Massive Cellphone Outages: Cyber Attack or Solar Flare? | Guest: William Forstchen | 2⧸22⧸24
Episode Stats
Length
2 hours and 3 minutes
Words per Minute
149.3282
Summary
Porn is rampant in our culture, and it is destroying our families, marriages, and families. It's time to take a hard look at what's going on, and what we need to do to stop it.
Transcript
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Let me start with a topic that is not easy to talk about, not comfortable, but it is rampant in our culture and it is destroying lives, and that's pornography.
00:00:41.940
It destroys later our young women, marriages, families.
00:00:46.260
It is, it is, it wires your brain in a way that only heroin does.
00:00:54.800
You may have experienced it in your life, seen it in the life of somebody that you love.
00:00:59.400
There's a Victory app by Covenant Eyes that can help if you or somebody you know is in this spiral.
00:01:06.100
It is a powerful tool for Christians who are serious and want to quit porn for good.
00:01:15.060
It's a way for you to never start it, or it is also a way to quit.
00:01:19.660
Once you've installed the Victory app on your devices, it will run silently in the background, and you choose a person that it'll notify if you're choosing online behavior doesn't match your goals.
00:01:35.780
You can get started on the path to recovery right now.
00:02:14.260
Welcome to the Fusion of Entertainment and Enlightenment.
00:03:09.760
You will understand what's happening in ways that I can't even describe.
00:03:16.760
Because I know these things and as I went over it and I now look at the news again, it is so clear on what is happening.
00:03:27.760
And it's essential for those who want to save the Republic. I don't care if you're Republican or Democrat.
00:03:33.760
If you want to save the life that we all live, you need to understand these two things.
00:03:39.760
And I'm going to show it to you in real time beginning in 60 seconds.
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All right, so there's a couple of things that you need to understand.
00:05:30.760
One of them is color revolution and how color revolutions work.
00:05:34.760
We've done several shows on this, especially around 2020.
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I'm not going to get into it today, but we will probably come back to that at some point.
00:05:44.760
Because there are what we are following, well-known plans to collapse a country into a new system.
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There's two theories that I want to talk to you about today.
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In case you've heard me say that and you don't know what it means, this is the playbook for fundamental transformation, okay?
00:06:14.760
Top-down, that's when the government is infiltrated by legal insurgents.
00:06:26.760
This is when the radicals become policy makers.
00:06:30.760
Now, here's why this is so dangerous the way our system is running right now.
00:06:36.760
We used to have protections against these things.
00:06:40.760
You would have to be voted in, and then you would have to, you know, pass radical bills.
00:06:47.760
And they used to have to do it by changing the names of the bill, the Patriot Act.
00:06:53.760
And it was effective, but it wasn't effective enough.
00:06:56.760
And so when the radicals got in, in Congress, it still didn't move things fast enough.
00:07:07.760
The agencies, the agencies, Department of Education, Department of Health and Housing, Department of, you know, the Interior, all of these things, the EPA, those are all appointed.
00:07:24.760
Now, when you are president, you come in and you have to appoint 4,000 people.
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But there's like hundreds of thousands of people that work for the government.
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But 4,000 every four years or every eight years.
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In those 4,000 positions, you can put radicals in there and nobody pays attention.
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Once they get control of the agencies, I want you to begin to watch the language carefully on what people are doing.
00:08:07.760
For instance, America was talking about a border deal, right?
00:08:13.760
America was talking and wanting Congress to pass a deal to shut the border down until we got a handle on it.
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That's not what the White House was talking about.
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And that's not what Chuck Schumer and others were talking about, including Mitch McConnell.
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They were talking about a comprehensive immigration package.
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It was about what are we going to do with the people who are here?
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Are we going to give them citizenship, et cetera, et cetera?
00:08:49.760
So just by changing the language, does that sound familiar?
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Just by changing the language, you think we're working on a border deal.
00:09:00.760
You know, we were going to close the border, but the Republicans, you know, scuttled it.
00:09:10.760
Yes, there were some things in there about the border that were unacceptable.
00:09:15.760
However, it's all the rest of the stuff that went with it.
00:09:21.760
Then you hear stories about, no longer do you hear, Congress has made a new law.
00:09:30.760
You hear, the such and such agency has released new guidelines.
00:09:42.760
They've put these people into radicals into positions where you don't know their name.
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And Congress has allowed them to release new guidelines, which in the old timey days were called making laws.
00:10:05.760
So you have the radicals that are doing all of this, and they are just pushing down and making things oppressive.
00:10:23.760
This is where the radicals in government work in parallel with the radicals on the streets.
00:10:30.760
Radical policy always butts up against the Constitution, and the Constitution is a roadblock.
00:10:37.760
But when the activists hit the streets, radical change is possible.
00:10:42.760
So that's why they keep saying, you know, this extreme Supreme Court, we've got to pack the court.
00:10:51.760
It's why they keep saying, you know, it's Christian nationalism.
00:10:56.760
We'll get into the other reason a few days later.
00:10:59.760
But that's why they keep saying these things to get people on the streets and make it okay for their radicals, BLM, Antifa, to rise up.
00:11:13.760
Then the radicals again at the top start to do things and change laws, not actually changing it, just releasing new guidelines that maybe cut down on our police.
00:11:26.760
Or you get radicals in the Attorney General's office or the DA, and they decide, you know what, we're not going to prosecute anymore.
00:11:40.760
The job of the Attorney General, the job of the DA is to enforce and try the laws.
00:11:50.760
What happens when they just change a guideline and say, yeah, we're not going to do that.
00:12:03.760
So they start making different guidelines and now crime is out of control.
00:12:09.760
They start spending money, but they're not spending it through Congress.
00:12:14.760
Congress is the place constitutionally where every bit of spending must start.
00:12:22.760
Otherwise, you're spending money that you don't have the right to spend.
00:12:29.760
How is it the President can just say, yeah, I just gave him another $20 billion?
00:12:45.760
And they're doing it time and time again, even against the Supreme Court.
00:12:50.760
So the bottom, top comes down, bottom comes up, and they hit the streets.
00:12:57.760
Because of the conflict there, remember, you're in the middle.
00:13:01.760
Because of the conflict there, all of a sudden, all of society turns inside out.
00:13:10.760
And what happens is, as it gets worse and worse and worse, you get more and more tired
00:13:18.760
until you just give up and say, somebody make it stop.
00:13:34.760
And that's when fundamental transformation is completed.
00:13:40.760
This is how the Soviets turned Czechoslovakia from capitalist to communist in three years in 1948.
00:13:48.760
Czechoslovakia was very against the Soviets, very against communism.
00:13:57.760
The treaty that we had at the end of the war was that the USSR could not just cross the border and take over more countries.
00:14:20.760
I find this so fascinating because it's really kind of the same with Satan, isn't it?
00:14:27.760
Well, I know it is, at least with Hocus Pocus and the witches.
00:14:40.760
The Soviet Union in cahoots with the communist in Czechoslovakia got a bunch of people elected radicals that were pretending to be not as radical.
00:14:55.760
Then they started to do exactly what's happening here.
00:15:00.760
The radicals could, you know, just change some guidelines and policies which allowed the radicals on the street to go unchecked like Antifa here.
00:15:13.760
It got so bad that finally the people said, somebody make it stop.
00:15:20.760
And they went to the government, not knowing that the government was now in cahoots with a different plan entirely.
00:15:28.760
And so the government said, you're right, we need to make this stop.
00:15:39.760
That's how they changed a capitalist country into a communist country in three years.
00:15:48.760
It's all in a book called and not a shot fired.
00:15:52.760
It was a member of the Czechoslovakian Communist Party revealed all of this.
00:16:01.760
But think about how the left has treated the organizations like Occupy Wall Street.
00:16:15.760
So nobody really questioned what happened to Occupy Wall Street.
00:16:22.760
Isn't it interesting that the end of Occupy Wall Street is the beginning of the huge corporate donations going to leftist causes?
00:16:35.760
Is it possible that a deal was brokered by Wall Street and giant businesses leave us alone and we'll contribute to your radical causes?
00:16:50.760
Can't prove that, but I bet it's probably a pretty good guess.
00:17:00.760
Next, when I come back, I want to talk to you about the intimidation that happens and then Cloward and Piven.
00:17:14.760
And then I will show you Cloward and Piven happening right now.
00:17:33.760
But you will see it in every aspect of this nation right now.
00:17:43.760
First, Cindy wrote in about a dog's experience with Rough Greens.
