Knowledge Fight - #257: January 25, 2019
Episode Date: January 28, 2019Today, Dan and Jordan discuss how Roger Stone got indicted for crimes he definitely committed, and break down how Alex Jones responded to the news. It's all a mess....
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Andy and Kansas, you're on the air. Thanks for holding.
Hello, Alex. I'm a first-time caller. I'm a huge fan. I love your work.
I love you.
Hey, everybody. Welcome back to Knowledge Fight. I'm Dan.
I'm Jordan.
We're a couple dudes like to sit around, drink novelty beverages,
and talk a little bit about Alex Jones.
Oh, indeed we are, Dan.
Yeah.
Dan?
Hi. Yeah, Jordan.
What was the last time you saw somebody do something truly astonishingly excellent?
I saw that gymnastics routine, that floor routine that was going around.
On Twitter.
I don't remember the young lady's name, but that was outstandingly good.
Was she the one that was like 13 years old?
No, no, no, that's the ice skating.
Yeah, I think she's in college. I think she goes to the UCLA.
I wish I knew more details about this. I'm not a big gymnastics guy,
but it came up on my Twitter feed. I watched it. I was like, holy shit.
It's insane that people's bodies can do that.
Yeah.
Then I guess, I mean, we're recording this on Sunday,
but last night I watched NXT Takeover Phoenix and like watching Ricochet,
the pro wrestler Ricochet.
Is Phoenix okay?
Phoenix is all right.
They've been taken over, but they are all right.
They survived.
There's a wrestler named Ricochet who can just do amazing flips.
Like he could jump over stuff.
The way he's able to land the things that like you shouldn't be able to,
your body shouldn't move like that.
Watching him is also really physically impressive.
Nice.
But look, I want to answer this question more, but we don't have time.
Okay, I'm sorry.
Today's a big show.
Okay.
We got a lot to go over and, but, you know, everyone should know that there's a
podcast running a lot about Alex Jones.
I only know what you tell me about Alex Jones and we're all going to talk very,
very, very nice.
We have big news to take care of.
And of course, everyone knows what that is already.
And that is that I started playing high rule warriors on the switch.
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Yeah.
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Big news.
Everyone has been waiting for us.
Right, right, right.
That's not it at all.
Okay.
Roger Stone got arrested on Friday.
He got indicted and, you know, people are clamoring for our take on it.
And so we will get to that.
And I'm excited too.
But before we get to that, we need to give a shout out to a couple of people
who make this show possible.
Nice.
People who have joined up and are now policy wonks.
First, I'd like to say thank you to Kerry.
You are now a policy wonk.
I'm a policy wonk.
Thank you, Kerry.
Hi, Kerry.
Next, Nikita.
Thank you so much.
You are now a policy wonk.
I'm a policy wonk.
Thank you.
Thank you very much, LaFam Nikita.
I'm sure they get that a lot.
You probably don't appreciate our hacky humor.
Nope.
Next, I'd like to say thank you to Brent.
You are now a policy wonk.
I'm a policy wonk.
Thank you, Brent.
Thank you very much, Brent.
And then finally, I'd like to say thank you to Fred Koch's racist ghost.
You are now a policy wonk.
I'm a policy wonk.
Thank you, Fred Koch's racist ghost.
Yeah, I don't know if I'm thankful.
Hey, if he maybe wants to make good, you know?
Oh, that's true.
You know, maybe it's one of those like trying to get to the good.
This could be a Christmas Carol kind of situation.
Exactly.
Exactly.
He's Marley.
He's Marley.
Yeah, something like that.
So he gives a couple bucks our way and we appreciate it.
Thank you very much.
If you are a founding member of the John Birch Society's ghost
or just anybody else and you'd like to support our show,
you can do that by going to...
That's a very narrow group.
Well, I'm not the everybody else part.
You can do that by going to our website, knowledgefight.com,
clicking that button.
So support the show.
We would appreciate it.
Please do.
Now, Jordan, today, like I said, Roger Stone is...
He got indicted and he's in trouble.
And here's the problem with being Roger Stone.
His primary brand is basically being a dick.
So no one's really going to go soft on him.
And at the same time, two of the things that he's most famous for
are the movie Get Me Roger Stone and saying that John Podesta's
time in the barrel is coming prior to the John Podesta emails
being leaked.
So those two things are things that are so fucking easy for
people to make jokes and headlines about.
It's just a sea of people doing like Mueller said,
Get Me Roger Stone or even John Podesta said,
It's now Roger Stone's time in the barrel.
Man, that's like us saying Lafemnequita.
That's terrible.
He's hacky on a level.
But in a way, Roger brought it on himself by having this kind of
brand in this career that's so a tacky, tacky and a tacky.
He ends up becoming the recipient of it once the tables are
turned a little bit.
And on one level, I wish people would be a little more creative,
but on another level, I kind of enjoy it.
I appreciate it.
He has to just be thinking like,
Why is everybody being so mean to me?
Because he's a complete and total psychopath.
I think I'm a nice guy.
I'm just a dude trying to get by, man.
Right.
Yeah, it's like, you know what?
You can't even make a 40 year career out of fucking people over
without eventually having to deal with karma.
That's bullshit.
It's nonsense in a globalist plot for sure.
For sure.
So I don't know.
I don't know how basic to get with this information,
but I guess I should probably just assume that everybody doesn't
know anything.
Today we're going to be going over Friday's episode of Alex
Jones's show.
The, what would that have been?
The 25th, I guess.
Yeah.
The January 25th, 2019.
And it's in the immediate aftermath of Roger getting
arrested and posting bail.
He got arrested at like six in the morning,
I believe was the exact time.
FBI agent SWAT, SWAT at his house, which I think is a good idea.
That's yeah.
I think that based on the things that he's up to and you know,
the context that he has, I would consider him a flight risk for
sure.
You're going to want to surprise him.
Yeah.
That's what I would, not because of danger,
not like he's going to get a shootout going or something like
that, but I wouldn't, I wouldn't take any chances.
So they SWAT team to his house in the morning,
took him away and arrested him pretty soon after that,
him and his lawyers were able to negotiate a bail and he posted
a $250,000 bond and he is now free to go to New York and Florida.
I believe those are the two places he's allowed to travel.
New York, DC and Florida, I believe.
That's correct.
Yeah, but Austin, not on the list, he could have got Austin on
that list and he didn't.
And I think that tells you something.
Do you think he could have gotten Austin on that list?
Yeah, absolutely.
He works for fucking info wars too close to the border.
Now that's for work.
It may, if you make that argument,
then DC or New York should be too close to Canada.
I think Florida is too close to Cuba.
Sure.
Any of these arguments could hold water.
If Roger Stone wanted to,
he could have gotten Austin on that list.
He didn't.
And I think that's partially because I have a,
I have a large theory about all this.
And I think that Roger, in many ways,
now that he's actually been indicted,
realizes Alex can't really help him outside of tricking his listeners
into giving him money.
Right.
That's the only thing Alex can help him with.
His problems are much bigger than Alex can help with now.
And so it's not a priority for him.
I don't think it.
Yeah, I mean,
I think that it's just like he's going to use the info wars army or
whatever for whatever they're worth,
but he's not going to be like,
he's not going to be Roger Stone anymore.
No.
So he's not going into work at info wars and being like,
and here's why I'm not because he's just going to get really boring,
really fast and nobody gives a shit about his take on other shit.
And he'll direct his attention on places where like Trump actually is listening
to like Tucker Carlson and maybe going on Fox and friends.
Like he'll do that instead of helping Alex rile up the troops for their
imaginary apocalyptic battle.
Right.
