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You know, when you have to get tough, you get tough.
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And again, we're seeing it done in a masterful way
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and the art of the deal is going on in spades.
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Hello everybody.
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I don't want to be you later on.
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Trump is doing some wonderful things.
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Love it.
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Hello, Daniel.
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Hang on.
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There he is.
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Where's Daniel?
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Hey, Daniel. Good to see you.
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Welcome.
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You're on mute, Daniel.
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Still on.
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Hello.
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There you are.
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Can you hear me now?
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Yep.
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We can hear you.
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So we'll introduce you in a moment.
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Good to see you again.
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0:00:58 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction] you.
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Daniel, this is Jerome Corsi.
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0:01:02 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction]ay for a while this morning.
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Hi, Jerome.
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Good to see you.
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0:01:06 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction]easure.
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Hello.
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0:01:08 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction]en to this on Rumble in its entirety,
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0:01:10 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction]ay with you for a few minutes this afternoon.
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Okay.
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And I apologize.
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Nice to see you again.
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Thank you very much.
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Jerome, I can't imagine.
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Yes, yes, absolutely.
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Jerome, I can't imagine you've got anything else to do
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than be here.
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Come on.
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Get serious.
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I got to write two very important memos
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0:01:31 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction] to be read in Washington tomorrow.
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Well, it was a nice bit of news with Venezuela
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agreeing to take back all the illegals
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0:01:41 --> 0:01:[privacy contact redaction] got in the email today.
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Yes.
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And Trump is making good progress.
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I am wanting him to get in touch with Putin
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quickly here because Putin is under internal pressure
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that he waited until Trump was going to be president
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and didn't retaliate when we launched
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our long-range missiles into Russia
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and when the British and the French were doing the same.
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And now he's under pressure.
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0:02:14 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction]liners are saying that Trump doesn't really care
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to push back Ukraine in a moment of weakness.
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Trump doesn't seem to understand the urgency
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of being in touch with Putin now.
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0:02:35 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction] week even said that Trump lost the [privacy contact redaction]ion
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Putin was signaling that he has information on that
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and of course I've signaled back we don't want that information
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0:02:54 --> 0:02:[privacy contact redaction]and the urgency of getting the talks going
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because Putin was also an attempt
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which even Tucker Carlson reported
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which we knew in advance that there was an attempt on Putin's life
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and he was warned about it and he increased his security.
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Within Russia there are forces that do not want peace.
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0:03:14 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction] like there are forces in the United States that want war
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and Putin has kept them in check but if Trump waits too long
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it's going to be hard for Putin to stay in power
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let alone prevent an escalation of the war.
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So that's got to be communicated pretty quickly.
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So Putin's patience up to the inauguration now was really his best play, right?
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Yes, it was his best play and he was encouraged to take that play and he did.
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That's right.
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But now that Trump's been in power, I mean it's only, you know,
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Trump's now had two full weeks, he's in 14 days, you know,
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0:03:52 --> 0:03:[privacy contact redaction] his speed is moving it appears that Russia and Putin
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are not even on his radar and that impression can't be allowed to last.
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Do you know that there's not aggressive open communication between Trump and Putin?
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0:04:08 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction] been day one.
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0:04:11 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]ed it.
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Well, that's a pity.
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I don't mean to take time from Daniel but that's where I'm going to...
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That's very good. Thank you for letting Daniel know that.
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We'll get the show on the road.
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Jerome, that's a pity in my opinion.
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He shouldn't use up his capital.
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Well, that's why I'm going to not be able to hear all of Daniel's presentation today.
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Okay.
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We've got to get this word in there.
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Good. Yeah.
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All right. Let's get this show on the road and welcome to Medical Doctors for COVID.
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Ethics International is today's discussion with Dr. Daniel Estulin.
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0:04:50 --> 0:04:[privacy contact redaction]ephen Frost almost four years ago
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with a desire to pursue truth, ethics, justice, freedom and health.
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His medical specialty is radiology.
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At this moment we remember Ryan Oformick unlawfully incarcerated in German jail,
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0:05:11 --> 0:05:[privacy contact redaction]ion in the German elections on the 23rd of February.
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Let's do what we can to shine a light on Reiner's plight.
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Let's get the message to President Trump if we can
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0:05:26 --> 0:05:[privacy contact redaction]ration to get Reiner to be freed.
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I also at this moment point out to you that the value to Big Pharma
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of each transgender or each gender transition person,
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the lifetime value of one transition is between six to eight million dollars per person.
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0:05:51 --> 0:05:[privacy contact redaction]and the dollar value of a transition,
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0:05:56 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction]and the pressure for the transgender movement.
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I'm Charles Coviss, the moderator of this group on Australasia's passion provocateur.
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0:06:05 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction]e in these meetings and Daniel Echelon is certainly a passionate man.
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0:06:10 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction]iced law for 20 years before changing career 31 years ago.
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0:06:15 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction] 14 years I've helped parents and lawyers to strategize remedies for vaccine damage
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and damage from bad medical advice.
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I'm also the CEO of an industrial hemp company.
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Bad medical advice is now the number one killer of people in America.
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More deaths than from heart disease and from cancer and from diabetes.
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We comprise lots of professions here and we're from all around the world.
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Many of us thought the vaccines were OK.
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Now many of us proudly say yes, we are passionate anti-vaxxers and I count myself amongst those.
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0:06:50 --> 0:06:[privacy contact redaction]iment if someone says I'm an anti-vaxxer.
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Yes, I am.
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0:06:57 --> 0:07:[privacy contact redaction] time here, welcome and feel free to introduce yourself in the chat
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and where you're from.
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0:07:04 --> 0:07:[privacy contact redaction]and we're in the middle of World War III and the medical science battle is only one of 12 battle fronts.
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The legal battlefront is another.
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The spiritual war that we are in is another battlefront.
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The trans-human agenda is another battlefront.
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0:07:19 --> 0:07:[privacy contact redaction]and the development of science and the science is never settled.
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Anyone who tells you the science is settled, reach for your wallet says Michael Crichton.
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This meeting runs for two and a half hours after which for those with the time, Tom Rodman runs a video telegram meeting.
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Tom puts the links into the chat if you're able to join.
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We'll listen to our guest presenters today.
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0:07:41 --> 0:07:[privacy contact redaction]ill and PhD for as long as Daniel wishes to speak.
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0:07:44 --> 0:07:[privacy contact redaction] Q&A. Stephen Frost, by long established tradition, asks the first questions for 15 minutes.
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This is a free speech environment with appropriate moderating.
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That means don't waste time.
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Free speech is crucially important in our fight to preserve our human freedoms.
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If you're offended by anything, be offended.
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0:08:01 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction]ed.
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0:08:03 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction]ry that requires nobody to say anything that may offend another.
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0:08:09 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction] the triggering industry.
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Don't say something, Daniel, that might trigger someone.
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We call bullshit.
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0:08:17 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction]ive of love, not fear.
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Fear is the opposite of love.
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0:08:22 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction]s you.
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Love, on the other hand, expands you.
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0:08:26 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction] talkfests.
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0:08:31 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction]ions and initiatives have been generated from linkages made by attendees in these meetings.
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0:08:39 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction] or resources that will help people put the details in the chat,
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0:08:44 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction]oaded onto the Rumble channel.
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0:08:48 --> 0:08:[privacy contact redaction]ings of Daniel's previous two or three.
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I'm trying to remember whether it's two or three previous presentations, Daniel.
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0:08:57 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction]ulin, our guest today.
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And we thank you for sharing with us your time and wisdom and insights.
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0:09:03 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction]ing, I will share a short background of your extensive background
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0:09:10 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction]e who don't know you can understand a little bit.
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The short version is that you're a doctor of political science, author of 18 books, your TV presenter, public speaker,
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university professor, foreign policy advisor, the three presidents in Latin America.
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0:09:26 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction] sold over eight million copies in 68 countries, translated into 42 languages on five continents.
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0:09:33 --> 0:09:[privacy contact redaction]ory of the Bilderberg Group, the Tavistock Institute, Global Projects at War.
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You've spoken at 700 conferences, at least over one million people.
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These include European Parliament speech, Schiller Institute Conference, United Nations Conference.
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And you've won numerous awards and including you won the best program of the year at the New York Television and Film Festival in 2013 and many others.
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Daniel, you're a superstar. Thank you so much for being with us.
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And thank you, Stephen Frost, for starting this group and for getting Daniel to speak to us.
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Daniel, we are in your proverbial hands.
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I know you don't share your screen, but if you want to, you are able to.
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Welcome to today's discussion.
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Thank you so much for the invitation.
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I'm a bit under the weather, so if I cough, I try not to do it often.
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I got all my pills, my tea, my honey, my bronchitis spray, anything that can help me get through this, I have it on my table.
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0:10:41 --> 0:10:[privacy contact redaction]art with what happened over the last couple of days, specifically the Black Hawk helicopter ramming the American Airlines,
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if I'm not mistaken, airplane with [privacy contact redaction]
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What you're seeing is a war.
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It's not a war between Russia and the United States or China and the United States.
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It's the war between the deep state or the people representing the deep state on the one hand and Donald Trump and the forces that he represents on the other.
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What we saw the other day is a response to Trump firing 51 top political advisors from CIA agents to FBI, et cetera, et cetera,
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for all the shenanigans they've done, especially in his four years in office and then four years in Biden's administration.
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0:11:33 --> 0:11:[privacy contact redaction] a response.
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There's going to be many responses in the near future.
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You're going to see planes go down.
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You're going to see metro stations all over the country being blown up.
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You're going to have long-gun shootings in schools and otherwise.
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You're going to have a lot of people being killed, maybe tens of thousands, because this is a war of attrition.
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This is the war to decide who's actually going to control the purse strings because you're looking at two different Americas.
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And so today I want to talk about what a Trump is, not who is Donald Trump, but what is a Donald Trump?
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What forces he represents, because again, you have to understand that Donald Trump is a face of a project.
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He's not a person.
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By that, I'm not insinuating that he's some extraterrestrial shape-shifter.
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I'm not saying that at all.
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He's a face of one of the global projects, just as Biden was a face of another global project, et cetera, et cetera.
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But what's actually happening right now in the United States, we saw it back in Soviet Russia,
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So I want to go back to that period of time and show you the parallel.
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Now, many believe that Yeltsin actually installed Putin, and so he was his successor.
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Actually, that's not the case.
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The global mafia's plan to take over Russia, this was a multivariate scenario.
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We're the global mafia.
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We want to take over Russia.
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0:13:20 --> 0:13:[privacy contact redaction]and that to keep millions of people in obedience, we must give them some kind of a big idea.
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Remember the big idea that George H.W. Bush talked about?
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0:13:29 --> 0:13:[privacy contact redaction]e some kind of a big idea.
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What idea?
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Can we know which variant the Russians would accept?
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Again, we're talking about 1999, the year 2000.
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No, but we can guess.
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0:13:42 --> 0:13:[privacy contact redaction], tired of the madness of the insane Brezhnev era of the 1980s, like Biden in the United States.
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0:13:48 --> 0:13:[privacy contact redaction]ly the same thing.
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The Russians may want democracy.
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And so we, the global mafia, we don't really care who sits in the Kremlin, which party rules the country.
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For us, what's important is that gas and gold and coal and oil and coal town and everything else flow to the West.
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And therefore, we don't care who controls the Kremlin.
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0:14:10 --> 0:14:[privacy contact redaction]ives are met.
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So who do we put in the democratic vein?
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Well, we can put Jovlinsky, a member of the Bilderberg group, president of the Yabloko political party.
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We try him, and if not, we have a few others who can replace him as a democrat.
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Now, what happens if democracy doesn't work, asks the global mafia.
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0:14:33 --> 0:14:[privacy contact redaction] sentiments are still strong.
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Again, remember, it's only 10 years after the collapse of the Soviet Union.
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And therefore, they say the second scenario is Marxism.
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This means that if we want to bring back the Marxist past, we can bring in Zyuganov, the eternal leader of the Communist Party,
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a traitor in the cellar who's been the leader for 30 years.
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And if the Russians get fed up with the communism and Marxism, Russia is an orthodox country.
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They might want a czar to reason the global mafia.
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0:15:05 --> 0:15:[privacy contact redaction] this famous filmmaker Nikita Mikhalkov.
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And if this doesn't work, then Russia will be converted to a strict fascism regime.
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In addition, the global mafia wants to impose this harsh fascist regime on all the countries on the planet Earth.
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And therefore, it's necessary to slow down the process of consumption of material goods.
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because the elite, they realized back at the end of the 19th century,
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0:15:39 --> 0:15:[privacy contact redaction]s, the class system that existed before capitalism held back the feudal system.
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And so the poor were poor and the rich were rich.
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And under capitalism, merchants from the people began to appear who also wanted to be rich.
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0:15:53 --> 0:15:[privacy contact redaction]ood that if things continue in this way,
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there will be not enough for everybody.
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And for this, the teachings of Marxism suited them very well.
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And so the elite began to promote Karl Marx.
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0:16:05 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction]s, Russia was chosen as a starting point to launch a world revolution
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0:16:11 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction]ablish the pseudo-communist society throughout the planet Earth.
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And in 1917, Lenin was brought to St. Petersburg in a sealed wagon, sealed train from Switzerland.
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0:16:20 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction] Petersburg on a ship from the United States
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0:16:24 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction]ied to him by the Rockefellers.
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0:16:26 --> 0:16:[privacy contact redaction]e launched the process of the world revolution.
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I want to remind you we had the uprisings in Mexico, in Hungary, in Mongolia, in Germany.
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And so Lenin broke his promise to the global mafia,
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limiting the revolution to one country, the Soviet Union.
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And so he was assassinated by his wife, Nadezhda Krupskaya, an agent of the Western elite,
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0:16:56 --> 0:17:[privacy contact redaction] as Raisa Gorbachev, the wife of Mikhail Gorbachev.
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And so Trotsky was supposed to continue his work, but then Trotsky fell ill and Stalin took over the country.
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I repeat, the idea of the global mafia is Indian fascism. Why?
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0:17:12 --> 0:17:[privacy contact redaction] fascism. Where is this hardest form of fascism in India?
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It's a rigid caste system. You have the Brahmans, the Kshatriyas, the Viches, the Shudras, a rigid caste system.
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And so you see the chaos the world over, in every country in the world.
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Look what's happening in England right now.
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Whatever his name is, you have the same things happening in Spain, in Germany, in France, in Italy.
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0:17:48 --> 0:17:[privacy contact redaction]ates and so many other countries the world over.
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0:17:52 --> 0:17:[privacy contact redaction]e want? People want order.
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0:17:55 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction]e want a mix of Mussolini, Hitler, Pinochet, Franco, and Stalin all in one.
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And if you go back to Russia in the year 2000, Russia was completely out of control. It was chaotic, destroyed.
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0:18:09 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction] came out of the default in 1998. The country was on its knees.
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Yeltsin passes the baton to Putin. Why Putin?
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We're talking about small guy, discreet, no team, very modest, very hardworking.
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And so the leaders saying we control him through the global mafia and through Putin we take control of Russia and it won't take more than a year.
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And what did the year 2000 begin with? With the sinking of the Kursk submarine by the United States government.
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0:18:37 --> 0:18:[privacy contact redaction] a little bit before that, in late 1999, several explosions in residential blocks killed more than [privacy contact redaction]e in three Russian cities, including Moscow.
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And then in 2002 Chechen militants seized the Dubrovka Theater in Moscow, 130 dead, many caused by toxic gas used by Russian special forces after the hostage crisis lasted several days.
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And then in 2004 there were several attacks, suicide bombers killed people in the center of Moscow Metro, blew up two airplanes.
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The massacre in the school of Beslan shocked the country when the armed Chechen militant terrorists stormed a school on the 1st of September.
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Okay, 334 dead, more than half of them are children, etc. etc. And people are saying, you know, God save us.
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Okay, end this chaos, you know, give us order, you know, any system you can, anything. We will accept any system.
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0:19:34 --> 0:19:[privacy contact redaction]ease give us peace. And so this is exactly what we can expect in the United States.
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Okay, Trump has just taken over the wars. It's for survival. It's life or death.
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The liberal banking financiers, okay, because again you have to understand the United States is not a homogeneous country.
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These are two countries, okay, divided literally in half. You have the red states, you have the blue states.
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They hate each other. They're totally different in every possible way, shape and form.
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Okay, and so you're going to have attacks and counterattacks, which is why again, I'm not at all surprised.
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And it doesn't really make a difference if, you know, some, if the people on the plane, the pilots on the helicopter,
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they were controlling, you know, the actual flight pattern or it was controlled, you know, remote control.
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It doesn't make a difference. The point is this, you're going to see it all over the country.
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Okay, you're going to have subway stations being blown up. You have tons of people are going to be killed.
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You're going to have, you know, unnamed terrorists. They're going to blame it on Iran. They're going to blame it on Venezuela.
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They're going to blame it on ISIS. It doesn't matter. You just have to understand the reason why this is being done.
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And the reason this is being done, we have reached the end of a model, okay, model based on infinite growth.
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You can't have infinite growth on a finite planet. Okay, and before you had two models, economic models, okay,
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0:21:00 --> 0:21:[privacy contact redaction] model and you had American capitalist model.
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Okay, each had its own advantages and its own disadvantages, some strong points and so on and so forth.
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But these two groups, they coexisted between the end of World War II and 1989 or 1991.
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At that time, the Soviet model collapsed and the West took over the Soviet space, which was about 40, 45 percent of global economy.
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Again, because capitalism is a very dynamic system, it expanded into the Soviet space and took it over in very few years, in 17 years.
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But then in 2007, we had the beginning of the end. They called it the Lehman Brothers Collapse, a subprime crisis.
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It wasn't subprime, wasn't Lehman Brothers Collapse. It was the beginning of the end of a model based on infinite expansion on a finite planet.
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Okay, so I'm going to talk about that in a little while.
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So that's a kind of a way of introduction. So again, be ready for a lot of violence in the United States, a lot of violence,
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because it's a fight to the death and only one side can win.
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And the liberal banking financiers, this is the global, you know, cartel, the global mafia, okay.
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They've been painted in the corner. They have no way out. The only way out that they have is global war.
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And this is what they're pushing as hard as they can. So let's talk about Trump. What is a Trump?
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Again, it's important to understand that Trump is not a person. Okay, you can divide this into Republicans and the Democrats.
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And the whole thing of dividing into, that's the devil's work, the devil divides. Okay.
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0:22:56 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction]and that all the Republican presidents, whether we're talking about the Bushes,
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whether we're talking about, it doesn't make a difference. We're talking about the Democratic presidents, Obama and company.
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This is the same party. It's a global party. The only difference between the Republicans and the Democrats until the arrival of Donald Trump is the abortion.
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Everything else was absolutely the same. Okay. So the idea is it's not a fight between the Republicans and the Democrats.
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It's a fight between the global banking financier cartel, okay, who can survive only at the expense of others and isolationists,
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0:23:33 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction]s, industrialists. These are the people in Trump represents. This is the face.
