In the first episode of the new year, we look back at some of the most significant events of the past 12 months, including the raid on Qatar, the assassination of Hamas leaders in Qatar, and the recent attack on Poland. We also look at a new poll that suggests women no longer regard having children as the most important thing in their lives.
00:04:58.000We'll be with you for an hour, and we'll be covering the stories that we consider to be of most important.
00:05:02.000Indeed, trying to aggregate them and prioritize them is pretty hard because there's a well, it ranges from potential war, revelations on the Epstein files, Hamas leaders killed in Qatar, protests across the world, the British government trying to reform.
00:05:22.000Let's start with this, because I suppose loads of us that thought that the threat of Putin and Russia was being used to create a kind of uh uh to legitimise expenditure on the military have got now look at this bit of information.
00:05:36.000Now there's one other main story today that we're covering, and that is uh the Polish president has called it uh in fact in the last half hour an unprecedented moment in NATO history.
00:05:46.000This is after uh Poland, of course, scrambled its own and NATO air defences to shoot down drones after a Russian air attack on Western Ukraine, the first time in the Ukraine war that Warsaw has engaged assets in its airspace.
00:06:00.000Vladomy Zelensky saying it sets a dangerous precedent for Europe, calling for a strong response from allies.
00:06:07.000I try and think about who benefits from the reporting and who benefits from the events themselves, and in that vein, let's have a look at Israel's strikes on Hamas leadership in Qatar.
00:06:22.000In broad daylight near the centre of Qatar's capital.
00:06:26.000It was another demonstration of hard Israeli power, a serious escalation in Israel's multifront war in the Middle East and a blow for America's diplomatic efforts to end the Gaza War.
00:06:38.000Hamas leaders were in this building to discuss the latest American proposals for a Gaza ceasefire.
00:06:48.000It insists they do not include their Doha-based leadership.
00:06:52.000Chris, there's been quite a lot of high-profile encounters, conferences, conventions and meetings, hasn't there, lately?
00:07:00.000Xi meeting with Putin and Kim Jong-il over in China.
00:07:05.000There were the recent encounters between Putin and Trump and Alaska.
00:07:09.000I wonder how much influence, impact we can have on geopolitical matters when it comes to near-peer polls, wrestling it out and wrangling for supremacy in the world.
00:07:21.000It seems like it's kind of beyond our reach and comprehension.
00:07:26.000I reckon that if we can just try to detect as best we can what truths might be detectable within it.
00:07:33.000Perhaps we can just get on with our own little humble lives.
00:07:37.000And that's what we're going to try and do over the next hour.
00:07:38.000If you're watching this anywhere other than Rumble, come over at Rumble.
00:07:41.000You can join us on locals, of course, and you can uh you might be watching this on YouTube, but ultimately ain't beneficial to us if you watch it, uh if you watch it there.
00:07:50.000Um I want to talk a little bit about this NBC poll to uh that says that women no longer regard having children as the most important thing in their lives.
00:08:00.000And there's a kind of disparity between that and the way that men regard it.
00:08:06.000Gen Z adults, 18 to 29 year olds, what do they consider to be important to have a successful life?
00:08:11.000The combination of gender and politics produced two very different sets of priorities.
00:08:15.000So I suppose men and women having vastly differing priorities.
00:08:18.000It's hardly surprising when you look at the way that the culture war is unfolding and the continual pitting of men and women against one another rather than in a lines.
00:08:29.000Let's have a look at how some uh commentators on the right are regarding it.
00:08:33.000Matt Walsh having children was the most important thing to men.
00:08:35.000It was the least important thing to women, tells you everything you need to know.
00:08:38.000And let's have a look at what um let's have a look at what Charlie Kirk says about that before telling you.
00:08:45.000I've always wanted to have children, didn't you?
00:08:46.000Didn't you always think it would be the most important thing or the most beautiful thing that could happen to you?
00:08:50.000But were you not too consumed with self?
00:08:53.000So you see the kind of creep of your culture's reach on every aspect of your life.
00:08:59.000Like that the normalization of feeding your children bad food, addicting them young to sugar, normalizing screens.
00:09:09.000Like the kind of invisible evil that you continually count encounter but can't confront because it's normalized is perhaps the greatest problem of our time.
00:09:20.000That evil is present and normalized, masked and continual.
00:09:25.000And I suppose the idea that women don't consider having children to be a priority.
00:09:31.000Well, what else what else would we be doing?
00:09:34.000On a foundation of connection to God becoming a parent, remaining connected.
