Bill Meyer Show Podcast - Sponsored by Clouser Drilling www.ClouserDrilling.com - 01-09-25_THURSDAY_8AM

Episode Date: January 9, 2025

Capt. Bill Simpson from the Wild Horse Fire Brigade, getting love from the Epoch Times...says the herbivores can help fight the CA style blazes. Diana Anderson talks the globalist agenda in our cities..., event is Friday 6pm at Central Point Library.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 The Bill Myers Show podcast is sponsored by Clouser Drilling. They've been leading the way in Southern Oregon well drilling for over 50 years. Find out more about them at clouserdrilling.com. K-2-9-4-A-S Ashland. 13 after 8, Captain William B. Simpson in the house. Of course, he's calling from the horse house over there in Northern California at his bunker, Wild Horse Fire Brigade. Captain Bill, good to have you on.
Starting point is 00:00:25 Good morning, Bill, and happy New Year. Happy New Year to you, too. Boy, I got to tell you, Epic Times has been showing you some love here as of late. This is pretty interesting stuff. I'm reading in Epic Times. I'm a subscriber. It says,
Starting point is 00:00:39 Wild horses can help prevent wildfires, advocates say. Horses don't tear out the roots of plants while grazing, unlike cattle and sheep, says Simpson. By the way, how long ago was that picture taken? It's a beautiful photo with you and the horses and the lookout at the Iron Gate. How long ago was that, do you know? Yeah, okay, so there's one with me standing in a field of grass, not looking at horses. The photographer from Epoch News did that. And then the one with me looking over the horses in the lake was taken just before they drained the lake.
Starting point is 00:01:14 Okay, I was wondering about that because I'm seeing there's still an Iron Gate Lake there. Yeah, and that's one of Michelle's great photos. We have our new calendar just got delivered late, and it's amazing photos of the area and our heritage horses up here. It's a beautiful photo. I'm kind of curious, though. What would that shot look like now? I know we haven't talked to you much about the Klamath Lake,
Starting point is 00:01:39 or what used to be Klamath, rather, Klamath River Dam System. Now they're all gone. Is it still just looking pretty much like, I'm just kind of curious if all the water that has been coming down, all the rain's been scouring out all those clays and sediments because, you know, the happy reporting is still going on. Even Time Magazine, they're talking about, oh, the fish are up here and they're spawning now. And I don't know what to think about that because it just looks a little too contrived. But I could be wrong. What do you think?
Starting point is 00:02:07 Yeah, there's a ribbon of water. I mean, you know, we have seven miles of view of the river. We probably have the best view of the entire river, anywhere up and down the whole river. There's a ribbon of water, but on both sides of it is black clay mud, so it's contrasted by this black uh you know mud and uh and then um up in the shoreline of course above the old shoreline where the lake was you've got a little bit of green it's re-greening now because of the rain but there's a lot of sediment going down the river um all the um one of the tributaries that i'm particularly interested in is pretty near our ranch here. It's about an eighth mile away, and that's Jetty Creek.
Starting point is 00:02:48 And I filmed with a drone, you know, a couple dozen spawner salmon. Nobody knows how they got there. There's debate on whether they came over the highway or up the river. So that's a whole separate thing. But the areas where they spawn are now covered over with silt so those eggs are dead so if they did if they did spawn in that uh piece of uh of creek between copco road and the river it's probably about a quarter mile of of jenny creek where they were spawning that i saw um it's covered over now those eggs are done that's what i was wondering and because you
Starting point is 00:03:23 just because the fish, the magic fish came back to the spawning grounds doesn't mean that there's a healthy spawning ground for them to reproduce, right? That's really what we're talking about. Yeah, correct. And in fact, Jenny Creek has changed its course. They had a pre-planned course for that creek and well, Mother Nature said, nope, we're not going there. And now there's actually three. It's branched off, I think, in three spots last time I looked. But that was before the last big storm. So it's hard to tell what's going on with that now. So, yeah, there is, you know, I mean, these guys aren't following the science. They're not doing real science.
Starting point is 00:03:57 And we're paying for, you know, as you would say, an excrement show here. Good science talks about what went wrong and what went right. And then you move forward from that with those lessons. These guys want to skip over what went wrong and just talk about what went right. Yeah. I mean, there was a reason, Bill, that the original plan talked about dredging out all that sediment for the reason that we saw. OK, now. And the reason it wasn't done was that it was insanely expensive. And so they just decided to do it on the cheap. And I find it fascinating that, you know, that they got to do, that they were permitted to do what would get you or me or anybody listening thrown in jail or fined out of existence if we did this to a river or a lake someplace.