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0:23:39 --> 0:23:[privacy contact redaction]or. Well, that's a different story. We'll talk about this a little bit later again.
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So again, so what is a Trump? Okay. You have to understand that beginning back in 1981,
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0:23:51 --> 0:24:[privacy contact redaction] or another was in essence driven by a redistribution of US dollars printed by the Federal Reserve
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and passed through the Federal Reserve system. And that process is controlled by International Monetary Fund, World Trade Organization,
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0:24:15 --> 0:24:[privacy contact redaction]itutions. And so for all this talk about Bretton Woods system being abolished back in 1971,
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the truth is this, International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, World Trade Organization, all of these are Bretton Woods created institutions.
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0:24:30 --> 0:24:[privacy contact redaction]em is alive, albeit wearing a different mask. And so on the whole, everybody understood that money printing requires assets to back surplus money.
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It's easy. You don't have to be an economist to understand this. And so in the 1980s, the role of assets was played by various newly emerging derivatives.
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In the 1990s, at the beginning of the 2000s, those were assets that appeared as a result of the dissolution of the Soviet Union.
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A proposal, the United States had two approaches at the time. The first approach implied using assets taken from the Soviet Union to cover debt accumulated in the 1980s
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0:25:14 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction]art from scratch. And that was the approach of the Bush administration, George H.W. Bush, who didn't want to dismantle the Soviet Union.
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There was yet an alternative approach to embezzle everything and make good use of those assets.
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0:25:28 --> 0:25:[privacy contact redaction]ration, what became known as the Rape of Russia period of the early to mid 1990s.
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And for that reason, people who emerged in Russia as affiliated units of the Clinton team, in other words, I'm talking about the entire financial and economic structure of today's Russia, today's Russia,
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the financial block in Russia today in 2025, not 10, 20 years ago today, it's still under the control of the Democratic Party of the United States of America,
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which is why Trump and Putin are on the same team. They may not need to be on the same team in every sense of the word,
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but they're on the same team in a sense that they share the same enemy, global liberal banking, satanic cartel. And they are both and also Xi Jinping also is part of this team.
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The three of them share the same enemy, which is stronger than each of them individually because it's a global mafia.
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And that is why the three of them need to get together and solve that as the first issue of business.
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And so in any case, to continue with our story, things were rolling along smoothly.
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Are you OK, Daniel? I'm OK. I'm just, you know, I'm much better now. I had like 40 fever all week, but I'm fine. Just coughing. But I'm fine.
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OK. But beginning in the early 2000s, it became clear that there were no assets left.
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0:27:07 --> 0:27:[privacy contact redaction]ates government decided to print money back by completely fictitious assets, which they called subprime mortgages.
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And by 2008, we know what happened. The entire system imploded. In fact, 2008 crisis was a twin of the pre-war Great Depression that began with the US stock market collapse in October 1929.
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And then the spring of 1930 saw a deflation shock and the crisis itself commenced in 1930.
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And further on, unlike the 1930 crisis, the American monetary authorities, mainly the Federal Reserve, for the first time openly started to issue an issue of money not supported by any asset at all.
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0:27:51 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction]ion is, why did it not have any impact on inflation? Because the problem was caused by the changes in the structure of money supply.
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0:28:00 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction]s, the credit multiplier dropped by a factor of four between 2008 when it was 18 and 2014 when it was only four.
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0:28:09 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction]y subsequently soared four times from zero point eight trillion dollars to three point three trillion dollars.
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0:28:17 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction]y printed two point five trillion dollars with no inflationary impact.
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Now, in 2014, I want to remind you that Barack Obama stopped the printing presses. Why?
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0:28:29 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction]ier to less than four would kickstart a process called nonpayment crisis.
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After that, in 2012, Barack Obama won the election in early 2013.
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0:28:42 --> 0:28:[privacy contact redaction] time in 35 years since the beginning of Reaganomics, he eliminated Barack Obama, all the representatives of Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan from his economic council.
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And in 2014, Obama suspended money printing.
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It's absolutely clear that the only chance for financiers to ensure money printing in this context is to control the Federal Reserve System of the United States or take control from the White House, which is what we're seeing right now.
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The fight between Powell and President Donald Trump.
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And that is when the bankers financiers going back to 2014 started to promote a certain person, Hillary Clinton, okay, to the post of president of the United States.
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The alternative group, the isolationists behind Donald Trump, also began to position themselves for the coming [privacy contact redaction]ates.
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0:29:40 --> 0:29:[privacy contact redaction]it, just so you understand, happened.
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Hold on a second.
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0:29:50 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]it happened, not between the parties, as it was in [privacy contact redaction]ates, but within the party.
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0:30:00 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]an to switch on the printing press to save the global financial system was associated with the Democratic Party, while the plan to save the national economy was associated with the Republicans.
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That was the case in 2016.
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That's the case this year.
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0:30:18 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction], that is the advocate of defending the national economy, was Rand Paul and Trump from the Republican Party and paradoxically now Bernie Sanders from the Democratic Party.
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And that is why President Obama initially stood firmly behind Sanders. And then, you know, without much fan he decided to back Hillary Clinton.
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And so the chronology of the events is simple to follow.
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0:30:46 --> 0:30:[privacy contact redaction]rauss con affair in 2011. We had Goldman Sachs scandal in 2013.
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0:30:53 --> 0:31:[privacy contact redaction]opped the printing of money quantitative easing in [privacy contact redaction]ed Kingdom and Trump's victory in the United States.
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0:31:02 --> 0:31:[privacy contact redaction]ates presidential elections.
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0:31:07 --> 0:31:[privacy contact redaction]and what a Trump is was very different from the previous vote, because for the first time in many decades the contenders represented to completely divergent models, rather than slightly varying versions of the same economic model and such a model.
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0:31:29 --> 0:31:[privacy contact redaction]itutions that supported dollar denominated transactions and legalization of the amounts that were printed.
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Generally speaking, the broader the dollar were used, the more dollars were needed, so more had to be printed.
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And this is not a trivial job because you cannot entrust legalization to just anybody.
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Okay, and the United States banks were banned from having subsidiaries, in other words, to support competition.
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0:31:56 --> 0:32:[privacy contact redaction]ablishment of special transnational financial institutions that would have offices in every city and every financial important street in major cities.
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But it would take a lot of money to maintain such a vast network, while the profits they make are not sufficient, provided they engaged in ordinary commercial operations.
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To put it crudely, the focus was made not on commercial viability, but instead on creating a presence that would cover all of the planet's economic areas.
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And therefore, as long as the world was demonstrating economic growth, and more importantly, the money was printed, it made sense to preserve and develop the network.
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And so the total profits, they were enormous and some of it could be easily diverted to general goals.
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But in 2008, saw the start of a crisis that shrunk the bank's revenue significantly.
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And in 2014, the United States cut its printing volumes.
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It printed, in other words, just enough money to support its budget deficit.
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0:32:57 --> 0:33:[privacy contact redaction]ates dollar couldn't expand further.
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Inflation was inevitable, but the US couldn't allow it.
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As a result, transnational banks ran into trouble.
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So what we're seeing right now as well.
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And they became aware of this issue back in 2011.
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So the bankers and the financiers, what they did is they tried to take the issue of global currency out of the US hands.
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0:33:20 --> 0:33:[privacy contact redaction]s, they wanted to steal the US dollar from the US and give it to themselves.
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Okay.
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Through what became known as the Central Bank of Central Banks.
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0:33:29 --> 0:33:[privacy contact redaction]s, Bank of International Settlement in Basel in Switzerland.
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And the idea was it would be a supranational institution that would have the exclusive right to print the global currency during the financial crisis.
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Okay.
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Now, the US dollar would remain a national currency and its issue would be limited by the amount set by the central banks of central banks.
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And so at the G8 meeting at the time, at the G20 meeting, it was already everything was decided.
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There's a whole bunch of documents which actually show the paper trail.
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Okay.
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It was all set up under the International Monetary Fund that the global financial institutions would take the whole thing of printing US dollars out of the Federal Reserve and give it to the international institutions.
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0:34:16 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction]rauss scandal.
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I'm not sure if you remember that scandal or not.
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0:34:24 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction]rauss count who was the general director of International Monetary Fund.
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He was caught in the in the hotel in New York with some waitress or whatever or somebody who worked at the hotel some some black woman from Dominican.
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It was the maid.
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It was the maid.
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Yeah, whatever it was.
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The whole thing was a setup.
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Okay.
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0:34:41 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction]y a message.
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Of course, I let him go after a while.
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Okay.
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0:34:47 --> 0:34:[privacy contact redaction]y a message to the international financial institutions that the United States government is not going to hand the control of the US dollar to them.
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Okay.
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And when that message became clear, they let Dominique Strauss come or can go.
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Okay.
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So that's that's a very important issue to keep in mind.
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Okay.
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If we talk about the elite and I think it's important to talk about the elite because we talk about the elite people think of the Bilderberg group.
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Unfortunately, it's it's I'm very sorry.
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0:35:22 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction]upid book which sold millions of copies the world over in [privacy contact redaction]ood for whatever reason it is.
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Okay.
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0:35:32 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction] common denominator.
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Okay.
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0:35:36 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction]e these they whoever these they are.
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Okay.
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We don't know who they are.
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We don't see their faces.
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Everybody talks about Jewish Masonic conspiracy, Illuminati all seeing eye all this all this stuff.
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And when my book came out on the Bilderberg is back in 2005 suddenly these they had a name a face who could see what they did.
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0:35:52 --> 0:35:[privacy contact redaction] of their deliberations and stuff.
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0:35:56 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction]upid book is because when I was coming out of the intelligence work with the with the Russian military counterintelligence, I needed to eat.
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We had a lot of information on the Bilderberg is because you know back in the 50s when the group was founded, it was a fairly decent level influence group.
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It wasn't it was never top of anything, but it was decent enough.
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And so we had a lot of information on them, a lot of documents, a lot of photographs, faxes, everything.
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And so I realized if I were to write this book, I'd need to show people photographs and all kinds of other things because otherwise they wouldn't believe it.
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And suddenly when my book came out, we had like 200 pages of documents and photographs, all kinds of stuff, you know, faxes and handwritten notes from Prince Bernard, you know, to other government officials in other countries.
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0:36:46 --> 0:36:[privacy contact redaction]e went ape shit and I said, ah, so these are the people who run the world.
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It wasn't the case.
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0:36:54 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction], the reason I'm saying this is because a lot of the times when we talk about the control mechanism, the people who really run the world from behind the scenes, the world's ruling class, we need to understand that it's not Bilderberg.
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0:37:10 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction]ory, masters of whatever you want to call them, they're high ranking officials, whether we're talking about, you know, their representatives, presidents, prime ministers, their representatives of the elite.
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Okay, the think tanks, they clearly realize this fact.
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Okay, what we're talking about, and they reacted the best way they could.
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0:37:30 --> 0:37:[privacy contact redaction]ates had absolutely no inkling whatsoever to hand over control.
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And although Obama is a traitor, he realized that, you know, he'd be running into some serious issues with the people who run the United States if he were to hand over the control mechanism, which is the printing press to international global concern.
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Okay, now, so some people believe that this global elite, only supranational structure of global coordination like the Bilderbergers or the Club of Rome or the Trilateral Commission of Council on Foreign Relations, because that's what they know.
444
0:38:01 --> 0:38:07
Okay, we can also talk about the, you know, the famous Rothschilds or the Rockefellers.
445
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Okay, so the thing is, as far as these two are concerned, despite all their wealth, their history, their power, they're not omnipotent.
446
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These families, which have already become, you could say, had hierarchies, okay, are only one element, albeit very important, and deliberately demonstrate development of a much more complex whole.
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0:38:30 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction]ures of this global coordination and management, despite their importance, are not so much subjects.
448
0:38:38 --> 0:38:[privacy contact redaction], you could say they're second level subjects, but tools, their platforms, local stand if you wish.
449
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They can make certain decisions, but the basis of these decisions are the agreements previously reached between the main groups of the world elite and their environment.
450
0:38:55 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction], you know, airplanes falling out of the sky, then after, you know, the thing with in Washington, you know, a small plane allegedly fell out of the sky in Philadelphia.
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I mean, I saw the debris. I didn't see an airplane. Okay, I also didn't see a hole. I mean, that thing traveling at that speed, you can easily calculate, you know, the size of the, there was nothing there.
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0:39:18 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction]? What actually fell? What was that? Okay, we don't know.
453
0:39:24 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction] There was no reason to believe it was an airplane. But this kind of stuff you're going to see happening all over the United States.
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0:39:31 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction]uff, okay, don't be surprised. It's the war, because there's no agreement in place.
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0:39:41 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction]ified form, and Trump, of course, he understands that.
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0:39:50 --> 0:39:[privacy contact redaction]ified form, the current global elite consists, you could say, of four large groups.
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0:39:59 --> 0:40:[privacy contact redaction]s and part of the aristocratic families of Western and Central Europe, led by the British and the Dutch monarchies.
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Of course, I'm not talking about the Windsors, nor talking about the representatives of the House of Orange.
459
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Can they compete with the really ancient dynasties represented by their descendants, the Arvignans, the Ruriki, the Genghis, for example.
460
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That'll be the one group. Another group would be the Vatican, the Catholic religious orders.
461
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We're talking about religious military intelligence. Whether we talk about Opus Dei, the Jesuits, the Knights of Malta,
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0:40:35 --> 0:40:[privacy contact redaction]ocracies closely associated with them from Northern Italy, Southern Germany, Spain, Scotland.
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0:40:43 --> 0:40:[privacy contact redaction] group will be families of finite seers, bankers, and large industrialists of the United States and Britain.
464
0:40:49 --> 0:40:[privacy contact redaction]s, the Anglo-sphere, or Anglo-American and American English clans.
465
0:40:54 --> 0:41:01
And finally, the diasporas. Talking about the Jewish diaspora, the Armenian diaspora, the Lebanese diasporas are very powerful.
466
0:41:01 --> 0:41:09
And the representatives of the four groups of the global elite, in one way or another, directly or indirectly, openly or secretly,
467
0:41:16 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction]ures. So let me give you a concrete example.
468
0:41:22 --> 0:41:28
Both the Rothschilds and the Rockefellers, they were both present in the Club of Rome and the Trilateral Commission.
469
0:41:29 --> 0:41:33
I've never been talking about the representatives of the diaspora.
470
0:41:33 --> 0:41:39
And if you look, for example, at the current Capsaicin-inclusive capitalism, with the Vatican, you have the Vatican, you have the Rothschilds,
471
0:41:39 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction] foundations, corporations, supranational structures, often express and represent the interests of certain global parallelogram of forces
472
0:41:51 --> 0:41:[privacy contact redaction]s, which of course does not exclude their activity in any given situation.
473
0:41:57 --> 0:42:05
And so also similarly, although not in equal proportions, you have four groups of globalists present on all the levels of the vertically integrated global economy.
474
0:42:11 --> 0:42:17
The top floor, I guess you could call it, is the big tech. The next level, these are the capital management funds.
475
0:42:18 --> 0:42:24
The next level, the financiers who make money out of nothing. And the fourth floor, the corporations, the military-industrial complex, etc.
476
0:42:27 --> 0:42:35
And so the big tech, these are the owners of large social information platforms that control the main means of production of this post-capitalist system.
477
0:42:39 --> 0:42:[privacy contact redaction]s, information flows, social networks, individual groups, behavior, for example.
478
0:42:47 --> 0:42:55
We're talking about the Bethesda, the Zuckerbergs and company. And they strive to gain a foothold at the top of the world economic pyramid.
479
0:42:56 --> 0:43:[privacy contact redaction]rial capital, or the part of the financial sector that this capital serves and the state of bureaucracy.
480
0:43:08 --> 0:43:14
So these are the corporations that control the social media. In other words, we're talking about the Microsoft, Apple, Amazon, Meta, etc.
481
0:43:15 --> 0:43:21
What are the goals of this war? Well, the first is the establishment of control over intangible factors of production.
482
0:43:22 --> 0:43:28
Behavior, needs, value, image, for example. This is what's called the social digital, that's what the digital platforms do.
483
0:43:29 --> 0:43:35
The second task is the expropriation of the embodied labor and capital that small and medium-sized businesses have.
484
0:43:37 --> 0:43:45
Now how do they do this? It's done very simply with the help of one version of Schwab's stakeholder capitalism and the second is inclusive capitalism, which is the Rothschild program.
485
0:43:45 --> 0:43:[privacy contact redaction]s, in fact, under the pretext of capitalism for all, capitalism itself is being nullified and some may say it's kind of a strange thing to do.
486
0:43:55 --> 0:44:04
No, capitalists nullify capitalism. Yes, because capitalism as a system has worked on its own and in order to maintain power and privileges,
487
0:44:05 --> 0:44:[privacy contact redaction] elite need to become something else because capitalism has reached the liberal and the liberalist level.
488
0:44:12 --> 0:44:18
And that's why they become something else because capitalism has reached the limits of growth within this economic model called Bretton Woods.
489
0:44:19 --> 0:44:26
There's nowhere to expand. And so they're dismantling capitalism as we speak. And that's what New World Order is all about.
490
0:44:27 --> 0:44:34
Something else. It's about undermining the economic base of working class and the middle class through the green economy.
491
0:44:34 --> 0:44:38
That's also a very important element of this deindustrialization.
492
0:44:39 --> 0:44:[privacy contact redaction]rial capital, which is a competitor to financiers.
493
0:44:46 --> 0:44:[privacy contact redaction]s on the one hand, these are the people behind Donald Trump, and you have the financiers, these are the people who may create money out of nothing.
494
0:44:54 --> 0:44:[privacy contact redaction]e who are the enemies of Donald Trump.
495
0:44:57 --> 0:45:04
And so again, remember that Trump's social support was first and foremost industrial capital.
496
0:45:05 --> 0:45:12
And when Trump said, let's make America great again, he meant great America was the industrial America of the 1930s to the 1980s.
497
0:45:13 --> 0:45:19
So you wanted to bring back the winning forces that came to power on the Roosevelt's New Deal.
498
0:45:20 --> 0:45:[privacy contact redaction]ion is, what world are the global elite building right now?
499
0:45:30 --> 0:45:45
Well, so much has happened over the past 12 months, but I think the main event, the main one in terms of content, was and is the social war of the upper classes against the lower classes taking place on the global scale.
500
0:45:45 --> 0:45:57
Back in the 1990s, Christopher Latch, an American sociologist, he coined the term the revolt of the elites and the title of his book, which is a very interesting book, The Revolt of the Elites and the Betrayal of Democracy.
501
0:45:58 --> 0:46:[privacy contact redaction]riking and quite accurate.
502
0:46:01 --> 0:46:11
He said that after the offensive of the masses that started back in 1910 and ended with the Russian Bolshevik Revolution in October 1917, sometime in the late 1960s,
503
0:46:11 --> 0:46:16
this offensive, this impetus of the lower classes began to stagnate.
504
0:46:17 --> 0:46:32
And so the elite launched their own counteroffensive and it developed because in the 1960s and the early 1970s, the capitalist system had reached a dead end.