It's never coming.
I think he goes out every night into the forest as well and screams.
Pardon me.
There is a great moment in the in his press conference that he gave.
We don't have we're not going to play a clip of it,
but an interviewer asks,
have you asked have you had any conversations with Trump about being
pardoned and Roger's response is pardon me.
I don't think he was trying to be funny,
but it's hilarious.
That's pretty great.
So Jordan,
here we go.
Let's let's jump into this and we'll,
you know,
we'll get through it the best we can.
We're going to be going over this indictment here bit by bit as we go
through the episode,
but I'd like to lay some of it out for the listeners here who haven't read it.
For someone like me,
it seems unthinkable that someone wouldn't immediately go out and read
that indictment,
but I also accept that I'm a weirdo.
So Mueller handed down a six count indictment against Roger Stone on Friday.
Counts two through six are all lies that Roger told the House Intelligence
Committee and count one is an obstruction charge regarding some threatening
messages that Roger sent to Randy Kredico,
his supposed intermediary with Julian Assange and WikiLeaks.
Reading over this indictment,
one gets a very strong sense that Roger is completely fucked.
The obstruction charge could carry a 20 year sentence and each charge of lying
to Congress could be up to five years,
but I don't mean that Roger is fucked because that's a total of 50 years
he could be looking at,
which is life for him.
I mean, he's fucked because of the information that's laid out in the document
and more importantly,
the information that is conspicuous in its absence.
The text messages and emails that are referenced are mostly,
but not all correspondences that had already come to light in some manner or another.
Some are messages that came out when Jerome Corsi got in trouble like a month
or two ago, about a month ago.
Some were reported on back in mid 2018 when Randy Kredico met with investigators,
but there are a few pieces of information in the indictment that bring it all together
and clearly demonstrate that Roger Stone intentionally misled the house and tell committee
and gives a strong indication as to why.
There's no fat in that document,
which I think is an interesting point.
Mueller clearly has so many more emails and texts than the ones referenced in this document.
And if I were a gambling man,
I would bet that the reason that the indictment looks the way it does
is because what is in there is enough for Roger Stone to be charged with a crime.
And some of the other correspondences may contain information related to other crimes,
particularly the correspondences between Roger and Jerome Corsi.
I could be wrong, but that's my hunch.
Either way, Roger is fucked because this indictment lays out a really open and shut case
that Roger is super guilty of the crimes he's accused of.
Another way he's fucked is that he's essentially been thrust into a prisoner's dilemma with Paul Manafort.
The two of them know a lot of dirt on each other and are both really bad people.
So now that they've both been indicted, each of them knows that the other is a threat.
Typically, you never want to be in a prisoner's dilemma with someone who you know is untrustworthy.
And there are few people...
Which one?
...are few people in town who are less trustworthy than Paul Manafort and Roger Stone.
So that's sort of just a broad glimpse of what's going on.
And now, in order to discuss this indictment within its proper context,
I need to give you and the listeners a little backstory to flesh out some of the aspects
and other non...
Some of these aspects of the story that other non-infowars-focused outlets might have missed.
So, Alex Jones isn't the only person in our story who has a radio show, or more accurately, had a radio show.
On August 15, 2016, Genesis Communications Network distributed a press release
heralding the launch of The Stone Cold Truth, a two-hour show hosted by Roger Stone every Saturday.
The show was short-lived on GCN, which isn't suspicious at all, I say slightly facetiously.
Ironically, his time slot is now filled by World Crisis Radio, hosted by Webster Tarpley,
the former Infowars guest who turned on Alex in early 2016 when he realized that Trump was an aspiring fascist.
Very bizarrely, the co-host of Roger Stone's show, The Stone Cold Truth,
is a comedian named Travis Irvine, who I have definitely hung out with multiple times.
I've done shows with Travis, I've booked him on my shows when he visited town,
and at no point could I have possibly imagined that he would end up being the co-host of a Roger Stone radio show.
Yeah, I know Travis!
Point is, this world is very weird.
This is weird!
Yeah, I know that he was a Libertarian dude and he ran for mayor of his town.
I knew that, but I couldn't have imagined he was this far.
Like, the idea of teaming up with Roger Stone for a radio show is pretty crazy.
Now, hold on. If somebody gave me that offer, I would really have to think about it hard because that's fucking hilarious.
It is pretty wild.
Every day I would wake up and be like,
I'm working with Roger Stone on a fucking radio? This is stupid!
Right, so I agree with you, but also you've got to consider the idea that you might end up complicit
in something you don't realize you're getting involved in.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Anytime you agree to a project with Roger Stone, you know it comes with the possibility of a subpoena.
So you've got to weigh that in your calculus.
So either way, I don't know, I've listened to a number of his episodes of the show,
and I know that Travis is involved with Roger Stone, but in terms of the show,
it really seems like Roger just has him there to use as sort of a millennial stooge kind of thing.
I don't know. I don't want to assume what their relationship actually is or anything like that,
but it's really fucked up. I think he's a really nice guy in the times that I've met him.
That's weird.
Yeah, very weird.
So anyway, Roger released his first episode on August 20th and featured an interview with Jesse Ventura.
I've listened to a bunch of episodes of the show, and the way I describe it is the Alex Jones show
with no yelling and way more concentration.
Wall-to-wall Trump campaigning and a little bit of Clinton bashing throwing in for good measure.
Travis, how have you been?
Look, I mean, Jesse's fine, whatever, but like the show itself is like,
it almost is like trying to take Alex Jones and make him NPR.
Yeah.
That's the kind of, and a little bit more like irresponsible with their reporting.
Right.
Certainly.
Oh, well, yeah, yeah, of course.
On his third episode from September 3rd, 2016, Roger had an interview with Randy Krediko.
The interview itself is inconsequential and the two pretty much just talk about how Roger and Randy
supported some crime sentences and reform measures way back.
So Roger is definitely not a racist.
That's sort of the point they're trying to make.
The only thing that really stands out to me is how Roger introduces Randy Krediko on this episode.
And now in an incredible metaphysical act backed from the dead, a man who I actually only a few years ago
swore I would never speak to again as long as I lived and actually had a mass card printed out
announcing his death, which I promulgated widely.
Randy Krediko, Randy is a famed comedian.
So that's a fucking intro.
That's quite an intro.
That is an intro.
I want that intro in my life sometimes.
Sooner or later, if we have a falling out and get back together as friends, I'll give you that intro.
Okay, thank you.
So without context, that sounds a little bit strange.
Why did Roger swear he would never speak to Randy Krediko again?
This is a piece of the story that almost every single report that I've seen fails to discuss.
This is important.
This is a very big piece of the story and every article that I've read has basically just said,
Randy Krediko and Roger Stone had a falling out blah, blah, blah.
They just, no one has pulled that thread or at least no one seems to.
I'm sure somebody has and I just haven't seen that article, but the vast majority of these articles
leave that question open and I am the type of person who's very curious and I want to understand why.
Why the fuck did these two people who were deeply involved in a he said, he said situation about espionage?
Yeah.
Why the fuck did they have a falling out?
It seems important.
So it all goes back to 2007 and I would imagine that Randy was actually the one who didn't want to talk to Roger ever again.
Back in 2007, Roger was working for the then New York State Senate Majority Leader, Joseph Bruno,
who is probably most memorable for being a huge enemy of then Governor Elliott Spitzer.
Some of this stemmed from political differences, but some of it also probably was a result of Bruno being suspected of corruption
and the fact that Spitzer's office had ordered the state police to track his travel records in terms of expenses and flights and that sort of thing.