00:17:46.760
She said, my Roxy is a 14-year-old mini schnauzer.
00:17:50.760
For years, I had to get on the floor with her with the food to pretend I was eating it.
00:17:55.760
Now, I didn't do that, but I did hand feed Uno for a while.
00:18:07.760
Imagine being on the ground for 30 minutes trying to, you know, just pretend you're eating.
00:18:22.760
Anyway, she said, I heard about Rough Greens on your show.
00:18:25.760
Maybe that's a better approach than just the suck it up and eat.
00:18:31.760
It's a supplement developed by naturopathic Dr. Dennis Black.
00:18:36.760
I had kind of a similar problem as Cindy with Uno.
00:18:41.760
And he said, the doctor, Dennis Black, he said, Glenn, this will change your world.
00:18:49.760
And then it changed my dog's world because after I feed him this over a few weeks and months, I noticed a massive change in his health.
00:19:03.760
Rough Greens would like to send you a first trial bag for free.
00:19:31.760
In this book I was telling you about, Not a Shot Fired, they talk about how this worked.
00:19:40.760
This was an internal document finally found and released.
00:19:44.760
Quote, the bottom up, they systematically support the revolutions in the organs of power and enhances their strength and makes up for their numerical weaknesses.
00:20:02.760
That means the radicals in position in the government.
00:20:07.760
They make up for the lack of numbers and support on the street.
00:20:33.760
It creates the illusion that you're surrounded.
00:20:42.760
But for fundamental change to happen, they have to puff themselves up.
00:20:46.760
It has to appear that they have the will of the entire country.
00:20:51.760
This is why when we started the 912 project, I said, you are not alone.
00:21:02.760
Unless you travel the country and you go from town to town to town and you just talk to people, then you realize we're not that different.
00:21:16.760
If they can make you feel alone and they have the top and the bottom, that's when constitutions are changed.
00:21:27.760
Now, they need to do that through intimidation.
00:21:32.760
How many of us still feel comfortable expressing our First Amendment rights?
00:21:39.760
And not necessarily because of government, but indeed because of government.
00:21:48.760
We know through the Twitter files that the government is involved.
00:21:51.760
We know from whistleblower after whistleblower after whistleblower, the United States government and the Pentagon, our intelligence agencies and the intelligence and military agencies of five eyes are all working together to, quote, save democracy by quelling you, by making sure that you don't do what Brexit did or you don't do what Trump did.
00:22:26.760
If all of the countries in Europe want to go their own way, then what happens to the IMF?
00:22:38.760
You've got to have a military might that holds everybody to this economic system until it can be broken up and rescaled the way they want it.
00:22:57.760
Culture wars, discrediting churches, unions, universities, political parties, businesses.
00:23:22.760
Do you know how many problems we face in this country that could be solved overnight if we had a government that just used common sense, just everything they did?
00:23:48.760
And that's why companies like my Patriot Supply are so important.
00:23:52.760
We are headed for trouble, and I want you to be prepared.
00:24:03.760
I'm going to talk to the cyber expert here at the top of the hour.
00:24:07.760
There's been a big outage of most of the big cell phones services overnight.
00:24:13.760
They say it wasn't a cyber attack, but there was a big cyber attack that was happening in Israel yesterday, and it did come from Iran.
00:24:33.760
And you can check out Glenn's show from last night, blazetv.com slash Glenn.
00:24:50.760
I'm going to jam a lot of information in the next few minutes.
00:25:00.760
So, see, I'm going to try to make it easy for you to follow.
00:25:05.760
In the late 1960s, there was an article that was published in The Nation by two socialists named Richard Andrew Cloward and his wife, Frances Fox Piven.
00:25:16.760
The LBJ new state, the welfare state, had just been passed.
00:25:21.760
And so, the nation published this article from Cloward and Piven.
00:25:29.760
It was a strategy using the Saul Alinsky rule, make the enemy live up to their own book of rules.
00:25:40.760
So, Cloward and Piven decided, we can launch a campaign.
00:25:49.760
They launched a campaign to overwhelm and collapse the system through government welfare programs.
00:25:55.760
It involved, quote, a massive drive to recruit the poor onto the welfare rolls.
00:26:01.760
Under this strategy, welfare was a Trojan horse to make the entire system overwhelm and collapse.
00:26:09.760
The more people that got onto welfare, the state economy would buckle under the strain.
00:26:14.760
The welfare state was now being ordered from the top down.
00:26:20.760
And it could be led by, quote, demonstrations and cadres of aggressive organizers.
00:26:33.760
I pointed this out and everybody said, oh, she was just a little old grandmother.
00:26:40.760
But however, once I stopped talking about her in 2020, just before the election, the New York Times said,
00:26:49.760
Francis Fox Piven has become the intellectual guru of activist progressives.
00:26:58.760
It said, quote, she's trying to work with saying that working within the system is terribly misplaced.
00:27:07.760
Ms. Piven argues since it's rigged by the elites against the poor, what's needed is a sense of crisis that will force change.
00:27:27.760
By the way, do you remember the National Voter Registration Act of 1993?
00:27:41.760
It made it easier for voters to register, but difficult to determine validity.
00:27:45.760
Examiners were under orders not to ask anyone for identification or proof of citizenship.
00:27:51.760
And it started with the mailing of voter registrations, enabling anyone to register without personal contact with a registrar or an official.
00:28:01.760
OK, any of this sound like it's going to lead up to an overwhelming of the system because it has.
00:28:13.760
Cloward and Piven, they were looking at just a couple of things.
00:28:19.760
But this strategy now has been used all across the spectrum of American society.
00:28:24.760
Do you feel a little overwhelmed with everything that's going on with your schools?
00:28:28.760
Do you feel a little overwhelmed by what's being shoveled at you in the news?
00:28:34.760
Do you feel a little overwhelmed when you go to pay your rent, pay your bills at the end of the month?
00:28:40.760
Do you feel a little overwhelmed when you are looking at your job, your income, price of inflation?
00:28:47.760
Do you feel a little overwhelmed with your debt?
00:28:53.760
The U.S. national debt is now on pace to top $54 trillion in the next 10 years.
00:29:00.760
Everyone, including the optimistic Congressional Budget Office, says it's not sustainable.
00:29:14.760
Record number of Americans can no longer pay their rent.
00:29:22.760
You remember the Cloward's Piven strategy, push it to the brink, watch it collapse.
00:29:34.760
His administration has just issued new guidelines for Medicaid.
00:29:48.760
Medicaid now includes cover for rent, utility, and food.
00:29:59.760
I showed you record amounts of Americans can no longer pay for groceries and rent.
00:30:03.760
Now Medicaid's going to take all of that on and increase the debt.
00:30:09.760
Keep looking through this lens and reexamine what's happening at our border.
00:30:17.760
10 million Americans, or sorry, 10 million foreigners.
00:30:24.760
They equal the size of a state now that is bigger than 38 of the 50 states.
00:30:48.760
No, no, we don't even have to track them anymore.
00:30:52.760
Now, I want you to know 59% of non-citizen households that we know of, this includes illegals, are drawing on government welfare.
00:31:15.760
42% using Medicaid, which now includes rent and housing.
00:31:24.760
Now, let me just give you some of the headlines in the news.
00:31:28.760
With that in mind, Biden administration continues to ignore the Supreme Court ruling.
00:31:35.760
They just wiped out another $1.2 billion in student loan.
00:31:51.760
New York, quote, is absolutely overwhelmed by illegals.
00:32:02.760
Denver schools facing unprecedented challenges with influx of migrant students.
00:32:09.760
Interest on the national debt is now exceeding our entire defense budget.
00:32:18.760
Interest on the money we've borrowed is now a bigger payment than our entire war machine.
00:32:36.760
The showdown now between the Freedom Caucus and Republicans and Democrats give Johnson terms for a spending fight.
00:32:45.760
Radicalized conservatives say they've got to rein in spending.
00:32:49.760
Nobody's even willing to point out what I just said.
00:33:20.760
California Legislative Analyst Office Tuesday increased this year's projected state budget shortfall to $73 billion.
00:33:30.760
Now, remember, they just released this a couple of months ago and said, oh, it's not so bad.
00:33:37.760
Now they've doubled the debt for the year to $73 billion.
00:33:51.760
Well, the stock market's going up, but we're just not collecting enough taxes on that.
00:34:08.760
Money that hasn't yet been dispersed for wildfire resilience, flood control, and IT overhaul for the unemployment benefits system, which scammers pilfered tens of billions of dollars from it in the last four years.