505
0:46:32 --> 0:46:[privacy contact redaction]
506
0:46:34 --> 0:46:[privacy contact redaction]ly well that it was necessary to change the system, that further industrial and democratic development of the political system would lead to the strengthening of the working class.
507
0:46:46 --> 0:46:52
And they needed to do something, but as long as the Soviet Union existed, it was impossible to solve this problem.
508
0:46:52 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction] the Soviet Union, the Soviet nomenclature, the greedy and stupid Soviet nomenclature, they were dragged into this global game through the Club of Rome.
509
0:47:03 --> 0:47:13
And then in the 1980s, having found in the Soviet Union itself those forces that sought to change the socioeconomic system, the Soviet Union was destroyed from within.
510
0:47:14 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction]ion of the Soviet Union allowed the West and the entire capitalist system a grace period of 15 to 20 years between 1991 and 2008.
511
0:47:27 --> 0:47:34
And within this 20 year period, the former socialist camp was plundered and the West profited from it.
512
0:47:35 --> 0:47:39
But then again, [privacy contact redaction]ory.
513
0:47:39 --> 0:47:46
And so the subprime crisis was flooded with money, which then ceased to be money.
514
0:47:47 --> 0:47:49
Because after all, money is not paper, it's a kind of an instrument.
515
0:47:50 --> 0:47:[privacy contact redaction]ions.
516
0:47:52 --> 0:47:56
And if I can print trillions of dollars out of nothing, that is no longer money or finance.
517
0:47:57 --> 0:47:58
This is something else.
518
0:47:59 --> 0:48:04
And it was in 2008 that financial capital was transformed into financialism.
519
0:48:04 --> 0:48:[privacy contact redaction]s, it's something that no longer related to money, but to the will of those who turn the money making machine.
520
0:48:11 --> 0:48:18
And so the fight right now, just so we understand what we're seeing between Jerome Powell and Donald Trump,
521
0:48:19 --> 0:48:23
when Trump is saying, I'm going to get rid of this guy and, and, and Powell is saying, fuck you, you know, you can't do anything to me.
522
0:48:24 --> 0:48:25
But the same thing is happening in Russia.
523
0:48:26 --> 0:48:31
Putin has been trying for [privacy contact redaction]or of the Russia Central Bank and Vyacheslav Nabokov.
524
0:48:31 --> 0:48:32
And he can't get rid of her.
525
0:48:33 --> 0:48:39
Putin supposedly, you know, the world's dictator, he can't touch the director of Russia Central Bank.
526
0:48:40 --> 0:48:46
For the same reason why Trump can't touch Jerome Powell, because they represent an alternative system.
527
0:48:47 --> 0:48:52
Nervila Nabokovna, the director of Russia Central Bank, works directly for International Monetary Fund.
528
0:48:53 --> 0:48:[privacy contact redaction]roy Russia's economy.
529
0:48:56 --> 0:48:59
And she's been doing this very effectively for the past 12 years.
530
0:48:59 --> 0:49:[privacy contact redaction]e, today, the interest rate in Russia is 27%.
531
0:49:04 --> 0:49:[privacy contact redaction]and what I'm talking about.
532
0:49:07 --> 0:49:11
27% has totally wiped out small and medium sized business.
533
0:49:12 --> 0:49:[privacy contact redaction]ates, the Federal Reserve is doing everything it can to destroy the United States.
534
0:49:18 --> 0:49:19
And Trump's, I'm going to get rid of this guy.
535
0:49:20 --> 0:49:21
And Jerome Powell said, fuck you.
536
0:49:22 --> 0:49:28
And so again, it became absolutely clear that capitalism over time had to become something else.
537
0:49:29 --> 0:49:33
But this required a situation in which there are no competing forces.
538
0:49:34 --> 0:49:[privacy contact redaction]ed, which means that it was necessary to create something else, another point of tension.
539
0:49:41 --> 0:49:[privacy contact redaction]ed, they were the point of tension.
540
0:49:45 --> 0:49:48
But when the Soviet Union collapsed, they needed another, something else.
541
0:49:48 --> 0:49:57
In 2007, 2008, an evolutionary plan for the transition to post-capitalism was developed in the West.
542
0:49:58 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction]ed States of America, its preservation as a group of transnational corporations.
543
0:50:07 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction]an was, the execution of the plan was to create a new system of capitalism.
544
0:50:14 --> 0:50:19
And it would take 16 years.
545
0:50:20 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction] eight years of Barack Obama's presidency and eight years of Hillary Clinton's presidency.
546
0:50:26 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction]an was based on the creation of two transoceanic communities, transatlantic and trans-pacific.
547
0:50:33 --> 0:50:[privacy contact redaction]ies had to compete with each other and thus create a new dynamic for the development of the system,
548
0:50:39 --> 0:50:43
which would eventually evolve from capitalism to post-capitalism.
549
0:50:44 --> 0:50:48
And the elite would retain their dominant position as post-capitalist society.
550
0:50:49 --> 0:50:54
But then in 2016, something unexpected happened. A Trump appeared on the scene.
551
0:50:55 --> 0:51:01
And those forces that were not satisfied with this option, in which platforms such as Google and Microsoft,
552
0:51:01 --> 0:51:06
Twitter, etc. They voted for their candidate, which was Hillary Clinton.
553
0:51:07 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction]an. They could not restore the transatlantic and trans-pacific communities.
554
0:51:15 --> 0:51:26
And it became absolutely clear to the forces that brought Obama to power that the United States cannot be the basis of an evolutionary transition.
555
0:51:26 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction]ed States will have to be sacrificed on the altar of greed and power.
556
0:51:33 --> 0:51:[privacy contact redaction]ion arose of how to eliminate those contradictions that were usually resolved in the history of capitalism by world wars.
557
0:51:42 --> 0:51:50
And again, world war is impossible from the point of view of the presence of nuclear weapons, but the world war is also a kind of a social catastrophe.
558
0:51:51 --> 0:52:01
Nobody said that a war has to be a hot war. And in fact, speaking of eliminating the United States, sacrificing on the altar of greed and power,
559
0:52:02 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction]ly what we've been witnessing the four years of the Joe Biden presidency.
560
0:52:12 --> 0:52:[privacy contact redaction]ly. They've tried, they've done everything in their power, the global elite, the liberal banking financiers during the four years of the first Trump presidency.
561
0:52:23 --> 0:52:32
And then when Trump was eliminated in a fake election, the powers, the presidency was given to Joe Biden.
562
0:52:32 --> 0:52:42
And this dismantling or sacrifice of the United States as a republic, it continued.
563
0:52:43 --> 0:52:56
And so now we come to the point. So basically what has been happening in recent years is a form of, I guess you can call it social war between the upper classes and the lower classes.
564
0:52:56 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction] a revolt of the elite. This is a real social war.
565
0:53:03 --> 0:53:13
And so a certain part of the world elite are, first of all, those who, this is absolutely new term called the accessity from the English word access.
566
0:53:14 --> 0:53:23
And the accessity is these are the owners of large social and information platforms that control the main means of production of the post capital system.
567
0:53:23 --> 0:53:[privacy contact redaction]s, information flows, social networks, individual group behavior through imposed needs, goals, opinions, etc, etc.
568
0:53:33 --> 0:53:39
And so these accessities, they strive to get a foothold at the top of the world economic pyramid.
569
0:53:40 --> 0:53:49
And they're the main enemy of the industrial capital of the part of the financial sector that this capital serve and of the state bureaucracy itself, which is one of the reasons again,
570
0:53:50 --> 0:54:02
why Trump this time around, the first thing he did, he went after all these people, after all of them, after the financial system, after the bureaucracy, after the intelligence apparatus, because all of them are his enemies.
571
0:54:03 --> 0:54:13
These are not Americans. These are the elements of the globalist controlled, globalist cartel, the global mafia that is destroying the United States from then.
572
0:54:14 --> 0:54:22
These are the corporations that control the social networks. This is Microsoft, this is Apple, this is Amazon, this is Meta, etc, etc.
573
0:54:23 --> 0:54:35
Now, what are the goals of this war? The first is the establishment of control over intangible factors of production, which are what? Behavior, needs, values, images.
574
0:54:36 --> 0:54:46
And this is what so-called social digital platforms do. And the second task is the expropriation of the embodied labor and capital that the smaller medium sized businesses have.
575
0:54:47 --> 0:54:59
Now, how do they do this? This is done very simply with the help of one version again, the Schwab stakeholder capitalism, and the second the inclusive capitalism, which is the Rothschild program.
576
0:54:59 --> 0:55:[privacy contact redaction] under the pretext of capitalism for all, capitalism itself is being nullified.
577
0:55:07 --> 0:55:14
And that's something very important to understand. Now that takes me to the next subject I want to talk about.
578
0:55:15 --> 0:55:22
Now, I'm sure you've heard recently that Trump has kicked off this new project called Project Stargate.
579
0:55:22 --> 0:55:[privacy contact redaction] Stargate sounds like something out of a dystopian nightmare.
580
0:55:32 --> 0:55:42
A kind of partnership of mega corporations announced by US government to protect the national security of the United States and its allies and leverage the artificial intelligence for the benefit of all humanity.
581
0:55:42 --> 0:55:[privacy contact redaction]s a lot of money. Okay, so you have to understand first of all, where's the money coming from?
582
0:55:49 --> 0:55:[privacy contact redaction] to do with all the missing money that the United States government can't allegedly find? What does it have to do with the idea of digital ID?
583
0:55:58 --> 0:56:07
I want to remind you that not long ago, American Congressman Tim Burschett, if I'm not mistaken, said that if anyone leaked where the money goes, it's going to be a disaster.
584
0:56:07 --> 0:56:17
Tim Burschett, if I'm not mistaken, said that if anyone leaked where the money goes, when the Pentagon fails yet another audit, they will be killed immediately.
585
0:56:20 --> 0:56:30
Right now, 52 trillion dollars is missing. 52 trillion dollars is missing from the US government coffers. The Comptroller General of the United States can't find the money.
586
0:56:31 --> 0:56:40
How do you lose 52 trillion dollars and know not anything about it? It's not something you go to the beach and lose an earring or something. Where is it? It's somewhere in the sand of Cancun, Mexico.
587
0:56:41 --> 0:56:49
It's 52 trillion dollars. I'm sure if they wanted to find that money, they'd know exactly where to look for it. That's on the one hand.
588
0:56:50 --> 0:56:57
On the other hand, you had this thing called FASAB 56, which basically took all that missing money and drove it into obscurity. That was done under the first Donald Trump administration with bipartisan support from the House, from the Senate, and from the President himself.
589
0:57:08 --> 0:57:14
FASAB 56 is called FASAB because it's Federal Accounting Standard Advisory Board.
590
0:57:14 --> 0:57:22
FASAB basically allows the government agencies to alter financial statements to protect national security information.
591
0:57:27 --> 0:57:34
If the US government is spending trillions of dollars to fund secret operations, my question is how do these secret operations fit in with Stargate and all those projects the American government has with Musk of going into space?
592
0:57:44 --> 0:57:52
Another key piece in the puzzle is, remember Davos, I think it was last week or the week before, the delegates message was, in fact, Pedro Sanchez, Spanish President, he said that they wanted social media accounts to be linked to a digital ID wallet.
593
0:58:03 --> 0:58:08
A wallet, not just a digital ID, which is what Trump has been pushing in the United States.
594
0:58:08 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction], what Trump is doing is exactly what Biden was doing, except that you couldn't have Biden do this because we hadn't saw that tag before with the COVID thing.
595
0:58:19 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction]e were watching very carefully, so they needed to change, get rid of Biden, put somebody else in his place, who actually could take this whole idea to fruition.
596
0:58:29 --> 0:58:36
Trump is far more dangerous than Biden in that sense. Those people were saying, Daniel is pro-Trump. I can't be pro-Trump, I'm Russian.
597
0:58:37 --> 0:58:43
I don't have a horse in this race. It's great as long as whatever these people do is good for us.
598
0:58:44 --> 0:58:[privacy contact redaction]and that Trump is far more dangerous and the team that he has in place and the team that he put together, that team's objective is to create a concentration camp without tears.
599
0:58:57 --> 0:59:03
Needless to say, they're waiting for the backlash from the people that will try to convince them to do this.
600
0:59:06 --> 0:59:14
They will convince the public to accept AI systems and all this digitalization by selling the benefits of AI and its supposed superiority over humans.
601
0:59:15 --> 0:59:23
And in the meantime, they will continue to build the technological surveillance with AI serving to collect, to exploit, to weaponize data against us.
602
0:59:25 --> 0:59:[privacy contact redaction] the Democrats couldn't have done this. You needed a Republican president to do this.
603
0:59:29 --> 0:59:36
Yes, you can say, well, that's not really true because Trump banned all CBDC's project. Yes. So does that mean Trump is good? Let me explain to you.
604
0:59:38 --> 0:59:46
This is what I think. Now if Trump banned CBDC's, if I am the big banking cartel, this is exactly what I would want him to do.
605
0:59:46 --> 0:59:54
And so Trump's executive order is about using dollar stable coins to extend dollar hegemony and dollar stable coins are just as programmable, they're just as surveillable and just as cost confiscable as the CBDC's.
606
0:59:54 --> 1:00:02
The only difference is that the central banks does not issue them directly and maintains what you can call a two tier banking system, which is what Wall Street has been pushing for to start discussions about the digital dollar in earnest.
607
1:00:04 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction]ates, the digital currency is the most important asset in the world.
608
1:00:11 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction] important asset in the world.
609
1:00:15 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction]ates, mass surveillance is a public private partnership. So the question is, why would surveillable digital money be any different?
610
1:00:24 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction] $37 trillion in debt. How do you make that debt go away? Well, the easiest way, okay, is you have third thermonuclear war.
611
1:00:33 --> 1:00:[privacy contact redaction] thermonuclear war. You have a third thermonuclear war.
612
1:00:38 --> 1:00:46
You write off all debts and responsibilities through a big, big war. It's dangerous because everybody's got nuclear weapons these days.
613
1:00:47 --> 1:00:56
What's the alternative? What's plan B? I think through the dollar stable coins, as many of them are at least partially backed by US treasury bonds.
614
1:00:57 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction], in November, American Enterprise Institute, which is a conservative think tank,
615
1:01:02 --> 1:01:07
in a very long article, they said exactly that.
616
1:01:08 --> 1:01:17
Okay. And so the devaluation of the value of the dollar and most if not all fiat currencies will continue relative to gold and also real asset.
617
1:01:18 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction] countries, they're in a dollar debt trap and there's no currency that offers an alternative to the dollar.
618
1:01:24 --> 1:01:32
In terms of liquidity and size. And so you need a strong enough military to enforce the debt that the US dollar, that the United States of America has.
619
1:01:33 --> 1:01:36
And so the dollar will remain dangerous and it will remain dominant.
620
1:01:37 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction]eps to own and invest in real physical assets, our value will continue to collect.
621
1:01:45 --> 1:01:[privacy contact redaction]and if you look at the system, what they're doing as far as everything is concerned.
622
1:01:51 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction] private cryptocurrencies, plus you have Stargate data centers, plus you have mRNA injections, plus you have immigration IDs, plus you have biometrics.
623
1:02:03 --> 1:02:06
It's are simply a private cryptocurrency.
624
1:02:06 --> 1:02:11
Okay. They don't need CBDC for that.
625
1:02:12 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction]
626
1:02:15 --> 1:02:23
Okay. Now, and that takes me to this whole thing about Stargate, which is a massive space strategy project.