00:09:40.000I can't imagine what else you'd be doing with your love.
00:09:42.000Well, I can, because I did it for years and years and years.
00:09:44.000I've lived for 40 years where primarily I pursued myself.
00:09:47.000Some uh pursued my own goals, my own crazy aims.
00:09:50.000Uh Bam Boss in the Rumble chat says, I'd love to hear Russell uh covering digital ID.
00:09:56.000We'll be looking right later on this week.
00:09:58.000If you looked at um Russell Brand Unpacked, we did a brilliant episode on digital ID in the UK, loads on the unrest across the UK, and we've done some stories on NATO arming up, which obviously is a story that's going to escalate in the light of these um this fracar between Poland and Russia.
00:10:15.000Let's have a look at what Charlie Kirk's saying about family, and then we'll jump into some of that as well.
00:10:18.000What is going on with women and not wanting to prioritize family?
00:10:26.000Yeah, this is a pattern that I've seen time and time on these college campuses where young men are ordering their life correctly.
00:10:32.000Uh they want to first and foremost have children, get married, and then have a nice job or to be able to travel.
00:10:39.000If you look deeper into this data, it's completely consistent with other data we've seen in the last couple of years.
00:10:44.000Young women, they don't value having children.
00:10:46.000And this is one of the reasons why we are seeing a fertility collapse in the West.
00:10:50.000We're seeing less and less young people get married.
00:10:52.000We're seeing more and more people go into their 30s to have children.
00:10:55.000Now, mind you, this is starting to change the last 18 months, especially.
00:10:59.000We are seeing a little bit of a turning of the corner, if you will, as the country is starting to get more into traditionalism and young people are starting to go back to church.
00:11:07.000But if you play out the liberal worldview, the Kamala Harris worldview to its furthest possible logical point, you have a country with literally no future.
00:11:17.000When you play out the logical endpoint of President Trump's agenda of where young men voted for him, you have one of lots of children, increasing communities, and you also don't have a need then for mass immigration.
00:11:30.000Trump voters, young men, they want family, children, and legacy.
00:11:34.000Young women who voted for Kamala Harris, they want careerism, consumerism, and loneliness.
00:11:39.000That is a dramatic divide uh that is going to play out in our politics for the years to come.
00:11:44.000Maybe what you could think about for a moment while trying to wrap your head around some of these ideas is the difference between an animal that's in a farm, an animal that's in a zoo, and an animal that's in the wild.
00:11:54.000I suppose what we live now in are managed cycles and conditions that are so sort of mm synthetic and controlled that we don't even really know what we're supposed to be doing here.
00:12:05.000How long are you able to spend in the presence of nature?
00:12:08.000How long are you able to spend in the presence of God?
00:12:11.000How often are you able to draw a breath and gently exhale without some sort of artificial stimulant, something that you've eaten or something that you're looking at or some terrible and invasive idea, controlling and curtailing your inner space.
00:12:24.000The United Kingdom seems at the moment to be curating itself towards uh something beyond dystopian.
00:12:31.000And the response to this bit of artwork by Banksy is interesting.
00:12:36.000Now, Banksy, he's been a famous street artist for a long while.
00:12:40.000In fact, when he first became famous in the United Kingdom, he was very much affiliated with the left, and perhaps he still is.
00:12:48.000And certainly the issues of free speech and the use of art as a as protest is an idea that's strongly associated with the left.
00:12:56.000He um, of course, uh has recently uh done a mural, and you can see that the mural itself is like a judge pounding with a gavel upon a protester.
00:13:07.000The arts had to be covered up in the UK because you know, provocative art is a dangerous thing.
00:13:12.000Now that bit of art don't explicitly say that it's about the repression of protests around Palestine in the UK, does it?
00:13:21.000It's talking more generally about free speech.
00:13:24.000And I think that's important because what I find most difficult about working in this Space is when it becomes like a football match, when it becomes like a sport tournament, when everyone's approach to every single artifact that's put in front of us is partisan.
00:13:40.000Ah, right, this person's been stabbed on a train.
00:13:44.000How can we manipulate this for our agenda?
00:13:47.000There's been a bit of art in the UK or a cabinet reshuffle or missiles in Poland or whatever it is, every single event is utilized in order a point score and to justify a particular perspective.
00:13:59.000And until we operate on a basis of truth and principle, I think we're gonna just contribute to this turgid quagmire of digital turbulence that doesn't lead us anywhere.
