actually it's about 50%
1055
1:08:44 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction]e. That's official
1056
1:08:47 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction] is because we don't have a welfare
1057
1:08:51 --> 1:08:57
state to speak of, everybody is economically active. Because if
1058
1:08:57 --> 1:09:02
you're not economically active, you don't eat. And that
1059
1:09:02 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction]e to be innovative, productive, but under
1060
1:09:10 --> 1:09:14
the radar. So the government can't tax them. So we've got a
1061
1:09:14 --> 1:09:21
60 million population and 7 million taxpayers, 50% of which
1062
1:09:21 --> 1:09:27
are white and 50% of which are the middle class, rising blacks
1063
1:09:27 --> 1:09:29
after 25 years.
1064
1:09:29 --> 1:09:33
So you don't have a system where you can actually get are
1065
1:09:33 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction]ate, and then get free
1066
1:09:37 --> 1:09:41
housing like in New York City and then get $2,000 a month and
1067
1:09:41 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction]ores and take anything you want for
1068
1:09:44 --> 1:09:46
without being charged with crimes. You don't have that
1069
1:09:46 --> 1:09:47
there in South Africa.
1070
1:09:48 --> 1:09:54
There's absolutely nothing here. There is a thing called, what's
1071
1:09:54 --> 1:09:59
that? It's called a government grant. That if you are desolate
1072
1:09:59 --> 1:10:[privacy contact redaction] you can claim a government grant, which is the
1073
1:10:04 --> 1:10:12
350 South African rands a month, which is divided by 20. So it's
1074
1:10:12 --> 1:10:15
around about $17 a month.
1075
1:10:17 --> 1:10:18
A day $17 a day.
1076
1:10:19 --> 1:10:20
No a month.
1077
1:10:21 --> 1:10:25
Oh, $17 a month. So that's something happened. Something
1078
1:10:25 --> 1:10:28
ran. So it's 300 and something a day. A year.
1079
1:10:29 --> 1:10:29
Yeah.
1080
1:10:29 --> 1:10:32
That's much less than the people who get are coming into the United
1081
1:10:32 --> 1:10:35
States. Okay. And then what about health care? What about
1082
1:10:35 --> 1:10:38
health care? Do you get you go to the hospital and then you get
1083
1:10:38 --> 1:10:39
free health care or
1084
1:10:39 --> 1:10:[privacy contact redaction]ate health care system, which does
1085
1:10:44 --> 1:10:48
actually provide quite good services for the indigenous
1086
1:10:48 --> 1:10:[privacy contact redaction] my ilk, for example, will go private
1087
1:10:53 --> 1:10:[privacy contact redaction], but we don't pay insurance for the people who are
1088
1:10:57 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction]ates. So I don't pay insurance anyway. But
1089
1:11:00 --> 1:11:04
we don't pay insurance because that's just a joke. Because you
1090
1:11:04 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction] insurance policy is an air
1091
1:11:09 --> 1:11:10
ticket to UK.
1092
1:11:13 --> 1:11:17
I see. And is the medications as expensive here? Like for
1093
1:11:17 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction]ance, in the United States, insulin can cost $800 for a
1094
1:11:21 --> 1:11:22
vial that was $2.
1095
1:11:22 --> 1:11:27
No, I saw the doctor the other day and that cost me six that
1096
1:11:27 --> 1:11:34
was a half an hour session, very good guy. And that cost me 650
1097
1:11:34 --> 1:11:36
Rand, which is about $30.
1098
1:11:39 --> 1:11:42
Okay, and then how is it and one more question, I'm sorry to
1099
1:11:42 --> 1:11:45
monopolize, but this is very good information. How is
1100
1:11:45 --> 1:11:50
Namibia? We in the United States are importing hundreds of tons
1101
1:11:50 --> 1:11:54
of beef from Namibia, Africa into Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
1102
1:11:54 --> 1:11:59
And it is and you can sell boxed beef from Namibia, Africa into
1103
1:11:59 --> 1:12:03
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, but you cannot move boxed beef from
1104
1:12:03 --> 1:12:07
that's frozen beef in a box from, let's say, Texas to
1105
1:12:07 --> 1:12:08
Philadelphia.
1106
1:12:10 --> 1:12:15
Yeah, understood. There's tremendous growth here in not
1107
1:12:15 --> 1:12:19
only South Africa, but you're right about Namibia. Mind you,
1108
1:12:19 --> 1:12:23
that's a lot of desert to there. But they're very, very good at
1109
1:12:24 --> 1:12:32
let's say agriculture in desert type conditions. And we in South
1110
1:12:32 --> 1:12:36
Africa, for example, is self sufficient and more in its own
1111
1:12:36 --> 1:12:44
food. Where I live in the Cape, Western Cape, all our food is
1112
1:12:44 --> 1:12:50
provided by the sea, we've got the sea is teeming with fish, I
1113
1:12:50 --> 1:12:57
can buy a massive tuna, for example, a bluefin tuna, a steak
1114
1:12:57 --> 1:13:07
for 60 Rand, which is something like $3, maybe. You know, it's an
1115
1:13:07 --> 1:13:[privacy contact redaction] I keep I write letters every week. And I
1116
1:13:12 --> 1:13:[privacy contact redaction]ack. And I try to tell people, and
1117
1:13:16 --> 1:13:19
particularly my Brit friends to get the hell out of there, come
1118
1:13:19 --> 1:13:25
south. Because I discovered South Africa, I discovered
1119
1:13:25 --> 1:13:29
Simon's Town, for example, force by Yacht Club in 1999, when I
1120
1:13:29 --> 1:13:35
sailed here, because I was looking for paradise. And I was
1121
1:13:35 --> 1:13:39
going to Mauritius originally, but I discovered that Simon's
1122
1:13:39 --> 1:13:44
Town is a bubble of paradise. And we call it millionaires row
1123
1:13:44 --> 1:13:46
without the millions.
1124
1:13:49 --> 1:13:50
That is beautiful.
1125
1:13:50 --> 1:13:52
Wow, sounds fabulous.
1126
1:13:52 --> 1:13:57
Yeah. Everybody go to join Peter. Thank you, Jim. Great
1127
1:13:57 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction]ions. Glen got Glen has his hand up. We're off to South
1128
1:14:02 --> 1:14:02
Africa.
1129
1:14:04 --> 1:14:09
Yeah, I have a question for you, Peter. Okay. So there's been a
1130
1:14:09 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction]ivity relative to Palestinian actions.
1131
1:14:16 --> 1:14:19
I was curious to what degree that penetrated South Africa.
1132
1:14:20 --> 1:14:24
Well, that's an interesting question. Because in our bubble
1133
1:14:24 --> 1:14:28
here, we really don't take too much notice of what's going on
1134
1:14:28 --> 1:14:32
in the north. Although you might note that South Africa was the
1135
1:14:32 --> 1:14:41
leading country that took Israel to the International Court,
1136
1:14:41 --> 1:14:46
didn't he? The criminal court. And we got a result, but it
1137
1:14:46 --> 1:14:51
wasn't really what I'd expected. But that came from our
1138
1:14:51 --> 1:14:58
background, which was initially the resistance to the apartheid
1139
1:14:58 --> 1:15:03
regime, of course, but magnificently Mandela's solution,
1140
1:15:03 --> 1:15:10
which was peace, or the reconciliation committee that or
1141
1:15:10 --> 1:15:15
commission that was set up after apartheid. So we have within our
1142
1:15:15 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction]itution is a very, very strong constitution written
1143
1:15:19 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction]itution, unlike Britain. And it's very strong. And we take
1144
1:15:25 --> 1:15:30
part of the global south, we're part of the BRICS. There's a lot
1145
1:15:30 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction] from China here, and a lot of investment, actually,
1146
1:15:35 --> 1:15:41
and from Russia. And we, we take the alternative view to the
1147
1:15:41 --> 1:15:46
north, that whatever's going on up there, it does tend to be a
1148
1:15:46 --> 1:15:48
bit remote as far as we're concerned.
1149
1:15:51 --> 1:15:55
Okay, part of the reason I bring it up is I graduated from
1150
1:15:55 --> 1:15:59
college in 1974. And at that point, I can tell you there was
1151
1:15:59 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction]inian presence in any of the colleges
1152
1:16:04 --> 1:16:10
US wide, that that all evolved shortly after that, that 7475,
1153
1:16:10 --> 1:16:14
we had the oil crisis. And with that, you had the giant ramp up
1154
1:16:14 --> 1:16:19
of prices that suddenly flowed into all of the OPEC countries.
1155
1:16:19 --> 1:16:23
And at that point, Qatar became the centerpiece of gathering
1156
1:16:24 --> 1:16:27
those billions of dollars and funneling them into the
1157
1:16:27 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction]ates. I have a good
1158
1:16:31 --> 1:16:38
friend who went to college in the middle 80s, from 82 to 8086.
1159
1:16:38 --> 1:16:41
And he said they were all everywhere. Yeah, you know,
1160
1:16:41 --> 1:16:45
establishing support groups, making clubs, funding
1161
1:16:45 --> 1:16:49
departments, that there was just mountains of money coming in to
1162
1:16:49 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction]em up to basically endorse this theme of
1163
1:16:53 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction]inians, and to a large extent to plant the seeds of the
1164
1:16:57 --> 1:17:02
anti semitism that we are now seeing today in massive scale.
1165
1:17:03 --> 1:17:09
And I mean, I can remember in 1970, with the Ohio State
1166
1:17:09 --> 1:17:14
shootings. So I was in high school, my sister was in
1167
1:17:14 --> 1:17:18
college, and you know, never had any finals. They all got
1168
1:17:19 --> 1:17:23
canceled in in late April and May. And you never even had
1169
1:17:24 --> 1:17:27
things going on. We're seeing that same thing right now. It
1170
1:17:27 --> 1:17:30
looks like a whole bunch of colleges are canceling their
1171
1:17:30 --> 1:17:35
live classes, they may cancel final exams. Yes, it's crazy how
1172
1:17:35 --> 1:17:38
these things repeat many years after, but but have the same
1173
1:17:38 --> 1:17:39
source.
