The Glenn Beck Program - November 05, 2022


Ep 162 | How Elites Will Create a New Class of Slaves | Whitney Webb | The Glenn Beck Podcast


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 24 minutes

Words per Minute

177.1727

Word Count

14,903

Sentence Count

23

Misogynist Sentences

8

Hate Speech Sentences

13


Summary

Whitney Webber is a writer and journalist who has covered some of the most important stories of the 20th century. She has written two volumes on Jeffrey Epstein, a man who infiltrated the highest ranks of every sector of power. She is a force to be reckoned with, and she has a gift for locating power and hunting it in its darkest corners. She's the kind of writer who reminds the elites that they are not actually above rules, and we're not all a bunch of rubes.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 a campaign of lies can hide anything and with the magic of disinformation mysterious deaths can be
00:00:07.620 quickly brushed off as suicides even when all of the details don't add up and there's so many
00:00:13.680 stories now that just don't add up public assassinations can happen right in front of you
00:00:20.180 and you'll never know who was really behind it or why as long as the powers that be push a great
00:00:26.240 narrative the same lie over and over and over again jeffrey epstein infiltrated the highest ranks
00:00:34.300 of every sector of power you are going to learn a lot about the world today he was into law enforcement
00:00:43.960 art wall street silicon valley big business real estate philanthropy media academics and banking
00:00:52.140 he even wormed his way into high fashion he hung out with noble prize winning scientists and
00:00:57.460 billionaire arms dealers movie directors famous actors journalists and lots of politicians
00:01:03.020 including heads of state not just here in america and he has a very special bond with bill and hillary
00:01:10.180 clinton we still don't know who took part in his many crimes and they are vast this is nothing short
00:01:19.100 of political terrorism theater facilitated by the media today's guest as you will hear
00:01:27.960 i just finished it and you will hear halfway through i say maybe it's halfway through i said i think this is
00:01:39.260 the most important hour i have ever been a part of in broadcast i've done this for 45 years
00:01:47.760 this is the most important person and hour you can you can spend today's guest has a gift for locating power
00:02:00.800 and hunting it in its darkest corners she realized that epstein was not an anomaly an anomaly an anomaly
00:02:07.900 she is somebody who has written two volumes on just him but you will see it is connected to entire
00:02:16.120 networks of power and influence a web of elites who operate under the principle that rules are for
00:02:23.260 other people her two-volume book one nation under blackmail the sordid union between intelligence and
00:02:30.360 crime that gave rise to jeffrey epstein is out keep your eye on this one she is sharp she is a massive
00:02:40.360 threat to powerful threat to powerful people if people will listen and do their own homework and just
00:02:47.720 explore what she's saying the game is up she's the kind of writer who reminds the elites that they're not
00:02:58.440 actually above rules and we're not all a bunch of rubes please welcome whitney webb i can't wait to get
00:03:07.620 into this podcast with you imagine what it would be like if you could just flip a switch and make
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00:04:31.020 welcome i am a huge fan of your work um uh you have covered some of the most important stories
00:04:53.980 i think um in my lifetime thank you and you are so clear on all of them and most of these stories
00:05:04.840 are the ones you can't get answers on they're they're all the stories that the big and powerful
00:05:11.360 want to hide want you to not see what's really going on and it's it's so frustrating because it's
00:05:19.100 clear that these things are happening and should be discussed are you you worried ever about your
00:05:27.400 safety um no and the reason i say that is because i think you know um a lot of what we're facing is
00:05:34.720 an energetic and spiritual uh battle i guess you could say and um i think in order you know if you're
00:05:42.340 afraid of of these people yeah um you're giving them power over you and uh i think really the only
00:05:49.520 way to to win this is to have your commitment to you know what you're fighting for the good about
00:05:54.400 humanity to be total right so good for you how old are you uh 33 you you write and think and speak
00:06:05.380 like you're 80 and very wise thank you must have a good parents um okay so i want to talk to you if
00:06:12.600 we can in an hour i want to mention bitcoin get a little bit of that journalism transhumanism esg the
00:06:20.800 world economic forum we're not going to be able to get to all of it but we have to start with
00:06:24.800 jeffrey epstein because the way you have written about him it connects to a whole world
00:06:34.160 world of corruption yeah is he kind of the rosetta stone yeah i think it's sort of like a meta scandal
00:06:40.920 you're looking at someone who really had i guess for lack of a better metaphor had his hands in a lot
00:06:46.280 of pies right right so he was sort of at the center of a lot of scandals but not necessarily at the top
00:06:52.200 right i think he was more maybe middle management in a sense but very central to a lot of these things
00:06:58.260 going on that sort of these um networks in which he um in which he inhabits are involved in you know
00:07:05.140 numerous uh acts of corruption simultaneously and he you know is there involved in many of them but
00:07:12.080 not necessarily at the top level right so was he was he a spy i think he definitely had intelligence
00:07:19.280 connections and there's a lot um you know to suggest that was the case i think one of the most uh
00:07:24.020 the earliest hints we heard of that was having a secretary of labor alex acosta under trump uh say
00:07:30.100 that one of the reasons he was pressured into giving epstein a sweetheart deal during his first um
00:07:35.040 arrest in in florida was because he had been told by unspecified actors that epstein belonged to
00:07:40.780 intelligence but that's kind of you know what exactly does that mean was he an asset was he on the
00:07:46.020 payroll which intelligence agency multiple intelligence agencies when you have his close association with
00:07:51.720 someone like galane maxwell in the mix and her father had affiliations with numerous intelligence
00:07:56.260 agencies you know it really is an open question he's kind of a bad guy yeah i'm reading your work
00:08:02.580 about him and explain who he was uh so robert maxwell was involved in many things uh but he definitely
00:08:09.860 played a major role in undermining u.s national security by selling bug software to nuclear laboratories
00:08:15.120 in the united states um and this was directly facilitated by well-known statesmen
00:08:20.340 in u.s history like henry kissinger for example and a lot of the people i think that enabled him at
00:08:26.180 least on the u.s side tend to be those that uh favor global governance and you know and they kind of
00:08:33.820 don't want the u.s to have that kind of monopoly on on power because all of his family they were killed in
00:08:39.420 right right and so uh he he's in the west england uh he survives becomes kind of uh william randolph
00:08:51.060 hurst of england yeah medium mogul sure yeah um and uh and then betrays the west and that's not because
00:09:01.480 he was on the others he wasn't on the soviet side he was on a global government side well i think
00:09:08.080 there you have to look at this network and they've evolved over time right uh robert maxwell was very
00:09:12.700 close to the eastern bloc he had a very close relationship with intelligence figures in the
00:09:16.760 kgb and also bulgaria he had a relationship with british intelligence and israeli intelligence
00:09:21.600 and was involved in aspects of what later became known as iran contra which of course involves aspects
00:09:27.560 of u.s intelligence so i mean he had his hands and you know everywhere and everything and i think
00:09:32.520 ultimately people like him are interested in any deal they can make to advance their money and their
00:09:38.360 power and their influence they'll take it so robert maxwell was very interested in having his family
00:09:43.840 be like the kennedy family a political power dynasty um and that's part of why he started moving into new
00:09:49.780 york city around you know just a year or two before he ended up dying and galane maxwell was sent to
00:09:55.040 new york sort of to be his emissary um wow into the u.s and he wanted her actually to marry a kennedy
00:10:00.840 and this is attested to and you know past mainstream media reports and you know you can see his his
00:10:05.880 efforts to get her close to i think uh one of the sons of robert f kennedy um and also john john f kennedy
00:10:12.640 jr trying to get her sort of in that social social tier because he sort of saw that as you know would
00:10:19.420 advance his power and also you know that of his children and i think if you look a lot at the
00:10:23.800 psychology of robert maxwell he seems to have had narcissistic elements and that could be because
00:10:27.740 of the trauma of his past and a lot of times narcissistic parents see their children as extensions
00:10:32.920 of themselves and so you know that he's looking at how to build an empire and using his children to
00:10:39.200 that effect and you sort of see that with the psychology of galane maxwell as well galane
00:10:43.120 was she part and parcel of from the beginning or was she uh you know kind of a good girl idealistic
00:10:55.300 comes over here you know knows that dad wants to put her into powerful positions but not shopping women
00:11:03.800 i i think it's a lot more complicated than that you have to look at her early history um the favorite
00:11:09.060 son of robert maxwell was originally michael maxwell he was in a vegetative state after a car crash i
00:11:14.740 think when he was 15 and that happened shortly after just a few days after galane was born so
00:11:20.660 her family members and she herself have attested to that she was basically neglected for the first
00:11:25.320 three years of her life and even developed a childhood anorexia things like that and then you know not a
00:11:31.460 few years after she becomes the favorite child so she goes from having this complete lack of parental
00:11:36.060 attention to being sort of showered in it by robert maxwell and that obviously has is going to have a
