00:14:42.000I hear these people all the time talk about how important it was to kind of go against the grain and it's because we stood up when it counted and mattered and turned against Britain and all that stuff.
00:14:54.420Anyway, that's not the point of the clip.
00:14:56.100Listen to, or look rather, look at this weird clown right here.
00:15:01.200You can't be pro-insurrection and pro-cop.
00:15:05.320You can't be pro-insurrection and pro-democracy.
00:15:07.860You can't be pro-insurrection and pro-American.
00:15:10.940Donald Trump lacked the courage to act.
00:15:13.820The brave women and men in blue all across this nation should never forget that.
00:15:19.620You can't be pro-insurrection and pro-com.
00:17:37.240...to the Honorable President Joseph R. Biden, Jr., of the United States of America,
00:17:43.560for his true friendship with the State of Israel, the people of Israel, and the Jewish people.
00:17:50.520His uncompromising, decades-long commitment to Israel's security.
00:17:54.700His contributions to deepening, strengthening, and enhancing the strong and unwavering alliance between Israel and the United States of America,
00:18:04.220and his struggle against anti-Israeli and anti-Semitic hatred around the world.
00:18:10.160And then here he gets the medal here, right?
00:18:16.760Yeah, they call him the best friend Israel ever known.
00:18:20.560You know, because, you know, Benny Shapiro's objective here, of course, as we find out later in these clips that we have.
00:18:56.320We'll discuss my continued support, even though I know it's not in the near term a two-state solution.
00:19:03.860That remains, in my view, the best way to ensure the future of equal measure of freedom, prosperity, and democracy for Israelis and Palestinians.
00:19:13.720You once defined yourself as a Zionist.
00:19:18.460You said that you don't have to be a Jew in order to be a Zionist.
00:20:47.160He's visited the Temple Mount on Sunday and prayed Minshash there.
00:20:53.640I do so much hard work to open up over here and make sure that people can do it a little bit of incredible things.
00:21:01.280And if you can see the sort of big creative space, simply for walking up here and adopting a little bit.
00:21:05.960And, you know, thanks to these guys for doing all the hard work day by day to expand the access to people who have an original claim to this idea.
00:21:24.920And then it says, thanks to the people like this who are basically ensuring the safety of the people who have, like, the right to access this.
00:21:45.980And, you know, thanks to these guys for doing all the hard work day by day to expand the access to people who have an original claim to this place.
00:21:53.500The people who have original claim to this place.
00:22:10.560I think I saw them posting quite a bit.
00:22:13.180Like, you shouldn't even walk up there or something they said, right?
00:22:17.640Cassie Dillon, which works over at Ben's Real Daily Wire here, followed along to be his little mouthpiece and tweet out all the wonderful things that happened during the trip.
00:22:29.200The only place where Israel is an apartheid state is on the Temple Mount, Ben Shapiro said, when I joined him on his tour of the holy site.
00:22:37.360And, of course, he means because Jews don't have unfettered access to the location.
00:22:43.400And there's a mosque on there right now, I would assume, right?
00:23:23.920Shapiro said that the Jordanian Waqqar does not want non-Muslims visitors to feel safe on the Temple Mount.
00:23:30.940Yeah, I wonder why these, these boys, they want to start their work on the Third Temple.
00:23:35.880That's something that's incoming here soon, right?
00:23:38.140People have covered this in quite great detail.
00:23:40.580People like Adam Green done excellent coverage on some of that stuff of how they're like, they want to re-uptake the, what do you call it, re-commence, I guess.
00:23:49.840The animal sacrifices there twice a day, I believe.
00:23:54.640Now, this is people that shit on pagans because they think they do animal sacrifices.
00:28:53.340Jews in Germany of the 20th century or Spain of the 15th century felt that this is their home, that they...
00:29:01.200Yeah, for no reason whatsoever things happen.
00:29:04.640They are free citizens, that they live in a peaceful empire, and then they found the Holocaust or the inquisition, etc., and I want to ask you bluntly...
00:29:13.340Yeah, all of a sudden, they just woke up one day.
00:29:16.880The Visigoths in Spain just woke up one day and just like, let's just kick out all the Jews.
00:29:48.600Do you ever wonder if one day you will have to flee the United States?
