Sunday Live: DHS Confirms MULTIPLE KILL SQUADS Now Hunting Down President Trump After Second Failed Assassination Attempt - FULL ALEX JONES SHOW - 09.22.2024
Former head of the National Institutes of Health, Francis Collins, confronts Alex Jones about the poison shot that killed over 20 million people. Dr. Collins admits to the poison, but does not back down from the cover-up of the origin of the poison.
00:00:53.000Redeem yourself, turn state's evidence, like Redfield and others have started to do, and come all the way out because The globalist operation for depopulation and what these shots do, turning off the immune system, is all public, and it's not going away, and it's destroying faith in the system and in the medical system, and it's going to bring the system down.
00:01:12.000So those of you in the system need to join with the people, and you need to come out for Nuremberg, too, and be witnesses against those that will be held responsible.
00:01:21.000And you know the punishment for crimes against humanity.
00:01:23.000You know what that is for Nuremberg with the Nazis.
00:01:25.000All right, here is this confrontation.
00:04:18.000Royce White, strap in, smash mouth populism, here on Sunday Afternoon.
00:04:24.000Welcome back to the Alex Jones Show here on Sunday Afternoon.
00:04:32.000I'm your host, Royce White, here in the belly of the beast, Minneapolis, Minnesota.
00:04:37.000And as I was just saying before the break, I love seeing Alex Jones get right up in the face of the establishment and their shills, their running dogs, Dr. Collins, responsible for a lot of injury and death in our country and around the world through the vaccines.
00:04:53.000And it's just my opinion on the vaccine.
00:04:54.000Look, it's not an opinion, it's a fact.
00:04:56.000The entire vaccine industry is corrupt.
00:04:59.000We don't have to, you know, the COVID vaccines for sure.
00:05:17.000We can tell from the way that they handled the pandemic and the COVID-19 vaccines, there was an issue.
00:05:22.000But there's an issue with the entire vaccine industry.
00:05:26.000I mean, there's a fundamental problem with the entire vaccine industry.
00:05:30.000And all you got to do is go back and look at the history.
00:05:33.000Alex Jones has done a great job of exposing some of that history.
00:05:37.000But I was just at an incredible health summit, World Health Freedom Summit here in Alexandria, Minnesota.
00:05:45.000Not last weekend, but the weekend before, I believe.
00:05:47.000It all runs together when you're on the campaign trail.
00:05:49.000But I was at this summit and they had a bunch of great presentations.
00:05:54.000I saw my good friend Kenny Maurer, who is a Hall of Fame referee or will be should be a Hall of Fame NBA referee who said, hey, I don't want to take the vaccine.
00:06:04.000I don't I don't want to take the vaccine and the NBA try to mandate it.
00:06:09.000I'm saying this all as a precursor to what I'm going to talk about today in terms of culture and sports and entertainment and where we've kind of lost some ground and where we need to pick back up some ground.
00:06:20.000But this this summer was incredible and they laid out A sequence of events where polio, for example, polio hit the scene.
00:06:59.000You have the military-industrial complex.
00:07:01.000You have the medical-industrial complex.
00:07:04.000And you have the media-industrial complex.
00:07:06.000All three of them, they work together.
00:07:08.000You know, on any given day, you can see a politician go on mainstream media to promote some, you know, part of that medical-industrial complex, promote another war, vice versa.
00:07:20.000If you really get down to the nitty-gritty, you find out that a lot of your media propaganda and a lot of your medical research, advanced research, is done in the military-industrial complex wing of our government and society.
00:07:33.000So, it's all connected, inextricably linked.
00:07:37.000So, none of my kids have been vaccinated.
00:08:11.000These used to be regular, accepted ideas.
00:08:14.000Now, I guess this is conspiracy theory.
00:08:16.000This is why, you know, you go to my Wikipedia, like I said, the last time I hosted, the opening line is, Royce White is a conspiracy theorist.
00:08:23.000No, I'm a conspiracy analyst, is what I am.
00:08:27.000There's a lot of conspiracy in this country.
00:08:30.000As the great Steve Bannon always says, there are no conspiracies, but there are no coincidences.
00:08:35.000That's kind of a wink and nod to tell you that conspiracy isn't really so conspiratorial.
00:08:43.000Collins, Fauci, a lot of them, the World Health Organization, it's right up in your face.
00:08:48.000The only conspiracy really is that they've done such a good job with entertaining people, uh, at places like, uh, the Minnesota Vikings football game that, that they can tell you it's a conspiracy or a conspiracy theory.
00:09:03.000That's, that's really, that's really what the conspiracy is.
00:09:06.000The conspiracy is to distract the American people and the people all across the world with bread and circuses.
00:10:20.000This is a mistake, partly because you got to, you know, when you're in a war, you're in a fight, you got to acknowledge and accept how effective your enemy is with their strategy.
00:10:32.000When you take the media institutions, when you take the academic institutions, when you run the entertainment industry, you have a monopoly on information.
00:10:43.000That's why the show is called Info Wars, right?
00:10:47.000There is a mainstream establishment monopoly on information itself.
00:12:27.000The solution can be that we start to fix the culture and we give people something better to live for and better to live by.
00:12:35.000But don't let them fool you into hiding in your little corner of the world.
00:12:43.000See, because when you do that, I use this example all the time, and I was telling some people down at US Bank Stadium today, Who live in Minnesota or from Minnesota, but they spend time down in Florida in Minnesota.
00:13:07.000Part of it's because of income taxes, and we tip our hat to the great state of Florida for having a much better income tax policy than Minnesota.
00:13:15.000In fact, if there's a hallmark of Minnesota's communism, it would be the state income tax, where we had an $18 billion surplus here in the state of Minnesota, and commie Governor Walz didn't give a single penny back to the working citizens.
00:13:30.000That, my friends, is what's on the horizon.
00:13:33.000However, It's also worthwhile to mention when you think that you're running from the front line, when you think that you're tucking tail and running to a better place somewhere else in the country, it's funny how quickly your commie governor becomes the pick to, let's say, get
00:14:30.000You got to hold the line where you are.