00:34:35.760
But how about we study more transgender things for the schools?
00:34:40.760
Meanwhile, while that's going on, California Democrats are introducing a bill to divert the surplus funds to reparations.
00:34:58.760
Why would we be talking about reparations at this point?
00:35:07.760
Most Americans are now spending 11.3 of their income on food.
00:35:12.760
The last time that happened was during the Gulf War.
00:35:20.760
World Bank president said, when it comes to a country's over-indebtedness, the four most dangerous words are, this time it's different.
00:35:34.760
It's not only a single major country with troubling debt.
00:35:40.760
Each of the world's major economies has a serious debt problem caused by too many years of irresponsible budget policies and zero interest rates.
00:35:51.760
And it could make it all the more difficult to avoid a recession and renewed financial strain at home.
00:36:00.760
All Western countries are in our position, many of them worse.
00:36:12.760
Why have we given Ukraine more than it took in inflation-adjusted dollars than it took to rebuild Europe under the Marshall Plan?
00:36:35.760
This is why nothing will be done at the border.
00:36:38.760
This is why nothing will be done about mail-in ballots.
00:36:43.760
The excuse is, well, we don't have the results overnight like we used to because, well, all of the mail-in ballots and it's just a little overwhelmed.
00:36:57.760
I hope that helps you understand your world a little bit better.
00:37:04.760
Give a man a pair of slippers and he'll be a couch potato all day long.
00:37:11.760
But why give a pair of my slippers from my pillow?
00:37:15.760
Well, I'll tell you, in my life, I'm doing a radio show and I have to walk from the car into here.
00:37:28.760
I do get some of the interns to carry me at times.
00:37:35.760
The point is, honey, you can keep sending me slippers for gifts.
00:37:42.760
The MySlipper has great sale on right now, 50% off the MyPillow 2.0 or 50% off their new flannel sheets or their six pack towel sets going for $29.98.
00:37:52.760
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00:38:00.760
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00:38:09.760
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00:38:17.760
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00:38:29.760
Glenn's newsletter is free and full of useful info delivered every day right to your inbox.
00:38:55.760
As I pointed out yesterday, if you're watching the blaze, you can hear it if you're listening.
00:39:05.760
Meaning, ah, things are happening all the time that I've never seen before.
00:39:12.760
You know, you go through all of this overwhelming the system.
00:39:16.760
Isn't it amazing that we didn't have a fight in Congress over Medicaid now taking food and housing?
00:39:33.760
That's the way it's happening with everything now.
00:39:35.760
That is called a dictatorship or an administrative state, not a constitutional republic.
00:39:42.760
And the way they've done this incrementally, I mean, just look how it all works.
00:39:51.760
You take something like Medicaid that people agree, okay, you know, poor people need help
00:39:58.760
You're basically turning into a universal basic income.
00:40:00.760
I mean, the minimum wage is a great example of that.
00:40:04.760
But like, here's a policy that's really popular.
00:40:08.760
Generally speaking, people think the minimum wage should be higher because people are nice,
00:40:12.760
They're like, ah, people who don't make a lot of money should make a little bit more.
00:40:16.760
And so they adopt that and it has an 80% approval rating and they keep raising it and raising
00:40:22.760
When they first said $15 an hour, it seemed completely insane.
00:40:26.760
And I remember sitting in this room talking about it as insane.
00:40:32.760
We said to each other at the time, jokingly, why not just make it 50?
00:40:39.760
Now that, if you're working a 40 hour work week, that's $104,000 job.
00:40:47.760
One, if you have to pay all your minimum wage employees $100,000 a year, business owners
00:40:52.760
either quit or are making, they're taking away from the evil rich business owners and executives
00:41:00.760
Does that sound like a goal you've ever heard of before?
00:41:03.760
And you do that through a policy that has 80% approval rating instead of one that has 30%
00:41:10.760
And you do it through the administrative state.
00:41:11.760
And by the way, then you get Medicaid to also cover your housing and your food.
00:41:18.760
Because of course, when you raise the minimum wage like this, a lot of these minimum wage jobs
00:41:24.760
So then those people are now dependent on the government and-
00:41:32.760
And then you're basically at home just, you know, just doing drugs to get yourself through
00:41:36.760
They start just, you know, harvesting you for organs and it's the matrix.
00:42:01.760
Owning a dog is an awful lot of responsibility.
00:42:11.760
Piper's getting a little bit on the older side.
00:42:14.760
Uno can't walk down the stairs and the front door anymore.
00:42:20.760
But, you know, you just kind of give them the best life you can for as long as you can.
00:42:28.760
Look, I want my dog to live as long as possible, but I want him to feel good as well.
00:42:33.760
And I'm telling you, I really think he's lived longer and healthier.
00:42:37.760
I know it for a fact that any of our dogs, all of our dogs, you know, they're German Shepherds
00:42:46.760
And I really credit Rough Greens from Dr. Dennis Black.
00:42:51.760
Vitamins, minerals, probiotics, antioxidants, all the good stuff your dog needs.
00:42:56.760
You sprinkle it on their food and they love it.
00:43:04.760
You just pay for shipping for that first free trial bag.
00:43:41.760
Welcome to the fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
00:44:09.760
The eagle has landed on man and machine and the merging.
00:44:16.760
We'll talk about that and so much more in 60 seconds.
00:44:23.760
That is the question that you might have to ask quickly.
00:44:27.760
Believe it or not, in a lot of emergency situations where you need to protect yourself and your family, that is the question.
00:44:39.760
But you don't have a lot of choices available to you.
00:44:42.760
I have guns and I also have, well, I did before the tragic boating accident.
00:44:49.760
I got to call my sheriff's office and report that.
00:44:58.760
I mean, you've got this thing floating on water.
00:45:00.760
Things that are heading on water, I think sink.
00:45:02.760
I'm for global warming because I'd like that lake to drain out a little bit.
00:45:08.760
But anyway, the Berna launcher is something that I have.
00:45:14.760
And it is something that I gave to my wife and my son and my daughters.
00:45:23.760
It looks like a gun, but I have one daughter who just doesn't like guns at all.
00:45:32.760
It has tear gas and kinetic rounds that really hurt.
00:45:36.760
And the tear gas will incapacitate the would-be attacker for up to 40 minutes.
00:45:47.760
Berna.com slash Glenn, proudly made in America, manufactured in one of my favorite places,
00:46:00.760
So the website Down Detector detected a surge in outage reports from users at AT&T, Verizon,
00:46:07.760
T-Mobile, Customer Cellular, Boost Mobile, U.S. Cellular, and Straight Talk.
00:46:14.760
The reports of the system being down or outages began at 3.45 a.m. Eastern time.
00:46:24.760
The outages have been reported across many major U.S. cities.
00:46:34.760
They say they don't think this was a cyber attack, but how did all of them go down at the same time?
00:46:49.760
It was from Iran, the Israelis say, and it was an attack on their cell phone services.
00:46:56.760
So quite a coincidence, but let's not jump to any conclusions.
00:47:06.760
At some point soon, we will have cyber attacks, and it will leave you vulnerable if that's what you depend on.
00:47:17.760
We are becoming more and more a society that is connected in all things and absolutely incapable of doing any things without our electronics.
00:47:35.760
This is truly like landing a man on the moon, I think.
00:47:38.760
This is the first real merging of man and machine, I think.
00:47:48.760
I mean, we've had the electronic, you know, the bionic arms and things like that, but this is in your mind.
00:48:00.760
And it is really tempting because this is, you know, this will be great to some degree.
00:48:10.760
You'll be able to access information and have the whole internet in your head.
00:48:30.760
So that is now the beginnings of that happened and was announced yesterday.
00:48:37.760
Elon Musk said Neuralink is active in the first person to have one of the chips implanted in their brain.
00:48:45.760
They have seemingly made a full recovery, you know, so far.
00:48:51.760
We don't know what the effects of this are or will be.
00:48:56.760
But Musk said the patient can now move the mouse around a screen just by thinking.
00:49:16.760
And, you know, also, you look at the way Elon Musk does business.
00:49:20.760
This is a lot of what he does, which is a lot of kind of just let's try it.
00:49:25.760
Like there's a lot of like, hey, let's give it a whirl.
00:49:28.760
He said, I think, yesterday or earlier this week that he had plans by 2029 to have a million people on Mars.
