Stay Free - Russel Brand - September 04, 2024


HOLY SH*T! Pfizer Runs Clinical Trials On Prisoners In CHINESE CONCENTRATION CAMPS! - SF444


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 18 minutes

Words per Minute

160.88023

Word Count

12,672

Sentence Count

724

Misogynist Sentences

8

Hate Speech Sentences

24


Summary

In this episode of Stay Free With Russell Brand, host Russell Brand is joined by journalist Mike Benz to discuss the dangers of the deep state, and why you should vote for Kamala Harris in the 2020 Democratic primary. Plus, a look at what's going on at the anti-Trump 'Robby Kennedy' rally, and Elon Musk's new plan to get rid of the US government. Stay free with Russell Brand wherever you get your podcasts, and don't forget to Like and Subscribe to stay free on Apple Podcasts and stay up to date on all things podcasting! To find a list of our sponsors and show-related promo codes, go to gimlet.fm/OurAdvertisers and use the promo code: "UPLEVEL" to receive 10% off their entire purchase when you enter the offer code: UPLEVEL10 at checkout. This offer ends on 5/31/2019. If you're not a member of the Awake and Wonder, consider becoming a patron or patron supporter of the show by clicking the link below. You'll get 20% off your first month with discount code AWAKEDWALKER at the checkout, plus 10% discount when you buy your first pack when you become a patron, plus free shipping throughout the rest of the month, plus an additional $5 off your membership when you sign up to Awake & Wonder offers a maximum of $99.99. We'll be giving you a copy of his book, and he'll get a free copy of the book, plus he'll be able to watch the book on Audible, too! - no matter where he or she works, and get a discount on the book is reviewed, plus they'll get an extra $10,000 shipping, plus a free shipping discount, plus shipping on the day of his or her first week of the ad is available to you get 20/day, shipping starts, and they'll also get an ad on the first day of the offer starts, too, they'll receive a discount, and you'll get access to the book he or he'll receive an ad discount, too. That's 5/1/online training, plus all that'll get you an ad, plus VIP pricing, and all other options, plus $5/day shipping, and a FREE VIP discount, for the choice of $10/day they can choose that starts at $50/place they decide to rate the book they choose.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 [MUSIC PLAYING]
00:00:09.000 Brought to you by Spider.
00:00:12.000 So I'm looking for the steel Looking for the steel
00:00:17.000 In this video, you're going to see the future.
00:00:20.000 Hello, this is Gregory. Hi.
00:00:24.000 We're going to be working in the satellite software.
00:00:26.000 Hello there, you awakening wonders.
00:00:31.000 Thanks for joining me today for Stay Free with Russell Brand.
00:00:34.000 We've got a really brilliant and exciting show.
00:00:36.000 Mike Benz is going to be on the show later.
00:00:38.000 If you don't know who Mike Benz is yet, he's a journalist who's able to help you understand the power of the deep state, the history of the deep state, the influence of the deep state, particularly over big tech and your government.
00:00:51.000 Right now, he's a brilliant guest.
00:00:52.000 He'll be on once we leave YouTube, because as you know, our exclusive home is Rumble, where you can stream freely, where we can speak freely, and where my dog Bear can trouble me freely.
00:01:06.000 Hello, Awake and Wonders in the locals chat.
00:01:08.000 Remember, if you're not on Awake and Wonder yet, consider becoming one.
00:01:11.000 I do live shows, like live stand-up shows, and you can watch the stream of those live shows Or, you can, if you want to, sorry about that, there was a sort of a weird phantom sound, or you can actually attend live.
00:01:24.000 If you respond, if you send something to this tickets at russellbryan.com, if you send your details, we'll send you a ticket, you can come to any show, including next week, I will be, no it's later this month actually, Rescue, ah no it's not on there no more, Rescue the West, I'm, or Rescue the Republic, can you tell me what button that's on, or is it not on there anymore?
00:01:48.000 the rescue the republic assets let me know guys if if you don't mind 20 or 21 oh it's on both of them yeah check that have a look at this brett weinstein has put together this event bobby kennedy's attending i'm attending there i am dressed up as a revolutionary soldier while donald trump ...poses as George Washington.
00:02:13.000 Bobby Kennedy there.
00:02:14.000 And I suppose that this Rescue the Republic event that's taking place on the 29th of September is a rally and a rallying cry for true anti-establishment opposition.
00:02:26.000 Now you, of course, may have doubts about Donald Trump.
00:02:29.000 You may love him.
00:02:30.000 You may be maggot right up to the hill.
00:02:32.000 But let me know how you feel about Tulsi Gabbard and Bobby Kennedy joining this movement and let me know if you want to attend that event.
00:02:40.000 I'm sure we could organize some VIP experiences in particular for you awakened wonders.
00:02:47.000 Now, before we get to Mike Benz, there's a few little things I want to talk to you about.
00:02:51.000 Mostly, I wanted to bring up this Musk comment on this position.
00:02:57.000 I can't wait.
00:02:57.000 There's a lot of waste and needless regulation.
00:02:59.000 This is Elon responding to, Trump is reportedly eyeing a plan to involve prominent business executives, including Elon, in ordering federal agencies to identify programs to cut.
00:03:10.000 Can you imagine that?
00:03:11.000 Is that like when Our man from Argentina did that.
00:03:15.000 This is gone!
00:03:16.000 This is gone!
00:03:18.000 What was that dude's name?
00:03:19.000 He was pretty extraordinary.
00:03:21.000 Have a look at this.
00:03:22.000 Kamala... We have... One second.
00:03:25.000 Before we get into this, Kamala Harris is revisiting be unburdened, become unburdened by what might have been.
00:03:33.000 She's doing it again, God love her.
00:03:35.000 We have dreams.
00:03:37.000 We can see what is possible unburdened by what has been.
00:03:42.000 I thought that was... That catchphrase has got to go, hasn't it?
00:03:45.000 You've got to drop that out.
00:03:46.000 Also, apparently here there's some interesting inflections.
00:03:51.000 I've not watched this yet.
00:03:52.000 You better thank a union member for the five-day work week.
00:04:00.000 You better thank a union member for sick leave.
00:04:02.000 You better thank a union member for paid leave.
00:04:06.000 You better thank a union member for vacation time.
00:04:10.000 I like that bit.
00:04:11.000 And here is the apparently neutral Amazon entity, Alexa, offering political insight.
00:04:21.000 Alexa, why should I vote for Donald Trump?
00:04:26.000 I cannot provide content that promotes a specific political party or a specific candidate.
00:04:32.000 Alexa, why should I vote for Kamala Harris?
00:04:39.000 While there are many reasons to vote for Kamala Harris, the most significant may be that she is a strong candidate with a proven track record of accomplishment.
00:04:48.000 As the first female vice president, Harris has already broken down a major gender barrier, and her career in politics has been characterized by a commitment to progressive ideals and a focus on helping disenfranchised communities.
00:05:01.000 That's the kind of near-neutral and banal propaganda that many people query.
00:05:09.000 It's hardly Extremist.
00:05:13.000 But it's the kind of normalisation of a particular political purview, i.e.
00:05:19.000 that in order to save democracy, you have to vote for Kamala Harris in November.
00:05:25.000 Well, actually, if you really care about your republic, it seems that you have to consider the new alliance that's emerging between Trump, Bobby Kennedy, Tulsi Gabbard and the like.
00:05:36.000 Could this be the most powerful anti-establishment alliance In history.
00:05:41.000 Now, I know many people will have questions about Trump.
00:05:44.000 Trump has indeed had a four-year presidency, which I would see as, in a way, evidence that, basically, politics stayed between the rails, I would say.
00:05:53.000 I don't know.
00:05:54.000 You guys let me know.
00:05:54.000 A lot of people are talking about the volume on the chat, guys, so could we... Let's have a little chat about that afterwards in regard to... I'd like the lowest possible level to go up and be higher, if that's possible, please.
00:06:06.000 Something to bear in mind, certainly, for the coming months.
00:06:09.000 Okay, now, just when I think I can't love Pfizer and Albert Baller anymore, they come up with the perfect product.
00:06:18.000 Pfizer, you don't get enough access to their products, do you?
00:06:22.000 You've always got to deal with mediators and brokers, like doctors and pharmacies, et cetera.
00:06:30.000 Well, I've had enough of it.
00:06:32.000 I want Pfizer direct to me, especially when we know that Eli Lilly and Pfizer are so rigorous with their testing, so diligent with their products, that there are hardly any incumbents of Chinese concentration camps that aren't given their products.
00:06:52.000 As a test.
00:06:54.000 It's indeed true that major US pharmaceutical companies have been running clinical trials at hospitals affiliated with the Chinese army and may have tested drugs on prisoners in China's illegal concentration camps.
00:07:08.000 Isn't it amazing that during the pandemic period we were given a clear moral and ethical choice?
00:07:13.000 You better take this vaccine if not for yourself, you Selfish pig.
00:07:18.000 Then for your grandmother, or for the elderly, or for the vulnerable.
00:07:23.000 Well, these very same corporations ran clinical trials in illegal concentration camps.
00:07:31.000 While we were being told that it was racist to inquire as to whether or not the virus had emerged from Wuhan, most likely a Wuhan laboratory, we were told that it was racist to say that, They were running clinical trials at concentration camps!
00:07:47.000 What kind of warped and crazy moral metrics are being deployed where you are called racist saying, I heard this thing came out of Wuhan, do you think it's possible it came out of the Wuhan Institute of Virology?
00:07:58.000 You racist!