00:29:53.240I mean, I think that every Jew throughout world history who has a brain and knows history has always wondered if a country that is not a Jewish state
00:29:59.800is going to eternally provide them security guarantees and full citizenship, of course.
00:30:04.360I mean, that's why the existence of the state of Israel is the single greatest guarantor of my loyalty to the United States, frankly.
00:30:13.260Because Israel exists, that means the United States is going to be a more welcoming place for me,
00:30:17.100because Israel is there as a backstop in case anything should go wrong.
00:30:56.820Last time I checked, many people in the West, European countries, are slowly but surely becoming second-hand citizens in their own countries.
00:31:07.100In other words, there's open season on people of European descent in many of our countries.
00:31:11.780Of course, we're being targeted by our own governments.
00:31:15.960We're getting less rights, right, as time goes on.
00:31:18.840Just an example, I saw women who had a mace with them and defended themselves against a rapist, was charged criminally for having a mace.
00:31:26.980It was actually a woman, I didn't cover this story yet, about three weeks ago, I think, two weeks ago,
00:31:31.420that was stopped by police, a Swedish woman was stopped by police in Sweden,
00:31:36.680and she was charged because she had a baseball bat in her car.
00:31:41.400And this is, of course, to defend herself, because these are the countries we now live in.
00:31:45.360But we really don't have a backup country.
00:31:47.620We don't have anywhere else that we can go.
00:31:50.620This is quite fascinating, how they view this, that for them, Ben Shapiro admits here,
00:31:54.660Israel is like a guarantee that you can always, if things go south over here, you can just go there.
00:32:01.820You can leave and you can go to Israel, and then everything will be good and continue to be good.
00:33:13.760I wouldn't even say mutually beneficial or exclusive.
00:33:16.940It's exclusively Israel benefits from the United States, right?
00:33:22.940Which is, you know, it's kind of interesting because now, of course, as things is going very sour in the U.S., right?
00:33:29.760And Israel is kind of positioning itself to be really at the top of the pyramid of global control through, you know, initiations with China and Russia, even through the Belt and Road Initiative and these kinds of things, right?
00:33:40.500The tech center of the world, all the big companies are there and R&D, you know, we've talked about a lot of this over the years, right?
00:33:47.300But as that's happening, the U.S. is kind of falling out of favor.
00:33:51.220It's still, of course, very important and huge amounts of money.
00:33:54.000In fact, we have politicians in the U.S. such as Nancy Pelosi who are talking over the fact that even if the U.S. capital would crumble to the ground, the support for Israel would still be there, right?
00:34:05.420And she talked about that at an APAC event, and we'll talk more about APAC later when we talk about AOC and how she targets, you know, Norse heritage, Scandinavian culture through attacking the Volknut and some of these symbols, right?
00:34:18.080And kind of tied back to this topic we're talking about now to actually just see how APAC acts on this and that these phonies such as AOC and the squad and all these people are just, it's just blah, blah, blah when it comes to APAC in Israel.
00:34:32.500They're actually, they talk big game occasionally, but when it comes down to doing something about it, no, no.
00:34:38.700They're all in the pockets and doing the bidding of groups like APAC.
00:34:43.000But anyway, so Ben's work in America is important because that underlines the cooperation and support of America towards Israel, right?
00:35:06.800Jews should live where they can do the most, where they can be a light to the nations.
00:35:10.140And for me, as a person with millions and millions of followers in the United States promoting what I think are values that are eternally good, living in it.
00:35:17.920My millions of followers in the United States where I can be a light unto the nations, right?
00:35:27.460Where I can bring enlightenment and be a moral guiding star to these horrible pagan countries before they accepted us and our glory and blessing, right?
00:36:06.700He's saying, I can do the bidding for Israel by being in America, being part of the kosher right movement there with my millions of millions of followers.
00:36:17.460You know, they love boomers, love me on Facebook, you know.
00:36:20.840Be part of the kosher right, the controlled op, the whole, you know, gay thing that's going on right now.
00:36:25.260And where these voices have now become, so many of these voices have now entered into the territory which only truly dissident, right, people spoke about 10 years ago.
00:36:38.460And you can argue maybe there's a net positive in there.
