Stay Free - Russel Brand - October 11, 2024


β€œThe Democrats Have FIXED The Election - VOTE FOR TRUMP!” RFK On Rescuing American Democracy – SF472


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 12 minutes

Words per Minute

156.72055

Word Count

11,310

Sentence Count

716

Misogynist Sentences

6

Hate Speech Sentences

16


Summary

In this Friday edition of Stay Free with Russell Brand, we have a conversation with RFK Bobby Kennedy, who has joined the Trump campaign. Is this a good or bad thing? Is it possible to love your country and not be a racist? And is it possible that people from a variety of cultures and racial backgrounds can come together to oppose globalisation? That is the question that we are being asked in this election, and my prayer is that it is possible, of course. That is why we are devoted to having conversations that educate us. That s why we re doing the Oracle series, where we re talking about the pandemic that is only available on Locals. Episode 1, we talked about the Pandemic with brilliant experts like Robert Malone and Pierre Corey, and Episode 2, Mike Benz got together with Kim Iverson and Max Blumenthal to talk about the nature of the state, the deep state, and war. You will love that conversation, and you can watch it on Rumble right now. You re not going to want to miss it. You ve got a link in the description telling you how to watch that episode right now on Rumble. You can go and watch it right now! You re going to love it! You can also catch up on the first episode of Awaken Wonders, which is available on Rumble on Rumble here. You ll be able to watch the entire season starting on Rumble, starting on October 31st! You ll get access to all the episodes on Rumble starting on January 1st, 2019. You won t want to watch them on Rumble? You ll have access to the full season on Rumble and all the rest of the Awakenwonderaries episodes available on the Appraisals only on RUMBLE. You can get all the information you ve been asking for. You re gonna get a copy of the full access to everything you need to know about the full Awakened Wonders. and much more! You ll also get access only on Rumble! Subscribe to Rumble, wherever you re gonna go! and Rumble, Rumble! Rumble is the place to find out what's going to be going on in the next 24/7. Rumble and Rumbling, RUMBER, Rumbles, and RING! Subscribe, RING, RAY, RALORE, RALLY, ROWRODE, and all that good stuff. RAY! - The ROWDY, RULY!