00:11:41.620 psychological impact on someone and in addition there's a she was basically managed by her father
00:11:49.660 from a very early age he managed her tried to manage her romantic life he tried to manage what
00:11:55.060 job she would have and she was very dependent on him so when he is dead in 1991 it makes sense that
00:12:00.400 she would attach herself to someone with a lot of the similar similar characteristics right so dad didn't
00:12:05.540 know about uh jeffrey epstein wasn't alive at that point well the allegation have been made by people
00:12:11.660 that worked with robert maxwell um in the 80s that um jeffrey epstein was seen in his offices frequently
00:12:18.080 in the united kingdom and during that period of time it was known that epstein was active in the united
00:12:22.900 kingdom he was allegedly being mentored by a british arms dealer named douglas lease with a british
00:12:28.080 intelligence connections god first of all you wrote two volumes yeah a thousand pages yeah i mean that is
00:12:36.400 crazy amounts of work yeah i had my son was born in the middle of it so it was really crazy you were
00:12:42.540 there for that i imagine when your son was born um so tell me a thousand pages and it's not there's no
00:12:51.300 fluff in it i mean it is dense it's very dense why is it nobody else is reporting on this um well i guess
00:13:00.480 i could i don't really know exactly why that would be but the the silence is very eerie about major
00:13:07.060 aspects of the epstein case um you know it ended up being a thousand pages because i was as i was writing
00:13:13.260 about epstein a lot of the connections that came up i was i was just you know increasingly aware that a lot
00:13:18.440 of people in the american public um you know a lot of the names i was coming across most people
00:13:23.520 weren't going to be familiar with correct you know um banks like the bank of credit and commerce
00:13:28.480 international or bcci the scandal that involved or even things like iran contra people may have heard
00:13:33.600 the name but don't really know what it involved so i figured i was going to have to go back and sort
00:13:37.300 of explain that to people so that type of context is a volume one of the book and um and also the
00:13:44.360 history of sexual blackmail and how it's been sort of an undercurrent in some past political scandals
00:13:49.780 um in american history and how in these sorts of networks in which epstein was inhabiting that type
00:13:54.940 of practice and exploitation even of minors for those purposes was actually um disturbingly common
00:14:00.800 so epstein starts to look less and less of a you know he's not an anomaly basically right um by the
00:14:07.960 time you get through with volume one and so volume two is sort of my effort to um you know dig up as much
00:14:13.840 as i could you know with stuff that's publicly available really um about epstein and also his
00:14:19.940 greatest benefactor leslie wexner and then also uh you know galane maxwell okay so so uh this is just
00:14:27.180 there's a lot to discuss there's a lot to discuss here on just this because it's this goes to the deep
00:14:34.560 state or you call it um deep politics um and it's been going on for a long time but people i don't think
00:14:43.260 realize that you know the born identity you know those jason born movies that that is a reflection
00:14:50.960 of some people's real lives i mean it's a it's a totally fictitious story but those things do go on
00:14:58.420 and and i i i tell you i have i have felt for a long time with the just with the nsa listening to
00:15:08.760 everybody's phone calls if you're important in washington they're going to do everything they
00:15:15.100 can to manage you to manage you yeah so if you're not rock solid in who you are and what right and
00:15:22.180 wrong really is they got you yeah but even they don't you know today i think we've moved away from
00:15:29.320 the type of model that epstein used for sexual blackmail it's an era of electronic blackmail and you
00:15:34.700 don't even have to do anything wrong they can just plant it on your devices and play gotcha that way
00:15:39.800 so it's really an unprecedented situation and a lot of these intelligence agencies as i note in the
00:15:45.620 book you know really for decades have been totally out of control um and you know i really start off
00:15:50.360 the book talking about how intelligence agencies and organized crime in the u.s got in bed together
00:15:55.140 and really that symbiosis um you know it was originally justified out of wartime necessity during
00:16:00.540 world war ii fighting the nazis yeah but it never stopped right right and it's um you know business
00:16:05.820 is business and some of these people in our own national security state you know realized they
00:16:10.400 could make a lot of money working with organized crime and really shielding them and getting in on
00:16:15.480 the spoils i guess you could say good news and bad news here is the bad news first then we get right
00:16:21.760 back into the podcast it looks like beef prices are probably going to increase by another 20 percent
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00:17:23.000 of cattle for high quality beef so don't have a normal black friday have a black angus friday
00:17:29.620 with great steaks from good ranchers american meat delivered you know we think of in my idealistic
00:17:39.140 years of thinking about america i thought well we did some bad things yes and i'm not talking about
00:17:45.360 slavery anything else i'm talking about things we did in war but we had you know we really didn't want
00:17:52.580 to do those things i'm not sure if any of that is true are the people involved in this stuff do they
00:17:58.640 recognize at all that this is evil or is this just business well i think when you're talking about
00:18:03.680 intelligence agencies there's hierarchies so there's like people maybe low in different levels
00:18:08.560 that may think what they're doing is right and advancing american interests but then there's people
00:18:12.760 at the top that aren't necessarily like that and it's about advancing their own interests
00:18:16.220 if you look at a lot of controversial intelligence operations and decisions coups for example of the
00:18:21.960 past a lot of it was justified as um going against communist influence trying to to keep that from
00:18:27.380 growing um but then some of these same actors like the iran contra types uh they ended up getting
00:18:33.640 involved with the chinese government just a few years later in the 1990s and some of this blossomed
00:18:38.900 into what a lot of conservatives today remember is chinagate during the client administration and
00:18:43.000 things like that so you know they really have no allegiance to anything except uh their desire to grow
00:18:47.820 their own money and power are we ever going to find out who's in the black book i don't think so
00:18:53.620 i think the fbi has been compromised from the very beginning uh in the book i talk a lot about j edgar
00:18:58.640 hoover he was blackmailed by the mob he uh realized the power blackmail had started using blackmail
00:19:04.400 himself um and you know increasingly the fbi and i think it's very obvious to a lot of conservatives now
00:19:10.140 comes in to cover things up and to you know go after uh you know figures that they you know don't
00:19:17.600 want to advance in their careers or you know any sort of thing it's it's very um it's very complicated
00:19:24.380 so what do we do as a country when you know there needs to be massive investigations of all sorts of
00:19:28.280 stuff jeffrey epstein being one and you know the government is increasingly capable incapable of
00:19:32.980 investigating itself especially when you're looking at the fbi or something can we just go through some
00:19:38.720 names like alan dershowitz and bill clinton and donald trump what were they involved in
00:19:46.200 uh so and so each of those cases is really different but if i'm looking at you know i guess
00:19:54.440 the one that's gotten the most gotten the most attention obviously are the former presidents right
00:19:58.420 trump and clinton um as far as i'm concerned the clinton epstein relationship is much more damaging
00:20:03.600 than the trump epstein relationship but there you know are obvious reasons for concern
00:20:08.540 uh in both of them and i don't think it's uh you know i in in trying to be objective you know i
00:20:14.800 can't absolve one or the other but are you saying are you saying because one is more damaging because
00:20:21.300 people don't understand it's not just the horrific evil sex trafficking that was going on it's also
00:20:29.060 massive corruption and financial financial crimes and and that's particularly glaring with the epstein
00:20:35.740 clinton clinton relationship you have someone like jeffrey epstein that described himself in the 80s as
00:20:39.860 a financial bounty hunter he was hiding or finding looted money for powerful people that's coming from
00:20:46.000 him and he said this to numerous people there's numerous sources attesting to this so obviously he
00:20:50.840 was very comfortable with the offshore financial system shadow banking and all of that and then in
00:20:56.640 the late 80s um in addition to becoming involved with leslie wexner's finances uh he is involved in
00:21:02.540 orchestrating one of the largest ponzi schemes in u.s history uh the other person he worked with in
00:21:07.200 that steven hoffenberg uh you know is arrested and goes to jail for that in 1993 epstein's name is
00:21:12.340 dropped from the case and he ends up at clinton white house fundraisers and one of those fundraisers is
00:21:19.100 uh involved hillary clinton's effort to alleged effort to refurbish the white house and this makes a
00:21:25.340 brief appearance in vince foster's quote-unquote suicide note the only mention of hillary clinton in that
00:21:30.700 suicide note is relating to her and khaki hawkersmith redecorating and how there was
00:21:34.700 nothing wrong with the finances there um if you're um you know listeners are familiar with uh the vince
00:21:41.820 foster situation and how hillary clinton in her office was involved in finding the suicide note when
00:21:48.340 there was nothing in the briefcase and all of that later it's very interesting the only mention of
00:21:52.340 her name would be in trying to absolve that particular fundraiser of you know any wrongdoing which
00:21:57.780 would have been foster's responsibility and that's jeffrey epstein's you know one of his first
00:22:02.040 interactions with the white house there's a picture of him shaking hands with bill clinton at that
00:22:06.620 fundraiser uh donor reception and uh only uk media covered that when it came out last december