Ultimately, this was a misuse of state resources and Bruno was cleared of wrongdoing in terms of his travel history.
But in 2009, he was convicted on two counts of what's known as quote honest services fraud,
where he failed to disclose conflicts of interest involving him receiving $440,000 in consulting fees from a businessman he was friends with,
which were alleged to be bribes and kickbacks.
He was sentenced to two years in prison, but his legal problems were solved by a deus ex machina moment when the Supreme Court ruled in 2010
that honest services fraud statute, the statute regarding it, was too vague and thus his convictions were overturned and he walked free.
Legally speaking, Bruno is clean, but I refuse to accept that $440,000 from a friend who is a businessman is for legitimate consulting.
Yeah, I would have advised him to wait until right around 2016 when that would be like, hey, you're doing great!
Let it rip.
Either way, Roger worked for Joseph Bruno at the time, raking in a salary of $20,000 a month, and Elliott Spitzer was breathing down his boss's neck.
What?!
Yeah.
Motherfuckers!
Fucking New York state politics, man!
Motherfuckers!
State politics? He's just working for a- oh god, I want to kill these people.
So Elliott Spitzer was breathing down Bruno's neck, and so Roger Stone went to work trying and succeeding in taking down Elliott Spitzer.
First, he sent the FBI a letter on November 19, 2007, tipping them off about Spitzer's habit of employing sex workers.
This, to me, seems like a flagrant act of hypocrisy.
Seeing as Roger Stone is a noted sexual libertine and a libertarian, and thus he shouldn't be opposed to sex work being illegal or punished.
That's a bedrock of principles, like in terms of libertarianism.
I've heard him say before that he believes that, in past appearances, that sex work shouldn't be criminalized, but principles don't matter when you're a hatchet man.
He's a ratfuck, of course!
Yeah, it doesn't matter if what you're doing is directly opposed to what you believe, it doesn't fucking matter.
This wasn't the only thing that Roger did in his attack on Elliott Spitzer.
Previous to snitching to the FBI, at about 10pm on August 6, Roger Stone called Elliott Spitzer's father Bernard and proceeded to threaten him with legal action.
Bernard Spitzer had nothing to do with Roger's political work. He called him out of pure ugliness and malice.
As we listen to this call, this voicemail-
We have the voicemail?
We do.
Oh shit.
As you listen to it, remember that the recipient of this call is Elliott Spitzer's 83-year-old father, who at the time was suffering from Parkinson's.
This is a message for Bernard Spitzer.
You will be subpoenaed to testify before the Senate Committee on Investigations on your shady campaign loans.
You will be compelled by the Senate's sergeant at arms.
If you resist the subpoena, you will be arrested and brought to Albany.
And there's not a goddamn thing your phony, psycho piece of shit son can do about it.
Bernie, your phony loans are about to catch up with you.
You will be forced to tell the truth, and the fact that your son's a pathological liar will be known to all.
There are a number of flourishes in the vocal pattern in there that are like, that's fucking Roger to a T.
I think he wrote that down too.
It's possible there was a script.
He was definitely reading off of the script.
In the aftermath of this call being released, Bruno asked Roger to step down, which Roger agreed to do.
But he nonetheless proceeded to tell anyone who had listened that he'd been set up.
First, Roger said flatly that he didn't make the call.
It wasn't me.
He was shaggy in it.
That's a-
The shaggy strategy.
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Nice.
Then a private investigator that Bernard Spitzer hired showed evidence that he had traced the call and it had come from Roger's apartment.
With that information on the table, Roger had to pivot.
So he claimed that anyone could have broken into his apartment and made the call, but also seemed to have no concern about his apartment being broken into.
He claimed that he was at a live performance of Frost Nixon that night, saying that he, quote, highly recommends it to Governor Spitzer.
It shows you what hubris and lying brings you.
This alibi fell apart when New York magazine pointed out that the company putting on Frost Nixon had a dark night on August 6th.
So he literally couldn't have been-
Wait, the quote from him was, this shows you what lying and-
Hubris.
Oh man, lying and hubris.
He- he- oh my god.
Both demonstrated by his own actions.
The same- oh god, he's so fucking crazy.
He's a nut.
So Roger had nowhere to turn, but he needed to spin this because the optics of having for no reason left a threatening message like leaving a threatening message on an old man's phone.
That's not the kind of dirty trickster image Roger likes to cultivate.
He likes to present himself as the cunning, shitty, but brilliant kind of guy.
Yeah.
Doing those sorts of stunts.
Not the pointless petty and just abusive for the sake of being abusive sort.
That's not good for business.
You can be both.
No, you can secretly be the latter, but you want to present yourself publicly as the- as the prior.
Because you need that.
You need that- it's exactly what you've always responded to, the Loki trickster god kind of thing.
Yeah.
When in reality, no, he is a monster.
He's a horrible person who's made almost all of his money throughout his career lobbying and supporting dictators.
Yeah.
Like if you look into who like Manafort Stone and Black, Black Manafort Stone, who they worked for, it is a who's who- not a who's who, there's other people who they didn't work with.
Yeah.
But there are a lot of murderous dictators in their ranks.
And then you look at the three of them and then Lee Atwater got involved with them too.
Like the guy who made the fucking Willie Horton ad.
Jesus.
Man.
Yeah.
I mean, it's a slimy crew and they worked for worse people.
Yeah.
Roger is a really, really bad person.
Yes.
Not this comical bad person that he likes to present because it's easier for him to do his business.
I feel like as far as representing those guys and lobbying for the dictators, that's just more like knowing people because you- like the job is open, man.
You have to have zero morality in order to do that shit.
It's true.
So it's not like- it's not like people are clamoring.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
But the money is big.
I really want to lobby for Nikola Ceausescu.
I'm not sure if he worked with Ceausescu, but like, you know, you have- let me get my list up here.
Some of his great hits.
Mobutu Cicicico in Zaire, who was- the United Nations said that he, quote, presided over the worst human rights conditions in Africa.
Okay.
He had made a habit of murdering political dissidents in public in order to terrorize the public and embezzled at least $5 billion from his own country.
And U.S. foreign aid.
That's a lot of money.
And Roger still worked with him.
And then of course, another one of his great clients was Ferdinand Marcos of Philippines, which I believe we've already talked a little bit about that dirty business.
Yeah.
So Roger, that's the real like version of the sort of business he's involved in.
Yeah.
He likes to cultivate the fun.
Look at him.
Right.
How's he going to get away with this one?
Yeah, I'm a libertine and I fucks around and I got a tattoo and Nixon on my back and it's kind of ironic, but it's also pretty serious.
So with no other option left and needing to spin this, Roger Stone blamed Randy Krediko.
The Washington Post relates Roger's rationale, quote, speaking of Krediko.
He's been on Letterman.
He's been on Leno says Stone.
He does an incredible impression of former Senator New York Senator Alfons DiMotto.
Okay.
So, so his argument now, as I understand, or his, his claim now is Randy Krediko broke into his apartment.
Right.
Made the call to Bernard Spitzer did a perfect Roger Stone impression under the auspices of the Spitzer people trying to set Roger up.
Yeah.
Okay.
Yes.
That's what it has to be at this point for Roger's version of the story.
It's a false flag.
Right.
Yeah.
So he goes on to say that Krediko has done an impression of him in the past and then he really swung for the fences by accusing Krediko of being a cocaine addict.
That's Roger's style.
You always include a personal attack that somehow meant to invalidate the person who could be a voice that refutes your point.
Yeah.
That is how he does it.
It's, it's very consistent throughout his career.
Like the American justice system.
You hear it over and over again in his appearances on info wars, even the way he attacks people who could provide criticism of all that shit.
