WarRoom Battleground EP 185: The Attack On The Pro Life Movement; Massive Voting Issues Found From Arizona Election
Episode Stats
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Summary
The pro-life movement has been around since 1973, and since then, there has been a great deal of confusion about what it is and what it stands for. In this episode, we take a deep dive into the history of the prolife movement and discuss the current state of it.
Transcript
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this is what you're fighting for i mean every day you're out there what they're doing is blowing
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people off if you continue to look the other way and shut up then the oppressors the authoritarians
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get total control and total power because this is just like in arizona this is just like in georgia
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it's another element that backs them into a quarter and shows their lies and misrepresentations
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is why this audience is going to have to get engaged as we've told you this is the fight
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all this nonsense all this spin they can't handle the truth war room battleground here's your host
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stephen k bannon one in 70 one in 74 uh that changed uh they they became a pro-life i think
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my friend russell moore in 2003 uh put something on the floor of the southern baptist convention
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that changed it so it doesn't go back i don't believe to the bible uh to jesus's teaching though
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i certainly understand reading the new testament of bible why people would be pro-life i only bring
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that up to say i've always been concerned about uh people coming forward like donald trump and i have
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seen it throughout my entire adult life the worst human beings on the face of the earth people who
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are not conservative all they have to do is wave the bloody banner of abortion and people fall in
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line immediately church has fallen oh he's a godly man oh he's a man of jeez oh he's and trump played
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them like a fiddle here's a guy who was pro-choice like all the way but when he decided to run suddenly
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he's like wait a second the more pro-life i sound the more evangelicals will just immediately throw in with
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me i'm i'm wondering you're talking about things are changing now i'm wondering though are we going
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to see the same thing happening five years from now 10 years from now or will evangelicals be a bit
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wiser in following these false idols well one i hope so i don't know but i here's some reason for hope on
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that point for a long time the pro-life movement was focused and for good reasons on the nine supreme
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core justices because of the roe decision which i profoundly disagreed with the state of american
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law was that it was very limited in its ability to protect unborn life with the dobbs decision now
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american law can protect unborn life but then the second part of the challenge now kicks in which is
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there's no way to a pro-life culture in the united states without persuading millions and millions
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and millions of americans to change their minds about this issue and one thing from a pro-life
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perspective for me that was so discouraging was that of the 27 percent of americans the second
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highest priority behind inflation was of the 27 percent of americans who went to the polls with
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abortion front of mind about 76 percent more than three-fourths of those folks voted against their pro-life
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position and so that meant and what that told me is that there are millions and millions of hearts
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and minds that had to be changed and have to be changed and there's no way to do that through
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animosity and pugilism and vengeance and all of the ways that trumpism interacted with the american
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body politic so that's why i wrote what i wrote and i called people back to john paul ii's book
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and john paul ii's book in 1995 about a pro-life theology talks about this he uses this phrase the
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incomparable worth of the human person the pro-life movement has to project that it understands the
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incomparable worth of the human person from from conception until natural death and a movement
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centered around animosity and vengeance and pugilism doesn't do that and so that course has to change
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david froth okay um it is tuesday 22 november the year of our lord 2022 you're in war and battleground
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or bringing terry schilling terry there's a lot of confusion out there and of course the pro-life
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movement's taking a lot of uh hits i think maybe not that well-informed hits from a lot of different
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quarters particularly the remember the the part of the the secular part of the republican establishment
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that are not with us on any cultural issues all they want is tax cuts and deregulation increase
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their wealth right so tell us tell describe what we just heard there and i want your analysis first
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before i get your analysis of the um of what just happened on 8 november and is the uh pro-life movement
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to blame for it sir thanks so much for having me steve well look what we just saw was your typical
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david french uh response to everything in politics because he fundamentally misunderstands
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politics first of all he starts off by saying that uh donald trump tricked us right uh he tricked us
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all the way uh from you know he was pro-choice and then he tricked us well he tricked us into actually