00:07:59.000 Now, what is going on in China though is we're running clinical trials on prisoners in concentration camps that are illegal.
00:08:08.000 Many of you will be familiar with the Plight of the Uyghur people, a Muslim community who are incarcerated in China.
00:08:16.000 A lot of people campaigning for their freedom.
00:08:18.000 Pfizer, it seems, have got a totally different perspective.
00:08:22.000 A bipartisan group of lawmakers have sent a scathing letter probing the FDA for more information about decades of research from companies like Eli Lilly and Pfizer.
00:08:31.000 Some of this research was conducted in the regions where the Chinese Communist Party has been accused of setting up camps to house and commit genocide against Uyghur Muslims.
00:08:39.000 The representatives said, we believe that U.S.
00:08:41.000 biopharmaceutical entities could be unintentionally, unintentionally of course, intentionally all they do is heal you and help you, profiting from the data derived from clinical trials during which the CCP forced victim patients to participate.
00:08:56.000 Eli Lilly told the Daily Mail, it's a British newspaper, Lilly conducts clinical trials around the world to ensure diversity in our research and increase access to our medicines.
00:09:06.000 What a brilliant response from their PR team at Eli Lilly.
00:09:10.000 Diversity in our research!
00:09:12.000 You could be...
00:09:13.000 That one of them little children that you saw spasming in America having been given a vaccine.
00:09:19.000 I believe that was a Moderna vaccine, but I wouldn't absolutely commit to that, certainly not while we're on YouTube.
00:09:23.000 Remember, we'll only be on YouTube for a few more minutes.
00:09:26.000 Mike Benz is coming up in a matter of moments.
00:09:30.000 But we also run clinical trials on prisoners.
00:09:34.000 Potentially Uyghur prisoners incarcerated in China.
00:09:39.000 Well, there's no reason why you should wait till you're incarcerated in a Chinese concentration camp to try Pfizer's latest products.
00:09:46.000 Albert Baller wants some accessible I'm so overwhelmed!
00:09:50.000 Some people are telling me that adverse events need to be investigated.
00:09:53.000 a post on that. Research shows that many people in the US are overwhelmed by the
00:09:57.000 abundance of online health information. I'm so overwhelmed!
00:10:01.000 Some people are telling me that adverse events need to be investigated.
00:10:05.000 Some people are telling me that excess deaths need to be investigated.
00:10:08.000 Some people are pointing out that athletes appear to be collapsing on the field of play with an incredible and alarming regularity.
00:10:15.000 Other people are trying to really push Pfizer down my throat or into my arm where the spike protein definitely won't migrate into the lining of my heart.
00:10:24.000 We, especially when they're ill, they have questions, these people, and need to make, I'll do it in an Albert Buller voice, it'll help, and need to make the best decisions for themselves and their loved ones.
00:10:32.000 So I'm thrilled, thrilled to announce the launch of Pfizer for All, a user-friendly digital platform designed to simplify healthcare access and management for patients in the US.
00:10:42.000 Patients can use Pfizer for All to connect with qualified healthcare professionals The same day, get prescriptions and diagnostic tests sent directly to your home or for pickup at a preferred pharmacy.
00:10:54.000 Well, this is what a brilliant opportunity.
00:10:56.000 Look at this.
00:10:57.000 We're proud to call the USA our home since founding in New York 175... We started Pfizer with just a couple of rickety old vaccines 175 years ago.
00:11:08.000 We're committed to helping patients and Uyghurs as well, it seems.
00:11:12.000 Although there is no concrete evidence that the trials took place in concentration camps, just in the regions.
00:11:18.000 And is it beyond their moral purview?
00:11:20.000 That's something to investigate.
00:11:21.000 Let's have a little look at Pfizer for all.
00:11:27.000 Yesterday.
00:11:28.000 Yesterday was amazing.
00:11:30.000 Rachel was determined to live her life on her terms, not her migraines.
00:11:35.000 Because after years of coping, Rachel took the next step to find an option that could work for her.
00:11:41.000 Yesterday, breakthroughs were made and lives were changed.
00:11:46.000 But that was yesterday.
00:11:50.000 Let's outdo yesterday.
00:11:52.000 Talk to a doctor about migraine treatment options at PfizerForAll.com PfizerForAll. Here's a reminder about some of the other
00:12:03.000 Pfizer products.
00:12:03.000 These are a reminder about some of the other Pfizer products.
00:12:06.000 This is from 2021.
00:12:06.000 Today with our partner BioNTech, we announced results from a phase 3 trial in 12 to 15 year olds that showed that our COVID-19 vaccine demonstrated 100% efficacy against COVID-19 disease.
00:12:17.000 Robust antibody responses and was well tolerated.
00:12:23.000 100% efficacy.
00:12:24.000 Is it possible that that would be considered misinformation?
00:12:28.000 100% effective?
00:12:29.000 Let me know in the comments and the chat.
00:12:31.000 How you feel about that?
00:12:35.000 Also, it seems that Pax Lovid, their oral COVID medication wasn't as effective as they claimed.
00:12:43.000 A new study seems to suggest that it doesn't actually work.
00:12:47.000 The time to sustained alleviation of all signs and symptoms of COVID-19 did not differ significantly between participants who received Nirmatrevlia wrote Pax Lovid to give it its brand name and those who
00:12:57.000 received the placebo write New England Journal of Medicine Journalist Today. In
00:13:04.000 writing out Pax Lovid Pfizer claimed in a press release that its
00:13:06.000 preliminary data showed an 89% reduction in hospitalisation and death for patients who
00:13:12.000 took the pill. When Pax Lovid first hit pharmacy shelves Pfizer claimed that Pax Lovid
00:13:18.000 rebound, that's short for people's symptoms, coming back after taking a
00:13:21.000 course of Pax Lovid was inconsequential amounting to one or two percent of patients
00:13:26.000 who were prescribed the drug.
00:13:27.000 But a late March study suggested that about 1 in 4 patients on Pax Lovid suffered from that rebound.
00:13:33.000 This study didn't just analyse the presence of viral fragments, it found that 24% of enrolled patients suffered from symptomatic rebound.
00:13:41.000 So it's about 25 times more un-effective than they claimed.
00:13:46.000 So, whether it's testing prisoners in Chinese prison camps, whether it's reaching you in new ways, making claims that 100% of their vaccines are effective for children, Or claiming that Pax Lovid is 25 times better than it actually is.
00:14:01.000 Pfizer has got something for everyone.
00:14:04.000 And most of it is, well, I don't know, just make sure that you're looking after the lining of your heart.
00:14:08.000 Won't go too far, because we're still on YouTube.
00:14:12.000 And as long as you're on YouTube, and as long as the world is controlled by a global corporatist interest, you will need to pray.
00:14:19.000 That's why I'm proud to be supported by our partners today.
00:14:22.000 Halo.
00:14:23.000 Halo partner us.
00:14:25.000 Thanks.
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00:14:31.000 Halo's new series is called How to Pray.
00:14:33.000 Over the next two weeks, an all-star lineup of spiritual leaders and guests can guide you in short daily sessions so that you have the essentials for a deeper prayer practice.
00:14:42.000 You'll learn how to pray with the scriptures and the great spiritual practice of imaginative prayer.
00:14:47.000 You'll learn very old prayers, such as the rosary, which you know I do each day.
00:14:52.000 Very beautiful.
00:14:53.000 You get new guides every day, including Jonathan Rumi, who played Our Lord and Saviour in The Chosen, Jesus is my body double, Bishop Robert Barron, brilliant guest on the show, Father Mike Schmitz, I love Mike Schmitz, he's amazing, and Mark Wahlberg, as well as others.
00:15:06.000 You're gonna love it!
00:15:07.000 While you're on Hallo, the app that, you know, just download it on your phone, it's really good, check out the thousands of wonderful free prayers, meditations and music.
00:15:15.000 Download Hallo for three months free at hallo.com forward slash brand.
00:15:19.000 Use that, they'll know I've sent you and that my evangelism is working.
00:15:24.000 Hey, if you're watching this on YouTube, we're going to leave now.
00:15:26.000 We're going to talk a little bit about the election results in Germany.
00:15:30.000 Then we will be joined by the incomparable and brilliant Mike Benz.
00:15:35.000 See you in a few seconds.
00:15:36.000 Click the link in the description.
00:15:38.000 If you're not on Awaken Wonder yet, become an Awaken Wonder.
00:15:41.000 You can join me for live-streamed stand-up events.
00:15:44.000 And if you are an Awaken Wonder, you can come to any live event anywhere in the world that I'm participating in and get a ticket absolutely free.
00:15:52.000 What an incredible offer.
00:15:53.000 I mean, that's got to be better than Pfizer for all, hasn't it?
00:15:55.000 Click the link in the description.
00:15:56.000 If you're on YouTube, join us over on Rumble, which is our home.
00:16:00.000 Now, there have been some pretty surprising political results across Europe in recent months, accompanying the rise of censorship and surveillance and people's ongoing fears around migration.
00:16:12.000 And I would add to that global corporatism.
00:16:15.000 The Gilets Jaunes movement in France focused, in particular, say, on Black Rock's inordinate
00:16:21.000 power.
00:16:22.000 And after the elections in France, Macron cobbled together a peculiar alliance and is
00:16:26.000 still unable to name a prime minister for, presumably, because of bureaucratic challenges
00:16:33.000 that are difficult for us to understand.
00:16:35.000 He should probably ask for some help from his wife.
00:16:38.000 She's always been a good, older mentor.
00:16:41.000 Hasn't she?