Transcript

00:00:00.000 so so
00:02:14.000 Oh In this video, you're going to see the future.
00:02:31.000 Thanks for joining me for a very special Friday edition of Stay Free with Russell Brand.
00:02:36.000 We've got a brilliant conversation with RFK Bobby Kennedy, the man who's changed the complexion of the election.
00:02:42.000 How can you maintain the vote for the Democratic Party is anything other than a vote for the establishment now that Tulsi Gabbard and Bobby Kennedy have joined the Trump campaign?
00:02:51.000 Let me know in the comments and chat if you agree with me that this is an opportunity to disrupt the bizarre teleology of the beast, We're good to go.
00:03:27.000 And Revelation simultaneously.
00:03:29.000 The first episode available for Awaken Wonders is with Tucker Carlson.
00:03:34.000 You're going to love that conversation.
00:03:35.000 It's absolutely magnificent, fantastic.
00:03:37.000 You are going to enjoy it. It's Tucker like you've never seen him before.
00:03:40.000 And remember, our conversation with Jordan Peterson is up now.
00:03:43.000 This is Friday. You can go and look.
00:03:45.000 Don't do it now. Watch this show.
00:03:46.000 It's fantastic. Bobby Kennedy's coming up in a minute.
00:03:48.000 But you can see me and Jordan Peterson talking about Christ, Christianity, and what What the archetypes are behind this current moment, where wherever you are in the world, there appears to be a conflict between nationalism and globalism.
00:04:00.000 Is it possible for nationalism to become inclusive?
00:04:02.000 Is it possible that it could become the fulcrum of new conditions of subsidiarity, where we have new broken down, I don't want to say Soviets, that's not a good word, communities that are fully autonomous, self-governing through electoral democracy?
00:04:16.000 Can we change the world together?
00:04:17.000 And are we at a pivotal moment?
00:04:19.000 Let me know what you think in the comments and chat.
00:04:21.000 For the first 15 minutes, we're going to be available on YouTube, but we can't stay there, for it is one of the heads of the beast.
00:04:27.000 If you studied Revelations hard enough, you'd see the word alphabet or Google or YouTube in there somewhere.
00:04:33.000 For these omniscient...
00:04:35.000 We're omnipotent organisations that censor and surveil according to their agenda are very much a part of the challenge that we are facing together.
00:04:44.000 I've got a few things that I want to pick up on.
00:04:46.000 Did you see Joe Rogan and Callie Means talking about the trivialisation of this election campaign when it's obviously super significant?
00:04:54.000 Let me know what you think about this in the Awaken Wonder chat.
00:04:56.000 Let me know if you're watching us on Rumble right now.
00:04:57.000 Even if you're watching us on YouTube, we're a You better turn on the notification bell or you just won't know what we're doing.
00:05:02.000 You've got to let me know what you think about the trivialisation of this election and the constant recourse to the idea that somehow what we're dealing with is a Nazi Donald Trump.
00:05:11.000 Is that what nationalism means these days?
00:05:13.000 A return to fascism and nationalism?
00:05:15.000 Let me know in the chat. Is it possible to love your country and not be a racist?
00:05:18.000 Is it possible that people from a variety of cultures and racial backgrounds can come together to oppose globalisation?
00:05:23.000 That is the question that I believe we're being asked in this...
00:05:27.000 Excuse me, in this election.
00:05:28.000 And my prayer is that it is possible, of course.
00:05:31.000 That's why we're devoted to having conversations that educate us.
00:05:35.000 That's why we're doing the Oracle series that's only available on Locals.
00:05:39.000 Episode 1, we talked about the pandemic with brilliant experts like Robert Malone and Pierre Corey.
00:05:43.000 And Episode 2, Mike Benz got together with Kim Iverson and Max Blumenthal to talk about the nature of the state and the deep state and war.
00:05:54.000 You will love that conversation. There's a link in the description telling you how you can watch that Oracle season right now.
00:05:59.000 But first of all, let's have a look at this.
00:06:02.000 The trivialisation and the accusations of Nazism that have surrounded Trump since he came down the old golden escalator.
00:06:08.000 Is it true? Is he a fascist?
00:06:10.000 Is he a retro Hitler? Or is he really a bull in the China shop of globalism, preventing them from pursuing their agenda?
00:06:17.000 I'm still trying to work it out myself in the midst of a hurricane.
00:06:20.000 We have long known that Donald Trump has revered the Nazis.
00:06:25.000 He has revered Hitler.
00:06:27.000 Revered them. Revered them.
00:06:29.000 I wonder what the claim is there.
00:06:31.000 Like, what the basis for that claim is.
00:06:33.000 Like, to revere the Nazis.
00:06:35.000 There's no way you can revere the Nazis.
00:06:37.000 It was a dismal, dismal, murderous and insane project.
00:06:41.000 He's read his book. He used to say he had it on his nightstand.
00:06:44.000 Donald Trump has had a very sinister philosophy, wanting to be a dictator, absolutely dividing people up based on who they are, based on factors about them that have to do with their race and their gender, etc.
00:06:59.000 And when he uses language like this, I don't think that it's a Freudian slip.
00:07:04.000 I think that the danger of a Donald Trump is that he would absolutely try to exterminate an entire group of people because he thinks that their genes are somehow different than his and faulty.
00:07:16.000 And I say this with all the sternness that you hear in my voice.
00:07:19.000 That's so weird. They've gone so far with that idea.
00:07:21.000 What has he done? That's so mad.
00:07:22.000 Did he say that? Has he actually said that?
00:07:24.000 It was so extraordinary. On one hand, there's the absolute trivialisation of this election campaign.
00:07:29.000 Mad little anecdotes, stupid dumb stories.
00:07:33.000 And on the other hand, there's this kind of reprehensible escalation of the threat of ultimately an independent libertarian politician couched within the post-Tea Party Republican movement, forming alliances with other independents like Tulsi Gabbard and Bobby Kennedy, which is obviously a disruption to the bureaucratic globalism that's been defining politics from Clinton onwards or Blair onwards in my country that was not interrupted by Trump.
00:07:56.000 A Bush administration or successive conservative governments in my country.
00:07:59.000 That's what the Uniparty means.
00:08:00.000 That's what globalism means. That's what globalism wants.
00:08:02.000 But that's just what I think. Why don't you let me know what you think in the comments and chat.
00:08:06.000 Remember, if you're still watching us on YouTube, turn on that notification bell.
00:08:09.000 There's no way you'll get access to this content.
00:08:11.000 Otherwise, just to give you a point around the trivialization of this thing, this is a moment on Colbert.
00:08:16.000 You surely saw it the other day, where they sort of try and act like they're sort of gun-toting guys.
00:08:21.000 Check it out. When you first became the nominee and named Tim Walls as your...
00:08:26.000 Oh yeah, this is the bit where they're sort of talking about beer and stuff.
00:08:29.000 But yeah, have you heard some of the crazy stuff?
00:08:30.000 I've got a gun, I drink beer.
00:08:31.000 Your vice president nominee, people are calling it the vibe election.
00:08:35.000 All the vibes were all good.
00:08:37.000 But elections, I think, are one on vibes because one of the old saws is they just want somebody they can have a beer with.
00:08:42.000 So would you like to have a beer with me so I can tell people what that's like?
00:08:45.000 Ah! Ah!
00:08:47.000 Filthy propaganda! Ah!
00:08:51.000 Don't do it! Don't do it!
00:08:53.000 Think of your integrity. Think of the middle class girl that you once were with aspirations and ideals.
00:08:58.000 Think about God.
00:09:00.000 Think about truth. Don't pretend to have a beer with Stephen Colbert.
00:09:03.000 Don't pretend to participate in this giddy spectacle I've seen inside of it.
00:09:07.000 I've seen inside that spectacle.
00:09:08.000 I've been on those shows, Stephen Colbert.
00:09:10.000 He's a Catholic. He's a... Good man, I'm sure I'm convinced of it, but you know what it's like when you're in the insidious tendrils of that beast?
00:09:15.000 That machine is giving you money.
00:09:17.000 You have to believe what it believes, otherwise you'd have to break away, become independent, oppose the machine, believe in people, believe in the power of transcendence.
00:09:25.000 He's a tough gig. This was...
00:09:27.000 Now, we asked ahead of time, because I can't just be giving a drink to the Vice President of the United States, but I'd ask...
00:09:32.000 You asked for Miller Highlight.
00:09:34.000 You asked for Miller Highlight. I'm just curious.
00:09:43.000 Okay, the last time I had...
00:09:45.000 Oh no, she can't open it.
00:09:47.000 I hope she's not like that with that handgun she's revealed she owns on Oprah.
00:09:51.000 Wait a minute, I'll shoot you right out of the coconuts!
00:09:54.000 Fear was at a baseball game with Doug, so...
00:09:57.000 Okay, so cheers. There you go.
00:09:59.000 Cheers.
00:10:00.000 There you go.
00:10:01.000 Now I can do this.
00:10:05.000 I can be normal. I'll just have a drinky of the old normalcy.
00:10:10.000 Here we go. I'm a regular person.
00:10:12.000 I can bloody well do this.
00:10:14.000 Put that in me. Go baseball!
00:10:23.000 Just a regular presidential candidate there.
00:10:27.000 Meanwhile, Donald Trump's been accused of being a Nazi.
00:10:30.000 Meanwhile, we hover on the precipice through giddy brinkmanship, teetering on a preposterous apocalypse.
00:10:40.000 That tastes like the beautiful city of Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
