00:04:36.380So I'm going to try to keep it as brief as possible here and give you the overview and hit the important points of what has occurred during the trial of Infowars, the lawsuit, the bankruptcy, which is really just the latest and to them, they hope, the last step in a mini-step process of attempts to destroy Alex Jones.
00:04:58.860It did not start with the lawsuit. It actually started a lot earlier than that. And this all ties into the story that we're going to tell here of the way in which extremely powerful forces can come together, work behind the scenes, and work to illegitimately and illegally, in my opinion, destroy a successful and completely upfront company.
00:05:24.080And I guess I should say, just on the offset, this is all my opinion, and I'm not a legal
00:05:28.940expert by any means, and what I say here is in no way representative of NXR, the organization,
00:06:20.380Alex Jones created a new company called the Alex Jones Network that he doesn't own because he's not allowed to own anything.
00:06:26.440And so we're still broadcasting at AlexJonesLive.com, and you can still find Alex Jones there.
00:06:32.280And so really the ultimate conclusion of all of this is that if you are persistent, if you fight back, if you resist the corruption and continue to tell the truth, regardless of who likes it and who doesn't,
00:06:43.620The American people will have your back, and you will be able to defeat this level of oppression and repression and abuse by the system.
00:06:52.540It's actually a hopeful story. It's actually a story of resilience and resolute continuation of something, despite the most powerful forces in the world trying to get Alex Jones to stop.
00:07:05.100he just won't stop. And there's a lesson in that for all of us. And there's a lesson that
00:07:10.040people like Alex Jones, organizations like InfoWars or NXR Studios need to be supported
00:07:17.160by the people because there is no institutional support for any of us. And we will be crushed if
00:07:24.740we aren't aware of the game that we're playing and the ways that the rules change. So just in
00:07:31.880case you don't know, Alex Jones is a media personality. He is a reporter and a filmmaker
00:07:37.160and a radio host that first started around 1994 hosting on cable access. So when you
00:07:44.820talk about Alex Jones, you're talking about, honest to God, the classic American story
00:07:50.560of a regular guy, just like anybody else, just deciding on his own volition, I need
00:07:56.700to do something, I want to make something, I want to build something, I have a story
00:07:59.700to tell, accessing, you know, things that are available to him and to everybody, going to the
00:08:06.140library, looking stuff up, going to the cable access channel and signing up for a time slot
00:08:12.040and being so compelling and so interesting and so correct that it spirals to become something that
00:08:18.320has literally altered the course of human history. And I think you'll see that as we go through the
00:08:23.480story. So in 1994, Alex Jones begins hosting on public access in Austin, Texas, talking about
00:08:29.060conspiracy theories, anti-government commentary, civil liberties were a big focus as well. And in
00:08:35.320fact, we have a video from around 2002. This would have been, you know, actually almost a decade into
00:08:41.300Alex's career, but this gives you a good idea of his style, his worldview, and his presentation
00:08:48.600style, what made him so compelling. And you'll hear in this, what he's talking about is nowadays
00:08:53.340widely and you know almost completely acknowledged the fact that there are these hidden forces behind
00:09:01.320the scenes that are working to maybe not everybody would say enslave humanity but certainly we all
00:09:07.100recognize they don't have our best interest in mind and again the world that exists today in
00:09:13.6002026 is so vastly different than the world that existed when this clip was made in 2002
00:09:18.520And it's different in no small part because of Alex Jones hammering this message out and enough people receiving it, hearing it, recognizing the truth in it, and then acting on it, acting on this truth, protesting, going out, getting involved, running for office, exposing this stuff, writing their own books or making their own movies, that nowadays this is widely acknowledged.
00:09:40.500But back in the day, this was, I mean, this got you kicked out of dinner parties.
00:09:44.360This was not something that normal, polite, respectable people talked about.
00:09:49.400And thank goodness we're in a world now where we can talk about this stuff openly.
00:09:52.720We can recognize the threats that we're under.
00:09:55.220We can acknowledge the conspiracies that seem to dictate so much of our world.
00:09:59.260But here's Alex Jones in 2002 on cable access in Austin, Texas, showing you the revelation, the ideology that would come to dominate modern politics.
00:18:47.900So moving forward from 94 to 95, he gets on the radio.
00:18:52.360He actually starts to become extremely popular.
00:18:54.340He's on something like 300 plus radios by the time he launches InfoWars in 1999.