00:16:42.000 Really?
00:16:42.000 Rather reliable.
00:16:43.000 So let's have a look what's going on in Germany.
00:16:46.000 And remember, stay with us, because in just a few moments we'll be with Mike Benz, who will help us to understand how new movements Even if those new movements might have aspects that cause concern to some, are going to be required to oppose centralised bureaucratic authoritarianism that grants incredible power to corporations like Pfizer?
00:17:08.000 via their relationships with people like Ursula von der Leyen at the EU, who, as you recall, did deals at the height of the pandemic for millions of millions of vaccines.
00:17:17.000 That's not to mention the fact that her husband's got a vaccine company.
00:17:20.000 So corporatism and globalism is a great threat.
00:17:23.000 But in Germany, they're, of course, concerned about the results of the most recent elections.
00:17:28.000 Let's have a look at some mainstream news coverage of those events.
00:17:34.000 Tonight, a political taboo has been shattered.
00:17:37.000 A far-right party winning a state election in Germany for the first time since the Nazis, raising questions about Germany's political future and setting off alarm bells about the far-right's rise across Europe and beyond.
00:17:49.000 The Alternative for Germany Party, or AFD, taking first place in the East German state of Thuringia and second in neighboring Saxony.
00:17:56.000 The AFD, formerly accused by German intelligence of being an extremist group in both states.
00:18:02.000 Front pages in Germany calling it a political earthquake and a slap by Germany's East.
00:18:08.000 It's horrible.
00:18:09.000 I find it unbelievable, this Berlin resident says.
00:18:11.000 The AFD playing on fears about migration, especially by Muslim immigrants, and rallying opposition to foreign aid to Ukraine and to high costs of living.
00:18:20.000 Parts of East Germany feel that they've been left behind.
00:18:23.000 They feel like they are not necessarily getting their part of the pie.
00:18:28.000 The AFD leader in Thuringia telling supporters at his victory party, first they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, and then you win.
00:18:36.000 One of the biggest losers, Chancellor Olaf Scholz, whose deeply unpopular center-left party hemorrhaged votes.
00:18:43.000 Some of his coalition partners didn't even meet the 5% threshold to serve in parliament.
00:18:47.000 Scholz calling the results worrying, telling Reuters the AFD is ruining Germany's reputation.
00:18:52.000 But the elections won't immediately change the way Germany is governed.
00:18:56.000 In part, because Germany's mainstream parties are vowing to block the AFD from forming a governing coalition.
00:19:01.000 Tonight, AFD's leaders calling that threat undemocratic.
00:19:05.000 Saying Chancellor Schulz should take the hint and pack his bags.
00:19:09.000 The election also bringing shocking success for the far left, including a brand new party, the BSW, that came in third in both states.
00:19:19.000 Its leader, a former communist, echoing the far right in rejecting Germany's old guard of centrists, saying, the message has arrived.
00:19:26.000 People want change.
00:19:28.000 It's a populist message voters have been sending more and more forcefully across Europe and even in the US.
00:19:34.000 In the UK, the far-right Reform UK gaining ground.
00:19:37.000 Its leader Nigel Farage elected to Parliament for the first time in July.
00:19:41.000 And in France, the right-wing National Rally gaining dozens of seats, more than ever before, and leaving French government gridlocked for months.
00:19:49.000 Should we expect more voters across Europe to take a gamble in the future on the far-right?
00:19:54.000 I think you're already seeing it.
00:19:56.000 And by the way, our election is coming up in November, and it's a very similar situation here, I believe.
00:20:00.000 The big question now is what all of this means for Germany's national elections set to take place next year, and whether the rest of the country will follow this sharp shift to the right.
00:20:10.000 Olaf Scholz has said he plans to run again for chancellor next year, but this election dealt such a blow to Germany's centrist that there are questions now about whether his governing coalition can even hang on until next year.
00:20:22.000 Extraordinarily the term far-right seems to be more and more prevalent in the judgment of these political parties and movements.
00:20:30.000 Perhaps we will analyze some of the policies and work out together what determines far-right and how that term is being used these days.
00:20:40.000 Joining me to discuss that as well as many other issues relating to surveillance, censorship And the potential for a radical resistance to oppose centralised authoritarianism in the United States is one of my favourite guests, the great Mike Benz.
00:20:55.000 Mike, you look good.
00:20:57.000 I'm surprised.
00:20:58.000 I'm excited by your general appearance.
00:21:01.000 Well, I was very inspired by the shades that you had on at the beginning, so I figured we'd do a men in black thing, since that seems to be what the state wants to do to us, to just zap our historic memory of everything that they've been doing and have planned for us.
00:21:16.000 So maybe we can zap them back.
00:21:18.000 Mike, when you... I've put sunglasses on now, I'm into the idea.
00:21:22.000 Mike, when you hear the term Far-Right used to describe the Reform Party, which are kind of, in a way, sort of a Conservative, Nationalist, Britain First Party, it's a real stretch to describe them as Far right.
00:21:36.000 It makes me wonder why there is an appetite to condemn nativist parties and whether or not you consider that to be a globally coordinated idea.
00:21:51.000 And if it is globally coordinated, is it connected to migration?
00:21:55.000 And is migration part of a broader set of ideas that bring around disruption and disarray?
00:22:02.000 And is it possible to ask these questions and have these conversations without being called racist?
00:22:10.000 Well, it certainly is attached to the immigration issue, but that itself is more sort of a subset of the nationalism issue.
00:22:18.000 And it's important, I think, for folks to understand that the term far-right is not something that is bantied about as a sort of descriptor label in the abstract.
00:22:29.000 It is part of the general strategy of the blob, the foreign policy establishment who's
00:22:35.000 tasked with overthrowing governments when they get in the way of the U.S., joint U.S.-U.K.
00:22:41.000 foreign policy, NATO transatlantic agenda.
00:22:45.000 When they have a trick around anyone who's a threat to democracy, they get to use their
00:22:51.000 special set of skills to overthrow those governments or to flow tens of millions of dollars to
00:22:56.000 political opposition to unseat.
00:22:58.000 Those political movements, and the term far right is a designation to say that they are
00:23:03.000 outside the bounds of what normal democratic discourse should be.
00:23:08.000 And so the reason they keep barraging far right, far right is because they've—
00:23:15.000 They want to say in a democracy, you can be right or you can be left, but you can't be extremist.
00:23:20.000 And if you are extremist, you are undermining democracy.
00:23:22.000 And so we get to sick our democracy promotion programs against them.
00:23:27.000 This gives a license to the U.S.
00:23:30.000 State Department, to USAID, to the National Endowment for Democracy.
00:23:34.000 To the UK Foreign Office, to GCHQ, to everyone who uses that set of skills to unseat authoritarians in Venezuela or Iran or Russia now gets to take that same program dollars to stop the extremist far right.
00:23:49.000 Yes, and it's curious to see that this is one of a carousel of issues where there appears to be a global consensus.
00:24:01.000 For example, you can see that there are agricultural movements across the world and there seems to be an attempt to destabilize small-scale Farming.
00:24:11.000 It seems that migration is an issue across the world and it appears to be handled in a somewhat uniform manner.
00:24:19.000 And I suppose most notably we saw in the pandemic, and for reasons that could be understandable, Cohesive global response.
00:24:29.000 But while that would be entirely legitimate in a sort of a medically authoritative response to a genuine disease and a genuine crisis, what most of us have been left with is that this was an opportunity to assert authoritarianism at an unprecedented scale.
00:24:47.000 And Mike, I wonder how the use of the phrase far-right Is being used, like in your country, the United States, in our country, the UK, in relation to the elections in Germany, in relation to events in Brazil, in relation to what's been happening in France, because I don't feel like people are suddenly more racist than they ever have been.
00:25:09.000 I feel that some people have concerns about migration and wherever you stand on that issue, you'd have to, in a democracy or a republic, listen to the views of the electorate and respond to them.
00:25:19.000 And I feel that what's happening is people are becoming disenchanted with globalism, the kind of deep state, inverted commas, blob powers and the kind of corporate overreach that is truly global and that one of the most...
00:25:34.000 ...immediate and available responses is to return to a kind of nationalism, is a concern for boundaries and borders.
00:25:41.000 So how is it that there is such a cohesive and uniform response to an issue that would be diverse if there weren't a centralised authority orchestrating it?
00:25:57.000 Well, the answer is because of the consensus building process within NATO, which then filters down into the EU and is back channeled by the U.S.
00:26:04.000 and the U.S.
00:26:05.000 State Department.
00:26:06.000 And so just last week, for example, if folks go to my ex account, it's at MikeBennCyber, I posted a 45 minute Consensus building stakeholder conference, the inside guts of it, so people can see exactly how journalists are trained by the NATO propaganda arm at the Atlantic Council and the NATO press office in order to have this consensus set of terms.
00:26:28.000 You can actually see the inside guts of that.
00:26:30.000 I'll put that at the top of my timeline in a second here.
00:26:33.000 But as I heard you describe France, I just made a mini thread so that folks can sort of understand NATO's role in and the censorship industry's role in what's happening in the French elections right now.
00:26:44.000 So just to immediately answer your question, they don't give a flying fig newton about racism.
00:26:50.000 This is the same reason this same apparatus is funding the Azov battalion, which has been infused with Nazism for You know, over a decade and was actually condemned by the U.S.
00:27:03.000 Congress in 2014 and funds were forbidden to flow to them.
00:27:07.000 But then the moment they became geopolitically useful as a battering ram to seize Eurasia from Russia, suddenly they were glorified and they were welcomed in Congress and we started sending them hundreds of billions of dollars.