00:14:12.000So let's have a look at art as protest and the principle of free speech and not concern ourselves with whether this free speech is the rights of British natives to protest against migration and their use and the government sanctioning of hotels being used to house migrants and a lot of British people don't want that anymore.
00:14:35.000Or whether it's for the free speech of people to protest on behalf of Palestine and Palestinian people who the protesters believe are being subject to a genocide.
00:14:45.000In a sense, if you believe in this principle of free speech, obviously, you shouldn't care what that free speech is being used to do.
00:14:52.000And do you find that it's a kind it's a dispiriting experience to know that people's attitude towards free speech varies when they know the subject that's being spoken of?
00:15:02.000Let me know what you think about that in the comments and uh chat.
00:15:07.000Let's use for a while this like Banksy piece to underscore it.
00:15:11.000Man, I first heard of that dude down there in Bristol when I was still a smackhead when I was still a drug addict when every town I went to or every country I went to, I just had to find out where people could buy drugs where I had to find homeless people in order to score.
00:15:23.000I was never really that cooked up or connected, never really that happy being cool or on the peripheries of a counterculture.
00:15:30.000And Banksy there, he was um you know, he was a s renowned even then and truly underground and avant-garde.
00:15:38.000This might be the event, the incident that unmasks Banksy, which will show you that while he is traditionally associated with the left, it's a left-wing government that might actually take invasive and abrupt action that e that never took place when there were a variety of different more authoritarian conservative governments in place.
00:16:01.000So Banksy could be unmasked as please investigate this, you know, this story.
00:16:06.000So um it seems that the British public are pretty keen to see this uh piece of art, regardless of whether or not the uh the uh the authorities are trying to censor it.
00:16:43.000Yeah, reset yourself a little while, reset yourself for a moment.
00:16:47.000I because I have a lot of conversations with people that are overtly and very definitively conservative or right wing, like uh Laura Lohmer yesterday or Tommy Robinson earlier this week.
00:16:58.000I get the kind of opportunity to note how tribalism divides us to the point of nullification.
00:17:06.000That people would rather be right than happy, would rather score a point than form an alliance.
00:17:13.000Um see this looking at my home land there with people like lab rats scampering to glance at a work of art concealed like why would I what set of relationships entitle a government even to put that up in front of just a bit of graffiti?
00:17:30.000How fragile and how teetering on the precipice of collapse must a nation be that a mural, a somewhat innocuous mural, in fact, of a judge pounding a protester with a gavel.
00:17:41.000This is like when you hear like sort of mad stuff about well, I've got to say, like Nazi Germany, where everything was considered so fretful.
00:17:50.000Let's have a look at um the process of removal of this art which apparently is undertaken.
00:18:40.000We've done a really good video on Russell Brand unpacked about how Britain is on the brink of civil war.
00:18:46.000This is, of course, the kind of fiery rhetoric that's engaged in a lot when there's unhappiness and dissatisfaction prior to the election in your country.
00:18:54.000There was a lot of talk of America, there's gonna be secession, it's falling apart.
00:18:59.000Does it seem that in general it's been more peaceful since Trump has been elected?
00:19:04.000Particularly with these rather more significant geopolitical events that are unfolding that we touched on earlier, you know, a moment or two ago with the ongoing crisis in the Middle East and the ongoing escalation of tensions between Russia and NATO.
00:19:16.000This I suppose it's sort of NATO versus Russia, really, isn't it, with Ukraine as a kind of proxy.
00:19:22.000I wonder if it's if we're able to recognize that while these geopolitical battles take place on a plane that's kind of inaccessible to the majority of us, domestically, people are experiencing very similar things in all of our countries, certainly the Anglophonic and sort of classical European countries.
00:19:42.000Freedom of speech issues, concerns about migration, loss of identity, despair, even the poll about women not want to have kids anymore, suggests a kind of what, a kind of disillusionment, and that you're receiving your values from your culture rather from than from what, rather than from God or your spirit or intuition.
00:20:03.000If you can't have a general consensus around what it is to be a man or a woman or what a family is, or what pieces, or what principles we abide by, it's gonna be difficult to hold together a nation.
00:20:13.000So I do think that the UK is in serious, serious uh the the metaphor that was used in the analysis we did is that while uh stenographers and experts in earthquakes can't accurately predict exactly when an earthquake will happen, they can observe tectonic movement.
00:20:32.000And Britain was described as a country fraught with fault lines that there would inevitably be some kind of disruption.
00:20:40.000And this kind of pitiful display around Banksy seems like an indication that they can't even tolerate pretty mild and modest protest.