00:22:12.960 i gotta tell you it's pretty stunning i only see stuff that i kind of trust from uk now i read any
00:22:21.280 there's any scandal going on in america i trust the foreign press more than i trust our well isn't it
00:22:26.300 stunning that there's a picture of you know the claim has been for a long time that the epstein
00:22:30.480 clinton relationship only really began after clinton left office and then you have a picture
00:22:34.380 contradicting that and it doesn't get any coverage so how does there's something else there obviously i
00:22:39.760 was shocked to learn from you that ron brown i i remember he was a guy who was on a plane going
00:22:48.440 someplace croatia yeah croatia and it crashed and and everybody was like it's another clinton murder
00:22:54.760 and i've never really bought into the i mean you wouldn't have to push me far but i'm a fact
00:23:00.320 guy you know what i mean yeah show me the facts um well it's a lot to unravel to understand the ron
00:23:07.000 brown situation because it's tied up with that what i mentioned earlier china gate which was uh
00:23:11.640 very difficult even for congress to investigate uh the man at the center of it who was also the man
00:23:16.820 that jeffrey epstein met with repeatedly at the white house named uh mark meddleton he pleaded the fifth
00:23:21.640 28 times including uh to the question is was he a foreign agent and pretty much every key figure
00:23:29.360 they tried to subpoena uh also pleaded the fifth and there was just um you know it was very difficult
00:23:36.080 to investigate and even uh the george w bush administration the first invocation of executive
00:23:42.200 privilege of bush as president was among other things to block documents about mark middleton being
00:23:47.780 made available to congress and the 9 11 happens and everyone forgets wow it's it's very amazing
00:23:53.500 because mark middleton was not a high-ranking guy he was uh an aide to uh mac mcclarty who was chief of
00:24:00.780 staff and then a senior advisor to bill clinton so why are you having the subsequent president stepping
00:24:05.680 in for mark middleton there's obviously a lot going on there because at the same time uh that um
00:24:11.860 mark middleton is involved in china gate he's meeting with jeffrey epstein and jeffrey epstein in that
00:24:16.320 period of time is arranging for the relocation of southern air transport the iran contra airline
00:24:21.600 from instead of going from miami to latin america it starts going from columbus ohio where leslie
00:24:27.340 wexner is based uh to hong kong so are those events connected i make a case for that in the book and if
00:24:34.000 if true it's very very disconcerting because basically you know to summarize china gate you have
00:24:40.080 a mass transfer of sensitive u.s military technology being made to china it's being paid
00:24:45.320 for by the pla or the the chinese military and uh ron brown was at the center of that because the
00:24:51.940 commerce department commerce department was signing off on you know all sorts of so why was he then
00:24:57.860 supposedly killed he uh shortly before he was uh unexpectedly asked to go on a trade mission to
00:25:04.340 croatia he agreed to cooperate with an investigation into this particular network that was executing
00:25:10.720 china gate and the people on the u.s side that were uh facilitating china gate uh were people that were
00:25:17.820 connected to the networks of longtime clinton benefactors the riati family and jackson stevens who
00:25:23.880 you know were sort of political king makers for bill clinton when he was governor of arkansas
00:25:29.040 it's how much crazy how much of what we think we know is wrong or how big of a role is what we
00:25:41.040 think we know to what really is happening well i think there's been a major effort to control the
00:25:47.220 media and how much information gets to the american public about all sorts of things if you look at the
00:25:52.060 epstein case you're only allowed to talk about his sex crimes from 2000 to 2006 uh don't look at his
00:25:57.900 financial crimes or any of the thing he did before the year 2000 is you know pretty much how mainstream
00:26:03.700 media handles the case and that's pretty you know there's a lot to find if you can go back farther
00:26:09.180 so when you're you're looking let's just look at epstein for a second when you're looking at his
00:26:13.720 circle of influence he is somebody who's kind of recruiting just getting people on tape doing
00:26:22.980 horrible things or raising money so they're in the pocket right is that kind of his role i think
00:26:29.220 that's part of it but at the same time you know he's doing a lot of that he's also involved in
00:26:33.640 financial crime you know financial crimes pretty much throughout his career i mean that's the common
00:26:38.380 thread from epstein from the 70s right until his second arrest you know that if he was working
00:26:43.340 as an operation that would kind of be over i think it was known i mean even in january 2020 you have
00:26:49.900 john mccain's wife cindy mccain saying we all knew what epstein was doing right and this is the wife
00:26:55.160 of a senator with no direct connection to the epstein scandal so that means top people in our
00:27:00.640 congress and senate knew what epstein was up to and nothing was done and so does that i mean is there a big
00:27:08.160 body count around epstein yeah i think yeah i think there is to an extent mark middleton who i just
00:27:14.440 mentioned was found uh hung by the neck by an extension cord in may with a shotgun wound to
00:27:20.100 the chest um and it was ruled a suicide in little rock arkansas and a local court ruled um pretty
00:27:28.460 shortly thereafter that no video or you know photos of the scene could be publicly released
00:27:33.920 and this was only after you know mark middleton had been involved in chinagate and numerous other
00:27:39.480 scandals but that only happened just a few months after the visitor logs of him meeting with epstein was
00:27:44.300 released uh last december and published by the uk's daily mail so that's one but that's one
00:27:50.600 recently you also have jean-luc brunel who was a major uh facilitator of his uh sex trafficking
00:27:56.760 activities particularly when it came to the modeling industry um turned up dead in his prison cell you
00:28:02.700 have epstein himself and then you have uh the son of esther salas who was a the judge overseeing the
00:28:08.140 epstein deutsche bank case um murdered at uh her home let's not just gloss over epstein uh and his
00:28:17.060 death do you believe he hung himself i think the official story is just uh i mean it's it's crazy
00:28:24.700 uh personally because you know he he was a tall guy he's supposed to have hung himself from something
00:28:30.480 that's shorter than his standing height with like paper thin sheets he would have had to curl up in the
00:28:35.400 fetal position to hang himself and he's you're not going to do that it's it's very uh it's logistically
00:28:41.940 impossible we're supposed to leave all the cameras malfunctioned that night um you know the prison
00:28:47.400 guards were asleep it's a lot of coincidences um so who would who who would we have to believe
00:28:54.220 i mean that would have to involve lots of government lots sure but he belonged to intelligence
00:29:02.800 and if you look at you know someone like robert maxwell he died off of his yacht uh he had a lot
00:29:09.200 of ties to intelligence things were you know the walls were closing in on him and his own daughter
00:29:14.920 gillaine maxwell thinks he was murdered uh by uh rogue massad agents and sicilian contract hitmen
00:29:21.280 and that's coming straight from his daughter that worked closely with him so if you you know if things
00:29:27.160 get too hot if you you know uh maybe worked at work for them in the past but you become you know
00:29:32.780 more of a liability than an asset you know things sometimes happen every morning people all over the
00:29:38.980 country wake up and live their lives it's a land that today is still free they work hard they try to
00:29:47.120 make a good living they love their god their family and at the end of the night they go to bed as decent
00:29:52.400 people that is the american ideal it's an almost limitless aim conceived in the hearts motivated by
00:30:00.720 liberty and goodness and freedom and decency please believe me when i say you're not alone
00:30:09.040 and you're you're not apt to find a clearer example of that kind of spirit than the people
00:30:18.980 who build make dream of and sell the products from grip six they make several things but i want to
00:30:27.760 talk about their socks for instance the socks when you buy them you're supporting american ranchers
00:30:32.900 who raise specially bred sheep that will produce modern wool the kind of wool that we need that keeps you
00:30:38.800 cool in the summer and warm in the winter the american manufacturers who wash that wool process it and
00:30:46.640 then weave it into socks that will keep your feet warm in the winter all of it is happening right here
00:30:53.800 this is a group of american business owners who have accepted the risk that comes along with only using
00:31:00.000 american-made products and american labor so help help us rebuild the dream keep our community strong
00:31:08.660 grip six check them out grip six dot com grip six dot com slash beck and save
00:31:15.240 i don't believe in the pizzagate conspiracy you know that there's an underground however i i do think that
00:31:24.380 there is real evil at the upper levels that yeah we've been engaging in and all of us dupes out in the
00:31:34.720 center of the country are like oh no you know i how much how prevalent is the massive corruption
00:31:44.860 and the evil with well like i mentioned earlier the more you look at the people that were around epstein
00:31:53.720 even before epstein gets involved it becomes very clear that what he was doing was not uh out of the
00:31:59.420 ordinary for these particular groups especially like arms dealers like adnan khashoggi he had an
00:32:04.820 alleged harem of women that he used to blackmail powerful people in the private and public sectors
00:32:09.660 on his yacht um and all their sorts of types of people um robert keith gray a pr executive that uh
00:32:18.040 started working for adnan khashoggi around the same time that jeffrey epstein allegedly did has an
00:32:21.860 alleged history of sexual blackmail for the cia and then you have allegations of uh roy cone the
00:32:28.340 well-known new york mob attorney also being involved in sexual blackmail stuff begins uh working for
00:32:34.020 adnan khashoggi in the same period of time in the 1980s uh i mean they're the more you look it's it's