1174
1:17:39 --> 1:17:43
It is indeed it's a cycle actually, as I see it. And I
1175
1:17:43 --> 1:17:49
write about this quite often, actually. I see this as a cycle
1176
1:17:49 --> 1:17:[privacy contact redaction], there is some indication that we go
1177
1:17:53 --> 1:17:58
through these cycles on a regular basis, about 14,000 years
1178
1:17:58 --> 1:18:04
cycle, we're certainly in a 250 year cycle end of one empire
1179
1:18:04 --> 1:18:10
rising of the other, which is East Asia, China. And it also
1180
1:18:11 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction]rauss and how and the fourth turning, which
1181
1:18:16 --> 1:18:21
is the generational cycle of 80 years. So we've got a
1182
1:18:21 --> 1:18:25
combination of the two cycles, I think, Martin Armstrong writes
1183
1:18:25 --> 1:18:29
a lot about this with Socrates that he's got. And he's very
1184
1:18:29 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction]ances. So I'd refer you
1185
1:18:34 --> 1:18:38
to you, you're right about the 70s. But I have a little thing
1186
1:18:38 --> 1:18:42
I can put up on on the chat called what the fuck happened in
1187
1:18:42 --> 1:18:49
1971. And there's a whole series of graphs, which shows something
1188
1:18:49 --> 1:18:54
significant happened in 1971, which of course, Nixon took,
1189
1:18:54 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction], America defaulted on the gold standard in effect.
1190
1:18:59 --> 1:19:04
And when you see the charts, a whole series of charts in in the
1191
1:19:04 --> 1:19:09
article, I'll put up, you'll see how things moved since then,
1192
1:19:10 --> 1:19:14
we're going through this cycle, it's going to be a rough ride, I
1193
1:19:14 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction]e of years, but I'm very hopeful. And
1194
1:19:17 --> 1:19:21
I believe that something very good is going to come out of
1195
1:19:21 --> 1:19:21
this.
1196
1:19:24 --> 1:19:25
Thank you.
1197
1:19:26 --> 1:19:33
Well, can you expound on the time frame in terms of 2025 2627?
1198
1:19:34 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction]s so difficult to predict, because
1199
1:19:42 --> 1:19:46
it's not in our hands. The powers that be are pulling the
1200
1:19:46 --> 1:19:52
levers, and they will decide when the time is right, as we
1201
1:19:52 --> 1:19:57
saw with COVID, for example, and a lot of other examples prior to
1202
1:19:57 --> 1:20:03
that. My guess is, and I've written in my book, actually, I
1203
1:20:03 --> 1:20:08
wrote a book, it's on research gate, the financial jigsaw, part
1204
1:20:08 --> 1:20:12
one, I'm now serializing part two, part one is about the
1205
1:20:12 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction]er 13 describes what I see
1206
1:20:18 --> 1:20:23
as the as the coming depression, economic depression is kind of
1207
1:20:23 --> 1:20:30
a repeat of the 1930s. And my guess is before certainly before
1208
1:20:30 --> 1:20:39
2030, I would say my feeling is within the next 24 months, maybe
1209
1:20:39 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction], I was caught out in 2008. Because I
1210
1:20:49 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction]ed something to happen pretty quickly after that. But
1211
1:20:54 --> 1:20:59
actually, of course, they use QE, which stonewalled everything
1212
1:20:59 --> 1:21:03
for the next 10 years. But we've now run out of those options, in
1213
1:21:03 --> 1:21:[privacy contact redaction]s put some links up into chat
1214
1:21:08 --> 1:21:[privacy contact redaction], if you want to read chapter 13 of my book.
1215
1:21:15 --> 1:21:19
Thank you. And is there any and, and that's the real question
1216
1:21:19 --> 1:21:22
about getting out of the countries that are set to fall?
1217
1:21:22 --> 1:21:27
Yes, with, you know, United States, it looks like it's going
1218
1:21:27 --> 1:21:32
to be parceled out divided up and crushed into nothing new
1219
1:21:32 --> 1:21:36
Babylon is falling. The ships will turn away and all that
1220
1:21:36 --> 1:21:[privacy contact redaction]uff. Yeah. And that maybe goes for the six eyes
1221
1:21:42 --> 1:21:47
countries, five eyes countries as well. But the issue is now
1222
1:21:47 --> 1:21:51
where where to go and will our land in these other countries will
1223
1:21:51 --> 1:21:55
the land in these five eyes countries that are being swamped
1224
1:21:55 --> 1:22:00
by immigrants and or illegal invaders, I should say, financed
1225
1:22:00 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction]ate Department and bankrupted, and all our money is
1226
1:22:05 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction]ates into the Ukraine and
1227
1:22:07 --> 1:22:12
Israel right now. Billions of dollars. I mean, while we open
1228
1:22:12 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction]ers, we protect it, we protect other borders, makes
1229
1:22:16 --> 1:22:23
no sense. Where, where do we protect ourselves as these
1230
1:22:24 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction]e are taking over our legislative branches, and just
1231
1:22:28 --> 1:22:32
parceling out our money? Yeah, I don't know what we do and what do
1232
1:22:32 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction] even our land, it's
1233
1:22:36 --> 1:22:37
going to be taxed to hell.
1234
1:22:37 --> 1:22:42
There's several good writers, Doug Casey at International Man
1235
1:22:43 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction] And there's several others as
1236
1:22:48 --> 1:22:54
well. And certainly, if I were in the States, now I will be
1237
1:22:54 --> 1:22:58
moving out, I'd make sure I've got a dual passport, I wouldn't
1238
1:22:58 --> 1:23:01
give up my American passport, but I would get a dual passport.
1239
1:23:03 --> 1:23:09
I've got dual residents here in South Africa and UK. Not that I
1240
1:23:09 --> 1:23:15
ever think of going back to UK again. I've told the world to
1241
1:23:15 --> 1:23:22
find paradise. I looked at Belize and Zanzibar is somewhere
1242
1:23:22 --> 1:23:29
worth looking at. And certainly, I chose Mauritius as a first
1243
1:23:29 --> 1:23:33
stop, but never got there because I found it here in
1244
1:23:33 --> 1:23:42
San Francisco. But I would say, go south. My dear father always
1245
1:23:42 --> 1:23:50
said, go south son, like the other one said, go west. But I'd
1246
1:23:50 --> 1:23:53
certainly get out in the north without a doubt. I don't think
1247
1:23:53 --> 1:23:58
there's going to be a kinetic explosion, nuclear war, whatever,
1248
1:23:58 --> 1:24:02
as such, because the globalists and the billionaires are not
1249
1:24:02 --> 1:24:08
going to give up their wealth and their lifestyle. But there's
1250
1:24:08 --> 1:24:11
going to be a lot of chaos, I think it's going to be
1251
1:24:11 --> 1:24:15
depression, economic depression. We're already much poorer now
1252
1:24:15 --> 1:24:21
than we were 20 years ago. And also, these places are
1253
1:24:21 --> 1:24:26
enterprising, they're rising. South Africa is rising. There's a
1254
1:24:26 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction]ivity, there's a lot of enterprise. So certainly
1255
1:24:33 --> 1:24:38
South Sub-Saharan Africa, always worth looking at. Someone
1256
1:24:38 --> 1:24:43
mentioned Namibia, very good. Botswana is one of 14 countries
1257
1:24:43 --> 1:24:48
that doesn't have an armed police force, which always gives me a
1258
1:24:48 --> 1:24:55
nice comfortable fit. So yeah, and certainly a lot of people
1259
1:24:55 --> 1:25:00
looking up South America, Argentina, well, it's in a state
1260
1:25:00 --> 1:25:02
of flux at the moment. No one knows really where that's going
1261
1:25:02 --> 1:25:03
with that.
1262
1:25:03 --> 1:25:08
Peter, Peter, Peter, Anders put the comment in about India is
1263
1:25:08 --> 1:25:14
his assessment of over the next [privacy contact redaction] to go to.
1264
1:25:15 --> 1:25:18
Well, I wouldn't disagree with that. I know nothing about
1265
1:25:18 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction]n't been to India. But certainly there's a lot of
1266
1:25:22 --> 1:25:27
pluses with India. Again, very intelligent people got a lot of
1267
1:25:27 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction] with. Very clever people. So
1268
1:25:34 --> 1:25:37
yeah, I wouldn't wouldn't say no to India.
1269
1:25:40 --> 1:25:43
And what about what about Haiti? Sorry.
1270
1:25:45 --> 1:25:45
Haiti?
1271
1:25:45 --> 1:25:49
I've tried to ring Andrew, I can't get him. I don't know what
1272
1:25:49 --> 1:25:50
certain I really don't.
1273
1:25:51 --> 1:25:54
Steve, I assume that's what you what you were doing. So we'll
1274
1:25:54 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction] keep going with this conversation. We've got an hour
1275
1:25:56 --> 1:25:58
to go. And if he comes and joins us.
1276
1:25:58 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction]e you know, it's up to them if they
1277
1:26:01 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction]ew's worth waiting for. Yeah. But
1278
1:26:05 --> 1:26:09
the, you know, I don't want them to be blaming me for hanging
1279
1:26:09 --> 1:26:13
around waiting for him and then eventually doesn't turn up. So I
1280
1:26:13 --> 1:26:16
think they might I can see the possibility that there was a
1281
1:26:16 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction]anding. I won't go into detail. But and or Yeah, I
1282
1:26:23 --> 1:26:26
don't know. I do know. But I don't want to stay here. So
1283
1:26:27 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction], I'm trying to get him on. And I have sent texts and I
1284
1:26:31 --> 1:26:36
tried to ring him on two different on the phone and on
1285
1:26:36 --> 1:26:37
WhatsApp. And I'm not on.
1286
1:26:39 --> 1:26:39
Yep. Thank you.
1287
1:26:41 --> 1:26:43
I'm grateful for Peter Underwood's insights while we're
1288
1:26:43 --> 1:26:45
waiting if that's okay with you.
1289
1:26:45 --> 1:26:50
Yes, that's fine. Yeah. Sure, Peter. One thing I know about
1290
1:26:50 --> 1:26:54
South Africa, Peter. Well, I knew someone who used to come
1291
1:26:54 --> 1:26:59
every year to work for the military as a doctor in the UK.