00:14:32.000And part of holding the line where you are is not getting so caught up and fearful of the possibility and potential for crime and violence out there in the metropolitan areas that you don't go out and stand firm for what you believe in, and even more importantly, preach and minister the gospel and the value of American citizenship.
00:15:12.000And even more of a modern marvel is to see how many people an American football game just draws.
00:15:18.000I mean, when you really see, when you visually see it, when you're there and you're not there just to get out of your car and, and kind of, you know, walk up to the arena or the stadium and, and walk in and get to your seat or get your, your, your snacks from the cassette stand.
00:15:31.000When you actually just sit back and watch it from an observational standpoint, it is breathtaking.
00:15:37.000How, just how many people, are there at one time. It's really mind-blowing. At least
00:15:45.000for me it was today. So I'm there and I see the thousands and thousands of Minnesota Vikings jerseys.
00:15:52.000Now what's great about it is, I'll talk about what's inspirational in a moment, but what's
00:15:58.000great about it is American football and American professional sports does
00:16:03.000bring out a mixed crowd of people who are engaged in their fandom because of a much broader sense
00:16:14.000of community outside of their politics. Right?
00:16:19.000I mean, people's politics are their politics.
00:16:22.000But sports has a way to bring all of the people from a given community together under the auspice of genuine, fair, and elite competition.
00:16:31.000That's what American, and that's what all professional sports does.
00:16:34.000Hell, that's what sports does down at your high school level, you know, down to the peewee level.
00:16:39.000As a matter of fact, there's, there's all kinds of tournaments all across the country.
00:16:42.000You could go off to on a, on a given weekend and you'll find people there who are the parents of, of young, young children, kids, teens that believe in many different things, but they're there together in one place under the auspice of genuine and fair competition.
00:17:00.000And that's why we went down there as a campaign.
00:17:03.000And I had about 10-11 campaign volunteers.
00:17:07.000One of my young up-and-coming Republicans, his name is Mason Madden, and he's holding the Royce White sign up, and we're walking against the grain of traffic.
00:17:17.000And being polite, just smiling and waving.
00:18:20.000And it dawned on me how when I was coming up, when I was coming up,
00:18:28.000I would have regarded that as a nuisance.
00:18:30.000I would have regarded him as something that's an irritant.
00:18:33.000And you can almost see, as people encounter what he's saying out there in front of the stadium, that many of them think of it as a nuisance.
00:18:41.000Even if they vote Republican, even if they may support Donald Trump, they find it that the football game is not really a place Where they should have to come and encounter a man preaching the gospel of Jesus Christ.
00:18:55.000I mean, you just know nobody wants to hear what he has to say.
00:18:58.000You can feel it when you're out there.
00:18:59.000When I saw him, I could feel that nobody really wanted to hear what he had to say.
00:19:03.000You know, and it's it's it's a strange.
00:19:08.000It's a strange kind of catch 22 right there in front of a football game, because at the same time where I say sports is valuable, it has value that it adds to society, it has become almost religious.
00:19:22.000So religious, in fact, that people reject the gospel of Jesus Christ right there in front of the stadium as it's an inconvenience.
00:19:30.000And there's something to be said for that, as to why our society has gone the way that it's gone.
00:19:34.000So I'm sitting there and I'm listening to him and he's saying, Jesus Christ is the way, the truth, and the light.
00:19:42.000And, you know, don't be damned to hell.
00:19:44.000Don't let your soul be damned to hell.
00:20:36.000But my point in saying and pointing that out is this.
00:20:40.000I want to keep talking about this, this cultural thing that the crisis of culture and sports and entertainment that we have in the next segment as well.
00:20:49.000But the point, the reason I point that out is this.
00:20:53.000Sports has a way of bringing people together, but we've, we've, we've siloed sports from politics and politics from education and education from, and, and it's just all these silos.
00:21:05.000There's all these little, these, these, these little, uh, you know, There are all these separations in our society, in our culture.
00:21:15.000You're not supposed to talk about this thing here.
00:21:17.000You're not supposed to talk about that thing there.
00:22:10.000And I know, I know it's inconvenient to go down there into the twin cities and to that metropolitan area, wherever that, that, that, that NFL football stadium is, or NBA arena is, or, or, or, you know, MLB stadium is in your respective city.
00:22:26.000I know it's inconvenient to go down and find a place to park and the city overcharges you to park on the street and everybody's price gouging each other.
00:22:34.000Cause they, I mean, we're living in inflationary times, right?
00:22:37.000I know it's inconvenient, but you got to ask yourself, what's more inconvenient?
00:22:42.000Going down to those places, smiling and waving and representing yourself as an individual citizen, but also the things that you believe in, representing that or living under communism.
00:22:56.000And that's what we failed to weigh and measure up until this point.
00:23:00.000You know, we've kind of looked at all of these things as somewhat of an inconvenience.
00:23:04.000Like, we let the Marxists and the Communists take over our schools, and so we reject that.
00:23:17.000Down there in Minneapolis in the belly of the beast here in Minneapolis.
00:23:20.000I'm in the belly of the beast here in Minneapolis.
00:23:22.000We got a problem with the crime, but we don't want to go down there and preach the gospel or we don't want to go down there and minister the value of American citizenship or the Republican Party platform or whatever party that that you believe in whatever party platform you believe.
00:23:36.000We don't want to do that though, right?
00:23:38.000And so I get myself to this place where I'm thinking we have to be down there every single home game.
00:23:49.000Because, you know, what you have to first check off of your list is, you know, before you throw too much condemnation, on people you know who may love sports more than they're involved with the church or they may know the stats of their favorite player more than they know uh you know what's going on in terms of the people who represent them in government in which way they vote on certain bills you can throw condemnation on them but you have to ask yourselves why would they think any different and so even myself where i have great contempt
00:24:24.000And it grows, trust me, on a daily basis, because I do encounter a lot of people who know exactly what's going on, and they're siding with these evil people on purpose anyway.