Starting point is 00:04:43 Right. You know, just dumping the stuff. I, you know, I put some of the blame on our county supervisors because they were late to engage in battle, you know, with lawfare. They came to the table too late with too little. And, you know, and this is how, unfortunately and sadly in our county, we see a lot of leadership from behind. Now, anybody that's been a leader of a successful company, not a bureaucrat, not an employee, but somebody, an entrepreneur who knows what it takes to lead and win,
Starting point is 00:05:18 because in the competitive market, there is no crown for second place. I mean, you run the race. If you win, you get the crown. You don't get a crown for running in the race. You don't get a crown for being a spectator of the race. You get a crown for winning the race. And so we're funding failure with our taxes because every time we see this leadership from behind, it's too little too late. And, you know, I mean, we could have come out with a PR campaign. I started talking
Starting point is 00:05:47 to the county about launching a massive national media campaign back in about 2016. I've got emails with Ray Haupt and people. And by the way, Ray Haupt made a silly comment in Epoch Times that cows and horses don't eat trees. I mean, you know, that's kind of insulting to the intelligence of his constituents and to ranchers. Cows, you know, and it's a good thing that cows and horses don't eat trees because guess what, Ray? 66% of all wildfires, according to the latest university studies and InstaWeb, are grass and brush instigated and fueled fire so it's a real good thing that cows and horses don't eat trees because the biggest part of our problem two-thirds of all fires are grass and brush like in los angeles well yeah grass and brush now you're writing a piece out there and i'll uh put it up there it's okay uh you're making the claim that
Starting point is 00:06:41 la grass and brush fires could have been prevented. I don't know. I don't know. In a 60 to 80 to 100 mile an hour windstorm, I don't know if much of anything could have helped that. But what is your evidence? Well, the evidence is simple combustion of chemistry. I mean, this is first year college chemistry, Bill. If you have no fuel, it doesn't matter how much oxygen you
Starting point is 00:07:05 inject into the air. The wind is just injecting oxygen into the combustion. Now, if you have a reduced fuel, I mean, anybody with a wood stove knows this. You can have your damper and the flue wide open. If there's no fuel in the fireplace, you're not going to have any fire or heat. Yeah, and I would agree with you. And the thing is, though, as long as you have houses, you have combustibles. Well, you need ground ladder. Well, a lot of these homes are really, you know, they're fairly well built. I mean, and a lot of them have down there, they have those terracotta roofs and things. But what's killing, if you look at these neighborhoods before and after, I studied the Sonoma fire, the Paradise Fire, you know, which is the campfire.
Starting point is 00:07:47 I've studied the Marshall Fire. When you look at the area with the satellites before the fire, you will see there's extensive grass and brush. And that's because a lot of people don't want to mow anything but their own yard. And we know, you and I know from the flyover at the Alameda fire that Jackson County paid for these fires when you have, and that was grass and brush. There was no forest fire at Alameda. That was all grass and brush, as you know. I watched that whole flyover movie that Jackson County paid for to watch, to study what happened with that fire. They flew over with that helicopter day after. In fact, it was still smoldering flames.
Starting point is 00:08:29 And you could see that what happened is defensible spaces don't work. The Safeway store in Phoenix had a parking lot 300 feet all the way around. That got torched by the cinder storm. See the heat front, grass and plants. Wait a minute, the Ray's Food Place? Yeah, the big supermarket there. In Phoenix? No, that did not.
Starting point is 00:08:49 That did not. It was in Taloner, Phoenix, right there by the exit, right off the Highway 99. Oh, okay. Well, maybe the one in Taloner did. I didn't notice that one. I noticed it. The big supermarket there. I can't remember if it was there. I don't shop there.
Starting point is 00:09:01 Okay. I can't remember if it was the site way. But, you know, the brand-new bank they put in, cement parking lot all the way around 100 feet. Brand-new, up-to-the-code, state-of-the-art bank that they just put in on Highway 989 there. Burned to the ground. In fact, it exposed the vault in the concrete. It was so hot. Here's the thing.
Starting point is 00:09:17 Grass and brush burns hotter than a forest. And a lot of people, I don't think Ray Halp even realizes this. I think he forgot his basic chemistry. The reaction, the rate of reaction of combustion is a function of surface area available for oxidation. So when you're burning a tree, all you have is the diameter of the tree initially that will burn. It burns from the outside in, as far as gasification of the wood. So the thing is with grass, you have a phenomenal amount of surface area. Which is why it burns so easily when it's hot and dry.