1292
1:27:00 --> 1:27:05
So every summer here, obviously winter there. And he they were
1293
1:27:05 --> 1:27:10
living in South Africa in Johannesburg. And so he and his
1294
1:27:10 --> 1:27:13
wife used to tell because he used to bring his wife and they
1295
1:27:13 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction]ay in the officers mess. That was the
1296
1:27:16 --> 1:27:19
deal. You know, if he could, they put him up in the officer
1297
1:27:19 --> 1:27:22
mess and he would work there for three months, whatever it
1298
1:27:22 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction], he said that in Johannesburg, you know, you
1299
1:27:28 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction] had to be from South Africa or living there a long
1300
1:27:31 --> 1:27:36
time to be safe because, for example, at night, no one ever
1301
1:27:36 --> 1:27:38
stopped at the traffic lights, it was too dangerous to stop.
1302
1:27:38 --> 1:27:42
And it was in some parts of Johannesburg. According to him,
1303
1:27:42 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction]op in in the daytime. I don't know
1304
1:27:44 --> 1:27:45
whether that's true.
1305
1:27:46 --> 1:27:50
Yes, Stephen, that's absolutely true. Even here in the Cape
1306
1:27:50 --> 1:27:54
where it's very safe. We don't stop at red traffic lights at
1307
1:27:54 --> 1:27:58
night because potential hijacking doesn't happen to up
1308
1:27:58 --> 1:28:03
too often here. But in Johannesburg, definitely. They put
1309
1:28:03 --> 1:28:[privacy contact redaction]op cars because you think
1310
1:28:10 --> 1:28:16
there's a child or someone's. Yeah. There's all kinds of
1311
1:28:16 --> 1:28:17
tricks.
1312
1:28:17 --> 1:28:21
So Peter, you said like 15 minutes ago, you said
1313
1:28:21 --> 1:28:26
unequivocally that I'm not saying how can it be safe if
1314
1:28:26 --> 1:28:28
that's the case, you know, that you can't even stop at the
1315
1:28:28 --> 1:28:29
traffic lights.
1316
1:28:30 --> 1:28:36
Well, safety is relative, Stephen. I came here in 99 and
1317
1:28:36 --> 1:28:41
married my South African wife in 2003. And we were here for 10
1318
1:28:41 --> 1:28:46
years before I had to go back to UK in 2009 because of the GFC.
1319
1:28:47 --> 1:28:51
And she taught me a lot. Basically, it's about being
1320
1:28:51 --> 1:28:[privacy contact redaction]e, if I'm parked in a mall, and I come
1321
1:28:59 --> 1:29:05
back to my car, and I start the car, and I look in the mirror,
1322
1:29:05 --> 1:29:09
as we normally do, and I see a little note on the back of my
1323
1:29:09 --> 1:29:14
window. So I get out to look at the note. And they're in the
1324
1:29:14 --> 1:29:19
car and off before you know where you are. It's that sort of
1325
1:29:19 --> 1:29:24
thing that they're very clever at. Now these, I don't want to
1326
1:29:24 --> 1:29:27
make the impression it's happening all the time. This is
1327
1:29:27 --> 1:29:31
fairly rare, particularly in the Western Cape is very safe.
1328
1:29:31 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction] 10 times a day. We've got
1329
1:29:37 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction]ations, and the police work with private
1330
1:29:42 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction] armed response, private security come
1331
1:29:49 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction] two or three times a week. They're on
1332
1:29:56 --> 1:30:01
the watch all the time. So but it does happen. Yeah. My
1333
1:30:01 --> 1:30:08
wife was about 2006. She was in a bar in Fishook, which is a
1334
1:30:08 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction] 10 kilometers from here at nine o'clock at
1335
1:30:13 --> 1:30:18
night. And five guys came in and told everybody to get on the
1336
1:30:18 --> 1:30:23
floor. They were armed, of course, except her. She was at
1337
1:30:23 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction]uck a nine mil in her head. And she looked
1338
1:30:27 --> 1:30:33
at the guy and said, well, pull the trigger. But he couldn't.
1339
1:30:34 --> 1:30:38
That's my lady. South African lady.
1340
1:30:42 --> 1:30:44
But it doesn't sound too safe, Peter. That's the point.
1341
1:30:46 --> 1:30:49
Well, as I say, safe is relative, really.
1342
1:30:49 --> 1:30:50
Okay, if you're
1343
1:30:51 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction]er figures compared to the
1344
1:30:53 --> 1:30:58
awful, absolutely awful. I wrote about it the other day. Funny
1345
1:30:58 --> 1:31:05
enough, Steve. It's in in in. See if I can remember the
1346
1:31:05 --> 1:31:12
numbers in UK. It's one is 600 a year.
1347
1:31:13 --> 1:31:15
That's about right. That would be about right.
1348
1:31:16 --> 1:31:19
In in in South Africa is 35,000.
1349
1:31:19 --> 1:31:25
Yeah. And the population is what half 60 million. Yeah. How
1350
1:31:25 --> 1:31:30
many in South Africa with 60 million, 60 million. Oh, so
1351
1:31:30 --> 1:31:36
that's Yeah, it's not as great as so what do you say 30,000 35,000
1352
1:31:36 --> 1:31:41
35,000. So that's 35. That's about 50 times.
1353
1:31:42 --> 1:31:43
It doesn't sound too safe.
1354
1:31:43 --> 1:31:43
Peter.
1355
1:31:46 --> 1:31:51
But bear in mind that 90% is black on black. These are what we
1356
1:31:51 --> 1:31:58
call the gangs. There's gang warfare, certainly in the Cape.
1357
1:31:59 --> 1:32:04
If you go down to Mitchell's Plain or Cali or Philippi, these
1358
1:32:04 --> 1:32:09
are gang areas. This is where the gangs kind of rule really,
1359
1:32:09 --> 1:32:13
the police don't have too much control over them. But they're
1360
1:32:13 --> 1:32:19
operating only within their own cycles in area. So they're not
1361
1:32:19 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction]ing where I live, for example, or in the suburbs or
1362
1:32:24 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction] you. And also, don't forget Johannesburg is very much
1363
1:32:28 --> 1:32:33
concentrated in this area. Again, gangs are running the area
1364
1:32:33 --> 1:32:39
and Durban as well. So it's, it's not overall, it's very much
1365
1:32:39 --> 1:32:42
focused in tiny areas.
1366
1:32:42 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction]ics separating the areas.
1367
1:32:46 --> 1:32:49
Oh, no, I'm for well, I've looked for that funny enough,
1368
1:32:49 --> 1:32:53
Steve, I can't find any stats that separates the areas. But
1369
1:32:53 --> 1:32:57
from my own personal experience here in Simon's town, and
1370
1:32:57 --> 1:33:01
certainly in the southern suburbs in Cape Town, generally,
1371
1:33:03 --> 1:33:07
I've not seen any. Well, I've been here now. I came back what
1372
1:33:07 --> 1:33:11
in the middle of December, and I haven't seen any evidence
1373
1:33:11 --> 1:33:15
whatsoever. There's very peaceful, everything's rolling
1374
1:33:15 --> 1:33:23
along fine. So and it's very, and also, the lifestyle is very
1375
1:33:23 --> 1:33:28
Mediterranean. So although they don't siesta, but I do in the
1376
1:33:28 --> 1:33:35
afternoon, but they don't siesta as such as a kind of ethos.
1377
1:33:35 --> 1:33:42
They, it's a very slow, probably slower than manana, actually,
1378
1:33:42 --> 1:33:47
Cape time, I call it. I mean, you'll sit in a restaurant for
1379
1:33:47 --> 1:33:50
an hour before they'll after ordering before they'll come
1380
1:33:50 --> 1:33:54
and bring your food, for example. And everybody is very
1381
1:33:54 --> 1:33:58
sort of laid back and relaxed. So talking about safety is
1382
1:33:58 --> 1:34:00
relative, Stephen, that's the point.
1383
1:34:00 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction]ralia, Peter?
1384
1:34:05 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction] I'm very good friends with Jerry Brady.
1385
1:34:08 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction] wanted to ask you whether, whether, if you have been to
1386
1:34:12 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction]ralia, whether Australians are more laid back than South
1387
1:34:15 --> 1:34:16
Africans in your view?
1388
1:34:17 --> 1:34:22
Well, my, I've been, I've been friends with Jerry Brady for 10
1389
1:34:22 --> 1:34:27
years, at least. And from what I can tell, it's certainly, it's
1390
1:34:27 --> 1:34:31
more, yeah, I think Australia is more energetic. Let's put it
1391
1:34:31 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction] Here, it's much slower. I mean, Jerry has been
1392
1:34:37 --> 1:34:40
here to South Africa. He visited some years ago.
1393
1:34:40 --> 1:34:44
It's like, you see, we would think that Australia is pretty
1394
1:34:44 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction]ed Kingdom.
1395
1:34:47 --> 1:34:47
But,
1396
1:34:48 --> 1:34:53
well, United Kingdom is hectic as far as I can say.
1397
1:34:53 --> 1:34:54
It what?
1398
1:34:54 --> 1:34:58
I mean, for example, they drive up motorways at 80 and 90 miles
1399
1:34:58 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction] up the, up the M3 here to Cape Town, very
1400
1:35:05 --> 1:35:08
few cars exceed 60 miles an hour.
1401
1:35:10 --> 1:35:13
Yeah, I love driving fast anyway. Yeah, but not say too
1402
1:35:13 --> 1:35:13
much.
1403
1:35:14 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction], go ahead, Glen. Oh, sorry, Charles, it's you.
1404
1:35:21 --> 1:35:27
Yeah, well, Jim had his hand up in terms of, in terms of, sorry,
1405
1:35:27 --> 1:35:30
Glen's got his hand up now. Jim, are you done? We'll come back
1406
1:35:30 --> 1:35:31
to you, Jim. Go ahead, Glen.