00:49:38.760
And when I heard that, I thought there's no, oh, it's Elon Musk.
00:49:44.760
And then this is his goal with all of this stuff.
00:49:48.760
The, I mean, he has a, I think it's a t-shirt or something he wears that says Occupy Mars.
00:49:53.760
Like he, this is like the central idea of his life.
00:50:01.760
He believes that we are on such a dystopian track right now that because of global warming, but also because of AI.
00:50:10.760
He believes AI is just as dangerous as global warming.
00:50:15.760
He believes we cannot compete with AI unless we can merge with it.
00:50:25.760
Because it will be operating at such high speeds.
00:50:28.760
We don't have the processing capabilities for the speeds.
00:50:32.760
You know, it's kind of like, it's kind of like dogs, you know, dog life, seven years, one year for us.
00:50:38.760
Uh, it's like one year is like a thousand years for AI.
00:50:47.760
So he believes that we need to be able to merge with the machine until we can get off this planet.
00:50:55.760
I don't think he'll be taking Neuralink with him, or maybe he just thinks we won't have access to this AI on Mars.
00:51:05.760
Uh, but that's really what is, is driving him, driving his whole life.
00:51:11.760
It's really, really hard because I know it feels creepy and there are risks and, and, and all of that, but it's like, it's really, really hard to, to think about telling someone who's paralyzed that nah, we could, we could make you move, but we, we don't want to pursue that technology.
00:51:29.760
I mean, it's just, it's such incredible technology and, and for all of the other stuff that he's done, which is really impressive.
00:51:36.760
I mean, Elon Musk is an impressive dude, space travel, you know, uh, uh, the electric car stuff.
00:51:42.760
I mean, I don't care about the electric car stuff that much, but it's still really impressive what he's been able to do.
00:51:47.760
Everyone basically said you couldn't do it and no other company has been able to do it.
00:51:53.760
He's done so many incredible things, but if he was able to take, you know, people who, you know, with disabilities and, and all these, these issues that have been unsolvable throughout all the world.
00:52:05.760
And somehow figure out a way to, through Neuralink or something similar to solve that for all these people.
00:52:14.760
It's, it would be the greatest thing he ever accomplished by a long shot.
00:52:17.760
My daughter, Mary, um, you know, had brain surgery about three, four years ago.
00:52:28.760
Uh, earlier this year, I think it was in the summer.
00:52:32.760
Um, she started to have breakthrough seizures and they are even on medication.
00:52:38.760
Now they're grandma, they're, they're, they're just terrifying.
00:52:43.760
Um, and, uh, and I said to her, this is about four years ago.
00:52:48.760
I said, honey, if you wait, Elon Musk is doing experience with Neuralink.
00:52:55.760
And one of the things that Neuralink will do is it will, you know, patch all of the brain damage.
00:53:03.760
It will take where, when you have a stroke, it's like a highway.
00:53:07.760
And there's all these highways running to different parts of your brain.
00:53:14.760
So there are other paths to get to where it's going, but it makes it much slower.
00:53:20.760
And sometimes it can't just get to where it's supposed to go.
00:53:26.760
Um, and so Neuralink will connect the different parts of the brain back to each other and doesn't need roadway.
00:53:33.760
It's just Bluetooth to all the parts of the brain that it needs.
00:53:45.760
Dad, I think I'll wait because I know the savior will heal me even if it's just in the afterlife.
00:54:05.760
We have, what I've been talking about, the singularity, the merging of man and machine,
00:54:14.760
and also, what I've been talking about, this particular category for 30 years plus.
00:54:21.760
And I said, there's going to come a time, merging man and machine.
00:54:26.760
There's also going to come a time where you cannot believe your eyes or your ears.
00:54:41.760
Balty, uh, Bobby Altoff, apparently a very sexually explicit video, uh, of, she's a podcast person, uh, spread on X all day yesterday.
00:54:56.760
Uh, this was, they tried to get it down as fast as they can, but it was just populating everywhere.
00:55:03.760
And it's a complete deep fake, but you can't tell it's a deep fake.
00:55:13.760
Uh, and she had to come out and say this, I mean, violation of me, you know, this goes beyond violation of privacy.
00:55:32.760
Like the, like the Taylor Swift stuff that came out.
00:55:39.760
We are at the point to where you don't know what's real and what's not.
00:55:47.760
We are, in one of my early books, uh, where I talked about AI, um, I remember saying, don't fear the system.
00:56:03.760
Fear the programmers and the algorithms, because whatever you put into that algorithm, it becomes reality.
00:56:21.760
The Bard has become Gemini artificial intelligence.
00:56:25.760
So Google, the Gemini now can not only answer all of your questions, but it can also just type in and it'll create a scene for you.
00:56:35.760
Uh, apparently it has no problem producing images of black Native American and Asian people when prompted, but it refused to do so with white people.
00:56:48.760
I mean, I know this is serious, but it was also really funny.
00:56:52.760
Like if you request like, uh, what, give me a picture of a, an antebellum plantation owner.
00:56:59.760
And they would just, it would just be like an Asian and a Native American.
00:57:04.760
Like they couldn't fight, just could not bring itself to create white people.
00:57:08.760
You're asked to show a, a white person, George Washington.
00:57:12.760
Gemini said it could not fulfill the request because, and I'm quoting, it reinforces harmful stereotypes and generalizations about people based on their race.
00:57:24.760
Uh, you do the founders and it would come up that like all the founders would be all these different, different races.
00:57:29.760
Uh, it's important to remember that people of all races are individuals with unique experiences and perspectives.
00:57:35.760
Reduce, reducing them to a single image based on their skin color is an inaccurate statement and unfair.
00:57:46.760
I know our point is we shouldn't reduce people to their skin color.
00:57:50.760
You guys are constantly pushing that nonsense on us all the time.
00:57:55.760
Quote, when you ask for a picture of a white person, you're implicitly asking for an image that embodies a stereotyped view of whiteness.
00:58:04.760
This can be damaging both to individuals who don't fit those stereotypes and to a society as whole as it reinforces biased views.
00:58:16.760
So Fox followed this down the rabbit hole and Google replied immediately and took it down.
00:58:29.760
Like they obviously didn't intend for it to do this, but what they did put in there is bias is bias.
00:58:40.760
It's supposed to be much more subtle than it wound up turning out being.
00:58:44.760
And that's what they're going to go back and fix.
00:58:51.760
By the way, AI currently is going throughout all of the history of the world all over.
00:58:59.760
And it is subtly changing our documents, our history books and everything else, anything that's online.
00:59:06.760
If you don't have a paper copy of something, you're going to find yourself in your lifetime sooner rather than later going, well, no way.
00:59:36.760
Let me tell you about real estate agents I trust.
00:59:40.760
Your first thought was, how much can I get for it?
00:59:47.760
You're going to want an inspector to come and assess and, you know, what your house is worth and then what what you need to do before you put the house on the market, not to mention what could be done to improve the value of your house before you list.
01:00:03.760
And you can find them at the real estate agents I trust dot com.
01:00:09.760
This is my company dedicated 100 percent to pairing you up with a real estate agent that you can trust that has the answers, not just the questions or can find the answers for all of your questions.
01:00:26.760
And they're usually the top sellers in the market.
01:00:34.760
Go tell us where you're moving from and to whether across the street or across the country.
01:00:55.760
OK, so I'm I'm I'm I'm I'm not paralyzed by the future.
01:01:06.760
It's going to be interesting to see how all of this works out.
01:01:10.760
It really will be interesting to see how it plays out and scary.
01:01:13.760
But again, there was a back in the day there was an NFL.
01:01:18.760
I think it was an NFL athlete football player who I think was kind of known as being sort of liberal.
01:01:23.760
And it was in the one of these moments of the Chick-fil-A controversies were like they were trying to get people to to ban, you know, don't go to Chick-fil-A boycott Chick-fil-A.
01:01:34.760
And he posted a video of himself eating Chick-fil-A and everyone on social media called him out.
01:01:44.760
Like, sure, there's all these things I'm worried about, but the chickens do freaking good.
01:01:49.760
All of these things are going to fall into this category.
01:01:53.760
We can all say we're worried about all these things coming down the line.
01:02:01.760
Like if your entire life is lived with with no ability to move and all of a sudden you can move.
01:02:14.760
The bad part of it is if it can upload into you, and it's not here yet, but if it can upload into you, it can also download.
01:02:41.760
How will you know what you decided if somebody can pump it directly into your brain?
01:02:49.760
It's already tough just because of the way Google can.