Starting point is 00:09:51 Yeah, really hot. Yeah, you inject a lot of air, a lot of oxygen with the wind, and then you have all this surface area that can combust, and you generate a phenomenal amount of heat. And that's why you can melt buildings with a grass and brush fire. I mean, you know, the most destructive fire we've seen in the United States was a couple winters ago, and that was the Marshall Fire up in Colorado, just outside of Boulder. That was all grass and brush. There was a wind on it. It was December 31st, the winter fire, just like this. And the wind came in, and there was a power line that triggered the grass and brush fire. It
Starting point is 00:10:24 doesn't matter source of ignition. Something's going to light this stuff up, whether it's a cigarette or a campfire or a chain or a power line, lightning, whatever. But when you have the fuel standing there just beckoning any kind of source of ignition, you're in trouble. And that Marshall fire was the most destructive fire as far as the structures. I think 268 structures were destroyed in that Grouse and Brush fire midwinter. So, you know, the good news is we have an opportunity with a mixed herbivory. Like in L.A., you could use goats. I mean, goats are, you know, they walk around, they do their little thing.
Starting point is 00:10:58 There's a lot of places you can put goats very successfully. There's places we can put cows. There's places we can put cows. There's places we can put sheep. And there's places where we could put these horses and save $200 million just by putting them there. How do you supervise them, though? I mean, that's always part of it, because someone's going to have to supervise them, right? Not necessarily. Okay. So it depends what species we're talking about. Yeah, because, you know, I know the goats. I mean, hey, goats are great lawnmowers. Don't get me wrong about that in an urban area but they also eat the uh eat your windshield wipers
Starting point is 00:11:29 and get up on your car and do everything else you know well okay so yeah so i i study this quite a bit okay and for instance in grass valley in a very exclusive gated neighborhood they use goats now they use dogs to manage the goats. And these dogs are amazing. They keep the goats right where the goat herder wants them. They don't leave a given area. And then when he wants to move them, the dogs move the herd down to the next area and the dogs keep them right there. These dogs today can even segregate geese by color. I'll send you a video. There's a video of these uh uh sheepdogs that actually could separate white and black yeast into two different groups uh groups but okay so
Starting point is 00:12:12 there's ways to do that with horses and cows you know cows you might have to use some fencing you you i'm i'm not i haven't done as much experimentation because our cows are all fenced on the ranch so i haven't done the kind of experimentation. Yeah, but honestly, though, you're not going to be able to pay enough people to go out there and mow everything they would need mowed down in these canyon areas. Right, we don't have a scalable solution. I keep debating with some of these people who keep arguing, well, prescribed fire, okay, really?
Starting point is 00:12:41 You're going to burn 300 million acres of prescribed fire. When are you going to start doing that and how often are you you going to do that? And oh, by the way, how much of the smoke can we breathe before we all die? You know, I mean, and oh, by the way, how many of those fires are going to get out of control, burn half of Mexico down again? You know, New Mexico. So, you know, the worst, one of the worst fires we've seen recently was caused by a prescribed burn that got out of control. They always talk about how great it is, but they show you no evidence. There's no positive evidence of the benefit. Bill, you know the reason why prescribed fire gets talked about a lot, because there are
Starting point is 00:13:14 people who make their living from it. That has replaced other income-generating forces, and wherever there's the government grant check, people are naturally going to gravitate to it. So there's no government grant check for a mixed herbivory plan yet, or is there? I don't know. Well, 99% of Americans are suffering huge economic losses. You look at the UCLA study from earlier, it was last year, mid-summer last year, that said 5,000 Californians are dying every year, premature death from wildfire smoke. And the loss over that 10-year period was $435 billion.
Starting point is 00:13:53 Now, if that doesn't drive legislators to start thinking about what's the right thing to do, you know, the pitchforks, I mean, Americans are getting upset now. I mean, this is getting to the boiling point. This is a tipping point. And these obstructionist people that are out there in government, a lot of them, are creating problems for the mass majority. You know, this one percentile of people who are making money off wildfire, they're going to have to just, you know, suck it up and get different jobs because we need to look at Oregon. Last year, you had the worst wildfire season ever. 1.3 million acres burned, incinerated. The worst one ever. Wildfire Today reported.