00:27:18.000 So, you know, the sins of racism can be cleansed immediately the moment you can prove yourself useful to the Blob's foreign policy agenda.
00:27:29.000 In fact, racism is often something we cynically exploit in order to mobilize different groups against our adversaries.
00:27:36.000 But just at the top of my page, I'll just sort of read this.
00:27:40.000 This is from the Financial Times just three months ago.
00:27:43.000 EU and NATO keep nervous eye on Marine Le Pen's bid for French presidency.
00:27:49.000 The far-right candidate wants to rein in Brussels' power and take Paris out of the military alliance's command structures.
00:27:56.000 And then also from French news, Le Pen wants France out of NATO's integrated command, backs NATO-Russia ties.
00:28:02.000 She's also ran on essentially renegotiating Europe's energy posture with Russia.
00:28:08.000 NATO wants to stop Marine Le Pen by any means possible because she is basically the reincarnation of Charles de Gaulle.
00:28:16.000 If folks remember, NATO was headquartered in 1949 in the beginning, not in Brussels, but in Paris.
00:28:22.000 And it was only after De Gaulle ran a sort of make France great again type presidency in the 1960s, and the CIA and NATO essentially backed a coup against De Gaulle, by the way, this is all publicly available.
00:28:37.000 If you look up the CIA's work with With Algerians to potentially even assassinate Charles de Gaulle when he was threatening to undermine NATO, which again is the military arm of the blob.
00:28:49.000 So everything that the State Department wants done commercially and all the State Department's stakeholders and the multinational corporations and banks, everything that the EU is doing, everything that is part of that transatlantic alliance, oftentimes that relies on the immediate military backbone of NATO.
00:29:08.000 but if not, NATO paramilitary support or NATO civil military affairs.
00:29:13.000 And so you need this enforcement arm.
00:29:15.000 And so, you know, what you see right now is an attempt to exploit the civil grievances
00:29:22.000 around identity issues to stop Marine Le Pen.
00:29:26.000 And that would all go away if Marine Le Pen sold her soul and vowed 100 percent fealty
00:29:33.000 to NATO's political and commercial goals.
00:29:38.000 And so this is happening all over all over Europe.
00:29:41.000 NATO is hell-bent on stopping AFD in Germany, partly because AFD in Germany is mostly a sort of lower middle class workers movement who opposed the post-NATO assassinated Qaddafi assassination is what set off the immigration crisis in Europe.
00:30:00.000 So you had these right-wing nationalist parties emerge because of that immigration crisis.
00:30:05.000 But as part of that plank set, the AFD party in Germany, Matteo Salvini's movement in Italy, the Vox party in Spain, Marine Le Pen in France, all of these parties have also run on neutrality with Russia because Russia provides the cheapest energy to the United States.
00:30:24.000 And so the lower middle classes who are getting destroyed by the US-led sanctions on Russian energy, and now the full-scale
00:30:33.000 US war against Russia, can all be reversed and people in Europe will be
00:30:38.000 financially much better off, especially the lower and middle classes, if that US coerced policy in
00:30:46.000 Europe were reversed.
00:30:48.000 But that would fly in the face of the NATO agenda, as well as the commercial and financial
00:30:53.000 interests who all make windfall profits at massively--
00:30:58.000 [BLANK_AUDIO]
00:31:00.000 Massively higher margins by forcing Europe to buy liquefied natural gas from North America instead of natural gas from a Russian pipeline.
00:31:09.000 And so this energy dependence that Europe has on Russia is easily contextualized by the U.S.
00:31:16.000 State Department and the U.K.
00:31:18.000 Foreign Office as being, you know, sort of Russian puppets.
00:31:22.000 That is Marine Le Pen is a Russian puppet.
00:31:24.000 The Vox party in Spain is a Russian puppet.
00:31:26.000 AFD is a Russian puppet.
00:31:27.000 Mateo Salvini is a Russian puppet, and that allows these prosecutions in every one of these countries.
00:31:32.000 There have been Russiagate-style prosecutions against the political movement.
00:31:36.000 The CIA has been actively involved.
00:31:38.000 The State Department and USAID have been funding opposition to these movements all over.
00:31:43.000 In fact, all of the censorship in these countries comes from US State Department-coordinated NGOs Who all use this kind of Russiagate predicate to say, even if it's not Russian disinformation they're spreading, Russia wants them to win.
00:31:56.000 So anything they say is Russian propaganda.
00:31:59.000 So we now get to back channel with Facebook, with YouTube, and previously Twitter 1.0 to censor everything they do to stop this.
00:32:06.000 And they contextualize it as a national security threat for that reason, in terms of NATO and
00:32:12.000 the US Pentagon funding the censorship.
00:32:15.000 But then they contextualize it in US national interest because it undermines essentially
00:32:19.000 our North American energy companies by allowing AFD to win in Germany or Marine Le Pen to
00:32:24.000 win in France.
00:32:25.000 So it's a very nasty, strange brew we have going on here.
00:32:28.000 That's really a beautifully articulate way of helping me understand a very broad range
00:32:34.000 of problems and a very distinct set of territories.
00:32:41.000 And my next question, Mike, is that the way that the 2024 election is being presented, particularly to habitual Democratic Party voters, is this is the election in which you have to save democracy.
00:32:56.000 Prior to the assassination attempt, Continually we were told that Trump would make himself a dictator.
00:33:03.000 Times when he's made glib remarks about being a dictator for a day to build a wall or drill or whatever.
00:33:09.000 Those comments have been taken out of context and amplified to create further hysteria.
00:33:16.000 I wonder how, and if you even care to, you would Let's reframe the addition of Bobby Kennedy to the Republican movement or the Republican Party or Tulsi Gabbard joining, both of whom have sort of made points of distinction and been clear about the areas in which they disagree with Trump.
00:33:37.000 How would you use this newly formed and still forming alliance to counter the idea that it is Trump And now Kennedy, Tulsi Gabbard, etc.
00:33:49.000 that are the threat to democracy rather than Kamala Harris.
00:33:53.000 Which key pieces of information, which headlines do you think make it clear to people that might be culturally liberal, that still might think of Martin Luther King and Malcolm X and indeed the murdered Kennedy brothers as kind of avatars of the last great era in American politics and to some degree counterculture?
00:34:16.000 How do you explain to them that it is Kamala Harris and the Democratic Party that are representatives of an authoritarian and globalist movement and that the new alliances, in particular the ones I've just listed, suggest that if you are an establishment, this election in particular could be a chance to oppose it?
00:34:40.000 What do you think are the key points of difference?
00:34:43.000 Well, it clearly shows a cross-party, bipartisan, big tent, popular groundswell, popular will for a new agenda for the American people that represents the American people rather than a cloistered set of institutions.
00:35:02.000 And this is the real trick of this word democracy.
00:35:05.000 Democracy, people need to understand that democracy is the CIA's watchword to overthrow governments.
00:35:12.000 Okay, I'm going to say it again.
00:35:13.000 Democracy is the CIA's watchword to overthrow governments.
00:35:19.000 The CIA, the State Department, the Pentagon, our transatlantic partners in NATO, we have two excuses that we invoke in order to overthrow a hostile foreign government said to be run by a dictator.
00:35:31.000 The first one is aggression.
00:35:34.000 Outward aggression.
00:35:35.000 They do some military action against another country, and so that gives us a national security predicate to stop them from aggressing against someone else.
00:35:43.000 But if we can't nail them on aggression, then we can always nail them on repression.
00:35:48.000 We say that even though this person was democratically elected, look at all these people in the streets.
00:35:54.000 Oh, by the way, USAID and the U.S.
00:35:56.000 State Department and the U.K.
00:35:57.000 Foreign Office paid these people to take to the streets.
00:35:59.000 Pay the institutions that are organizing these rent-a-riots, but never mind that.
00:36:04.000 Look at all these people in the streets.
00:36:05.000 Look at all of, you know, all this popular outcry within the country against the government.
00:36:10.000 The government is not representing the people.
00:36:13.000 So even though it was democratically elected, it is still repressing its people.
00:36:18.000 And so therefore in the name of democracy, we get to overthrow the democratically elected government.
00:36:24.000 We now call this the term that they use is illiberal democracy, which is this idea that even though you are democratically elected, so it's technically a democracy, still it's not representing the democratic institutions in that society.
00:36:38.000 And so we get to use our same CIA playbook that we use to overthrow You know, fascist governments in the 1940s and communist governments in the, you know, during the entirety of the 20th century against populist governments in the 21st century.
00:36:54.000 And so it's the same networks, the same military intelligence and diplomatic networks that have this regime change power.
00:37:02.000 And this is what they're doing at home.
00:37:04.000 Everything that the reason that they've staked their claim on democracy is because this is a department of dirty tricks power that we have used For almost 100 years now, and it is very powerful, and this includes the power of prosecutors.
00:37:18.000 I mentioned this on my Tucker Carlson interview last week, but the State Department now aggressively pursues a trick that it calls transitional justice.
00:37:28.000 Which is as part of the stock and trade every time we transition a democracy from a illiberal democracy to one that heeds the rules of the rules-based international order.
00:37:41.000 Which is that we arrest the opposition politicians.
00:37:44.000 We arrest the opposition judges in order to prevent democratic backsliding.
00:37:49.000 This is exactly what we've seen at home.
00:37:51.000 The same thing that the U.S.
00:37:54.000 has advocated for In Serbia, the same thing the U.S.
00:37:57.000 has advocated for in Poland, the same thing the U.S.