01:02:52.760
Google can change your mind just by re-stacking the search results on the first page.
01:03:00.760
Change your mind on how you vote, and you don't even know it.
01:03:05.760
Imagine when you have that portal open all the time, and it can sense your dreams, read your dreams.
01:03:14.760
I mean, it would be cool if you have a dream and you could, you know, what did you dream last night?
01:03:28.760
Finally, hearing about other people's dreams might be interesting.
01:03:35.760
Also, you'd be a little terrified that some people could see your dreams.
01:03:40.760
Like, some of them, maybe you don't want people's...
01:03:54.760
You know, we used to always say, don't fear the corporation.
01:04:00.760
The left used to say, no, fear the corporation.
01:04:06.760
Fear the corporation that is in bed with the government.
01:04:14.760
I mean, he is under attack by the US government like crazy.
01:04:23.760
He's got lots of things that the government has to have from him.
01:04:35.760
He is the Einstein, or better yet, the Tesla of our time.
01:04:43.760
considering he went through all the trouble to name his company Tesla.
01:04:59.760
I've met people who have lived with debilitating pain.
01:05:06.760
I've met people who have turned to Relief Factor and it worked for.
01:05:22.760
I mean, you don't realize how valuable that is until you lose it.
01:05:26.760
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01:06:07.760
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01:06:12.760
Over 50,000 AT&T outages were reported officially at 7 a.m. Eastern time this morning.
01:06:33.760
Most issues were happening in Houston, Chicago, Dallas, Los Angeles, and Atlanta.
01:06:46.760
Looks like, well, looks like they're heading on the way back up and most of it is fixed.
01:06:54.760
But yesterday there was a cyber attack on the phone systems, the cellular systems in Israel.
01:07:00.760
And the Israelis are reporting that that was Iran that did that.
01:07:04.760
I think this is only a matter of time before we see stuff that will cause real problems.
01:07:11.760
There's a guy, John Acuff, he wrote today, tweeted, once you've read One Second After, cell phone outages carry a different weight.
01:07:26.760
If you've never read One Second After, I highly, highly recommend it.
01:07:34.760
And he tells a story about what happens one second after an EMP.
01:07:42.760
And it, I mean, you will, it will open your eyes into how dependent we are.
01:07:51.760
And at the time, I was like, oh, my gosh, I never even thought of that.
01:07:55.760
Yeah, that would no longer, you just don't think of it.
01:07:59.760
And William's with us now to talk about the outage and attacks on our infrastructure.
01:08:07.760
Good morning, Glenn, and thank you for the kind words about my book, Still Selling Strong.
01:08:14.760
So, William, the attack on cell phones, our cell phones go down.
01:08:22.760
And I think a lot of America, they go into detox immediately.
01:08:29.760
But this is something we don't know about today.
01:08:33.760
But this is something that we know our Department of Homeland Security is saying they are waiting for cyber attacks.
01:08:49.760
You know, Glenn, my college, Montreat College, has a strong cybersecurity training program.
01:08:55.760
And I'll go in their lab and just sit there sometimes.
01:09:02.760
Because if you saw the number of attacks, incoming attacks on our infrastructure, on our military, it's unrelenting.
01:09:12.760
We don't even know if some of them have broken through, put sleepers into them, and are waiting to hit.
01:09:22.760
So, tell me what you think is most likely and how it will affect us and how we should prepare for it.
01:09:32.760
Well, first of all, if our cell phones really went dead, my daughter would have a nervous breakdown.
01:09:46.760
That's unrelenting from Russia, any number of bad players.
01:09:54.760
Cyber attack could include our water system, our electrical grid, or do you think it would be all of it or some of it?
01:10:03.760
It could be targeted to a specific or in a general offensive, like what I would call a first strike scenario, a widespread.
01:10:14.760
Suppose water all across the board was shut down for 48 hours because that's all electronically controlled.
01:10:21.760
What would happen to your town in one day if all water was turned off?
01:10:33.760
I'm mainly focused more on our electrical infrastructure.
01:10:41.760
That's the bad one because if you lose electricity, that's the fundamental building block.
01:10:47.760
Then everything goes, water, food, medical, all of it.
01:10:57.760
I hate asking people questions like this who know.
01:11:12.760
In my talk with Southeast FEMA last week, there are a lot of good people working in that system.
01:11:24.760
And they say the number one thing is, if only Americans would be prepared, one month worth of emergency supplies on hand.
01:11:32.760
That applies to everybody, whether you're living in an apartment in the city.
01:11:53.760
Don't you want to be prepared before rather than after?
01:11:56.760
So if something like this happens, would we be, do you think we'd be in lockdown situation or would you be able to travel, you know, to?
01:12:07.760
If you lost your whole electrical grid, even just regionally, it would very quickly have to be a lockdown to avoid panic, try and keep control on population.
01:12:19.760
Those people living in New York, remember when Sandy hit 10 years ago, it got a little hairy there, even though tens of thousands of tons of emergency supplies were being moved in.
01:12:30.760
If it had gone for two weeks, it would have been very bad.
01:12:33.760
Yeah, my uncle used to work for, I don't know what department in the military, but he did some of the original studies on, you know, the after effects of war and crisis and everything else.
01:12:50.760
And he said, generally speaking, you have 72 hours.
01:12:53.760
If everything isn't restored in 72 hours, you're done.
01:13:03.760
Again, if you have everybody listening to, if you have a month's worth of emergency supplies on hand, it doesn't cost that much.
01:13:12.760
You can at least hunker down and be safe while the crazies are running up and down the street.
01:13:17.760
So if we had, you know, there's, it's, it's strange.
01:13:22.760
Um, you know, I, I thought EMP is the worst thing that could happen to us ever.
01:13:29.760
Um, however, the more I see AI and everything else, it may in the end, and I'm saying 50 years from now, if AI has gotten out of control and EMP might be our best friend, it will kill millions of people, but it would release a slavery.
01:13:45.760
If God forbid, you know, I'm in science fiction world here, but God forbid AI went, went bad.
01:13:51.760
I mean, it's the ones and zeros would have to be confused.
01:13:56.760
Well, the EMP scenario, which is indeed the worst, according to two congressional studies, which I based my novels on, I've got four books out on the subject, 80 to 90% of the population would be dead a year later.
01:14:10.760
And people go, what again, no food, no water, no medical supply, no command and control.
01:14:20.760
You know, when you, when I, when I read, this is years ago, one second after you, you know, you got to the 30 day mark and you started talking about what was coming, you know, in the next.
01:14:32.940
And I thought, oh my gosh, I've never even thought of that.
01:14:36.580
I mean, you're just, we're just not prepared even mentally to what would come.
01:14:45.340
When I started working on the book, I went, I interviewed numerous different sources.
01:14:51.020
I remember two in particular going to my chief of police, talking with him about, and I say, okay, the grid goes down.
01:14:59.800
He actually picked up the phone and then he said, oh, blank, my phones don't work.
01:15:06.040
The other interview was with the pharmacist at the end of one hour talking with her.
01:15:13.460
And I darn near was in tears as well, because think about your pharmacy.
01:15:18.180
You go in, you get a medication, they put it into a computer and a day later it comes back out or nursing homes.
01:15:28.280
The vast majority of people in nursing homes will be dead within a week.
01:15:36.540
And especially in today's world where we have so many people with technology that was not even around when you wrote the book or it was an infant stage.
01:15:47.140
And now, you know, we know these attacks are happening all the time.
01:15:53.100
We know there are many countries that would like to take us down.
01:15:57.240
And our Achilles heel, you know, is we don't live in caves.
01:16:02.420
And if you are going against a cave-dwelling nation, if they can knock out the electricity, we're dead.
01:16:17.520
Well, you know, in the EMP scenario, which I wrote about one second after, I had North Korea as the main player, most likely.
01:16:27.880
So, and it was pointed out, yeah, okay, they screwed us over.
01:16:35.120
And my main character at the end said, what difference does that make for us?
01:16:43.340
Yeah, a third world country like North Korea, the leadership will just go 2,000 feet underground.
01:17:00.060
Yeah, my girlfriend spends that on a regular basis.
01:17:04.460
But I don't know if she's ever said what my wife has said.
01:17:07.200
We've gone to a party one time, and she knocks on the door, and then she looks at me just before the doors open, and she went, do not make anyone cry.
01:17:27.620
One Second After is the name of the book, and he's got follow-ups after that.