627
1:02:24 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction]
628
1:02:29 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction]rategy project they call this a
629
1:02:36 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction] 2.0 and I think it's it's a lot more than Manhattan Project
630
1:02:41 --> 1:02:46
2.0 okay because space is the final frontier for the first time in history
631
1:02:46 --> 1:02:[privacy contact redaction]ic civilization I'm not
632
1:02:51 --> 1:02:57
talking about UFOs I'm not talking about you know Jedi you know expedition
633
1:02:57 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]ar Trek or Star Wars I'm not talking about that
634
1:03:00 --> 1:03:10
at all I'm talking about real sense of the meaning of the space race and so
635
1:03:10 --> 1:03:15
Musk is right when he says that it's not necessary to tackle the moon program
636
1:03:15 --> 1:03:20
but to immediately tackle the Mars program you see in the 1960s when when
637
1:03:20 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]ates of America lunar programs and the Soviet Union they were
638
1:03:23 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]ood that Mars was the price of the lunar race now
639
1:03:29 --> 1:03:34
Musk is right when he says that if we fly to Mars we will definitely be able
640
1:03:34 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]s on the moon but the opposite is not necessary true and so
641
1:03:41 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]rategies okay accepted in the scientific community and
642
1:03:46 --> 1:03:[privacy contact redaction]rategy of the slow gradual development and also
643
1:03:50 --> 1:03:55
step-by-step strategy and Joe you have mastered the near-earth territory and
644
1:03:55 --> 1:03:59
we're making a permanent station around the moon then we begin to explore the
645
1:03:59 --> 1:04:02
moon and after that you know we eventually get to Mars and the work is
646
1:04:02 --> 1:04:08
very slow it's arduous gradual it's low risk and must propose is a much riskier
647
1:04:08 --> 1:04:12
strategy forget the moon go right to Mars because Mars requires a
648
1:04:12 --> 1:04:16
fundamentally different spacecraft different landing takeoff modules
649
1:04:16 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction]em I would even set up a more global program to
650
1:04:21 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction]ts such as Jupiter or Saturn or
651
1:04:25 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction]arting probably with Saturn and for this we'll need an
652
1:04:30 --> 1:04:36
inter-orbital ship with nuclear engines and we'll need to take take off and
653
1:04:36 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction]ems that would be universal in fact you could even go further I mean
654
1:04:41 --> 1:04:44
there's really no need to waste time now on the moon or even on Mars you know
655
1:04:45 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction] eventually by itself when we have
656
1:04:50 --> 1:04:[privacy contact redaction]em to access to the satellites of larger planets and so we
657
1:04:56 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction]ore the entire solar system as a whole and I
658
1:05:01 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction] mean something like that and for that you certainly
659
1:05:05 --> 1:05:10
need a lot of money a lot of money which is again one of the reasons why when we
660
1:05:10 --> 1:05:15
talking about the missing trillions you have to understand that these missing
661
1:05:15 --> 1:05:19
trillions are gonna go some of them are gonna go towards color evolutions you
662
1:05:19 --> 1:05:23
know changing governments you know coup d'etat but most of that money the you
663
1:05:23 --> 1:05:29
know large bulk of that money is gonna go into space okay now about the moon
664
1:05:29 --> 1:05:33
talking about it being possible to send helium-3 to earth from moon is
665
1:05:33 --> 1:05:37
meaningless because we don't have the station that can operate on the
666
1:05:37 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction]ance that they will not be one over the next decade and delivering cargo
667
1:05:42 --> 1:05:46
from moon will be profitable if you assemble ships on the moon but they will
668
1:05:46 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction] a lunar base not a lunar not a lunar base sorry but a lunar
669
1:05:50 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction]rial city and this is a task comparable in complexity to exploring
670
1:05:55 --> 1:05:[privacy contact redaction]em and then of course the presence of water
671
1:05:59 --> 1:06:04
and the moon as on Mars it allows for the establishing of bases there another
672
1:06:04 --> 1:06:11
very important thing the cosmonautics can never be private it's only
673
1:06:11 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction]ate in the sense the United States or Russia is
674
1:06:16 --> 1:06:22
managing space research badly because the state does not understand why it's
675
1:06:22 --> 1:06:25
doing what it's doing this applies in the same way to the United States or
676
1:06:25 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction]er okay in order is a waste of time
677
1:06:30 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction]s on the other hand private individuals cannot engage
678
1:06:36 --> 1:06:42
in space research okay they can do so in low orbit which are you know already
679
1:06:42 --> 1:06:[privacy contact redaction] many different commercial opportunities but
680
1:06:45 --> 1:06:49
private individuals cannot engage in space exploration not only because it's
681
1:06:49 --> 1:06:53
expensive but also because it's impossible to predict the risks and
682
1:06:53 --> 1:06:57
therefore collaboration between the public and the private sectors and space
683
1:06:57 --> 1:07:[privacy contact redaction]rongly overlong strong over long
684
1:07:03 --> 1:07:07
periods of time and with large amounts of money and private individuals work
685
1:07:07 --> 1:07:12
better in management doing things you know quickly here and now and so making
686
1:07:12 --> 1:07:[privacy contact redaction]rategies traditions and security
687
1:07:16 --> 1:07:23
measures and if Musk accepts the job offered to him by Trump he'll first
688
1:07:23 --> 1:07:[privacy contact redaction]ion in security and inspecting requirement this inevitably
689
1:07:28 --> 1:07:34
lead to many many many deaths for which Musk will be held responsible but it
690
1:07:34 --> 1:07:[privacy contact redaction]art on similar programs okay without
691
1:07:38 --> 1:07:42
the government you know involved in the middle and all this great success in
692
1:07:42 --> 1:07:46
space where you know it was achieved precisely thing thanks to these kinds of
693
1:07:46 --> 1:07:[privacy contact redaction]e in Soviet Union Karalev his design bureau was founded by
694
1:07:52 --> 1:07:57
the Soviet government but kind of made decisions completely independently and
695
1:07:57 --> 1:08:01
from this point he was the leader who took responsibility for everything that
696
1:08:01 --> 1:08:05
happened but he was a thousand percent backed by the government and so this
697
1:08:05 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction]s worked you can talk about the Third Reich the
698
1:08:09 --> 1:08:13
Messerschmitt design bureau only Messerschmitt made decisions and and and
699
1:08:13 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction] to say I myself will decide who's a Jew in my design
700
1:08:17 --> 1:08:23
bureau okay and so here and company they paid you know for all the guarantees
701
1:08:23 --> 1:08:30
what I see here is not a desire to transfer space into private hands but to
702
1:08:30 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction]eristic of relatively totalitarian
703
1:08:37 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction]etely totalitarian regimes when you have a fusion of the state on the
704
1:08:40 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction]rators and so you have the creation of structures
705
1:08:45 --> 1:08:50
that take advantage of the capabilities of both and this is exactly what the
706
1:08:50 --> 1:08:[privacy contact redaction] this is an absolutely correct strategic decision
707
1:08:54 --> 1:09:03
and they will get the results so Trump understands the importance of space okay
708
1:09:03 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction]ands the meaning of conquering getting there first while
709
1:09:07 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction]e in similar conditions he single-handedly destroyed
710
1:09:12 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction] as a ready-made launch vehicle already
711
1:09:17 --> 1:09:22
made reusable ship and the entire launch system that was created for this and he
712
1:09:22 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction]royed this because he believed that space was no of no use to anyone with
713
1:09:29 --> 1:09:32
the collapse of the Soviet Union it seems that Donald Trump has taken this
714
1:09:32 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction]akes into account and he will continue to pursue space no matter
715
1:09:37 --> 1:09:43
what and I want to remind you something else okay that for example Jules Verne's
716
1:09:43 --> 1:09:48
novel from the gun to the moon okay takes place in the United States after
717
1:09:48 --> 1:09:[privacy contact redaction]er is sent to the moon by by American gunners
718
1:09:53 --> 1:10:00
who needed to find another use for it this is very interesting logic okay Jules
719
1:10:00 --> 1:10:[privacy contact redaction] back then and so the United States of America is
720
1:10:04 --> 1:10:[privacy contact redaction] like the one for example that Russia
721
1:10:08 --> 1:10:12
experienced back in the 1990s and it took Russia a long time to get out of
722
1:10:12 --> 1:10:[privacy contact redaction] more than [privacy contact redaction]em of government created
723
1:10:17 --> 1:10:22
after the crisis in general and as a whole did not and does not have any
724
1:10:22 --> 1:10:29
major innovations in relation to the former Soviet Union in other words we
725
1:10:29 --> 1:10:[privacy contact redaction]-soviet Russia we have created nothing nothing zero and we still today
726
1:10:36 --> 1:10:42
live at the expense of the Soviet Union especially the Stalinist Soviet Union
727
1:10:42 --> 1:10:48
everybody talks about a Roshnik okay but that is you can fact was created by
728
1:10:48 --> 1:10:[privacy contact redaction] to give you an idea how far ahead Stalinist Soviet Union was
729
1:10:54 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction]s today you know Soviet or opposed Russia okay the system is based
730
1:11:00 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction]ination personal loyalty which provides certain guarantees
731
1:11:06 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction]ability but on the other hand it creates many problems and war conditions
732
1:11:11 --> 1:11:17
were not only loyal but also intelligent and loyal people are needed and so Russia
733
1:11:17 --> 1:11:23
came out of the crisis of the 1980s and the 1990s in its traditional way okay
734
1:11:23 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction]ures and so now the question arises whether
735
1:11:29 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction]ures are needed in relation to management in relation to resettlement
736
1:11:33 --> 1:11:41
in relation to urban skeleton of the country in relation to the infrastructure
737
1:11:41 --> 1:11:47
and Trump again has learned well the lesson of the dismantling of the Soviet
738
1:11:47 --> 1:11:51
Union he's following a different path okay and this brings me to the
739
1:11:51 --> 1:11:[privacy contact redaction] two main models we have the cosmo colonialism and we
740
1:11:57 --> 1:12:[privacy contact redaction]ates is very much in the issue of
741
1:12:01 --> 1:12:06
cosmo colonialism so with China and I guess to a much lesser extent Russia and
742
1:12:06 --> 1:12:[privacy contact redaction] of course is not to start transporting as I said helium
743
1:12:10 --> 1:12:[privacy contact redaction]eroid belt it will still be more
744
1:12:13 --> 1:12:19
expensive on finding them on earth but to create a colony it doesn't matter
745
1:12:20 --> 1:12:24
it's on Mars it's moon the satellites were it's self-sufficient colonies which
746
1:12:24 --> 1:12:28
would force us to radically transform our economic system and the reason I'm
747
1:12:28 --> 1:12:33
talking about space in case someone is wondering why is this guy talking about
748
1:12:33 --> 1:12:[privacy contact redaction] to do with Donald Trump it has to do with a with a fact
749
1:12:39 --> 1:12:[privacy contact redaction] reached the limit of growth on the planet earth which means that we
750
1:12:55 --> 1:12:59
can't grow anymore here okay we've reached the limits of growth you can't
751
1:12:59 --> 1:13:[privacy contact redaction]t earth itself they were able to do that
752
1:13:04 --> 1:13:08
after World War one and World War two by destroying all these countries all these
753
1:13:08 --> 1:13:12
contents and then rebuilding you can't do that right now because everybody has
754
1:13:12 --> 1:13:16
nuclear weapons which means that there's a good chance that they'll kill each
755
1:13:16 --> 1:13:20
other there'll be nothing left to you know to rebuild and that's why the whole
756
1:13:20 --> 1:13:27
concept of space has become so important and that's why it's so necessary to have
757
1:13:27 --> 1:13:[privacy contact redaction]olen money which is now is gonna go towards this project now they're
758
1:13:33 --> 1:13:39
talking about 500 billion dollars that's that's chicken feed that's nothing
759
1:13:39 --> 1:13:46
that's nothing that's a drop in the bucket it's less than zero we're talking
760
1:13:46 --> 1:13:[privacy contact redaction]eds of trillions okay hundreds of trillions
761
1:13:52 --> 1:13:[privacy contact redaction] 52 trillion maybe more we don't know and so
762
1:13:58 --> 1:14:02
the idea right now what we're seeing right now the Stargate project this is a
763
1:14:02 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction] for conquering space this is a necessary project because if we reach
764
1:14:07 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction]t earth and we need to find another model to
765
1:14:11 --> 1:14:17
keep growing you can grow up or you can grow down growing down meaning you built
766
1:14:17 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction]t earth and that's what they're doing
767
1:14:21 --> 1:14:26
underground bases underground cities all kinds of things but that's not enough
768
1:14:26 --> 1:14:31
okay because the future of mankind is in space and this is the first chance we
769
1:14:31 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction]tary civilization intergalactic and that's
770
1:14:36 --> 1:14:43
why if you're the global elite their idea is deindustrialize and you
771
1:14:43 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction]ly what it means which is what we're seeing right
772
1:14:47 --> 1:14:[privacy contact redaction]ry okay you go back to the way things were a long long
773
1:14:51 --> 1:14:54
long time ago which is why they're talking about saving the planet earth and
774
1:14:54 --> 1:14:58
the animals and the whales and the Amazon rainfall at the expense of what
775
1:14:58 --> 1:15:04
that humanity and the Club of Rome they came up with their own version of you
776
1:15:04 --> 1:15:10
know the of back in 1972 with their report called the limits to growth
777
1:15:10 --> 1:15:14
where they're talking about that you know the real enemy of humanities is is
778
1:15:14 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction]t earth and humanity itself okay and that's why again it's so
779
1:15:19 --> 1:15:25
important right now that the next arms race is a space race and that's why the
780
1:15:25 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction]ates Russia and China Russia is way
781
1:15:29 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction]ed States its main enemy is not even China
782
1:15:35 --> 1:15:39
or Russia it's the global financial cartel and that's why it's so important
783
1:15:39 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction]ually gets somewhere okay now what is exactly does
784
1:15:45 --> 1:15:48
it mean if we're talking about space we're talking about nuclear energy we're
785
1:15:48 --> 1:15:53
talking about closed cycles and all a production form as automated robotic
786
1:15:53 --> 1:15:[privacy contact redaction]exes that find everything you need on Mars and you start working
787
1:15:57 --> 1:16:02
on producing things there which is a closed biological cycles cycle system
788
1:16:02 --> 1:16:08
absolutely clean using absolutely all the waste this is fundamental step in
789
1:16:08 --> 1:16:13
development of humanity and the country that takes this step begins to receive
790
1:16:13 --> 1:16:18
what in English is called easement in other words non-possessory right to use
791
1:16:18 --> 1:16:23
or take advantage of another's property without owning it because if you can
792
1:16:23 --> 1:16:29
make a base let's say in Mars okay and I mean all the natural resources there
793
1:16:29 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction]ing oil on earth is not a problem for you this can be done
794
1:16:35 --> 1:16:39
at a level of small business because you become so advanced and the
795
1:16:39 --> 1:16:44
capitalization of its entire territory increases the country becomes virtually
796
1:16:44 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction] because you can calmly place let's say
797
1:16:50 --> 1:16:[privacy contact redaction]eroid belt and politely inform your potential
798
1:16:54 --> 1:16:59
opponents of the consequences and the only drawback of this strong
799
1:16:59 --> 1:17:[privacy contact redaction]ion called cosmo colonialism is that it's immensely
800
1:17:03 --> 1:17:09
expensive how expensive I don't know but again they have 52 trillion dollars to
801
1:17:09 --> 1:17:[privacy contact redaction] point we're talking about Cosmo as
802
1:17:14 --> 1:17:20
well as our infra colonialism it requires a radical change in the world
803
1:17:20 --> 1:17:[privacy contact redaction]em and obviously again we're talking about a lot of money
804
1:17:23 --> 1:17:[privacy contact redaction]s they will not give you any return on capital in four
805
1:17:27 --> 1:17:32
years in ten years and [privacy contact redaction]ed a hundred
806
1:17:32 --> 1:17:[privacy contact redaction]ed and fifty years after which you get a colossal step of
807
1:17:37 --> 1:17:[privacy contact redaction]rument that will allow you to live
808
1:17:41 --> 1:17:51
for those 100 years and this moment it doesn't exist let me explain simple
809
1:17:51 --> 1:17:58
money is money you can freely convert as numbers complex or long money can have
810
1:17:58 --> 1:18:02
many different components and some of these components are scaler in other
811
1:18:02 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction]s the balance sheet currency and some are vector which is in other words
812
1:18:07 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction] money aimed at certain I guess you could say changes in the world in
813
1:18:11 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction]s money is used for accumulation the so-called long or
814
1:18:15 --> 1:18:20
easement and for accounting issues which is a completely different thing so this
815
1:18:20 --> 1:18:24
is a fundamental element of the financial system so instead there was
816
1:18:24 --> 1:18:29
once the idea of creating derivatives but the derivatives economy because it
817
1:18:29 --> 1:18:34
doesn't have a pronounced material carrier has the ability to separate from
818
1:18:34 --> 1:18:38
the real and therefore doesn't really work because they turn into an object
819
1:18:38 --> 1:18:42
of blatant speculation and we know what happened again we're talking about long
820
1:18:42 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction]ed years or more but does humanity really need
821
1:18:48 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction]e say what what do images of distant
822
1:18:52 --> 1:18:[privacy contact redaction]hetic pleasure answer spaces politics and the
823
1:18:58 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction]ates of America has made it an intrinsic political necessity and even
824
1:19:03 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction]ill remain tied to earth for a very long
825
1:19:07 --> 1:19:11
time we can build colonies on Mars we can build colonies on the moon but these
826
1:19:11 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction]e I mean we really haven't gotten into
827
1:19:16 --> 1:19:19
space I'm not saying this is a conspiracy theory theories who believes
828
1:19:19 --> 1:19:24
into flat earth theory and so on and so forth but compared to billions of
829
1:19:24 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction] that two or three hundred people have gone into space
830
1:19:30 --> 1:19:35
doesn't really change anything at all okay but the realization that earth
831
1:19:35 --> 1:19:42
ceases to be whole but becomes only a part of changes the picture of the world
832
1:19:42 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction]ates does this because of the need for
833
1:19:46 --> 1:19:[privacy contact redaction]e because it changes the mythology and the ideology
834
1:19:52 --> 1:19:58
of its part of humanity but the problem is this any culture that lives in linear
835
1:19:58 --> 1:20:02
time and will live in linear time either develops and goes beyond the boundaries
836
1:20:02 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction]ops developing and enters into what's known as cyclicity
837
1:20:06 --> 1:20:13
and even in this sense we need cosmos and if we talk about the applied sense
838
1:20:13 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction]e geology cannot be a normal science until
839
1:20:18 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction]ts for example and so we're working with I
840
1:20:22 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction] but we cannot draw conclusions based on this
841
1:20:27 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction] because the basis of this geological science is a little
842
1:20:31 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction]ts for example have tectonic plates
843
1:20:35 --> 1:20:43
or is this is only a feature we don't know this and therefore cosmos is