00:32:40.300 quite uh it's prevalent but you know how prevalent it is i can't really say but it definitely does
00:32:46.220 influence our politics and that's disturbing is the is the clinton foundation involved in any of this
00:32:53.280 that just so um i don't know exactly um you know those types of activities i have no evidence for
00:33:00.340 that and i haven't looked into it so i'm not going to say it's not happening but i i just don't know
00:33:04.960 because i haven't looked right um but when you like i mentioned earlier about the epstein clinton
00:33:09.440 relationship he goes from ponzi schemes to clinton fundraising then he's involved with a lot of the
00:33:13.860 1996 controversial fundraisers that were investigated by congress clinton leaves office he's flying around
00:33:19.640 and epstein's plane setting up the clinton foundation and the clint health access initiative
00:33:23.220 and even credits jeffrey epstein back in 2003 with designing a lot of the philanthropy that became
00:33:28.380 the clinton foundation specifically the hiv aids program so you have a serial financial criminal
00:33:33.280 creating basically the clinton political slush fund post-presidency um the um have you seen any
00:33:40.920 connections in um ukraine there's this is the hotbed of a lot of really nefarious players yeah um i
00:33:52.100 haven't looked into it specifically because a lot of my timeline that i did for the book you know
00:33:56.140 stops before um years like 2014 when there was this you know basically a coup um you know with victoria
00:34:02.800 newland and some of these people from the obama administration and all of that um so unfortunately
00:34:07.520 you know i haven't personally explored that but i think it's i mean even mainstream media before the
00:34:12.240 recent uh conflict there was you know pretty open about the corruption in ukraine so i don't know your
00:34:18.960 politics and it's not important to me what's important to me is your character and your work
00:34:23.780 which is phenomenal um but uh i'm guessing you and i don't necessarily agree on policies
00:34:32.860 you know maybe i don't know i just you know at this point i think my politics are i'm i don't want
00:34:38.960 the government to be run by organized crime that's what i think that's a starting point for most americans
00:34:44.380 let's start there right you know that's what i was driving to is
00:34:48.360 there are big things on the table that no one's talking about and we're all focused on the little
00:34:58.720 stuff they've used to divide and conquer us this whole time and big things are happening and basically
00:35:04.860 we are being herded into a pen a techno feudalism yes slavery i don't know a lot of there's a lot of
00:35:11.720 different names for it going around but it's not good right and it's organized crime you know
00:35:16.320 running the shell at the highest levels and also evil i mean yeah it's just getting so dark
00:35:24.720 and yeah you know i'm i'm to the point where can you give me nine of the top 10 bill of rights you
00:35:33.220 know what i mean do you agree with those give me some anything that is foundational they're all being
00:35:39.220 destroyed all of them they don't mean anything anymore but those are the things that can bring
00:35:44.640 us together and they do i mean i'm sure you're called a radical conspiracy theorist
00:35:52.240 um you know there's a difference between conspiracy theory and conspiracy facts so i would call you
00:36:00.680 conspiracy fact purveyor yeah uh i guess so because conspiracy is a real crime and it's happening and
00:36:09.080 it's been happening right and um you know a lot of us are sort of fed this you know when we're in
00:36:14.680 school and stuff sort of this naive i guess you could call it a fairy tale version of history where
00:36:19.940 there's no corruption everything's fine the mob disappeared decades ago nothing to see here but
00:36:25.780 that's uh not the real history of this country tell me before we leave epstein tell me why uh
00:36:32.920 maxwell's alive oh i think it's pretty obvious she's going to cooperate with the people that
00:36:41.220 supported that operation and she's not going to spill anything she got moved from the prison where i
00:36:46.980 think she was at the same prison where epstein died and now she's a what is has been described
00:36:51.500 as a country club prison in florida that wouldn't have happened unless she was like yeah just leave
00:36:57.260 me alone please i'll do whatever you want all right let's let's i think she knows from her father's
00:37:05.320 death who not to double cross and who runs the show yeah um how does this involve the regular person
00:37:12.440 why should the regular person care about this kind of corruption um in just talking about epstein the
00:37:18.180 financial crimes uh there are very significant and are just sort of a microcosm of what has basically
00:37:23.500 been the looting of the american public for decades you look at people like katherine austin fitz and mark
00:37:29.100 skidmore who have calculated about 21 trillion dollars of u.s taxpayer money that's just gone missing
00:37:34.200 from from the house of urban development and the department of defense right it's probably more than
00:37:42.080 that where is it being where to go where to go yeah who took it i remember and it's still happening
00:37:49.060 and now we're having uh the standard of life in the u.s being degraded inflation's increasing the
00:37:54.760 squeeze is on thanks to manufactured food and energy crises and i think um a lot of the stuff we're seeing
00:38:00.680 being built for us people are currently perhaps unwilling to accept but when they're cold and hungry
00:38:06.980 and desperate you're exactly right i think that some people will be more willing
00:38:11.100 you're not improving my mood much well you know it's um we have to understand what we're facing in
00:38:19.300 order to um you know solve it right and a lot of people deal with it i've i've been bringing this
00:38:26.120 bell for gosh almost 20 years now and saying wake up pay attention look what's happening and it just
00:38:33.780 keeps getting more and more obvious and at times there are times you're just like i i how do you deal
00:38:41.740 with it um well i'm a mother um and i just uh i have to keep going i don't know i have to keep saying
00:38:48.820 something because my kids are going to live in this world right and there's certain things that i just
00:38:53.440 find unacceptable and i think every parent yeah probably does at this point so you know it doesn't
00:39:00.060 really matter anymore um and i think also if you're looking at this from like the energetic spiritual
00:39:05.040 level it matter you know um we have to keep fighting because what's the alternative and what
00:39:11.400 does that mean for us even after we're gone yeah right so let me you know i first ran into you
00:39:18.620 um and your work i don't remember where i saw you but you were talking about transhumanism
00:39:24.340 and this is something that again i i think i was talking about this in the 90s and saying it's been
00:39:31.940 going on a long time a long long time and saying that this is what life is going to head towards
00:39:37.800 and it's not good and we should probably have a conversation now you know we are on the verge
00:39:46.160 of this this is happening it could faster than ever yeah it could happen 20 25 30 35 it's here now
00:39:55.280 yeah explain what transhumanism is and why it is so dangerous yeah so i'll just uh probably start
00:40:03.320 with the history of it um so there was a man named julian huxley he's the brother of the famous author
00:40:09.540 aldous huxley he was president of the british eugenics society the united nations is created um
00:40:15.880 after world war ii he is put in charge of unesco in writing his vision for unesco julian huxley says
00:40:23.100 about eugenics we need to make the unthinkable thinkable again 10 years later he coins the
00:40:28.800 term transhumanism in a book did he read his brother's work um i'm sure actually that aldous
00:40:35.800 huxley's work was influenced by the type of social milieu he inhabited which would include
00:40:40.660 his his brother okay and uh you know sort of that those intellectual circles uh where both of them
00:40:47.640 grew up right you know this is the british aristocracy and really a lot of the idea of
00:40:52.520 eugenics going back to francis galton and you know darwinism and all of that it seems to sort of
00:40:57.460 emanate from from there fabian socialists and yes yes um so in in a book in 1957 i believe called
00:41:06.560 new bottles for new wine something like that julian huxley coins the terms transhumanism and talks
00:41:11.980 about how the new eugenics is going to be merging man with machine so this is basically eugenics
00:41:17.840 rebranded and a lot of people that funded eugenics causes of the past like the rockefeller family are
00:41:23.700 you know big proponents of transhumanism today and it's it's getting uh increasingly problematic
00:41:31.160 um i would say you know if you look for example at the new head of the fda who very few people have
00:41:37.920 bothered to look into um robert califf he's a former google health executive google health has
00:41:43.540 a joint venture venture with glaxo smith klein called galvani bioelectronics i think the former
00:41:49.280 head of that was monsef salawi who was in charge of operation warp speed and their focus is what they
00:41:54.600 call bioelectronic medicine which is uh you know injectable nanotechnology that can manipulate your
00:42:02.240 central nervous system what are the implications of that we have the person that just purchased twitter
00:42:07.000 making a brain chip company he's also a major contractor to the u.s military he has a major
00:42:13.040 conflict of interest uh with uh chinese silicon valley equivalents like tencent um and you know he says
00:42:21.160 i love this he says that's one of the reasons why i want to get off the planet he says his work is to
00:42:29.260 find a way to a compete against the transhumanistic you know no folly um uh you don't believe that at all
00:42:39.580 i don't i don't buy it no if you look at that company they had animal trials many of them of the monkeys
00:42:46.580 it was tested and died after the brain chip was put in if that were my company i would reformulate
00:42:53.860 everything or shut it down if it was going to kill that many animals but it's already moved into human
00:42:58.180 trials i mean even though it's killing all the monkeys well it killed many monkeys yeah i forget the
00:43:03.140 exact number but a significant portion it's this is where it gets frightening well it's tied up with