00:24:32.000They're making a conscious decision to do what's wrong.
00:24:35.000So those people deserve our condemnation and contempt.
00:24:38.000But there are a lot of people, a vast majority of people, who are falling through the cracks by default.
00:24:47.000There are a lot of people who, take it from me, I grew up in a culturally democrat community.
00:24:55.000I grew up in a black catholic community as well, so you could say there are plenty of traditional conservative values that were just Baked into the way that we thought.
00:25:05.000But culturally, politically, black communities all across this country remain culturally Democrat.
00:25:11.000Now you're seeing a shift and Donald Trump helped to bring about that shift in many ways.
00:25:18.000But regardless, some of these people, some of these people don't know any better.
00:25:27.000They don't even know what Marxism really is.
00:25:30.000I mean, they're just being told some fluffy, fictitious fairy tale about Marxism by some white liberal woman who was brainwashed and educated by a Marxist professor who came from the 60s who thought that Marxism and socialism were the only suitable rejection to capitalism because of the military-industrial complex and what they thought to be unrighteous wars.
00:26:18.000So they can't make an informed decision.
00:26:20.000So they don't understand the implications of what their views and beliefs, even casually, may really mean.
00:26:28.000And we have to, as Christians and as Americans who believe in redemption, we have to carry some level of grace when it comes to thinking about the future of this nation.
00:26:39.000But also, how do we go back and reach these people?
00:26:43.000And the great news coming out of Minnesota right now, out of my race with Amy Klobuchar, neck and neck with the independents.
00:26:50.000They said that us MAGA extremist Republicans could not perform with the independents and moderates.
00:26:56.000And the latest poll shows that me and Amy Klobuchar are deadlocked, dead heat with the independents, which is a very, very good sign for the direction of this country in this election cycle.
00:27:23.000I'm your host, Royce White, here in the belly of the beast, Minneapolis, Minnesota.
00:27:28.000And we are here this afternoon, here to talk to you about a good deal of things, good many things, political, cultural, so on and so forth.
00:27:38.000But before that, we got a message from the great Alex Jones himself.
00:27:50.000Justice Department trustee assigned to my case, personal and business bankruptcy, ordered without a court order or any reason, the doors of this facility shut.
00:28:02.000They lied and said it would just be for three days and they admitted the security would be for a month or permanently.
00:28:08.000The judge in Houston, Judge Lopez, had nothing to do with it.
00:28:15.000Then it hit the news they were going to close us.
00:28:17.000No judge's order, no nothing, just the Justice Department, who'd been involved in the case harassing me from the beginning for over a year and a half.
00:30:39.000So I need you to go to thealexjonestore.com that's separate from free speech, but there are advertisers here, big supporters, and get Alex Jones t-shirts, Patriot t-shirts.
00:33:06.000I had somebody come up to me today at the Vikings game in front of the stadium and say, hey, I heard you hosting on Alex Jones the other day.
00:33:31.000We got to protect that value and fight for that value.
00:33:34.000Now what I was talking about before the break is we cannot let the fear of everything that's happened in this country reach a level where we are afraid.
00:33:45.000We are too afraid to go down into the places that we need to go to change minds and hearts to win.
00:33:54.000There's no sense in even talking about politics if you're not willing to go somewhere to meet somebody on the road that disagrees with you and talk to them and try to change their mind.
00:34:07.000There's no reason to talk about politics anymore.
00:34:23.000Our founding fathers were brilliant and they get the freedom of speech, freedom of assembly, just like I'm saying, uh, just, just a moment ago is the greatest tool we've been given.
00:34:33.000No matter what the mainstream media lines up against us, just like Alex Jones did there in the airport, went right up to Dr. Collins and got in his grill and said, we know that you lied.
00:34:43.000We have the same power to do that, only the difference is Dr. Collins does know that he lied.
00:34:48.000He does know what this establishment's agenda is.
00:35:11.000Those people that are standing back there behind him, that are just going to get on the flight, they have no clue what's really going on in this country.
00:35:18.000And that is by intentional and brilliant design.
00:35:20.000They have no clue what's happening in the world around them, for the most part.
00:35:33.000We are that patriotic rebel force that is trying to help people wake up, wake up and realize All of these institutions have every incentive and motive you could possibly imagine to lie to you.
00:35:48.000Control at this level of this many people has to start with lies.
00:35:54.000It has to start with misinformation and propaganda.
00:36:16.000I was there right in front of the TV as a small child, you know, praying that Gary Anderson made the field goal back in In 1998, he shanked it to the left, and Gary Anderson's probably a great guy.
00:36:31.000I never really met him in person, but he was an incredible field goal kicker.
00:36:36.000He made a bunch of kicks over the course of his career.
00:36:40.000When he got right up to the moment to send us the Super Bowl, he shanked one.
00:36:44.000I'm sure wherever he is, he's still kicking himself at night because of it.
00:36:49.000Hopefully he's let it go, because at the end of the day, it's just a game.
00:36:52.000But the point I'm making is, You know, I'm a lifelong Vikings fan.
00:36:57.000You know, I was there today and the Vikings won and I'm happy about that because we all share some sense of community, some pride in our community, some pride in the place that we live.
00:37:06.000And that's why team sports is so popular.
00:37:09.000And you go back down, I can't tell you how many people I saw today out front that were from Iowa State, that were Iowa State grads.
00:37:15.000And there are a lot of them out there.
00:37:16.000I meet them all across the country and they're spread out all across the country.
00:37:20.000And we have that sense of pride in Iowa State, in Iowa State's sports, in Iowa State As a school.
00:37:58.000Because if you look at the metrics of what draws the most crowds on live television, for example, professional sports is far out in the head in terms of what draws the biggest live audience on all of live television.
00:38:13.000And presidential debates and things like that would also be high up there, which kind of tells you something about what our political entertainment has become.