Starting point is 00:14:32 Yeah, and not a lot of it in Jackson County, oddly enough, though. We didn't have much trouble. But point well taken. You had your fire up there by Eagle Creek, and everybody had their fair share. But, yeah, there was areas a lot worse for sure but that was after they built the taxpayers there out of what what is uh uh Representative Marsh 76 SP 762 what was that yeah that's uh Jeff Golden too you know Representative Pam Marsh and Jeff Golden how many hundred million dollars was spent saying, oh, yeah, we're going to get this fixed? Well, hey, you know, it's five. What is it, four or five years
Starting point is 00:15:10 ago now? I mean, how long do you fund failure before you call it out? I mean, this is a bipartisan issue, Bill. I mean, Democrats and Republicans die equally from smoke. We burn equally. You know, look at James Woods. Look at Moby. Look at all these superstars down there in Palisades. Their homes are torched. You know, they're Democrats. They're torched.
Starting point is 00:15:35 Not James, but most of them are. Yeah. All right. Well, I'll tell you what. I'm going to put your information up here if you don't mind. And like I said, have uh brought it here and you've brought it there now naturally you're talking about uh you know you're big on the uh the wild horses because you want them in the areas where you know essentially the other stuff can't
Starting point is 00:15:55 go right you just shove them off into an area yeah i mean look at you know look at the poor martin ranch out there and down here in siskiyou county at table rock ranch you know they've lost 30 cows to the whaleback uh wolf pack 30 cows are gone yeah and and so and they're in the valley floor can you imagine if they put their herd even further out into the wilderness how fast it would disappear yeah forget about it you know yeah we need natural selection for the horses it controls the population and it maintains their genetic vigor you know it's the right tool for the horses. It controls the population and it maintains their genetic vigor. You know, it's the right tool for the right area. If I give you a toolbox and there's just a straight edge screwdriver and I say, go conquer the world, Bill, you're going to be pretty disappointed. You're going to say, well, where's my Crescent Ridge? Where's my hammer? I know,
Starting point is 00:16:36 but you do talk about how your ranch is essentially a 3,000 acre fire break. It's quite interesting. I'm going to put your information up there, Bill. And like I said, I don't, I'm out of time right now, but we'll, we'll circle back around there, but people should read up on it. And it's, it's always thought provoking. And I do like the idea of your mixed herbivory plan. It's not just one type of animals, whatever animal is, is right to, you know, to chew down some of the urban landscape, especially. Okay. All right. Yeah. The right tool in the right area. That's how we do it, and that's how we'll win, and it'll be cost-effective. Okay. Can goats be trained to move the homeless around too?
Starting point is 00:17:14 Just curious. The dogs probably. Dogs. Okay, we'll train the dogs. Okay. All right. Yeah, we'll train the dogs to line up the homeless. Okay, the drug-addicted ones, they'll put them in one area, and the non-addicted ones, they'll put them in one area, and the non-addicted ones get shushed over to another. You could probably train those sheepdogs to do that.
Starting point is 00:17:30 They're really good. All right, Bill. Thanks so much. It's good to hear from you from Wild Horse Fire Brigade, okay? Be well. All right. Thank you, Bill. Appreciate it.
Starting point is 00:17:38 All right. Take care. It's 830 at KMED. This is the Bill Myers Show. American Rancher Garage, your night in service. Hi, this is Dwayne Barkley with American Rancher Garage wishing you a happy new year. Start 2025 right with saving 25
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Starting point is 00:18:33 Visit OregonEdeals.com and click the Metford link to score these deals. I'm hooked on OregonEdeals.com. I'm saving big. So, I've been thinking about how nimble and responsive Fontana roofing is. And? Okay, humor me. Close your eyes. Okay.
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Starting point is 00:19:22 have experienced teams of expert, efficient roofers that are often able to react to our customers' unique situations and turn their jobs around fast without sacrificing quality. Okay, but I kind of wanted to work in how we have the ability to bend the fabric of space and time. Let's just let our customers assume that. Fair enough. If time is of the essence, visit MontanaRoofingServices.com. You're hearing the Bill Myers Show on 106.3 KMED. Streamed on KMED.com.