1407
1:35:34 --> 1:35:39
So, Charles and Stephen, there's two particular topics we might
1408
1:35:40 --> 1:35:44
want to delve into that are very current. If Dave Colum is
1409
1:35:45 --> 1:35:48
comfortable discussing what's going on in the Ivy League
1410
1:35:48 --> 1:35:52
colleges and whether he's seeing any of the high degree of
1411
1:35:52 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction] of pro-Palestinian and anti-Semitism existing at
1412
1:35:56 --> 1:36:01
Cornell. A second topic that I mentioned when you were on at
1413
1:36:01 --> 1:36:06
the beginning, Charles, is around the, how the climate
1414
1:36:06 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction]ory is not only false and a fraud, but it's actually
1415
1:36:12 --> 1:36:16
flipped that there are other conditions going on that could
1416
1:36:16 --> 1:36:20
lead to the decimation of the, of humans as well as all upper
1417
1:36:20 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction]t. So I could address that if people
1418
1:36:26 --> 1:36:29
wanted to hear a little bit about the show we're having in
1419
1:36:29 --> 1:36:30
two days on Thursday night.
1420
1:36:31 --> 1:36:34
Well, you've got the, you've got the, you put the link in, the
1421
1:36:34 --> 1:36:39
show is on Thursday night. And certainly where many of us here
1422
1:36:39 --> 1:36:41
on this call, including me, are of the view that there is a
1423
1:36:41 --> 1:36:45
depopulation agenda, Glen. So it makes total sense that the
1424
1:36:45 --> 1:36:48
whole fraud around climate emergency will do precisely what
1425
1:36:48 --> 1:36:52
you're talking about. So shining a light on the deforestation
1426
1:36:53 --> 1:36:59
threats to humanity is clearly of great value. And Dave is
1427
1:36:59 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction] Colum?
1428
1:37:01 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction]ays
1429
1:37:06 --> 1:37:12
the carbon control world are saying that by burying trees
1430
1:37:12 --> 1:37:17
that somehow that's reducing the CO2 and wanting to get carbon
1431
1:37:17 --> 1:37:22
credits paid to them for that. What when in fact, because of
1432
1:37:22 --> 1:37:30
that significant loss of tree lines, and that does over 35 to
1433
1:37:30 --> 1:37:36
40% of the trees in the, in the world have been cut down and are
1434
1:37:36 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction]ive. Now compared to 600 years ago, when Columbus first
1435
1:37:41 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction]ates, well to North America, and and that
1436
1:37:45 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction]rain on our atmosphere, that is now
1437
1:37:50 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction]eds of 1000s of years that
1438
1:37:55 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction]osion of life forms, both plant and
1439
1:38:00 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction]t, we're all due to the atmospheric mix
1440
1:38:05 --> 1:38:11
of high oxygen, and, and a reasonable amount of carbon that
1441
1:38:11 --> 1:38:15
could be converted to, to photosynthesis to make the
1442
1:38:15 --> 1:38:19
oxygen. And that that's fairly rare within, you know, the solar
1443
1:38:19 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction]em or even, you know, other places that were very unique
1444
1:38:24 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction] that had that mix that created a large amount of
1445
1:38:28 --> 1:38:32
oxygen that led to life. And that it had magnetic poles that
1446
1:38:32 --> 1:38:36
helped keep all that oxygen, the atmosphere in place from being
1447
1:38:36 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction]ivity. But that by by taking
1448
1:38:43 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction] land that's primary is the biggest converter
1449
1:38:48 --> 1:38:54
of, of carbon dioxide into oxygen, that we've lost the
1450
1:38:54 --> 1:38:59
mechanics in the pump, the generator pump that supplies our
1451
1:38:59 --> 1:39:[privacy contact redaction] endangered the oceans with with
1452
1:39:03 --> 1:39:[privacy contact redaction]ic junk and, and various kind of runoffs that
1453
1:39:07 --> 1:39:13
that kill life forms that would otherwise have converted oxygen
1454
1:39:13 --> 1:39:17
in the water. I mean, the carbon dioxide in the water to oxygen
1455
1:39:17 --> 1:39:22
also. So where you can kind of view this as some as as having a
1456
1:39:22 --> 1:39:26
rope around your neck and it's slowly being tight. And at some
1457
1:39:26 --> 1:39:32
point, you know, initially, you can't do as much. You can't, you
1458
1:39:32 --> 1:39:36
know, run as much or so on because you can't get enough
1459
1:39:36 --> 1:39:40
oxygen after a while, you reduce your breathing just to survive.
1460
1:39:40 --> 1:39:44
And if it goes too far, you you're completely fixated. And
1461
1:39:44 --> 1:39:49
that's the state in the danger that we have going on within our
1462
1:39:49 --> 1:39:57
earth. And this is an attack on on both humanity and and on on
1463
1:39:57 --> 1:40:03
on Mother Nature, and that if if humans don't turn that around
1464
1:40:03 --> 1:40:07
and repopulate our trees, which which is straightforward,
1465
1:40:07 --> 1:40:12
because the, the dense, the high density places across Canada and
1466
1:40:12 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction]ates, but especially Russia and, and
1467
1:40:17 --> 1:40:21
certain part, you know, Brazil has, you know, has had a mount
1468
1:40:21 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction]er's part, but they've been tearing down a lot of their
1469
1:40:26 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction]s. There's certain parts of northern Africa that have the
1470
1:40:30 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction], at one point, extremely high
1471
1:40:34 --> 1:40:40
vegetation. But that through through evolutionary cycles,
1472
1:40:41 --> 1:40:44
turned into desert, but with the right kind of management, many,
1473
1:40:45 --> 1:40:48
many parts of northern Africa could be turned back from from
1474
1:40:48 --> 1:40:53
desert into flush areas that could support, you know, an
1475
1:40:53 --> 1:40:57
enormous amount of trees. There's there's various set of
1476
1:40:57 --> 1:41:04
programs known known as the 1 trillion tree initiatives that
1477
1:41:04 --> 1:41:[privacy contact redaction]arted at various points, but they've never been
1478
1:41:07 --> 1:41:11
ramped up to the real size that they need to, to achieve those
1479
1:41:11 --> 1:41:15
goals. And we're at this point, we're still in a significant
1480
1:41:15 --> 1:41:18
decline of the amount of O2 oxygen.
1481
1:41:22 --> 1:41:26
Yes, well, well said, Glenn. And I'm a fan as a number of people
1482
1:41:26 --> 1:41:[privacy contact redaction]ymer. And the evidence is clearly like the
1483
1:41:31 --> 1:41:[privacy contact redaction]ions the fraudulent climate
1484
1:41:36 --> 1:41:41
emergency gets shut down, you cannot get any funding for any
1485
1:41:41 --> 1:41:44
research at university to show that there's no climate
1486
1:41:44 --> 1:41:48
emergency. And so shining a light on this, Glenn, on Thursday
1487
1:41:48 --> 1:41:52
night, you put the link into the chat, everybody, what time? What
1488
1:41:52 --> 1:41:54
time on Thursday night your time?
1489
1:41:55 --> 1:42:03
It's it's 8pm Eastern Time. So and it is we caught we recorded
1490
1:42:03 --> 1:42:06
live, but it's made available for replay immediately
1491
1:42:06 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction]s. So we recognize that that's not always a convenient
1492
1:42:11 --> 1:42:15
time. This particular one we view as so urgent that we're
1493
1:42:15 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction]ivities next week, around running large
1494
1:42:21 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction]e on on the concern and how they
1495
1:42:27 --> 1:42:31
can deliver it. We were hoping to engage a large amount of
1496
1:42:32 --> 1:42:36
spiritual leaders in that process. Because we do think
1497
1:42:36 --> 1:42:43
this is a spiritual war we're in. And, you know, God will
1498
1:42:43 --> 1:42:49
survive all of this, but humans may not. And we'd like to see a
1499
1:42:49 --> 1:42:51
lot more humans survive.
1500
1:42:51 --> 1:42:56
Yeah, here, including you and me, Glenn. Okay, well, hands up
1501
1:42:56 --> 1:43:00
to discuss this topic or other topics. Marv.
1502
1:43:00 --> 1:43:07
Hey, when I, I, after the Fukushima catastrophe, I read a
1503
1:43:07 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction]ankton, and I can't remember the number, but it's
1504
1:43:11 --> 1:43:20
either 60% or 70% of our oxygen comes from ocean plankton. The
1505
1:43:20 --> 1:43:25
trees are a small percentage of what produces it. But anyway,
1506
1:43:25 --> 1:43:32
there was a sharp dip. The Fukushima catastrophe reduced the
1507
1:43:32 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction]amatically for three or
1508
1:43:37 --> 1:43:42
four years. It's recovered now. But anyway, they would, yeah, we
1509
1:43:42 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction]ant life on the land, but have you
1510
1:43:46 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction]ankton?
1511
1:43:48 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction]ually a very valuable portion of it. It's not
1512
1:43:53 --> 1:43:56
nearly as high as you've indicated. The best estimates is
1513
1:43:56 --> 1:44:05
that the ocean conversion of oxygen, O2, is somewhere between
1514
1:44:05 --> 1:44:13
35 and 40% of the generated oxygen. But again, while it has
1515
1:44:13 --> 1:44:20
not been damaged as much as the tree canopy, it is in fact under
1516
1:44:20 --> 1:44:26
duress and Fukushima kind of things and blooms and plastic
1517
1:44:26 --> 1:44:31
contamination of the oceans and runoff contamination that, I
1518
1:44:31 --> 1:44:35
mean, river deltas often are a giant place for where some of
1519
1:44:35 --> 1:44:39
that conversion occurs, and many of them have been damaged by,
1520
1:44:40 --> 1:44:45
you know, improper use of fertilizer runoff. So there's a
1521
1:44:45 --> 1:44:49
range of natural things. I mean, the nice part about these trees
1522
1:44:49 --> 1:44:54
work for free, you know. We just got to, you know, start the
1523
1:44:54 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction]ing seedlings farms
1524
1:45:00 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction]s of putting them out in large scale. Various
1525
1:45:06 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction]ually engineered designs where you could have
1526
1:45:10 --> 1:45:17
planes of seedlings and basically do air drops. If you get
1527
1:45:17 --> 1:45:21
it the right height and the right weight of each little pot,
1528
1:45:21 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction]ually sink into the ground below. You include in the
1529
1:45:26 --> 1:45:29
set a certain amount of fertilizer to get it running, and
1530
1:45:29 --> 1:45:33
therefore you don't even necessarily need to have manual
1531
1:45:33 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction]anting. You can do large scale planting
1532
1:45:38 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction]s.