00:43:09.340 depopulation right you have this being sort of the new uh path of eugenics and so you know i don't think
00:43:15.440 these people ultimately care about you know how many people are left right smart and right well
00:43:22.920 eugenics is you i mean well people like to act like eugenics disappeared and it hasn't it's just
00:43:29.400 rebranded and if you look at the history it's it's very clear and it's very disconcerting that's why
00:43:34.800 everything you're seeing that is coming out of policy all over the world ever all of the all of the
00:43:41.280 world economic forms seems so malthusian the the medically assisted death originally was going to
00:43:46.780 be for terminally ill people now people are pitching it to homeless people in canada saying
00:43:50.980 you're too poor to live do you want to kill yourself um how do we not remember what happened last time
00:44:01.300 well i think some of these people you look at the rockefellers they funded what happened last time
00:44:06.340 yeah a lot of that uh money that was used to set up the nazi eugenics program came from the
00:44:12.020 rockefeller foundation and that's a matter of record they've tried to go back and say oh we're sorry but
00:44:16.660 they're funding a lot of this stuff now okay so um i think you're getting the impression that maybe
00:44:24.220 maybe you should prepare maybe you should help with a parallel economy we may uh might not be too far
00:44:35.600 away from uh being able to undo some of the damage that has been done
00:44:40.980 but it's going to take all of us doing our part we got to vote we have to stand for the truth
00:44:49.440 we have to be a little bit more like our guest patriot mobile is america's only christian
00:44:55.680 conservative conservative mobile phone provider they have been a force for conservative values
00:45:00.980 and when you're with patriot mobile a portion of your bill goes to fund conservative causes and
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00:45:10.820 values that made us the greatest country on earth in the first place their family and their business
00:45:16.280 plans are affordable and they have the same great coverage as the major carriers because these days
00:45:22.140 everyone is on the same set of cell towers and when you add on top of that fact that you're supporting
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00:45:38.800 call 972 patriot make sure you get free activation with the offer code beck you've read ibm and the
00:45:47.720 holocaust i haven't read it but i'm familiar with the relationship so um he's a good dear friend of
00:45:53.760 mine and uh you know it's the same thing it's the same thing now giant corporations are in bed with
00:46:01.160 all of this stuff and uh someday they'll be hiding it and go no no no we didn't do anything with that
00:46:07.860 but i don't know i don't think they even have to now i mean if it really gets to the transhumanist
00:46:12.460 point and they can just manipulate um you know this is an attempt to manipulate consciousness yes
00:46:17.460 really really so in memory and all of that i mean they don't have to even bother with it anymore
00:46:24.360 uh once it gets to that point i talked to ray kurswell once and and i said you put the nanotechnology
00:46:30.920 just tell me out here ray i'm a science fiction writer you put the nanotechnology into me and you
00:46:37.900 control it not me you control it and i start speaking out about things that you and the powerful
00:46:44.960 don't like why don't you just turn me off why don't you just oh you know what and all that
00:46:51.820 nanotechnology and i just die sure and his response was because we wouldn't do that yeah let's trust us
00:47:00.660 how has that gone for the you know past hundred years or so right and if organized crime are the
00:47:06.400 people in charge are you going to trust them i mean they want us to trust in them if you look at
00:47:11.240 the world economic forum or even in the bide administration um and a lot of their policy
00:47:15.620 documents they're one of their main focuses uh are rebuilding trust with the public and it's not
00:47:20.860 working yeah it's not but they may be looking at drastic interventions to make it work and i think
00:47:26.580 you know if we're transhumanism to uh be shore hooned uh shore horned uh shoehorned through you know
00:47:33.060 that could happen and if you're seeing this um you know the sort of these mergers uh because there's
00:47:38.640 many of them of silicon valley companies and and big pharma you know they're framing it as health
00:47:44.640 care but it's eugenics being framed as health care and it's uh it's really terrifying i mean it's
00:47:52.040 terrifying it's crazy there's a lot of words for it but you know ultimately uh it has to be stopped
00:47:56.960 and unfortunately covid has set this precedent where it can be mandatory or where you can lose your
00:48:02.360 livelihood where you can you know not be able to travel you can basically be placed under house arrest
00:48:07.220 unless you agree to it if you don't i mean in the grand scheme of uh where we've all been upgraded
00:48:15.300 we're all part of the upgraded i don't think that's the intention that's how they're selling it to
00:48:20.720 people if you look at this for example the british eugenics society where a lot of this came came from
00:48:25.160 you look at someone like hg wells best known as a science fiction writer but also a avowed eugenicist he
00:48:30.500 predicted that in a hundred to two hundred years there would be two human races there would be the
00:48:37.760 um upgraded augmented elite who were intellectual and attractive and you know were the ones that did
00:48:45.180 everything and then a dwarf-like troll-like squat underclass that eats bugs
00:48:51.240 and uh you know for people that have been paying attention it seems like you know they're selling
00:49:00.120 this as as one way it's all going to be a utopia utopian uh thing if we all upgrade i mean that's
00:49:07.460 how it's being framed right but if you look at how these people think they don't want that they're
00:49:13.220 looking at feudalism and how do you create a class of slaves that cannot even cognitively rebel ever
00:49:21.240 again it is why i mean it you know these teachers unions said oh we we care about you know minorities
00:49:28.400 and everything else they did more damage to a whole generation of minorities more than they did
00:49:35.340 kids in general kids in general into the yeah into the gears of the machine i live in south
00:49:43.100 america the lockdowns there were brutal everyone was under house arrest basically you were only
00:49:48.500 allowed out of your house twice a week with papers that you had to show to police each uh paper was
00:49:54.080 good for like roughly three hours and uh my daughter goes to daycare um she's four and she was thankfully
00:50:02.380 you know shielded from a lot of this and was able to have interaction and stuff but a lot of kids
00:50:07.220 weren't and a lot of kids her age and younger are non-verbal uh they scream like instead
00:50:13.080 of talking i mean they can they're it's it's it's devastating and the fact that these people you
00:50:19.840 know act like it was for the children or for public health when you know the evidence increasingly comes
00:50:24.260 out and it wasn't you know it was it was for something else and i think we're you know it's
00:50:29.820 increasingly becoming clear what that something else is and was
00:50:33.100 what we're doing to farming the the the esg and world economic forum plan is evil i mean i i don't i
00:50:49.920 mean it seems an overused word and it's one i swore off about five years ago i said i don't want to
00:50:57.960 call things evil because it it has to be evil as a different level but when you're talking about
00:51:04.540 controlling and dumbing down and enslaving and destroying i don't know what other word to use
00:51:13.800 for it and they've gotten away with saying this this is conspiracy theory conspiracy theory well they
00:51:20.200 just you know i think that's you know since the the term really entered the american vernacular
00:51:24.520 after the assassination of john f kennedy it's been used to basically claim that if you think
00:51:29.800 powerful people get together to discuss how to advance their power um and keep it um at the expense
00:51:37.260 of everyone else and that they have any agency um you know you're crazy it all has to be a coincidence
00:51:44.640 you know they have they never have any bad intentions the people that you know are the oligarchs
00:51:49.940 that you know fund our politicians and have ties with intelligence and have monopolies and you know
00:51:55.700 uh the technology that runs our lives and stuff like that i mean it's um you know i think at this
00:52:02.260 point you have to be quite naive to think that's actually the case but um so how do people like the
00:52:08.220 um new governor i think of alberta uh standing up against esg and the first thing one of the first
00:52:18.360 things she said was anybody that brags about how they have controls and people in every government
00:52:26.040 uh leader's office if not the leader themselves i don't think we should be doing any business with
00:52:33.320 them and esg and world economic forum is out um how does somebody like that survive somebody like
00:52:43.140 klaus schwab you know i think um you know it's not just klaus schwab i think klaus schwab is sort
00:52:50.620 of a man who is there to facilitate i mean let's talk about the world economic forum for a second and
00:52:55.680 what it is and what it's not they describe themselves as the premier promoter of public
00:52:59.520 private partnerships um for lack of a better word that is fascism so um then you have the family
00:53:06.880 history of klaus schwab that his father ran a nazi model company and funded the atomic bomb and all of
00:53:11.720 that and uh just very complicated stuff there and uh you basically have him being in this position
00:53:18.240 where he's promoting uh you know fascism on a global i mean he's a white kitty cat away from
00:53:24.740 being a james bond super well but i think that's you know they want everyone to focus on him and think
00:53:29.440 that it's just him and just the world economic forum there's other organizations that are promoting
00:53:33.380 this too and also a lot of the you know the young global leader program that's not exclusive to the
00:53:37.740 world economic forum you know there's lots of other institutions with similar um agendas
00:53:42.860 you know that uh sort of are are related to the world economic uh forum which seeks you know not
00:53:50.880 just public private partnerships and fascism but global governance you know there's a lot of these