00:38:33.000Don't throw the baby out with the bathwater, but we have to be hyper-focused, that we don't allow sports, entertainment, music, bread and circuses to distract us from everything else going on, especially at this moment in our nation's history, because we are on the verge of losing our freedoms.
00:38:51.000And even more dangerous than that, you know, I've been thinking about this and I was thinking about this today.
00:39:00.000You could see a scenario where they would find a way to make sure everything continues to work relatively well.
00:39:12.000The question is, do we as Americans believe that part of our civic duty and our American citizenship is to ensure that It works at a fundamental level for as many people as humanly possible.
00:39:27.000And that answer in the future is going to be no.
00:39:30.000In the future, you may still be able to go and get on the light rail, local transportation train here in town.
00:39:38.000You may still be able to go get on the light rail.
00:39:40.000You may still be able to go get in your vehicle, drive downtown Minneapolis Park, tailgate, have a beer.
00:39:46.000Have a bite to eat, go into the game, you know, pay electronically.
00:39:50.000In the future, they'll do an eye scan.
00:39:52.000It'll be a fingerprint or, you know, facial recognition, whatever the case may be.
00:39:57.000You may still be able to do those things, but your fellow American citizens will slowly lose their rights and freedoms.
00:40:04.000And even furthermore, they will slowly start to disappear.
00:40:08.000And you'll look up eventually and you'll go, wow.
00:40:11.000Wow, there used to be 70,000 people here, and now there's only 30,000.
00:40:16.000And you ask yourself, well, what good would that do this establishment?
00:40:21.000What good would it do to pull consumers?
00:40:25.000And when you think about consumers, when you think about consumer, don't just think about the profit and the money.
00:40:29.000Think about consumers as a metric of human energy, okay?
00:40:34.000When we talk about energy, when you talk about money and currency, what you're really talking about is the exchange of energy.
00:40:46.000Well, again, you see the population as stagnant.
00:40:51.000But the people like Dr. Collins, they see the population from a 30,000-foot view, and they see it as always increasing.
00:41:00.000Now, there are people who are starting to point out the fact that we might have a population problem, but it depends on which side of that football you're on.
00:41:09.000I mean, think, go back to World War II.
00:41:11.000I mean, you think, we lost 75 million people during World War II in six years.
00:41:20.000I think we're so desensitized to exponential math.
00:41:25.000I don't, I don't, I don't, I don't know that people fully grasp that level of death.
00:42:16.000And right now, you may still be able to go to a football game and enjoy it.
00:42:20.000And I'm not telling you you shouldn't, but you for damn sure better at least be thinking somewhere in your mind how important this political season is and the others that are going to come in the near future to try and stifle and spoil that agenda.
00:42:50.000You know, sports, in a way, is an example.
00:42:55.000Professional sports is, in a way, it's an example of the microcosm of little platoons that help America go, that help America thrive, that help America be America.
00:43:06.000The little platoons of the mom and the dad and the family and, you know, taking the daughter to soccer practice or the son and volunteer coaches and peewee football and, you know, going to those school boards, being on that school board.
00:43:28.000A lot of what shaped me into what I am today was done right there on a concrete or cement or asphalt basketball court at a park in a neighborhood that they tell you is too dangerous for you to go to.
00:43:42.000But I was able to survive out there playing basketball by myself.
00:43:45.000Now, could I have been hit by a straight bullet?
00:43:48.000There weren't that many instances where I was in danger of being hit by a straight bullet, but it happens.
00:43:53.000I'm not saying it doesn't happen across the country.
00:43:55.000The point is, you and I, we have to be willing to go down there, or I guarantee you, long-term, we will lose this country.
00:45:18.000So it's perfectly reasonable to talk about Kamala Harris's identity and ethnicity, especially since she wants to use it as the springboard to garner the blind faith of all of these black people and Janet Jackson.
00:45:35.000Because it's such a it's such an important cultural signal again for the Democrat Party and their platform and how it's starting to crumble.
00:45:42.000How Marxism always starts to implode on itself.
00:45:46.000They actually think they can go after Janet Jackson.
00:45:50.000They think they can cancel Janet Jackson.
00:46:24.000If you don't understand how influential mainstream media and some of these popular music icons are, then show up.
00:46:36.000At a concert the same way you do at a football game and you'll see there are very few things left in our society that even get people to come out in person.
00:46:45.000You can still order, you can order anything you want from Amazon.
00:46:49.000You can order anything you want from Uber Eats or Instacart.
00:46:52.000It started off as food and restaurants.
00:46:54.000Now, just bring me my Kleenex from Target, vis-a-vis my mobile app.
00:46:59.000You really don't have to leave the house that much.
00:47:02.000Now, your work is going to be remote too.
00:47:04.000I was listening to some remote learning.
00:47:08.000Everybody has a digital remote learning day now in their school week.
00:47:12.000They're shaping society to where you voluntarily give up your freedom of movement.
00:47:16.000Where it's culturally conceded that we don't really have to leave our homes.
00:48:08.000Never forget they tried to cancel Kyrie Irving.
00:48:11.000One of the best basketball players of all time, and I'm a pretty good basketball player myself, but when you talk about pure skill and talent, Kyrie Irving is one of the best basketball players of all time.
00:48:24.000And you all remember when he posted the clip of Alex Jones talking about how this entire information war is being waged and they tried to cancel him.
00:49:39.000And I mean she is, I'm not saying she can do no wrong.
00:49:43.000What I'm saying is, compared to Kamala Harris, who is Kamala Harris in the shadow of Janet Jackson?
00:49:50.000I challenge anybody listening to this right now to go to your phone, or wherever you get your music, you go download Velvet Rope, the album, and you go play Velvet Rope today on this Sunday morning, and you open up some windows and pull those blinds back and get some fresh air, and you tell me that that album doesn't make your day feel a little bit better.
00:50:09.000What has Kamala Harris ever done for the black community?