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overturning roe within his first term right this has been a goal for the pro-life movement since
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uh roe v wade in 1973 he's been a great pro-life president and we'd be blessed to have him again
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but when he goes into about the whole thing about winning over the hearts and minds of the american
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people what we saw this past election was what happens when the republican party doesn't fight back
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when they allow their democrat opponents to brand them that's 75 to 25 that he's talking about where
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we lost the issue that's how the american people vote when they think the choice is between all
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abortions or no abortions what we need to talk about is the reasonable and popular
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restrictions that the republican party supports which is a 15-week abortion ban at the point in
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which the baby can feel pain that has 60 support about from the american people if we had made the
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issue of abortion around 15 weeks or not we would have kicked the snot out of democrats so no the pro-life
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movement isn't going anywhere it's a winning issue it's part of the republican coalition and they
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better figure it out before 2024 because the left certainly isn't going to back away from this
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when you say they should figure out i mean tell me what happened between you had the huge win
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and i think the audience that are not part of the pro-life movement need to need to hear this you had
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the huge win on uh on roe v wade right and then they went absolutely crazy and um and then you had all
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their advertising but in the interim you had kansas and and that got a little confused and once you lost
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kansas they got jacked up they were everywhere this is their leading and of course their outreach on
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tiktok and and all these other platforms to uh the youth vote where how did the pro-life movement
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not because you had a lot of very pro-life candidates including the one we're fighting out today in
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arizona of katie hobbs it took the most radical position of all multiple times and her only campaign
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stops people used to mock her her only campaign stops for a planned parenthood right so how do you
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how do you and this thing's in a dead heat right now and of course with all the malfeasance in
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maricopa county i don't see how you're certified i actually think kerry lake is going to end up being
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governor here but talk to me about the pro-life movement i'm not saying you guys drop the ball but
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clearly between the historic decision you guys fought for for 40 years in november 8th was what uh four
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months and and certainly the landscape you know the the your uh your opposite forces kind of took the
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bit and it looks like they they were if they didn't do it in reality they've got the perception that they
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were able to to stop some of the red wave well the reality is steve where we fell short is we fell
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short in convincing gop leadership that this was a political winner uh where we fell short is getting
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the gop leadership to focus on anything besides inflation and crime they really thought that
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they could get away without saying the a word uh we we know that that wasn't true we know that that
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was a short-sighted thing the only reason that you would ignore an issue in politics is if you think
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it's going to go away or if you think your response is going to hurt you but what we saw is over almost
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half a billion dollars spent in negative campaign ads against republicans on attacking them for
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wanting to restrict all abortions and to put women in jail these ads from beto and all these other
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democrats were literally accusing republicans of wanting women to die over not being able to get an
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abortion that's what happens when you don't have a counterpunch what we need to do in the future steve
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is we need to get our candidates to counterpunch it's not enough justice just to talk about the issue
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and to be pro-life like david french is suggesting we have to counterpunch when the democrats accuse you of
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wanting to ban all abortions without exceptions you have to hit them right back in the teeth and
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make sure that people know pull a donald trump you have to say that these guys want to be able to pull
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a baby out of the womb at nine months they're okay with that and killing it it's not okay with us but
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it's okay with them that's the world we live in we support a 15-week ban that's totally reasonable
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and popular and supported by the american people that's what we need to get back to we need to
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counterpunch and go on offense there's no reason to ignore the a word it is a beneficial issue for us
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if only we go on offense and show how extreme the democratic party is
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you know to get to the the candidates are just are not that they're not leaders and not that
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they're not fighting this they obviously are but the candidates also rely upon their consultants their
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pollsters and their money raisers whether that's people going out for big donors or for for small