So, Randy Krediko thought the accusation was funny.
Quote, that's hilarious.
I'm absolutely denying it.
I mean, he does have an easy voice to do, but I haven't heard him or seen him in years.
In order for Roger story to work, as you pointed out, pro Spitzer forces would have to have enlisted Krediko to make this phone call posing as Roger, but they'd also have to have seamlessly broken into his house to place the phone call and brought Krediko along.
Oh, and also they'd somehow have to convince Roger to lie about his alibi the night in question.
Yeah.
Yeah.
This is nonsense.
Roger did it.
And when his back was against the wall, he blamed Randy Krediko.
And this is why Roger thought they would never speak again.
And there's a good chance that they wouldn't have, but they did because in 2016, Roger once again needed a patsy.
That's important.
On September 3rd, 2016, when Roger had Randy Krediko on the Stone Cold Truth, Roger's involvement in communicating with Assange was already well underway.
According to Roger's indictment by June or July of 2016, Roger was already telling senior Trump campaign officials, which many people think is Steve Bannon.
I'm not entirely sure if that's confirmed because there's multiple references to Trump officials in the document and they're not specified if it's the same person person one.
They're not saying person one.
They're saying high high level Trump campaign officials.
Right.
Right.
Gotcha.
It being able to track whether it's all the same, but a lot of people believe it's Steve Bannon.
Yeah.
So they're already, he was already telling senior Trump campaign officials that WikiLeaks had damaging information and documents about Hillary Clinton.
On June 22nd, WikiLeaks released the DNC emails and three days later, Roger emailed Jerome Corsi and told him to quote, get to Assange at the Ecuadorian Embassy in London and get the pending emails.
Corsi forwarded the email that Roger had sent him to Ted Malik, who we've seen pop up a time or two on Info Wars in the past.
Yeah.
He's a British weirdo who he's famous for the declaration Davos man is dead.
Yeah.
He might as well be called Ted Moloch.
He's a bit of a fraud himself.
Yeah.
We've gone over him in the past.
He's not really all that important except for he's not named in this and he's not like a person one, two or three either of the document, which I find weird.
It makes me think that maybe he's not a target.
Maybe he's cooperating or something like that.
I don't know.
I don't know what to make of that.
It was worth it for me to get that demon joke in there.
Sure.
So the way that the command is delivered to Corsi doesn't seem to imply that this is an unreasonable thing for Roger to be asking of him.
He doesn't tell him to try to get to Assange.
The way it's phrased heavily implies that they had reason to believe that they could in fact get in touch with him.
By August 2nd, 2016, Corsi was emailing Roger with suggestions that he knew what the next right-wing coordinated attack on Hillary was going to be.
Quote, would not hurt to start suggesting HRC old memory bad has stroke.
Corsi also told Roger that he expected the next batch of emails would have to do with the Clinton Foundation.
Almost immediately, Roger began telling everyone that he'd spoken to Assange and the next documents would likely be about the foundation, almost as if he was repeating and embellishing the things Corsi told him.
Roger would continue claiming that he had spoken with WikiLeaks until WikiLeaks put out a statement in mid-August saying they had not communicated with him, so his story changed to have him having talked to them through an intermediary.
On August 23rd, 2016, Roger was a guest on Randy Kredico's radio show, and Kredico asked Roger about how Roger had been in communication with Assange.
In that interview, Roger told Randy Kredico, quote, we, meaning him and Assange, have a mutual friend, someone we both trust and therefore I'm a recipient of pretty good information.
The date of this interview is important because it predates Randy Kredico ever speaking with Julian Assange.
The first time the two were in contact was when Assange was a guest on Kredico's radio show on August 25th, 2016.
Roger's communication through intermediaries or not predates the possibility of Randy Kredico being his intermediary.
Jerome Corsi was the person who was coordinating with Roger on this front, but Roger couldn't blame Corsi.
The two were too connected, and throwing Corsi under the bus would raise too many dicey questions, but Randy Kredico was perfect.
It was plausible, since Assange had been on Kredico's show, thus there was a kernel of an idea that Roger could work with, but more importantly, blaming Kredico in theory didn't lead anywhere.
Kredico wasn't aware of any of the internal machinations, but Corsi was.
This is why when Roger testified in front of the House Intelligence Committee, he said his intermediary was Kredico and never brought up Jerome Corsi, because he needed that to be the perception.
By November 2017, Roger had publicly claimed that Kredico was his go-between with Assange, and unsurprisingly, Kredico got a request from the House Committee to come testify.
He texted Roger about it, and Roger replied with a quote from Richard Nixon.
Quote, Stonewallet, plead the fifth, anything to save the plan.
This is a paraphrasing of something that Nixon told John N. Mitchell, his former Attorney General, on March 22, 1973, approximately 11 months before he would be formally impeached.
Much like Nixon, Roger was stupid enough to say something like that in a manner that would be recorded.
On November 28, 2017, Kredico was subpoenaed by the committee, and he told Roger about it.
Roger told him to plead the fifth, but then two days later, he would run to Jerome Corsi and ask him to start writing some articles about Kredico.
Roger sensed that his patsy wasn't cooperating, so he planned the public scapegoating that he was going to initiate that plan.
Corsi replied to his request by saying, quote, why not wait to see what he does?
You might be defending yourself too much, raising new questions that will fuel new inquiries.
This may be a time to say less, not more.
How is Corsi the wisest person in this story?
I think Corsi low-key, because he's so boring and a douche, I think that we maybe underestimate how, like, involved in shit he might be.
Also, yeah, and also, so his go-between is Corsi. How is Corsi in contact with Assange?
He might also be making all of it up.
That's possible.
I don't know, but also it could be through Farage or, you know, there's that network of all those people who were in London.
Right, right, right.
Could be Ted Malik too. That could entirely be.
I mean, until we know more, I do think that Roger is lying to cover this up.
I don't know what Corsi's game is.
He could be making all of it up himself and funneling it to Roger, and Roger thinks it's coming from Assange.
Or Corsi could actually be in touch with Assange some way.
But either way, Roger can't afford for that information to come out.
Right, right, right.
Because it's a legitimate thread, it also ties into Info Wars.
It becomes a huge disaster for him if Corsi's in the mix.
Who knew our show would be incredibly relevant in 2018 or 2019?
Still writing June on your checks.
So, two days after telling this weird Nixon quote to Krediko in order to get him to plead the fifth,
two days later, on November 30th, he reaches out to Jerome Corsi and tells him to start writing about Krediko.
On November 30th, 2017, Roger Stone released a statement on Info Wars on the website where he extolled the decency of Randy Krediko
and how the committee was wasting their time in interviewing him.
There's no byline on the story, so Corsi may or may not have written it.
Either way, the editorial tone at Info Wars, it wouldn't stay flowery towards Krediko for long.
And behind the scenes, Roger was anything but laudatory towards him.
This is a trend that tried in true manipulation strategy.
Roger said these complimentary things for two reasons in his statement about Krediko.
One, as a way to try and persuade Krediko to going along with him in his You Need to Plead the Fifth plan.
Dear Krediko, commit a crime.
It's a public statement on the website, but it's also a message directly to Krediko through the website.
And the second function that it serves is that he could use the compliments later to inflict further guilt, as Roger would do later.
Everything I've said publicly about you has been complimentary, yet you continue to act like Nunberg,
referencing Sam Nunberg, the guy who got questioned by Mueller and then ended up drunk all over TV, talking shit about Roger.
So, the next day after that article, December 1st, Roger texted Krediko and told him to do a Frank Pentageli,
referencing the character in Godfather II who pleads the Fifth, but also knows what the Congressional Committee wants to know.