00:50:15.000And I like Janet Jackson saying it, and now they're gonna call Janet, She's going to get the call and she's going to apologize and walk the statements back.
00:50:22.000But her first instinct is the instinct that many black people are having.
00:50:26.000And I only bring it up to say, don't be scared to go down into the metropolitan areas because they're already starting to think the same thing you think out there.
00:51:29.000Welcome, ladies and gentlemen, to the Alex Jones Show.
00:51:32.000I am your host for the hour, Jason Burmess.
00:51:35.000And today we're going to be talking about a subject, again, that transcends left and right and is a reality when it comes to what's really going on in space.
00:52:06.000We're seeing these headlines everywhere.
00:52:08.000Trump is now ludicrously saying that we're going to go to Mars during his administration.
00:52:17.000He's not even talking about human beings.
00:52:20.000He's talking about landing a large scale rocket.
00:52:25.000on Mars, on the movement to put human beings there.
00:52:30.000Now, the reason I'm choosing this as a subject is because we have to realize that the vast majority of our space program is, one, about weapons and communication systems.
00:52:43.000It is weaponizing space on a mass level, okay?
00:52:47.000That's numero uno, and we're going to show you that in a moment.
00:52:51.000Then, we have to also understand it's putting us Into the virtual arena.
00:53:28.000Within two years, the first uncrewed starships launched to Mars during the next Earth-Mars transfer window to test landing reliability.
00:53:40.000Now listen, Just the rocket stuff we have going on here.
00:53:45.000What's currently going on in the ISS, we're also going to illustrate that, that these astronauts who were supposed to be there for a couple days are now stuck there until about February.
00:53:54.000They're about 250 miles above the planet in low Earth orbit.
00:54:21.000First of all, before we get there, I want people to understand that space is obviously not a uniform thing, just like we don't always know what's going on around our planet.
00:54:33.000And I, and I think that NASA has a place that we do need to learn more about our earth, but that's the thing.
00:54:49.000NASA discovers an invisible electric field surrounding the Earth, claiming it is as important as gravity.
00:54:57.000Now, I want people to understand this.
00:54:58.000There's so much going on around us that is invisible to the eye, that even transcends The technology that we have now developed.
00:55:09.000Yes, we have created wireless networks of information and beyond.
00:55:14.000But when you look at the magnetosphere, the ionosphere, the stratosphere, the discovery of even the Van Allen radiation belts, by the way, that came right before the Apollo missions during Gemini.
00:55:30.000Okay, so not that long ago, and allegedly, Human beings, for the first time since the Apollo missions, and for the first time women ever, you'd think that'd be a big story, just went past the Van Allen belts, actually.
00:55:45.000So, just so everybody understands that, this Polaris Dawn, which we're going to get into, that just took place, it is essential to understand how far we really maybe, maybe, in putting humans in space.
00:56:02.000We got a jam-packed hour for you, and you're gonna want to pay attention.
00:56:29.000We are talking about the reality behind what's going on in space, the Polaris Dawn spacewalk and where we've been historically and where I imagine we are going.
00:56:41.000Now, first and foremost, When we talk about these spacewalks, they have a long and storied history.
00:56:48.000And again, prior to this spacewalk of Polarstown, that was not even a thousand miles above the earth, but above the Van Allen radiation belts.
00:56:58.000The only time human beings have been beyond that is Apollo.
00:57:03.000And by the way, the Russians, they've only been just about under 300 miles officially, even though they were kicking our arnis in the space race.
00:58:26.000Because supposedly, Last year, and this year we were supposed to send humans to the moon again, another promise that never came to fruition.
00:59:07.000So, so again, just, just think about the numbers that you have to meet.
00:59:11.000Forget about the possibility of space debris, asteroid fields, encountering things you didn't know about like that invisible magnetic force.
00:59:21.000As important as gravity, you're just figuring out that's somewhere else.
01:00:31.000We've got NASA administrator after administrator, including their chief scientist telling you back in 2016, about eight years ago, that's not, none of this is real.
01:00:43.000I know that's inconvenient, but again, I want to, I want to remind people we've been weaponizing space since the Reagan administration through the strategic defense initiative program.
01:00:54.000We've created an information skin around the planet, also talked about at this conference in 2016, which we're going to illustrate.
01:01:03.000And I talked about transhumanism, the metaverse, virtual reality.
01:01:09.000Now you're going to see where it comes into play.
01:02:10.000They're going to establish the habitat.
01:02:11.000They're going to go in because with 3D printing, Uh, we can put a fleet of robots on the surface of Mars.
01:02:17.000We may find, based on what we know about the radiation environment, that we want to go underground rather than, you know, have huts on the surface and get blown away in the wind that doesn't exist.
01:02:33.000So just, you know, the guy laughing over there that he's talking about, and we're going to get to the woman in the middle who's from Rocketdyne.
01:02:38.000That's the guy behind the Martian, which is, again, the Hollyweird perception of Mars with Matt Damon.
01:02:45.000And Bolden's pointing out that, you know, we don't even know there's wind or an atmosphere on Mars.
01:02:50.000We're not sending human beings to Mars, okay?
01:02:53.000And he, think about the fact that he talked about humanoid-type robots first.
01:02:58.000How far away from that are we, and who's behind that as well?
01:03:38.000Also, they're going to use 3D printing.
01:03:40.000Okay, so now the next clip is going to go even further and tell you that these nanobots that they send, not just full-fledged robots, are going to be the first thing.
01:03:50.000And they're going to survey Mars And then once they send back that data, then you can virtually visit Mars at any point.
01:03:58.000Now, this is, again, an interview from 2016.
01:04:04.000And this person actually brings up Ray Kurzweil first in a transhumanist perspective.
01:04:11.000And then he actually gets corrected by Dennis Bushnell, former chief scientist of NASA, up until like two years ago, retired a couple years ago.
01:04:37.000And you were talking about robot exploration and, and I, I'd mentioned Ray Kurzweil to you and you'd said that he'd spoken at NASA.