00:19:00.660So Infowars in 1999 becomes a website, and this once again represents sort of Alex Jones being on the forefront of these new technologies that allow the mass dispersal of information.
00:19:16.220So before the internet, and again, I hate saying stuff like this.
00:19:20.320I always hate when in podcasts people are like, you know, this was a time before cell phones, so they couldn't just call each other.
00:19:25.140I hate when people do that, but I'm going to do it here.
00:19:26.320there was a time before the internet kids and when the internet before the internet existed
00:19:32.600you had basically three or four big channels you had a couple of big publishers but information
00:19:39.180itself was highly controlled and highly selective and once again you see the way that the powers
00:19:46.040that be let me explain something really quick what Alex Jones talks about what we talk about
00:19:52.680on InfoWars, what we talk about here at NXR Studios. It is a global cabal of people who are
00:19:59.240extremely capable of pulling off some extremely evil deeds. And often you look at what they've
00:20:05.600been able to accomplish and what they can get away with, and it almost imbues them with like
00:20:09.900a magical quality. Like, oh my gosh, they must be superhuman. These must be demons in disguise
00:20:15.840because how can they pull the wool over everybody's eyes so effectively? Or how can nobody see this
00:20:22.160such, you know, such an obvious thing. Is there some sort of spiritual power being wielded over
00:20:27.340these people? And there likely is. I mean, I'm a Christian. I believe in spiritual power. I don't
00:20:32.000discount that. But at the same time, you have to recognize these people are human beings. They
00:20:36.700have to contend with human will. They can't do whatever they want, whenever they want. And when
00:20:41.160you fight back, if you fight back smart and you fight back hard, they will fail or they'll have
00:20:46.680to change their tactics to deal with a new situation. And that's an important thing to
00:20:50.720remember not to get blackpilled, not to think, oh my god, these people are so powerful. We better
00:20:55.040surrender because they'll kill us if we don't. That's not the case. You can stand up to these
00:20:59.580people. You can force these people to show their hand or to change their tactics because what they
00:21:04.700were doing is stopped by what you're doing. So as the internet opens up and suddenly the flow
00:21:12.680of information is available to everybody, they've had to change tactics to deal with that. Before,
00:21:17.840when there were only three channels and two publishers,
00:21:21.640then the way you would crush a story is by ignoring it, right?
00:21:26.040Maybe, you know, you have a story and somebody goes to their local news station
00:21:29.080and maybe the local news station runs it so everybody in Milwaukee hears about it.
00:21:33.260But for it to get to a national audience,
00:21:35.700that, you know, cable package has to then be picked up by a national syndicate
00:21:40.060who will then spread it to the rest of the nation.
00:21:42.860And if they want to crush a story in its crib,
00:21:45.600if they want it not to get anywhere except for Milwaukee,
00:21:47.840they just ignore it. They just pretend it doesn't exist. They don't cover it. Nobody, you know, in
00:21:53.320America is any of the wiser. Maybe people in Milwaukee know about it. Maybe they spread it
00:21:56.820word of mouth, but it doesn't really go anywhere. It certainly doesn't pick up the, you know,
00:22:01.640steam that it needs to actually become a national story that changes politics or has an effect on
00:22:06.860the world. That was before. That was when they had control of the information flow. Then the
00:22:11.500internet comes around. Suddenly everybody can get information to anybody extremely effectively and
00:22:16.940with little to no overhead and so that tactic no longer works they can no longer just ignore you
00:22:23.300now they have to actually provide a counter argument so before where if it was a big story
00:22:28.400they could ignore it and it would sort of fizzle out and go away now they have to actually
00:22:32.900proactively either try to discredit that story or they have to come up with a different story
00:22:38.640to distract everybody with this has been a fundamental change in the way that the media
00:22:44.120interacts with the people. And it's been a change for the positive. They can no longer simply ignore
00:22:49.840stories that they want to go away. Ignoring them doesn't work. And so they've had to change their
00:22:54.900tactics. And you'll see that throughout this timeline, how they've had to routinely change
00:22:59.980tactics, because once again, they're human beings, and they have to contend with human will. They do
00:23:03.840not have superpowers. They are not omniscient. They cannot snap their fingers and have humanity
00:23:08.980jump. They have to get your agreement. They have to get your complicity if they want to do
00:23:13.700something to you. It's an important thing to remember. And it's a message that Alex Jones
00:23:16.600has championed the entire time he's been on the air. So we'll speed up a little bit here because