This is a really damning reference, considering that Frank Pentageli was set up by Forlione and was being threatened into not testifying.
Also, Frank does testify, then recants after he's been threatened.
Then, he's threatened more and told his family he'll be safe if he commits suicide, so he does.
I don't know about Krediko, but I would not be quick to do a Frank Pentageli and someone who, like Roger fucking Stone,
saying that to me would obviously be interpreted as a threat.
He literally sent two text messages that are like, I committed a crime, please help me cover it up.
This is mob shit.
Yeah, and it's referencing other shit where people fucking committed a crime.
You bet.
What an idiot.
That same day, Randy Krediko replies and warns Roger that Roger needs to amend his testimony before December 15th,
the day he was scheduled to testify.
Krediko was doing this because by this point, he'd figured out that he couldn't be Roger's go-between,
considering that he hadn't spoken to Assange when Roger was going around the media in early August,
claiming that he'd communicated with WikiLeaks.
He knew that his testimony would contradict Roger's and was extending a very unnecessary courtesy.
It's unclear what happened between December 1st and December 12th,
but on the 12th, Krediko told the committee that he would assert his Fifth Amendment rights if he was forced to testify.
Based on information that is public, I can't say what happened there,
but it's really hard not to assume that it had something to do with Roger.
The fact that the indictment doesn't include any interactions between those dates is very telling.
I'm no legal scholar, but I'm positive that Mueller has those interactions,
and you can make your own conclusions about why they're not in there.
Dear Krediko, I will kill you. I will kill you. I will kill you.
Or, I mean, there's one point when Roger's emailing with a Trump person,
someone in the administration or the campaign,
and the person asks him, do you have any news about Assange or WikiLeaks?
And he says, yes, let's go on WhatsApp.
So there's a decent chance that between that time...
I should have used Signal. I'm telling you, man.
But there's a decent chance between that time Roger was communicating with him through some encrypted thing
and saying those sorts of horrible things.
To be fair, the things he's already saying to him just over unprotected means is pretty damning.
So whatever the case, I'm not entirely sure what all the details are.
I think some of that will come out as time goes on,
but for now we have to leave that sort of vague.
Right.
By the end of December, Krediko had second or third thoughts
and decided he was going to talk to the FBI and the committee.
The timing here is interesting because by that point,
Manafort and Rick Gates had been indicted,
and Michael Flynn had just pled guilty to cut a deal.
If you're Randy Krediko and you're seeing all these people going down
and you're mixed up with the guy who knows all of them,
it's got to feel weird.
You're being vaguely threatened by the guy who knows all of them,
and the guy who knows all of them was also one of their lobbying partners
for years when they worked with dictators.
That would not be a pleasant position to be in,
and I would be like, yeah, I'm talking to the FBI now.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You keep referencing the vaguely threatening things.
I don't want to test if you're bluffing.
Who am I going to be friends with?
Is it the guy who I know is guilty because he texted me guilty shit,
or the FBI who have proven that a bunch of other people are guilty?
Tough.
So Krediko told Roger that he wasn't going to let Roger's lies about him stand,
and Roger didn't take it well.
Krediko began making media appearances to clear his name and tell his side of the story.
Then on April 9th, 2018, Roger emailed Krediko to tell him,
quote, you're a rat, a stoolie.
He also threatened to, quote, take that dog away from you,
which is probably a reference to killing his dog.
Yeah.
I don't think it's like that's my dog.
Yeah, I don't think so.
You're holding on to and then, I don't know.
So he also said, quote, I'm so ready.
Let's get it on.
Prepare to die, cocksucker.
This is right back to like hubris all over again.
You bet.
When Roger was asked about these emails back in May, 2018,
Roger said most of them were, quote, probably fabricated,
which is a weak denial.
Most and probably being in there.
I'm not, I don't, I'm not interested.
Somebody broke into my apartment.
Right.
They sent an email.
Krediko emailed himself.
Got to blame him again.
Yeah.
In perhaps my favorite part of this story,
when Mother Jones was reporting on these emails back in May,
they reached out for comment from Roger and this paragraph is pure fucking gold.
Quote, in a text message to Mother Jones,
Stone did not dispute sending this particular message to Krediko,
but he maintains he was not making a threat
and contends that Krediko is citing his words out of context.
Quote, quote, he told me he had terminal prostate cancer.
Stone writes it was sent in response to that.
We talked about it too.
He was depressed.
I'm going to take your dog because he's got.
Okay.
No, the prepared to die.
That's what he's talking about.
He told me he had terminal cancer prepared to die.
So that was Roger's spin on it.
Krediko says he did not, he does not have prostate cancer
and did not have such a conversation with Stone.
And he doesn't even have a dog.
So once again, Roger just being like real fucking making everything up.
So this is a cut and dry case of witness intimidation and tampering.
Roger was clearly lying or he was clearly trying to vaguely threaten Krediko
into pleading the fifth because he knew that if Krediko didn't,
Roger's testimony was going to be contradicted
and those contradictions would raise suspicions.
Those suspicions would be examined.
The timeline would fall apart and Jerome Corsi would come into play,
something Roger never wanted to happen.
Roger intentionally lied to Congress to cover up Corsi's involvement in all this
and then committed witness intimidation to make sure those lies weren't realized.
And based on everything I can tell from the charging document,
he's dead to rights on this.
It's a open and shut case.
The chrome plated balls on this dude.
Sure.
Unreal.
Here's the important thing to realize and why I told you this long ass story.
Compulsive behaviors naturally trend towards forming a pattern.
Serial killers start to develop routine behaviors and habitual liars do too.
Given the information present, it would be a stretch for me to say that
Roger Stone is guilty of deeper involvement in the DNC and Podesta hackings
and the dissemination of the hacked materials,
but his behavior deeply suggests to me that he is.
His response to early suggestions that he was involved in any of this stuff
followed literally the exact path that his denials of being the one
who harassed Elliott Spitzer's dad went.
It's the exact same pattern.
First step, deny things aggressively.
Second step, lie as much as you can.
Third step, keep lying until people don't believe you anymore.
Fourth step, blame Randy Krediko.
If you take Randy Krediko out of the equation,
this is also the exact pattern that Roger followed
when he was forced to step down from a position in the 1996 Bob Dole campaign
after he was accused of posting a classified ad looking for people to swing with him and his wife.
Deny, lie, keep lying, blame someone else.
In that case, an unnamed domestic employee, he said, had a drug problem
just like he did with Krediko in 2007.
We all learn from our experiences as humans.
And generally speaking, we have a tendency to repeat successful behaviors.
In the case of the 2016 campaign and the propaganda campaign surrounding it,
Roger replayed the behavior that got him out of trouble in 1996, 2007,
and undoubtedly a ton of other times that we're not aware of.
In this case though, it seems like the underlying crime was too big for his patsy just to laugh it off.
Right.
And that is kind of what I feel about the indictment.
Wow.
Sorry about that, what is that, half an hour story time.
That was fucking great.
I was enraptured with your storytelling.
There's connections that I don't think people are making.
And some of it has to do with, I don't know, lack of awareness
or lack of curiosity perhaps in some reporting.
And then some of it is just like, I understand that I'm making connections that maybe can't be proven,
but are definitely there.
You know, the patterns of behavior are definitely there.
If you walked me into a court, I probably couldn't make this argument to a legal satisfaction.
But in terms of how I view, like what's the most likely scenario,
I feel very confident that this is,
and that's not to say that Roger absolutely was in touch with Russian intelligence or anything like that.
But the way he acted when these accusations started coming up implies that he believes he might have been.