00:37:59.000 has advocated for in the Czech Republic and in Nicaragua and Guatemala about arresting all the opposition as soon as you narrowly win a razor-close election in order to prevent the resurgence in the next election because it's very expensive for the State Department to manage every election.
00:38:21.000 If they're close, they might lose.
00:38:23.000 The State Department has funds for every single country on Earth, and so they want Poland, for example.
00:38:31.000 I just did a lecture on this yesterday.
00:38:34.000 You have the National Endowment for Democracy, which is the CIA.
00:38:37.000 It was created in a letter from the CIA director in 1983.
00:38:40.000 It's in-house journal.
00:38:42.000 The month Donald Tusk narrowly won this past election in December of last year in Poland, the National Endowment for Democracy's in-house journal was literally provided a list of who this newly elected Polish government should arrest and imprison and bring charges against in order to stamp out populism and prevent the political resurgence of that party in the next election.
00:39:07.000 So this is the CIA hand dictating who to arrest, but it's done in the name of democracy.
00:39:13.000 The whole thing is that populism is a threat to democracy.
00:39:16.000 And so in order to stop a populist candidate from winning the president, we get to sick the prosecutors on them for no other reason than that they are populist, that they are nationalist.
00:39:27.000 And again, part of this, you know, the role of this blob is because it is multinational,
00:39:31.000 because it has multinational interests, because there are multinational financial firms, there
00:39:35.000 are multinational organizations and stakeholders.
00:39:39.000 Nationalism in any one country undermines the ability for multinationalism to co-opt
00:39:44.000 that country's commercial systems, its financial systems, its political ecosystems.
00:39:48.000 And so, make America great again is a threat, just as make Brazil great again is a threat.
00:39:55.000 And just as, and this is not a right-wing thing, they went after, Kirstein Armer right
00:39:59.000 now is the Prime Minister of the UK.
00:40:02.000 The operation that NATO ran against Jeremy Corbyn, who was the former head of the UK Labour Party, who Keir Starmer took his place.
00:40:13.000 You can go right now, if you're listening to this, type in the name Anders Fogh Rasmussen into YouTube right now.
00:40:19.000 Anders, and then Fogh is F-O-G-H Rasmussen.
00:40:24.000 He was the former head of NATO between 2009 and 2014.
00:40:27.000 And just go see what he had to say about Jeremy Corbyn and stopping left-wing populism from rising to power and Corbyn from winning the election at that time.
00:40:38.000 So they will play both sides of this because Because this neoliberal, neoconservative, neodemocracy fusion faction has enemies both on the populist right and the populist left.
00:40:51.000 It just so happens that in Europe and in the United States, the main parties that have risen to power and that are threatening to rise to power are from the right-wing populist side.
00:41:01.000 But that's what's behind this.
00:41:02.000 Yes, it's in fact only immediately part of the trend.
00:41:08.000 There was a minute in Europe where parties like Syriza and Podemos in Greece and Spain respectively were challenging a more nascent form of this centralised authoritarianism that now appears to be more concerned about attacks from the right.
00:41:26.000 And Jeremy Corbyn, the left-wing Labour Party leader, Was attacked for being an anti-Semite and for whatever tropes become available to attack, diminish and dismiss a leader or movement that they don't feel can be contained within their multinational and multinational feels almost like an intermediary stage before the advent of globalism.
00:41:51.000 They will deploy whatever they have to.
00:41:53.000 I spoke to Bannon, Steve Bannon, once about like he was sort of himself as an obvious advocate for the right.
00:42:00.000 He was, I remember him saying that he was uncertain as to where populism would lead.
00:42:06.000 But more laterally, you know, it could go left or right in it by his reckoning.
00:42:09.000 Of course, he had his personal preferences.
00:42:12.000 But now it seems that we're in a very different moment because whether you're talking about Emmanuel Macron, Justin Trudeau, Keir Starmer, Kamala Harris.
00:42:21.000 There is a sense, if you ask me, that they belong to a very particular ideology, a kind of bureaucratic authoritarian class that can't come out and directly say, we want more power.
00:42:32.000 We want more control.
00:42:34.000 We want a larger state.
00:42:36.000 So they will say, we need to protect you from this.
00:42:39.000 We will protect you from that.
00:42:41.000 We cannot tolerate this form of extremism.
00:42:43.000 And this is a truly global phenomena.
00:42:45.000 And I'd like, after our short break, to talk about what's happening between Brazil and the United States right now.
00:42:52.000 Before that, though, Mike, we've just got to fit in a quick message from Positive, because Positive are an ancillary of Rumble, and Rumble, baby, are keeping things running.
00:43:04.000 Quick message, then we'll be right back to you, Mike, for ex-Brazil and whatever you wanted to finish up on.
00:43:09.000 See you in a second.
00:43:12.000 What do you want?
00:43:12.000 These are actually snacks that are available from Rumble.
00:43:16.000 Rumble make these snacks, you see.
00:43:20.000 This is a brand called Positive.
00:43:21.000 It's a pet food brand that Rumble have.
00:43:24.000 But also they have a pet insurance that is an affiliate to it.
00:43:28.000 You know, like dogs can go from very high energy to just being sick in an instant.
00:43:32.000 And you know it's like if you have to call a vet like when they're out of hours.
00:43:36.000 It's a terrible way to manage your dog's health, not to mention it can be very stressful for you.
00:43:39.000 So there's this emergency pet kit that you can get from Pawsitive Health,
00:43:44.000 which contains critical medications and supplies that can keep you out of it and maybe even save
00:43:48.000 your dog's life. So if you want to use it, go to Pawsitive, that's spelled like P-A-W,
00:43:54.000 pawsitive.com/brand.
00:43:56.000 That's pawsitive.com slash brand and get your pet emergency kit that's got critical meds in it like activated charcoal and styptic powder and you can get 15% off using the code brand today.
00:44:11.000 Go to pawsitive.com slash brand and use the code brand to get 15% off.
00:44:14.000 I like these Rumble connected organizations because they've been so supportive.
00:44:19.000 Good boy.
00:44:20.000 So supportive to our channel.
00:44:22.000 It's great to give a little bit back.
00:44:25.000 There it is.
00:44:27.000 Mike, I'm really excited to ask you about what's happening in the world since Brazil has banned X, why it appears that America is more than happy with it, and what it means for the world when entire platforms can be taken down in vastly populated and incredibly powerful nations.
00:44:45.000 I saw that you had a point that you wanted to finish before, though, mate.
00:44:48.000 What was that?
00:44:50.000 Yeah, I want to, and I just posted this to the top of my ex-account at MikeBenzCyber if people want to see the source document.
00:44:56.000 I wanted to just sort of put the button on what you were saying about these issues around
00:45:00.000 immigration and calling people racist and appealing to identity issues, when what's
00:45:05.000 really going on here is you have a cloistered set of commercial and financial and military
00:45:10.000 interests and they are essentially, those organs are just pumping out those talking
00:45:16.000 points about things they think will appeal to the electorate more in order to remove
00:45:19.000 a threat to those commercial interests from rising to political power.
00:45:23.000 And I think one of the best illustrations of this is actually a Wikileaks document that
00:45:28.000 was disclosed several years ago by Julian Assange.
00:45:31.000 It was a CIA memo at the time that the US military and the US
00:45:39.000 State Department and the CIA and its transatlantic partners were trying to get NATO holdouts to provide more war funding for the invasion of Afghanistan.
00:45:48.000 And this CIA classified memo was a report back to the State Department about how the propaganda arm of the U.S.
00:45:58.000 State Department should reframe the reason for why we're in Afghanistan and reframe
00:46:06.000 it from being about national security to being about women's rights and being about how
00:46:11.000 women in Afghanistan are not able to drive cars or go to college and make the whole thing
00:46:17.000 an identity appeal on feminist grounds and to female voters, especially in France, in
00:46:23.000 Germany and in the Netherlands, where the populations there, their parliaments, were
00:46:29.000 not voting to give their governments dollars to fund the NATO war effort.
00:46:34.000 And so they ran, the CIA basically ran, you know, aggregated all this polling data and showed that actually we can get those parliaments to fork over dollars for the war if we simply make it less about the threat that Afghanistan and al-Qaeda poses to national security because they don't really care
00:46:52.000 about that and they're not really seeing evidence, make it about women's rights.
00:46:56.000 Make it about, appeal to their identity.
00:46:59.000 They're 50% of the electorate.
00:47:01.000 Polls show that 26% of them are in favor of this.
00:47:04.000 And so we can get their parliament to give us money for the war, not because we give,
00:47:09.000 you know, a flying fig about women's rights, but because that is what will persuade them to give up
00:47:09.000 you know, a flying fig about women's rights, but because that is what will persuade them
00:47:14.000 to give up their money.
00:47:15.000 their money, and that is what will give us the war. And so this is what happens on identity
00:47:16.000 And that is what will give us the war.
00:47:18.000 And so this is what happens on identity issues all over.
00:47:21.000 issues all over. And you can actually, you know, if you pay close attention to these NATO
00:47:22.000 And you can actually, you know, if you pay close attention to these NATO periodicals,
00:47:25.000 periodicals, you will see them consensus building these different type of identity-based attacks.
00:47:26.000 you will see them consensus building these different type of identity based attacks.
00:47:30.000 Well, if we call them racist, well, if we do this, and so they don't care about that.
00:47:30.000 Well, if we call them racist, well, if we do this, and so they don't care about that. They
00:47:35.000 They care about getting their money.