00:10:43.000 The champagne and beers. There you go.
00:10:45.000 What a terrifying spectacle it is indeed.
00:10:48.000 A spectacle is the right word.
00:10:49.000 You'll be familiar, of course, with the work of Guy Debord, who said that what we're living in is a set of illusions anymore, that you can't feel reality or truth, can't feel a visceral or spiritual truth, because they're masking that, they're changing it.
00:11:03.000 Here's a conversation between Callie Means and Joe Rogan.
00:11:07.000 This is all before we get to Bobby Kennedy, by the way.
00:11:08.000 This conversation about RFK is amazing, because I believe what I love about RFK... She's authentic.
00:11:14.000 Have a look at this conversation between Callie Means, who's done more than anyone to help us understand the horrors of big food and how big food, in a sense, tee you up for big pharma, and Joe Rogan, who's done more for independent media than Joe Rogan.
00:11:25.000 Anyway, in this conversation between these two, I would argue brilliant men, we get an insight into the trivialisation of the electoral campaign while we hover dangerously close to personal and maybe even global death.
00:11:39.000 Trump wants this to be a generational issue for him.
00:11:42.000 And I just want to say something. I think we're at a big moment here.
00:11:46.000 We're debating trivia.
00:11:48.000 I think the two most existential issues are nuclear war or what's happening to our health.
00:11:54.000 And whatever you think, and I used to be a never-Trumper.
00:11:58.000 watching him care about this issue, watching what's happening with the RFK,
00:12:02.000 watching what's happening of how that's resonating with voters.
00:12:04.000 I posted the other day on X how many people that have never never dreamed
00:12:09.000 they would vote Republican are considering it just because of the fear
00:12:13.000 and threat of globalism and because of the mad masquerade we're watching
00:12:17.000 unfold. What the hell happened with Joe Biden? What's he doing now? How did Kamala
00:12:21.000 Harris become the candidate? What's going on with Nancy Pelosi? How's she making
00:12:25.000 all of this money. What is Tim Walz? What is he even?
00:12:29.000 Why does he look like that?
00:12:31.000 They can't form another government, can they?
00:12:34.000 Of course they can't. The reason that they seem so peculiarly powerless, odd vassals and empty ciphers is because the power is coming from somewhere else.
00:12:41.000 You recognise that, don't you?
00:12:43.000 You know that this is spiritual warfare.
00:12:45.000 It's not the first time you've heard that phrase.
00:12:47.000 You're hearing it all over the place, aren't you?
00:12:48.000 You're sensing it yourself.
00:12:50.000 You're feeling it.
00:13:08.000 That are explicit and open, believe in free speech, care about health and generally speaking are anti-war and I pray that it can become total anti-war as the total policy for that new movement.
00:13:18.000 It's got to be better than the sort of sub-three, like the three letter agencies below them, FBI, CIA. They're not going to be marshaled, drained in under a Kamala Harris presidency, and the bizarre bureaucracies above them, I'm talking about globalist bureaucracies, specifically NATO, WHO, WF, they're not going to be opposed by that Democratic Party movement.
00:13:40.000 Think about the pandemic. They're part of the confluence of that funnel of dark power.
00:13:45.000 That's just what I think, though, of course.
00:13:47.000 Let me know what you think in the comments and the chat.
00:13:48.000 Seeing, you know, from my small vantage point inside, there is tremendous Connection of these two men and moral clarity of seeing what's happening.
00:14:00.000 And my question is this, and to anyone kind of considering voting in this election, Trump is going to say stupid shit.
00:14:06.000 He is Trump. We know who he is.
00:14:09.000 There's two important questions to ask.
00:14:11.000 Who sees this corruption and institutional capture that's going to destroy our country, I think, to an existential level?
00:14:18.000 And who is willing to suffer that blowback?
00:14:21.000 Who is willing to go up against these military industrial complex, the healthcare industrial complex, the education industrial complex that's making us a non-competitive They are ready.
00:14:32.000 Who is going to appoint?
00:14:33.000 This is a question I have.
00:14:34.000 Who do we believe is going to appoint people like RFK, people like Elon Musk, to stir stuff up?
00:14:41.000 Who is going to do that?
00:14:43.000 That, to me, is the foundational question.
00:14:45.000 And I do consider this the most important election of my lifetime, watching these two men, because it is so genuine.
00:14:52.000 And there is a genuine desire To truly transform, to see our broken corruption and institutions for what it is, and really, truly, I think, prevent nuclear war and dramatically reverse our health crisis.
00:15:10.000 Trump has said that his one big mistake last time was personnel, was that the pharma and the ag slithered in and gave him the list of names.
00:15:19.000 Everybody should ask, do you think RFK is going to have an influence on those names based on what Trump has said?
00:15:24.000 And I think he is. And I think people like Elon are going to be involved.
00:15:27.000 I think there's this coalition of people that are coming together and Trump's going to put in power and listen to.
00:15:33.000 And this is a bipartisan issue.
00:15:35.000 And no matter what happens, we have to solve this issue.
00:15:38.000 But I will say this so clearly with the most conviction I can.
00:15:43.000 We will... Be on the verge, I think, of a health population collapse, societally destabilizing event unless true executive leadership sees this corruption and this issue for what it is and says we need a radical transformation in how we see agriculture and how we see health, our two largest industries. I think we have to have that.
00:16:03.000 And every single member of Congress I meet with, including Democrats, say that in order for this issue to get done, we need a president to make this the priority to talk because that gives us air cover and there could be transformational change if a president does that.
00:16:15.000 So that's what I've seen from being in this.
00:16:17.000 And I can tell you, President Trump has kept every promise to RFK and deeply cares about this issue.
00:16:23.000 Well, that just seems like common sense, doesn't it?
00:16:26.000 A matter of prioritisation.
00:16:28.000 On the brink of war, you need to re-evaluate and reassess your position and your conditions.
00:16:37.000 I believe this is a pivotal moment. I believe this is a pivotal moment for all of us individually
00:16:41.000 and of course for us collectively. And as I've said many times, the reason I feel optimistic
00:16:47.000 about this election more than I have for a long while really is precisely because Bobby
00:16:51.000 Kennedy is someone that I know personally. I know him to be authentic, a man of integrity
00:16:56.000 and I can tell you this.
00:16:58.000 If the Democratic Party hadn't become a hollowed-out vassal for corporatist, globalist and deep state power, they would have made that dude their nominee.
00:17:07.000 That's what he wanted.
00:17:08.000 He was an anti-establishment candidate like Bernie Sanders was way back in 2016.
00:17:13.000 I know. I can hear you. I don't even need to read the comments, although I appreciate you getting into those comments.
00:17:17.000 I really do. You better believe that.
00:17:19.000 What I'm telling you is...
00:17:21.000 Anti-establishment, anti-big business, anti-corporatism, anti-globalist candidates can come from all over the place.
00:17:28.000 As long as they're not talking about centralising the power of the state, facilitating the power of corporatism to the degree where it becomes globalist power, i.e.
00:17:37.000 are transcendent and big enough to maneuver and control whole nations.
00:17:41.000 If you want an example of that, look at the Ukraine-Russia war and look at who's
00:17:45.000 benefiting from that. Look at Halliburton's role in it, look at Blackrock's
00:17:48.000 role in it, look at where power might truly lie. If you want to oppose that, you've got to
00:17:53.000 start thinking independently. If you want to oppose that, you've got to start thinking
00:17:56.000 spiritually. But that's just what I think. Why don't you let me know what you think in
00:17:59.000 the comments and chat.
00:18:00.000 If you're watching this on YouTube, turn on the notification bell.
00:18:02.000 It's the only way they're ever going to let you know that we're here because they're part of this globalist machine.
00:18:06.000 That's why there's any antitrust lawsuits going on all over the place.
00:18:10.000 They have to strangle true free voices and thinkers like you.
00:18:16.000 Okay, guys. Now, I'm so excited to introduce our guest today, Bobby Kennedy.
00:18:21.000 I believe he's Has the power to change the course of history, certainly when it comes to this election, and this is the most candid conversation I've ever had with him.
00:18:28.000 You will enjoy it.
00:18:30.000 Stay with us to the very end.
00:18:32.000 See you in a second. Bobby, thanks so much for joining me for Stay Free with Russell Brand.
00:18:38.000 I'm so happy to be here with you, Russell, as always.
00:18:41.000 I want to thank you personally, I suppose, because I... I'm convinced that we are in a pivotal moment.
00:18:49.000 That totalitarianism now is veiled.
00:18:54.000 And it's more dangerous than it has ever been.
00:18:56.000 I've been speaking about it a lot.
00:18:58.000 That the bureaucracy indicated by, say, Kafka or Huxley, and most obviously Orwell, is being augured and introduced.
00:19:07.000 That the continual threat that we are presented with, by we, I mean people who consume media, is that we have to be wise and aware of the militaristic dictator.