Right.
I think that's as far as I'm willing to go.
These guys have got to, they finally have to realize the worst thing that happened to them was Trump winning the presidential.
Nobody thought he was actually going to win.
So they were just like, fuck yeah, I can show off my skills and then use that showing off to fucking sell those skills to somebody else.
And it sort of feels like the classic, do be all dirty and shit, but we'll do well enough in this campaign in order to parlay it somewhere.
Yeah, they thought they were auditioning.
That's what they were really doing.
They didn't rethink the worst thing that happened to them was Trump winning.
It'll lead to tons of contracts and other ways that we aren't as tied down as we now are because of crimes against the United States.
So I don't know.
I think that's going to be interesting to see how this plays out.
We're recording this on Sunday and already there's, you know, articles are starting to come out about Roger saying like,
Look, if it turns out, I know something.
I'll talk to Mueller.
There's already indications that he's like, I'm going to get out of this because I read the indictment.
I realized that I'm fucked.
Hey, I'm a slimy motherfucker.
Who do you want information on?
Alex fucking Trump.
I don't give a shit.
We conspired to steal an election because there's another important piece to consider and that is that nothing in that indictment relies on credit goes testimony
or even courses.
It is basically entirely made up of these documents.
Yeah.
The emails, the texts and stuff like that.
There's no, like he said, he said about this.
It's entirely like we can show that at this date, you said this.
Yeah.
You guys were having this conversation at that date.
Your testimony contradicts that.
Therefore you lied to Congress.
All the lying stuff, I know exactly that all of the lies, it's telling.
I'm sure Roger lied about more stuff in his testimony.
Oh yeah, for sure.
But the things that he's charged with are all things that served to cover up Corsi's involvement.
Those things, I think that you can probably end up like Roger's going to plead his public case that I just didn't remember or whatever.
Sure.
And maybe that's a slippery thing to try and nail him down on.
The witness intimidation is not.
That is 100% borne out by those documents and it reaches the legal standard of witness tampering.
Yeah.
And I think that he knows that he's probably going to get 20 years.
He should.
If he doesn't cut a deal, like I can't imagine the way he's carried himself throughout this entire like last two and a half years or so.
Yelling about Miller every day on the radio saying that he's guilty of treason and stuff like that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I don't see any reason people would show lenience towards him.
They were nicer to Manafort because at least he wasn't being an asshole while they were investigating him.
Stone is fucked and everybody hates him.
And the only reason that he would get off is if Trump pardoned him.
And the only reason Trump would pardon him is if he knew that Roger Stone knew some shit.
And the only reason that...
And he does know that Roger knows some shit.
Exactly.
I also think that if he...
I know that we kind of have slightly different feelings about whether or not Trump could pardon Roger.
And I concede that he could and everything is up for grabs nowadays in terms of what you can get away with.
Yep.
But I also think if he were to do that, it would be definitely obstruction of justice.
Oh, yeah.
Like it would lead to a charge.
Everything that Trump has done so far is absurd.
He threatened somebody through Twitter.
Yeah, I know.
But that's Twitter.
This would be like directly pardoning someone who tried to derail an investigation.
Yeah.
And that would be...
I think that would be...
I hope that would still be beyond the pale.
You would hope.
I hope.
I don't know.
It wouldn't.
And nobody would care because the right wing is like, guess what?
We're going to survive this.
We've survived so much shit in the past two years.
It is nonstop all of the illegal things that we've done.
And it's fine.
Like nobody can pay attention long enough for us to not get away with shit.
So now that all that's out of the way, we got the indictment stuff.
I think we have a pretty decent grasp on what's going on with that, where that comes from
and all that stuff.
Now we can jump into January 25th and Alex's immediate response to his best buddy, the guy
who tells him every narrative to do, apparently, Roger Stone getting arrested.
And here is an out-of-context drop.
Have you ever heard Roger tell a lie?
No.
No.
Cubress!
Roger's never told a lie.
Roger Stone is a straight shooter.
So Alex gets on air at 11 and at 11 at his time, Roger got arrested at six or so.
So he's had a few hours assuming he was awake.
I have no idea.
Yeah.
This guy named Harrison Smith.
He's this sort of underling at Info Wars.
He's the guy who found those Antifa Soros documents on 4chan and made a big deal out of it.
Yeah.
He's a brilliant, brilliant researcher.
He's terrible on air too.
Has a zero charisma.
Awful.
Awful as a host.
Yeah.
He was filling in for David Knight because David Knight had that heart attack and isn't
allowed to host his own show for a while.
Right, right.
Which again, we support and applaud.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So Harrison Smith was hosting it and it was atrocious.
Like I watched a bit of it and I'm like, wow, how is Alex not bum rushed the studio and
just been like, we are in a crisis.
We need some, oh and get in there.
Anything.
It called Joe Biggs back in.
It seems like he should have broken through the wall like the fucking Kool-Aid man.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Entitement.
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, it just goes to show how shallow his bench is.
Yeah.
So like in the day when you need a fucking spin artist in there, you got Harrison Smith.
Yeah.
Good luck.
Ironically, the only person who should have been in there that wasn't Alex is Roger Stone.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I like too that Harrison Smith is trying to compare the treatment of, you know, Roger
Stone to, to like Solson Eatson.
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
And so that makes perfect sense.
He's meeting off a teleprompter and he tries to say the gulag archipelago and he trips
over the word so bad.
It's clear that he has no idea what the words are.
Yeah.
And he's just reading something someone else has written.
It's embarrassing.
It's so bad.
It's just, and so I was expecting like Alex is going to come in with a head of steam.
He's got to write the ship, his own broadcast.
Like to the Harrison Smith is so bad that David Knight calls in and brings life to the
night is the one who is a who is saving this performance somewhat.
Great.
It's still not good, but like the level of talent is so glaring.
Yeah.
Like we hate David Knight and think he's boring, but next to Harrison Smith, that guy is a
showstopper.
So I give it two days before they start comparing Roger to Martin Luther King Jr.
Undoubtedly.
This is, oh, this is the letters from the Birmingham jail all over again.
Undoubtedly.
Yeah.
Alex starts the show.
And like I said, I expected him to come in with a head of steam, but he's actually kind
of subdued.
There's a little bit of like a, like a almost focused energy, a little bit.
It doesn't last the whole show, but it definitely starts on a somewhat even keel.
And Alex's whole thing seems to be at the beginning of the show.
I think he's aware how many fucking people are going to tune into his show to see what
the fuck freak out he has.
Yeah.
And so he, he's seeing excessive traffic coming to his website.
And so all he wants to do is make sure that everybody knows that he's about to talk to
Roger Stone, who's just gotten out of jail on bail.
Right.
And it is a world exclusive.
And he's furious that more media outlets aren't saying Info Wars has the exclusive
Roger Stone.
So there's a little bit of pettiness to start off the show.
Ladies and gentlemen, this is a world exclusive.
InfoWars.com reporter, Patriot, former chief advisor to Donald Trump.
Criminal.
Roger Stone was SWAT team rated in a disgusting act of police state theater by the now politicized
arm of the deep state, the FBI.
And a pre-dawn raid that CNN, of course, had been tipped off to with the reporter lying
on TV, like a Cheshire cat saying that he hadn't been.
Well, Roger Stone last night predicted to me.
I think they're coming for me to Mara.
He said, I can just feel it.
I can see it.
All the preparation, everything.
And he sent me a text message saying they're preparing to move in for the kill.
And boy, was he right.
So Roger Stone exclusively joins us.
This is the first interview world exclusive right now.
He just bonded out about 30 minutes ago.