01:17:41.100
And you'll think of things, and it will help you on.
01:17:45.040
It's why, really, honestly, I'm like, I got to get an X-ray machine.
01:17:53.700
Nothing works if this all would happen, unless it's, you know, protected.
01:18:06.700
Should be telling you about My Patriot Supply or the medical situation, Jace case.
01:18:11.760
Then you don't have to worry about, you know, pharmacy with Jace Medical.
01:18:16.160
But I want to talk to you about another survival point, and that is good ranchers.
01:18:25.380
We must have farmer communities and farmer's markets in our town.
01:18:30.500
The closer you can live to the food, the better off you will be if there's some sort of, and I don't mean like an EMP, not what Bill's writing.
01:18:41.400
Part of it is like, I just would rather be in New York.
01:18:44.200
And then you realize, nope, nope, not even in that situation.
01:18:47.040
Not even when you want to die, would you want to be in New York?
01:18:52.220
But anyway, good ranchers, they have all American beef, chicken, even their seafood.
01:18:59.580
All of it is 100% from American farms and ranches.
01:19:03.980
That is so critically important, because the government is doing everything they can to put these guys out of business.
01:19:10.620
Good ranchers, when you buy your meat from them, you pick your box.
01:19:14.080
You use the promo code BECK, and you'll save money, and then you know that your food is local.
01:19:22.220
It is coming from Good Ranchers, so it's here in America.
01:19:26.560
They have different boxes, weekly essentials box full of pre-trimmed beef and chicken.
01:19:32.720
Helps you with the meal prep so you can save time.
01:19:35.140
You're going to fall in love with beef and chicken and seafood all over again, and especially bacon.
01:19:41.580
Because if you use the promo code BECK, you're going to enjoy $240 worth of free bacon over the year.
01:20:19.160
President Biden has given First Dog Commander to relatives.
01:20:24.820
Now, this is a family that just loves each other.
01:20:31.240
Commander just wouldn't stop attacking people in the White House, including, ready for this?
01:20:40.080
One case in which the White House tour had to be suspended to mop up blood from the floor of the East Wing.
01:20:49.320
Now, I mean, if your dog bites you and it punctures the skin, you know, once maybe, does that to a stranger.
01:20:59.820
But if you're mopping up blood from, that dog should be destroyed.
01:21:13.200
If it was strained, I bet they got it from Czechoslovakia.
01:21:15.480
Because they beat those dogs to, to, to, oh yeah, they're, don't ever buy a German Shepherd from Czechoslovakia.
01:21:23.120
Not that you had, you can cross that, that's an easy one.
01:21:26.700
Well, especially because the country doesn't exist anymore.
01:21:28.900
So you need Czech Republic, I believe is what you'd be.
01:21:33.020
But, so, so this dog has bitten several people, including.
01:21:46.000
And it couldn't go, that dog couldn't go to a better family than the Biden family.
01:21:52.540
I mean, I, can we impeach the president instead of the president's dog?
01:22:05.320
We'll give him a nice little kennel, maybe in the back.
01:22:08.140
And let's just get rid of the president from the White House.
01:22:17.280
I think Joe kind of shuffling around a big field somewhere in a nice meadow would be a great way.
01:22:42.460
You know, we haven't talked at all about the Jim Biden controversy going on.
01:22:47.840
Which I'm going to spend some time on that on Studios America tonight.
01:22:53.600
They're like, oh, well, this shows that Joe Biden wasn't involved in the business practices.
01:22:59.860
We'll go into it tonight because it shows he was literally emailing people promising things from his brother about this giant health care company, which wound up collapsing.
01:23:11.260
But like you look at it, you're like the most wholesome thing that's ever happened in this family is Hunter Biden dating his dead brother's wife.
01:23:20.960
Like that's the most wholesome thing that's ever occurred.
01:23:24.660
And the most lovable member of the family is Commander, the German shepherd.
01:24:41.100
Well, they have a plan in the White House and it's a really well thought out plan.
01:24:51.940
Now, I don't know if you've ever heard of that.
01:24:59.400
In fact, we're going to share with you the audio of the person that's pitching it.
01:25:10.840
We'll share that with you here in just a second.
01:25:17.080
We have become a culture of death and it is getting worse.
01:25:20.660
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01:27:15.860
It's an entertaining story for the whole family.
01:27:21.860
So, uh, the two state solution, which is Israel living side by side, uh, with, um, uh, with Hamas is, you know, not something that you would think would really work.
01:27:38.600
Um, but no, the Biden administration has really thought this thing through.
01:27:48.000
I kind of thought maybe they really didn't put much thought into this.
01:28:01.420
Um, so this is a, uh, a, um, testimony, a testimony in Congress from a high ranking official.
01:28:16.000
Well, you did tell me we were doing the opposite here.
01:28:18.240
So I just, to, to clear it, I, I'm not prepared because you told me we're doing the exact opposite segment, which I was just setting up.
01:28:25.040
And then you've now reversed it to the thing we're supposed to do at the bottom of the hour.
01:28:33.640
The reason you're in the hall of fame is because I cover your mistakes.
01:28:41.900
So, uh, I don't know her name because I don't have the article up because we weren't supposed to do it for half an hour, but I want to play this clip.
01:28:47.880
It's a guy from, it's a, one of the congressmen from Republican from Florida.
01:28:51.860
And I, and he is asking, what is this two state solution?
01:28:56.360
And, and, and give me some details about how you've come to the solution that you, the idea that you want a two state solution.
01:29:14.880
Um, this is, this is something that we do support.
01:29:27.500
Cause you might think like, okay, she might be thinking, oh, well, obviously I've looked at it.
01:29:33.120
But like, it does appear that she doesn't know what the word objectively means.
01:29:38.400
And it does appear because she immediately throws the we into it.
01:29:43.040
I mean, it's no, it's something we, that she really wasn't part of the process of figuring this out.
01:29:52.360
Have you analyzed a second Palestinian state objectively?
01:30:03.880
You don't know what it means to objectively analyze something?
01:30:14.980
I mean, you might think at the beginning, no, she's got to know what objectively means.
01:30:23.180
Because I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm starting to swim in your path.
01:30:26.600
I want to make sure I'm not, I'm, we're being fair here.
01:30:28.800
I mean, I, yeah, I, I wanted to say she's dumb as a box of rocks on the outset, but I didn't
01:30:36.620
because I want to be fair and rocks may have been too high on the ladder at this point.
01:30:46.300
You might not be because I can't believe that you would answer it in that way.
01:30:51.320
You're here representing support for a Palestinian state, correct?
01:31:04.060
So I'm trying to understand what you're saying.
01:31:05.900
I thought I made it pretty simple, but you said no, but I'll grant you that now you said
01:31:12.100
So having looked at it objectively, which I would assume somebody in your position does,
01:31:17.220
who would you assess would lead that Palestinian state?
01:31:22.320
You can name a group, but I'm saying Hamas, Palestinian Authority, Palestinian Islam,
01:31:26.880
Islamic Jihad, Fatah, some other group, who would lead it?
01:31:30.460
I think that has to be something that's considered.
01:31:33.500
I don't think I'm in a position to say that right now.
01:31:34.780
Who did you objectively assess would lead it in determining you have support for a Palestinian
01:31:40.240
I don't want to, I don't think that I can answer that question.
01:31:43.120
I think this has, this is part of a larger discussion.
01:31:45.240
So you objectively assess that you support a Palestinian state.
01:31:49.360
In objectively assessing that, who do you assess would lead that state?
01:31:54.240
What group that does not receive military support from, say, Iran, do you assess would lead
01:32:06.120
But I think I would have to have a little, I would, I don't, I don't feel comfortable saying
01:32:10.240
Have you not assessed what group would lead it?
01:32:13.780
Have you, or have you not assessed who would become the leader of that Palestinian state?
01:32:17.420
This is part of, this is part of a larger discussion.
01:32:21.900
I, I have, this is a part of a larger discussion.
01:32:32.280
So this is the time to have the larger discussion.
01:32:40.380
Have you objectively, you know, looked at all of this and, and come to this conclusion?
01:32:48.900
Well, that's, well, here's, okay, here's what it means.
01:32:52.060
When you look at it, you're for the two state solution.
01:33:00.120
If you can't answer that, then you haven't even looked at the situation.
01:33:06.160
No, you don't even have the most basic understanding, which of course is what, what the situation we're in, right?
01:33:13.220
Like she doesn't have any idea what she's talking about here.