00:47:35.000 care about getting their money. They care about their mandate and whatever political pawn can be
00:47:37.000 They care about their mandate.
00:47:38.000 And whatever.
00:47:40.000 put in power to make that happen. But we can turn to Brazil now because that's obviously a huge topic
00:47:46.000 that Rumble is banned in Brazil right now. So, you know, that's obviously existential to the state of
00:47:54.000 the world. Yeah, Rumble's banned in Brazil. Rumble is banned in France and Rumble's banned in Russia.
00:48:00.000 And now Brazil has made the audacious move of banning X and fining people for using VPNs.
00:48:06.000 would imagine that the United States of America, if it was an energy interest that was threatened
00:48:11.000 in a foreign territory, they would advocate and send over emissaries to ameliorate that
00:48:18.000 challenge.
00:48:19.000 But in this instance, they appear to be pleased.
00:48:22.000 Now, one can't help but sense that that might be part of a global agenda around the control
00:48:27.000 of information.
00:48:29.000 What does Brazil's banning of RumbleNX tell us, Mike?
00:48:36.000 I've been screaming for years now about this Brazil situation and how it's exactly what you identified.
00:48:43.000 The State Department is actually behind this.
00:48:45.000 The State Department, USAID, and the National Endowment for Democracy, which is a CIA cutout, all descended on Brazil, I mean, really in 2016, but really started massively upscaling funding for Brazil's domestic censorship industry in 2018.
00:49:02.000 ahead of the Bolsonaro election, but then especially in the weeks after.
00:49:06.000 Let me explain what's going on here.
00:49:09.000 When internet censorship architecture first started getting laid down across NATO and in the United States blob apparatus in 2016 after the events of Brexit, and Donald Trump's election.
00:49:22.000 This new tool was proven very powerful to suppress messaging for populist political movements all over the world.
00:49:30.000 And so the State Department began to develop global programs to add censorship to what was previously just their free speech diplomacy.
00:49:39.000 So the State Department, USAID, NED, our thousand government-organized non-governmental organizations who serve as the soft power swarm army of the blob have for about 70 years now had tens of
00:49:52.000 millions or hundreds of millions of dollars in annual funding from U.S. taxpayers in order to promote open
00:49:59.000 societies abroad, in order to advocate for free speech in foreign countries, not because
00:50:05.000 we love free speech, but because we needed a free media ecosystem, an open media ecosystem for us to
00:50:12.000 promote the political parties or or candidates or movements who are most pliant to U.S.
00:50:18.000 interests.
00:50:18.000 This is why, for example, in 2018, 26 U.S.
00:50:22.000 government-funded NGOs all signed solidarity letters condemning Russia for possibly, when it was threatening at the time, to ban Telegram.
00:50:31.000 It was because the U.S.
00:50:32.000 State Department and the CIA were using Telegram within Russia in order to organize protests
00:50:39.000 and organize anti-Putin political movements.
00:50:42.000 So they did not want that secure communications ecosystem that the State Department was exploiting
00:50:49.000 to be shut down by Russia.
00:50:50.000 So they attacked Russia for free speech.
00:50:52.000 Now notice not a single one of those US-funded NGOs said a peep about Brazil actually banning
00:51:00.000 X, which is a US national champion, a US platform.
00:51:05.000 So these US NGOs went hog-wild mad that Russia might ban a Russian messaging app.
00:51:15.000 But said nothing when X, a much bigger platform, was actually banned by Brazil.
00:51:21.000 And this is because, and this is the story I'll share in a second here, they were actually behind it the whole time.
00:51:26.000 The US government spent tens of millions of dollars censoring Bolsonaro supporters on social media In Brazil, that is.
00:51:35.000 And they do this through their formal government programs dedicated to this.
00:51:39.000 They're split between the U.S.
00:51:41.000 State Department, USAID, and the National Endowment for Democracy.
00:51:44.000 USAID is a notorious CIA funding conduit, which is given huge amounts of dollars for democracy promotion.
00:51:53.000 And then those pumped up assets by USAID or by the National Endowment for Democracy are then back-channeled so that we have soft power influence Over the information ecosystem of the political ecosystem of a country, the State Department wanted to stop Bolsonaro.
00:52:07.000 They were unsuccessful.
00:52:09.000 They were in in October 2018.
00:52:11.000 They decided that it was actually WhatsApp and telegram that were the big problems, because even though the blob was able to kick.
00:52:18.000 Bolsonaro supporters off of Facebook, YouTube, and Twitter 1.0, they all switched to WhatsApp and Telegram.
00:52:25.000 And this is also one of the reasons that Gab, which was one of these upstart Twitter alternatives in 2018, one of its first major user bases were people from Brazil, because all those people were kicked off of Twitter.
00:52:39.000 and Facebook and YouTube. And so they took to alternative messaging ecosystems.
00:52:44.000 So the US State Department funded tens of millions of dollars to Brazilian censorship ecosystem
00:52:52.000 partners, people who are on or around the Supreme Court of Brazil, which is called the STF,
00:52:59.000 the censorship court of Alexandre de Mores, which is called the TSE, as well as their
00:53:08.000 external stakeholder advisory commissions, as well as the constellation of Brazilian
00:53:14.000 university centers, the legal scholars, the fact-checking organizations.
00:53:19.000 The counter disinformation civil society organizations and the Brazilian media outlets in order to create this political support base for the censorship laws and the censorship edicts that we are now witnessing play out.
00:53:36.000 And so it's not just that the State Department is silent on this, which of course their silence is absolutely deafening.
00:53:42.000 They were behind this from day one.
00:53:45.000 In fact, they were behind this even before day one.
00:53:49.000 And again, X is caught in a proxy war between the blob versus populism.
00:53:55.000 And so if this was Twitter 1.0, and I mean, just imagine, and I posted this again on my X account, and it blew up to like 10 million views on this one post, and I can put this to the top of my feed after this conversation.
00:54:10.000 The Biden administration in early 2022 actually descended the U.S.
00:54:17.000 State Department, the CIA, the head of the CIA, Bill Burns, and the head of the U.S.
00:54:23.000 military, Lloyd Austin, all went down to Brazil to personally threaten Bolsonaro, his military officials, his diplomats, And his whole intelligence network to warn him not to cast doubt on the results of the upcoming Brazilian election or the processes, the electronic voting machines in which they voted.
00:54:45.000 So again, the CIA, the State Department and the DOD all fund on U.S.
00:54:51.000 taxpayer dollars.
00:54:52.000 We paid for them to take private jets down to Brazil to threaten Bolsonaro just for Potentially casting doubt on his own elections.
00:55:02.000 And part of this was because it was the U.S.
00:55:03.000 State Department who railroaded the Brazilian election and Brazilian election officials into using electronic voting machines.
00:55:10.000 I'm not sure if you're aware of this and again I posted this on my ex account and I'll repost this at the top of it so everyone can see this.
00:55:16.000 Brazil used about four times more electronic voting machines in this election than it ever had in the past.
00:55:21.000 And that was done because the U.S.
00:55:23.000 State Department called in special favors to Taiwan Semiconductor.
00:55:28.000 That is, our diplomats, using American taxpayer dollars, went over to Taiwan and said, yes, listen, there's a semiconductor shortage, but we need these semiconductors to build electronic voting machines in Brazil.
00:55:40.000 And so the normal shipment that you would be giving to Americans during this semiconductor shortfall Give that to Brazil instead of to Americans.
00:55:50.000 Instead of for American computers and American electronics, give that to Brazil so that Brazil can use a massive increase in electronic voting machines.
00:56:01.000 That was back-channeled by the U.S.
00:56:02.000 State Department directly.
00:56:04.000 And then Bolsonaro said, actually, I don't trust these electronic voting machines.
00:56:09.000 And when he said that, we sent the CIA to talk to him and his staff and the U.S.
00:56:16.000 military, Lloyd Austin, the head of the Defense Department, to talk to Brazil's military officials to warn them of the consequences if they continued to simply question the use of electronic voting machines.
00:56:28.000 So just imagine if Bolsonaro had banned Twitter 1.0, you know, because Elon didn't finish his acquisition of X until October of 2022.
00:56:39.000 Imagine if Bolsonaro had banned Twitter 1.0 because too many Lula supporters were on X. Do you know how fast the CIA, the State Department, the DOD, a swarm army of NGOs would descend on them?
00:56:54.000 How fast they would be sanctioned?
00:56:56.000 How fast the $50 million in annual foreign assistance and $200 million over the course of Bolsonaro's term would be yanked?
00:57:04.000 How fast there would be a retrenchment of private sector interests because of his attack
00:57:09.000 on free speech in that country.
00:57:11.000 But the fact is, is Elon Musk undid all the years, the six years of the spiderweb construction
00:57:18.000 of censorship in Brazil.
00:57:19.000 The star spangled fangs of that spider, the US funded network, spiderweb network of censorship
00:57:27.000 institutions in Brazil, were all completely defanged when Elon Musk took over the helm
00:57:27.000 institutions in Brazil were all completely defanged when Elon Musk took over the helm
00:57:32.000 and undid all of the censorship that Twitter 1.0 was doing against Brazilians at the time
00:57:38.000 and actually undid all the damage that Facebook and YouTube and all of these other and
00:57:42.000 WhatsApp and Telegram which were brought to heel because now an even bigger platform, X,
00:57:48.000 which is now bigger than ever, is giving a free speech license to Brazilian politicians.
00:57:53.000 It was actually US funded NGOs who actually clipped out of the legislative bills in Brazil
00:58:00.000 the safe harbors for Brazilian parliamentarians because US...