World exclusive.
Roger, thanks for joining us.
And you've got the floor, obviously, for this segment and the next.
And please lay it out.
Alex, I can say it had greater, better moments, better mornings, shall we say.
Where did we start?
Not good.
Not good.
I think you can get a sense there that Roger, not into this interview.
He is, he's not Roger Stone, the character that we've come to know on Info Wars as a
flamboyant calling Adam Schiff a cocksucker and screaming about how he's wronged by everybody.
I think the reality is set in and lying is not so fun for him anymore because he has consequences
in front of him.
Yeah, he's probably not used to that.
What he's really not used to is being handcuffed to his hands and feet while shuffling into
a courtroom.
And he will address that a little bit later.
Yeah, that's something where it's like, that might change a little bit of how you're going
to do business that shit.
It gets real, real quick when you're in shackles.
So they're having this world exclusive interview and Roger in this next clip is just basically
reading a statement and spoiler alert.
This is almost exactly the statement he reads when he ends up going out in front of the
courthouse and talking to the gaggle of press that is out there.
So here is Alex's fantastic world premiere exclusive.
Where should we start with how you're able to predict this last night over the phone?
What happened this morning?
What happened once they got into your house?
Also, I want to address this really quick.
The idea that he thought like he predicted this is not that surprising.
Yeah.
Like pretty recently Mueller requested his testimony from the House committee.
Yeah.
It's obvious that he knew he'd lied.
Right.
So like obviously if the investigator is requesting those documents, that means that they have
reason to believe that this will provide them with the information they need to charge you.
So him being like they're coming.
Of course they're coming, Roger.
And if he did predict it, that justifies the pre-dawn rate.
It kind of does.
That's the most justification for the pre-dawn rate.
He's like oh god damn it.
I couldn't make it to my fucking hidden care of it.
If I had one more day.
Yeah, exactly.
And then what happened once you were in jail?
Then what unfolded after that?
The important thing I think off the bat is that after a two-year investigation none of these
charges relate to Russian collusion or WikiLeaks collaboration.
And I actually think that that's worse for Roger.
That's exactly what I was thinking, but whenever you were reading that wall of text I was like
they're not talking about Russian collusion at all, which means they're charging stone
with something in order to make sure that they get that conviction, which means when they do
charge somebody with Russian collusion, they have got that conviction already there.
So they can use a conviction instead of an indictment.
That's possible.
That's what I was saying.
That's some of my feeling about it and what I think is conspicuous in its absence.
So Roger is using that as a way to be like it has nothing to do with all this other stuff,
but it does just on a secondary level.
So anyway, he's being fast and loose about this, but who cares?
Sure.
Or any other illegal act connected to the 2016 election.
Prepare to die, cocksucker.
I'm going to Congress in my testimony.
Okay, so.
It matters that it could be immaterial and which there is no intent.
Any error I did make would have been inconsequential and it would have been in that person.
No, that's not true.
I mean, we went through the lies.
Yeah.
They're not unintentional.
Yeah.
You don't accidentally just forget, oh, the person that I said was Randy Kredico was actually
Jerome Corsi and I'm going to uniformly lie to cut Jerome Corsi out of this whole thing.
Right.
So I don't know.
I understand that he probably thinks that this defense is going to work, but I just,
as an external observer, I don't think it's going to.
I think it's thin.
Yeah.
The spin is very hollow when you start your interview with what essentially amounts to
I am sad.
I am very sad.
Bad day, Alex.
So you might have been able to tell in that clip there, Roger's having a little bit of
phone issues.
Yeah.
He's having some troubles with technology and that continues into this next clip.
Please describe what happened because your phone's been breaking up repeat.
You said 29 FBI agents showed up at my home, pounded on the door.
I opened the door to, you know, pointed automatic weapons.
Sure.
I was handcuffed.
Sure.
There were, I don't know, 17 vehicles in the street with their lights on.
Sure.
They terrorized my wife and my dogs.
They executed a search warrant to search the premises.
Okay.
And CNN was present.
So what?
CNN was tipped off prior to my arrest.
Cool.
Unbelievable world is close.
So Roger, we're going to go to break in a moment and come back and let you walk through what
happened after that.
Do you notice how he's just describing what a routine arrest is?
Like he's a victim of it when it's the result of his actions?
Yeah.
That's not a coincidence.
That's what all these people on the right do.
Everything he's describing is exactly what you would expect.
People with guns.
Of course.
Yeah.
The bunch of cars.
Of course.
This is a high profile target who is involved in something pretty messy.
Not that you would expect a shootout to happen or anything like that.
You do expect him to have a trap door in his house.
Like that's why you're doing that because you're like, if he gets anywhere near that
fireplace, it's going to spin around to the outside and he's going to be able to run
away.
Right.
And the idea of like, they put me in handcuffs.
Yes, you got arrested.
They searched my house.
Yes.
There is a reasonable suspicion.
There's evidence.
Yeah.
Further evidence there.
Yeah.
So like all this stuff is like, this falls on deaf ears when he is involved with an outlet
that routinely demonizes black youths that are killed by police.
I was literally just thinking like the next with all the subtext of this is Alex going
like, but you're not black.
It's, it's, I don't even think that what Roger's coming from is a race standpoint.
It's a status standpoint.
Right.
He has like a, how dare you do this to, do you know who I am?
Yeah.
There's that sort of feel to it and whatever.
In this next clip, what we hear is that Alex is trying to boost Roger's press conference.
Talk about how awesome it is, but he still only seems to care that he got to talk to
him before the press conference.
Ladies and gentlemen, hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of reporters are queued up in
Florida outside the courthouse trying to get an interview with Roger Stone.
Well, he's here exclusively, global exclusive.
And he's going to make them wait while literally hundreds and hundreds more pile up.
One of the biggest press conferences in history.
He goes on to later say it's bigger than OJ's press conference and a couple, a couple
points on that OJ's press conference was an official event and it was indoors in a small
ballroom.
Of course, there's more people outside the Florida courthouse where notorious dickhole
Roger Stone is getting, getting processed.
Of course, people, if I were in Florida, I would drive a couple hours.
Oh, for sure.
To show up and yell something at it.
Yeah.
It would be great.
So I can only imagine that tons of people were like, oh, hell yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So that's why there's tons of people there.
It's not like it's actually like most of them think this is newsworthy or like bigger
than OJ.
Although.
I wouldn't mind like just from a standpoint, I think a treasured thing that I would like
on my phone is like video of him with shackles on like, I would watch that anytime I'm sad.
I would watch that and be like, we got him.
Yeah.
There's something gratifying about that.
Although I will say on Friday when I woke up, this news had broken.
It was a tragedy for me.
Yeah.
I've been in the middle of trying to work on a very in-depth Wednesday episode for us.
And I'd put in like three straight days.
I was getting it already.
I'm like, damn it, universe.
Now you're throwing me off course.
I got to do this Roger Stone shit.
Hey, you know, life progresses at its own pace and we follow it at where it goes.
So you can see that Alex is really just like, this is the exclusive.
We are the best.
He's putting off all those people out there to talk to us because we're amazing.
And here, Roger just gives him what I would describe as a boilerplate defense.
And I don't believe it.
I went to legit false statements to the Congress and I contest all of them.
And he, in my testimony, would be honest mistakes, memory.
And they would be immaterial.
They would be inconsequential.
So, you know, it's a political, I think it's a politically motivated work.
Well, Roger, I've talked to a lot of national members.
I've talked to a lot of national members of the press today who were just flabbergasted right now because they've read the indictment.
And you have Randy Kredico saying he was talking to a signs and that he was the go between.