00:23:20.9402001 was a big breakout year for Alex. Obviously he was one of the first ever to say that we do
00:23:27.320not have the full story about what happened on September 11th, 2001. 9-11 is an inside job. That
00:23:33.200was sort of the catchphrase that he popularized. And whether you believe it was an inside job or
00:23:38.220believe that maybe we just don't have the full story of how everything happened, I think right
00:23:43.440now, if you were to go and hold an honest poll to the American people, I think more than half of
00:23:48.540them would agree that we don't have the full story about 9-11. There's something missing there. Now
00:23:54.560again, in 2002, 2003, probably up to like 2009 or so, if you in public said you don't believe the
00:24:02.340story of 9-11, you were ostracized. You were a freak. I mean, you were like, you know, kicked0.98
00:24:06.620out of polite society. You weren't allowed to believe that. But something has changed. Something
00:24:11.080has changed where now that's not only an acceptable view, I think it's probably the
00:24:15.440majority view. Maybe not that 9-11 was an inside job, but certainly that there are elements to it
00:24:21.340that we were lied about and that it was used to pursue goals that had nothing to do with the
00:24:25.680actual attack itself. This is another phenomenon that it's worth paying attention to and recognizing
00:24:30.920that it wasn't one major documentary. It wasn't a book that came out. It wasn't a revelation of
00:24:35.800leaked documents and suddenly everybody around the world went, oh my gosh, we got the wrong story
00:24:39.880about 9-11. It's a slow drip form of revelation that happens incrementally and that is sort of
00:24:48.300quiet in the background. You never know when exactly it happens. There's no hard line where
00:24:52.760you can say before this, nobody believed it, after it, everybody believed it. It just sort of happens
00:24:57.460and eventually you look around and you go, wait, everybody gets it now? It seems like everybody I
00:25:02.300talk to understands that there are hidden worlds that are being kept from us. It's really an
00:25:08.740amazing process that we've seen take place and again it represents a really a massive victory
00:25:15.940for those of us in the alternative media but it was not a popular stance to have and so
00:25:20.980again you see a pattern of Alex Jones being right about stuff being right to question things
00:25:26.380bucking the trend of the mainstream media and yet persisting and and being attacked he was actually
00:25:34.080kicked off of almost all of the radio stations he was on he went from 300 down to under 100 i believe
00:25:39.860and had to slowly build his way back up but it shows you once again that if you're operating
00:25:44.620off the truth if you're not being deceitful if you're being honest and forthright and you know
00:25:50.240people know that they'll support you and even when they try to destroy you or threaten to
00:25:55.120take you off every radio station you've got to persist and it'll work out for you as long as
00:26:01.180again, you're right and accurate and honest, things tend to work out. And it's a lesson that
00:26:06.780Alex Jones has taught us over and over. Terms like false flag, terms like inside job, these
00:26:14.920phrases now are regular parlance. Everybody knows what they mean. Alex Jones really was the guy who
00:26:20.960popularized all of these phrases and let people know about tactics that the elite used to keep
00:26:28.040people in control or to manipulate their opinion one way or another, manufacture consent for wars
00:26:34.340overseas. These things are extremely important. They dictate what the American people are willing
00:26:39.280to put up with, willing to go along with, and willing to co-sign. It's all about the information
00:26:44.380war. And again, that's why the name Infowars was so accurate. Now, through all this time,
00:26:50.020Alex Jones is making documentaries. He's on cable access. He's on radio. He's selling DVDs and
00:26:56.900t-shirts and building up his company. And all through, basically, from 2007 through 2015 or so,
00:27:03.740InfoWars becomes the biggest independent news outlet in the world, dominating on social media,
00:27:10.020changing the conversation in a lot of different ways. And yet, he was still sort of treated as
00:27:17.220a sideshow. He was still sort of mocked as this conspiracy theorist. People think he talks about
00:27:22.300aliens and bigfoot and he was sort of sidelined and not taken very seriously now on one hand you
00:27:28.520might be upset by that if you're alex jones because he's very serious about what he's talking
00:27:32.180about he's not talking about woo woo sci-fi you know tinfoil hat stuff he's talking about
00:27:37.460the way politics really works and the agreements that are really made between countries
00:27:42.260in secrecy because their people wouldn't agree to it the overarching plan which is obviously in0.92
00:27:48.760motion to destroy the fundamental fabric of our society through racial replacement and0.95
00:30:44.120This was a mass murder by the United States government, burning American citizens and
00:30:49.020children alive in their own home because they refused to give up their guns.