00:19:16.000 Strongman archetype emerging and seizing a stranglehold over an enthralled population beleaguered by charisma.
00:19:25.000 But I've felt for a while that there's this banalization, this bureaucratization of culture, this desacralization.
00:19:34.000 A person with a cultural background that I come from, a person that's like...
00:19:39.000 You know, love Martin Luther King or Gandhi or Malcolm X and even people that I'm so struggled to put in the inventory knowing some of the people that will be watching this.
00:19:48.000 Che Guevara, I know, I know, I know.
00:19:50.000 Like all of the people, all the people that get iconoclastically attacked for their obvious and many failings but nevertheless somehow represent rebellion and standing up to the establishment.
00:19:59.000 It's been very hard for me to sort of learn over time that this is a very important and significant election.
00:20:05.000 When you were running as an independent, it was clear you were making a great impact for the many, many people that feel that the nationalistic aspects of the MAGA campaign were offputting, even though I personally can understand why nationalism would be a response to globalism.
00:20:20.000 It's pretty obvious why that would be the case.
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00:21:32.000 You, joining Trump's campaign, supporting Trump, overcoming the many evident and I suppose obvious differences has meant that I now know what my junior and peripheral role is.
00:21:48.000 It's to advocate for an anti-establishment movement that has a chance to disrupt something that I feel that if it were to remain uninterrupted, could bring about an unprecedented level of control.
00:22:03.000 What kind of personal challenges have you faced in making this movement?
00:22:07.000 And what now is your message to the many, many people across America, if polls are to be believed, that supported your independent candidacy?
00:22:17.000 Yeah, let me begin by just commenting on something that has puzzled me, because my whole generation I grew up reading Aldous Huxley and George Orwell and Arthur Kessler and Solzhenitsyn and Robert Heinlein and all these other, I would call them almost philosophers or political philosophers, who were warning us about the advent of this kind of system, that this would happen one day.
00:22:52.000 And we all looked at that and said, yeah, maybe in 200 years or something like that.
00:22:59.000 But that generation that grew up with me, the baby boom generation, who are very well educated, this is before we discontinued civics lessons in American classrooms.
00:23:09.000 We all grew up reading that.
00:23:11.000 We know better. And the extraordinary phenomena to me is how the capacity for critical thinking Has been so overwhelmed and subverted in that entire generation that they're not seeing any of this stuff happen.
00:23:34.000 They went around along with COVID, which was just, looked like in many ways a psyops program with orchestrated fear using to disable the capacity for critical thought.
00:23:50.000 And then now those same mechanisms are being used to get them to support Kamala Harris, a person who was not elected, to get them to ignore the fact that the Democratic Party abandoned elections.
00:24:05.000 There was a palace coup against Joe Biden.
00:24:08.000 First of all, Joe Biden's group disabled the elections to make sure that people like myself could not run against him, so there was no Democratic primaries.
00:24:18.000 And then the kind of faux election that took place, of course, he won all the primaries because they had fixed them in very, very obvious and undeniable ways.
00:24:30.000 But then he then had a palace coup against him, and Kamala was put in there without any pretense that she was ever elected.
00:24:39.000 And yet the Democrats are able to tell themselves that they are Destroying or abandoning democracy in order to save it from the much greater threat which is Donald Trump.
00:24:51.000 And people who support Kamala Harris rarely do it because they support any of her policies which are still unknown.
00:24:58.000 She's never been forced to articulate them.
00:25:01.000 They're supporting her because of the terror of Donald Trump.
00:25:06.000 And this is, you know, that he is going to become a dictator, it will be the end of democracy, that, you know, the republic will be destroyed if he gets in there.
00:25:16.000 You see this again and again and again.
00:25:19.000 And it's created this atmosphere of kind of violence against him, but also this extraordinary phenomenon where Democrats have walked away from their core values, which were when I grew up in the Democratic Party.
00:25:37.000 The Democratic Party was the party of civil rights, of constitutional rights, freedom of speech.
00:25:43.000 The word liberal is derived from a term meaning freedom of speech.
00:25:49.000 My uncle, my father loved the fact that our country was not as scared of debate, that the policies that we embraced were policies that had been annealed in the furnace of debate and then triumphed in the marketplace of ideas.
00:26:06.000 We were the party, the anti-war party, and my father ran against the Vietnam War.
00:26:12.000 My uncle John F. Kennedy said that the principal job of a president of the United States is to keep the country out of war.
00:26:21.000 His term in office was one of the first times in modern history that we never sent anybody, a combat veteran, a combat troop abroad to fight.
00:26:31.000 He resisted his military industrial complex and intelligence apparatus, their pleadings.
00:26:39.000 That he go into Laos in 1961, that he go into Cuba in 1961, that he go into Berlin in 1962, Checkpoint Charlie Crisis, that he go into Berlin in 1963, or that he send combat troops to Vietnam, which he refused to do.
00:26:55.000 And this was the history of the Democratic Party.
00:26:57.000 We were the anti-war party, and now we are the party of war.
00:27:02.000 It is the Democratic Party that created the Ukraine conflict, which is The war that should have never happened.
00:27:09.000 And where now you have this weird situation where Dick Cheney Who was the greatest villain to the Democratic Party.
00:27:20.000 He was the guy who gave us the Patriot Act.
00:27:23.000 He gave us the torture regime.
00:27:24.000 He gave us extraordinary renditions.
00:27:27.000 He gave us the censorship and surveillance state that came out of the Patriot Act.
00:27:34.000 And he gave us the Iraq War, which was a war that was built on deception and pretense.
00:27:41.000 Everybody knows that now.
00:27:42.000 We said we'd never do that again.
00:27:45.000 And it was the worst foreign policy cataclysm in American history.
00:27:51.000 And now Dick Cheney and John Bolton, the people who gave us that, have endorsed Kamala Harris.
00:27:59.000 And 225 other neocons, the people who were driven out of Washington because they were so discredited after Iraq.
00:28:11.000 I've now endorsed Vice President Harris.
00:28:14.000 And they're not endorsing her because they've changed.
00:28:17.000 They still think all those were good ideas.
00:28:20.000 They're endorsing her because the Democratic Party has fundamentally changed.
00:28:23.000 That party has become...
00:28:26.000 The party at which, when I was growing up, it was the party of cops, firefighters, labor unions.
00:28:32.000 It was the party that stood up for little people, you know, working people.
00:28:38.000 And the Republican Party was the party of the rich.
00:28:42.000 And today, it's the opposite.
00:28:44.000 It's absolutely an aversion.
00:28:46.000 The Democratic Party has become the party of big tech, big ag, big pharma, We're good to go.
00:29:07.000 The half-voted Republican own only 70% of the wealth in this, or 30% of the wealth, where the half that voted Democrat owns 70% of the wealth.
00:29:17.000 You've had this complete inversion of the Democratic Party, and a lot of it, and the alliance now between the Democratic Party and the intelligence agencies is something that I could have never believed would happen.
00:29:29.000 I think you had 50 CIA agents endorsing Vice President Biden, two weeks ago, when she gave her very belligerent, you know, imperium speech at the Democratic Convention calling for U.S. hegemony around the globe, which is completely undemocratic impulses, She was preceded immediately in her speech by a former CIA director, Leon Panetta, who spoke before.
00:30:03.000 And that is something that could have never happened in the Democratic Convention.
00:30:07.000 You had military generals speaking in that convention.
00:30:10.000 Oh, it's become the party of the neocons.
00:30:13.000 And a lot of that, I think...
00:30:16.000 And if you ask individual Democrats who are my friends, people I grew up with, family members...
00:30:23.000 Do you think, you know, the Democratic Party is doing these things?
00:30:28.000 They will not answer the question.
00:30:29.000 They'll just say, yes, but Trump.
00:30:32.000 Yes, but, you know, we've got to stop Trump at any cost.
00:30:36.000 At any cost. And it's very disarming.
00:30:43.000 It's very troubling to see people who are rational people who you've known your whole life Who are now embracing these ideas that we would have called fascistic.
00:30:54.000 You know, the term fascism means a merger of state and corporate power.
00:31:00.000 And that seems to be the general theme of the Democratic Party.
00:31:04.000 And I'll just say one other thing.
00:31:07.000 I love what you said about Nationalism being a rational response to globalism.
00:31:14.000 And I think that's absolutely...
00:31:16.000 And you're seeing this populism now around the world.
00:31:20.000 And I think populism is a good thing.
00:31:23.000 It can be a bad thing, too.
00:31:25.000 You know, my father was a populist, and populism has two potentials.
00:31:31.000 One is a very idealistic potential, like my father demonstrated, and the other is, you know, populist movement can be hijacked by demagogues and be used to serve very, very dark purposes.