00:20:47.000And the fact that on the left people are dissatisfied for a variety of identity issues and the the subject of Palestine and Israel, and people on the right are unhappy because of migration issues.
00:20:58.000That's not a country that can be held together for very long, I would contest.
00:21:01.000But let me know what you think in the comments and chat.
00:21:04.000Crypt AEA says, just say it, Russell, the UK has fallen.
00:21:07.000Yeah, it kind of looks like that, mate.
00:21:08.000That's a pretty succinct way of saying it.
00:21:09.000But I've got Phil an hour and I've got a lot to tell you during that time.
00:21:14.000And the sort of point I want to get across is that while the great spectres of mighty nations and near-peer war looms, and it's oppressive and terrifying, perhaps those kind of threats have always been present.
00:21:26.000And maybe you could contest too that the threat and blight of poverty is always been present.
00:21:33.000Uh the McDonald's CEO, I think, says that Americans are just not eating anymore.
00:21:40.000Meals are dropping out, not because of intermittent fasting, not because people want them abs, baby, but because people are simply too poor.
00:21:49.000And part of what we also saw was that particularly with middle and lower income consumers, they're feeling under a lot of pressure right here.
00:21:57.000I think there's a lot of you know commentary about what's the state of the economy, how's it doing, and and what we see is it's really kind of a two-tier economy.
00:22:05.000If you're upper income earning over a hundred thousand dollars, things are good.
00:22:11.000Stock markets are near all-time highs, you're feeling uh you know, quite confident about things, you're seeing international travel, all those barometers uh of upper uh income consumers are are doing quite well.
00:22:22.000What we see with middle and lower income consumers is actually a different story.
00:22:26.000It's that consumers under a lot of pressure in our industry, traffic for lower income consumers is down double digits.
00:22:33.000Uh, and it's because people are either uh choosing to skip a meal, so we're seeing breakfast, people are actually skipping breakfast, or they're choosing to just eat at home.
00:22:43.000And so for our b They's starving, people are starving to death.
00:22:49.000Maybe I can eke out a few more days on the planet that way.
00:22:53.000In my country, Keir Starmer has reorganised his cabinet, a kind of literal reshuffling of the deck chairs as the Titanic continues to descend.
00:23:05.000Let's have a look at how Keir Starmer handles that because I'm always pretty grateful to get the opportunity to see him on camera and in public.
00:23:12.000Let's check him out because you know I like to see his people's skills.
00:23:18.000Let me welcome you to uh this Colleagues!
00:23:21.000When I say call, you say league, coal, league, co, league, co we can't keep doing this.
00:23:28.000Cabinet team, and for the next stage of our journey as we move from the stage of fixing foundations now on to the stage of national renewal.
00:24:21.000I'll fist bump my blooming self if they have to.
00:24:23.000Therefore, to focus on our priorities, which are economic growth and national renewal, and the right people to heed the patriotic call to lift up our country and take it forward to national renewal for millions of working people.
00:24:40.000And that focus on economic growth and national renewal is not one department or some departments.
00:24:55.000That is the priority of the government, because our mission is to deliver for working people.
00:25:00.000That is written through the plan for change, and that is why we've always focused on living standards and making sure people are better off, on public services and making sure that our NHS is up and moving forward and fit for the future, and on the security that so many people deserve.
00:25:20.000Whether that's the security in their own neighborhoods.
00:25:23.000They shouldn't do that as a job, should they?
00:25:25.000Like that's not someone who belongs in front of the public because everything he's doing is unusual and indicative of unconscious activity that he should be dealing with.
00:26:14.000That haircut, we don't have that so much.
00:26:16.000That used to be uh the your common deputy head mistress, maybe even next door neighbour, possibly a dinner lady, lunch lady in your language.
00:26:24.000She'd be called Jean or something like that.
00:26:55.000We are obviously representing different departments around the table, as you must and you will.
00:27:00.000Um, but you're not just representing one department, you are representing the government.
00:27:06.000And uh this is something therefore all of us, the public in the end, they don't judge one department, they judge the government as a whole.
00:27:13.000Um and that is why we must always work as one team.
00:27:16.000I think it's important that we are very clear about who we're up against.
00:27:20.000We're up against those that feed off the politics of grievance.
00:27:24.000Those that do not want problems to be fixed because of the problems are fixed.
00:27:29.000Their reason to exist, their politics ceases to have any hold in our society.
00:27:36.000Alright, that's an interesting point that he's making the politics of grievance.