00:53:56.000 organizations seating their people in in certain places uh so how do you you know fight against this i
00:54:03.320 think uh there are sort of like factional infighting uh to an extent and it's really hard to know um
00:54:11.240 how that's going at any given time um but there's an obvious effort um by powerful interest to stop
00:54:19.140 nationalist politicians from reaching the highest levels you think yeah i well i think it's pretty
00:54:26.100 clear yeah yeah so um you know how do they stop that i don't know i mean unfortunately you look at the
00:54:31.580 world economic forum a lot of the banks are very involved and when you you know are in bed with
00:54:37.460 the banks and the banks are in bed with you um it's it's very hard to go against that in today's world
00:54:43.700 and you know they're making it uh even harder on the little people people in canada that protested
00:54:49.580 with the the you know the trucker protest they were de-platformed not from social media but from the
00:54:55.560 financial system and i think that's going to become increasingly common it's already happening to a lot
00:55:00.300 people that i work with taken off of paypal uh having trouble with their their banks venmo i mean
00:55:06.660 you know sure uh and i think that's gonna you know become increasingly commonplace and that's how
00:55:12.120 they're going to try and force compliance and you know a big part of this you have the move towards
00:55:15.860 a central bank digital currency and all of that at the same time which is programmable money the state
00:55:20.520 decides whether you save or you spend they decide what you can and can't buy and all this stuff
00:55:24.820 and all the central banks even on the you know uh in places like russia where vladimir prudin talks a
00:55:30.640 good game about nationalism and protecting our culture they're going full steam ahead with that too
00:55:35.240 it's the way you control a population yeah and i think all these governments are really interested
00:55:41.200 right now in domestic control so what does america look like at the end china that is the goal of a lot
00:55:48.440 of people at the highest levels of silicon valley in our government i would say look no oh sure i i i
00:55:54.260 i have friends who are industrialist and they would say to me 30 years ago china's the new model
00:56:02.480 and i thought i don't that's a bad model we don't want that they would just flippantly just say if china's
00:56:09.680 the new model it wasn't until 10 years later that i started going wait a minute they mean that sincerely
00:56:17.540 that how it works there all of it is coming here yeah that's terrifying for a long time we talked
00:56:26.400 about china gate earlier the origins of silicon valley are in that whole mix and a lot of the
00:56:33.000 most powerful people in our military industrial complex including like lockheed martin were involved
00:56:38.940 with that and wanted that sensitive technology to go to china and undermine our national security they're
00:56:44.620 looking there's something there was something going on there then and i think we're increasingly
00:56:48.700 seeing it now um i wrote an article in 2020 about the national security commission on artificial
00:56:55.100 intelligence they basically say that in order to uh be competitive in artificial intelligence and secure
00:57:01.720 economic and military hegemony for the united states we have to go beyond china in terms of their
00:57:08.400 implementation of surveillance technology um the use of artificial intelligence moving away from private
00:57:14.400 car ownership which they refer to as a legacy system in-person doctor visits uh to the ai powered
00:57:20.980 alternative this was in 2019 before covid covid comes along years before that i talked to the chairman of
00:57:28.380 the board at general motors and he told me by 2030 we won't be making cars as you know them today
00:57:34.360 we'll be making fleets yeah because people yeah it's uh you know ubers you rent and you can't control
00:57:40.900 where they go and they're only going to be in the smart cities you're not going between cities anymore
00:57:45.420 no more road trips uh no more you know you decide oh i want to go over here today i want to drive three
00:57:51.880 hours to see my family or whoever my friends that's that's over if these people win and the national
00:57:57.980 security commission on ai was run by eric schmidt former head of google uh one of the the co-chair was a
00:58:03.820 very top guy that works closely with schmidt that uh was at the department of defense and it's uh the
00:58:08.700 intelligence community the military and silicon valley and those are the people uh increasingly
00:58:14.260 running the show and they think if we don't uh go beyond china's surveillance system it's mega city
00:58:22.020 smart city model um we will fail and then you have people like elon musk coming in and saying i'm going
00:58:27.180 to take over twitter for free speech and then he also says i want to make twitter into basically like
00:58:32.300 wechat which is you know and basically a surveillance app to use in china that's for
00:58:37.480 your finances your social media all pretty much everything is on that app they even call it the
00:58:43.860 everything app and that's his model and the parent company of that tincent is one of tesla's
00:58:50.360 shareholders and you know most active advisors so is that data going to stay you know that he's going
00:58:58.920 to get from twitter the new twitter when it becomes a wechat equivalent is where's that going to go i
00:59:04.140 mean there's a lot if you look at um you know the china connection here it's you know when i was
00:59:09.300 writing before i wrote the book i didn't realize the extent of the overlap but it's very concerning
00:59:15.360 you have people with major conflicts of interest running our national security policy on things like
00:59:20.880 ai that have conflicts of interest with china and they you know eric schmidt just wrote a book with
00:59:25.660 henry kissinger and these guys basically argue in order to avoid a war a cataclysmic war with china
00:59:31.320 we have to make good and cooperate with china and the model for that is basically you know the world
00:59:36.660 economic forum i mean they argue the same thing global governance and technocracy um following the
00:59:43.520 china model here and it's very uh against every everything most americans are accustomed to
00:59:49.940 uh but they're i i guess finding ways to manufacture consent for it whether the justification is
00:59:56.640 climate change it's covid it's a food and energy crisis that's been manufactured um you know whatever
01:00:03.560 they can whatever will stick they'll use but the the problem is you're having the people that
01:00:07.880 control silicon valley behind this they control where most people get their information where most
01:00:12.600 people socialize today and they're increasingly censoring people from platforms they're waging
01:00:18.800 basically a war on dissent uh that i've written about a few times and it's getting you know
01:00:23.940 increasingly orwellian to the point where you know they'll label you misinformation or you know this
01:00:28.400 is disinformation uh but you know the biden administration if their war on domestic terror
01:00:32.960 advances the way they've written it out uh you say the wrong thing or you disagree with the state
01:00:38.560 even or the official narrative you're uh you know inciting violence you're potentially a domestic
01:00:43.600 violent extremist right um and that's happened in history before not necessarily the united
01:00:48.560 states but other countries and you know it's pretty clear that once that type of policy gets
01:00:52.880 implemented things go downhill very quickly do you have hope at all that
01:00:57.600 the if the republicans could win it at least slows it down i mean i think people in the republic
01:01:07.640 there's there's clearly people who go to washington and actually believe it and then are turned
01:01:14.660 uh or they go to wash and they're already a dirt bag and they know what they're getting into
01:01:19.780 and then there's a few that go and stand and are trying to hold the line but they're a minority
01:01:27.280 a big or they get forced out correct uh if i'm not mistaken ron johnson right um was the one that
01:01:33.800 that challenged a lot of covid narratives and i mean even mainstream media npr supposed to be
01:01:38.780 objective says oh he spreads conspiracy theories and his challenger's a rising star and you know i
01:01:44.280 mean they're very clear about who they favor and who they don't and if they don't want you to win
01:01:47.680 they'll gerrymander your district they'll do so i mean there's lots of tools and that they can use to
01:01:53.960 prevent you from from staying in office and who knows what we'll uh see in the midterm elections
01:01:59.940 but ultimately you know those type of people that are willing to stand their ground and actually fight for
01:02:05.600 the american people are very few um even and it doesn't really matter what party you're talking
01:02:11.460 about it's very small number when you consider the amount of votes needed to pass certain legislation
01:02:17.020 um so i think ultimately the way out of this is for the american people to realize that we yes this is a
01:02:26.580 fight between good and evil but if you're looking for the good guys stop looking at people that are put
01:02:31.260 on the tv screens in front of you and start looking at your neighbors yeah and the answer is so clear
01:02:37.640 local local local local local yes absolutely this is really us versus them it's not left versus right
01:02:44.680 anymore we are so far beyond that yeah uh really and it's amazing and very heartening how many people
01:02:52.780 that i know and i interview that um we would have we would have been against each other 15 years ago
01:03:02.420 we would say oh you're and now it's like no no no forget all forget all of that yeah you know and
01:03:08.540 it's heartening that people are waking and starting to come together question is do we make it fast enough
01:03:18.900 i've been saying for a while this is going to be a photo finish i don't know which one's gonna i don't
01:03:24.500 think anyone really does and i think it comes down to how much responsibility people are willing to take
01:03:29.440 for their own lives and and you know how how far communities are willing to go to ensure that they're
01:03:34.680 self-reliant in the face of what we're facing well if the banks are deplatforming people you can't use
01:03:41.100 their financial system are you going to go to the cbdc land where eventually you won't be able to spend