00:31:45.000 But it's a natural response to the globalism that's happening because people want local control and local democracy and they feel that their sovereignty is being taken away from them.
00:31:58.000 Now, you know, in Europe has changed dramatically.
00:32:01.000 There is no freedom of speech in Europe anymore.
00:32:05.000 We saw the head of Telegram, Pavlo Derov, torn out of his airplane when he stopped to refuel in France.
00:32:12.000 And, you know, Thierry Breton, who's the chairman of the European Commission, threatening Elon Musk that if he interviewed Donald Trump live on X Spaces...
00:32:28.000 That he would be prosecuted criminally and civilly.
00:32:31.000 We saw three weeks ago Brazil censor Twitter and censor a lot of other social media sites.
00:32:40.000 So you're seeing this rise of censorship of totalitarianism all around the world.
00:32:44.000 And, you know, I think the only hope to prevent that In this country is Donald Trump.
00:32:52.000 If Kamala gets in there, this is what's going to happen.
00:32:55.000 It is indeed a global phenomenon transcendent of national sovereignty.
00:33:01.000 Our country is at a different inflection point.
00:33:04.000 The United Kingdom, I mean by that, having just elected Keir Starmer, another authoritarian bureaucrat, fancy that, who is similarly governing in a banalizing way.
00:33:17.000 Advocating for war, somehow a kind of un-person, transparent only in so much as there's nothing there, not from clarity of ideas, a legislator.
00:33:30.000 Moral clarity. I mean, the blatant freebies that he's taking from, you know, from wealthy classes when he's Imposing austerity on the rest of Britain and predicting that the economy is not going to get better any time in their future.
00:33:48.000 Extraordinary things. Stephanie!
00:33:51.000 What I want to say is that the reason there is a plasticity and mutability around the principles is precisely because there's nothing to prevent that.
00:33:59.000 There is no skeletal structure undergirding it that would be required in an idealistic movement.
00:34:04.000 Now, the reason I mentioned at the beginning of this, I believe I did all well, Huxley, Kafka et al, is precisely to acknowledge that we're facing something darker than two political movements opposing one another, but a type of spiritual warfare is what I would like to allude to.
00:34:19.000 And a lot of people, I think, are suffering from a degree of vertigo from the vacillating changes we're all being forced to undertake in order to augur something sensible to oppose.
00:34:32.000 This gargantuan beast slouching towards us now with its thick and heavy thighs, Robert.
00:34:39.000 Now, what concerns me is that, at least initially, what it appears that we're dealing with is an alliance between four mavericks, all of them in their own way flawed, being human.
00:34:51.000 You... A brilliant and magnificent man, and I've said it's you that has acted upon me as the agent of change, that has made me recognise that in order to oppose establishment power, I have to have a different perspective on Trump and the MAGA movement, which I'd already come accustomed to to a degree, because you know what I hate?
00:35:16.000 I hate snobbery.
00:35:18.000 I hate it. I hate haughtiness and superciliousness in particular to working people because even though I didn't have a great time growing up, that's where I come from.
00:35:29.000 And when people talk about baskets of deplorables and speak condemnatory language about ordinary working people, they're talking about the people that I grew up with.
00:35:40.000 And I've watched it.
00:35:43.000 Over years, the stranglehold.
00:35:44.000 And I've seen the sort of the reflux induced by that esophageal grip in the form first of Brexit and the rise of Trump, two simultaneous events that amounted to the sort of belching out and shirking off.
00:36:01.000 Of the imposition of authoritarianism.
00:36:03.000 You say about populism, and I too believe that a kind of an engagement of the populary, a revivification of politics, a libidinization of people, is precisely what's being felt.
00:36:16.000 You know, you, Tulsi Gabbard, Elon Musk, Trump, this peculiar quadrant that I feel has to be framed and enshrined and presented to the electorate as the alternative to this sterile and sterilising project that we're being invited to vote for may be like a quartet of mavericks And you could see from the way that you're being treated in the media, it's hard, I think, with Tulsi Gabbard, war veteran, so dignified and elegant.
00:36:48.000 You know, Trump, my God, he provides them with so much raw material, doesn't he?
00:36:52.000 Elon Musk, another unusual maverick.
00:36:54.000 But you, precisely the kind of president I would have thought the Democratic Party would...
00:36:59.000 Would have craved.
00:37:00.000 And clearly their appetite for hollow ciphers of differing degrees can never be quenched precisely because they need to provide a conduit for the real power.
00:37:13.000 I noticed one of the times I watch most, you know, watch as much of your stuff as I can, but you sort of said that the Trump campaign were never hostile, were never vindictive when you were running.
00:37:22.000 And the Democrat Party went from trying to get you Off of ballots to ensuring that you remain on ballots because a kind of confusion and disorientation now is part of their campaigning against you.
00:37:37.000 How important specifically is it, Bobby, that people ensure that they vote for Trump now in order to prevent this kind of globalism and totalitarianism that we're discussing?
00:37:49.000 And how do you advise those people that have supported you and probably, you know, in fact...
00:37:55.000 Wouldn't you have assumed the biggest demographic of Bobby Kennedy supporters would come from God?
00:37:59.000 All the people that have been observing the risks you've taken around the subject of health.
00:38:03.000 All the people that are anti-establishment but can't bring themselves to vote for Trump because of some of the clumsy stuff he's said.
00:38:10.000 People disenfranchised and disenchanted by a democratic party that's clearly been captured by corporate interests and is now the party of war.
00:38:17.000 How are you gonna guide them and what appeal do you make To ensure that when it comes to this election, they vote for Donald Trump.
00:38:28.000 Yeah, I mean, that's a really important point, Russell.
00:38:31.000 I'm in this kind of paradoxical position that I don't think any politician that I recall has been in, which is I'm urging people when they see my name on the ballot not to vote for me, and instead to vote for Donald Trump in the only way that I'm going to get to Washington, D.C., and actually try to start fixing these problems, which I will do if they let me in.
00:38:55.000 Is if people ignore my name on the ballot and vote for Donald Trump instead.
00:39:01.000 Particularly in a couple of the battleground states like Michigan, where I fought very hard to get off the ballot.
00:39:08.000 I actually won the case in the Court of Appeals, and they ordered the Board of Elections to remove me from the ballot.
00:39:14.000 The Democratic Party, which had been trying to keep me off the ballot for four months, Then pivoted and now is sued to keep me on the ballot because they knew that that would confuse the electorate.
00:39:28.000 Yeah. Oh, you know, it's a deliberate anti-democratic imagination and, you know, I'm urging people not to fall for it.
00:39:38.000 I don't want to be on the ballot and I don't want you to vote for me.
00:39:41.000 I want you to vote for Donald Trump because that's the only way that I'm going to get to Washington and fix the food system.
00:39:48.000 Fix the pharmaceutical system, unravel this corrupt merger of state and corporate power that has turned our agencies predatory against the American public, and hopefully rescue American democracy so that then we can begin actually promoting democracy around the world, not at the barrel of a gun, but through the power of example.
00:40:09.000 One of the things I've enjoyed about you campaigning alongside Trump is the clarity of the messaging, moving away from rather diffuse, inane concepts like joy, the Kamala Harris campaign, or turning the page.
00:40:23.000 It was pointed out to me earlier that Kamala Harris is on the page that they're turning, and on the next one, she's in government.
00:40:31.000 Who wrote the page? That's her page.
00:40:34.000 That you brought to the forefront.
00:40:36.000 Health. Ending war and free speech.
00:40:40.000 These seem, obviously, to be pressing and important issues.
00:40:46.000 What, in particular, in the event that there is a successful campaign and that you are granted the authority to do so, will you do about Big Food and Big Farmer?
00:40:57.000 I was watching your video about the cereal the other day, you know, and, like, they're sort of...
00:41:01.000 Someone said under there, like, I'm guessing this would be like...
00:41:05.000 I'll check you, man.
00:41:06.000 I'll tell you. Well, you don't have to buy that food.
00:41:09.000 You don't have to buy that food.
00:41:11.000 It's only an option. I'm thinking, how can a liberal, democratic person make that argument?
00:41:16.000 Do you know what addiction is?
00:41:18.000 Addiction is the overriding of your compulsions, the overriding of your voluntary ability to choose whether or not to do something.
00:41:27.000 I'm going to say this as an addict in recovery.
00:41:28.000 I know you're... Public about your position, you know, you're a recurring addict as well.
00:41:33.000 You know, if our food has things in it that take away your ability to choose whether or not you're eating it anymore, and that's happening at scale and being marketed at children, sometimes I think when we're caught up in the culture war, you know, and it's easy to get caught up in the culture war, there are evocative issues around identity and who cares more about anything they care about themselves these days.