00:27:42.000If you're here where we're talking a little bit about the unrest and disarray across the UK, but you join us in time on potentially Armageddon's Brink, although I pray that what's brought about is a new regime of peace where through our inner connectivity, we're able to at least for a moment or two, or for the duration of this stream, transcend the terrors of it increasing and in court global war to reflect on for a second Trump's birthday card to Epstein.
00:28:10.000Let me know in the comments and chat if you think this is l is that meant to be it.
00:28:15.000Was someone drawn, is that decorative or is that meant to be the card itself?
00:28:38.000And frankly, uh, you're wasting your time.
00:28:40.000All you do is trying to get off the great success of DC and about 200 other things we've done that are so successful.
00:28:47.000Uh this is a great, great success, and we have so many.
00:28:50.000I don't think any president in their first eight months has any had anywhere near the success that we've had.
00:28:57.000In a let's have a look at MSNBC covering it.
00:29:00.000They've like sort of taken the time to uh and analyze the signature.
00:29:04.000Isn't it extraordinary that in this age of AI and potential near-peer warfare, division and despair, near ubiquitous poverty, and a requirement for a great, great awakening and revival that they're still doing handwriting analysis on MSNBC.
00:29:20.000Uh below, below the signature that appears on the Epstein birthday letter.
00:29:28.000Now, obviously they are different magnifications of those signatures and different Do you see?
00:29:34.000Let's see what uh Thomas Massey's saying about.
00:29:36.000I think we're trying to get Thomas Massey to come on the show, we might be in DC next week.
00:30:08.000Let me know in the comments and chat if you can hold on to something.
00:30:10.000In the end, the news cycle's so um blustering and incessant, it's difficult to cling to a single piece of information.
00:30:18.000And in what as someone who's done this for years now, like made various videos, first on YouTube, you know, and I suppose stand-up comedy for years and years, you start in the end to notice certain cycles and a kind of passing of a perpetual baton of where people get into government and blame the previous government, that the confinement of conversation takes place with what appear to be mutually agreed lines.
00:30:42.000People talking about the amount of tax that you'd pay, or the amount of aid that should be given to a foreign nation.
00:30:49.000Far less frequent are conversations that would themselves radically alter the way that we live.
00:30:55.000In m my heart, is that we don't ask enough.
00:30:59.000And I don't mean motivated by self and the hope of pleasure or even fulfilment, but through the love of God and through the realization and manifestation of so much technological and material advance.
00:31:12.000We might be living so differently now.
00:31:15.000We might be living in a world of consciousness and awareness.
00:31:17.000I was watching that film The Martian last night, which seems like a pretty atheistic movie, actually.
00:31:22.000Like there's a point where he die like where after he first grows life, for example, it cuts to his funeral on Earth.
00:31:28.000And it seems like it's a really, really Brilliant film, but I think what it's advocating for is man's expertise and how science can replace the need and requirement for God.
00:31:36.000While I was watching it though, what I was struck by is that there is so much ingenuity and brilliance and excellence and expertise in the upper echelons of any institution.
00:31:46.000There are people that know how to grow plants under extraordinary conditions.
00:31:51.000There are medical advancements that are brilliant in the age of communication, miracles abound and are around us that we don't even query or question anymore, like the one that we're using right now.
00:32:03.000To sell products to advance ideas that are probably detrimental.
00:32:07.000We find it very difficult to get in the ring on subjects that matter, like with normalized toxicity, that we've normalized eating food that's so full of chemicals and sugar that you we're sort of basically poisoning our kids.
00:32:27.000And I, based on the you know, the first six months, don't think that Trump or Kamala Harris or anybody is going to resolve that.
00:32:34.000The reason I remain not enchanted but captivated by Bobby Kennedy is because I think that when you watch the particular battle and particular mission that he's undertaking, it does amount to confronting that power.
00:32:50.000Whilst we might have initially hoped that there would be an end to pharmacological advertising, that you know that's not gonna happen.
00:32:59.000What's more likely to happen is sort of endless disclaimers.
00:33:01.000This product may cost, this product may cost.
00:33:04.000I've got so much to talk to you about when it comes to vaccines, autism.
00:33:08.000We're gonna be covering that in a little more detail, I think, in the coming weeks.
00:33:13.000But I just want to let you know that I personally find it difficult to continually get it up, get it up for arguments about which side of a cultural war, which is basically aligned when it comes to your purpose here.
00:33:26.000Is either is to work, your purpose here is to spend money, your purpose here is to consume.