00:36:41.020I'm not sure yet, but it's too early to tell.
00:36:43.920But it's interesting how, you know, other people work with Daily Wire, such as Matt Walsh and some of these people, you know, they've dropped anti-white, you know, terms and things like that.
00:36:53.260And say things are anti-white and so on.
00:36:55.720At the end of the day, that is good, I think.
00:36:57.820But at the same time, these little steam valves, right, in these kosher conservative movements is there to raise enough kind of fuzz, right, when certain thing goes wrong.
00:37:09.320But then never pull it back to actually answering these questions of like, well, how do we stop these things?
00:45:26.800I agree, it's something you have to look out for.
00:45:29.160I don't think it will get to that point.
00:45:31.300You can argue, of course, it's happening in South Africa.
00:45:33.340I mean, it is happening in South Africa, obviously.
00:45:35.320But you could argue that, you know, it already has begun in the sense that there's like a low-scale kind of war against many people in Europe
00:45:45.740that have accepted large amounts of immigrants and stuff like that.
00:45:49.120But it's kind of already like warfare to a certain extent.
00:45:52.700There's competition over resources and territory and many of our people are being forced out.
00:45:58.080I mean, and even if they live in these areas, they're not dominated by immigrants.
00:46:02.820It's an unbearable existence and most people want to take off from that.
00:46:06.160We have huge white flight, as it's called in Sweden, for example.
00:46:09.360And that's for a reason, because no one wants to live in these areas.
00:47:47.960He basically just, you know, he's part of the American military in that all of a sudden he's just like right in with Mao doing translations.
00:50:53.100Many congratulations to Professor Susan Michi, or Michi, Mickey, Mickey, I think Mickey.
00:50:59.900Susan Mickey for being appointed chair of the World Health Organization's Technical Advisory Group for Behavioral Insight and Science for Health.
00:53:10.280Michy is a member of the Communist Party of Britain.
00:53:13.720And she was also a member of its predecessor, the Communist Party of Great Britain.
00:53:18.160I guess it's not great anymore. Is that why they changed it?
00:53:20.880In March 2018, she spoke at a public meeting saying that communists should be working full tilt for the election of Jeremy Corbyn as prime minister.
00:53:30.100Now, of course, they have, what's his name now?
00:53:33.460Oh, what's the predecessor there taking over after him?
00:53:50.580Well, how long, Susan, now when you work for the World Health Organization,
00:53:54.820should we be doing all this crazy stuff such as wearing face masks, which, of course, contributing to microplastics in your lungs?
00:54:03.100There was a study out on that the other day.
00:54:05.540And all the other detrimental effects, of course, of yeast infections and all kinds of diseases because of mask wearing, but also social distancing.
00:54:13.200Like, how long should we do those things?
00:54:17.420Professor Mickey, if I can start with you first.
00:54:20.560Do you think that this is going to be right?
00:54:22.400We've had so much hope on the vaccines, hopefully changing everything, bringing an end to the pandemic, bringing an end to these changes we've had in our lives.
00:54:42.240And the third thing is people's behavior.
00:54:45.420That is the behavior of social distancing, of when you're indoors, making sure there's good ventilation or if it's not wearing face masks and hand and surface hygiene.
00:54:56.940We'll need to keep these going in the long term.
00:54:59.720And that will be good not only for COVID, but also to reduce others at a time when the NHS is going.
00:56:19.600I mean, the third, you could argue third-way politics is more dangerous today than some of these commies.
00:56:23.940But the point is, it's all a little big club at the top.
00:56:27.280The same thing as the head of the United Nations, Antonio Guterres.
00:56:30.680He was the head of Socialist International before jumping on the UN, right?
00:56:34.880So anyway, here she is talking about, think social engineering, things, all the weird and crazy shit that's happening after COVID and the crazy stuff that people accepted, right?
00:56:44.300All of it, you could argue, is down to forcing changes in our behavior, right?
00:56:49.020Our patterns or how we do things or accepting just to do things differently, right?
00:56:55.340So the question is, what does it take to achieve desired behavior change, is the question.
00:57:03.700My advice would be, firstly, to be very clear about what behavior you are trying to change, whether it's healthy eating or physical activity.
00:57:13.020And within one of those areas, what the specific behaviors would be.