Starting point is 00:19:51 We really appreciate what you're doing this morning. Why don't I give a little love to Kelly's Automotive Service? Because I just want to tell you that coming up next week, it's going to start on Monday. They have their 14th annual Wipeout Hunger Drive. And all you have to do is just go out and get some peanut butter. 40 ounces or more of peanut butter and 10 or more ounces of jelly. And you take it to either the Grants Pass or the Medford locations. And they will put a pair of new windshield wipers on your car, valued up to $35. And they're actually really good windshield wipers too. And valued up to 35 bucks and they're actually really good windshield
Starting point is 00:20:25 wipers too and um next week all the donations up to 500 bucks if you actually wanted to kick in some bucks uh will be matched by midland empire insurance too so your donations will be doubled good people working over there at kelly's automotive service in medford in grants pass wipe out hunters hunger rather starts this coming mond. Show them a little love, good people. Lisa and the whole crew, okay? It's 8.33 at KMED. We're going to break for the rest of the news here in just a moment. And then Diana Anderson is in studio.
Starting point is 00:20:55 Diana Anderson, one of two people who testified yesterday at the Medford City Council. We'll ask her a little bit about that. I guess she talked. Did you talk the speed limit, too? You talked the speed limit no no i i was addressing uh smart growth and where it originated okay all right bob hayworth yes he did talk about the speed limit though and so uh two people it would seem to me with all the irritation people are with 5 000 people getting nailed with those speeding tickets you know you think that uh that a few more would show up. Right.
Starting point is 00:21:25 Of course, I know it's been the holidays and people might not even know how to do it. But if nothing else, you can get an email to the council, couldn't you? Right. Well, they were swearing in people that are being new members of the council. And the parking was, I mean, the parking lot was just filled. So it would have been a bad time for people to come in. Okay, well, maybe next meeting then. Yeah, right.
Starting point is 00:21:46 How about that? Right. All right. All right. See if we can get them to reverse course from the climate-friendly, equitable community communism, which is what they're all kind of signed on to, whether they realize it or not. We'll talk more about that with Diana in just a moment. From the KMED News Center, here's what's going on.
Starting point is 00:22:03 More than 350 Oregon firefighters are going to California to battle wildfires near Los Angeles. John Hendricks with the Oregon State Fire Marshal's Office says around 240 will be protecting structures. We work with the Oregon Fire Service, so their work will be similar to what they do up here during our wildfire season. So they'll be working to help protect life, property, and infrastructure. Those crews are from local agencies around the state, including from Jackson, Josephine, and Klamath counties. The Oregon Nurses Association claims Providence refuses to bargain as the union threatens a strike involving 5,000 health care workers. Providence says it's willing to negotiate. The union says it'll strike Friday morning
Starting point is 00:22:43 if there's no deal impacting hospitals around the state, including Medford. The board of Josephine County Commissioners moved to terminate the current Josephine Community Library District lease for their Grants Pass branch and have now established a framework to negotiate a new lease. Currently, the library pays $1 a year. Bill London, KMED. This hour of the Bill Myers Show is sponsored by Fontana Roofing. For roofing, gutters, and sheet metal services, visit FontanaRoofingServices.com. American Rancher Garage
Starting point is 00:23:12 United Service Hi, this is Dwayne Barkley with American Rancher Garage, wishing you a happy new year. Start 2025 right with saving 25 for 25. That's right, save 25% on all lube oil filter services and BG-branded services, like engine cooling system, power steering system,
Starting point is 00:23:29 and transmission services throughout January. Let's get your vehicle ready for the new year. Call 541-499-6673 to schedule your appointment today. Some restrictions apply. American Rancher Garage, we are United Through Service. Looking for your next adventure? From the rugged Subaru Outback to the versatile Subaru Forester, Southern Oregon Subaru has the perfect vehicle for you.
Starting point is 00:23:50 Plus, we're offering a lifetime powertrain warranty on all new Subarus. Whether it's mountain roads or city streets, drive with peace of mind. Visit Southern Oregon Subaru today and find the perfect new Subaru for you. The service contract is not provided or backed by the manufacturer of the vehicle. The manufacturer of the vehicle is not responsible for claims or repairs under the service contract. Good morning. This is News Talk 1063 KMED, and you're waking up with the Bill Myers Show. Diana Anderson has been a community activist involved in kind of yeoman's work here. Wrote a book not that long ago who made american schools marxist
Starting point is 00:24:25 training centers yeah that's okay just get on the school board it'll be fine i wish that were the case right yeah that would be nice and simple yeah it'd be nice and and i see what's been going on with uh with michael williams i don't want to get off into these school things right now but that's the book that you wrote you know a while back and i think it's pretty interesting and you use kind of uh detailed in that and it's not just the schools it's the government and the government systems in the bureaucracy it's all been creeping kudzu of communism really right in fact uh the whole idea is in community education and and the word education is can be confusing because when I talk about education, I'm not talking
Starting point is 00:25:08 about a school building where you go get a degree and try and graduate and that kind of thing. It started with community education. They wanted to open up the school doors and let everybody in and let the kids out and they were supposed to get active with the community and
Starting point is 00:25:23 that's United Nations Education for Sustainable Development kind of program that they did. Yeah, sustainable development is essentially turning you into a good little Marxist. Yeah, even back in 1911 in one academic publication, they talked about communizing the relationship between the school and the community. And think about how we almost have intersecting lines of influence because you had the technocrat movement of the 1930s of technocracy, which is really about what they were trying to bring in at that time was the global electronic dictatorship of sorts. Correct. In which everything was going to be an energy-based economy. Right. And in currency.