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donations how do you get you're losing the war and i think you would admit this you're losing the war
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with those three groups because those are the groups are really um uh shifting a candidates that
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don't fight this back away from this soft pedal this am i not correct in that no you're correct we
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we need to start we need to we need to release more reports and i'll tell you that my organization
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app is getting ready to prepare an autopsy of this 22 election see we've been writing about this
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for a long time we've been preparing all of the polling the public research on these issues we've
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been showing the republican party since 22 our first autopsy was on the 2012 election because republicans
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at the rnc released an autopsy that said that you know social issues like abortion distracted from the
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gop's winning economic message steve our autopsy argued the exact opposite that social issues like
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protecting the unborn at 20 weeks 15 weeks was way more popular uh than any corporate tax cuts for
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millionaires or any regulatory cuts uh because those only speak to a small proportion of electorate
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we're going to produce another report we're going to get it in punch even harder steve the reality is
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is that this issue isn't going anywhere anywhere i wish that we could you know actually i don't wish
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but these guys wish that they could just make the issue go away and disappear and have democrats
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you know never talk about it again it's not going to happen and there's not you're not going to
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eliminate 80 of the republican party is pro-life what are you going to do with them why is it that
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the democratic party won't even abandon the transgender movement which is only what one percent
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of their coalition three percent of their coalition maybe the democ we need to treat the pro-lifers
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with the respect that they deserve because they're 80 of our party you get rid of that issue
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and you're going to have a lot of people not showing up to vote for you at the polls
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it's do or die and so we're going to be coming out of the report showing how popular these issues are
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and contrasting how the republican candidates that dug in on the abortion issue like ron desantis like
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mike dewine like like so many like like um great abbott in texas those candidates all did really well
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it was the candidates like dr oz and everyone else that distanced themselves and tried to ignore the
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issue that suffered and so we're just going to keep showing this we're going to keep showing up at the
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polls but you guys also have to make your voices heard to these candidates because they need to
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know that you care about these issues and that they can't flounder on them when are we when are
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we going to see the report terry i want to give people a heads up because this is this is absolutely
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a fundamental building block going forward when is this report going to come out so we're waiting on
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the research from our campaign ad steve as you know we ran millions of dollars worth of ads this year
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we're doing the research we hope to have it done around the first part of the year but i promise you
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we will launch this on war room i love that where's your social media your website now all of it uh
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where do they get to you sir it's just a shilling 1776 across all the platforms truth uh getter uh and
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twitter and instagram killing 1776 and then americanprinciplesproject.org to catch us on the web
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okay uh brother we're going to look forward to seeing that report and breaking it down and going
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through it and making sure everybody reads it so and everybody understands it i i couldn't agree more
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with the 2012 autopsy was also where and i love reince prebuss but they also came out and said hey we
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need amnesty we need open borders basically and i said no no no no that's just a complete complete
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mystery the trump movement really came out of that botched autopsy and for david french president trump
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delivered more for the right to life movement than any president in history am i am i correct in that
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uh terry shilling no that that was what was so maddening about that whole segment is they're acting
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like oh trump's a fake pro-lifer well yeah well that fake pro-lifer just beat the crap out of all of
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the guys that have been pro-life in their heart of hearts for for decades because he overturned rowan his
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first term and he didn't even really try that hard it seemed like he just did it
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thank you brother appreciate it look forward to having you back on here to go through the report
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i want to bring in now uh this is very important and we've got him by phone we've interrupted his
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work day but uh and uh we we apologize to him for that but we're going to have him back on
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more to go through this this is mark sonnenklar he uh wrote an incredible report
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that uh just the news john solomon uh team has picked up the um as we've talked about previously
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um uh the hannity has linked to it uh many of the daily caller did a huge piece on it's starting to