01:04:44.000And to me that the way that you described, uh, robots almost as kind of like the children of mankind really stuck with me and it put what we're doing on Mars right now.
01:04:54.000So Kurzweil speaking at NASA, that's of course, I mean, again, there's a NASA Google partnership.
01:05:24.000Robot is one of them from the early 00s, as I remember.
01:05:29.000Uh, and the idea is that, uh, we are currently becoming cyborgs at a very fast rate.
01:05:38.000Uh, we, the IBM BlueBrain project, uh, which is nanosectioning the neocortex and replicating it.
01:05:45.000Silicon has made such good progress that they are claiming in 12 to 15 years, they will be able to market a biomimetic human level machine intelligence.
01:05:56.000So again, This is about 2016-ish, maybe even a little bit earlier, but I believe 2016.
01:06:03.000So they're talking about that 2030 marker that you hear again and again and again.
01:06:09.000The nanofunctionalization of robots is continuing to pace very rapidly.
01:06:16.000So there's no reason why in the 10, 20 year, well, 15 to 25 year out, That exploration can't be done very well with robots at a cost which has been estimated at about one one thousandth out of sending humans.
01:06:34.000So one way to do this exploration of Mars and so forth is three ways.
01:06:43.000One is to send the nanorobots and instrument the planet and send back the data And the Brits demonstrated five senses, virtual reality, haptic taste, touch, smell, sight, and sound recently.
01:06:59.000So everyone could explore Mars anytime they wanted to at one one thousandth the cost of sending people.
01:07:20.000I want people to also understand the World Economic Forum also partners with NASA and is a very big part of this agenda.
01:07:26.000Now, aside from creating technology, NASA Tech, That can like hone in on your heartbeat because that's as significant an individual as your facial recognition as your finger and thumbprints as a surveillance tool in another video they show you.
01:07:43.000This is them talking kind of about that virtual Mars.
01:08:10.000And the circumstances it could face on Mars.
01:08:13.000Listen, they're building this virtual idea of Mars.
01:08:18.000The reality of sending rockets and human beings to Mars is absolutely utterly ridiculous.
01:08:24.000And, you know, we're going to come back to what they're actually doing on space.
01:08:28.000And I just want to say, look, I am a dork.
01:08:31.000You know, I mean, I've got, I, every time I pick these things up, I'm not one of those people thinks that space is fake.
01:08:37.000Uh, no, I think there are varying degrees of misinformation, disinformation, and total and complete propaganda that were fed about space and the programs, but what they're doing there is very, very real.
01:08:51.000And it's a multitude of things under different guises, uh, that are essentially privatized in many respects.
01:08:58.000Now let's, let's, Start with Scott Kelly here.
01:10:21.000OK, so before Musk started launching astronauts back up into the ISS, Kazakhstan in this program with, of course, Russia, because ISS is International Space Station.
01:10:32.000That's where the vast majority of this stuff was being launched out of.
01:10:37.000Try to understand what your physical capability is.
01:10:41.000You walk with your eyes closed, like foot to foot, which is hard even when you haven't been in space for a year, especially on this uneven ground in Kazakhstan.
01:10:54.000You get on an airplane, the airplane flies to Norway and you do it there.
01:11:00.000And then it gets back to Houston and you do them here again before you even get to go home.
01:11:54.000Who knows where we've actually been? Okay. Human beings, very far, I'm extremely skeptical of.
01:12:02.000Propulsion system-wise with just rockets.
01:12:06.000I'm extremely skeptical of that as well, but I do believe we have other types of technology that of course would have to be classified, not just because of space exploration, but their weapons potential and use that again, just reality.
01:12:25.000And the fact that you now have people stuck up there possibly till February, they've already been stuck up there months, and they keep easing the situation.
01:12:39.000Now on day 63 of what was supposed to be a 10-day mission, NASA today said astronauts Butch Wilmore and Sonny Williams may remain in space until February.
01:12:49.000Butch and Sonny would remain on station and become part of that increment and return home with them on Crew-9.
01:12:54.000Crew-9 is a SpaceX mission to the station set to launch in late September, returning next year.
01:13:01.000For months, NASA has insisted Wilmore and Williams are not stuck in space.
01:13:07.000Years behind schedule, Boeing's troubled Starliner launched on a test flight in early June.
01:13:12.000But Starliner has remained docked to the space station, with mission managers divided over whether it's safe to bring Wilmore and Williams home.
01:13:20.000And by the way, that's another thing people have to understand about Boeing.
01:13:24.000They're a large military industrial complex contractor for this type of work.
01:13:32.000And another part of this agenda, you know, we often talk about that 2030 agenda of restricting your access to travel to geographical areas.
01:13:42.000Well, they want to revamp the entire flying industry, airports, etc., and automate them further.
01:13:50.000And I think that they've been using demonized, or I'm sorry, Boeing, to demonize that situation.
01:13:55.000I'm not saying they're a good company, but look at this as well.
01:14:41.000Um, You know, things like solar electric propulsion, another thing I like saying.
01:14:46.000So blow our hair back, give us a sense of what you guys are working on, you know, that's really cool, and how it fits into all of this.
01:14:53.000You know, we're working on, like you said, we support government, we support commercial, and we do primarily propulsion, which is engines, big engines, motors, those type of things, as well as power.
01:15:04.000The key things, you know, neat things we're working on today, we're doing ion propulsion, which is a form of electric propulsion.
01:15:11.000You talk about bringing, you know, bringing the cost down.
01:15:14.000Everything we throw off the planet now has to go on a rocket that costs quite a bit of money.
01:15:18.000So the smaller you can make it, the cheaper it gets.
01:15:20.000So we have solar electric propulsion that we'll be putting on these next missions.
01:15:26.000We're working the technology on NASA contracts and internal.
01:15:29.000And by the way, this also works into small cube satellites.
01:15:33.000This woman is from Rocketdyne, all right?
01:15:36.000And right here is where she's gonna move into those 3D-printed rockets, and also talk about, again, a lot of rocket technology is still classified.