00:57:16.760So I think one needs to start by understanding the behavior, exactly whose behavior, when, how, why.
00:57:30.580And think about what needs to change to change the behavior.
00:57:34.020So there's a very simple model, the COMBI model of behavior, which suggests that for behavior to occur, one needs three things to occur.
00:57:45.220That is capability to conduct the behavior, motivation for the behavior, and opportunity for the behavior.
00:57:54.720So the very first step would be almost to make a diagnosis of the behavior.
00:58:00.520How do you characterize the behavior you're trying to change in terms of capability, opportunity, and motivation to change that behavior?
00:58:09.720The model is a bit more complicated than that because each of those has a subdivision in that you can think of capability as physical capability and psychological capability.
00:58:19.720Opportunity as the physical opportunity to do something, but also the social opportunity.
00:58:27.680And motivation, the two systems, which is the reflective, the very conscious, deliberative, decision-making system, but also the more automatic, which is the more habitual, unconscious, emotional kind of motivation.
00:58:45.100And then, having done that, secondly, would be to think about the whole range of interventions that's open to one to draw on, what functions they play, and to use the behavioral diagnosis as your guide to which are likely to be the appropriate intervention functions.
00:59:04.280Having selected those, it's then a question of what specific behavior change techniques would be used to deliver the intervention functions.
00:59:12.620And depending on what level one was operating, what kind of policy categories one would use to support those interventions.
00:59:23.160So that basic approach is described in a paper of mine called the Behavior Change Wheel, Open Access in Implementation.
00:59:31.560Oh, great. The Behavior Change Wheel. Can these people be any more cringe?
00:59:36.720So that basic approach is described in a paper of mine.
00:59:41.420Let me guess. Is that what's on her Twitter on the back? Yes. Of course it is.
00:59:46.840There we go. There's the. Enjoy, folks. There's the Behavioral Change Wheel right here.
01:01:20.860They're isolating and de-socializing you so that you can be re-socialized into their new version of society.
01:01:28.460I guess she was so, you know, proficient, essentially, in what she did in terms of behavioral change that the World Health Organization had to snatch her up, essentially, and say, like, well, this is, she's really successful.
01:01:41.660What are they doing over there in Britain?
01:01:43.400And I remember, too, by the way, I try to find the screenshots of this.
01:01:47.540It was an article about something called nudging.
01:01:50.680If someone has any of this or remembers it, shoot me off an email, redice at protomail.com.
01:01:56.300It was about how Britain still was like the big export, like the big export thing that we still do in the UK is political and social nudging, they call it, where they're able to basically change behavior by, you know, pushing people in certain directions, right?
01:02:15.840And it was just reminding me of the kind of work that she's done.
01:02:18.660And I'm sure that that article and stuff, if not referencing her directly, touched upon things that this woman has been working on.
01:02:25.860So anyway, so that's why we call them communists, because sometimes they actually just are, right?
01:02:31.020And so I want to talk about monkeypox a little bit.
01:03:22.660Children are being, wait a minute, are they being affected?
01:03:25.920What does adjacent mean exactly, right?
01:03:30.200And oh my, were there outrage regarding this afterwards, right?
01:03:35.800And the incredible part of this is that in the interview, they're talking about this clip here, I think, in specifics, and they're talking about Rachel Walensky here, or Rochelle Walensky.
01:03:45.180She stated that the children contracted it from gay men.
01:03:49.940This is a setup, Anthony says here, who has the handle Arguably Gay.
01:03:56.160Michael J. Wilson says, and she literally used specifically the phrase, men who have sex with men, while talking about these kids, too.
01:04:21.700She is not the right person to communicate.
01:04:23.920They have so many unalives on their hands from their mismanagement of communication alone.
01:04:30.620And today, she's out there making a statement that the two cases of the children, we could trace back to two men who were having sex with other men.
01:04:39.980How about the other cases where the mother may have given it to the child, or the husband gave it to the wife, or the brother gave it to the cousin?
01:04:48.220Or in the red states where the sister gave it to the brother?
01:15:42.520I've never seen this before in my life.
01:15:43.960There seems to be a few sensors in there.