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get write-ups uh and he's going to start doing a lot more media uh mark thank you very much for
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joining us by phone i just wanted to get some very basics out of it because i know you're pressed for
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time you did a report in the title of this report and we have it our team has it and memphis has it
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we're going to have it up on screen uh captain bannon and uh and grace chung will put it in all
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the chat rooms it's going to be up natalie's going to have it the war room site we're going to push this
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out here's what i need everybody to do i need everybody to read this report i need everybody
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reflect on this report and i need everybody to push this report out the title of it is uh it's from
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mark sonnenklar and it's to a list of people kelly ward who you know uh very well uh and various
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republican gina sobota who you know very well and other uh uh republican candidates it's it's the
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title of it is maricopa county roving attorney observations november 8 2022 general election and
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it's written approximately a week after mark just a couple things and this report is is extraordinarily
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detailed uh goes on for page after page after page i think it's what 23 pages and i need everybody to
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read it because i need the war room posse needs the facts mark first off when you say observations
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where were you how did you actually get in a situation that you could actually um write this
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report what were you doing all right steve thanks for having me on first of all um i uh i was working
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for uh the republican national committee's election integrity program in arizona and uh i i signed up
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for that program because i i knew that election well i we moved to arizona from california uh right before
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the 2020 election and i saw that what happened in arizona during the 2020 election and i was pretty
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outraged and uh i was upset that um you know the powers that be didn't uh look more into that election
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and i i decided at that time i wanted to help save arizona and uh i thought that election integrity
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would be you know really sort of at the core of doing that so i enrolled in this program the
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republican national committee's election integrity program and um we were trained uh there were
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uh 17 or 18 uh total roving attorneys that went to the various vote centers in maricopa county
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um on election day um i by the way i did do this uh during the primary on august 2nd as well so i had
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some experience this was my second time doing it on election day of the general election and um yeah so
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um that was the program i was in and and i i visited uh 10 different vote centers on uh the election day
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of the general election um i can't recall exactly how many i i uh visited during the primary but i
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actually included my primary report um within the general election report as well so anybody who reads
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the the general election report will also be able to review my what i saw during the primary
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let me say i just want to say for the audience it's very detailed it's 23 pages long i want the
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audience to read it and come to their own conclusions uh but it's very detailed and you kind of check the
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time when you went around and you give a a personal observation has has this been more formalized
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and you're part of the election integrity i guess team that's working this is this been more
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formulized in the rnc or is somebody uh thinking of doing something with this where does this stand
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right now honestly i don't know the rnc really hasn't been in touch with me i sort of took it upon
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myself to write this report on my own i i surveyed i went out to the other roving attorneys as i
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mentioned there were 17 or 18 in maricopa county um and we covered i believe we covered all 223 vote
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centers in maricopa county on election day i went out and you know proactively um sought out the
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findings from the other roving attorneys and i had uh i believe 10 of them got back to me and gave me
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their detailed findings so you know together me and the other 10 roving attorneys that did respond
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to my survey my informal survey um we we together covered 115 a total vote centers out of a total of
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223 so a little over 50 percent uh of the vote centers we covered and so no but to answer your
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question um i i don't know what the rnc is doing um they have not contacted me i did this on my own
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and uh and i and i i got it out out there on my own
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uh mark when the audience starts to read this 23 page report what would as kind of their sherpa
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what would you recommend they focus on what are the one or two things that they should really focus on
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as they go through this well like i said we um well in the report if you if you focus on the
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executive summary the first uh one to two pages you'll see that um we reported that me and the
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10 other roving attorneys reported that 72 of the total 115 vote centers that we uh visited which is
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60 you know a little over 62 percent had material problems with the the printers which caused the