1533
1:45:41 --> 1:45:46
OK, thank you.
1534
1:45:46 --> 1:45:50
You know, I've always wondered about the, you know, in Oregon,
1535
1:45:50 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction]s, we kill all the hardwood trees, we spray. All
1536
1:45:57 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction]s now are farmed for the Douglas fir and the fir trees.
1537
1:46:04 --> 1:46:08
Well, I think those hardwood trees, the broadleaf plants,
1538
1:46:08 --> 1:46:14
produce a lot more. They do a lot more for the synthesis than
1539
1:46:14 --> 1:46:19
the fir needles, or I might be wrong about that.
1540
1:46:19 --> 1:46:24
But no, you're correct. They are more efficient. But, you know,
1541
1:46:25 --> 1:46:29
it's unlikely we're going to go to a world where we're not using
1542
1:46:29 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction]s. In general, most of the wood
1543
1:46:33 --> 1:46:37
companies are, you know, that's their livelihood. So they're
1544
1:46:37 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction]anting, at least for evergreen
1545
1:46:43 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction]ion and fir trees and so on. You're right, hardwood in a
1546
1:46:48 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction] in the Brazilian jungles is the most
1547
1:46:54 --> 1:46:57
efficient. Virtually everything that comes down gets captured
1548
1:46:58 --> 1:47:04
and converted. But, you know, certainly taking areas and saying
1549
1:47:04 --> 1:47:07
we're going to be much more efficient around replanting them,
1550
1:47:07 --> 1:47:[privacy contact redaction]ion, is a good positive way of keeping the
1551
1:47:13 --> 1:47:17
oxygen generator going. Thank you, Bob.
1552
1:47:17 --> 1:47:19
We've got hands up. Jim.
1553
1:47:22 --> 1:47:27
Hey, Glenn, I was just wondering about, I put in the chat a cover
1554
1:47:27 --> 1:47:[privacy contact redaction] magazine from [privacy contact redaction]anding
1555
1:47:31 --> 1:47:39
next to a climate change machine. The US Air Force said they
1556
1:47:40 --> 1:47:[privacy contact redaction]ete control of the weather by 2025, and it seems
1557
1:47:46 --> 1:47:52
they do. Can you discuss the intelligence agency control of the
1558
1:47:52 --> 1:47:[privacy contact redaction]ess company and Colson,
1559
1:47:57 --> 1:48:04
C-O-U-L-S-O-N, Aeronautical, that is the family of Foster Colson,
1560
1:48:04 --> 1:48:[privacy contact redaction]ess company and Colson Aviation, that's
1561
1:48:08 --> 1:48:[privacy contact redaction]s to put out all the
1562
1:48:11 --> 1:48:16
fires, especially the ones in Canada that just burned Canada's
1563
1:48:16 --> 1:48:[privacy contact redaction]s so much that the smoke covered the United States. It
1564
1:48:20 --> 1:48:24
looks like there's a lot of intelligence network involvement
1565
1:48:24 --> 1:48:[privacy contact redaction]s. Can you go into that?
1566
1:48:33 --> 1:48:37
While I know a fair amount of it, it is not one of the topics that
1567
1:48:37 --> 1:48:42
we delved into in our show in any significant way. I will comment
1568
1:48:46 --> 1:48:53
relative to Lahana in Hawaii, and for anyone that thinks that
1569
1:48:53 --> 1:48:[privacy contact redaction]er, they are wrong on two fronts. You
1570
1:48:59 --> 1:49:05
described altering climate, the most common mechanism of that is
1571
1:49:05 --> 1:49:11
seeding clouds. It is likely that that particular hurricane before
1572
1:49:11 --> 1:49:[privacy contact redaction] to accent the wind speeds that
1573
1:49:16 --> 1:49:23
were occurring on Lahana. More importantly, Lahana was in fact the
1574
1:49:23 --> 1:49:32
burnings were all accelerated by spraying of materials similar to
1575
1:49:32 --> 1:49:41
napalm, but in a much smaller type of gun and done from low-flying
1576
1:49:41 --> 1:49:[privacy contact redaction]rong indication is that those helicopters were
1577
1:49:47 --> 1:49:52
run by the Colson Company. That's the only one I have directly
1578
1:49:52 --> 1:49:58
commented on in public in an open forum that happened to be on a
1579
1:49:58 --> 1:50:[privacy contact redaction] similar things, and it
1580
1:50:04 --> 1:50:[privacy contact redaction] similar things have gone on in
1581
1:50:07 --> 1:50:10
Canada, which is the home country for Colson.
1582
1:50:17 --> 1:50:18
All right, thank you.
1583
1:50:19 --> 1:50:19
You're welcome.
1584
1:50:29 --> 1:50:30
Lou, do you have a question for me?
1585
1:50:41 --> 1:50:[privacy contact redaction] wanted to say you said God will live after human
1586
1:50:45 --> 1:50:53
beings are gone. God is love, period. That's 1 John 4-8. This idea of a
1587
1:50:53 --> 1:50:58
supreme being is a delusion. The universe is way too big with our
1588
1:50:58 --> 1:51:06
billions of galaxies for some Zeus-like supreme being to be, you
1589
1:51:06 --> 1:51:11
know, knowing where every feather drops and every leaf falls. That's
1590
1:51:11 --> 1:51:15
delusional. If we disagree on that, we just have to agree to disagree.
1591
1:51:16 --> 1:51:21
Well, there's a lot of different variations on how people represent
1592
1:51:21 --> 1:51:[privacy contact redaction] I would say is something created the universe, and
1593
1:51:28 --> 1:51:[privacy contact redaction]em created our planet in vast contrast to
1594
1:51:36 --> 1:51:[privacy contact redaction]em that gave us a combination of
1595
1:51:43 --> 1:51:51
an iron core that allowed a magnetic field. Within that, the appropriate
1596
1:51:52 --> 1:52:00
gravity levels and atmosphere settings to build nitrogen, oxygen,
1597
1:52:00 --> 1:52:[privacy contact redaction] life forms created and flourish.
1598
1:52:10 --> 1:52:13
I personally don't think that's a coincidence.
1599
1:52:14 --> 1:52:18
It's not a coincidence, but if you're familiar, as we all are,
1600
1:52:18 --> 1:52:[privacy contact redaction] a Bachelor of Science degree in religious studies.
1601
1:52:23 --> 1:52:[privacy contact redaction]ogen, when it burns long enough and hard enough, you get fusion,
1602
1:52:28 --> 1:52:34
and then you get helium, and then you get the various other, what,
1603
1:52:34 --> 1:52:40
over 100 elements on the periodic table. Carbon is the miracle molecule
1604
1:52:41 --> 1:52:51
because it can bind with so much other matter. I think E equals mc squared,
1605
1:52:51 --> 1:52:56
where energy and matter are equatable when you talk about the speed of
1606
1:52:56 --> 1:53:03
light squared equating them. It's a wild world. I recently heard about
1607
1:53:04 --> 1:53:09
frequencies being a big thing, and other dimensions. We went from
1608
1:53:09 --> 1:53:13
Newtonian physics to quantum physics, and now this guy at a party I was at
1609
1:53:13 --> 1:53:[privacy contact redaction]ay said, dimensional physics. It just gets so bizarre and esoteric,
1610
1:53:20 --> 1:53:26
and really metaphysical and ridiculous to me. We life forms,
1611
1:53:26 --> 1:53:32
we're fragile creatures, we're cellular based. There are three forms of life,
1612
1:53:32 --> 1:53:40
unconscious life, like our insects and our plants, and there's conscious life,
1613
1:53:40 --> 1:53:45
like our fellow mammals, our dogs and cats. We get pet therapy from them in comfort.
1614
1:53:45 --> 1:53:54
And then there's us, there's self-conscious life. A lot of philosophers over the millennia
1615
1:53:54 --> 1:54:01
have spoken about, we're the only creatures that are conscious of self,
1616
1:54:02 --> 1:54:08
have a conscience. The more you know, the more you know how much you don't know.
1617
1:54:09 --> 1:54:15
But God is love, period. It's the attraction force and the equally necessary separation force
1618
1:54:16 --> 1:54:22
in a beautiful balance. Water is life, and I gotta go.
1619
1:54:23 --> 1:54:28
Well, as a comment, you know, in good times when the world is truly in balance,
1620
1:54:29 --> 1:54:[privacy contact redaction] theological dialogue in an open society and free debate is a wonderful thing,
1621
1:54:35 --> 1:54:42
and allows various kinds of options to everyone. Unfortunately, we're not in that balance right
1622
1:54:42 --> 1:54:46
now. We're in grave danger of a massive imbalance.
1623
1:54:46 --> 1:54:50
And fear not, it's the best of times and the worst of times.
1624
1:54:52 --> 1:54:56
It's the best of times and the worst of times. You can understand why the oligarchs don't want
1625
1:54:56 --> 1:55:05
change, because they've got their rituals and their comfort zones. And so, you know,
1626
1:55:05 --> 1:55:13
compassion is a luxury. And it's a form of compassion, you know, to listen to others and
1627
1:55:13 --> 1:55:22
to expound on what we consider our areas of knowledge. So thanks, guys, for having the Zoom
1628
1:55:22 --> 1:55:26
meeting. I'm sorry, Bridget didn't show up. Ben, I've heard him before, and that member of
1629
1:55:26 --> 1:55:34
Parliament is right on. And so thanks for listening to me. Thanks for letting me make a comment here
1630
1:55:34 --> 1:55:40
from beautiful Ormond Beach, Florida. Enjoy. Enjoy Florida.
1631
1:55:40 --> 1:55:47
Creators, we're creators, conspiracy realist, educator, activist, truth-or-organizer, reader,
1632
1:55:47 --> 1:55:51
socializers. Well said, Lou. Well said. Thank you, Charles.