01:03:45.840 money without like a microchip in your hand and all of this stuff um you know there's obvious red lines
01:03:51.480 people can't cross how are you going to feed your family how are you going to keep your house heated
01:03:55.540 in winter uh you know basic needs i think uh we should probably be taking some lessons from the amish
01:04:01.520 to be honest i think you know i think they got a lot of stuff right the amish they're going to be fine
01:04:09.360 they're going to be fine we have we have outsourced our needs to corporations that want to enslave us
01:04:17.360 so we have to uh start producing our own stuff at a local level it's all about exit and build and
01:04:24.980 that's what we have to do and the more people that do that um the better off we will be the real
01:04:30.380 question is how uh accustomed are americans to convenience and will we be enslaved by that
01:04:37.120 convenience or not and i think that's the ultimate so far we have been a lot of people have been yeah
01:04:41.600 um talk to me a little bit about bitcoin um so i'm you know not necessarily um uh well versed on
01:04:49.780 cryptocurrency i do um uh i i like bitcoiners because we tend to have a lot see a lot in common
01:04:57.340 about um you know the state of government today and uh the federal reserve for example central bank
01:05:02.860 central bank digital currency um and all of that but you know because i'm not particularly well
01:05:08.400 versed in it i don't like to tell people how to spend their money it's a very individual decision
01:05:12.200 um do you think it can survive uh i think the central banks the bankers and the government will
01:05:19.100 do everything they can to prevent a currency that threatens their power from actually being able to be
01:05:23.480 used and i think we're already seeing uh major efforts to make that the case you know they can make
01:05:28.580 it illegal to uh you know turn it into something else illegal to use as tender you know they they're
01:05:35.400 looking at a lot of different options um but you know some bitcoiners despite that think is totally
01:05:42.180 possible but i don't think i'm qualified to talk about that um you know i personally have you know
01:05:47.440 um in terms of my finances like you know some people donate to my work in crypto i have a little
01:05:52.620 bit of that but you know i'm personally looking at trying to put as much of my money as i can and
01:05:57.280 things that will keep me and my family self-sufficient come what may uh which in my case
01:06:02.340 included like investing in land so i'm not renting i own where i live i have enough land to produce what
01:06:08.320 my family needs in terms of food uh stocking up on things that i can't produce you know things like
01:06:14.640 that that's where my money is personally going but i am not in the business of telling people
01:06:18.760 you know giving financial advice beyond that but you know if the goal is to have developed parallel
01:06:24.700 systems so we're not dependent on the systems of the people trying to enslave us you know whatever
01:06:30.140 you think is a good way to get from point a to point b uh you know that's probably where your money
01:06:35.340 should be going if bitcoin's a part of that if you feel that way good for you and if not you know good
01:06:40.120 for you too i think ultimately uh what we need to do is um uh try and create something so that we can
01:06:47.180 be resilient and not have to uh i mean because the system is just so unacceptable uh i mean it's in
01:06:55.220 it's really not just in and it's not just against freedom and all sorts of other values right it's
01:07:01.040 just it's against nature it's against life really and so i mean if you're going to support that you
01:07:08.740 know i think people have to realize the consequences that come with that and exactly what
01:07:12.800 it means when you are are willing to give yourself over that kind of system the implications of that
01:07:19.800 and i think a lot of people don't really realize that or take the time to think about it and i think
01:07:23.980 they should are you god driven is god a center of you yeah but i tend to think of maybe god
01:07:32.500 differently than most christians i don't really see it as a person or as a man i see it as uh maybe the
01:07:38.000 universe or the creative force right uh you know uh the energy uh that drives all life george lucas
01:07:45.060 and the force i mean there's a lot of different ways you know to look at it but ultimately if you're
01:07:49.980 looking at humanity what do you like about humanity it's all the it's the creativity it's uh the
01:07:56.140 vivaciousness you know that's the stuff that i think we're fighting for uh and you know uh a lot
01:08:02.660 of the guys behind this want to to eliminate that i think a lot of transhumanism is aimed at creating
01:08:08.280 like a drone-like workforce that will never be able to uh challenge their working conditions or
01:08:13.420 ask for a bigger piece of the pie and it's amazing to me that more people on on the left don't see
01:08:18.540 that if they're all about workers rights and unionizing all right you have a chip in your brain
01:08:22.560 how's the how's you know workers rights going to go how is union how are the unions in bed
01:08:29.040 furthering all of this well i would say that you just have to look back to uh the unions you know
01:08:34.880 back in the 20s and 30s and 40s and how organized crime took them over and that hasn't really changed
01:08:39.740 um so the big ones i mean you know um so it's um you know a lot of those guys over the years have
01:08:45.920 evolved to uh support these types of of policies because it's more control and money and what does
01:08:51.520 the mob love more than anything else right what why is the left you know i've always held libertarian
01:09:04.060 more libertarian views when it comes to social issues i don't care who you marry i don't care
01:09:09.020 what you do i don't care who you love that's no no business of mine shouldn't be in the business of
01:09:13.700 the government you know that was a progressive idea to have a marriage license from the government um
01:09:20.320 but we fought this and i remember saying to my my daughter who was in college at the time she said
01:09:27.340 dad it's about love and i said i don't think it is i think it's about control and this argument if we
01:09:35.700 play it out you can't stop polygamy you can't change one factor without changing other factors and
01:09:43.960 everyone said these things were crazy we we are now transitioning kids because there's no gender
01:09:53.520 identity anymore we are sexualizing our youngest kids what where is that coming from it's such a force
01:10:06.240 if your ultimate goal is total control you need to have a population that has no national identity
01:10:14.020 that has no identity period that that identity can be fluxed and can be moved uh whenever convenient
01:10:20.940 for the people on top if people have an identity and know who they are and know where they stand they're
01:10:25.840 a lot harder to control and i think if you make all of that fluid um at every level uh it's a lot easier to
01:10:34.180 exert your will over them because you know they they don't have their feet firmly on the ground right
01:10:41.020 i thought of this several times during this podcast i think this is the most empowerful
01:10:48.460 interview i've ever done well thank you yeah i i mean i i
01:10:54.100 i hope people listen and open their mind enough to go that can't be true i mean i usually start my
01:11:05.980 investigations on things going no way it can't be i don't do that as often now because i'm seeing oh
01:11:15.740 yeah it probably is yeah um
01:11:18.180 did who were you before you started doing this i mean did you believe these things or have you found
01:11:27.840 these things going oh my gosh and one leads to another well i guess you could say that when i was
01:11:32.660 younger in my teen years i had a major trust issue with adults um and i just uh had a hard time i just
01:11:40.860 didn't believe what i was told a lot of the time i had to figure it out for myself and all sorts of
01:11:45.460 things i guess that's sort of a lot of some teenagers um are like that but i um you know around the time i
01:11:52.860 was in university the last year or two i sort of figured out um a lot of things about um american
01:12:00.280 history that's sort of hidden from us um uh the government isn't exactly there to help necessarily
01:12:07.440 i don't know how we went from hey government is like fire with george washington saying
01:12:15.300 if you're in control of it it's good if it's out of control it'll burn you
01:12:19.580 to hey we're from the government we'll educate your kids how could you possibly think a government
01:12:26.780 is going to raise kids who say be skeptical of us yeah well um it's not you know look at who has
01:12:35.080 taken over our education system you go back to things like uh the rockefeller family or their
01:12:40.220 role in health care there's a lot of oligarch families that have very specific agendas that
01:12:45.280 have really taken over government policy and it's been like that for a very long time
01:12:48.800 and they're not elected no one put them in charge actually a lot of people used to hate the rockefeller
01:12:55.500 family until uh you know they started a major pr campaign to rebrand themselves as philanthropists
01:13:00.900 that a lot of uh other unpleasant people have since followed um and uh you know the long-term
01:13:08.440 consequences of that we are seeing today um but anyway um in terms of my background you know i was
01:13:16.120 you know 21 22 and just looking around you know i'm 33 so i'm a millennial right and uh most people
01:13:23.480 my age just you know i could see a lot of this stuff like um we're too dependent on corporations
01:13:30.000 that have a lot of nasty uh agendas or do bad things there's a lot of issues a lot of illegal
01:13:35.700 wars no accountability at the highest levels of government you know if people my age don't start
01:13:40.700 doing something it's going to get really bad uh and most you know most people were like stop talking
01:13:45.920 about that i have netflix and beer so i don't care everything's fine as long as you know i'm
01:13:50.700 comfortable basically you know screw your politics or screw your concerns and i just uh then wait i left
01:13:56.580 the u.s after that how can the same group of people that generation claim that no you have to
01:14:05.820 be an activist you have to be involved in climate change and you know i'm going to sit down and glue
01:14:11.800 myself to a wall like a moron uh you know yeah well that's the activism that's put in front of young