Starting point is 00:26:14 And you were granted your energy allowances. They even called themselves Soviet technicians. Yeah. Yeah. soviet technicians yeah yeah and don't tell me that uh that the whole thing with the smart meter as an example with our pacific power smart meter and things like that is not ultimately designed to be part of this and and all we have carbon allotments and we have carbon credits being traded as part of the gangrene new deal all under the guise of we're going to change the weather by you know by doing this.
Starting point is 00:26:45 It's all about tracking your personal consumption and your movements and that kind of thing. I'm going to be addressing the World Economic Forum, which is a huge organization that's kind of centered in Russia. But during the Obama administration, they made sure they had a U.S.-Russia relationship put together, a commission, so that heads of state in Russia matched with heads of state in America. So is it kind of a fake enemy that's being portrayed right now? Oh, yeah. Yeah, definitely. All right. That's what I'm thinking.
Starting point is 00:27:23 Before we dig into some of what you're going to talk about tomorrow, I want to make sure people know where you do all these presentations in which you go up there and you talk about these subjects in depth and how our local governments are plugged right into this stuff, whether they realize it or not. Climate-friendly, equitable community is – Yeah, the 20-minute neighborhoods. 20-minute neighborhoods. 15-minute cities, all the same thing yeah it's all just under different names marketed differently in different states and provinces that kind of thing and so tomorrow when is your next presentation because you know people come out and watch these things they report back they tell me good things uh and central point library at six o'clock tomorrow central point library 6 p.m tomorrow night and what an hour or two should be taken?
Starting point is 00:28:06 I'm going to say I'm extending a little bit because I want to fill in people on what climate-friendly areas are about. But I want to get into how they're going to monitor residents, students, that kind of thing. What is the agenda in Klaus Schwab's fourth industrial revolution. It's all about the new skills and the new surveillance that's got to take place using their technologies. Do you ever get that impression that the incoming Trump administration, we're all being kind of faked out that Elon Musk is, well, look, he's kind of our ally now. Well, one of the cities that they had their main conference for WEF and they put out these timeline colorful maps that gave everybody the trends and the technologies that were in the hopper and the ones that were already completed. And I went to Silicon Valley to get the results of that conference and the maps.
Starting point is 00:29:05 And they are very nice in printing out their slide presentations for you to look at that they developed. And on one of the maps from Silicon Valley, it talks about nanobrain implants. Which, of course, is what Elon's all over this. Yes, he is. He's invested heavily into the neuroimplanting. And there are some good benefits for people who are blind or they're paralyzed and they're using neurocomputer interfacing in order to allow them to function better. That would be a blessing.
Starting point is 00:29:49 Yes. But I can see where the control grid people, the technocrats, would more or less want to view this as how do we get people wired up. Right, right. I ended up going to a university in India and they're're really smart people in those universities, and they talk about technology. And they even list mind control as one of the benefits of neuroimplanting. Silicon Valley actually made mention on one of their maps, mandatory neural implanting. Mandatory. They mentioned this in Silicon Valley.
Starting point is 00:30:31 Yeah, Silicon Valley and MIT and Cisco Systems, they gave billions of dollars to build Skolkovo Institute right outside Moscow. It's bigger than the Pentagon. There's room in there for 31,000 people in different labs. And what they do, they connect with other labs, for instance, the one in Arizona State University. And what they do is they come up with social, economic, and environmental type of packages for the
Starting point is 00:31:09 future. Those are the three main pillars that they look at. Because those three main pillars, you can subset anything that would be described as human survival, human, you know, or community living, whatever. And they're the ones that come up with all these new ideas and what they're going to do with the new technologies, that kind of thing. So, and then my concern too, people will ask me about vaccination records. Are we going to have to, or are they going to require us
Starting point is 00:31:41 to put vaccination health records onto a card or a passport in order to travel? And so I. And this is just coming a few years after the essential, essentially what we had vaccine passports, COVID. Right, right. Silicon Valley did. Fluential companies, along with health care companies and U.S. intelligent contractors. The Commons Project Foundation backed this up. They launched what they call the Vaccination Credential Initiative. And so in the hopper there, they're going to be putting out what they call smart, smart with capital editors they're smart health cards and they're
Starting point is 00:32:28 meant to work across borders and everything but they need to get it more globally um fixed first you know something diana by diana anderson with me and tomorrow night she's going to be talking about these and very various other pretty deep here. And do you get the impression that everything about our politics right now is designed, you know, keeping us looking at, you know, rabbit season, duck season, rabbit season, duck season, Democrat, Republican, football season. Everything seems to be about distracting you from what, you know, the truly evil individuals, you know, behind the scenes want. Right.