00:58:05.000 funded NGOs were saying you should not allow Brazilian parliamentarians to have a free pass for misinformation or anti-democratic speech.
00:58:16.000 Understand this.
00:58:17.000 It was not until about a week ago, and I've been screaming, screaming, screaming about this, and folks can read and I'll post this at the top of my timeline too.
00:58:23.000 Two and a half years ago, I did a deep dive on this whole network.
00:58:27.000 It's on my foundation's website.
00:58:28.000 It's called foundationforfreedomonline.com about this spider web network two and a half years ago that was set up By our CIA cutouts and our State Department and USAID grantees in order to do this against WhatsApp and Telegram.
00:58:41.000 It's the same network because they got those brought to heel.
00:58:43.000 They actually banned Telegram from the country for 48 hours until they put these censorship measures in place.
00:58:49.000 WhatsApp, because of the pressure they applied to Mark Zuckerberg, who owns WhatsApp, folded within two and a half days.
00:58:55.000 It took, you know, Telegram held out for two and a half years.
00:58:57.000 It's that same network on steroids against X. And the U.S.
00:59:01.000 Embassy in Brazil right now is caught in the crosshairs of this.
00:59:04.000 Sorry if I'm going on too long on this and interrupt me at any time.
00:59:07.000 Maybe I'll just make this as short as I can.
00:59:11.000 But the U.S.
00:59:11.000 Embassy did not feel any pressure on this until about a week ago.
00:59:16.000 I called them out personally in the Tucker Carlson interview.
00:59:19.000 I generated about 130 million impressions about the embassy this week on X. And then finally, three hours, for the first time in six years, three hours before this order came down banning X, the U.S.
00:59:32.000 Embassy put out a statement saying that they are monitoring the situation in Brazil In case there are any human rights violations and that democracy and free speech, you know, free speech is a key pillar of democracy.
00:59:43.000 Well, guess what?
00:59:44.000 Three hours later, X was banned from the platform and the U.S.
00:59:47.000 Embassy said, I ain't looking.
00:59:50.000 Not a peep.
00:59:51.000 Didn't condemn it.
00:59:52.000 What they were doing was a face-saving operation because they do not want the, they don't, when the autopsy is done on the death of Free Speech and X, they don't want those star-spangled fangs to show up in the autopsy.
01:00:05.000 But they have not done a single tweet, not a single press release, nothing condemning the actions actually taken, banning it.
01:00:13.000 But they don't want the investigation, they don't want these programs defunded, they don't want to lose their soft power.
01:00:19.000 influence and they don't want to stop bribing Brazilian civil society to keep this going.
01:00:24.000 Mike, it's pretty extraordinary to hear the extent of collaboration between various US officials and
01:00:35.000 CIA cutouts and recent events in Brazil. Of course, almost as an aside within that, you talked about
01:00:44.000 the likely efficacy or lack thereof of electronic voting machines and the use of semiconductors and
01:00:52.000 there are so many global issues that fold into this story.
01:00:55.000 It's It's... (stammers)
01:00:57.000 Exciting and a little John le Carre especially with you wearing those sunglasses and of course I'm aware as I'm listening to you explain this that the founder of Telegram has been arrested in France recently and one could sense in the reportage with regard to recent riots in the UK that there was a burgeoning appetite and the Commencement, I would say, of a campaign to normalise the banning of X. So do you see the banning of X in Brazil, significant though it is in a massive company of like, excuse me, country, easy mistake to make, of 220 million people, do you see it as a precursor
01:01:43.000 to bans in anglophonic countries, in the United States itself.
01:01:50.000 Do you think that's how globalism works now?
01:01:53.000 That whilst this is in itself a seismic event, that it's likely to be even more significant
01:01:59.000 if a country like mine, the UK, bans X.
01:02:03.000 And you can already see with some people that were banned from X being allowed on that it's
01:02:08.000 causing repercussions and people can say whether that's for good or bad.
01:02:11.000 I'm sure there's a variety of opinions when it comes to some of the more prominent like Alex Jones or Tommy Robinson.
01:02:17.000 people that certainly make a significant impact and have a significant following, seems to
01:02:23.000 me that we're moving beyond the stage where we ban individuals, because I suppose that
01:02:28.000 requires the compliance of the platforms and the owners of the platforms, to banning platforms
01:02:34.000 in their entirety across nations.
01:02:37.000 And of course, yeah, I sort of almost was unaware because I've gotten used to it that
01:02:41.000 Rumble's already banned in Brazil and France and Russia, that even when I was attacked
01:02:46.000 in the UK last September, there was a sense that it could lead to Rumble getting banned
01:02:52.000 and Rumble leadership being under, sort of having legal consequences if they were non-compliant
01:02:58.000 with the British government.
01:02:59.000 So where are we now?
01:03:01.000 Do you get the sense that the way these campaigns work is sort of territorially, almost as if it was a military war, that they win the Brazilian front, then they move on to the UK?
01:03:12.000 And if you can, can you sort of let me know what the significance is of the arrest of the Telegram founder, Pavel, there?
01:03:21.000 And how likely is that we'll see X banned in other countries, and indeed, of course, Rumble banned in other countries, you know, in the coming months.
01:03:30.000 And if you can tie into that, because I know you can give a long answer, how significant Elon Musk's affiliation with the Trump-Kennedy movement is in preventing and opposing that.
01:03:44.000 If you could do it in that order as well, if you don't mind, I'll just sit down and have a little rest.
01:03:49.000 Yeah, you nailed it.
01:03:50.000 You put your finger right on the pulse of the heart of it.
01:03:52.000 I'll give you a funny example as an anecdote that I think will tee up what I'm about to say, which is that one of these U.S.-funded government programs and its set of program-funded institutions actually held a A censorship ecosystem cross-country stakeholder conference a few months ago where they brought Brazilian censorship ecosystem participants together with those from other countries like the Philippines and one of the things that was said in the autopsy of those stakeholder discussions by this government-funded program was that
01:04:39.000 They were saddened that their censorship ecosystem participants in the Philippines were not willing to go as far as those in Brazil.
01:04:48.000 So, literally, you have the U.S.
01:04:50.000 government organizing people from dozens of countries for their own censorship ecosystem participants, those in the censorship judiciaries.
01:05:00.000 They'll call them EMPs, election management bodies, who are now Tasked with the censorship role and the Brazilian and all the different civil society institutions, the NGOs, the university centers, the media participants, everyone who's a part of this counter disinformation whole society counter disinformation framework.
01:05:19.000 Who's coordinating with the U.S.
01:05:20.000 State Department.
01:05:21.000 So you literally have the U.S.
01:05:23.000 government bringing together censorship operatives from dozens of different countries, getting them all to agree on a common framework for censoring populist movements in the country, and then even expressing sadness that some countries are not willing to go as far as Brazil is in cracking down on free speech.
01:05:43.000 So it is exactly... I mean, one of these programs One of these U.S.
01:05:48.000 censorship programs is in 140 countries.
01:05:51.000 They want to use this as the key to control every single election on earth because every single country on earth falls in some desk run by some assistant secretary at the U.S.
01:06:03.000 State Department whose job is to make sure that one party wins and the other parties don't rise to power because whatever politician pledges You know, the most consistency with the U.S.
01:06:16.000 State Department agenda for that region and its state commercial and financial plans for that region is the party that that assistant secretary is going to prop up and we're going to deploy resources to subvert or suppress the opposition.
01:06:31.000 But now on this Telegram front, I made the same point on Tucker Carlson about Telegram.
01:06:36.000 That was nominally what we were supposed to be talking about the whole time, which is
01:06:39.000 that have you heard a word from Denise Bauer, the ambassador, the head of the U.S. embassy
01:06:48.000 in France, about this arrest?
01:06:51.000 You haven't heard a peep.
01:06:52.000 Well, I'm wagering that, and I shouldn't have to be the one asking this.
01:06:56.000 This should be the House Foreign Affairs Committee who should have already had this answer.
01:07:00.000 I believe it is functionally impossible for the U.S.
01:07:04.000 State Department not to have had at least advance notice about that arrest, let alone participation in the judicial, the legal inquiry, the legal investigation that we've now heard had been going on for months before that.
01:07:20.000 Or potentially even pushing the French government to do this, because the U.S.
01:07:25.000 has been trying to get its fingers on control over Telegram for a long time now.
01:07:31.000 Telegram was the darling of the State Department and the CIA and the U.S.
01:07:37.000 military from about 2014 to 2020, because Telegram was this magical tool to be able to run CIA rent-to-riots with a strong level of security, with a strong level of popularity and the ability to mobilize.
01:07:51.000 Because outside of the U.S., most people don't use text messages.
01:07:55.000 They use either WhatsApp or Telegram.
01:07:57.000 Telegram has a billion users.
01:07:59.000 And what the CIA tries to do is it tries to have its inner cluster cell recruit Thousands or hundreds of thousands or millions of people in that country to all take to the political cause of whatever they're trying to support to unseat the current government.
01:08:14.000 So telegram was the main weapon used by the CIA in the summer of 2020 to try to topple the government of Belarus.
01:08:22.000 All of the main administrators of the main telegram channels associated with that attempt
01:08:28.000 to overthrow the Belarusian government were on CIA payroll via the National Endowment
01:08:33.000 for Democracy, which is the main cutout that's used.
01:08:36.000 And again, that was literally created in the letter from the CIA director in 1983.
01:08:42.000 Telegram was the main organ used in Hong Kong with the U.S.
01:08:46.000 State Department-backed umbrella visits that were done in 2019 in the wake of the extradition
01:08:54.000 law that China had just passed.