844
1:20:43 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction]y for the planetary reflection we're
845
1:20:47 --> 1:20:[privacy contact redaction]ep in civilizational development okay so again
846
1:20:51 --> 1:20:57
to kind of summarize what I said so far I'm gonna just do it more I'll stop
847
1:20:57 --> 1:21:03
Daniel Daniel Daniel your volume went down you touched something in your volume
848
1:21:03 --> 1:21:11
went down on your mic how's this now is this better no still low well like the
849
1:21:11 --> 1:21:18
mic switched to a different mic maybe hello hello is this better no you you
850
1:21:18 --> 1:21:24
um your hand touch something Daniel and it suddenly went down so I don't know
851
1:21:24 --> 1:21:28
what that was you you were throwing your hand about and you hit something
852
1:21:28 --> 1:21:41
about this hello no hello could it be your headphones you I think we're
853
1:21:41 --> 1:21:47
hearing you through a different mic like your laptop mic things Tom why not
854
1:21:47 --> 1:21:53
no no that's but that is the problem Stephen be quiet so that Tom can hello
855
1:21:53 --> 1:22:00
hello hello is it better now yeah if you go to the like you're gonna mute your
856
1:22:00 --> 1:22:04
mic and you hit the little up arrow carrot but you might be able to select
857
1:22:04 --> 1:22:12
the right mic how's it how's it now is it better yeah no yeah one two three four
858
1:22:13 --> 1:22:23
yeah better yeah is that okay now yes well yeah even fire Stephen okay okay so
859
1:22:23 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction] to summarize what I said so far
860
1:22:32 --> 1:22:36
Trump is a face of one of the two groups fighting in the United States for
861
1:22:36 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction]ed States but he's still not in
862
1:22:40 --> 1:22:43
control there's a lot of never Trumpers in the Republican Party of the deep
863
1:22:43 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction] all kinds of elements you know within the system
864
1:22:48 --> 1:22:[privacy contact redaction] Donald Trump there's no guarantee at all that
865
1:22:53 --> 1:22:58
he's gonna win this fight okay him being killed is still very much on the table
866
1:22:58 --> 1:23:02
they're still gonna try you know to get rid of him one way or another okay this
867
1:23:02 --> 1:23:[privacy contact redaction] the beginning I need this to say the biggest concern for the global elite
868
1:23:06 --> 1:23:10
is that the Trump and Putin are gonna work together and so Trump has set
869
1:23:10 --> 1:23:16
himself a goal but again all of this now the whole thing about space I hope it's
870
1:23:16 --> 1:23:22
clear if you can't expand within this Bretton Woods economic model on the
871
1:23:22 --> 1:23:26
planet Earth because you've reached the limits of growth you have nowhere to go
872
1:23:26 --> 1:23:30
you need something else which means you need to go up or down and that's whole
873
1:23:30 --> 1:23:[privacy contact redaction]oration and artificial intelligence and everything
874
1:23:33 --> 1:23:39
else that they're working on right now okay now that's it Trump speaking of
875
1:23:39 --> 1:23:45
situation in Ukraine has set himself a goal of ending the war over the next 100
876
1:23:45 --> 1:23:54
days now the end of 100 days comes in arm comes in early May which is good
877
1:23:54 --> 1:23:58
sign for Russia because nine of Maine is the our victory day the victory parade of
878
1:23:58 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction] the Nazi Germany I think it's a mistake to think that
879
1:24:02 --> 1:24:06
Trump is on Russia's side okay he himself make it very clear that he is on
880
1:24:06 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction]ates of America and every everything else are only
881
1:24:10 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction]s to him from the point of view of the American interest and so far the
882
1:24:15 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction]ates of America and Russia they do not
883
1:24:22 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction] now Trump needs peace okay he will need to put pressure
884
1:24:26 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction] Ukraine has already made a number of statements
885
1:24:31 --> 1:24:[privacy contact redaction]e that Europe must now pay for the maintenance
886
1:24:34 --> 1:24:43
of Ukrainian army which has a million troops and at the same time Europe has
887
1:24:43 --> 1:24:47
barely enough money to pay for the maintenance of its own army okay now both
888
1:24:47 --> 1:24:53
Zelensky important they will be under a lot of pressure and I'm not so sure
889
1:24:53 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction] internal pressure on Putin again I
890
1:25:05 --> 1:25:07
come from Russia's military counterintelligence I know all these
891
1:25:07 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction]e like the back of my hand okay you have two Russia's you have one Russia
892
1:25:14 --> 1:25:17
does does not want anything to know about the war which are the oligarchs
893
1:25:17 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction]e who live in the big cities you know war it doesn't touch them
894
1:25:22 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction] shape or form okay it has much impact on their lives as it does on
895
1:25:26 --> 1:25:30
Stephen on your life which means zero and then you have people who are fighting
896
1:25:30 --> 1:25:36
in the you know Ukrainian form of territories you know the Russia's
897
1:25:36 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction]orables and which are the same as America's deplorables you know we're
898
1:25:41 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction] you know to the front and to the army
899
1:25:44 --> 1:25:[privacy contact redaction] two Russia's who absolutely are totally at odds with one
900
1:25:49 --> 1:25:52
another they don't understand each other they don't like each other they live in
901
1:25:52 --> 1:25:58
totally different galaxies okay and put this is basically a catty horn he is he
902
1:25:58 --> 1:26:03
is an arbiter he was made an arbitrary was you know he was selected by by by
903
1:26:03 --> 1:26:08
Yeltsin to be his his heir apparent and basically you know put his job was you
904
1:26:08 --> 1:26:11
know to be the arbitrary an arbitrary in football between different fighting you
905
1:26:11 --> 1:26:15
know groups that are fighting each other for control of Russia okay and he's been
906
1:26:15 --> 1:26:20
able to do that fairly well but he is not really in control and that's
907
1:26:20 --> 1:26:[privacy contact redaction]and for as much as putting would like to do he's
908
1:26:23 --> 1:26:27
not doing might because he can't there's just too much power in other people's
909
1:26:27 --> 1:26:33
groups heads but that said okay his you know needless to say biggest support
910
1:26:33 --> 1:26:37
group is the military and so to think that there's anyone out there who can
911
1:26:37 --> 1:26:41
actually do something to put but he goes and tried that a couple of years ago in
912
1:26:41 --> 1:26:48
2023 we know how that turned out okay but again the the situation will on the
913
1:26:48 --> 1:26:52
front will determine that the you know the future of this war and more of a
914
1:26:52 --> 1:26:57
Trump's Trump's pressure will be aimed at breaking the weak aside which is I
915
1:26:57 --> 1:27:01
needless to say is Ukraine the situation in any case no matter what happens is
916
1:27:01 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction]ates because by investing minimal resources in the
917
1:27:05 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction]ed by the Biden administration Trump can emerge as
918
1:27:11 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction]ates peace and Russia and especially Ukraine they
919
1:27:15 --> 1:27:20
have nothing to counter with and Trump has already gained an advantageous
920
1:27:20 --> 1:27:25
negotiation position the problem with us the problem with Russia we have no
921
1:27:25 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction] no idea who we are like the Soviet Union when you exactly we are
922
1:27:30 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction] conceptual base okay we have no idea who we are we have no
923
1:27:34 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction] no idea when this war ends we have no
924
1:27:38 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction]ually won this war okay in football a team
925
1:27:43 --> 1:27:47
that scores more goals wins usually the game okay in the Second World War the
926
1:27:47 --> 1:27:52
Soviet Union won the war how did we know that we won the war what's the is the
927
1:27:52 --> 1:27:[privacy contact redaction]ory the red flag and the Reichstag so what how do we know
928
1:27:57 --> 1:28:02
when we win this thing we don't know no one knows nobody knows absolutely nobody
929
1:28:02 --> 1:28:[privacy contact redaction] no answers so they have no answers
930
1:28:07 --> 1:28:10
because nobody really knows beginning with the president himself and maybe he
931
1:28:10 --> 1:28:[privacy contact redaction] no idea where we're fighting this thing
932
1:28:16 --> 1:28:[privacy contact redaction]e are dying oh then you know some some some very
933
1:28:22 --> 1:28:28
diffuse ideas of you know of defeating Nazis if we are defeating Nazis now why
934
1:28:28 --> 1:28:35
are we selling gas and oil and and and and aluminum and and nuclear energy why
935
1:28:35 --> 1:28:39
are we selling this to our enemies why are we selling you know billions of
936
1:28:39 --> 1:28:43
dollars worth of gas and oil and and and uranium to the United States if they are
937
1:28:43 --> 1:28:48
our enemies why are we doing this because Russia is a quintessential
938
1:28:48 --> 1:28:[privacy contact redaction]e are saying Russia's common Russia's as
939
1:28:52 --> 1:28:[privacy contact redaction] as I'm Chinese okay there's nothing communist or socialist about
940
1:28:57 --> 1:29:03
Russia nothing at all zero okay the country's totally run by the people of
941
1:29:03 --> 1:29:10
zero allegiance to Russia zero the same the liberal banking financiers who
942
1:29:10 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction]ates absolutely the same and so we can't possibly win more
943
1:29:16 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction]ates because it's a monetary proposition in a negotiation
944
1:29:21 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction]ates wins and so initially Ukraine's position is extremely
945
1:29:25 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction] accept any demand and rely on the protection and
946
1:29:31 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction]ates that's not a good sign because the United
947
1:29:36 --> 1:29:41
States of America will defend exclusively its own interests Trump for
948
1:29:41 --> 1:29:[privacy contact redaction]e banned a to any country for 90 days including Ukraine for the exception
949
1:29:45 --> 1:29:51
of Israel and I think Egypt and so again in such a situation the United States
950
1:29:51 --> 1:29:56
wins no matter what Ukraine's loses no matter what and as far as Russia is
951
1:29:56 --> 1:30:00
concerned it remains to be seen we cannot win more than the United States
952
1:30:00 --> 1:30:09
and peace will depend on America's position so trouble create from his
953
1:30:09 --> 1:30:14
personal point of view a world that is suitable for both sides the problem is
954
1:30:14 --> 1:30:21
Trump has no idea what this war is about he relies on reports from the CIA from
955
1:30:21 --> 1:30:28
his intelligence so that this report is garbage you know you stole a few days
956
1:30:28 --> 1:30:32
away said so publicly that you know put things are not going well over a
957
1:30:32 --> 1:30:[privacy contact redaction]ually is about 250,000 dead maybe about another half a million
958
1:30:37 --> 1:30:41
wounded there's a million dead in Ukraine another about two million wounded
959
1:30:41 --> 1:30:45
but they're giving him false information on purpose or Trump really has no idea
960
1:30:45 --> 1:30:52
what's going on and again at the same time these conditions will be completely
961
1:30:52 --> 1:30:58
Trump's conditions unacceptable for both Ukraine and Russia and this is what the
962
1:30:58 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction] will develop on for the next you know three months another very
963
1:31:01 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction]and before Donald Trump came to power the winners of
964
1:31:06 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction]ogan and now Trump has joined them and the
965
1:31:15 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction]antly you know vanished in other
966
1:31:20 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction] a clear loser which is Ukraine and the war will not end you
967
1:31:24 --> 1:31:27
know it will not be ended by Ukraine but by the United States and Russia
968
1:31:27 --> 1:31:34
Ukraine's position this war will play you know absolutely no no no what's the
969
1:31:34 --> 1:31:38
what I'm looking for in the decision-making process itself no post
970
1:31:38 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction]ed in the northern Black Sea region which is very
971
1:31:42 --> 1:31:47
important for its macro regional aspirations Erdogan is now the clear
972
1:31:47 --> 1:31:[privacy contact redaction] why did we lose Syria because we have
973
1:31:51 --> 1:31:55
absolutely no idea what we're doing there in the first place why were we in
974
1:31:55 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction] what was our objective how do we define winning how
975
1:32:00 --> 1:32:04
do we do all these different things if you can't answer this very basic
976
1:32:04 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction]ions that there is no reason really to be anywhere and so where the God on
977
1:32:10 --> 1:32:15
the other hand is very clear he solved the Kurdish problem and now he's
978
1:32:15 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction]and that's the length his days as
979
1:32:18 --> 1:32:24
president unnumbered so talking to him absolutely makes no sense whatsoever and
980
1:32:24 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction]amatically worsened his relationship with Russia okay and will
981
1:32:30 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction]ogan also what about Europe Europe and exactly found itself
982
1:32:35 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction] unfortunate situation Russia and the United States are not allies
983
1:32:41 --> 1:32:46
okay but ideologically Putin and Trump are enemies of transnational
984
1:32:46 --> 1:32:51
corporations and they look at the world from the same point of view it's very
985
1:32:51 --> 1:32:[privacy contact redaction]and that okay wouldn't Trump they're not buddies okay
986
1:32:57 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction] the same enemy which is a very powerful enemy
987
1:33:00 --> 1:33:05
transnational corporations problem with Europe is Europe has surrendered to
988
1:33:05 --> 1:33:10
transnational corporations there are isolated attempts to fight the
989
1:33:10 --> 1:33:16
transnationals in case such as the case of Austria the case of Slovakia the case
990
1:33:16 --> 1:33:22
of Hungary but they met with harsh response okay even trying to ban for
991
1:33:22 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction]e Germany's parliamentary party and the second most popular party in
992
1:33:26 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction]ions the alternative for Germany and so Europe should admit defeat
993
1:33:31 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction]ead it goes to Davos and chooses the date to coincide with Trump's
994
1:33:36 --> 1:33:41
inauguration and response to Trump [privacy contact redaction]ers they
995
1:33:41 --> 1:33:46
express their regret that's all they could do okay and so Trump is brutally
996
1:33:46 --> 1:33:[privacy contact redaction] agenda and the only words they have is words of
997
1:33:51 --> 1:33:57
regret and so the outlook for Germany for Europe it looks tragicomic the
998
1:33:57 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction] Trump's line and the most tragic thing
999
1:34:01 --> 1:34:06
that could happen is is for Germany to ban alternative for Germany this will
1000
1:34:06 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction]s in several regions of Germany the separation of
1001
1:34:10 --> 1:34:15
Bavaria is quite possible and will be necessary to respond to this with our
1002
1:34:15 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction] in addition they will receive a simultaneous
1003
1:34:20 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction]ates and from Russia and so what my prediction
1004
1:34:25 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction] possibility that former East Germany is gonna go
1005
1:34:30 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction] Germany okay they're gonna succeed from the rest of
1006
1:34:34 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction] the conflict although not as much
1007
1:34:38 --> 1:34:42
as Ukraine but only because the fighting is not taking place on its territory and
1008
1:34:42 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction]etely ridiculous situation it's totally
1009
1:34:48 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction] its role as an arbiter and was left as an
1010
1:34:53 --> 1:34:[privacy contact redaction] and so if you look at Britain's relations with Russia they're completely
1011
1:34:57 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction]royed and the only thing left is war and the United States has shown that has
1012
1:35:04 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction]ance with the logic of the unity of the
1013
1:35:08 --> 1:35:11
Anglo-Saxon world we're seeing that right now the way it's treating Canada for
1014
1:35:11 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction]ed States through the NATO mechanism will
1015
1:35:16 --> 1:35:21
continue to rule Europe there's no strategic autonomy in sight for Europe
1016
1:35:21 --> 1:35:25
also because it's easy to steal from it this way and this also means that the
1017
1:35:25 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction]ates will not really get out of the war against Russia through Ukraine
1018
1:35:29 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction]ions of NATO and its allies determine it and there will be
1019
1:35:34 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction]atements but the reality will be completely different and I'm not
1020
1:35:38 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction] involvement of the American Armed Forces
1021
1:35:41 --> 1:35:45
in combat operations in the sight of Ukrainian Armed Forces through the
1022
1:35:45 --> 1:35:49
provision of intelligence data target designation guidance control of the most
1023
1:35:49 --> 1:35:[privacy contact redaction]em etc etc you know combat operations of the forces as a
1024
1:35:55 --> 1:35:59
whole are carried out through US European command of the Joint Chiefs of
1025
1:35:59 --> 1:36:03
the US Armed Forces as well as NATO Supreme Allied commander in Europe
1026
1:36:03 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction]opher Cavalli he's also the commander of the US Armed
1027
1:36:07 --> 1:36:11
Forces in Europe so forget about America leaving this conflict in peace
1028
1:36:11 --> 1:36:14
there's something else that needs to be understood even if the United States
1029
1:36:14 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction]ances itself from the war with Russia over Ukraine and dumps the
1030
1:36:21 --> 1:36:26
problems of the European on the European NATO allies it will not relinquish
1031
1:36:26 --> 1:36:31
control of the Ukrainian Armed Forces combat operations and escalation management
1032
1:36:31 --> 1:36:35
why because in the event of a sharp escalation Russia for example could
1033
1:36:35 --> 1:36:39
resort to the use of nuclear weapons and who will clean up the mess in the end
1034
1:36:39 --> 1:36:44
because let's not forget the male look at Americans have many military bases in
1035
1:36:44 --> 1:36:48
Europe and needless to say they could also be attacked as a result of that and
1036
1:36:48 --> 1:36:52
finally again Britain finds itself unprecedented situation relations with
1037
1:36:52 --> 1:36:[privacy contact redaction] worsened tremendously conflict with Turkey has
1038
1:36:57 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction] and now they're trying to pursue a somewhat
1039
1:37:00 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction]s Europe and they have also failed to become an
1040
1:37:05 --> 1:37:09
independent power center it's not a question of the army the resources of
1041
1:37:09 --> 1:37:15
the economy it's a question of the elite Britain does not have a strong leader
1042
1:37:15 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction]ives of the state not talking
1043
1:37:19 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction]er okay I'm talking about you know the Queen of the
1044
1:37:23 --> 1:37:28
King of England which means that the British deep state or deep powers and
1045
1:37:28 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction]ete disarray they were used to having the figure of Elizabeth II who in
1046
1:37:33 --> 1:37:38
critical situations was able to give the right advice using her knowledge and
1047
1:37:38 --> 1:37:43
70 years of long political experience today there is no such person in England
1048
1:37:43 --> 1:37:[privacy contact redaction]ion without this individual and
1049
1:37:47 --> 1:37:52
it's not clear where Britain is heading and so Britain has lost eight years
1050
1:37:52 --> 1:37:58
since leaving the European Union has not solved any of its significant domestic
1051
1:37:58 --> 1:38:02
problems and has worsened its position in the economy and culture immigration and
1052
1:38:02 --> 1:38:08
all the other areas as well and so again Ukraine just to finish and I'm done will
1053
1:38:08 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction] or another but the question remains as to at whose expense
1054
1:38:14 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction] will be ended and the moment the leading candidates are
1055
1:38:18 --> 1:38:22
Germany and France and then you know the third leading candidate is is is Britain
1056