00:41:53.000 You know, like there are actually quite fundamental things being discussed, like the potential for war,
00:41:58.000 the potential for war, and additionally food and pharma, pivotal fundamental issues.
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00:43:27.000 I've had the feeling that these interests are so entrenched, Bobby, that, you know, even if you're actually in government, you kind of can't do it.
00:43:33.000 You know, when you see Biden capping like 10 drugs or whatever and saying we beat big pharma this year, you think, why is the president in that kind of dynamic with pharma companies?
00:43:42.000 If you're the president, aren't you just able to go, hey...
00:43:45.000 Stop marketing these unnecessary drugs.
00:43:48.000 Stop introducing new drugs that are essentially a rebrand of white label.
00:43:52.000 So I get the sense that there are some pretty deep state and global corporatist powers in there.
00:43:58.000 How do you oppose them things, Bobby?
00:43:59.000 Let me make a point just and answer that.
00:44:04.000 That suggestion that people have a choice.
00:44:08.000 All of the institutions of our government have been corrupted to remove the choice from the American public.
00:44:14.000 And it's done in a series of very powerful, some of them subtle ways, for example, just not informing the public that there's poison in their food.
00:44:26.000 Creating, making the food addictive so that people don't understand the impact that it's having on them.
00:44:32.000 They don't have an informed choice.
00:44:34.000 As you know, During the 1980s and 1990s, the tobacco companies were the richest companies, some of the richest companies in the world, and they came under tremendous pressure from the government that was then suing them, a bunch of the states, not the federal government, a bunch of the states began suing them, glass action suits to reimburse for Medicare bill.
00:44:58.000 There was education programs to educate and discourage people from smoking, and they saw the writing on the wall.
00:45:07.000 So they went out to diversify, and they took all that money, and they bought up all the food companies in our country, and they brought in thousands of scientists who had specialized in addiction, in creating addiction in tobacco.
00:45:24.000 They brought those scientists into companies like Kraft and the big food company.
00:45:28.000 The two biggest food companies by the end of the 1990s in the United States We're Philip Morris and R.J. Reynolds, the two biggest tobacco companies.
00:45:37.000 And they brought all their scientists who were making tobacco more addictive and hooking children.
00:45:44.000 And they began making chemicals that addict you to fluids.
00:45:49.000 Monosodium, glutamate, but all hundreds of chemicals that are addicting and make food so that it doesn't satiate you, so that it actually keeps you hungry even when you're full.
00:46:01.000 And these were chemicals that did not occur in nature.
00:46:05.000 They were manufactured in labs.
00:46:06.000 The human body has no way to process them.
00:46:09.000 They're not actually food.
00:46:10.000 They're food-like substances.
00:46:12.000 At the same time, there's tremendous economic pressure For people to eat these foods, for example, tens, hundreds of billions of dollars that go to the farm program every year, that money, 90% of that is going for three items, corn, soy, and wheat.
00:46:35.000 And it makes those, crop insurance, all these other programs, makes those substances very, very cheap.
00:46:44.000 And they became the feedstock.
00:46:46.000 So GMO corn, GMO soy, and wheat, which are heavily laden with pesticides, became the feedstock for this new processed food industry.
00:46:58.000 And because they're so cheap, they're government-subsidized.
00:47:02.000 We spend only about 2% of the farm program goes to fruit and vegetables.
00:47:09.000 Most of it goes to these big GMO, heavily pesticide-laden and intensive grains that then become, you know, are put through extruders and other processes.
00:47:26.000 They're filled with sugars which themselves are addictive.
00:47:29.000 You know, sugar is, Mark Hyman has shown it's as addictive as crack.
00:47:34.000 Oh, and that became the basis for the food program, so it's the cheapest food.
00:47:43.000 In many neighborhoods in our country, particularly poor neighborhoods, there are food deserts.
00:47:47.000 You can't get ahold of foods anywhere near it.
00:47:50.000 The only food that you have access to is these kind of foods, these processed foods.
00:47:55.000 And that's why black Americans and American Indians have the highest chronic disease rates of anybody in the world.
00:48:05.000 And they had the highest death rates from COVID because it was actually chronic disease that was killing people from COVID. There's other mechanisms, too.
00:48:13.000 The food stamp program, which is $80 billion a year, on $70 billion of that, goes to processed food.
00:48:22.000 So if you're poor, it's the food that you're encouraged and the government pays for.
00:48:28.000 And the school lunch program, which for many kids in this country, the only decent meal they're getting every day is school lunch, And that now, about 70% of that is processed food.
00:48:43.000 Yeah, you can say they have people of choice, but they don't have choice.
00:48:46.000 It's like saying they had a choice to vaccinate during COVID. They did have a choice.
00:48:52.000 You could go into isolation, and you could lose your job, and you could...
00:48:58.000 But there were a lot of penalties built in to coerce that choice, and there are economic penalties...
00:49:07.000 They're physical and cultural, and advertising, as you say, is meant to overwhelm free choice.
00:49:14.000 Oh, you have all these mechanisms for overwhelming free choice, and people do not have a choice.
00:49:19.000 Most people don't have a choice but to eat this stuff.
00:49:21.000 People don't want to eat it when they hear about it, but particularly if you live in a black neighborhood in this country, you have to spend a lot of your resources and a lot of your time trying to avoid those kind of foods if you're educated about it.
00:49:35.000 And there's no education because the government is telling you, yeah, it's great.
00:49:40.000 And by the way, they've not only bribed and captured the agencies, the Congress, the press, which is dependent on food and pharmaceutical advertising, but they've also captured the NGOs, Some of the biggest contributors to the American Diabetes Association are sugar drink companies.
00:50:06.000 And probably the biggest contributor to the NAACP is sugar drink companies.
00:50:12.000 To keep black people from complaining that 10% of food stamps are used for Coca-Cola and other sugar drinks.
00:50:18.000 So Coca-Cola gives millions of dollars to NAACP, which is a national association for colored people.
00:50:26.000 It's the primary frontline organization standing up for civil rights historically.
00:50:32.000 But it's been completely bought off by Coca-Cola Company, So that if you say out loud, if you're a politician, you say out loud, we shouldn't let food stamps be spent on sugar drinks.
00:50:46.000 We are poisoning all the poor people in this country and giving them all diabetes.
00:50:51.000 The NAACP will condemn you as racist because they say that's the only food black people can afford.
00:50:58.000 And you're trying to cut off their choice to live as they want.
00:51:01.000 And it's all these contrived and fictitious and convoluted arguments that, no, it's not racist.
00:51:10.000 The racist thing is poisoning all the black people in this country and poisoning American Indians.
00:51:15.000 And let me give you just one example of how this is genocide.
00:51:22.000 That is a term I do not use lightly.
00:51:27.000 But the American Indians, more than any other race in the world, have been subject to genocide, deliberate genocide.
00:51:33.000 As much as Jews have, systematic genocide.
00:51:37.000 Most of them, you know, were deliberately exterminated through war and weaponry, through isolation and reservations.
00:51:45.000 Today that genocide takes place is being completed through what on there and I spent 20% of my
00:51:52.000 My career working on it with American Indian issues tree on treaty negotiations and litigation against big polluters
00:51:59.000 That were you know in in making incursions under the reservations and
00:52:06.000 But the what on the reservations?
00:52:09.000 there's a term called white death white flour white sugar and white grease which is Crisco and
00:52:15.000 The American Indians have the highest Chronic disease rate in the world the Pima Indians
00:52:23.000 in New Mexico and Arizona Have a diabetes the highest diabetes rate on earth 90%
00:52:30.000 because they're getting these foods They're being systematically poisoned.
00:52:35.000 Pimas were some of the healthiest, longest-lived people in the world prior to the advent of processed foods.
00:52:41.000 The Pima Indians in Mexico, right across the border, are slim.
00:52:46.000 They don't have diabetes.
00:52:48.000 They don't have cardiac disease.
00:52:50.000 They live long.
00:52:51.000 They're extremely healthy.
00:52:52.000 They're very durable. Right on the U.S. side of the border, where they're all being systematically inundated with these processed foods, they are dying at a younger age.
00:53:05.000 I think that the average lifespan is 47 years.
00:53:09.000 And it is a genocide.
00:53:12.000 It is the continuation of this systematic genocide of the Indian people.
00:53:16.000 And during COVID, We had the highest death rate of any country in the world.
00:53:21.000 We had 16% of the COVID deaths in the United States.
00:53:25.000 We only have 4.2% of the world's population.
00:53:28.000 We were dying from COVID at a rate of 3,000 people per million population.