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tabulators to not be able to read the voters ballots um uh you know i also saw you know eyewitnessed with
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my own two eyes several of the vote centers where the tabulators were rejecting nearly 100 percent of
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the ballots uh on you know upon the initial insert of the ballot now you might be able to flip it over
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and get it to read the second time or the third time or the fourth time but um there were there were
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vote centers where 100 of the time it would not read the first time um and and then on average i
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estimate after you know gathering all of this data from the various roving attorneys that
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on average i was seeing a failure rate the tabulators were not able to read the ballots
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25 to 40 percent of the time at all so no matter how many times the voter put the ballot into the
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tabulator it the tabulator would not read that ballot between 25 and 40 percent of the time the other
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thing um that i saw was you know as a result of these tabulator issues and potentially other issues as
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well there were very long lines at the uh at the vote centers so um 59 of the 115 vote centers that
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you know i and the 10 other um roving attorneys visited and observed at had very long lines
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one to two hour lines it was it was crazy and so based on those lines i think it's pretty safe to assume
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that the voters you know there had to have been a lot of voters who would not you know this was a
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tuesday people were had to go to work uh or had to be back at work i think it's quite safe to say that
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there were many many voters who did not wait in those lines left the vote center i mean you know
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it's it takes a special person who's going to wait in a two-hour line um to vote um and and and
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i would imagine many of those people didn't didn't vote later either so i just think that you know
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with a 62 percent failure rate in in terms of the number of of locations that had uh printer and
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tabulator problems uh you've got massive voter suppression in in maricopa county and and you add
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to that that you know a a significantly larger portion of the voting public that went to the polls
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went to the vote centers on election day were republican voters um they significantly outnumbered
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democrat voters in maricopa county on election day so you know any problems at the vote centers on
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election day are just logically uh going to impact republican candidates and their ability to get votes
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much more than they would democrat candidates since since since you were an observer and went around
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uh here's what i think is is confusing the people even in arizona that weren't in the room and then
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of course the rest of the nation in the world because everybody's watching this the knowing knowing
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that they were going to be under a microscope given the two years of really the direction of the
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nation right in the direction of the world from the ukraine to the southern border of the united states
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the capital markets to the economy all of it this whole situation with tabulators and things being
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set and machines and ink and all this which gets kind of confused to people when you were in there
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and you're saying there's a 25 to 40 percent uh failure rate and you're saying in some places you
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observed there's 100 rejection over and over again were the people that actually were part of the
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official process that they were they shocked by this was there any panic i mean because one of the
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things that came out is that there was and this has came up in the in the court hearing that took
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place that that afternoon to try to extend hours was there any um was there any i don't say panic but
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it looked like people actually knew that you know box number three or or you can leave and go to
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another place which seems like did not take did not go in accordance to the manual that's been
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promulgated what were your observations about the actual people that were actually running the
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election well first of all i want to say that the maricopa county should have absolutely known that
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there were you know that that they had these technology issues because as i mentioned earlier
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in this conversation i had written a report um which uh during my primary experience on primary day
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that noted and concluded frankly that there were major technology problems with printers and
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tabulators on primary day in on august 2nd of this year so the fact that mirror and granted that
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report that didn't go to maricopa county election officials it went to the rnc and i don't really
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know what happened with it after that but nevertheless you know they must have the county must have
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received reports from its you know inspectors in the field and tech people in the field and
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troubleshooters in the field that there were problems with with the tabulators reading the
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printed ballots they had to know this during the primary so that's the first thing i want to say
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i just it's at best complete malfeasance that they did not resolve the problems that they must have seen