00:30:53.400Alex Jones was very much in the center of that and fighting back against the false mainstream narrative about this being a cult and pointing out, no, this was an overreach by the United States government.
00:31:04.960This was a massacre of innocent people.
00:31:12.380Back then, that was a very dangerous position to hold, and yet he held it and was on the forefront.
00:31:16.880And even now, the Waco show that was extremely popular a few years ago on Netflix, that was adopted from a book by a man named Thibodeau, David Thibodeau, I believe.
00:31:28.860And if you go watch videos of Thibodeau shortly after the Waco massacre occurred, he referenced, he says, you know, there's this guy, Alex Jones, that's really leading the charge and helping us to rebuild the church.
00:31:37.880that type of stuff you know really solidified that Alex Jones was willing to go out on a limb
00:31:43.160and talk about stuff even if it was hugely unpopular and a risk to his own career if he
00:31:48.020knew it was true and knew what he was standing up for was the rights of innocent people so again
00:31:52.740you can talk about Waco you can talk about 9-11 being absolutely massive for him you can talk
00:31:57.280about like all these different instances that represent sort of hallmarks or tent poles in
00:32:03.100alex jones's career i wouldn't mention sandy hook it wouldn't be a main tentpole of alex jones's
00:32:09.840career if you were looking at it objectively from a time before the bankruptcy and and again i did
00:32:16.200i didn't frame it to do this but just if you go to ai or something just say give me a timeline of
00:32:21.940alex jones's career it'll give you you know major points of his career it'll mention waco it'll
00:32:27.020mention 9-11 it'll mention alex jones going on piers morgan in 2013 and getting an argument with
00:32:32.540him. That was all sort of down the road from Sandy Hook. But Sandy Hook didn't represent a
00:32:37.200major thing that Alex Jones was the face of, that it was his, you know, topic that he talked about.
00:32:43.240It just would have fit in with a whole bunch of other conspiracies that Alex Jones talked about
00:32:47.960every day on his show. There was nothing particularly special about it. There was
00:32:52.500nothing that made Alex Jones, you know, central to the Sandy Hook narrative. It just would have
00:32:57.780been another thing that he talked about for a few minutes during one or two shows and then moved on
00:33:03.000to the next topic, which is important to understand because now if you talk about Alex Jones, he's the
00:33:08.680Sandy Hook guy, right? I mean, that's what he's known as. That's why his company was destroyed
00:33:12.400because he, and the way that they portray it, the story that they told was that he just for years on
00:33:17.580end was harassing the Sandy Hook survivors and would endlessly talk about this. They were begging
00:33:22.960him to stop and he would never stop. That was never the case. That was simply never the case,
00:33:27.100which is really at the heart of all of this is understanding that if you look in the mainstream
00:33:32.340media, the perspective you get is not just inaccurate. It is deliberately falsified.
00:33:40.680Alex Jones was not the Sandy Hook guy. It wasn't his major thing. And he wasn't the one who like
00:33:46.260led the charge and came up with all the stuff about it. He had people on, he had guests on
00:33:51.300who were popular at the time. Because again, if you weren't a conspiracy theorist at the time,
00:33:55.060I can understand why if you're reading accounts of it from the mainstream media, you would think
00:33:59.860maybe Alex Jones was like the progenitor of this conspiracy theory. He simply wasn't. And as
00:34:05.460somebody who was paying attention at the time, Sandy Hook became a conspiracy on the level of
00:34:10.440like JFK, 9-11, I'm the Titanic. Like it was a major topic of conversation. And Alex Jones was
00:34:19.220by no means, I don't even think he was one of the top 20 people talking about it. Their entire
00:34:24.460documentaries, multiple, like I can probably think of five two-hour documentaries, each one that has
00:34:29.820at least 10 contributors to it, Alex Jones is not one of them, okay? And so the perspective that Alex
00:34:36.340Jones was the Sandy Hook guy, that is something that has been laid onto him ex post facto, after
00:34:42.860the fact, later on when they wanted to smear him as the Sandy Hook guy, and this ties into the
00:34:49.140censorship that's about to come about that I'll tell you about in just a second so in 2015 he was
00:34:57.740still sort of under the radar he had talked about Sandy Hook but it wasn't a big deal he wasn't
00:35:01.560associated with Sandy Hook by any means not to the wider public certainly and not even to the people
00:35:06.780who studied Sandy Hook sure you might talk about it but it wasn't his thing there was Wolfgang
00:35:11.160Halbig and all these other people that get brought up in the trial and elsewhere who were actually
00:35:16.220the ones you know pushing forward this theory that was again one of the most popular theories
00:35:21.180on the internet at the time so you know for Alex Jones the number one conspiracy theory guy in the
00:35:27.200world to talk about Sandy Hook for a few minutes here a few minutes there it was nothing out of
00:35:31.380the ordinary and it certainly wasn't something that you know was seen as a major concern for
00:35:36.840Alex something that he was hyper focused on and you know doing the work to drive forward it was
00:35:41.760something other people were doing and that he would occasionally report on again that's important
00:35:46.120to understand because the real motivation behind the lawsuit, the real motivation behind
00:35:53.580the bankruptcy was almost entirely political, entirely.