00:34:33.000Yeah, the uh John McAfee was the only he was the one who allegedly was trying to bring it down.
00:34:39.000I don't know if that's just internet folklore.
00:34:42.000But yeah, turns out he was it's funny to be taken down as a pedophile by a guy who's getting shit on in like a neighbouring island.
00:34:55.000Yeah, dude, that shit that that was pretty uh well there's the thing, they were never gonna release it.
00:35:00.000That was like it became apparent, like they're not fucking like, oh, those trillionaires somebody brought it up at a meeting, and Trump was like, Are you guys still talking about Epstein?
00:35:28.000In a minute, what we're gonna have a quick look at is the change he's been brought by RFK within the HHS and the considerable challenges that he faces while trying to bring that about.
00:35:38.000Before that, though, here's a quick message from one of our partners.
00:35:41.000Oh, actually, before even that, you were talking about the uh Bill Gates is someone in the chat was talking about Bill Gates' uh uh butter made out of sheer air, carbon butter.
00:35:51.000Yeah, that's what the world needs, Bill.
00:36:17.000Their supplements are the result of years of research and are manufactured under the current good manufacturing practices with regular third party lab testing.
00:36:24.000They never add sugar or anything artificial.
00:38:34.000Let's have a look at what Anna Paulina Luna's been saying.
00:38:36.000It seems like they're talking about missiles being shot out of the air by UFO technology.
00:38:41.000After that, we're gonna be talking about RFK's attempt to ban pharmaceutical advertising on TV and the compromises that appear to have had to have been made.
00:38:49.000And Dr. Tony Rogers, who testifies that the government weaponized COVID 19.
00:38:56.000In fact, we'll look at that first and then we'll get to the other thing after.
00:39:00.000Because listen, it's a subplot at this point with you know various potential wars opening on every single front and doubt and despair on every corner and people forgetting what their purpose is and all of us distracted and bewildered.
00:39:14.000But let's pay attention to what's happening with RFK, the HHS, and his attempts to regulate correctly big pharma and attempt to turn food into something other than a highly addictive gloop.
00:40:27.000I would like to have accountability for the COVID Era and I'd like to have accountability for the fact that the CDC has known since 1999 that vaccines cause autism and they've covered it up for 26 years.
00:40:41.000We'll be talking about that story and in some depth in the coming days, as uh new information is being compiled by the writer and criminologist Gavin De Becker in um book on how the IMO,
00:41:01.000a regulatory body that's kind of presented to us as credible, is in fact a privately funded body that primarily exists to endorse ideas that are beneficial to big pharma.
00:41:13.000And among them, they uh uh among these ideas, uh perhaps most notable has been the presumed debunking of the notion that vaccines and autism are linked.
00:41:24.000That's been debunked, that idea's been debunked.
00:41:26.000Seems that there's quite likely a link between vaccines and autism.
00:41:32.000All right, guys, we we'll be covering that in more detail.
00:41:34.000Let's have a look at where um S Secretary Kennedy is on um the changes coming to big pharma advertising.
00:41:41.000And when you s consider what uh Toby Rogers is saying there that it was a you know gain of function weaponized virus and the way that the government deployed it and the mishandling of the virus around the world and the exploitation and the indication that really it was a kind of a test to see how much we would suck up authoritarianism is pretty curious.
00:42:03.000Russell will never ask his audience to take action against the powers that be.
00:42:06.000Only subscribe and keep giving your attention to my sponsors.
00:42:09.000I would like you to take action, but I think primarily that action is for you to cultivate within yourself a c this is what I'm trying to do at the moment.
00:42:17.000I learned it, I'm learning it from Brother Lawrence, to kind of live as if all that's real is you and God.
00:42:23.000And that all you do is love God, and there isn't really anything to get.
00:42:28.000You don't love God so you get eternal life.
00:42:30.000You don't love God so that your family do well.
00:42:32.000You don't love God for any reason other than to love God.
00:42:36.000And from on this basis, the truth and the authenticity of the Lord begins to present itself to you.
00:42:41.000And it's difficult actually, the real challenge is is to find that connection and then be in the world because the world is full of artificial stimulants, not just in our food or in the pharmacological products that we take, but even in interactions that we're continually stimulated into what I would call kind of low frequency consciousness.
00:43:00.000We're continually distracted and bewildered.
00:43:02.000It's like a kind of like it would be like sort of trying to stack you know, like in Karate Kid when he stands on that one leg, you know, that crane kick.