1633
1:55:52 --> 1:55:59
Okay, Anders. Yeah, I'm not quite sure if I shall comment on the wellness company or
1634
1:56:00 --> 1:56:03
climate, but I think it may be better to do the climate.
1635
1:56:03 --> 1:56:07
Anders, do both, because you posted something that was interesting on the wellness company,
1636
1:56:07 --> 1:56:[privacy contact redaction], then the wellness company. Okay. So I've been doing a long research on
1637
1:56:15 --> 1:56:[privacy contact redaction], so I could talk for hours about what I know.
1638
1:56:24 --> 1:56:31
So there is not a problem with the climate. It's the problem with politicians to believe there is
1639
1:56:31 --> 1:56:[privacy contact redaction]arted to make this fantasy of that there is a carbon,
1640
1:56:47 --> 1:56:56
let's say, connection, the CO2, which was causing the global warming. We had a long time cooling
1641
1:56:56 --> 1:57:09
from about 1300 till about 1850. We had a huge cooling effect about 1645 to 1710. It was a huge
1642
1:57:09 --> 1:57:18
problem of the low level of carbon. It was connected very strongly to the 400-year low solar
1643
1:57:19 --> 1:57:[privacy contact redaction]romagnetic or magnetic radiation. We are now entering a similar period,
1644
1:57:27 --> 1:57:39
or it's getting colder. It will be colder between 1917 and 2053, according to Valentin Sarkova,
1645
1:57:39 --> 1:57:49
who is number one in solar research. The CO2 will most likely go down because there is established
1646
1:57:49 --> 1:57:55
in science a five to seven year relation. So when the temperature starts to drop,
1647
1:57:57 --> 1:58:08
the CO2 will go down. It will go back to the sea, and we will see a drop. Even
1648
1:58:08 --> 1:58:15
we believe that there is a problem with emission. This emission is going to equilibrium by the law
1649
1:58:15 --> 1:58:23
of Henry. It is known science. It's just that they don't want to talk about it. It was high level of
1650
1:58:23 --> 1:58:33
CO2 in 1942. After a very warm, the highest temperature on record is not recently. Most
1651
1:58:33 --> 1:58:38
of the tops were in the 1930s. It is quite interesting to see that they were
1652
1:58:40 --> 1:58:[privacy contact redaction]s who found this data that it was 440 parts per million of carbon
1653
1:58:50 --> 1:58:55
CO2 in 1942 after the global warming in the 1930s.
1654
1:58:55 --> 1:59:03
So, so, and Beck is the name of this scientist. He died about 2009, and they have been trying to
1655
1:59:03 --> 1:59:10
shut him down. They're trying to hide the fact that there was a correlation between CO2 and
1656
1:59:10 --> 1:59:19
temperature. And when temperature goes up, CO2 go up. When it go down, it's CO2 go down. And I think
1657
1:59:19 --> 1:59:24
within two years, we will see that CO2 will start to drop. It goes back to the sea following
1658
1:59:24 --> 1:59:37
a cooling trend. So this is caused by the solar, huge magnets in the sun, which are not completely
1659
1:59:37 --> 1:59:44
in sync. But so you can analyze these like in a prism, and you will find their components,
1660
1:59:44 --> 1:59:51
and you analyze those in a mechanical, a mathematic model. This is Valentine Sarkova in Northumbria.
1661
1:59:52 --> 1:59:[privacy contact redaction] correlation. And this is in line with NASA
1662
1:59:58 --> 2:00:05
and anyone who really knows about science and the sunspot, let's say. So this is the real science
1663
2:00:05 --> 2:00:16
of the what is causing that. It is not in Europe or not northern hemisphere. And it in Norway,
1664
2:00:16 --> 2:00:[privacy contact redaction]ed years, it's a lot greener because we were starving with
1665
2:00:22 --> 2:00:31
carbon CO2 from let's say 1650 till about 1850. And it has been growing, but it's still very low.
1666
2:00:31 --> 2:00:37
So we don't have a problem. There is nothing to solve. We need more carbon in the air.
1667
2:00:39 --> 2:00:43
Anders, I completely agree with all the positions you're taking.
1668
2:00:44 --> 2:00:52
And I'm completely, you know, our team is completely against the climate change
1669
2:00:52 --> 2:01:01
as it's described, namely that we have excess CO2 and that that is going to lead to some kind
1670
2:01:01 --> 2:01:11
of decline, either warming issues or others that are dangerous to life. Instead, we're saying what's
1671
2:01:11 --> 2:01:19
happening is the... I'm not worried. Hold on, let me finish. What has happened is the engine that
1672
2:01:20 --> 2:01:[privacy contact redaction]ion of O2 has broken down both in the forest cover as well as the oceans.
1673
2:01:33 --> 2:01:43
And with that, there's been a absolute loss of not only oxygen, but also carbon dioxide and
1674
2:01:43 --> 2:01:[privacy contact redaction] in the very, very high sides of the atmosphere.
1675
2:01:51 --> 2:02:00
And that at some point, you keep shrinking the absolute amount of oxygen in those high areas
1676
2:02:00 --> 2:02:06
where the extra cushion was, and then it starts to affect the amount of oxygen you have at sea level.
1677
2:02:07 --> 2:02:13
And that's the point we're heading for. We've taken away all of the spare cushion and we're
1678
2:02:14 --> 2:02:19
actually, you know, there's only been at sea level a small amount of oxygen drop.
1679
2:02:20 --> 2:02:26
What is causing it, in your opinion? Is it the harp? Is it the chanterelle? What is the
1680
2:02:26 --> 2:02:33
cause of the changes? Is it natural or manmade? Well, it's manmade from the viewpoint that large
1681
2:02:33 --> 2:02:[privacy contact redaction] been cut down or burned down compared to 600 years ago.
1682
2:02:40 --> 2:02:43
On the same side, they're growing. So if you go to...
1683
2:02:43 --> 2:02:50
But they're not being replenished. I mean, typical forest covers, you know,
1684
2:02:50 --> 2:02:58
gather nearly 100% of all light that comes down. Once you burn them down and not energetically
1685
2:02:59 --> 2:03:07
reset their seedlings to fill in that space, they are far less efficient and therefore producing
1686
2:03:08 --> 2:03:15
less oxygen in the oxygen engine. But let's say if you go to Norway, Sweden, Finland,
1687
2:03:16 --> 2:03:21
Russia, in Norway it's about 40% increase of forest the last 100 years.
1688
2:03:24 --> 2:03:29
Yeah, there are some places that have filled in more and as you described, some of that
1689
2:03:29 --> 2:03:[privacy contact redaction] rise of CO2 that they were more efficient. See, trees
1690
2:03:38 --> 2:03:45
don't need a high percentage of oxygen in order for them to operate.
1691
2:03:45 --> 2:03:54
They also produce all the food, all the crops, they consume carbon, CO2, and they emit O2. So
1692
2:03:54 --> 2:04:02
all the increase of 25-30% in food production is kind of producing O2 all over.
1693
2:04:04 --> 2:04:10
It is producing some. It's only a fraction, a very small fraction of what you get out of the canopy
1694
2:04:11 --> 2:04:[privacy contact redaction] across Canada or the Soviet Union.
1695
2:04:19 --> 2:04:[privacy contact redaction] I mean, they didn't touch much. So, okay,
1696
2:04:23 --> 2:04:31
I'm much more worried with the pollution and the chemtrail and the harp because there is a
1697
2:04:31 --> 2:04:[privacy contact redaction] three, four years following most likely radiation and poison
1698
2:04:39 --> 2:04:45
from harmful chemtrail. So I'm much more worried about poison and radiation than
1699
2:04:46 --> 2:04:55
let's say the natural processes because I mean, we have had much higher O2 earlier when it was
1700
2:04:55 --> 2:04:59
much more, when the temperature was warmer. It's a function also of temperature.
1701
2:05:02 --> 2:05:08
There's a variety of cross currents and anything that man is explicitly doing to damage the ecology
1702
2:05:09 --> 2:05:18
through whatever degree of chemtrails are occurring is absolutely evil and should be altered.
1703
2:05:19 --> 2:05:28
Unfortunately, people that are clearing forests in order to plant crops or clearing forests in order
1704
2:05:28 --> 2:05:37
to build open spaces, they don't recognize the danger they're putting the planet under by excessive
1705
2:05:37 --> 2:05:44
amounts of that. It's bad. So I know, for example, in Brazil, they're cutting down rainforest
1706
2:05:45 --> 2:06:01
to make sugar cane so that Sweden can go on E, whatever 85% non-petrol, let's say, ethanol.
1707
2:06:01 --> 2:06:[privacy contact redaction]etely crazy what they're doing. So, oh, yes, absolutely. Also the American idea
1708
2:06:09 --> 2:06:17
to burn, let's say, corn or to make fuel out of corn. That's also wrong idea.
1709
2:06:17 --> 2:06:23
And Glenn, for that matter, I can't work out. I'm trying to work out. Look,
1710
2:06:24 --> 2:06:29
do you two believe that man-made climate change is an issue?
1711
2:06:29 --> 2:06:31
Definitely not.
1712
2:06:31 --> 2:06:[privacy contact redaction]on?
1713
2:06:33 --> 2:06:35
Definitely not.
1714
2:06:35 --> 2:06:37
Absolutely. I agree with you. What do you say, Glenn?
1715
2:06:37 --> 2:06:39
Whether it's an issue?
1716
2:06:39 --> 2:06:45
You know, the warnings about man-made climate change?
1717
2:06:45 --> 2:06:47
No, no, it's a complete hoax.
1718
2:06:47 --> 2:06:53
So I don't understand what you two are discussing, then.
1719
2:06:53 --> 2:06:55
Well, I...
1720
2:06:55 --> 2:07:07
There is a scientific debate whether there is a reduction of oxygen, and that is a story.
1721
2:07:07 --> 2:07:15
But let's say the question is why? So if the temperature has been going up the last 40 years,
1722
2:07:15 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction] been more productive. So then I would say O2 has been going up because
1723
2:07:24 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction]ants. But, okay, you are burning fossil fuels. But this balance
1724
2:07:32 --> 2:07:38
is created by the law of Henry. So within six, seven years, there is new equilibrium, whatever
1725
2:07:39 --> 2:07:47
temperature there is. It's not related to emission. It's related to the temperature. The K constant
1726
2:07:47 --> 2:07:53
of law of Henry says that it is defined by the temperature and the new equilibrium.