Starting point is 00:33:02 Well, when you start talking about... In our politics right yeah they are so open about it is what's amazing there is a gal named shirley edwards from oxford university and she has a marvelous website for those people who are unfamiliar with 15 minute city connections you know she gives links you know hyperlinks on her website and everything. But she mentions how all of London now is mapped out into these areas where there's low carbon emissions happening. The European Union has a website you can go on. And let's say you're going to be going to Europe.
Starting point is 00:33:43 All you have to do is go on that website and select any number of cities that you want to visit. And it will take you there, and it will have little maps with borders around each region in that city, where you can travel, what time you can travel in that area, and everything. Oh, travel limitations because of carbon, right? Right, right. Carbon emissions, yeah. So everything depends on your carbon footprint. And that's what IoT or Internet of Things does. And the smart technologies, like your smart meter outside,
Starting point is 00:34:19 they'll determine that you need to be this globally sustainable citizen, this smart citizen, to make sure your home is smart, because government is smart now, and they're going to be putting all this together to make sure that you're functioning. And they put all that on their trajectory, they call it. Where are you going to go? What is our timeline here?
Starting point is 00:34:45 Because the left wing has always been putting it around the 2030, 2040. They always put a goal there when they talk about Vision 2040, like the city of Medford, Goals 2030, 2050. The maps that I had downloaded from Silicon Valley and other cities go out to about 2035. One of them goes out to 2050. So I guess the most – I would say the most egregious things are the things that are going to take over like the avatar. There's an initiative 2045 and the initiative 2045 is not well advertised yet but they said on their website that their goal was to make sure that they going with the technology where they could
Starting point is 00:35:36 download your personality into other biological entities or other avatars and then you would have this sense of immorality or immortality you mean i'm an immortality which of course might be an immorality yeah it is immoral yeah but the immortality well you know these are people uh these people are glow well godless oh godless but they want to act like god yeah exactly but exactly. But you see, this is why I get people all – and people say, well, what do you have against Elon Musk? He's a very smart guy, right? He's just kind of a figurehead of a system. And I'm trying to say just because he might be helping trying to get President Trump to cut some waste or someplace. But it puts people to sleep. But it's like, listen, it was just a few years ago.
Starting point is 00:36:25 You were talking about his electric car grift, and you were honestly criticizing him for the grift. And now he's become a multibillionaire, and now you're okay with him advising the presidency. I know. It's like people have the memory of a gnat or the memory timeframe of a gnat. Well, that was then. Now he's one of us you know that kind of stuff yeah he's like a two-sided coin in my book because i like his personality me too yeah but then i go back and i look what he's invested in in ev transportation um i don't know
Starting point is 00:36:58 how and if it was the neural implant just to help the blind see and the uh and the paralyzed walk i'm good with it but when you look at where the technocr and the paralyzed walk, I'm good with it. But when you look at where the technocrats, the technocracy, wishes this whole agenda to move forward, it's a very, very different kettle of fish. It is the matrix, in other words. It is essentially the matrix being brought to life. Yeah. If you go to the NIH, the National Institute of Health, there was a gentleman there whose name was – his first and last name was biblical, Emmanuel something.
Starting point is 00:37:30 Anyway, he set out the – Oh, is this Rob Emmanuel's brother? Yes. Yes, it is. Thank you. This was a couple of years ago. I looked into this. And he was actually put out an article on the web talking about – and it was a long article.
Starting point is 00:37:47 I mean if you're going to say to the public, I think that anyone who attains the age of 75 or greater than 75 years old, they're just not very – you can't contribute to society very well. You have served your purpose. it's time for you to go yeah and he i thought well you go first you know that's what i was thinking when i was reading the article but he was in the department at nih for ethics these are the people determining ethics right okay you know yeah yeah you think you're worried about the uh the providence strike tomorrow kids all right uh worry about who's actually coming up with medical ethics diana Right, right. Okay. You know. Yeah, yeah. You think you're worried about the Providence strike tomorrow, kids. All right? Worry about who's actually coming up with medical ethics.