00:35:58.580And there's a very easy way to know this.
00:36:02.300And that is that it wasn't until literally one week after Donald Trump got elected that
00:36:09.600You saw the first stories in the mainstream media relating Alex Jones to Sandy Hook, and they related Alex Jones to Sandy Hook and Donald Trump to Alex Jones.
00:36:20.360This was all about the fact that the people in power, those with the money and desire to enslave all of us, they didn't realize how powerful Alex had become, and Donald Trump's victory was a surprise to them.
00:36:35.640and they landed on Alex Jones as the reason that they were losing.
00:36:41.480And I'm going to go to the second clip here because this is a video I made on Infowars
00:36:46.700where I show that you can use Google News Search to actually identify the exact moment
00:36:53.220that the powers that be decided we're going to take down Alex Jones
00:36:56.700and we're going to use Sandy Hook to do it.
00:37:54.380For years and years, that was never a thing.
00:37:57.680It's all absurd, but that's just my personal view.
00:37:59.800so again you can do this search yourself you can search this yourself i just gave you
00:38:06.160instructions how to do it you can see that really you know it wasn't it wasn't sandy hook and alex
00:38:10.920jones that wasn't an association anybody made until one week after when there's an article
00:38:16.240tying them together and then one day after that you have the first family member of a sandy hook
00:38:21.120victim basically saying hey something needs to be done about this you know this alex jones guy has
00:38:26.360been you know victimizing my family and then you see the ball start rolling that eventually ends in
00:38:31.340the uh in the trial and the and the bankruptcy and everything and in fact there's there's more
00:38:38.600to this and this is it was a wider conspiracy than just Alex Jones uh and I'll I'll ask I'll
00:38:45.300provide the crew uh after this an image that we'll overlay here but you can actually see if
00:38:50.460you search google trends for the term fake news fake news was a a slogan engineered created by0.98
00:38:59.360the hillary clinton campaign that they originally intended to use thinking they were going to win0.99
00:39:05.080the election they were planning to use the term fake news to drive a censorship program
00:39:09.860with president hillary clinton because they launched it right about the time that the election
00:39:14.560happened but you know it wasn't a reaction to here's why we lost although that's what it became
00:39:20.880it was they were always going to intend to crush independent media under President Hillary Clinton
00:39:28.360they expected her to win and they expected to use this fake news rallying cry to crush people like
00:39:33.040Alex Jones and anybody that spread the WikiLeaks or spread her stolen emails all of this stuff that
00:39:39.500was accurate information that was revealed by hackers or wiki leaks or seth rich or whoever
00:39:45.160else uh that was a major you know problem for her and her campaign and they wanted to really put in
00:39:52.040the the strictures in place necessary to stop that type of information from coming out in the future
00:39:57.820and so long story short they invent this term fake news and it is a literal vertical line on google
00:40:04.120trends nobody says fake news i mean it's like a little bump maybe those words are combined sometimes
00:40:08.800But as a concept, it goes straight up exactly on the day of the election in 2016
00:40:17.260And then, of course, Donald Trump comes out and says
00:40:19.740You are fake news and sort of co-ops the slogan for himself
00:40:22.280And it becomes a saying that Donald Trump was saying about the mainstream media
00:40:26.260But originally, the fake news slogan was something pushed by Hillary Clinton
00:40:30.480To explain her loss and that originally she was intending to use
00:40:34.820After having won to crush independent media
00:40:37.040But they came up with this phrase, fake news, to then explain Hillary Clinton's loss and try to demonize independent media, and all of this was a part of this knee-jerk, frantic reaction from the establishment.