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during the primary and then you know more directly to answer your question that you just asked me
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um there were it was a mixed bag in the field on on the general election day um you know some
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inspectors you know probably had been had been inspectors before and knew what they were doing and
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knew that um they could you know send people to other vote centers but having said that none of the
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inspectors were trained and i don't believe any of the inspectors knew that they had to check people
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out of their vote center before they sent them to another vote center so i know i've heard many
00:26:49.740
mark mark mark just hang on for one second i want to get to we're gonna take a short commercial break
00:26:54.920
we return mark sonnenklar who was an observer uh and wrote this really incredible report that we want
00:27:01.620
everybody to re-report short commercial break we'll be back we got joe allen tiktok dave walsh on energy next
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uh welcome back mark sinclair i want to just finish the thought you had right before the break
00:29:06.320
you're saying that um some some uh people look like they knew what they were doing others didn't but
00:29:13.620
the the critical comment you made was or the most important comment the buried lead as we call it
00:29:18.380
they didn't know about the uh the voided ballots or or or checking in checking out i think that's
00:29:24.800
one of the big confusions and i think the supervisor um you know bill gates came out and gave i think a
00:29:31.280
very confusing uh set of uh instructions during the day and later that night or later that afternoon it's
00:29:38.400
actually in the the court uh arguments with tom liddy the the the uh the attorney for maricopa county
00:29:45.460
there seemed to be generally confusion of the people they're putting on the process about what
00:29:50.360
people do about checking in checking out what they're supposed to do with ballots etc can you
00:29:54.140
just put a little more flesh in that bone of what you what you saw yeah well since election day i've
00:29:59.760
spoken with um a couple of different inspectors and they tell me that they were not trained on
00:30:05.660
checking that they had to check people out of their vote center so an inspector is the lead um
00:30:12.280
person at a vote center and and based on what these inspectors told me they were not trained in how
00:30:20.700
to that they needed to check people out once people checked into a vote center that um if they wanted
00:30:27.500
to go to another vote center because the vote center that they were at was you know the tabulators were
00:30:32.500
not reading their ballots and they didn't want to put it in box three um then they would be they could go
00:30:39.220
to another vote center and try there but they had to check out of the original vote center that they
00:30:45.920
were at before they would be uh could go to the next vote center and vote um at the next vote center
00:30:52.040
the vote uh the second vote center that you went to would would see that you had checked in at another
00:30:57.380
at the first vote center and would force you to vote provisionally which you know provisionals are
00:31:05.340
are reviewed um apparently by election officials as well but it's less likely that your provisional
00:31:12.020
ballot is going to get counted so yes there was a problem there in that they were not trained uh in
00:31:17.840
how to check people out before they sent them to another vote center and you know my understanding is
00:31:23.720
that maricopa county election officials did not inform inspectors or did not get the word out to their
00:31:31.220
inspectors to the various the inspectors of the various vote centers that they needed to check
00:31:36.440
people out that's my understanding i i haven't confirmed that
00:31:40.020
mark last question uh the power of this report and once again i want everybody in the chat rooms to
00:31:48.860
to look at this and to reflect upon it as you read it uh the power of this is that it's observations
00:31:55.760
you don't really editorialize in this and i'm not asking as editorialize now but as someone that was
00:32:02.340
there for the for the day and had done the primary what is your general conclusion of the election
00:32:07.680
process as you saw it on the 8th of november in the year of our lord 2022 in arizona sir
00:32:14.160
well as i said the least you know the least that could be said for this performance by the maricopa
00:32:23.200
county election officials is that it was complete incompetence um and you know i don't have proof
00:32:31.360
of intentionality that you know they intentionally did this but the way that uh the maricopa county
00:32:39.880
elections officials are reacting you know uh since election day and up until today
00:32:46.960
is suspicious um they are trying to tamp down any questions about this election in maricopa county
00:32:56.520
they are maintaining they have maintained that only 70 um vote centers were impacted by the tabulator
00:33:04.640
issue which was really actually a printer issue and um which you know we we roving attorneys surveyed
00:33:13.180
115 vote centers out of 223 and we found that 72 of just that subset of the total number of vote centers
00:33:21.040
had problems so i don't buy that only 70 of the 223 vote centers had issues with the the printer
00:33:28.760
slash tabulators um i don't buy that the problems were resolved as of three o'clock which is what's
00:33:35.840
something that uh uh supervisor bill gates said on election day that is absolutely false because i was
00:33:43.040
at vote centers after 3 p.m and they still had problems with the tabulators and um you know to
00:33:50.920
minimize things in the in that way um that the the county board of supervisors is really minimizing the
00:33:58.400
problems on election day that leads me to believe that there is they are hiding something um so
00:34:05.900
that's all i can say i i don't want to speculate on their you know what their intentions were that's
00:34:11.820
fine but but yeah no that's i think it's fine how are you are you on social media at all can people
00:34:17.900
follow you or if not that's fine but are are you because this report is fairly explosive uh and i know
00:34:24.760
a lot of important people are writing this up now you got john solomon's team sean hannity's team
00:34:29.740
the old tucker carlson team over at daily caller uh i know other people are kind of all of this
00:34:35.320
work going through it is are you on social media you know i dropped off of social media several years
00:34:41.720
ago because i didn't trust it anymore um so not really i i do have a website if you'd like me to give
00:34:47.100
that i can do that yes yes yeah yeah what's the website uh the website is ethos that's e-t-h-o-s
00:34:56.000
law group.com ethos law group.com all one word yeah mark a sign in car thank you very much for
00:35:05.580
joining us here in the world appreciate it sir thank you thank you sir okay i want to uh
00:35:10.560
thank thank you brother i i want to make sure everybody gets this report and reads it we're
00:35:16.080
going to have a lot more discussion about this in the days and the weeks ahead uh this is um it's