00:43:09.000Imagine doing that while people held defibrillators to you, like and sort of put shocks for you.
00:43:15.000I'm having the president just signed an executive order making some news here when it comes to pharmaceutical ads.
00:43:23.000Yeah, the president just signed an executive order that's in a historic change in the way that pharmaceutical advertising is done on television, and the order basically reinstates or gives us now the the opportunity to reinstate the 1997 rules.
00:43:41.000Prior to 1997, pharmaceutical advertisers were required to put all the side effects on their ads.
00:43:48.000Many of them didn't advertise because it lengthened the it because of what it did to the length of the advertising.
00:43:55.000And that the removal of that requirement uh uh direct in 1997, FDA changed the rule to allow them to report the side effects on a website or on a telephone.
00:44:08.000And they know they only had to report a few of them on television.
00:44:12.000And that triggered a proliferation of these ads.
00:44:15.000We are there's only two countries in the world that allowed direct-to-consumer ad advertising by pharmaceutical companies on television.
00:44:22.000Or one of those countries, New Zealand is the other.
00:44:26.000It's had a disastrous impact on human health, on people's relationships with their doctors, and really on uh the entire gestalt where Americans are led to believe that there's a pill for every ill.
00:44:40.000And that you don't have to exercise, you don't have to hit your diet, whatever goes wrong with you, you can fix with a drug.
00:45:15.000So this is just you know, one nation under God, praise the Lord, but is it one nation?
00:45:24.000Well, actually, this is Trump saying that uh reposting this vaccine video.
00:45:29.000that's even better Show them the thymerosol, which we keep in a metal container because we're a little afraid of it, and it's a very fine powder.
00:45:50.000This is this is thymerosol, which is labeled very toxic, has cumulative effects, can cause damage to the kidneys, to the respiratory system, skin, to the uh nervous system.
00:46:04.000Specifically warns on here that it can cause reproductive and developmental toxicity, meaning that it can cause things like autism and other neurodevelopmental disorders.
00:47:23.000This is uh the influenza vaccine from Adventist Pesture or their flu zone.
00:47:32.000Twenty-five micrograms of mercury per dose.
00:47:36.000But I'd like to point out that a lot of it's pretty interesting that Trump would post that and I suppose that well, because what would naturally flow from believing in this um theory, which is sort of elsewhere obviously says is being discredited and debunked, is that you would really change your policy around vaccination.
00:47:55.000It's really interesting that he's posted that and well wonder what the impact of that will be.
00:48:01.000Hey, listen, we've got uh Anna how do we say her name?
00:48:06.000Anna Paulina Lona, she's I think coming on our show next week.
00:48:10.000Uh can we have a look at that ex post?
00:48:13.000I'd like to ask the committee to replay that video that Burlison had played earlier.
00:48:17.000I want to ask every witness here, specifically ones that have um center training or have been able to recognize some of this movements real quick.
00:48:24.000So if you guys can please roll that real quick.
00:48:53.000Okay, while this is still rolling, Mr. Um Satelli, real quick yes or no answers.
00:48:58.000Are you aware of anything in the government uh United States government arsenal that can split a hellfire missile like this?
00:50:04.000A lot of people just casually using the language, bundle of rods.
00:50:08.000Oh man, those were the glory days when we would talk about different types of UFOs and different types of extraterrestrial phenomena, and then we would link it to scripture and we would try to for a moment just reflect and recognize that we don't we know so little about where life comes from.
00:50:23.000We know so little about the processes that have led to modern civilization.
00:50:28.000We wouldn't understand, we couldn't begin to understand the kind of fluctuations and events and crises, the civilizations that might have been like swept away.
00:50:37.000Jake, I was I read today in Isaiah about the um it talked again about you know God, you got rid of the other gods.
00:50:50.000Are we talking about supernatural beings?
00:50:52.000It's like I suppose you know how Christ himself has to communicate through metaphor and analogy, uh allegory, that's sort of specific in the gospels.
00:51:02.000Look, I'm telling you this way because you won't get it otherwise, it's all kind of says but sometimes what I'm reading talks about um you know like the there's stuff in the old testament, isn't there, that seems like it's it it um cr intersects with real psychedelic mythic, eerie understanding of reality.
00:51:27.000Yeah, I think in when in those times too, they understood a supernatural world view that was more normal to you know how we view things in our modern times, it's harder for us to wrap our mind, but the whole thing was written with an understanding that the supernatural was real, and I think that is when you uh when you want to get there and you want to research it, it's pretty fascinating.