00:40:50.060having lost the election in 2016, they were out for blood, and they wanted to make sure it never
00:40:55.200happened again, and they decided it was independent media who, telling the truth without the guard
00:41:01.080rails of the mainstream, that allowed an independent, uncontrolled candidate to actually
00:41:07.400take the reins. And so, once again, this isn't about Alex Jones. It's not about Infowars. You
00:41:11.400don't have to believe what he says about Sandy Hook or 9-11 or anything to understand that this
00:41:16.340a powerful political structure defending itself against independent, unaligned, or truthful
00:41:26.560And not only the fact that it's an outlet that can get information out there and that
00:41:30.020can get attention to topics that they would rather ignore, but that Alex Jones built a
00:41:35.700company and a media outlet totally independent, totally on his own, totally funded by the
00:41:41.740the audience that he had through his store, the Infowars store, to go toe-to-toe with the big
00:41:47.420guys, which is another reason that they are so hyper-focused on Alex Jones, because they want
00:41:52.820to use him as an example to teach a lesson to the rest of us. You think you can go up against us?
00:41:57.560You think you can make a little studio in your backyard? You think you can burn DVDs and sell
00:42:02.640them out of the back of a van and build that into a major media empire? Not if we have anything to
00:42:07.800say about it right you try that will destroy your life that's what they're trying to tell people by
00:42:12.180destroying alex jones so you got to understand even if you don't like the guy you got to recognize
00:42:17.220how he's being used as a weapon against our rights and our ability to stand up against an entrenched
00:42:22.860and corrupt establishment and so you got to stand up for him on principle you got to fight back
00:42:29.220against this uh ridiculous oppression that is so fundamentally un-american and un-christian0.97
00:42:35.220and untruthful and designed exclusively for our enslavement and again i can prove this0.93
00:42:41.980they said this actually they said this quite a bit that the point of the bankruptcy was to shut down
00:42:47.740alex's box right his his the the box that he stands the soap box that he stands on and want
00:42:54.020to kick it out from under him and burn it right they want to destroy his platform they want to
00:42:59.560destroy his ability to talk freely. That's what this is about. It's a total abuse of the legal
00:43:06.480process, which ostensibly should be there just to have, you know, monetary remunerations because of
00:43:15.260a lie that was told. It's been totally abused, and I'll show you clips that illustrate that here
00:43:20.420in just a second. But it was that 2016 victory that suddenly the powers that be were looking
00:43:30.200around for who stole from them, who stole this election from them, and how do they guarantee it
00:43:36.020never happens again. And they didn't start with the bankruptcy. They didn't start with the
00:43:39.960lawsuits. In fact, they started with deplatforming. The deplatforming began around 2017,
00:43:45.540but it really accelerated in 2018 and Alex Jones served as the first major figure kicked off of
00:43:53.940every major platform within a period of a few days he was kicked off of Spotify and YouTube
00:43:59.640and Apple and the Google App Store and you know Twitter X and Instagram and I mean it goes on and
00:44:07.460on all of them kicked him off on the same day X or Twitter at the time was a few days later but
00:44:12.600you know they got him to under some other claim right they some people said oh well it's about
00:44:17.940threats and other people said oh well it's because he's spreading misinformation and fake news and
00:44:23.000then you know x said well you one time you filmed yourself calling oliver darcy saying that he looked
00:44:29.040like a possum that crawled out of a you know carcass of a cow uh so it was bull so we're
00:44:34.980going to cancel you for bullying it doesn't matter what they say it doesn't matter what excuse they
00:44:38.340The truth is, he was a political threat. Alex Jones is a political threat. He wields the ability to sway huge swaths of the population, and he does so without instruction from above. That makes him dangerous, so he must be destroyed.
00:44:53.460So cancel him for bullying, cancel him for this, cancel it. It doesn't matter what they say. What's really motivating them is that he represents a break in their security, a chink in their armor, a vulnerability that can and will destroy them if it's not dealt with.
00:45:10.920So they tried, with all their might, to deal with it by carrying out this public execution of a man in public.1.00
00:45:28.200I mean, I believe Infowars is making something like $30,000 a month on YouTube alone.
00:45:35.240So, I mean, they really cut off the cash flow in a very significant way.
00:45:40.680But Alex Jones knew this was going to happen. He had prepared for this to happen. He actually had a store set up to take advantage of the fact that as far gone as America is at this point, we still, by necessity, we have a core of capitalism where if you have something to sell and somebody else wants to buy it, there's not a lot people can do to interrupt.
00:46:01.200I mean, if it's not an illegal product, then you've got to be able to make a living.