1:38:22 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction]e of sentences summarize everything I said the
1057
1:38:29 --> 1:38:35
arrival of Donald Trump on the scene okay a Donald Trump not the president
1058
1:38:35 --> 1:38:40
Donald Trump a Donald Trump okay as a face of an alternative global project
1059
1:38:40 --> 1:38:47
okay brings to light the war between two completely different camps the liberal
1060
1:38:47 --> 1:38:52
banking financiers on the one hand these are the global Satanists whose idea is
1061
1:38:52 --> 1:38:[privacy contact redaction] meaning destroy the rest and live at
1062
1:38:55 --> 1:39:03
their expense and Donald Trump as the face of industrialist isolationist
1063
1:39:03 --> 1:39:[privacy contact redaction]s in 2016 okay Donald Trump was the representative behind Donald
1064
1:39:09 --> 1:39:13
Trump conceptually was the Vatican because Trump is not American president
1065
1:39:13 --> 1:39:18
okay remember he's part Scott if I'm not mistaken part German and so the idea
1066
1:39:18 --> 1:39:24
that behind me had Vatican conceptually and ideologically you had blood and soil
1067
1:39:24 --> 1:39:[privacy contact redaction]ocracy which is again in the United
1068
1:39:28 --> 1:39:33
States if you ask back in [privacy contact redaction]s were telling
1069
1:39:33 --> 1:39:38
especially Latinos to vote for Donald Trump on the insistence of the Vatican
1070
1:39:38 --> 1:39:42
so was the Vatican that helped Donald Trump win the elections in 2016 because
1071
1:39:42 --> 1:39:46
he was their candidate okay he's not the candidate of the United States of
1072
1:39:46 --> 1:39:51
America's totally different concept not talking about you know a political party
1073
1:39:51 --> 1:39:56
I'm talking about conceptual global projects and today that fight is coming
1074
1:39:56 --> 1:40:01
to fruition to the point where there's no return it's now or never and the
1075
1:40:01 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction]uff we're seeing right now with airplanes
1076
1:40:04 --> 1:40:08
falling out of the sky sabotage operations that was a terrorist
1077
1:40:08 --> 1:40:13
operation I was absolutely whoever responsible for the black hog ramming an
1078
1:40:13 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction]e we well saw the images made no intentions whatsoever to
1079
1:40:20 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction] whoever was responsible I was piloted you know by
1080
1:40:24 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction] had resolved childhood issues I
1081
1:40:28 --> 1:40:32
don't know it doesn't make a difference it's absolutely irrelevant the point is
1082
1:40:32 --> 1:40:36
that you'll be seeing a lot more in the United States and so because you can't
1083
1:40:36 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction]t Earth the dilemma for the elite how do we expand we expand
1084
1:40:42 --> 1:40:46
into space and that's what the Stargate project is all about the more technology
1085
1:40:46 --> 1:40:[privacy contact redaction] to all the control mechanisms okay the easier
1086
1:40:51 --> 1:40:58
it is for you to create those global concentration camp without tears and
1087
1:40:58 --> 1:41:02
that's what's being done right now and Ukraine operation is one of the you know
1088
1:41:02 --> 1:41:[privacy contact redaction] many others you have the Panama Canal
1089
1:41:08 --> 1:41:[privacy contact redaction] Taiwan you have Russia Ukraine you
1090
1:41:14 --> 1:41:[privacy contact redaction] a Latin America the entire world is that
1091
1:41:20 --> 1:41:24
war and that war okay is not the war between you know communists a capitalism
1092
1:41:24 --> 1:41:30
it's a war between the global cartels the global mafia okay on the one hand
1093
1:41:30 --> 1:41:34
and the forces representing again Trump is a face of an alternative global
1094
1:41:34 --> 1:41:[privacy contact redaction] and this is a global war for survival unfinished thank you so much
1095
1:41:40 --> 1:41:45
thank you Daniel well done for getting your voice to go through okay Stephen
1096
1:41:45 --> 1:41:[privacy contact redaction]ions to you so Daniel that was a heroic efforts with that
1097
1:41:52 --> 1:41:58
terrible cough you've got are you all right I'm fine I'm in seconds you know
1098
1:41:58 --> 1:42:05
it's if I don't talk I don't come not coughing what what was that spray you've
1099
1:42:05 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction] you don't have to tell us it's broncholine bronco
1100
1:42:10 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction] right very good does it help I don't know I don't know
1101
1:42:25 --> 1:42:[privacy contact redaction] bourbon works well but I don't drink alcohol so I would know
1102
1:42:30 --> 1:42:38
yeah Daniel do you know about proving causation it what do you know about
1103
1:42:38 --> 1:42:46
proving causation no all right no it's a difficult concept so anyway so Daniel
1104
1:42:46 --> 1:42:51
it's a bit difficult for me to know what questions to ask but I'll try and ask
1105
1:42:51 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction]e might ask so the thing about expanding
1106
1:43:00 --> 1:43:07
into space it's not a question like I think of you know human hubris thinking
1107
1:43:07 --> 1:43:13
they can conquer space you know how on earth are they going to travel 140 times
1108
1:43:13 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction]ance to the moon to Mars so the moon is approximately quarter million
1109
1:43:20 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction] apparently and Mars is say 35 million it's changing all the time of
1110
1:43:27 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction] so it's 35 times 4 it's 140 times the
1111
1:43:34 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction]ance to the moon and we don't even know whether we actually got to the moon
1112
1:43:38 --> 1:43:45
in was it the 1969 or the early 70s yeah it was [privacy contact redaction] moon landing
1113
1:43:45 --> 1:43:[privacy contact redaction] moon landing so so I've always I've been saying that you know
1114
1:43:53 --> 1:43:58
Elon Musk is going on about expanding going to space you know and I'm thinking
1115
1:43:58 --> 1:44:02
well where the hell is he going because you've got the moon our moon Earth's moon
1116
1:44:02 --> 1:44:[privacy contact redaction] is Venus or Mars and Venus is too hot and Mars is too
1117
1:44:09 --> 1:44:14
cold but of the two I think Mars is probably the one that you would go for
1118
1:44:14 --> 1:44:21
because Venus really is too hot and as far as I can tell anyway that's also
1119
1:44:21 --> 1:44:[privacy contact redaction] roughly so but you know so people seem to think and
1120
1:44:31 --> 1:44:35
I'm thinking that Musk is thinking to himself well we need to get to another
1121
1:44:35 --> 1:44:[privacy contact redaction]em apart from our solar system is is
1122
1:44:41 --> 1:44:[privacy contact redaction] which is an enormous distance so you
1123
1:44:48 --> 1:44:52
know in a man's lifetime we're never going to get there so unless we're
1124
1:44:52 --> 1:44:[privacy contact redaction]ling at considerably greater speeds than we have been to the moon which was
1125
1:44:57 --> 1:45:04
approximately 18,000 miles an hour I think roughly so so I've been thinking oh
1126
1:45:04 --> 1:45:08
it's not possible it's just ridiculous you know it's human hubris but that's
1127
1:45:08 --> 1:45:12
not the point the point is that go trying to get to Mars will cost a lot of
1128
1:45:12 --> 1:45:17
money and thereby that will create a greater economy is that what you're
1129
1:45:17 --> 1:45:21
arguing I don't really understand the point is that it's again you you need to
1130
1:45:21 --> 1:45:30
you need to expand you need to evolve you if you get to eventually if you get
1131
1:45:30 --> 1:45:[privacy contact redaction] an isotope there called helium-3 and with
1132
1:45:34 --> 1:45:40
helium-3 using as the energy source you can get to you can get to Mars from the
1133
1:45:40 --> 1:45:45
moon in about 10 days or so right now it's over [privacy contact redaction]t Earth and
1134
1:45:45 --> 1:45:47
we can't get there because by the time we get there we have a problem of
1135
1:45:47 --> 1:45:53
gravitation basically get there as gelatin with ice okay and so there's
1136
1:45:53 --> 1:45:58
lots of things to consider but I think the point is again you need to start
1137
1:45:58 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction]s because eventually eventually okay you're gonna
1138
1:46:04 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction]t civilization but we're not there yet we
1139
1:46:10 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction]eps it doesn't mean we can't do this okay but
1140
1:46:15 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction]art thinking about this and one of the things that
1141
1:46:18 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction]e are doing again is if you can't expand here and you can't expand
1142
1:46:21 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction]t Earth because they have no model I think we talked
1143
1:46:25 --> 1:46:34
about this before the problem the problem the problem they have right now
1144
1:46:34 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction] they have no language to explain
1145
1:46:47 --> 1:46:53
the future like what we're seeing right now Stephen we've seen twice in the past
1146
1:46:53 --> 1:46:[privacy contact redaction] time on the old Roman Empire collapsed between the
1147
1:46:59 --> 1:47:05
fourth and the sixth centuries and it was replaced by feudalism and the second
1148
1:47:05 --> 1:47:10
time when feudalism a thousand years later between the sixteenth and
1149
1:47:10 --> 1:47:[privacy contact redaction]d by by modern-day capitalism which today is on
1150
1:47:14 --> 1:47:18
its deathbed which means that for the first and for the first time we have no
1151
1:47:18 --> 1:47:[privacy contact redaction]ain what's coming around the corner by language I don't mean
1152
1:47:22 --> 1:47:26
Russian or English or French or Spanish or Italian I mean the language of the
1153
1:47:26 --> 1:47:[privacy contact redaction]e what this new model is going to look like we have
1154
1:47:31 --> 1:47:36
no idea we don't have the language for it so we haven't even got the language
1155
1:47:36 --> 1:47:43
for it Daniel we don't have the language for it because again in the West like in
1156
1:47:43 --> 1:47:48
the Soviet Union we we had a totally different system which was based on
1157
1:47:48 --> 1:47:53
teachings of Karl Marx and Adam Smith and so I don't know if you remember when
1158
1:47:53 --> 1:48:02
Putin met Donald Trump in Helsinki he proposed to him to you know come up with
1159
1:48:02 --> 1:48:[privacy contact redaction]itute and get American and Russian specialists to work together
1160
1:48:09 --> 1:48:14
on defining a new economic model and that's when American media went apeshit
1161
1:48:14 --> 1:48:[privacy contact redaction]e behind the media understood the consequences of that
1162
1:48:18 --> 1:48:[privacy contact redaction]em was very different and for all the stuff people are talking
1163
1:48:22 --> 1:48:28
about the Soviet Union was you know socialist was a was a garbage system
1164
1:48:28 --> 1:48:36
Soviet Union was growing 11% per year in 1991 11% okay and and Soviet GDP was
1165
1:48:36 --> 1:48:41
greater than today's America's global GDP okay and the Soviet Union the
1166
1:48:41 --> 1:48:[privacy contact redaction] model okay which over a 15 period between the the
1167
1:48:49 --> 1:48:54
mid-20s of the 20th century to 1940 the beginning of the Second World War the
1168
1:48:54 --> 1:49:00
Soviet Union went from being you know 90% agrarian 90% you know illiterate to 100%
1169
1:49:00 --> 1:49:06
illiterate and the second technological industrial power in the world in 15 years
1170
1:49:06 --> 1:49:[privacy contact redaction] the Soviet Union by mid 1970s had already won of the Cold War
1171
1:49:12 --> 1:49:[privacy contact redaction] so it's a long story I want to get into this right now but the
1172
1:49:15 --> 1:49:20
point is is that the Soviet Union we had the language to explain a totally
1173
1:49:20 --> 1:49:26
different model which worked okay and if you combine the two models and get the
1174
1:49:26 --> 1:49:[privacy contact redaction]em of economics with the Soviet system the two of them can come
1175
1:49:32 --> 1:49:36
up with a new model alternative model which would be the new model post
1176
1:49:36 --> 1:49:[privacy contact redaction] model and that's one of the reasons why you know the takedown of
1177
1:49:39 --> 1:49:45
Trump began when it when it began I think was in 2018 or more or less when
1178
1:49:45 --> 1:49:48
they met in Helsinki because the idea was they couldn't under no circumstances
1179
1:49:48 --> 1:49:55
if you're the deep state allow the so it doesn't seem to make sense to me but
1180
1:49:55 --> 1:49:58
maybe I'm missing something so you say we haven't even got the language to
1181
1:49:58 --> 1:50:[privacy contact redaction]ain or nobody's got the language to explain what they want in the future so
1182
1:50:03 --> 1:50:07
how is that gonna end well for human beings because we have previously had
1183
1:50:07 --> 1:50:[privacy contact redaction]ill make a mess of things and and an almighty mess of that
1184
1:50:12 --> 1:50:16
well that's why that's why you're seeing what you're seeing Steven that's why
1185
1:50:16 --> 1:50:19
we're seeing what we're seeing total global chaos because nobody has the
1186
1:50:19 --> 1:50:[privacy contact redaction]ain because what's worked before okay is global thermonuclear
1187
1:50:24 --> 1:50:28
war global war okay that's what the Second World War was about you destroy
1188
1:50:28 --> 1:50:35
and then you rebuild and that's why 1945 to 1975 were the glorious 30 years you
1189
1:50:35 --> 1:50:38
know of tremendous growth why because you have to rebuild the entire world but
1190
1:50:38 --> 1:50:42
you can't do the right now because everybody has nuclear weapons so the
1191
1:50:42 --> 1:50:[privacy contact redaction] okay they're gonna wipe out the entire
1192
1:50:45 --> 1:50:54
world yeah absolutely what I'm trying to say Daniel why why is there this
1193
1:50:54 --> 1:51:00
compulsion to expand somewhere you don't ask a fully grown a human being to grow
1194
1:51:00 --> 1:51:[privacy contact redaction]even is that the way things if you if the
1195
1:51:06 --> 1:51:[privacy contact redaction]agnates okay that it collapses onto itself so which out right now is
1196
1:51:14 --> 1:51:18
we can't grow any more on the planet Earth within this particular model and
1197
1:51:18 --> 1:51:23
this one of a good model and was it Daniel it wasn't a very good model was
1198
1:51:23 --> 1:51:[privacy contact redaction]ed called bread and wood it has existed since the end of
1199
1:51:28 --> 1:51:33
World War two until pretty much more or less now it doesn't work anymore okay
1200
1:51:33 --> 1:51:36
because you can only expand as long as there's somewhere to expand but as you
1201
1:51:36 --> 1:51:41
can't expand the problem is what do you do with eight billion people so Daniel
1202
1:51:41 --> 1:51:47
if you had wise men why couldn't you work out a way to adapt the system we've
1203
1:51:47 --> 1:51:53
got so that it doesn't need to expand I just don't understand my last conference
1204
1:51:53 --> 1:51:58
I talked about you know this kind of thing okay so this system is a good
1205
1:51:58 --> 1:52:[privacy contact redaction]em let's all work together okay let's help the old grow old and you know
1206
1:52:03 --> 1:52:06
in peace and then and tranquility let's help the young become stronger and
1207
1:52:06 --> 1:52:09
wiser and more intelligent let's help each other you know to be better and
1208
1:52:09 --> 1:52:14
this model is the elite saying you are gonna work for me and you are gonna be
1209
1:52:14 --> 1:52:[privacy contact redaction] and I'm gonna take you know advantage of everything that's all that
1210
1:52:19 --> 1:52:[privacy contact redaction] and what I'm done taking I'm gonna kill you I'm gonna do that with
1211
1:52:23 --> 1:52:[privacy contact redaction]ems okay they're mutually exclusive systems why
1212
1:52:29 --> 1:52:37
can't we it's a good question human nature against even so so we just go
1213
1:52:37 --> 1:52:41
headlong into a into a new world that we can't even describe at the moment not
1214
1:52:41 --> 1:52:45
even you can describe it Daniel well I can describe it but the problem is that
1215
1:52:45 --> 1:52:[privacy contact redaction] no language to to do something about this yeah okay Charles thank you
1216
1:52:54 --> 1:53:[privacy contact redaction]ions Daniel we've got hands up so
1217
1:53:00 --> 1:53:08
we'll go to those first and I think we had Anders on first then John but maybe
1218
1:53:08 --> 1:53:13
not yes that's right Charles that's right and then Jeremy yeah Anders John
1219
1:53:13 --> 1:53:22
Dave and Jeremy well I've got Jeremy Dave for some reason that weird yeah go
1220
1:53:22 --> 1:53:30
ahead and thank you Daniel it was a great presentation and analysis superb I
1221
1:53:30 --> 1:53:38
would say I didn't agree with all of it but you are very close to it I think and
1222
1:53:38 --> 1:53:44
I would like to make a comment and then some questions okay the language is
1223
1:53:44 --> 1:53:51
English and the currency is gold oil gas wheat corn and collateral I'm Norwegian
1224
1:53:51 --> 1:53:[privacy contact redaction] businessman turned into scientists with 30 years of living
1225
1:53:57 --> 1:54:05
experience in Poland and Ukraine 1992 2023 my claim the World Economic Forum
1226
1:54:05 --> 1:54:[privacy contact redaction]itting up a USA US dollar America
1227
1:54:14 --> 1:54:[privacy contact redaction]rial and bank owners of the Fed reserves B UK City
1228
1:54:22 --> 1:54:29
of London EU Titanic ship without comments see Russia India Briggs China
1229
1:54:29 --> 1:54:40
etc the missing money I think is at Basel BIS Switzerland but the remaining
1230
1:54:40 --> 1:54:[privacy contact redaction]ion is who owns it and controls it that's a good question I don't think
1231
1:54:45 --> 1:54:50
anybody really it's a good question who controls the debt I don't know yes okay
1232
1:54:50 --> 1:54:57
my friend I don't know my friend let me just run through so Jerome Powell is
1233
1:54:57 --> 1:55:06
controlled by the commercial bank owners of the Fed and he is controlled by
1234
1:55:06 --> 1:55:12
Trump and I will go into this but it's linked to Jamie Dimon at JP Morgan
1235
1:55:12 --> 1:55:20
Chase which is let's say an ally in an economic warfare between let's say USA
1236
1:55:20 --> 1:55:[privacy contact redaction] of the world and number one for a long time the China production
1237
1:55:28 --> 1:55:34
sourcing limited inflation India is next on the line and they have really a lot
1238
1:55:34 --> 1:55:[privacy contact redaction]y cheap goods so this is not a real problem the Kovac
1239
1:55:41 --> 1:55:[privacy contact redaction]y chain problem problems which caused
1240
1:55:47 --> 1:55:54
inflation it could be fixed the Green Revolution added a massive to it a
1241
1:55:54 --> 1:56:[privacy contact redaction]ill for there is a huge new change now since
1242
1:56:03 --> 1:56:[privacy contact redaction]ream which is creating a massive
1243
1:56:09 --> 1:56:[privacy contact redaction]G gas to Europe the Ukraine War is
1244
1:56:17 --> 1:56:[privacy contact redaction]ained by let's say Lindsey Graham as well as Bobby
1245
1:56:24 --> 1:56:[privacy contact redaction] to create collateral for the London EU side of
1246
1:56:32 --> 1:56:[privacy contact redaction] and they need that to survive okay I think the USA will be
1247
1:56:40 --> 1:56:[privacy contact redaction] to keep the US dollar hegemony to engage in economic war with
1248
1:56:46 --> 1:56:54
Canada Mexico India and EU the owners of the US question yes I will very shortly
1249
1:56:54 --> 1:57:01
and the US dollar more is linked to gold and gold now is leaving London to USA
1250
1:57:01 --> 1:57:08
Russia is already deep into gold EU is and UK is about to go down really really
1251
1:57:08 --> 1:57:15
really bad like UK after World War two now I come to the questions the leaders
1252
1:57:15 --> 1:57:21
in EU and UK are insane into the green movement killing the business model
1253
1:57:21 --> 1:57:28
totally what is your comment to this analyst Daniel and finally Elon Musk you
1254
1:57:28 --> 1:57:37
know his main vehicle in this kind of spaceship story is his starship and I am
1255
1:57:37 --> 1:57:45
pretty sure that this is about launching 20,000 5g satellites into orbit low orbit
1256
1:57:45 --> 1:57:[privacy contact redaction]er of USA Department of Defense which is run by at
1257
1:57:54 --> 1:58:05
moment okay it's enough Anders enough Danny there's a lot of stuff came out at me I
1258
1:58:05 --> 1:58:11
don't I I think I agree with you as far as Musk is concerned but again in any
1259
1:58:11 --> 1:58:[privacy contact redaction] a lot of different angles a lot of
1260
1:58:15 --> 1:58:[privacy contact redaction]ayers because a lot of money is involved and so if we're talking about
1261
1:58:19 --> 1:58:22
low orbit yeah I think totally agree with you okay because again the idea of
1262
1:58:22 --> 1:58:26
what we're seeing right now is a global concentration camp you couldn't have
1263
1:58:26 --> 1:58:29
done this with the Democrats okay because people were on to them and so
1264
1:58:29 --> 1:58:33
they're doing the same thing with the Republicans only a lot worse okay I mean
1265
1:58:33 --> 1:58:[privacy contact redaction]e were afraid of except people for
1266
1:58:37 --> 1:58:42
whatever reason I've been totally blinded by his changing the you know
1267
1:58:42 --> 1:58:48
Gulf of Mexico into Gulf of America get rid of the LGBT crowd doing all these
1268
1:58:48 --> 1:58:[privacy contact redaction]uff which is easy to do okay but if you're not paying attention to
1269
1:58:52 --> 1:58:55
the bigger issues and these are the bigger issues that you're talking about
1270
1:58:55 --> 1:58:59
okay it's you know a universal digital ID that's absolutely you know front and
1271
1:58:59 --> 1:59:04
center as a trap is a far more dangerous individual as far our rights and
1272
1:59:04 --> 1:59:12
liberties are concerned than then what's his name Joe Biden is concerned all
1273
1:59:12 --> 1:59:17
right thank you Daniel thank you Anders John
1274
1:59:22 --> 1:59:30
you mean I don't I'm struggling no not I'm struggling Daniel a little bit with
1275
1:59:30 --> 1:59:[privacy contact redaction] a unique expertise I think I'm the only
1276
1:59:38 --> 1:59:48
one in this room who is well read enough to teach what was left behind by dr.