Starting point is 00:38:28 Diana, on this event tomorrow, you'll be talking about things like this. Actually, on the subject block here, just so you know, and this is, once again, at the Central Point Library. Yes, 6 o'clock. 6 o'clock. Okay. Agenda 21, the Oregon's Guide for Smart Growth. The WEF's Fourth Industrial Revolution, like you just mentioned here about that, tools and tech for tracking people everywhere. And by the way, not to bag on Elon again, but after the Las Vegas blowup of the Tesla Cybertruck, he was in there and talking, well, we have looked into everything and the Cybertruck was functioning absolutely perfectly. Everything was just fine with it. I'm thinking, why would I want to have
Starting point is 00:39:08 a vehicle in which some guy over in Silicon Valley is looking into everything about my car? Why would people want that? But, you know, I digress. That seems to be where these type of individuals are wishing to push it. Also, Global Education Futures, the Foresight conferences, that's with Silicon Valley, too. And what is GEF? What is GEF? Global Education Futures. What the Global Education Future wants to put on the chopping block, such as academic journals to be replaced by researcher communication networks.
Starting point is 00:39:42 Huh. Well, even Peter Prokosian wrote uh wrote an article and put it on the web just recently just last month i believe and he was talking about the journal journalists uh journals from the um the the college's sponsor and the papers that are coming out they're so fake for one plagiarism is alive and well you know and now they're now they're probably being written by ai right so that's another um reason for them to say oh okay we're going to take over um make sure that that doesn't happen anymore we're going to make sure that the only thing on the web is things that are legitimate, that are scientific.
Starting point is 00:40:28 So they can even take – Oh, is that like safe and effective? Like they said, safe and effective too. Well, they don't say safe and effective. What they'd like to do, I've read, where they take all digital written articles and categorize them. And AI can do this, categorize them as to being scientific, religious, you know, whatever, political. All the articles then get categorized and then they get broke down. So they have these researcher kind of, I don't know if it's AI or real live bodies doing it,
Starting point is 00:41:05 but they go through quickly with their Internet of Things and they can screen all these articles. And then they can decide which ones are going to go on the web and which ones aren't. They are, when you submit an article, if you're an academic. So this will be, in essence then,, then, just an automatic bot sensor. Yes, correct. For what is allowed to be out there.
Starting point is 00:41:32 Currently, an academic from any university. So don't worry about the Facebook fact check thing going away. Yeah. Any academic writing an article, they get it screened first. It goes to the journal, and they look at it before the journal even publishes it. Well, if you have the globalists taking over that function, they can control the Gutenberg galaxy is what they call it. That means anything that was written in black and white.
Starting point is 00:42:02 Fascinating. All right. This is tomorrow night. And again, the time at the Central Point Library? Six o'clock. Six o'clock, Central Point Library. Give yourself about two, three hours on this one, probably? About two hours. Two hours. Okay, two hours.
Starting point is 00:42:19 Diana Anderson, once again, is a co-author of Who Made American Schools Marxist Training Centers? And it's not conspiracy theory, pie in the sky kind of stuff. You've got the documents. You've got the, you know, listen. They're very open about it. Yeah. And it is amazing just how pig ignorant we people, we the people usually are about such matters. And our cities and our councils are kind of plugged into this.
Starting point is 00:42:39 And you have to be aware of this. You're wondering where this comes from, the 20-mile-per-hour, the business zone, the carbon-free kind of lifestyle that is being pushed. I'm also going to let people know exactly the Vision 2040 Task Force, when they meet every month in 2025. I'll let people know what their schedule is. I encourage people to go to the meetings because, like Colleen Roberts had said, that the only thing that we can – the only thing that will stop this is just a massive effort by a lot of people. And if you just go and show up and say, I have read some of this or I've heard some of this, I've – and I don't like it.
Starting point is 00:43:25 I'm totally against it. You don't have to do a whole two-minute speech and know everything there is to know about it. Just the presence of a lot of bodies at a meeting to show that you support even one speaker, you know, makes a big difference. Diana Anderson, thanks for joining in. Okay. Thank you so much for the time. You have a big difference. Diana Anderson, thanks for joining in. Okay, thank you so much for the time. You have a good day.
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