00:35:22.240
an eyewitness account from a fairly sophisticated guy about this a lawyer um i want to go to dave
00:35:28.420
walsh i got joe allen on the tiktok dave walsh dave uh thank you uh by the way for changing your
00:35:34.260
schedule to be here and i wanted people to do it because we've talked about this thing of reparations
00:35:38.060
but all the great media here in the united states this reparations uh uh what has happened
00:35:45.580
in cop 27 and i think it's great about my next two guests because joe allen's been doing such a good
00:35:50.940
job about what's been going on at the g20 and what's going on at the b20 you have these really
00:35:55.980
supranational groups that the united states without really uh promulgating this to the people in this
00:36:03.640
country are making huge commitments are going to have massive implications to this nation going
00:36:08.400
forward particularly financially and uh and economically uh take a couple of minutes the
00:36:13.400
indian paper is covering this reparation situation you thought there's number four to seven trillion
00:36:17.700
dollars we've got the the article i think it's from the hindu times can you just walk us through
00:36:22.240
how they derive the number when we talk about reparations and wealth transfer and all that
00:36:27.100
what we're actually talking about uh dave walsh well you're right this is not reported over here in
00:36:34.380
our media at all indian media did a pretty thorough job in the times of reporting out on this two numbers
00:36:40.820
one was looked like reparations possibly 400 to 500 billion per annum but then on the other hand to
00:36:48.440
induce um spending on environmental related uh implementation of four to six trillion a year being
00:36:55.980
required so it's not completely clear how this is going to come down but they did disclose this
00:37:02.620
was a whole 40-hour negotiation after friday when the meeting was supposed to end into sunday morning
00:37:08.720
where this is all being hashed out for three key issues who will manage the fund uh what large
00:37:14.600
developing countries will contribute that means china india will they be asked to contribute at all
00:37:19.760
and what will the fair share contribution be so those principles were laid out to be agreed
00:37:26.120
in the next cop meeting in detail a year from now the the exact details as as reported so this is
00:37:34.340
this is going to land between half 500 billion a year and six trillion per year somewhere tell us
00:37:42.540
tell us you've got that this fund or whatever this reparations thing is is going to have
00:37:47.160
developed nations who they accuse of in their development um doing all this bad contributing
00:37:55.560
or driving climate change and then you have developing nations where it's going to be the recipient
00:37:59.520
and the question are the two biggest this is why the the times of the hindu times is doing such a
00:38:05.400
thorough work on it india wants to find out whether they're going to be on the writing a check or
00:38:10.300
cashing a check um which is a very big deal for a country it's got the poverty of india
00:38:15.040
but the four to five hundred billion they've kind of made that looks like the annually is the
00:38:20.620
reparations part but the four to six train sounds like reparations too on a continual basis what
00:38:26.160
what is the four to six trillion what's the makeup of it and what's supposed to be its purpose
00:38:31.380
well to the extent that that's not reparations that would be mandated spending and or facilitated
00:38:39.400
loan support equity support equity inputs by by the developed governments supporting lending world
00:38:48.320
bank lending uh j big financing in the case of japan into these markets needing uh more renewables in
00:38:56.840
their new energy mix as they grow and develop so that's where we go to countries in sub-sahara africa
00:39:03.560
and in southeast asia philippines indonesia in desperate need of more baseload generation being
00:39:10.180
condemned by these measures to only adopt renewable technologies that are intermittent part-time
00:39:17.040
have very low energy density on a going forward basis that only those kinds of programs would be funded
00:39:22.860
that it's more than inferred that's where we are now already with the world bank world bank only funds
00:39:28.360
projects in these nations as as they relate to energy if they are renewable that's the limit of
00:39:34.060
their funding presently already so this is it creates a larger disaster in in attempting to
00:39:39.560
develop those nations into a more modern lifestyle of economic development talk to people about that
00:39:48.040
because you're saying that most of these nations are really where we were at the beginning of the
00:39:51.620
20th century and they don't have any possibility or capability of getting to the mid-century or even
00:39:57.900
latter half of the 20th century given the constraints put on them for for a baseload energy coming from
00:40:04.400
solar coming from wind coming from tidal coming from things that just can't provide it no matter
00:40:09.080
because you have to go against the laws laws of physics right well the the average country in
00:40:15.420
sub-sahara africa has a gdp per capita of about 12 to 1300 per person um the average electricity use
00:40:23.740
replicates what the united states was between 1905 and 1920 in the typical country in sub-sahara africa
00:40:30.860
highlighting the desperate need for large-scale baseload power producing electricity producing
00:40:37.100
energy plants power plants that have been the hallmark of developing the western europe north america
00:40:42.880
japan russia into a and china particularly into a modern modern day existence so part-time renewables
00:40:51.500
condemning them to nothing but part-time renewables will will not get them economic development period
00:40:57.840
electricity consumption is at the core of economic development lots lots of studies have been made to
00:41:03.680
correlate do very tightly but there's a little more i just want to make you go ahead go ahead
00:41:10.700
there are a bunch of countries that should never participate in receiving reparations let me go to the
00:41:15.640
in the top 20 coal exporting countries in the world vietnam mozambique ukraine mongolia kazakhstan
00:41:21.680
poland south korea india indonesia south africa are members of the top 20 coal exporting nations in
00:41:28.740
the world so the extent they're exporting this hideous fuel they should be exempted from any receipts
00:41:33.520
nigeria libya algeria ecuador have been indonesia has been but equatorial guinea and gabon continue to be
00:41:41.240
members of opec as major oil exporters and then not to mention angola iran oman russia the congo
00:41:48.380
malaysia colombia and iraq colombia is a major coal exporter also in iraq member of export opec should
00:41:55.660
not be involved in receiving any funding related to the damage done by carbon fuels when they're among
00:42:02.040
the largest exporters in the world of oil and gas so you can start to eliminate but but you you know
00:42:09.000
well that's not where this is going to go they'll all be they'll all be happy recipients of this
00:42:13.240
should it go forward it just it's it's on so many levels it's just so wrong
00:42:17.840
what last question we got about a minute what when do you expect have you heard because you