01:15:47.420As the official technology partner of the City Football Group, we're always looking at ways to innovate and use tech as a way to unite fans and connect them to the club that they love more than ever before.
01:15:57.320I think you mean connect them to the cloud, right?
01:16:01.420From that burning ambition, the Connected Scarf was born, a first of its kind.
01:16:08.200The Connected Scarf is a device that we've designed that will enable us to measure physiological responses of emotions and excitement in football fans.
01:16:16.640The Connected Scarf is equipped with a series of sensors that record for us a range of physiological signals.
01:16:22.520For example, we get data about heartbeats, skin temperature and electrodermal activity, which is a broad measure of emotional arousal.
01:16:36.240So what we are doing is extracting physiological signals from the scar, from the bodies of our fans, getting a broad matrix of what they need and related it to actions that happen on the field.
01:16:52.520Using the data, we'll be able to understand fans more than ever before.
01:16:58.120It provides an opportunity to be more inclusive and learn more about the role sport plays in all of our lives.
01:18:32.020There's like Manchester City, like a football club in the UK is doing this.
01:18:36.060Shows off a smart scarf that tracks fans' reactions.
01:18:39.340Cisco plans to bring it to fans next season.
01:18:42.680This is, yeah, it's an emote bit, they call it.
01:18:44.800So, Cisco, on Wednesday, the Premier League football club shared that it would have been working with Cisco, the team's technological partner, since 2019.
01:31:23.060You know, they launched bioweapons at us, advanced energy weapons, all kinds of crazy stuff out there, right?
01:31:28.980And, yeah, I mean, you know, you can complain about other, you know, weapons being used, you know, like against, you know, like Israel dropped, like white phosphorus on the Palestinians and stuff, right?
01:31:40.620But it was like a lot of, it was a lot of information about that at the time.
01:31:44.100It was like they were, you know, kind of putting them down.
01:31:46.800They were basically saying, oh, my God, this should be illegal.
01:31:48.880This should be like there's international laws, you know, broken when they're using this technology.
01:31:53.700Well, that's what should happen here as well.
01:31:55.280It should be, you know, people should be held accountable, essentially.
01:31:59.300What the hell are they doing, you know?
01:32:01.500This should be totally illegal, and the people that are doing this, that should be first, day one out in the public, and the people that approve this being used should be fired.
01:32:10.540And, in fact, I can think of a lot more things that could be done to those people, too.
01:34:34.680Many of you have reported on, as Secretary Yellen said on Sunday, two negative quarters of GDP growth is not the technical definition of recession.
01:34:47.000It's not the definition that economists have traditionally relied on.
01:34:52.620There is an organization called the National Bureau of Economic Research, and what they do is they look at a broad range of data and deciding whether or not a recession has occurred.
01:37:30.800Top U.S. cattle feeding companies sent 1,000-pound carcasses to a Kansas landfill where they were flattened by loader machines and mixed with trash.
01:37:41.160After a June heat wave killed thousands of cows, documents seen by Reuters show.
01:38:55.820Neither is a typical method for disposing of bodies.
01:38:59.600But so many cows died in the unusual heat and humidity that facilities that normally convert carcasses into pet food and fertilizer products were overwhelmed.
01:39:23.640So the state government and cattle feeders, they claim here, had to take emergency measures.
01:39:28.780The mass deaths and subsequent scramble to deal with the decaying bodies sparked a push for changes in the meat industry in Kansas, the third largest U.S. cattle state.
01:39:54.800It was super weird things like this, right?
01:39:57.360So, of course, this is because they want you to eat the, well, bugs, number one, then the synthetic beef.
01:40:02.520And then if you want to find out more about where this actually is going, check out the latest Week in Warrior Show because actually cannibalism is next on the menu.
01:40:11.300They're actually promoting from the New York Times to NPR to these like major media outlets are basically saying, what's the taboo with eating humans anyway?
01:41:08.860But, yeah, so this is what they're doing.
01:41:10.140They're just, if something happens or cows die or pigs die or poultry or they can't feed them or they can't slaughter them enough, they just mass execute.
01:41:19.280I mean, in that case, they'd say tons of these animals and just bury it all.
01:41:23.420Or if they die for whatever cause, whether it's natural or not, they just ground it up, they run it over, and they destroy it, and they throw it away.