00:53:35.000 In Haiti, Nigeria, they were dying at 14 people per million population.
00:53:39.000 We were told by Bill Gates and Tony Fauci, We've got to get the vaccines to Haiti and Nigeria to save them.
00:53:46.000 They're going to be wiped out from COVID. Guess what?
00:53:48.000 Only 1% of them are vaccinated.
00:53:51.000 1.3% in Nigeria, 1.4% in Haiti.
00:53:55.000 And yet their death rate was one two hundredth of American blacks who were, you know, fully vaccinated.
00:54:01.000 And Indians had the highest vaccination rate of any population in the world, 100%, because they were being paid $1,000 apiece to get the vaccine.
00:54:11.000 And they had by far, far, far the highest death rate from COVID in the world.
00:54:17.000 So, and it's because they are sick.
00:54:20.000 CDC says the average American who died from COVID had 3.8 chronic diseases.
00:54:27.000 So it wasn't COVID that was killing them.
00:54:28.000 Healthy people did not die from COVID. The only people who died were people who were already sick, and it was chronic disease that was killing them, and that's caused by their food.
00:54:39.000 We are mass poisoning this generation of kids.
00:54:43.000 It's interesting to consider COVID not as an aberration, but a fulmination and culmination of processes that have long been in place and were requiring, I suppose, a third act of that magnitude and that nature to sort of, as the denouement almost, to like, you know, with the comorbidities and such.
00:55:07.000 To just execute the final plan, not to use, I don't want to use sensationalist language.
00:55:14.000 But Bobby, an earlier example you gave was the proposal that there be restriction on food stamp usage that people might, and with some legitimacy, regard as authoritarian if it were to say that certain foods can be purchased on food stamps.
00:55:30.000 And for me that sort of strikes...
00:55:31.000 As the kind of the kind of superficial measure that prevents the excavatory work required from being undertaken when you describe these barren food deserts and you know when I when I think of the highly managed environments that I occasionally move through the Airports that I sometimes suspect that globalism wants the world to resemble, where your every move is surveilled and measured, where the food that you eat and the sounds that you hear are all curated and controlled for you.
00:56:04.000 I wonder if the, not an alternative, but the necessary opposition might be, when it comes to say, just to your point about food and food stamps, a decentralized and localized system of agriculture.
00:56:20.000 And when I think of what the alternative might look like, it's...
00:56:25.000 The mind boggles the amount of institutions and institutional interests that would have to be challenged, opposed, brought down, decimated and destroyed to imagine the alternative where people were eating food grown locally and naturally, where people were Participate in their cultures and democracies directly, where people understood, to sort of paraphrase Burroughs' idea that people understood what was on the end of their fork, both physically and literally, but also in terms of the information that they're consuming.
00:56:59.000 To challenge, like, interests like big food, to imagine the type of power we're discussing.
00:57:04.000 I can't see it just as inert.
00:57:06.000 I'm starting to see it, and I try not to yield to hysteria as best I can, It sounds sort of a cultist that that amount of power could be practised.
00:57:17.000 And to imagine the opposition to that kind of power to enable people to...
00:57:24.000 Like, if you're on food stamps, you'll be eating organic grass-fed beef.
00:57:30.000 You'll be eating food grown near to where you are.
00:57:33.000 When I think of the interests that have just collapsed...
00:57:37.000 Just to try to augur that.
00:57:39.000 It's like a different economic, agricultural, environmental reality.
00:57:44.000 You know, I can imagine people sort of sanctioning, you're not allowed to spend your food stamps on sugary foods, you bloody idiots.
00:57:51.000 But what I can't imagine is...
00:57:54.000 We are going to take on big agriculture, big pharma, big food to the degree where people eat food that they understand grown where they're from.
00:58:02.000 We're going to end transporting food around the world.
00:58:04.000 We're going to have a diet that's in harmony with our environment.
00:58:07.000 Because ultimately, aren't we talking about consciousness?
00:58:10.000 Aren't we talking about an awareness?
00:58:11.000 Be aware of the information you're consuming.
00:58:13.000 It may be deceptive.
00:58:14.000 Be aware of the person you're voting for.
00:58:16.000 They may not have your interests at heart.
00:58:18.000 Be aware of these media organisations.
00:58:19.000 Be aware of the very food that you're eating.
00:58:24.000 My prayer is that you are elected as part of this movement.
00:58:28.000 Even just being in this city, man, terrifies me.
00:58:31.000 I see those big block buildings and their big blockchain capture.
00:58:35.000 I feel frightened.
00:58:36.000 I feel frightened here, and God knows what it must be like with you and your history.
00:58:39.000 I can't imagine what you say and what you do to prevent Coca-Cola having that power, Kraft having that power, Pfizer having that power, Raytheon, Norfolk Grumman, all of those.
00:58:51.000 And maybe even those things are just visible logos of something far more insidious and deeper.
00:58:57.000 And on a practical level, what is it that we're saying on day one?
00:59:01.000 Well, here's the thing.
00:59:04.000 If I get in there...
00:59:08.000 And, you know, one of the things that Robert Redfield said to me, you know, the former head of CDC who made this extraordinary endorsement of me this week.
00:59:16.000 Yeah, I can't believe that.
00:59:17.000 How did that feel? Because you wrote a lot about him in The Real Anthony Fauci.
00:59:20.000 I was bowled over. But then I met with him, and one of the things he said to me is that, he said, you're the only one who can fix this problem at HHS, because everybody who goes into HHS gets captured there.
00:59:33.000 First of all, they are...
00:59:37.000 To get appointed head of the HHS by any president of the United States, you already have to have been approved of and co-opt for a lifetime as part of this corrupt system.
00:59:51.000 People don't get into HHS unless they're pharmaceutical lobbyists or whatever.
00:59:57.000 But President Trump is an unusual guy.
01:00:00.000 And he said to me, oh, you know, the pharmaceutical industry is going to go nuts.
01:00:07.000 If I bring you in and give you power, and he said, I'm going to do it because I don't care.
01:00:12.000 That's what he said. And I think he's the only guy who really doesn't care.
01:00:16.000 He doesn't care. And what Redfield said to me, and just so people know, Robert Redfield was the head of CDC during COVID. And in my book, I bash him and his record.
01:00:32.000 And I said to him, you know, I really was unkind to you in my book on Fauci.
01:00:37.000 He said, I know, but I have a thick skin.
01:00:40.000 He came out of the military.
01:00:43.000 He was part of Operation Warp Speed, but he always was a voice of slight dissent.
01:00:50.000 He was telling us things that herd immunity probably did work better.
01:00:56.000 And these things that everybody else was trying to say, no, they don't work.
01:01:00.000 So he always had this little part of himself that was ethical, but he said,
01:01:05.000 you're the only one who can do this because you need somebody in there who's indestructible,
01:01:10.000 who has already, you know, stood the test of being defamed and attacked
01:01:15.000 and has withstood it because most people who go in there are gonna be, you know, at every level of those agencies.
01:01:21.000 Eurocrats have the capacity to commit these little civil disobediences
01:01:27.000 that will, you know, turn off the electricity, create a measles epidemic, do all these things
01:01:32.000 that will embarrass the president and discredit anybody who actually tries
01:01:36.000 to genuinely reform the system.
01:01:38.000 But for me, I've been thinking how to do this for 40 years.
01:01:43.000 I've sued all these agencies.
01:01:45.000 And when you litigate against them, you get a PhD in corporate capture.
01:01:50.000 And how...
01:01:53.000 To dismantle it, how to unravel it.
01:01:55.000 And I know the names of people in these agencies who have to be moved, or the troublemakers, for example, when I sued Monsanto.
01:02:04.000 We came across emails that showed that the head of the Pesticide Division at EPA for a decade had been secretly working for Monsanto and fixing studies, making sure that to bring in these phony mercenary industry scientists, we call them biostitutes, create studies that protected Monsanto, that hid the cancer signals from people using Roundup.
01:02:36.000 So, I know the names of those people in many, many of the agencies, and I know what to do with them and how to get rid of them.
01:02:44.000 We have to get rid of anybody in FDA who has anything to do with food.
01:02:48.000 A lot of it is by changing personnel.
01:02:50.000 Some of it is going to be by opening up databases.
01:02:54.000 There's a hundred things that I'm going to do in the first week.
01:02:57.000 We also now have the example of this awesome power That the government took during COVID of declaring an emergency and saying you can do things that everybody believes were impossible and we can do that.
01:03:09.000 But the most important mechanism that I will have at my disposal is the scientific research capacity at NIH. NIH gives away $42 billion a year.
01:03:24.000 56,000 scientists at universities in the United States, Canada, Britain, elsewhere around the world, to do research.
01:03:32.000 And the research, since 1980, the research has been really about new drug development.