1277
1:59:48 --> 1:59:54
I don't know if you've ever heard of him most people haven't and I'm wouldn't be
1278
1:59:54 --> 1:59:57
surprised if you're one of them but I'm gonna leave all the politics to
1279
1:59:57 --> 2:00:03
everybody else who could do an equally good job as I could ask and questions
1280
2:00:03 --> 2:00:07
about that and I'm gonna I'm gonna cover something that I think only I can answer
1281
2:00:07 --> 2:00:14
I'm gonna talk about the space like John want questions yeah I'm gonna have a
1282
2:00:14 --> 2:00:[privacy contact redaction]ion okay I'm gonna ask you though faces the answer what is the question
1283
2:00:23 --> 2:00:29
dr. Jerry Brady brought up in the chat this Malafuzian idea I'll let him speak
1284
2:00:29 --> 2:00:39
to that that you know it's always wrong that can we be isolationist in space or
1285
2:00:39 --> 2:00:51
do we need someone out there to trade with that's actually a very good question
1286
2:00:51 --> 2:00:[privacy contact redaction]in Fitz she's a former sub secretary of of
1287
2:00:55 --> 2:01:03
HUD with George HW Bush government she yeah so she and I talked about this
1288
2:01:03 --> 2:01:08
quite a bit a few years back I took you know how we trading within space okay
1289
2:01:08 --> 2:01:[privacy contact redaction]t Earth who we're trading with in space I don't
1290
2:01:11 --> 2:01:[privacy contact redaction]ion I don't know if we're trading with anyone it's
1291
2:01:15 --> 2:01:19
like you know there's there's evidence according to her I don't know anything
1292
2:01:19 --> 2:01:[privacy contact redaction]ing to her and her sources okay
1293
2:01:24 --> 2:01:30
we're actually trading with of planetary civilization whoever these they are I
1294
2:01:30 --> 2:01:33
don't know I have no idea I'm not getting into it because I don't know not
1295
2:01:33 --> 2:01:37
because I'm afraid talk about it because I know anything about it okay so these
1296
2:01:37 --> 2:01:[privacy contact redaction]ions I can't answer them I can I can provide a parameter and
1297
2:01:45 --> 2:01:51
you'll just have to maybe give me some some rope here in I'll take your word
1298
2:01:51 --> 2:01:58
for areas I'm well yeah I'm not gonna talk about UFOs or space aliens or any
1299
2:01:58 --> 2:02:[privacy contact redaction]ure change if I could tell you and guarantee
1300
2:02:05 --> 2:02:13
you like authoritarian Lee authoritarian with authority and to your satisfaction
1301
2:02:13 --> 2:02:19
everybody's satisfaction that Mars is a total dead end that it is a dead planet
1302
2:02:19 --> 2:02:26
with nothing whatsoever to offer how does that change the picture if that
1303
2:02:26 --> 2:02:31
were true improvable I don't think it does because as I said in my
1304
2:02:31 --> 2:02:38
presentation I mean you don't in the end you go straight to Mars and then after
1305
2:02:38 --> 2:02:42
going to Mars you can go to you know you can colonize the moon but the idea is if
1306
2:02:42 --> 2:02:46
you go into even further into space then whatever further you into space you go
1307
2:02:46 --> 2:02:[privacy contact redaction] back so I don't think it really
1308
2:02:49 --> 2:02:52
changes anything at all because the idea Trump is not the you know it's not the
1309
2:02:52 --> 2:03:00
end of it's just you know it's a step in the right direction okay I'm gonna
1310
2:03:00 --> 2:03:[privacy contact redaction] it there because anything else I say is gonna take us off into some kind
1311
2:03:04 --> 2:03:11
of space that's but if you would be open to you know an offline conversation with
1312
2:03:11 --> 2:03:[privacy contact redaction] through Charles I'd love to have that I think I could
1313
2:03:16 --> 2:03:[privacy contact redaction] not today you to get over my bad voice thank
1314
2:03:24 --> 2:03:[privacy contact redaction]e of my questions not really feeling well
1315
2:03:29 --> 2:03:34
please you've done you've done well for two hours Daniel will let you go in a
1316
2:03:34 --> 2:03:[privacy contact redaction] and Jeremy and then we'll finish with Stephen Dave column moving
1317
2:03:42 --> 2:03:[privacy contact redaction]en all this it seems to me we're looking at an
1318
2:03:51 --> 2:03:[privacy contact redaction]er Island kind of model we're trying not to starve ourselves to death so I
1319
2:03:56 --> 2:04:00
saw comments at the Club of Rome was wrong I would say they were
1320
2:04:00 --> 2:04:10
potentially premature where does Orban fit into this story you mean the the
1321
2:04:10 --> 2:04:[privacy contact redaction]or yeah yeah what says he seems to have a minister of Hungary
1322
2:04:18 --> 2:04:28
Orban behind him is the Vatican okay which means that he is the in my last
1323
2:04:28 --> 2:04:33
book which came out like three years ago called global projects at war I explained
1324
2:04:33 --> 2:04:36
that the fight is not so much between countries between global projects and a
1325
2:04:36 --> 2:04:[privacy contact redaction] is defined by several characteristics one has to have its own
1326
2:04:40 --> 2:04:48
conceptual base very clear to us it has to have its own economic model and and
1327
2:04:48 --> 2:04:53
its own intelligence apparatus which is one for example countries like Germany
1328
2:04:53 --> 2:04:57
and and and Japan could never be our global projects because they're
1329
2:04:57 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction]ates so right now you have six global projects at war
1330
2:05:04 --> 2:05:12
with each other one is working on you know call a new Babylon this is the
1331
2:05:12 --> 2:05:16
liberal banking financiers for the capital in New York another one is
1332
2:05:16 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction] is a great Jerusalem New Jerusalem that's based out of London
1333
2:05:25 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction]s the Rothschilds the British Royal Family another one is the
1334
2:05:29 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction] conceptually it's the Vatican ideologically it's the
1335
2:05:34 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction]ocracy and so Orban and company they're the representatives of
1336
2:05:39 --> 2:05:[privacy contact redaction] so when Orban speaks he speaks not as the leader of Hungary
1337
2:05:45 --> 2:05:50
but as a representative of one global project and which in cases in this
1338
2:05:50 --> 2:05:55
particular case is great European global project conceptually led and controlled
1339
2:05:55 --> 2:05:58
by the Vatican
1340
2:06:01 --> 2:06:06
that it seems to me anytime you need to bring in new players this idea of
1341
2:06:06 --> 2:06:13
infinite growth it ultimately is you're describing a Ponzi scheme and so when I
1342
2:06:13 --> 2:06:[privacy contact redaction]ates that's a group growing its its population I just
1343
2:06:18 --> 2:06:21
don't buy that model because I think what we have to do is figure out a not
1344
2:06:21 --> 2:06:[privacy contact redaction] to expand to the moon warning about using
1345
2:06:28 --> 2:06:33
money as a metric money's just a way of keeping track of who has claims to
1346
2:06:33 --> 2:06:[privacy contact redaction] the wealth in terms of resources in terms
1347
2:06:38 --> 2:06:42
of manpower in terms of brain power to do things so I just want to mention that
1348
2:06:42 --> 2:06:48
totally yeah that's one of the reasons there's there after dismantling Russia
1349
2:06:48 --> 2:06:56
because it's the wealthiest country on the planet Earth and it seems to me that
1350
2:06:56 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction]ed States plus Russia that to me
1351
2:07:01 --> 2:07:08
seems like a logical pair there's a seemingly you find which United States
1352
2:07:08 --> 2:07:13
because it's not a homogeneous country the Trump version the Trump version yeah
1353
2:07:13 --> 2:07:18
I'm not convinced Trump knew what he walked into but there was a trivial
1354
2:07:18 --> 2:07:22
thing that happened trivial on the scales you're talking about but not
1355
2:07:22 --> 2:07:27
trivial necessarily in terms of a move where a ton of gold moved from London to
1356
2:07:27 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction]ates has claimed but there's some who say it moved
1357
2:07:31 --> 2:07:38
to China this month big huge wad that London and there's gold defaults and
1358
2:07:38 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction]aying a role any thoughts yeah absolutely it's
1359
2:07:43 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction]ates and London and they're at war these are two totally different
1360
2:07:47 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction]e if you look at the Middle East you have London behind
1361
2:07:52 --> 2:07:[privacy contact redaction]ates behind Israel you look at who's behind Turkey
1362
2:07:57 --> 2:08:01
London is behind Turkey look at who controls the levers of power and in your
1363
2:08:01 --> 2:08:05
Ukraine it's the London intelligence who is controlling the levers of power in
1364
2:08:05 --> 2:08:[privacy contact redaction] right now London okay so the idea
1365
2:08:09 --> 2:08:13
is that London although they're out of Europe you know post-brexit they're
1366
2:08:13 --> 2:08:16
still trying to control the leaders of power in Europe okay so right now the
1367
2:08:16 --> 2:08:21
whole idea of the Paris-Berlin axis that's been broken and London isn't you
1368
2:08:21 --> 2:08:23
know taken over they don't have the problem with London as I said earlier
1369
2:08:23 --> 2:08:27
they've spent eight years doing nothing so they lost eight years of time which
1370
2:08:27 --> 2:08:31
is a big period of time to lose they don't have their own economic region
1371
2:08:31 --> 2:08:[privacy contact redaction]-brexit the idea was the idea in [privacy contact redaction]
1372
2:08:41 --> 2:08:48
regionalization of global economy and each region for it to work a macro region
1373
2:08:48 --> 2:08:[privacy contact redaction]ed million people so you'd have one region
1374
2:08:52 --> 2:08:[privacy contact redaction]ates and Mexico that's about five hundred million people
1375
2:08:55 --> 2:09:00
currency dollar Central America Latin America or South America and the
1376
2:09:00 --> 2:09:04
Caribbean islands that would be another region whatever they want to call it you
1377
2:09:04 --> 2:09:09
have the Paris Berlin axis that's European region yep China would be a
1378
2:09:09 --> 2:09:12
region of its own India would be a region of its own Russia would be divided
1379
2:09:12 --> 2:09:15
into two by the Ural Mountains I don't know if you remember back in I think it
1380
2:09:15 --> 2:09:19
was 2018 they were talking about having a second capital in Russia one in Moscow
1381
2:09:19 --> 2:09:[privacy contact redaction]e didn't understand what that meant well what it
1382
2:09:22 --> 2:09:26
meant was is that the world was getting ready for regionalizing its economies
1383
2:09:26 --> 2:09:30
and because Russia is very large if you divide Russia you know by the Ural
1384
2:09:30 --> 2:09:[privacy contact redaction]ern Russia would join Turkey and and and the the
1385
2:09:36 --> 2:09:44
the former Yugoslavia and Iran and then the the far eastern Russia with a
1386
2:09:44 --> 2:09:48
capital in Siberia would join the two Koreas in Japan and that would leave
1387
2:09:48 --> 2:09:[privacy contact redaction] you could actually join this Sunnis
1388
2:09:53 --> 2:09:56
and the Shiites together is if you offer them something on a platter and the idea
1389
2:09:56 --> 2:10:02
London's idea was to offer these people Israel on the platter which is why if
1390
2:10:02 --> 2:10:08
you remember back in [privacy contact redaction] a lady
1391
2:10:08 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction] asked Henry Kissinger he said that Israel in 10 years is going to be
1392
2:10:13 --> 2:10:17
you know disappear that was [privacy contact redaction]ion again
1393
2:10:17 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction]ood and he repeated the you know his answer and
1394
2:10:21 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction] Jacob Rothschild somebody who's also very well informed he
1395
2:10:25 --> 2:10:27
basically said the same thing and the idea that Israel is gonna you know
1396
2:10:27 --> 2:10:33
disappear in 10 years time and so the idea in 2016 was to join the Sunnis and
1397
2:10:33 --> 2:10:38
the Shiites with London and you know Israel would disappear and the whole
1398
2:10:38 --> 2:10:42
thing with Hillary Clinton winning the elections in the United States okay was
1399
2:10:42 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction] and so London came up with plan B that plan B
1400
2:10:48 --> 2:10:53
was was Macron was literally a carbon copy of Napoleon the third I'm not gonna
1401
2:10:53 --> 2:10:[privacy contact redaction]ain it right now who and why it's in I go and talk about in my book but it
1402
2:10:57 --> 2:11:00
says I think was the like the only person in the world who said Macron is
1403
2:11:00 --> 2:11:[privacy contact redaction] and then about a year later the economists had it on the cover
1404
2:11:04 --> 2:11:08
you know Macron looking like Napoleon the third okay so I was dead out on that
1405
2:11:08 --> 2:11:15
and so the idea is again you separate the world into in two regions and
1406
2:11:15 --> 2:11:21
that's and and that's the idea behind what we're seeing and again going back
1407
2:11:21 --> 2:11:29
to our bond or bonus is a representative is the face is the face of the Jesuit
1408
2:11:29 --> 2:11:[privacy contact redaction]ures which is part of the Vatican conceptually and part of the landed
1409
2:11:32 --> 2:11:[privacy contact redaction]ocracy ideologically in Europe.
1410
2:11:36 --> 2:11:[privacy contact redaction] we're gonna get moving one more question or you're done?
1411
2:11:42 --> 2:11:44
No I'm done.
1412
2:11:44 --> 2:11:[privacy contact redaction]ions.
1413
2:11:46 --> 2:11:49
All right we'll save we'll save Daniel. Jeremy then finish with Stephen.
1414
2:11:49 --> 2:11:[privacy contact redaction] a quick few things I'm just wondering whether you
1415
2:11:54 --> 2:11:59
wanted to comment on the mass migration that's occurred into Europe and into the
1416
2:11:59 --> 2:12:[privacy contact redaction] seems like a dumping ground now and also wondered if you I
1417
2:12:04 --> 2:12:[privacy contact redaction] asked about Auburn and Hungary I was wondering what your views were on
1418
2:12:10 --> 2:12:15
Turkey because I don't think people are thinking about Turkey at all and how
1419
2:12:15 --> 2:12:19
this fits into into all of it and obviously in the UK we didn't get
1420
2:12:19 --> 2:12:23
Brexit we've not had nothing it's we know better Brian no no Brexit whatsoever
1421
2:12:23 --> 2:12:[privacy contact redaction] with these things actually make me feel better for a
1422
2:12:35 --> 2:12:42
few moments it's it's it's organic so it's it's you know it's it's honey thing
1423
2:12:42 --> 2:12:[privacy contact redaction] it's still disgusting so if you really look at it from my high
1424
2:12:51 --> 2:12:57
up in our vantage point that there's similarities in in all these migrations
1425
2:12:57 --> 2:13:[privacy contact redaction]ates and from the Middle East into
1426
2:13:03 --> 2:13:08
into Europe England and Spain and France and Germany and and so on and so forth
1427
2:13:08 --> 2:13:[privacy contact redaction] behind all these migrations is the Vatican okay
1428
2:13:14 --> 2:13:[privacy contact redaction]ures which has been around for 2,000 years to
1429
2:13:20 --> 2:13:25
move anything you want now why would they be doing this exactly if you think
1430
2:13:25 --> 2:13:30
about it the Vatican is is Vatican is a think of Vatican is black international
1431
2:13:30 --> 2:13:36
okay it's the rise of the fourth right okay we're talking about right-wing
1432
2:13:36 --> 2:13:[privacy contact redaction]ures today's Europe is pussy lanimous you know homosexuals
1433
2:13:43 --> 2:13:[privacy contact redaction]us all these kinds of things where men wear skirts and you know so on
1434
2:13:49 --> 2:13:55
and so forth and high heels shoes and the idea is you can move into Europe all
1435
2:13:55 --> 2:14:03
these masses of very angry very young very hungry very religious young men
1436
2:14:03 --> 2:14:07
they're not families they're men young men who are absolutely appalled by what
1437
2:14:07 --> 2:14:13
they're seeing and through them using them you destroy all this pussy lanimous
1438
2:14:13 --> 2:14:18
Europe okay which has forgot to recreate and procreate and you know at least
1439
2:14:18 --> 2:14:[privacy contact redaction] it and then what you do is the mass comes off and you have
1440
2:14:22 --> 2:14:[privacy contact redaction]atorship okay the idea is as once you use the
1441
2:14:28 --> 2:14:32
North Africans on the Africans and the Muslims and the Arabs to destroy this
1442
2:14:32 --> 2:14:37
pussy lanimous Europe then the mass comes off and you have this hardcore you
1443
2:14:37 --> 2:14:[privacy contact redaction]alin Chinggis Khan dictatorship which is
1444
2:14:42 --> 2:14:[privacy contact redaction]e across Europe and so the idea is that future
1445
2:14:47 --> 2:14:53
Europe okay is going to be and the same and the same forces are moving these
1446
2:14:53 --> 2:15:[privacy contact redaction]ates the ideas is that Europe itself is going to be
1447
2:15:01 --> 2:15:[privacy contact redaction] you know the the First Division Europe
1448
2:15:07 --> 2:15:12
which is going to be again conceptually the Vatican is going to be Bavaria it's
1449
2:15:12 --> 2:15:[privacy contact redaction] Germany it's going to be northern Italy you know
1450
2:15:16 --> 2:15:22
European black nobility okay that will be one and an Austro-Hungarian Empire
1451
2:15:22 --> 2:15:25
that's where Orban fits in as well okay because you're looking at the rebirth of
1452
2:15:25 --> 2:15:30
the fourth right the second Europe with the Hansa League okay Hansa 2.0 so
1453
2:15:30 --> 2:15:34
that would be the Scandinavian countries Holland Belgium and England
1454
2:15:34 --> 2:15:37
unless they you know find their own economic region which they haven't thus
1455
2:15:37 --> 2:15:[privacy contact redaction] back into Europe okay if they don't do
1456
2:15:43 --> 2:15:[privacy contact redaction]ralia but then again the problem
1457
2:15:47 --> 2:15:[privacy contact redaction]ates so you know it you don't really
1458
2:15:53 --> 2:15:[privacy contact redaction]ates and England they're there at war okay it's
1459
2:15:57 --> 2:16:01
it's it's a war of attrition and it's it's a it's a real war because Trump
1460
2:16:01 --> 2:16:[privacy contact redaction]ands that you know whether we're talking about Canada whether we're
1461
2:16:04 --> 2:16:09
talking about England these are the enemies these are his enemies okay these
1462
2:16:09 --> 2:16:14
are the liberal banking financiers and so the war is is on that end and the
1463
2:16:14 --> 2:16:[privacy contact redaction] division Europe we were talking about you know former pigs south of
1464
2:16:18 --> 2:16:25
France Spain south of Italy you know a former countries of the Warsaw Pact such
1465
2:16:25 --> 2:16:29
as Bulgaria Romania and as Russia takes them over which there's a really good
1466
2:16:29 --> 2:16:35
chance that it will okay after they win the war and so on and so forth so you're
1467
2:16:35 --> 2:16:40
going to be seeing a division of Europe into into three European Union is
1468
2:16:40 --> 2:16:49
dead I think it's clear to everybody England's elite you know there's just
1469
2:16:49 --> 2:16:53
too much inbreeding and so they don't really have a model they can call their
1470
2:16:53 --> 2:16:58
own another idea that they've had is again joined forces with with India but