01:08:57.000 Telegram was the main artery for this sort of Green Revolution attempt to overthrow the
01:09:02.000 government of Iran.
01:09:03.000 And Telegram was the main vehicle for the CIA and the State Department to try to topple Putin himself inside Russia.
01:09:10.000 When Alexei Navalny, who was literally brought to Yale for training, you know, at the Maurice Greenberg World Fellows Program.
01:09:20.000 Maurice Greenberg was the guy who Bill Clinton wanted to be the CIA director.
01:09:24.000 When Alexei Navalny was brought to the United States for CIA rent-a-riot training and then sent back into Russia, his main organizing tool for street protests, many of which turned violent with Molotov cocktails, against Putin was Telegram.
01:09:42.000 And again, this was because between 2014 and 2020, Telegram was said to be safe because it was said that it was said to be a sort of resistant to Russian back channel control because Pavel Durov, who was the, you know, the guy behind Telegram and still is.
01:10:00.000 Had been pressured by the Russian government to turn over control of Telegram as he was for VK, which is Russia's Facebook.
01:10:07.000 Pavel had to flee Russia in order to escape the sort of Russian law enforcement threats against him for not turning over the keys to Telegram after he had already turned over the keys to VK.
01:10:21.000 And the fact that Pavel did not censor on VK the Euromaidan protests.
01:10:27.000 Russia had pressured Pavel to ban all of the major accounts of the organizers of the CIA-backed attempt to overthrow the government of Ukraine in 2014.
01:10:37.000 And Pavel disobeyed the Russians and moved to Dubai, non-extradition.
01:10:42.000 And so the CIA and the State Department had this huge trust in Pavel from 2014 to 2020.
01:10:48.000 But then strange things started to happen in the post 2020 period, which was, you know, Pavel did this billion dollar bond raise.
01:10:58.000 And when I say CIA, I mean, I'm not even joking here.
01:11:01.000 Everyone right now, and I posted this again on my ex account, and I'll put this to the top of my feed again after this, but you can read Two weeks after Tucker Carlson's interview with Pavel, the Telegram founder, two weeks after his interview with Pavel back in April, so this is a couple months before his arrest, but two weeks after that interview with Tucker Carlson,
01:11:22.000 Radio Free Europe, Radio Liberty.
01:11:24.000 This was a media institution created by the CIA and run for its first 20 years directly by the CIA.
01:11:33.000 Again, back from the 1940s to the 1970s, the CIA created Voice of America, created Radio Free Europe, Radio Liberty, Radio Free Asia.
01:11:42.000 These were all CIA Radio broadcast and print magazines that were piping in CIA propaganda to influence the course of domestic events in foreign countries.
01:11:55.000 It was how we circumvented the Iron Curtain by piping in these CIA radio broadcasting outlets.
01:12:02.000 And then it started to look a little funny that it was run directly by the CIA in the 1970s.
01:12:07.000 So it was turned over to the Board of Broadcast Governors and now to the U.S.
01:12:10.000 Agency for Global Media.
01:12:12.000 So, it's technically not the CIA anymore, but I got bad news for, you know, people who are, you know, uncynically believe in, you know, CIA-managed democracy.
01:12:22.000 It's still the CIA, okay?
01:12:24.000 But they literally published, two weeks after Tucker Carlson's interview, a piece called Telegram, a spy in every Ukrainian's pocket.
01:12:33.000 And it basically made the argument that maybe the reason Ukraine is losing the war right now, Ukraine, which the U.S.
01:12:39.000 has invested $300 billion in winning this war, maybe the reason Ukraine is losing the war is because Telegram is captured by Russia.
01:12:49.000 Maybe Russia and Pavel struck a secret deal when Pavel needed the money during this bond raise.
01:12:57.000 And so we need to bring Pavel to heel.
01:13:02.000 We need to wrest control over Telegram's backend to see if there's a Russian backchannel to it, because 75% of Ukraine uses Telegram.
01:13:12.000 That's up from 20% three years ago.
01:13:15.000 And because Telegram has been trusted, the Ukrainian military all uses Telegram.
01:13:20.000 Ukrainian parliamentarians all use Telegram.
01:13:23.000 Zelensky uses Telegram.
01:13:24.000 So the military, the statecraft, the intelligence, and by the way, the CIA runs Ukraine's intelligence.
01:13:30.000 Don't ask, don't trust me on that.
01:13:31.000 Trust the New York Times who wrote a full, you know, 30,000 word piece on how the CIA took over control of Ukraine's intelligence apparatus in 2014.
01:13:40.000 So, they make the argument that we need to take control over Telegram because maybe it's backed up by the Russians, but we also need to take control over Telegram because uncensored Russian propaganda Telegram channels are widely read by 75% of Ukraine's civilian class because they have access to these Russian channels because Pavel won't take them down.
01:14:06.000 And so we are losing the propaganda war.
01:14:10.000 We're losing the hearts and minds war.
01:14:13.000 Maybe the reason that we can't have elections in Ukraine is because Zelensky might lose.
01:14:18.000 And one of the reasons he might lose is because Ukrainians Are revolting against the Ukrainian Zelensky press office because they're more persuaded by these hugely popular Russian telegram channels.
01:14:30.000 So the CIA has to control telegram to censor Russian propaganda.
01:14:34.000 And then the third reason they articulate in so many words and they cite the heads of Ukrainian military intelligence and others is that over 50% of Russia uses telegram.
01:14:44.000 And Russia's own internal military documents call for telegram to be the primary modality
01:14:50.000 of communication.
01:14:51.000 And so, if they can break Pavel's back, if they can, you know, literally or figuratively
01:14:58.000 waterboard it out of Pavel to give up the encryption keys, they will suddenly have all
01:15:05.000 Russian military communications, all Russian statecraft and intelligence communications,
01:15:11.000 the panacea of years worth of internal deliberations, of live, real-time military activity will
01:15:20.000 all fall into the hands of the CIA.
01:15:23.000 and MI6 and the GCHQ and the State Department and Brussels, if we can just get Pavel to break his commitment to free
01:15:32.000 speech and give us the same back-end control over Telegram
01:15:37.000 that we've effectively coerced out of Mark Zuckerberg at Facebook
01:15:40.000 and out of most of the major heads of the social media companies.
01:15:43.000 Whoa. So it does seem quite important that this incredible machine
01:15:49.000 is disrupted at any possible point.
01:15:53.000 Even if what we're told we're voting for is an extremist or right-wing or extreme left organisation, any political disruption to these systems is Necessary, because it seems like it's reaching increasingly a critical point.
01:16:13.000 Indeed, the precise opposite of what we're being hysterically told by centrist parties all over the world, i.e.
01:16:19.000 we have to vote for one party to prevent tyranny, Is the precise opposite of what we have to ensure that this project is disrupted because it seems like it's moving at pace towards a point where opposing it would be an impossibility.
01:16:35.000 Mike, I'm going to have to leave it there.
01:16:37.000 It's fascinating to see you in particular.
01:16:39.000 We're just getting started!
01:16:41.000 I tell you, I've got the sense that you could do Almost limitless content on these subjects.
01:16:48.000 I know that now having spoken to you a few times.
01:16:50.000 It's beautiful to see you.
01:16:52.000 Look at those beautiful eyes.
01:16:53.000 You too.
01:16:54.000 It's glorious to be in your company, Mike.
01:16:56.000 I know we're going to be spending some time together because I imagine that you'll be participating in the rescue the republic event that Brett Weinstein is holding.
01:17:06.000 I know that you and I are moving in similar circles and in the same direction when it comes to
01:17:11.000 opposing what claims to be about liberty but is plainly about its absolute opposite. Thanks my
01:17:19.000 friend. Thank you Russell. It's good to see you I'll be in touch with you soon.
01:17:23.000 Thank you, man.
01:17:24.000 Well, all of you, thank you so much for joining us for that extraordinary and I would say I'd go so far as to say it was a bonus edition.
01:17:33.000 We did additional content.
01:17:34.000 We answered as many questions as we possibly could.
01:17:38.000 We went on a real journey with Mike there.
01:17:40.000 I've got a deeper understanding.
01:17:41.000 Yeah, Russell looks exhausted.
01:17:43.000 Well, I mean, because I was paying attention, baby.
01:17:45.000 There was a lot to deal with there.
01:17:46.000 We will be back tomorrow.
01:17:49.000 On the show tomorrow, we're covering a wide variety of stories.
01:17:53.000 Over the course of this week, we've got Jay Bacharia, Michael Francis coming on.
01:17:57.000 So many fantastic conversations.
01:17:59.000 If you are an Awakened Wonder, a member of our Locals community, I'm going to answer some of your questions directly.
01:18:06.000 In fact, let me just show you a little bit of what we do.
01:18:09.000 Like this one, for example.
01:18:12.000 Hey Russell, it's Nancy Kino from Green Bay, Wisconsin.
01:18:17.000 Loved your show and enjoyed meeting you in Milwaukee last month.
01:18:20.000 My question is, what does your wife and your family think of your evolution?
01:18:26.000 I'll be answering that question for my friends like Heel Light Love and Negligent Banana and Blessed Old Bird over there on Locals.
01:18:34.000 Join us!
01:18:35.000 Click the link in the description.
01:18:36.000 Thanks for supporting us.
01:18:37.000 See you tomorrow, not for more of the same, but for more of the different.
01:18:39.000 Until then, if you can, stay free.
01:18:44.000 Switch on, switch off.
01:18:45.000 You had me switching.