00:46:49.840And because of the support of the American people and because of the Streisand effect of kicking Alex Jones off, we not only survived, but actually grew out of it.
00:47:11.220I mean, they probably thought that because it was a major move and it was a risk for them.
00:47:16.480I mean, they sort of had to show their hands by doing that, right?
00:47:19.040They sort of had to expose that they were willing to collaborate with all these different industries to get them all aligned on destroying somebody.
00:47:28.920If more people, as they should have, had stood up against what had happened, they could have caused a major backlash, and they did to some degree.
00:47:35.940But you can just imagine how successful they thought they were in getting Alex Jones kicked off.
00:47:45.840They were not able to destroy InfoWars or the movement or Alex Jones, and so they moved to the next phase.
00:47:51.200They moved to the next phase, which is the lawfare.
00:47:54.900This case, again, I cannot elucidate to you the number of absurdities about this case.
00:48:02.240For one thing, the fact that they blame basically all of the Sandy Hook conspiracies on Alex Jones.
00:48:08.040That is ridiculous to absolutely anybody that has even a passing familiarity with the Sandy Hook conspiracy as it developed from 2012 to 2026.0.74
00:48:18.840To claim that Alex Jones was the leader, was the progenitor, was the source of this conspiracy is ridiculous, absurd, and completely non-factual.0.78
00:48:29.120But how are you going to know that?0.68
00:52:22.520And they testified that I won't settle, I won't give him a billion and a half dollars I don't have, and I'm a liar, and no one wants to shut me down, so shut him down immediately.
00:52:32.480Have you ever been gaslit? Because you're the people being lied to.
00:52:37.680And I got all the other videos of Matty and them saying, we know he's criminal, we're going to find all the hidden money, we're going to find the offshore accounts, and none of it was there.
00:52:46.260A tiny lake house, 127 acres, and my main house.
00:52:50.100And I sold my big expensive house that I made a really good move on for $2 million, sold it for $7 million two years ago, and put it all into this operation.
00:56:42.980So there you can see in their own words to the jury themselves saying, take his microphone away, silence him.
00:56:49.520This is what it was really about, which is why it should concern every American that they were able to do this.
00:56:55.780And then the more you look into it, the way in which they did this, the first person to actually start bringing together plaintiffs to do this lawsuit was an FBI agent who worked behind the scenes to gather this up and who Alex Jones never mentioned.
00:57:12.560This is another aspect of it. Typically in defamation, certainly in Texas, where one of the cases was, you have to actually say the person's name.
00:57:20.400That's why people go, well, you know, a certain guy of a certain persuasion did this, because if you don't actually say their name, it can't actually be defamation.
00:57:29.400There's this FBI agent who Alex Jones had never heard of, who Alex Jones had never mentioned, who some other person had, I guess, harassed this FBI agent.
00:57:36.960the FBI agent figured out this person had been on Alex Jones' show one time, and so he decides it's
00:57:42.000Alex Jones' fault that he's being harassed and goes after him. I mean, all of it is like this.
00:57:46.220It's all absurd, and the fact that an FBI agent that Alex Jones never mentioned, didn't know who
00:57:51.120he was, and never heard of, never had any contact with, launches a defamation suit that ends in a
00:57:55.820$1.5 billion judgment, it's absurd. So how did it get to that $1.5 billion judgment?
00:58:03.000well it was a default judgment if you don't know what a default judgment is it's supposed to be
00:58:09.220it's sort of an extreme reaction it's a sanction from the court that's supposed to be reserved for
00:58:15.060people who basically ignore the court entirely right it's most often used in like divorce cases
00:58:20.200or child custody cases where the dad's a deadbeat dad that just you can't get a hold of him you know
00:58:25.700they'll sue the person the guy never responds never shows up to court never defends himself
00:58:29.980and they go, all right, well, I guess I'm siding in the side of the plaintiff
00:58:33.200because what are you going to do if you can't compel the guy to respond?
00:59:50.220he literally was prevented from doing things like
00:59:52.720referencing the first amendment on the stand
00:59:54.880not able to reference the politicians like Hillary Clinton
00:59:59.680that were involved in this lawsuit in one form or another
01:00:03.300and by the way these lawsuits were being conducted
01:00:06.260by the biggest Democrat law firms in the entire world0.99
01:00:11.620including Hillary Clinton's personal law firm
01:00:15.180and a law firm that Donald Trump issued an executive order against
01:00:18.940because they had committed malfeasance against him
01:00:21.940and that they had to agree to perform, you know, $40 million worth of pro bono work for Donald Trump to avoid being sanctioned by the government.