1727
2:07:55 --> 2:07:56
Yeah.
1728
2:07:56 --> 2:07:58
So, Stephen, think of it this way.
1729
2:07:58 --> 2:08:03
No, I'm just thinking about the audience, Glenn. Glenn, can you explain it to the audience
1730
2:08:03 --> 2:08:08
what you two are arguing about? And also explain to the audience what you two agree on
1731
2:08:09 --> 2:08:16
because I think that this discussion is going to confuse people who are against the emergency
1732
2:08:16 --> 2:08:23
caused by global warming, you know? So... And I don't believe that man-made global warming is an
1733
2:08:23 --> 2:08:29
issue. I think the, you know, it's just crazy, the whole thing. And I just think...
1734
2:08:29 --> 2:08:[privacy contact redaction] some disagreement on O2.
1735
2:08:31 --> 2:08:33
It's very difficult to argue what you're arguing about.
1736
2:08:36 --> 2:08:36
Okay.
1737
2:08:36 --> 2:08:39
We disagree on oxygen, not on carbon.
1738
2:08:40 --> 2:08:[privacy contact redaction] So climate change is based on the theory that there's excess carbon dioxide
1739
2:08:45 --> 2:08:55
occurring in the atmosphere, and that will lead to a severe downgrade of the Earth and all of its
1740
2:08:55 --> 2:08:55
life forms.
1741
2:08:57 --> 2:08:57
Yeah.
1742
2:08:58 --> 2:09:06
The issue that I'm identifying clearly and for which there's, you know, a fair amount of
1743
2:09:06 --> 2:09:13
awareness, but not a huge amount. It's been covered up for a range of reasons that I won't go into.
1744
2:09:14 --> 2:09:[privacy contact redaction]ion of the oxygen generator. So if you think of trees and various kind of
1745
2:09:23 --> 2:09:31
plant lives as, you know, within their total ecology of the Earth, they generate oxygen.
1746
2:09:31 --> 2:09:39
And with high levels of oxygen, that's what pushed the fork forward within our whole Earth
1747
2:09:39 --> 2:09:[privacy contact redaction]ages, when you only had very simple and single cell plants,
1748
2:09:46 --> 2:09:50
you only had a small amount of oxygen being put off, and most of that then got absorbed
1749
2:09:50 --> 2:09:54
by the iron, and it turned into rust, and you had no atmosphere.
1750
2:09:55 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction] sort of diminished, or the iron readily available on the Earth's surface
1751
2:10:02 --> 2:10:12
diminished, then it did produce free oxygen, and with that additional nitrogen as an air
1752
2:10:12 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction]ead of a solid. And that's where we got an atmosphere.
1753
2:10:17 --> 2:10:26
And without an atmosphere, as exists in Mars, you have no life. So that's what's built up.
1754
2:10:26 --> 2:10:35
And together, the atmosphere has been growing for millions of years, and got to the stage of very
1755
2:10:35 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction]ant and animal expansion. It's considered a giant explosion inside of a
1756
2:10:45 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction]ical issues because it did happen so fast. But it relies on that pump, that pump of new
1757
2:10:52 --> 2:11:[privacy contact redaction]ant basis, and we've lost that pump. And we're now losing that amount
1758
2:11:00 --> 2:11:07
of oxygen, and on an absolute level, we're seeing our atmosphere reduced and collapsing.
1759
2:11:07 --> 2:11:18
So you think, Glenn, that there is a danger to the planet then because of what matter?
1760
2:11:18 --> 2:11:[privacy contact redaction]t, but not by climate change. Climate change is very much
1761
2:11:24 --> 2:11:33
focused on there being a problem with the CO2 levels, the carbon dioxide. The carbon dioxide
1762
2:11:33 --> 2:11:40
percentages in the Earth's atmosphere have fluxed over quite wide ranges. Anders has alluded to that.
1763
2:11:44 --> 2:11:51
There's no such thing as this runaway train of CO2 that got pushed forward by the climate change
1764
2:11:51 --> 2:11:54
crazies. So Anders, what do you think about that?
1765
2:11:54 --> 2:12:[privacy contact redaction] checked it up, and there has been a small change of oxygen, but it is not significant.
1766
2:12:04 --> 2:12:11
And I don't even know fully. He has theories about pulsation, but let's say
1767
2:12:12 --> 2:12:17
I'm not worried about oxygen. So it might be a reason.
1768
2:12:18 --> 2:12:27
You're measuring it both by the amount of oxygen relative to the other parts of the atmosphere
1769
2:12:27 --> 2:12:34
and around the amounts that occur at low levels of the atmosphere.
1770
2:12:36 --> 2:12:[privacy contact redaction] checked up. We are now at about 20%. It was 35% some 35 million years ago.
1771
2:12:44 --> 2:12:52
So there is natural variation both in oxygen and CO2. So I don't think if it is going to 19%,
1772
2:12:52 --> 2:12:56
it's going to be causing huge problems for us.
1773
2:12:59 --> 2:13:02
Maybe they measure it differently. You're substantially wrong on that.
1774
2:13:06 --> 2:13:12
But I don't even share about the mechanism of it. So I'm afraid of the pollution.
1775
2:13:12 --> 2:13:20
That's bad for everything, pollution and radiation. And it might be a connection to that.
1776
2:13:24 --> 2:13:30
It's unlikely. There is some level of the impact of pollution. But the other thing around pollution
1777
2:13:30 --> 2:13:41
is that is controllable, relatively forward way, controllable by humans. And we've seen that
1778
2:13:41 --> 2:13:52
certainly in the US from many decades of being anti-pollution and seeing things
1779
2:13:53 --> 2:14:00
comparatively improving, especially compared to China, which has got a massive pollution problem.
1780
2:14:00 --> 2:14:07
Generally, but chemtrails were a big worry. And I'm not sure most of you are realizing it,
1781
2:14:07 --> 2:14:12
but chemtrails used to be something they put into plane and to gas the atmosphere. And they
1782
2:14:12 --> 2:14:19
said it was geoengineering. We see now what is going on. But now they are putting also aluminium
1783
2:14:20 --> 2:14:[privacy contact redaction]astics and cesium into the jet fuel of normal planes.
1784
2:14:30 --> 2:14:38
So the amount of pollution now is maybe 10 times more than it was 10 years ago. It is extreme now.
1785
2:14:40 --> 2:14:51
The air, the sun, the blue sky is now very often covered with film from chemtrails.
1786
2:14:52 --> 2:14:54
It's just to look up to see it.
1787
2:14:55 --> 2:15:04
I'm not an expert on that. I will concede to the things you're describing. But one of the things
1788
2:15:04 --> 2:15:12
that's obvious is those people that are taking those actions are hiding it from us. They are
1789
2:15:12 --> 2:15:21
secluding it. Well, then can you identify the individual players, the individual budgets that
1790
2:15:22 --> 2:15:[privacy contact redaction] in various countries that are funding that? And the amount of the volume?
1791
2:15:27 --> 2:15:33
It's basically USA, NATO, the deep state. It's the same people behind the COVID. So they have a very
1792
2:15:33 --> 2:15:[privacy contact redaction]ory to destroy life on earth to some extent.
1793
2:15:43 --> 2:15:51
I'm simply saying those people taking those evil actions in control, if those control actions were
1794
2:15:51 --> 2:16:00
reversed, so would be the danger. However, in the case of oxygen loss and atmospheric loss,
1795
2:16:02 --> 2:16:09
it's not enough to stop the evil players from doing things. It's also to say that we have to
1796
2:16:09 --> 2:16:[privacy contact redaction]enish the engine that had created this relatively positive and ideal level of atmosphere
1797
2:16:19 --> 2:16:32
for us. Where you and I are disagreeing is on the mechanisms that get used in order to measure
1798
2:16:33 --> 2:16:38
the absolute amount of atmosphere that we have around the earth.
1799
2:16:40 --> 2:16:[privacy contact redaction] there are two main problems. It is radiation and pollution. And this
1800
2:16:49 --> 2:16:57
is manmade and it is on purpose and it is by evil governments and politicians and those behind them.
1801
2:16:57 --> 2:16:59
It's the same.
1802
2:17:02 --> 2:17:09
Anderson, Glenn, can I modify it to three different possibilities? Natural, manmade,
1803
2:17:09 --> 2:17:20
or intelligence made? And this seems to be intelligence made. And that's evil intelligence.
1804
2:17:20 --> 2:17:29
Let's say a plan that is intelligence in conjunction with demonic forces. And that goes
1805
2:17:29 --> 2:17:[privacy contact redaction] magazine where the main demon is standing right next to
1806
2:17:36 --> 2:17:44
a climate change machine. So if we think about this as those three possibilities, manmade mistake,
1807
2:17:45 --> 2:17:[privacy contact redaction]ake like the COVID versus evil intelligence design. And then we have the
1808
2:17:53 --> 2:18:00
occurrence of the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein as an evil intelligence design, as well as the climate
1809
2:18:00 --> 2:18:08
change as an evil intelligence design. And you see orange skies everywhere. Well, when we were
1810
2:18:09 --> 2:18:[privacy contact redaction]en, we would throw chemicals in the fire and make it colors. And if you threw cadmium in the
1811
2:18:15 --> 2:18:22
fire, you'd see orange flames. People look up and not only do they see orange near the sunset,
1812
2:18:22 --> 2:18:29
they see it on the opposite side of the earth. The orange sky is all around us. And that may be
1813
2:18:29 --> 2:18:36
cadmium. And I'm noticing all my trees are dying in my backyard. And that may be the aluminum and
1814
2:18:36 --> 2:18:42
the cadmium and these other things that are being perhaps put into our jet fuels. I don't know. And
1815
2:18:42 --> 2:18:54
that's what I haven't analyzed. So, Jim, I think you're adding to the dialogue, and that's very
1816
2:18:54 --> 2:19:04
useful to recognize the element of intelligence and its role. I would alter it in that you're
1817
2:19:04 --> 2:19:14
describing it the evil intelligence as being a primary initiator. And I would say, no, it's the
1818
2:19:14 --> 2:19:22
evil psychopaths that are the initiators. And they happen to recognize the power that can be achieved
1819
2:19:23 --> 2:19:33
through an intelligence toolset that is designed around not being visible, designed around tricking
1820
2:19:33 --> 2:19:[privacy contact redaction]e, and lying in order to trick people. And that the psychopath cartel at the top with George
1821
2:19:46 --> 2:19:54
Soros and Rockefeller family and various others, they are the initiators and the control agents,
1822
2:19:54 --> 2:20:01
and they're utilizing the intel world as a weapon to keep the rest of us into a slave state.