01:15:45.000And it'll half or one-tenth the size, depending on how we do that.
01:15:49.000So that's one thing, and it looks just like, you see the blue glow from the old Star Trek?
01:15:54.000It looks just like that, and it is like that.
01:15:56.000So we're working on, we're printing rockets now.
01:16:00.000You know, we're doing 3D printing of whole rockets, and a number of people are doing it, and the hard thing about that... So does that mean I can illegally download a rocket?
01:16:08.000Um, you know, you, well, we probably shouldn't talk about that.
01:16:14.000You know, rocket technology is still protected, right?
01:16:44.000We can actually print a whole CubeSat propulsion system in one pass.
01:16:49.000And those are things that, you know, bring down not just the cost of the product, they're more efficient, they bring down time, and all of this just continues to feel the cycle, like as George was saying it.
01:18:22.000And I had Greg Autry who authored the book Red Moon Rising with Peter Navarro talking about this technology and also Hydrogel is very excited.
01:18:33.000When you're printing on earth because of gravity, everything wants to be stacked, right?
01:19:25.000Because they've really partnered together a long time ago and we're going to show you some clips of that as well.
01:19:32.000But I promised you hydrogels, so you are going to get hydrogels.
01:19:37.000Now, At least in the, uh, I would say alternative media arena, a lot of people began to question the hydrogel technology during the COVID-1984 nightmare because they began to realize, uh, with mRNA and other bio nanotechnologies, uh, there were certain types of distribution systems that they were already looking into.
01:20:04.000NASA, a very large part, of those types of technologies and distribution systems.
01:20:11.000Meet Elaine, one of the co-founders of Tempanogen, a medical device startup based in Virginia.
01:20:17.000Her company is developing a gel patch that can serve as a replacement for eardrum repair surgery.
01:20:23.000That could have huge benefits here on earth, but launch that gel to space and the opportunities for use grow even more.
01:20:30.000First, we have to back up a few steps.
01:20:33.000Putting your life's work on top of a rocket may seem like a daunting task, but there's a system in place to help scientists who know nothing about spaceflight get their research into orbit.
01:20:43.000You see, NASA and its international partners aren't the only source of science aboard the space station.
01:21:23.000If you're starting a journey into the unknown, it helps to have an expert at your side to navigate the way.
01:21:28.000The National Lab connects researchers with implementation partners who provide resources and guidance for taking an experiment from Earth to microgravity.
01:21:36.000Elaine and her team are working with NanoRack.
01:21:39.000They have the plate reader on the space station that's going to be used for our project and they're coordinating the launch and getting all the materials together for us.
01:21:47.000We're glad that we're working with them because we're glad somebody has done this before and can help us along with the process.
01:21:53.000And I'm just going to say this, you know, again, I watch a lot of the old school stuff.
01:21:57.000And I watch a lot of the new school stuff.
01:21:59.000In fact, NASA had its own television network.
01:22:02.000They've, I think, moved it all the way online.
01:22:04.000When you go there, it tells you to go to this URL.
01:22:07.000But you notice the young, attractive women.
01:22:56.000And by the way, the amount put in there, a little bit sketchy.
01:23:00.000When you're talking about genetically modified organisms and bioluminescence, it's been going on publicly for decades.
01:23:07.000In fact, on this very network, 2008, 2009, I was talking about the bioluminescent pigs that they had genetically created.
01:23:17.000They had infused them with a type of jellyfish DNA and that literally made them glow in the dark and be neon pigs.
01:23:26.000Okay, so here we are again when I talk about these companies, they're in it to win it and they're utilizing that technology on the ISS.
01:23:36.000Bioluminescence itself has been around for a very, very long time.
01:23:40.000Our technology, which we call autobioluminescence, that allows cells to basically talk to us and tell us about their level of health.
01:23:48.000So when they're happy and healthy, they make a ton of light.
01:23:51.000And when they start to get sick, that light gets dim.
01:23:55.000People like drug development companies, academic researchers, scientists across the world spend lots of money and they use lots of crazy different materials in order to encourage cells to grow in three-dimensional structures.
01:24:09.000The International Space Station allows cells to do this with no external materials required.
01:24:16.000We want to be able to demonstrate that we can use microgravity to improve drug development.
01:24:30.000So now, I want to talk about satellite networks that they launched.
01:24:34.000Now, number one, let's start with the balloon satellites, which are under low Earth orbit that nobody really talks about.
01:24:41.000And in more than More than likely that these were NASA satellites, part of an international program to circumvent the Arctic region where communications are much tougher.
01:24:56.000That's what Seymour Hersh said when Chinese spy satellites.
01:25:00.000No, I think that they're putting more and more of these things up.
01:25:04.000And because of that inhuman error, a few of them got out of their control system where the public arena is not supposed to see them.
01:25:12.000But right here, We're going to show you.
01:26:11.000And they're still promoting this Mars thing because they know it's what the public wants to hear.
01:26:18.000When you stood up those programs, they're now flying to Leo, which is low Earth orbit, just to the International Space Station, about 250 miles or so above the Earth.
01:26:27.000But, you know, these entrepreneurs, they think big.
01:26:30.000You know, Elon Musk and Richard Branson.
01:26:33.000And, you know, Elon's talking about going to Mars.
01:26:35.000I wonder, does that put him in competition with NASA?
01:26:41.000And I think most people in the audience are quite aware that we recently, or SpaceX recently announced that They were entering into a partnership with us for what they call the Red Dragon.
01:26:52.000What he's looking at... Again, a partnership.
01:27:10.000We're not investing in that, but we don't need to.
01:27:14.000And by the way, that's landing rockets?
01:27:16.000Which is not very successful at, which you would need, obviously, to send human beings, not just to Mars, but land a rocket on a mass and then come back.
01:27:26.000Now, I want to just, before I show you the historic references to a global information network, which is being created and really, it's already being utilized, folks.
01:27:40.000They already have the global information network.