01:33:17.680
Now, Dave Rubin, who is the person I saw post this said, you know, we have an administration filled with, you know, senile people and diversity hires, right?
01:33:28.260
Like that's, and that's kind of what it seems like.
01:33:30.740
I don't think you have to be just diverse to be morons.
01:33:44.760
You might think, listen, listen to this and think, okay, well, look, this person has no, how, you just bring up some random official and ask them these detailed questions.
01:33:59.380
She is the U.S. Undersecretary of State for Arms Control and International Security.
01:34:07.320
That's the person who doesn't know what the word objectively means.
01:34:12.020
Again, the U.S. Undersecretary of State for Arms Control and International Security.
01:34:19.980
This is somebody who has deep knowledge and effect on U.S. policy in the most crucial aspects of our world.
01:34:36.700
Sir, whether you have or have not assessed who would lead the state.
01:34:39.480
I cannot answer a question, but I mean, particularly what I think what, what it should be.
01:34:45.160
You came here and said there should be a Palestinian state.
01:34:48.120
Have you or have you not assessed who would lead that?
01:34:53.800
Have you looked at who would lead it or have you not?
01:35:01.400
Have you or have you not assessed who would become the leader of that state?
01:35:08.140
I don't think she really knows what assessed means.
01:35:11.640
Stop again, because this is, this is an interesting part of this.
01:35:15.540
She obviously hasn't assessed this, nor does she know what the word assessment means or objectively.
01:35:24.800
I mean, objectively, I'm being so generous here.
01:35:29.720
Maybe you just are under the gun in the spotlight.
01:35:42.380
Have you thought about when you're thinking about this?
01:35:45.200
Who did you think would be like the people that took over?
01:35:48.680
Because, you know, you, you'd need to think that through.
01:35:51.400
It's like, if the president steps down, you have to ask the very next question.
01:35:57.340
You know, I want the, I want the president to step down.
01:36:07.640
Everybody automatically goes, yeah, you know, Kamala.
01:36:17.580
The most basic thing you need to do if you want to do something like this is to have a plan, right?
01:36:33.980
Does this testimony not explain all these situations?
01:36:37.000
So what I wanted to get to there, though, is, is, is Brian Mast could have done something
01:36:42.000
like who is going to lead this and stop, right?
01:36:46.980
Because she has, I would guess, absolutely no idea what any of the options are.
01:36:53.540
However, he goes a step further and gives her all of the main options that you might consider
01:37:18.540
I don't feel comfortable answering the question.
01:37:19.920
You don't feel comfortable saying if you have assessed something?
01:37:23.620
What I don't feel comfortable with is making a statement when I think it's part of a larger
01:37:33.600
Put it this way, there will be an assessment of this question within the U.S. government.
01:37:40.400
Why do you support it if you haven't assessed something you have not assessed?
01:37:43.860
I'm not in a position right now to say what that is because I think this is part of a larger
01:37:49.620
I think it goes back to your original statement, which was probably the correct one, that you
01:37:53.900
have not objectively looked at this and you got it right when you said that.
01:37:59.040
It's not a personal part of what the U.S. government wants to do.
01:38:01.000
You're supposed to be the part of the U.S. government that does that.
01:38:10.200
So do you assess that a Palestinian state would be more likely to be designated as a major
01:38:18.000
non-NATO ally like Israel or Egypt, or would you assess that they would have to be labeled
01:38:27.680
These are questions that I'm not in a position to answer.
01:38:31.360
I'm asking if you are in the position to answer if you have assessed whether that would
01:38:39.820
You came here sitting before Congress saying you are here representing the idea that there
01:38:47.380
You said you looked at it objectively, which you probably didn't.
01:38:53.660
So you can answer whether you assessed something or not.
01:38:56.260
What I can answer is this is part of a discussion that I don't think that I should be making
01:39:11.780
Why do you think that we should make a country out of a people that just conducted a Jewish
01:39:27.180
Can I have time to repeat the question for her, Mr. Chairman?
01:39:36.780
So the question, to repeat it since you said you don't understand it.
01:39:41.040
Why do you want to make a country of a people that just conducted a Jewish genocide?
01:39:51.000
I'm not going to respond to a question about that.
01:39:55.600
I don't feel like I want to answer your question.
01:39:59.380
But I just don't feel like I'm in the position right now that I can answer those type of questions.
01:40:04.980
This is a question that's going to be just, this is a question for the U.S. government.
01:40:10.380
You are the U.S. undersecretary of state for arms control and international security.
01:40:34.600
And, you know, you watch her and she seems nice.
01:40:42.660
She just has absolutely no idea what they're talking about and yet is representing the U.S.
01:40:48.600
Now, I've got a bigger question about that when we come back.
01:41:04.140
The cultural divide in America is widening along moral lines.
01:41:08.000
And if you have feet planted on both sides, it's not going to work for you.
01:41:15.140
You have to choose where the choice will be made for you.
01:41:23.180
How easy is it to switch to a mobile company that rivals the big companies in service but costs a whole less.
01:41:31.960
Or do you not feel comfortable in answering that?
01:41:41.580
You have affordable plans for your budget, excellent coverage, top-notch, U.S.-based customer service,
01:41:48.800
and the money that they make, it goes to help us win the fight against those.
01:42:08.360
Right now, there's a Media Matters person going, he said those people.
01:42:31.020
By the way, we now think we know what caused the outage of so much cell service overnight,
01:42:41.360
and that is a solar flare brought the network down for a while.
01:42:55.820
Something that you should absolutely be concerned about.
01:42:59.600
Solar flares can do great damage, and we're kind of probably due for one.
01:43:15.740
Has served as the Undersecretary for Arms Control and International Security since July 22nd,
01:43:23.060
As Undersecretary, she leads three bureaus, the Arms Control Compliance and Verification
01:43:33.700
And Non-Proliferation Bureau and the Political Military Affairs Bureau.
01:43:39.700
In addition, as of May 2023, Secretary of State Antony Blinken, named Undersecretary Jenkins
01:43:45.020
as the senior official to lead the department's effort on AUKUS implementation, U.S. Jenkins...
01:43:53.780
Well, see, maybe she knows a lot about AUKUS, something I don't know.
01:43:57.900
If they said, what is your stance on AUKUS, I'd say I don't feel qualified to...
01:44:06.000
Maybe she was just coming out of surgery and she wasn't clear-minded.
01:44:11.640
Maybe she had back pain and was taking, you know, some prescription medication that made
01:44:18.900
I would like to find out if the superior of her, the person that said, um, you go.
01:44:32.000
If they thought that was a good idea, the stupidity keeps going up a level, okay?
01:44:44.000
I mean, again, unless she was like, I forgot I had some early morning surgery and I was
01:45:02.920
Who thought she was the one to go in front of Congress?
01:45:13.220
These are the people making decisions for us, America.
01:45:15.440
If you're hoping that any day now the federal government is, uh, you know, going to right
01:45:20.840
the ship in the economy, remember that testimony.
01:45:37.840
You can do, uh, you can get out of your 401k and stocks and everything else and transfer
01:45:44.220
it over and put it into, uh, an IRA on gold or silver.
01:45:54.380
Give Lear a call today and ask for their free wealth protection guides.
01:45:58.020
Because if you think that those people in Washington are going to protect your wealth,
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You'll get 30% off your subscription to Blaze TV.
01:46:33.760
If you just joined us, you missed another horse on the highway, something that I've never
01:46:49.200
Uh, and, uh, and it was the undersecretary of state for arms control and international
01:47:00.600
Now, um, when you say undersecretary, I thought, you know, I mean, I'm like, yeah, but you're
01:47:11.720
It's like the, the Dwight Schrute, uh, assistant to the regional manager.
01:47:21.180
Who's been promoting her routinely in her, in her reign here.
01:47:26.420
Um, but you mentioned, uh, I don't know, she might not be a diversity hire.
01:47:30.160
I mean, I guess you give some evidence that maybe she was, again, she seems like super
01:47:34.560
Like I, she does, she does seem nice, but let me give you bad for, let me give you, uh,
01:47:41.400
And you tell me if this sounds like a diversity hire for me, I'm hoping that I can be a role
01:47:45.760
model to other young women who also want to achieve a lot.
01:47:49.340
They could look at me and say, if she did it, I could do it too.
01:48:00.980
Any, all people are capable of having this job.
01:48:05.320
Now, just remember, it's this philosophy that has our airlines hiring people based on who
01:48:12.140
they are and lowering the score, uh, of people.