01:03:40.000 So most of those guys are basically partnered with the pharmaceutical industry, and the individual scientists at NIH can actually collect royalties of $150,000 a year forever.
01:03:53.000 Any product that they developed at NIH, and that is then sold to the pharmaceutical industry.
01:03:58.000 So it's become an incubator for pharmaceutical products.
01:04:02.000 And studying gain-of-function and infectious disease to create more pandemics.
01:04:08.000 If I go in there, I'm going to change the focus and say, what we're going to do now is actually make people healthier.
01:04:16.000 We're going to figure out why has autism gone from 1 in 10,000 in my generation One in every 34 American kids today.
01:04:25.000 In California, one in every 22 kids.
01:04:27.000 Why did that happen? Why has diabetes gone from...
01:04:30.000 When I was a kid, the average pediatrician saw one case of diabetes in his lifetime.
01:04:36.000 Now, one out of every three kids who walks through his office door is diabetic or pre-diabetic.
01:04:40.000 We spend more on diabetes treatment in this country than our military budget.
01:04:47.000 I'm gonna say, what's causing this?
01:04:49.000 What's causing the obesity epidemic?
01:04:51.000 What's causing all these autoimmune diseases?
01:04:54.000 And we're gonna take all those scientists and we're gonna say, we want you to work on those now.
01:05:00.000 The reason for that is that if we have, you know, one of the big offenders is high fructose corn syrup, right?
01:05:08.000 That's one of the reasons Americans are so sick.
01:05:11.000 It's in everything. And it comes from corn.
01:05:14.000 And from subsidized corn.
01:05:17.000 There's millions of farmers who have been hooked on this system.
01:05:21.000 They're an impediment to changing it from above.
01:05:23.000 You could never say, the government could never say, we're going to get high fructose corn, get rid of it.
01:05:28.000 Because Congress is owned by Cargill, Monsanto, the companies that are making it.
01:05:33.000 There's a million farmers who are grassroots army for them.
01:05:38.000 And Congress is given money by all those companies and the regulatory agencies are controlled, so you can't just declare it.
01:05:45.000 But here's what you can do. I can do 20 or 30 studies, a mix of all different kinds of studies, animal studies, epidemiological studies, observational studies, that show the connection between high fructose corn syrup and diabetes or obesity.
01:06:07.000 And then what happens is the lawyers are going to come out of the woodwork and they're going to round up millions of clients who have diabetes and they're going to sue these companies.
01:06:18.000 Now, right now you can't do that because the science does not exist to allow those lawsuits to go forward.
01:06:24.000 But once we create that science, the marketplace, you can't change it from above through a centralized system, through decentralized attorneys suing in court Locally, you can change the system because you can impose costs.
01:06:40.000 And that's what we did with glyphosate, which was part of Roundup, which everybody said, you'll never get rid of glyphosate.
01:06:47.000 We brought, you know, I had 40,000 clients, me and my partners, who at all were home gardeners who got non-Hodgkin's lymphoma from using glyphosate.
01:06:57.000 And we tried those cases one at a time.
01:07:00.000 The first case, we won $289 million.
01:07:03.000 The second case, we won $89 million.
01:07:05.000 The third case, we asked for a billion.
01:07:08.000 We got $2.2 billion.
01:07:10.000 And then Monsanto came.
01:07:15.000 We don't want to try any more cases or we're going to go bankrupt.
01:07:18.000 And they settled the entire group for $13 billion and they agreed to take glyphosate out of home gardening products.
01:07:27.000 That's how you fix the system.
01:07:30.000 Well, it's very exciting to imagine you and pray for you to receive the kind of power that you've dedicated your life to coming into alignment with.
01:07:39.000 I pray that the rest of the campaign goes well for you, and I pray that you are protected, because I believe that you are doing such incredible and important work with such valour and such grace, and surely that's what we require now, nationally, internationally.
01:07:53.000 Thank you. Thank you, Russell, and thank you for your courage and for You know, being the philosopher, the leading philosopher, the reigning philosopher of democracy left on the globe.
01:08:09.000 What has it come to that such a thing must surely be true?
01:08:12.000 Hey, remember, the important thing, your real take-home here, is if you see Bobby Kennedy on the ballot...
01:08:19.000 You must vote Trump.
01:08:20.000 That is the message that we're here to convey.
01:08:23.000 Thanks for joining us. We didn't talk about free speech, but the very fact that you're on Rumble is an advocacy for free speech and we know where we stand on war.
01:08:29.000 Thankfully, end all war.
01:08:31.000 Peace. Thanks once again, Bobby Kennedy, for joining us today.
01:08:34.000 Thank you. Thank you, Russell, for having me.
01:08:36.000 Thank you very much. Well, thanks very much for joining me today for Stay Free with Russell Brand.
01:08:41.000 We're going to take a week off.
01:08:43.000 There will be posts and content coming up here and there, but we're going to be back in earnest next Monday.
01:08:49.000 And I'm so excited to tell you about Break Bread with Russell Brand.
01:08:52.000 Episode 1 with Tucker Carlson.
01:08:53.000 It's going to be up for you in a couple of days.
01:08:56.000 That's in addition to the Jordan Peterson conversation that's up in full.
01:08:59.000 That's in addition to our last ever episode of the Bible study,
01:09:04.000 our last ever episode of Stand Up Break Down.
01:09:08.000 But we are continuing to give you an additional offering if you are an Awakened Wonder,
01:09:12.000 a Locals member, as well as Break Bread.
01:09:15.000 You continue to get early access to interviews.
01:09:19.000 You continue, and this is an offering, you're not going to believe this.
01:09:22.000 There's someone I'm working with in the room right now.
01:09:24.000 You're not going to believe this offer. If you're an Awake and Wonder, if I do a live show anywhere in the world, you can get a special code and see me live.
01:09:32.000 And believe me, I'm going to be touring the world.
01:09:34.000 I'm going to be in Australia. I'm going to be all over the United States of America.
01:09:37.000 I'm going to be all over the UK with the blessings of a very great power.
01:09:40.000 And I can't wait to see you there.
01:09:42.000 if you're in a wake and wonder you better join me live for spectacular VIP experiences. Who knows
01:09:48.000 where this is gonna go? Thank you for joining me for today's conversation with Bobby Kennedy. Do
01:09:53.000 enjoy a little week of respite as we move towards this election period. Who knows what kind of crazy
01:09:59.000 world we're gonna be in when we get back. But what I can tell you is we will have on Break Bread with
01:10:05.000 Russell Brand a live streamed Christian guest every week where we will be taking communion
01:10:10.000 together, reading the Bible and working out how spiritual power is going to change the world. You
01:10:14.000 don't have to be Christian but if you're not Christian I want to tell you why you're not. I want you to
01:10:20.000 ask questions that will be put into the guests. Guests like maybe even Bieber will be on the show.
01:10:25.000 Can you imagine hearing what Bieber's believing right now with all this chaos as the world learns
01:10:30.000 what's been going on in Hollywood and entertainment? That conversation is going to be amazing. Can you
01:10:35.000 imagine what it's going to be like to have Elon Musk on, to have Trump on, to have all of these great
01:10:40.000 people? We're going to be talking to Christian leaders, theologians, philosophers and thinkers.
01:10:45.000 Breaking Bread with Russell Brand that's only available for our Awakened Wonder community.
01:10:48.000 We are going to continue to stream. Stay free with Russell Brand every single day but for you Awakened
01:10:54.000 Wonders you will get Break Bread, early access to interviews and the opportunity. I think this is
01:10:58.000 the most exciting one. You tell me in the comments and chat to join me live wherever I am.
01:11:02.000 What you do is you will write to the address, tickets, you know, I don't know the email address, that's not my job, but you'll write to it and you will claim your free ticket wherever I am in the world and we've got to get around this world.
01:11:13.000 I believe in it. I believe in travelling the world, doing my best to in my own way.
01:11:18.000 Floored as I am to carry the most important message that any of us can carry.
01:11:23.000 You know what that is. Thanks for joining us today for this glorious adventure.
01:11:27.000 Remember, check out the Oracle's seasons, and if you like them, we'll do more of them.
01:11:31.000 Let me know what subjects you'd like to see an Oracle's on.
01:11:33.000 We've done the pandemic. That was brilliant with Robert Malone and a few other people.
01:11:37.000 We've done the deep state with the...
01:11:38.000 The always fantastic Mike Benz.
01:11:40.000 Would you like to see food with Kali Means in Vandana Shiva?
01:11:42.000 That would be amazing, wouldn't it?
01:11:44.000 I'd love to do that one. So that could be the next Oracle season.
01:11:46.000 There's a link in the description telling you how you can get that.
01:11:48.000 Okay, so we're going to have a week off now.
01:11:50.000 We'll be back on Locals with Break Bread with Russell Brand.
01:11:53.000 Episode 1, Tucker Carlson.
01:11:55.000 You have to be a member to receive that content.
01:11:58.000 And then we'll be back every day streaming live from wherever we are in this crazy world.
01:12:04.000 Until then, I'll see you in a week.
01:12:06.000 Not with more of the same, but with more of the different.
01:12:08.000 If you can, till then, stay free.