01:28:02.000We're going to get into this one right here when they launched Starlink, which just got its contract extended for six months in June.
01:28:10.000And the reason that I had a Russia up here, Is because when he's talking about being war with NATO in the United States, you know what he mentioned?
01:28:19.000Their satellite systems, because they're hooking into the Ghost and the Sidewinder drones.
01:28:25.000Do you understand how dangerous that is?
01:28:29.000These satellite systems that are now also being built with Northrop Grumman and Elon Musk, it's out in the open.
01:28:39.000That they're building this spy satellite network, some of which is commercialized, some of which is highly classified, some of which is an extension of that Star Wars program, aka the Strategic Defense Initiative that was launched all the way back in 1983, 40 plus years ago, 40 plus years ago.
01:29:02.000Now, here you will have a representative from NASA, Explaining to you this global information network.
01:29:14.000Through ISS has been sort of seeding the small sat market and but you can't launch into all the different orbits from ISS and so what we'll be able to do with our vehicle launcher one is to put Which we've seen.
01:30:05.000They will establish essentially a new, uh, information skin for planet earth that, uh, you know, helps us with navigation and communication and weather and remote sensing.
01:30:16.000Now with the weather and the remote sensing stuff again, Because where are we here?
01:30:21.000Because I actually watched this, okay?
01:30:23.000And anybody can get their hands on it, Space Race.
01:30:27.000In the late 70s, early 80s, all of a sudden, NASA is very, very involved in what will become the Green Movement.
01:30:35.000It does a ton of surveillance, not just in the United States and the Arctic region, but globally, period.
01:30:43.000In fact, with renewables in particular, They talked about the solar propulsion systems, but they were the ones that pioneered using those massive windmills as well.
01:30:57.000Anybody can look at NASA and their promotion of quote-unquote global warming and climate change, and they were at the apex of that.
01:31:05.000Now, what do they want to do in response to, oh, humans are bad?
01:31:14.000And they think That they can literally technologically micromanage all of the species on the earth through a thing that they call directed evolution.
01:33:43.000So in a CubeSat that has the brains from Andy's telephone and a camera that came out of his telephone, it's going to have a little micro jet from Julie's and others.
01:33:54.000And they're going to be able to maneuver around.
01:33:55.000But most importantly, They're going to be able to comply with the law that says when you put a vehicle in space, it's got to be able to be controlled for a controlled re-entry where it will not harm anybody on the ground.
01:34:06.000And we're going to be able to do that.
01:34:07.000But again, the idea any of these things are going to harm you on the ground is also pretty ludicrous.
01:34:13.000Even Musk has pointed out that there are so few people on the planet that we do have things falling from space all the time, whether it be debris we created or natural debris.
01:34:27.000I mean, it is, it's much less than being hit by lightning folks.
01:35:37.000Untethered in space, I'd be a little bit worried.
01:35:41.000You know, allegedly you're moving and grooving out there, even though you don't feel it because you're in a vacuum.
01:35:48.000But I've watched enough 2001 Space Odyssey when Hal, The AI intelligence controlling the spaceship.
01:35:59.000And by the way, that's another thing we didn't even really talk about is that space travel now, at least in these rockets that they're showing you, I mean, this is a commercial crew.
01:36:47.000And it's about the today show and it's about not projecting the things That we all just saw here and the realities of people internally and what they've said in NASA, but that we can live the dream and we're going to Mars as human beings.
01:37:56.000In the five days between launch and splashdown, the four Polaris crew members made their mark on history, reaching an orbit 870 miles above earth.
01:38:08.000And you know, that's the other thing about these rockets.
01:38:13.000Listen, there's a time and a place for touchscreens.
01:38:15.000And again, we've shown you those, uh, all the way back to 2001, a space odyssey.
01:38:22.000And I often make the argument you watch 2001, a space odyssey, which comes out, I believe in 68, uh, before the moon landing.
01:38:29.000And it really preps, um, not only the United States populace, but the global populace.
01:38:37.000As to what to believe via space travel and what it's actually like and how it can be portrayed.
01:38:43.000And to Kubrick's credit, that movie stands up today.
01:38:47.000But when you really take a look at it and you take a look at those scenes in the deep, dark bowels of space with no sound and slow movements, yes, there's an artistic feel, but it also kind of gives you the idea of the lunacy of the idea of that type of travel that is so extensive.
01:39:08.000SpaceX astronaut Sarah Gillis and Anna Menon flew further in space than any women in history.
01:39:14.000The Dragon capsule flying higher than anyone since the last Apollo flights to the moon more than 50 years ago.
01:39:21.000And you know again talking about those flights when I was talking about the touchscreens.
01:39:28.000They had all these physical buttons, and I don't know how far Apollo actually went with rockets, but I can only tell you that I remain extremely skeptical of the whole scenario, okay?
01:39:40.000Please take us closer to fulfilling SpaceX's dream of making life multi-planetary.
01:39:45.000With Scott Poteet serving as the mission pilot, the crew also conducting some 40 research experiments and testing new spacesuits in the first ever all-civilian spacewalk.
01:39:57.000And again, those suits look a lot more like something you'd see in 2001, a space odyssey than anything else.
01:40:05.000As far as the experimentation, obviously they don't have the ISS labs there, but I have to wonder if some of those are, if they're that much higher up, right?
01:42:19.000was very involved in satellite radio and its institution around the world, is very involved in transhumanism, and is very involved in the transgender movement that has infiltrated your school systems and our culture on a level most can't imagine, because it really is about being from transgender to transhuman, aka that book, and Unzipped Jeans.
01:43:01.000I'm also live on patriot.tv, five days a week, 5 p.m.
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01:44:29.000Now, you're getting the colors I like the best.
01:44:31.000This dark green, this black, the red pinstripe.
01:44:34.000But what really matters is the shocks, the giant tires, the engine.
01:44:38.000Folks, I've had a lot of big trucks, but I'm telling you, they don't even compare to this.