01:48:16.540
So you don't, if you're a diversity hire, you don't have to have all of the high marks
01:48:27.720
This, and arguably with the exception of you being on a specific plane, this might be a
01:48:40.360
Do you tell me if she's talking about diversity?
01:48:42.080
There's so much going on right now with the emerging technologies.
01:48:45.200
We talk about artificial intelligence or quantum computing.
01:48:48.900
What I want to see is women who are leading in these areas.
01:48:52.460
I want to see women who break the barriers on these very interesting and challenging
01:48:59.240
Ever since growing up in the Bronx of New York, I've always had an interest in public
01:49:03.100
I always say, I never know where it came from, but I always wanted to do something and work
01:49:09.940
The best advice I was told is that to not take on other people's burdens, other people's
01:49:18.320
To let that stay where it is and not to take it on and make it something that I internalize.
01:49:23.580
So she wants women to have jobs in AI, not because they're better or-
01:49:31.600
She's very, very interested in AI for what, what, where do you stand on AI?
01:49:38.000
Well, she hasn't objectively assessed that at this time.
01:49:41.060
And also she doesn't, her biggest lesson she's learned is that she shouldn't take on the
01:49:56.100
No, I'm just pointing out that maybe people should know what the word objectively means
01:50:01.800
Well, sounded like a fatwa to me and I know America heard the same thing.
01:50:06.620
Maybe we should spend some time in a new storybook that I'm reading.
01:50:24.160
I have one where it's all of the books in one, but it's a great story.
01:50:42.900
They just put all of these short little books together.
01:50:46.740
And you go to the 23rd chapter of Let's Get Out of Here.
01:50:55.840
And I just want you to hear, this is where the big guy in the story, you kind of don't know
01:51:04.360
I haven't read it all the way to the end, so I don't know if they reveal this.
01:51:09.940
And I will tell you, I was shocked because it's so relevant in this story, 10% goes to
01:51:19.880
Like, so maybe this is a, I don't know if this is a pro-Biden book or what.
01:51:26.720
So, in the 23rd chapter of Let's Get Out of Here, do not spread false reports.
01:51:39.420
I think this is Mo writing down something he heard from this mysterious guy.
01:51:44.540
Don't help a guilty person by being a malicious witness.
01:51:55.800
That's weird because there are currently a bunch of people following the crowd, you
01:52:05.740
Maybe, like, don't follow the crowd when they're doing stupid stuff.
01:52:12.880
When you give testimony in a lawsuit, don't pervert justice by siding with the crowd.
01:52:18.380
So, that would be, like, this is such good, helpful stuff.
01:52:23.960
Like, if you were going, let's say you hated Trump, you know, and, you know, you would
01:52:29.620
go in and you would pervert justice by siding with the crowd because, you know, everybody
01:52:37.600
Don't show favoritism to a poor person in a lawsuit.
01:52:45.260
If you come across your enemy's ox or donkeys, there's a lot of oxen talk in this book.
01:52:51.140
That's one of the things I don't like because I'm like, can you, I mean, who has an ox
01:53:04.500
Anyway, you come across your enemy's ox or donkey wandering off, which donkeys usually
01:53:13.200
If you see the donkey of someone who hates you falling down under its load, don't leave
01:53:32.920
Don't put an innocent or honest person to death.
01:53:44.120
No, I have read this, and that's why I'm telling...
01:54:08.820
I feel like I've seen that book somewhere, like in a hotel or something.
01:54:17.760
Don't oppress a foreigner, Mr. I-want-to-close-the-boreign.
01:54:20.940
You, you yourself knows what it feels like to be a foreigner because you were a foreigner
01:54:28.400
I've never been to Egypt, so I don't know what he's talking about.
01:54:36.560
I guess Mo, in his book of fun, relevant stories, really had this down.
01:54:41.560
It's some interesting life advice you could pull from that, I think.
01:54:45.700
I'm not saying, you know, I don't want to become a zealot on this book, you know, or
01:54:51.640
a collection of these books, but I found a lot of good advice in it.
01:55:03.900
When, you know, lucky for me, none of my enemies have an ox or donkey.
01:55:11.280
So are you saying that that testimony was the ox or donkey falling over and I just walked
01:55:20.660
I thought my- I was at least helping everyone know this person needs help with their ox and
01:55:28.500
I don't have the power to lift the ox or donkey myself, but we should be aware that this
01:55:32.560
person has an issue with the ox or donkey falling over.
01:55:39.060
If you would have said, you know, I want to play something for you, it's somebody who
01:55:45.160
I wouldn't call him an enemy, but their ass is in a ditch here.
01:55:58.560
There's- so in this second- the second book, I haven't finished it yet, the second part
01:56:03.180
of this book, it has the subtitle, I can't wait to get there.
01:56:17.580
Because the second one is, hey, let's get out of here.
01:56:35.220
I'm curious if it's that one, because that one-
01:56:50.420
Yeah, it's like, I got a bunch of rules and stuff for you.
01:56:56.420
I've got a bunch of rules that you should probably keep in mind.
01:56:59.740
And then, uh, the fifth book is, uh, I don't know what's the fifth book.
01:57:27.280
So, anyway, uh, just thought I'd share that with you.
01:57:31.420
It's a, it's a very, uh, yeah, I bet people, like, I don't know.
01:57:34.340
I mean, you know, it's a, it's a, there's a lot of competing, there's Netflix, there's
01:57:40.720
There's murder, there's sex, there's destruction, there's happy points.
01:57:45.600
And I bet you might be able to pull lessons that make your life better out of a book-like.
01:57:53.980
You don't think you could learn things that could make your life a little better?
01:58:10.260
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02:00:19.200
Recent video, Kamala Harris is telling a reporter that she's ready.
02:00:28.380
What do you say to those concerns, specifically if he had to pass the powers to you for one second, one minute?
02:00:32.740
Heaven forbid, you know, I ask with all due respect.
02:00:36.980
Are you ready to step into the role and do whatever the country would need?
02:00:41.160
But, thank God, our president is in good shape, in good health, and is ready to lead in our second term.
02:00:50.200
I mean, that's the right answer, though, right?
02:00:54.260
I mean, I, you know, I can get on Kamala for a lot of things, but, like, that's, uh...
02:00:59.240
Yeah, you should answer it, of course I could, but we won't need it.
02:01:06.080
I mean, maybe you lead with, we won't need it, but of course I could in that situation.
02:01:10.400
She seemed to lead with the, of course I could.
02:01:19.260
Well, when you have the undersecretary, you know, state helping you make decisions.
02:01:23.420
And, like, you know, we were just saying that she might be a diversity hire, and to
02:01:29.900
We do know it about Kamala Harris, though, because in advance, he said he was going to
02:01:35.240
So we know for a fact this person was chosen because of her diverse skin color and gender.
02:01:42.520
Her lady parts were her lead characteristic for this job.
02:01:48.920
I've heard somebody say, you know, Trump's going to do a diversity hire.
02:01:51.340
I don't think he, I don't think he thinks that way.
02:01:54.420
I think he does think politically, you know, what would be advantageous.
02:02:00.160
You know, but if you look at the people he is, he said yesterday that he's, you know,
02:02:04.740
considering the Santas came out and said, well, take me off the list.
02:02:08.400
Yeah, he says, and it was a private call, too, right?
02:02:11.540
It was, you know, of course everybody says, yeah, I'm not interested in that, at least when
02:02:17.600
Vivek's response was quite different, let's put it that way.
02:02:26.400
Would you even be wanting that type of responsibility?
02:02:33.800
Yeah, so I'm not going to go into this out of respect to, you know, President Trump and
02:02:37.620
his ability to lead, going to go into our, in any conversations or anything like that.
02:02:40.680
But I will say this is, there's many ways to drive change in this country.
02:02:48.320
I think that there are many important positions.
02:02:50.680
And so my commitment is, I'm going to do whatever I can maximally do to have a positive
02:02:56.640
impact on this country and respect the decision that Donald Trump makes and how he wants to
02:03:02.580
And whatever form that takes, I'm ready for it.
02:03:05.680
Which is a totally fine answer, but also like someone who's interested in the VP slot.
02:03:15.140
As long as it makes some impact, I think he was saying there, you know, I'm not going
02:03:24.880
People are always trying to read the tea leaves on Trump, but like, he'll let you know.
02:03:30.180
He'll let you know when he's made the decision.
02:03:34.100
I think she's definitely one of the high competitors there.