1823
2:20:03 --> 2:20:10
But the purpose, if you put everything together, you see they are trying to do something with
1824
2:20:11 --> 2:20:[privacy contact redaction]ion by energy shock, by nitrate limitation. And the weather manipulation and the
1825
2:20:25 --> 2:20:[privacy contact redaction]ion. And this is they are planning a food crisis, global food
1826
2:20:32 --> 2:20:43
crisis within maybe 12 months. Yes, I concur with that. And if you know Manhattan, Kansas,
1827
2:20:43 --> 2:20:52
Manhattan, Kansas is right near Fort Riley, Kansas, where the Spanish flu originated from in
1828
2:20:52 --> 2:21:00
1918 or something like that. Manhattan, Kansas is where the new level four bio warfare labs are.
1829
2:21:00 --> 2:21:[privacy contact redaction]affed by US Air Force physician Robert Cadlec, K-A-D-L-E-C. And he just moved all
1830
2:21:09 --> 2:21:[privacy contact redaction]um Island, the safety of an island off the coast of Long Island
1831
2:21:15 --> 2:21:21
in New York, into the center of the United States, Manhattan, Kansas, where he could have a lab leak
1832
2:21:21 --> 2:21:29
and hoof and mouth disease would damage our entire cattle population in Kansas and the rest of the
1833
2:21:29 --> 2:21:[privacy contact redaction]ates, prompting a mandatory destruction of our entire cattle population, the elimination
1834
2:21:36 --> 2:21:41
of the land of milk and honey here in the United States, moving to synthetic beef and synthetic
1835
2:21:41 --> 2:21:47
milk and further imports from Namibia Africa, as we were talking about before. So this looks like
1836
2:21:47 --> 2:21:[privacy contact redaction]anned, just like we had a Wuhan leak, quote, leak when it was actually a planned release,
1837
2:21:52 --> 2:21:56
it looks like. And it wasn't the Chinese who did it. It was the United States and the Six Eyes
1838
2:21:56 --> 2:22:02
Intelligence Network who designed the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein rather than whatever the virus is,
1839
2:22:02 --> 2:22:06
or who knows what that is. But the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein is a biotero weapon. And now the
1840
2:22:06 --> 2:22:11
hoof and mouth disease is going to be one of the shots. There are multiple shots on goal. They
1841
2:22:12 --> 2:22:18
the intelligence networks do not rely on one thing. There are multiple shots on goal and there are
1842
2:22:18 --> 2:22:25
many things that are coming at us, including Monsanto, the ramifications of Monsanto's use
1843
2:22:25 --> 2:22:33
of Roundup. Roundup prompts a fungus, a special type of fungus on the roots of plants that has
1844
2:22:33 --> 2:22:38
been used as a biotero weapon that can cause nasal bleeding and vaginal bleeding. And we'll go into
1845
2:22:38 --> 2:22:45
that later on when I get more research on that. But there is a reason why Monsanto Roundup is
1846
2:22:45 --> 2:22:50
noted to cause cancer, should be banned immediately, but is still being sold and
1847
2:22:50 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction] sucking up the billions in fines, keeps paying them out as they keep selling the
1848
2:22:57 --> 2:23:05
Roundup. There's a reason for it. And it has to do with decimation of our food as Roundup depletes
1849
2:23:05 --> 2:23:13
the zinc sources in our food. You grow props with Roundup and you don't have much zinc in the product,
1850
2:23:13 --> 2:23:22
the corn, the wheat. And a friend of mine lives in Canada. They say if you move a stash of wheat
1851
2:23:22 --> 2:23:26
to put in a silo in Canada, they test it for Roundup. If it doesn't have any Roundup in it,
1852
2:23:26 --> 2:23:33
they don't accept it. This is disturbing. So this pesticide, I've been going into this now,
1853
2:23:33 --> 2:23:40
I can tell because I was so surprised to find that non-vaxxed people have the same poison in
1854
2:23:40 --> 2:23:[privacy contact redaction]e. So there is a source and the pesticides are now nanotech.
1855
2:23:49 --> 2:23:58
The water and the milk is filtering. So there is so many types of sources of pollution and it's not
1856
2:23:58 --> 2:24:03
only polluting us, it's polluting the trees and the plants, fish, the insects, everything.
1857
2:24:03 --> 2:24:11
And that is very important. And for us to just harp on this idea that ban the vaccine,
1858
2:24:11 --> 2:24:22
that is the wrong path. That is a divided path. We must ban the spike protein in any form, vaccine,
1859
2:24:22 --> 2:24:30
virus, hydrogel, aerosol. It's a nanotechnology. The spike protein is one of the biotero weapons.
1860
2:24:30 --> 2:24:34
You're right. There's more nanotech that I don't understand. You can talk about the wavelengths
1861
2:24:34 --> 2:24:[privacy contact redaction] certain expertise that I don't. Mine may be biochemistry or medical.
1862
2:24:39 --> 2:24:46
And so the nanotech, so I can concentrate on the spike protein as being a biotero weapon in vaccine,
1863
2:24:46 --> 2:24:52
virus, hydrogel, or any form. That spike protein is the biotero weapon.
1864
2:24:52 --> 2:24:[privacy contact redaction]ed Nations 17 goals, one is clean water. What they really mean,
1865
2:24:59 --> 2:25:08
they want to use nanografin and polymer film to clean the water, to pollute it. It's the opposite.
1866
2:25:08 --> 2:25:14
They will do the same with the milk. So they give now jabs to the cows and the bulls. They
1867
2:25:14 --> 2:25:21
get the same poison in them like we did. It goes to the chicken, to the pork. So the pollution is
1868
2:25:21 --> 2:25:28
now extreme in so many fields. And it is a huge mistake to believe that you're fine if you're not
1869
2:25:28 --> 2:25:38
jammed. And that is very true. But however, you've heard me and I appreciate Stephen Frost and
1870
2:25:38 --> 2:25:46
Charles Kovacs allowing me to speak about the things that RFK Jr. was thrown off of platforms
1871
2:25:46 --> 2:25:50
for speaking about. And that is the genetic specificity. There are certain things that you
1872
2:25:50 --> 2:25:55
couldn't speak about that you were banned. And so that's why I'm so grateful to Stephen Frost and
1873
2:25:55 --> 2:26:01
Charles Kovacs because they allow discussion about various topics, civilized discussion.
1874
2:26:01 --> 2:26:07
And one of the civilized discussions we need to have is whether there is some type of genetic
1875
2:26:07 --> 2:26:14
specificity, people who may not be affected or adversely affected or their children adversely
1876
2:26:14 --> 2:26:[privacy contact redaction]ed by the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein. And that SARS-CoV-2 spike protein, remember Pfizer's
1877
2:26:22 --> 2:26:29
CEO Albert Borla is not a physician. He's a veterinarian. And Albert Borla's specialty is
1878
2:26:29 --> 2:26:[privacy contact redaction]ration, castrating with a series of two vaccines. And if you notice, the SARS-CoV-2 spike
1879
2:26:37 --> 2:26:[privacy contact redaction]erone. It binds to organs with the highest number of ACE2 receptors. And
1880
2:26:44 --> 2:26:53
there are three ACE2 receptors on the spike protein in vaccine or virus form. And those three and those
1881
2:26:53 --> 2:26:59
ACE2 receptors number per square centimeter are highest on men's testicles. So if you have a high
1882
2:26:59 --> 2:27:06
affinity for that ACE2 receptor binding domain on the spike protein, your generations may be adversely
1883
2:27:06 --> 2:27:[privacy contact redaction]ration, as is the specialty of Albert Borla. Why is he the head of Pfizer?
1884
2:27:14 --> 2:27:20
That's bizarre. You know, and I can make a comment. All right, everybody. Everybody, hang on. Before we
1885
2:27:20 --> 2:27:27
continue, because this, I love, I love stuff on testicles. And I have no drama discussing stuff
1886
2:27:27 --> 2:27:[privacy contact redaction]icles. And we're at our two and a half hour, over two and a half hours. And so I want to stop
1887
2:27:34 --> 2:27:[privacy contact redaction]ing and Tom Rodman's got his video telegram meeting happening. But just for your
1888
2:27:40 --> 2:27:46
information, everybody, we got to [privacy contact redaction]e, one hour in, we've got [privacy contact redaction]e here now.
1889
2:27:47 --> 2:27:52
And all these issues are, you know, Susan's got her hand up, Peter's got a hand up. I'm happy to stop
1890
2:27:52 --> 2:27:[privacy contact redaction]ing. I've got to go and do something else. If you want to keep this conversation going,
1891
2:27:57 --> 2:28:[privacy contact redaction]ing, then when that runs out, Tom, are you happy to stay here? You can,
1892
2:28:02 --> 2:28:[privacy contact redaction]ay here. I don't know if someone else wants to,
1893
2:28:09 --> 2:28:[privacy contact redaction]ephen's here, but I'll stop the recording. Oh, yeah.
1894
2:28:14 --> 2:28:20
It's wonderful to have you all here. And we'll get Andrew Bridgen shortly, I'm sure. I'll save the
1895
2:28:20 --> 2:28:25
chat and Jeremy Forbes had to go and keep the conversation going. And I'll keep this open.
1896
2:28:25 --> 2:28:29
I'll just stop the recording so we don't have to edit so much. All right. Is happy with that?
1897
2:28:29 --> 2:28:34
Yep. All right. Keep going with the conversation on testicles. I'd love to join it,
1898
2:28:34 --> 2:28:43
but I've got other things to do. Just a comment, Jim. I would add that I have read research.