01:00:30.820It's this same law firm doing the same thing to Alex Jones that they did to Donald Trump, even significantly worse.
01:00:38.500But, you know, still, these are the types of people we're talking about.
01:00:41.640This was a political attack against a political enemy.
01:00:46.700It's another clip from me on InfoWars, clip number four, talking about and showing you that you can research this yourself.
01:00:53.580Go ask AI. Why was Alex Jones given a default judgment? Let's watch.
01:00:57.580This, according to Grok, is why we received a default judgment. We're not allowed to defend ourselves.
01:01:03.020Jones was ordered in 2019 and 2020 to produce financial records, web analytics like Google Analytics and marketing data showing how InfoWars profited from Sandy Hook content.
01:01:11.960They wanted us to provide them evidence that we were guilty.
01:01:16.320By mid-2021, he turned over only sanitized or partial records, e.g. fragmented sales figures with no context about Sandy Hook-related revenue.
01:01:24.920Well, we don't have context about Sandy Hook-related revenue.
01:01:33.720They don't go to the store other times.
01:01:34.760It just has no bearing on what we cover, how we cover it.
01:01:38.060For instance, in a June 2021 hearing, they argued he hadn't disclosed contacts or communications with advertisers tied to Sandy Hook broadcasts.
01:06:02.600And you would think the solution to that would be, hey, you collaborated with this guy and offered – because basically the Onion offered $1.4 million.
01:06:09.440The people that were aligned with Alex offered $3-something million.
01:06:12.920And they went with the Onion people, which is less money.
01:11:50.940In the study, when it says that it's difficult to overstate Alex Jones' role in spreading anti-government conspiracy theories, is it consistent with your research and work in this case?
01:12:07.700Um, when, when scholars are looking at, at different producers of media online, I mean,
01:12:15.020there's, there's a range of factors that we'll look at, but I would say that two of the most
01:12:20.440important ones are analyzing the content itself. So what is this person saying? What ideas are they
01:12:25.660promoting? Um, and another equally important aspect is what is the size of their audience or
01:12:31.340even beyond their poor audience? What's the size of their reach? Um, and in terms of combining a
01:12:37.500types of disinformation that alex jones promotes and the size and scale of his audience um i can't
01:12:45.420think of another person working in media who is is comparable to him he's unparalleled in terms
01:12:52.840of that combination so that's the reason they wanted to take him out and that's the reason you
01:12:58.000have to stand up for your first amendment and again i'm not here as a spokesman for info wars
01:13:03.160right now, I'm just trying to relate to you what has actually occurred over the last couple of
01:13:09.040years in what I consider to be probably the most important free speech case in American history,
01:13:14.620and one of the most educational cases, one of the most informative cases you could ever study
01:13:20.920to find out the methods by which the current American legal system can be manipulated to
01:13:26.460dishonest and oppressive ends so it's it's so important that we support people that are out
01:13:33.360there fighting the good fight and recognize that you gotta fight them you know though you know
01:13:39.980maybe you lose maybe at the end of the day they win info wars is shut down but you know what you
01:13:44.300do you launch the alex jones network the next day you keep fighting or you just cling on with your
01:13:49.920teeth and your fingernails and you just say if you're going to take me down it's going to be a
01:13:53.640fight. If you're going to come after me, it's not going to be easy. You may win at the end of the
01:13:59.160day. You may take us down, but we sure as hell aren't going to go easy, and we aren't going to
01:14:03.660be intimidated by your faux confidence that you control everything. We know you don't. We know
01:14:09.580you're just human beings. We know you're fallen like the rest of us, and we know you can be
01:14:13.520defeated, and you can be defeated easily because we have this secret weapon called the truth
01:14:18.600on our side. So again, this has been a very different episode than we'll normally do with
01:14:25.140Off Limits News next week. I'll be back here with a stack of stories that have occurred in the
01:14:30.540next seven days now, but we'll do a weekend review, top stories. We'll go through whatever
01:14:36.320the latest news is, the hottest stories, the most missed, under-reported stories out there.
01:14:41.940But I really want to thank Joel for suggesting as the first episode sort of a comprehensive view of the case against Alex Jones in Infowars as it is such an important series of events for people in America to understand.
01:14:58.840And it also shows that this is what NXR Studios is going to be up against.
01:15:07.040NXR Studios, of course, I just love the underlying ideology.
01:15:12.860I love the message that they're sending out.