00:42:24.060
followed this closely of kerry or the biden regime has anybody come back and actually
00:42:28.460
outside of war room and a couple of left-wing sites has anybody have they really come back and
00:42:33.940
address to the american people to congress the people's representatives or anywhere
00:42:37.580
exactly what they've signed us up for no there there's been no preliminary discussion whatsoever
00:42:43.620
except a couple of utterances of kerry to the media bragging about promoting this ideation about
00:42:49.320
three weeks ago um if it comes to congress you you can bet it's going to be in the middle of the night
00:42:54.400
it's going to be attached to a bill at midnight and we're there's going to be very little review of
00:42:58.700
it um this is but i do think this is why this thing delayed a year because most of these countries
00:43:04.260
do recognize they still have some notion of sovereignty having either a parliament to
00:43:08.800
congress a bundestag that has to approve their spending therefore yeah we can come and have
00:43:13.760
these happy talk meetings but we have do have to go back to our people to attempt to get funding for
00:43:18.600
these kinds of right these kinds of programs um particular scale of it no nothing in public
00:43:24.720
nothing is stated we have to rely on the hindu times to get information about what our what our
00:43:29.740
leaders are committing us to unbelievable uh dave how do people get to you on social media to find
00:43:36.100
out more of your analysis i can be reached at dave walsh energy on getter steve thank you
00:43:41.800
thank you amazing job uh joe allen uh the you did the uh you did the webinar this afternoon on tiktok
00:43:49.740
here's where i'll get i want you to explain it it's it's a data gathering opera people have warned
00:43:54.300
about this and of course also dave urban you know dave urban was on cnn beaten up on on president
00:43:59.680
trump used to be advisor to him was on the board of bite dance which was a our senior advisor to bite
00:44:04.860
dance which is the parent company of this and totally controlled by the ccp this is uh well
00:44:11.360
walk us through how is it controlled by the ccp how they suck up the data of young people
00:44:15.560
and correct me if i'm wrong didn't the democratic party just use tiktok as their major platform
00:44:20.480
for getting the word out to all their young naive uh voters sir
00:44:26.060
yes steve that's correct and uh also a lot of people that are directly associated with uh
00:44:34.040
the democratic party now and in previous administrations like obama natalie winters
00:44:40.900
has done a lot to point that out that uh the bite dance tiktok uh uh revolving door really does
00:44:49.460
involve by and large democratic operatives not so much republicans so the surveillance is is
00:44:56.440
pretty straightforward uh i wish i could say that it was unique to chinese apps but it really isn't
00:45:02.160
american european uh you know any any tech app is always trying to suck up your data but the danger
00:45:09.420
with the chinese communist party getting a hold of that data especially on mass through tiktok
00:45:15.800
is that it gives them an insight into the american psyche and american interests and american social
00:45:23.760
trends that our tech companies really don't have uh you know going the other way it's kind of a one-way
00:45:30.720
mirror china of course has banned facebook has banned youtube uh has banned instagram and various other
00:45:39.780
u.s uh technology platforms whereas we allow them basically an open window into our national psyche
00:45:49.060
and maybe most dangerously into the psyches of children so uh what you know one element i really
00:45:56.720
want to highlight uh aside from the sort of psychological information uh and sociological information
00:46:02.860
is that tiktok uh actually tries to get from as many users as possible their face print or their voice
00:46:12.180
print the sorts of uh biometric data that people use to open for instance their apple devices and they're
00:46:20.080
obviously doing so in order to gather intelligence and gain whatever advantage and and be able to uh exert
00:46:28.200
whatever influence they can over american culture and you know i really encourage the audience to
00:46:34.620
check out the if they didn't already check it out to check out the webinar the video should be up by
00:46:40.500
tomorrow at around noon and the contributions of colonel john mills and connie elliott were really
00:46:48.120
spectacular i think connie elliott especially shined when she was talking about the sorts of neurological
00:46:55.420
models that the people who develop these apps are relying on the the mesolimbic or reward pathways
00:47:03.000
the dopamine pathways that get people especially children hooked on these apps and she really went
00:47:10.900
does this um not just the ability to to take our data they have all types of possibilities of actually
00:47:20.480
influencing and doing uh mass influence operations by the types of content they put and make available
00:47:27.180
am i am i wrong in that yes absolutely i mean you know it's it's it's been long known that uh there
00:47:35.900
there are two different tiktoks there's the american tiktok and then there's doyen and that's the the the
00:47:42.400
kind of sister version of the app that's allowed in china and so the the sister version in china doyen
00:47:48.380
uh it limits the amount of time that children can spend on it they can't use it at night for instance
00:47:54.280
uh and it also curates the content to be much more edifying there's a lot more informational
00:47:58.700
educational content on it whereas the american apps are filled with all the sorts of things you
00:48:03.620
would see on lives of tiktok timelines right i mean just lots of you know just to say it nakedly
00:48:09.680
lots of degenerate material uh that you know it's impossible to know exactly how much they put their
00:48:16.180
thumbs on the scales because the algorithm is completely opaque uh but it's clear that the
00:48:20.560
output the content of tiktok in america is much more geared towards tearing down moral structures
00:48:26.100
and and really pushing out a lot of unhealthy sorts of content joe how do they get to you how do they
00:48:33.500
get to the webinar they can see it uh up on uh i think it's i don't know if it's even up maybe
00:48:37.340
tomorrow but how do they get to the webinar and how people get to your writings
00:48:40.560
uh i'll have it posted up on my social media at joe bot xyz i'll also send it over so that it'll be
00:48:49.320
uh in the war room news section tomorrow as soon as it posts should be around noon uh also you can
00:48:55.140
you can find me at uh joe bot dot xyz thank you very much steve very disturbing joe allen thank you
00:49:03.140
very much okay we're gonna be back here at 10 o'clock a lot of things are heating up
00:49:06.440
the battle for uh who's going to lead the house is on fire uh what's going to happen in arizona
00:49:13.500
is on fire what's going to happen in this lame duck the most historical lame duck uh probably in
00:49:19.780
modern history that starts on monday all these fights and continue we'll see you back here at
00:49:24.380
10 o'clock tomorrow morning with that in much much more big news out of brazil we'll get into depth
00:50:00.160
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