01:14:18.060 people today and they're being told that's what activism is and that that's the activism that's sort
01:14:22.360 of in vogue because it's shown and treated by mainstream media as sticking it to the man
01:14:27.300 these people throwing tomato soup on paintings but you look at uh those groups i think they're
01:14:31.360 called just stop oil they're funded by the getty and rockefeller families and the rockefeller family
01:14:36.540 you know made their money off of oil but you know they have a long time interest in eugenics and
01:14:42.100 funding correct um you know people that basically helped create uh this sort of new environmental
01:14:48.180 movement that uh downplays uh pollution and plays up carbon dioxide and that's all we should be worried
01:14:55.040 about and you know it's human the biggest i think the quote from the club of rome is the biggest enemy
01:15:00.580 of humanity is man and furthering you know that narrative not that you know it's not the corporations
01:15:07.060 that pollute or uh even the u.s military is you know even by you know climate change metrics the
01:15:13.440 biggest contaminator of you know the planet and all of that it's not about those guys it's just
01:15:19.240 about the regular people but really what it's about is controlling how much energy people can use and if
01:15:25.080 you can control how much energy a household can use you can control their economic activity you also
01:15:29.560 control how many family how big their family can get and i think that's ultimately uh what it's about
01:15:35.560 it's not about the environment for these people and a lot of it is uh you know wall street driven you
01:15:41.300 look at the united nations a lot of the people they put in charge of a climate change policy you have
01:15:46.400 mark carney former head of the bank of england and the bank of canada i believe uh he's one of the guys
01:15:52.800 that came in to rescue hsbc when they were caught uh money laundering for mexican drug cartels not
01:15:58.800 exactly a good guy and it's very unlikely that he is driven by uh concern about the environment and
01:16:05.080 then the other person is michael bloomberg former mayor of new york and a billionaire guy and so
01:16:10.120 these are the people crafting the solutions and just like covid you don't have time to think about
01:16:15.620 what we're telling you you just have to accept these solutions because if you don't something
01:16:19.740 really really bad will happen and it's the same it's sort of a similar narrative to what you know
01:16:24.140 was played out with covid and everything guns cars everything yeah so you know people are being
01:16:30.500 it's it's fear uh fear driven to get people to accept policies they otherwise wanted to accept because
01:16:36.120 they're told this cataclysmic event is just down the line and trust us again is uh the conclusion of
01:16:41.640 that so you know uh there's people that agree with the narrative about climate change and there's
01:16:48.380 people that don't and i'm not trying to really get in that space when i talk about this stuff i'm trying
01:16:52.720 to point out that the solutions are coming mostly from wall street and they're things like carbon markets
01:16:58.540 they're things like debt for climate swaps which back in the day used to be debt for land swaps
01:17:04.160 not about climate change and you know about other stuff um and then you have people like larry fink of
01:17:10.880 black rock and michael bloomberg and mark carney coming together and something like g fan saying
01:17:15.140 why don't we give wall street direct control of the imf and the world bank for climate change you know
01:17:21.800 how can anyone on the left that's worried about climate change sign up on that why don't they talk
01:17:27.420 about planting trees why isn't bill gates the largest you know like private landowner in the u.s now
01:17:32.260 planting trees like crazy if he's so worried about carbon dioxide um you know he he pooh-poohs the
01:17:38.180 whole idea of planting trees as a way to combat climate change it's just carbon markets and uh going
01:17:43.240 to electric vehicles and all of this stuff but electric vehicles necessitates mass mining uh and a lot of
01:17:49.600 that mining is in places that use child labor or it's going to be so environmentally destructive you uh
01:17:54.740 totally destroy the developing world which you know these people on the left supposedly want to
01:17:59.720 protect you're going to totally destroy the environment um i live in the south of chile in the
01:18:05.060 andes uh it's one of the only areas in chile that's still like forested and really nice not polluted water
01:18:12.060 any of that most of the mining in chile is historically in the north which has become very polluted and uh has
01:18:18.440 a lack of water among other things and now the mines are starting to move south because of this demand
01:18:24.180 for more and more minerals for you know electric vehicles and all of that um a lake that used to be
01:18:29.900 used for tourism uh there was uh some mineral i forget what it is discovered in the lake shore
01:18:34.680 and then the water just disappears one season and now it's ready to be mining right next to a national
01:18:39.280 park uh i used to live and work in peru uh they were talking about putting a uranium mine next to
01:18:45.180 machu picchu and all types of stuff i mean this is uh going the mining stuff is not being talked about
01:18:51.340 and uh you know electrical vehicles are being marketed as necessary but it's going to come at
01:18:56.900 a massive massive cost and i think that you know again the environment the environmental movement is
01:19:03.740 focused on carbon dioxide if they were really worried about the environment they would also
01:19:08.820 educate people on how destructive this type of mining is and what it does to the people who live there
01:19:14.580 in the environment and including in protected areas um there's a lot of species in this particular
01:19:20.020 area of chile where i live that are only there and they've uh you know been there for thousands of
01:19:24.860 years and they'll not exist if a lot of this mining goes forward but if you ask people like uh bill gates
01:19:31.400 for example who has a joint venture with most of the other titans of silicon valley called cobalt metals
01:19:36.740 they say all of the world's reserves of lithium cobalt and nickel must be completely mined if we even want to get
01:19:43.300 close to the electrical vehicle revolution so that means digging up the entire andes including areas that are
01:19:49.540 national parks right now and uh even if they do with all the reserves that we know that we have
01:19:56.080 you're not going to be able to reproduce the amount of private cars in use today it's going to be way
01:20:01.480 less cars and so they're just going to be i mean the models already sort of been out there they fielded
01:20:05.860 it in the uk recently you can't drive out of your district and all of that stuff it's going to be much
01:20:10.440 more controlled the freedom of movement well it's not really going to be freedom of movement it's going
01:20:14.060 to be controlled movement last question
01:20:18.380 are you optimistic um so that's a tricky question you know it sometimes you're working and writing on
01:20:30.960 this stuff i mean it's ups and downs sometimes you feel inspired sometimes you're like oh my gosh
01:20:35.900 you know yeah um you know but ultimately there's really no other way to be except to believe totally
01:20:44.880 in a better future um i mean we have to be totally committed to that if we're going to do it and do it
01:20:50.680 quickly and um you know i have a lot of hope uh that um americans when when things get really rough
01:20:59.260 will come together at least most of us i think so too you know um but you know in in the environment
01:21:05.400 we're in right now i think it's incumbent on everyone no matter how small or big your platform
01:21:10.440 is to speak up about what is happening uh i think we are past the time about worrying about what people
01:21:16.780 say about you about at work or at home or wherever the president gave a speech last night and he i don't
01:21:24.380 remember what he was calling people and i thought that just that is so i so i am so far beyond caring
01:21:31.540 about names and labels that anybody you know and i i think there are more and more people around the
01:21:37.980 world that are like i don't care i don't care what you call me i don't care you know what you do i i just
01:21:45.360 know what's true and i'm just not going there with you well the government wants to define what is true
01:21:52.420 and what is not i wrote a recent article um about that uh in explaining some of the calls to basically
01:21:58.740 uh make it such um and it's it's you know even if they try and do that and they try and say this is
01:22:07.080 the state you know the state is defining truth and if you deviate from that you are inciting violence
01:22:12.060 um and all of that but the problem is people at a visceral level gravitate toward the truth so they
01:22:18.160 hear it and they're like oh that makes sense or they look at the sourcing or they investigate for
01:22:22.840 themselves and they realize what is true and what is not so you know the state and silicon valley
01:22:28.000 there's really not that much space between them to be honest at this point um you know they can try
01:22:33.300 and and censor and manipulate and and whatever but ultimately people are going to gravitate towards
01:22:38.540 what is true and there's going to be a point where they're not going to be able to really the tools
01:22:43.460 they have now will not work and i think a lot of that is uh that time will come once people stop
01:22:50.300 trying to use these platforms uh that they are manipulating and start just going out and talking
01:22:57.500 to people they know uh we have to get offline and we have to do it quickly uh maybe even get back you
01:23:04.340 know in circulating imprint stuff that's printed i mean we really have to stop uh depend being so
01:23:10.120 dependent on these on these platforms that they're obviously manipulating i think everyone knows about it
01:23:14.760 or they're censoring people from um and they're using it to profile you you know stop giving them
01:23:20.800 your data and start getting in the real world and telling people uh what's what i mean they may call
01:23:26.280 you crazy but the stakes are too high to not do it that's how i feel thank you my pleasure thank you
01:23:33.240 just a reminder i'd love you to rate and subscribe to the podcast and pass this on to a friend so it
01:23:45.100 can be discovered by other people
01:23:46.360 is
01:24:00.420 you
01:24:02.220 you
01:24:02.880 you