00:51:58.000I um like even something, even like do you see how yeah, Michael Heiser, the Unseen Realm is some, yeah, nice one, Agright Six.
00:52:07.000Even actually, say Brother Lawrence saying practice the presence of God, right?
00:52:14.000That seems so sort of simple and sometimes eastern, like be present in the moment.
00:52:21.000But when that happens effectively, when I practice the presence of God, what I notice, and this is not my first rodeo because I've done this with meditation and psychedelics and things when I was younger, is oh wow, reality is not what I think it is.
00:52:38.000Relationships aren't what I think they are, natural phenomenon like when you feel as St. Francis discussed or described the supernatural in the natural that suddenly you see in a plant or a tree a kind of present mystery.
00:52:56.000And so something I was sort of trying to describe a little bit earlier.
00:52:59.000I guess with my you know befuddlement and bewilderment at like escalating events, oh there's Poland and Hamas leaders, like, oh man, like I can't keep I can't carry all of this.
00:53:14.000Like I don't I know there's no expectation for me to carry it.
00:53:18.000I mean, even mentally describing it when actually God is nearer to you than you can conceive of.
00:53:26.000Yeah, and it puts things in perspective and all the kind of song and dance of the whole thing, like the VMAs seems very stupid.
00:53:33.000Like when you compare it, it is all a distraction from you know, focusing on the supernatural.
00:53:40.000Well, not the VMAs because I hosted that, and that's actually a very good ceremony.
00:53:45.000That's the example that I literally turned on, you know, a couple days ago.
00:53:49.000That's the most recent example, but it's no matter what, I mean, anything that we're viewing, it's all distractions.
00:53:55.000Because if we really took time enough to focus on the supernatural, it would blow our minds put things in perspective we wouldn't be wasting time doing a lot of the things we're doing.
00:54:06.000We would that's the place to return to.
00:54:08.000I think one of the challenges is there's not even a an agreement on what it is we're supposed to be doing.
00:54:14.000There's m massive conflict around that and uh a kind of a that sort of deliriousness people can't we're not like all right so we all agree that we're here to love God.
00:54:26.000No God's not even real done yeah and if somebody gets a little further along then control usually sets in they try to control what they found and I think that's a thing we have to battle too.
00:54:39.000I wonder how we're going to make this show in ensure that is it a show ensure that what we do here remains relevant to what you lot care about but actually gives you access to what we need to understand.
00:54:55.000I don't mean from a kind of a didactic or demagogic position like here we've got this stuff that we want to teach you.
00:55:01.000I mean how we can experience it together, how we can experience it together.
00:55:30.000It's a person somewhere typing it on their phone or typing it Raven 001 or.
00:55:34.000sean apple cedar our beloved ashela and beth in wonderland all of them god at that point in the universe all of us you know like they see when in james it talks about he has no favorites has no favorites don't care anymore about you or me and when and that's what i think i find very difficult about the kind of conflict oriented space that we occupy yeah blue jellyfish you are real you are real when i was involved in transcendental
00:56:04.000meditation say with david lynch and bobby roth who ran the david lynch transcendental Transcendental Meditation Foundation with him I was really interested that they would conduct events where they would get hundreds of people together and meditate they would meditate together and they did an experiment I think in Chicago you'll be able to find it and when they had 400 people consistently meditating they said that the crime figures in that district dropped.
00:56:30.000Oh yeah like it has an impact so that as we sort of awake as we become channels of his peace you know we um it's like even with in this discussion in in putting the spiritual things as the top priority we still have to run ads oh should we run that ad that's that's the re that represents yeah but I think they're quite funny which one is it's not funny.
00:57:46.000What I get from that is, mostly what I think about with Lazarus is, he says thank you while the, before, he's a very realistic and brilliant, I guess I'm thinking about John's version of the resurrection of Lazarus.
00:58:02.000Although, you know, is he in Luke as well, I think, is it, Jake?
00:58:16.000And then, of course, the shortest verse in the Bible, Jesus wept, is around there.
00:58:21.000And I like it that he says, look, this lot here I'm in continual communion with you I'm in continual communion with you thank you God thank you thank you thank you thank you and when he um he says that but then that you come.
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01:01:40.000Going ahead to the ship, we set ourselves for Assos, intending to take Paul aboard there.
01:01:44.000For so he had arranged, intending himself to go by land, and when he met us at Assos, we took him on board and came to Mitlin, and sailing from there we came the following day opposite kiosk.