1471
2:16:58 --> 2:17:02
that hasn't really worked out very well and so they're between you know the
1472
2:17:03 --> 2:17:[privacy contact redaction] they don't have a model that have a language to describe their own
1473
2:17:06 --> 2:17:12
future okay and so I think they're gonna have a hard time and and and King
1474
2:17:12 --> 2:17:17
Charles III he's an income poop really you know whoever is gonna take over
1475
2:17:17 --> 2:17:[privacy contact redaction]s I think it's gonna be too late so that's the problem that's the
1476
2:17:22 --> 2:17:29
problem as far as the immigration into Europe which it's an absolutely organized
1477
2:17:29 --> 2:17:[privacy contact redaction]em absolutely organized because it takes a lot of money and a lot of
1478
2:17:35 --> 2:17:[privacy contact redaction]e across the entire continent and
1479
2:17:40 --> 2:17:45
you know you're talking about millions of people being moved into Europe and I
1480
2:17:45 --> 2:17:49
think that's I hope that answers your question as far as Turkey is concerned
1481
2:17:49 --> 2:17:[privacy contact redaction]s okay it's the great to run it's the it's
1482
2:17:54 --> 2:18:[privacy contact redaction] okay of the red project the so you had you have New
1483
2:18:08 --> 2:18:13
Jerusalem that's London you had New Babylon that's New York the financial
1484
2:18:13 --> 2:18:[privacy contact redaction] the Tehran project you have that tune that's
1485
2:18:16 --> 2:18:[privacy contact redaction] a Eurasian project with the capital of
1486
2:18:21 --> 2:18:25
Moscow that's not that's not putting okay it's Eurasian project it's the
1487
2:18:25 --> 2:18:[privacy contact redaction]e of Chinggis Khan okay these are different global
1488
2:18:29 --> 2:18:[privacy contact redaction] in Russia right now is Horton doesn't
1489
2:18:34 --> 2:18:41
like the idea like none of us like the idea of any kind of a union with China
1490
2:18:41 --> 2:18:49
okay put this spend his entire life as a colonel in Russian KGB in Dresden okay
1491
2:18:49 --> 2:18:56
he's absolutely he loves Germany so his idea is to turn Russia into Moscow third
1492
2:18:56 --> 2:19:[privacy contact redaction] okay if we become part of Moscow third Rome project over a
1493
2:19:02 --> 2:19:06
generation and a half European landed aristocracy will destroy our country
1494
2:19:06 --> 2:19:[privacy contact redaction]op being Russian Orthodox will be something totally
1495
2:19:10 --> 2:19:14
different okay and he doesn't really want to go to you know to the east
1496
2:19:14 --> 2:19:18
although we are Asians we're not Europeans who are Asians if you look at
1497
2:19:18 --> 2:19:23
the size of the Soviet Russia okay and so the idea here is would be to repeat
1498
2:19:23 --> 2:19:[privacy contact redaction] okay the first you know a grand a grand horde
1499
2:19:33 --> 2:19:[privacy contact redaction] was the Chinggis Hans the second was the union between Stalin and Mao
1500
2:19:37 --> 2:19:42
Tse Dung which was short-lived because Stalin was killed in 1953 okay and so the
1501
2:19:42 --> 2:19:[privacy contact redaction] and turning the Russian-Chinese alliance
1502
2:19:49 --> 2:19:[privacy contact redaction]e of Chinggis Han but Putin doesn't want anything to do with
1503
2:19:52 --> 2:19:[privacy contact redaction] Russians don't either the problem we have we have no
1504
2:19:59 --> 2:20:03
ideological base so we really can't define what we are okay which means that
1505
2:20:03 --> 2:20:07
the Chinese will lead us which means that the Chinese have no friends they
1506
2:20:07 --> 2:20:[privacy contact redaction]s and I don't think Russians want to be poodles Chinese
1507
2:20:12 --> 2:20:[privacy contact redaction]s and that's our biggest problem okay we have no project
1508
2:20:17 --> 2:20:[privacy contact redaction] one because we've always had one
1509
2:20:20 --> 2:20:[privacy contact redaction] is a very strong project ideologically based
1510
2:20:25 --> 2:20:30
but because ideology has been erased from Russian Constitution by the people who
1511
2:20:30 --> 2:20:[privacy contact redaction]-soviet Constitution which has a bullet the
1512
2:20:34 --> 2:20:[privacy contact redaction] to give you an idea who wrote our
1513
2:20:37 --> 2:20:[privacy contact redaction]itution hasn't been changed the Constitution was
1514
2:20:42 --> 2:20:[privacy contact redaction] in the period of rape of Russia and so we have
1515
2:20:46 --> 2:20:52
a problem and that problem is we need to define who we are until we do all these
1516
2:20:52 --> 2:20:[privacy contact redaction] ideological base and advantage over us
1517
2:20:58 --> 2:21:[privacy contact redaction] bastion of Christian Europe really at
1518
2:21:02 --> 2:21:07
the moment well the problem is is that the idea of Moscow third Rome is that's
1519
2:21:07 --> 2:21:11
what they're pushing us you know and towards towards this European based
1520
2:21:11 --> 2:21:17
statement and put likes that idea he loves Germany because he's been agent
1521
2:21:17 --> 2:21:22
there all his life you know the the you know Schiller etc etc but the point is
1522
2:21:22 --> 2:21:27
that we're not we're not European and I've always thought the Americans have
1523
2:21:27 --> 2:21:31
been trying to keep the Russians and the child Germans apart because you've got
1524
2:21:31 --> 2:21:[privacy contact redaction]uring capability that's also true but it's a very very
1525
2:21:35 --> 2:21:42
powerful nation though the idea of Moscow third Rome there'll be a but that
1526
2:21:42 --> 2:21:47
would be a conceptually speaking a Vatican project okay but because Germany
1527
2:21:47 --> 2:21:51
is part of again we're talking about we're talking about the rebirth of you
1528
2:21:51 --> 2:21:57
know the the the the fourth Frank okay the Roman Empire of German nations of
1529
2:21:57 --> 2:22:02
Germanic nations and that's the project that Putin wants to be a part of except
1530
2:22:02 --> 2:22:07
we are not European we are Asian okay and there is this part of me between
1531
2:22:07 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction]ly who we are and who we should be
1532
2:22:10 --> 2:22:15
all right Jeremy thank you so Daniel's voice thank you Jeremy
1533
2:22:15 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction]ions and then we'll go can I ask one simple question
1534
2:22:19 --> 2:22:24
did Trump know what he was getting into or did I don't know this is the guy who
1535
2:22:24 --> 2:22:29
said the other day that Spain is part of bricks okay this is the guy who
1536
2:22:29 --> 2:22:32
absolutely convinced that the one World War two he doesn't know anything about
1537
2:22:32 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction]ory of jar he's a businessman he doesn't need to know I mean bush was a
1538
2:22:36 --> 2:22:[privacy contact redaction]ates you don't need to be smart to be
1539
2:22:39 --> 2:22:43
president is a good negotiator he doesn't understand Russia's history has
1540
2:22:43 --> 2:22:48
no idea what this war is about and if you look at the minimal requirements of
1541
2:22:48 --> 2:22:53
you know of Trump's you know white paper and the minimum that Russia is he's
1542
2:22:53 --> 2:22:56
asking for which is one of the reasons we went to war in the first place
1543
2:22:56 --> 2:23:03
there's not one point that they have in common okay and unfortunately the
1544
2:23:03 --> 2:23:[privacy contact redaction] a bigger button that you do then and it works and you know
1545
2:23:06 --> 2:23:09
the argument they used with North Korea doesn't really work in the case of Russia
1546
2:23:09 --> 2:23:[privacy contact redaction] a lot more nuclear weapons we don't want
1547
2:23:12 --> 2:23:[privacy contact redaction] and put said he doesn't want to do that okay but then you also
1548
2:23:16 --> 2:23:20
said that what's the world about Russia all right
1549
2:23:20 --> 2:23:30
Stephen yeah so um Daniel so looking at Trump I think that he has an amazing
1550
2:23:30 --> 2:23:[privacy contact redaction]e he's a great storyteller you never know what
1551
2:23:36 --> 2:23:39
he's gonna say next so people are completely including me completely
1552
2:23:39 --> 2:23:[privacy contact redaction]awn in and it seems to me that it doesn't really matter
1553
2:23:46 --> 2:23:50
whether he knows what he's talking about rehistory and all that because he has
1554
2:23:50 --> 2:23:[privacy contact redaction]s about what is wrong at least they kind of coincide
1555
2:23:56 --> 2:24:00
with mine but not on everything and so a lot of people are briefing against
1556
2:24:00 --> 2:24:05
Trump before he's had a chance to you know he's only been in power for two
1557
2:24:05 --> 2:24:08
weeks but they're still saying he's not the real deal you know we can't trust
1558
2:24:08 --> 2:24:[privacy contact redaction] you know so do you think that if you're a
1559
2:24:13 --> 2:24:[privacy contact redaction]ually who do worse and follow Trump I
1560
2:24:19 --> 2:24:23
don't think we have a choice he's the president of the United States this is
1561
2:24:23 --> 2:24:27
the guy that you know the Americans decided to lead the country I think it's
1562
2:24:27 --> 2:24:30
a much better choice than anything else out there there's no doubt about that
1563
2:24:30 --> 2:24:[privacy contact redaction] which the way it should be if you know he's a
1564
2:24:34 --> 2:24:[privacy contact redaction] the works in it you know in the in the
1565
2:24:39 --> 2:24:43
linear fashion okay Russia is a very old country we've been around for over a
1566
2:24:43 --> 2:24:48
thousand years okay which means you know you know the Bolshoi theater is older
1567
2:24:48 --> 2:24:[privacy contact redaction] to give you an idea okay you know time
1568
2:24:52 --> 2:24:[privacy contact redaction] okay so we have a very long history very deep
1569
2:24:58 --> 2:25:[privacy contact redaction]ory okay we're not you know a country in in Western Africa would you
1570
2:25:03 --> 2:25:07
know that was some African tribal chief as its leader and so Trump you know
1571
2:25:07 --> 2:25:12
trying to manhandle Russia that's not gonna work okay the problem with Trump
1572
2:25:12 --> 2:25:16
is that you know his team he was never very good at picking the right people
1573
2:25:16 --> 2:25:[privacy contact redaction] term he had two people that he could trust General
1574
2:25:23 --> 2:25:[privacy contact redaction]eve Bannon and you know the deep state got rid of these people in a
1575
2:25:27 --> 2:25:31
matter of months and then everyone else on the team was you know his enemy and
1576
2:25:31 --> 2:25:34
Trump was unfortunately was not very good you know at picking his picking his
1577
2:25:34 --> 2:25:39
team it looks better this time around okay he had all these IT guys on his side
1578
2:25:39 --> 2:25:42
by IT guys on his side they're not his people they're traitors
1579
2:25:42 --> 2:25:46
unfortunately they realized you know where the power base is right now so the
1580
2:25:46 --> 2:25:49
kids does ring but doesn't mean that they trust them these are the people of
1581
2:25:49 --> 2:25:[privacy contact redaction]abbing in the back time and again and then everything in their power
1582
2:25:53 --> 2:26:00
to to you know limit the free speech etc etc and that the same could be said for
1583
2:26:00 --> 2:26:[privacy contact redaction]e who are traditionally from the Democratic
1584
2:26:03 --> 2:26:08
Party and so it remains to be seen because some of the hardcore people in
1585
2:26:08 --> 2:26:[privacy contact redaction]e went to bat for Trump they've been marginalized
1586
2:26:14 --> 2:26:[privacy contact redaction]e there what's her name Laura Loomer engaged a good friend
1587
2:26:20 --> 2:26:22
of mine she didn't totally marginalized she's been one of the most effective
1588
2:26:22 --> 2:26:[privacy contact redaction] back okay my like nobody was on Trump's side she was like
1589
2:26:26 --> 2:26:31
you know right there and now she's been marginalized and so many other very
1590
2:26:31 --> 2:26:[privacy contact redaction]e will be like cogs in the machine and getting Trump elected
1591
2:26:35 --> 2:26:41
like you know I don't know you and so that's not a good sign okay again being
1592
2:26:41 --> 2:26:[privacy contact redaction]ates is probably the hardest job in the world
1593
2:26:44 --> 2:26:51
and the problem is is that Trump and Putin they can have a very good working
1594
2:26:51 --> 2:26:[privacy contact redaction]ands that okay and he doesn't doesn't get you know
1595
2:26:57 --> 2:27:[privacy contact redaction]ed but by all these other side deals which there's a good chance he
1596
2:27:01 --> 2:27:06
might be okay because as you said he's very entertaining but you know being a
1597
2:27:06 --> 2:27:10
leader and being an entertainer these are two different things so it's easy to
1598
2:27:10 --> 2:27:[privacy contact redaction] talk shit as we are but it's you know being actually president
1599
2:27:13 --> 2:27:[privacy contact redaction]ates it's a hard thing to do so remains to be seen okay but if
1600
2:27:18 --> 2:27:[privacy contact redaction] of the team and actually get everybody
1601
2:27:23 --> 2:27:28
working you know on the same team together towards you know the objective
1602
2:27:28 --> 2:27:33
of working with Russia because Russia is not America's enemy historically we've
1603
2:27:33 --> 2:27:37
saved America's ass in the Civil War had it not been for us may not have the
1604
2:27:37 --> 2:27:[privacy contact redaction]ates must never forget that okay
1605
2:27:42 --> 2:27:48
Daniel was JD Vance a good choice as vice president again there's there's a
1606
2:27:48 --> 2:27:54
lot of you know pros and cons you can you know he's invested in things which
1607
2:27:54 --> 2:27:[privacy contact redaction]ionable as far as some of this you know technology is concerned but
1608
2:27:58 --> 2:28:02
then again I think it's too you know too early to tell I think when you know for
1609
2:28:02 --> 2:28:05
me the the marker is that you know when you have all these people supporting
1610
2:28:05 --> 2:28:[privacy contact redaction] agenda it's not America first Israel first and that's the case
1611
2:28:09 --> 2:28:[privacy contact redaction]ly whose interest do you really represent
1612
2:28:13 --> 2:28:17
okay so that for me that's a red flag more than anything else that's what means
1613
2:28:17 --> 2:28:[privacy contact redaction]e you know swearing their allegiance to
1614
2:28:22 --> 2:28:24
It's like wait a minute aren't you the you know you president of the United States
1615
2:28:24 --> 2:28:27
shouldn't be doing that to the United States allegiance not naturally in a
1616
2:28:27 --> 2:28:33
foreign country so that's one of them and the other the other is them because
1617
2:28:33 --> 2:28:37
remember sorry to interrupt you like you know London is very much looking for
1618
2:28:37 --> 2:28:[privacy contact redaction]roy Israel okay absolutely actively working
1619
2:28:43 --> 2:28:[privacy contact redaction]roy Israel and the idea is to get all the Israeli money into London's
1620
2:28:47 --> 2:28:51
banks okay so London is absolutely behind Hamas it's absolutely behind
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Hezbollah it's absolutely like London has been you know part of the Middle
1622
2:28:56 --> 2:29:[privacy contact redaction] game for for you know for over a century okay go back to the creation of
1623
2:29:01 --> 2:29:05
the Sauds in Saudi Arabia the same could be said for Latin America before the
1624
2:29:05 --> 2:29:[privacy contact redaction]rine you had London there now I want to remind
1625
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you that that Simon Bolivar the great El Libertador he forever was an agent of
1626
2:29:13 --> 2:29:17
the British Empire until he finally realized that in his dying days and
1627
2:29:17 --> 2:29:21
became the great libertadon okay but he was a Freemason working you know for the
1628
2:29:21 --> 2:29:[privacy contact redaction]n't forget that so London a lot of interests in
1629
2:29:27 --> 2:29:[privacy contact redaction]ed States and then fighting them
1630
2:29:32 --> 2:29:40
Daniel so overall so there are a lot on our side briefing against Trump at the
1631
2:29:40 --> 2:29:43
moment when he hasn't really had the chance to prove it but I agree with you
1632
2:29:43 --> 2:29:49
that Israel's Bivoured like to say the least and also the mRNA the half a
1633
2:29:49 --> 2:29:54
trillion dollars which has been promised to the mRNA technology apparently I
1634
2:29:54 --> 2:29:[privacy contact redaction]er about that but anyway um what do you think of
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2:29:59 --> 2:30:04
the press secretary of the White House I don't know I mean these people are not
1636
2:30:04 --> 2:30:[privacy contact redaction]e are nothing she's very good-looking when I would I go out with
1637
2:30:07 --> 2:30:12
her no you know you know I like these kinds of girls I don't I can't stand
1638
2:30:12 --> 2:30:16
them hey I don't like these kinds of people I know what you mean yeah but but
1639
2:30:16 --> 2:30:20
what do you think of her competence and confidence I mean it's I don't think
1640
2:30:20 --> 2:30:24
it's really difficult to be competent can all things considered only she needs
1641
2:30:24 --> 2:30:29
to do is to tell things as they are which is a you know breath of fresh air
1642
2:30:29 --> 2:30:33
it's funny I think it's really funny that we're talking about you know this
1643
2:30:33 --> 2:30:38
and yeah I agree with you yeah but I come from a different world
1644
2:30:38 --> 2:30:45
Steve when I come from yeah but what amazes me is that so she what's the
1645
2:30:45 --> 2:30:[privacy contact redaction] no idea what I mean yeah so she is unashamedly
1646
2:30:53 --> 2:30:58
conservative as far as I can see absolutely unashamedly and the British
1647
2:30:58 --> 2:31:[privacy contact redaction]e could never and certainly not the Swedish system could
1648
2:31:03 --> 2:31:12
never produce that woman she's 27 years old I don't know I mean we're talking
1649
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about having Alex Jones as a press secretary for a while all right come on
1650
2:31:18 --> 2:31:25
let's go you've sacrificed your body for the good of the group Daniel thank you
1651
2:31:25 --> 2:31:32
so much for doing something happens whatever it is but anyway thanks guys I'm
1652
2:31:32 --> 2:31:[privacy contact redaction] not feeling well
1653
2:31:39 --> 2:31:46
and edit all the cops out Daniel that's about 90% okay unlikely
1654
2:31:46 --> 2:31:56
Daniel said all right thank you Daniel thanks everybody time you guys are
1655
2:31:56 --> 2:32:[privacy contact redaction]ed on my on my webpage on my yeah on my YouTube channel Astralin TV
1656
2:32:01 --> 2:32:05
there's a lot of amazing videos in English and most of it is in Spanish
1657
2:32:05 --> 2:32:[privacy contact redaction] an English channel there as well do YouTube in English is called
1658
2:32:13 --> 2:32:[privacy contact redaction] my private channel Astralin dot media where we have
1659
2:32:18 --> 2:32:[privacy contact redaction]e in English and Spanish it's all dubbed and
1660
2:32:22 --> 2:32:27
then subtitled in both languages and we do our weekly conceptual intelligence
1661
2:32:27 --> 2:32:34
reviews we're analyze things from much high vantage point the webinars all
1662
2:32:34 --> 2:32:[privacy contact redaction]ralin dot media or my YouTube channel and just go
1663
2:32:39 --> 2:32:[privacy contact redaction] the English and the Spanish
1664
2:32:42 --> 2:32:[privacy contact redaction]ic analysis wonderful to work
1665
2:32:47 --> 2:32:52
great work thanks everybody bye for now he's gone thank you Charles thanks
1666
2:32:52 --> 2:32:57
thanks everybody bye bye bye