I remember back at the time this being discussed, you said you knew a talk show house that new lawyers from WikiLeaks.
Everybody was trying to talk to WikiLeaks.
So again, we talked about this a million times.
This is this is making journalism illegal.
Only.
Yeah.
I would say if you're bluffing about what the indictment actually says, right, Alex is, you know, I mean, it's just a shit spin.
But it's it this indicates to me that this is the direction Roger is trying to go with his defense.
And I think it's not the right defense.
I don't know what the right defense would be and it's not my responsibility to come up with it.
But this is very soft as we've already complained about.
Here's my pitch.
Here's my pitch.
Leave a threatening voicemail on every senator's.
I think that's not bad.
I think that would work.
Not a bad idea.
You got it.
I'm going to kill the entire Senate's dogs.
Sure.
Yeah, that'll play.
Yeah.
So here in this next clip, we see the beginning of something that Alex is the only person talking about in the entire world, which leads me to believe that he's concerned about his own well being in the aftermath of Roger getting indicted.
But not just his own well being one of his family members as well.
And if the press doesn't circle the wagons and see how dangerous this is, it's insane.
And now, as you know, I've got Washington Times, Washington Post, AP, all these reports about witness and special counsel probe, former Stone Associate, collected payments from Info Wars through job stone arranged.
I have my phone ringing off the hook saying, did you make the hush money?
Are you going to prison?
I'm going to prison.
So now employing people and then giving them a severance pay with that's in their contract, because that's what he wanted to work here.
He made a pretty good deal for himself.
But I had to let him go because I didn't like his writing anymore.
It just wasn't accurate.
Of course he now admits, OK, it was severance pay.
Earlier he was saying actually it was something else.
But the point is they're now moving on to me and my father.
And my spidey sense tells me they mean to move on us to take Info Wars out and to take any support for the president out because they know we got President Trump elected.
A little bit of hubris there too.
But also, like, I don't I haven't found it.
I can't find any like legitimate sources talking about how David Jones is going down the head of HR at Info Wars.
I like the idea of all of these fuck faces getting together and then Amlo has to be like, whoa, we've got a caravan of white people coming to the border.
We're going to have to build a fucking wall.
So it's interesting here because I was able this is one narrative that I'm not going to be able to really fully tell you what's going on.
But I'm going to read to you here from a Greenwich Time article about Corsi and the situation that he's in now.
Visa V these payments.
And we'll see.
I think this is a story that's going to develop a little bit over time and especially like I would love to get my hands on that contract.
Also, you didn't like his writing anymore.
Did you like you liked his writing?
I think there's actually a really reasonable argument to be made that when Corsi went deep down the QAnon hole, I would have fired it.
That's fair.
So I don't know.
There's a decent chance that he just got to QAnon and Alex did fire him.
Yeah.
You know, there's a chance that Roger and Corsi were both pulling the wool over Alex's eyes in terms of their clearly documented interactions about talking to Assange.
So that is that is really, really interesting, especially in the context of Alex saying that he told Roger Stone to go get.
Go get me WikiLeaks.
Like Roger called Corsi.
Yeah.
So and then we've got called 10 Malik and then we got all these emails going back and forth of how can we do this?
Shit.
So from this Greenwich Time article quote Corsi perhaps best known for promoting the false idea that former president Barack Obama.
Was not born in the United States has released internal special counsel documents fulminated against alleged plea deal offers and published a hastily written e-book outlining his account of interactions with his one time ally, the longtime
Trump advisor Roger Stone, subject of intense scrutiny in the Mueller probe.
At the same time, Corsi says he's been collecting what he describes as $15,000 a month in payments from Info Wars, a website that has attacked the special counsel investigation as a deep state conspiracy
designed to topple President Trump.
An attorney for Info Wars confirmed that these payments continued for the past six months as severance and Corsi lost his post as the website's Washington bureau chief, a job that Stone helped arrange according to both Stone and Corsi.
The revelation of Corsi's arrangement with Info Wars offers new context to the now frayed relationship between Corsi and Stone and how the on again off again alliance between two of America's foremost conspiracy theorists has drawn the attention of Mueller's investigators.
So when we talk about Alex going like we're setting Corsi up in as a Washington bureau, that whole idea with Stones, like the whole thing with Stone saying we need to have him.
Or maybe Alex thought we need to get a presence in Washington and Corsi was the one Stone recommended and set up for the job.
Something like that.
So that's also interesting.
$15,000 a goddamn month?
That's so much money.
What are these people fucking doing?
That's so much money.
The actual journalists get paid like a dollar every week.
Yeah, I know.
Insane.
Yeah.
That's over 100,000 a year.
God damn it.
Over like 15, 150,000 a year.
Corsi would have been pulling in just from Info Wars.
Let alone he went on nonsense.
Just getting fired.
Yeah.
And that ebook is fucking good.
Cannot keep it on the shelves.
By the way, I just I just got a copy of Mike Cernovich's new book.
Dude.
It was free.
That better be.
Yeah.
I just I got it in case it costs something later and I think it's probably going to be a disaster.
I'll let you know after I read it.
Anyway, quote, Corsi said in an interview that he doesn't remember being asked by Mueller's investigators about those payments, but he added that his brain was a mush after 40 hours of questioning over several days and he might have forgotten.
Quote, it's pretty far fetched, Corsi said of the notion he was paid to keep quiet.
I'm the guy who's talked to the most.
I haven't been hushed about anything.
So, you know, quote, after the Washington Post made inquiries into the payments last week, Corsi said he learned from Alex Jones's father, David, that the payments would stop according to a legal complaint Corsi filed this week against the post.
So it's unclear whether or not.
So here, quote, an info wars attorney disputed that, saying that Corsi was fired in June and paid the remainder of a one year contract to end of this month.
His info wars pay had already been scheduled to end this month.
Info wars attorney Mark Rondaza said, so it's unclear.
I could believe either version of the story.
Quite frankly, I don't.
I know that Corsi is up to some shit, but that doesn't none of this proves that that was hush money.
Right.
It could be a situation where it's like, fuck it, just pay him.
God, Mark Rondaza is fucking raking it in.
Yeah.
This past couple of years for him, I must.
He must have bought six boats out of all the bullshit that so many billable hours.
Mm hmm.
God, now I wish I was representing Alex.
Yeah.
So quote, Stone Corsi and Alex Jones all said that the info wars job and payments Corsi received after leaving are not related to Corsi's role in the Mueller probe.
Quote, I assisted him because he was constantly whining about being broke.
Stone said in an interview, Corsi declined to comment on Stone's characterization of his finances.
So, you know, it's this is, this is real back and forth nonsense.
That's what I would describe it.
Corsi put a little away, put a little bit away.
That's just, that's just good advice.
Yeah.
That's all I'm saying.
So it's interesting to me too, because this article has some stuff that I don't know if I was like aware of.
So in terms of like Roger and Corsi coming together, there's this sort of, I didn't realize this and I'm not sure if this is exactly true or if it's the public story.
But here from this Greenwich time article again, quote, Stone has previously told the post that he became aware of the conspiracy theorists,
Jerome Corsi, and conservative writer when Trump posed a question to him in 2011.
Who's this guy, Jerome Corsi?
When Stone asked Trump why he wanted to know about Corsi, Trump responded, quote, I've been talking to him.
Corsi had recently published a book titled Where's the Birth Certificate, the case that Barack Obama is not eligible to be president.
Trump became the most public ardent supporter of Corsi's theory staging splashy public appearances to taunt Obama to provide more proof about his birth.
So then it goes on to say, no, no, no, quote, Stone and Corsi's relationship continued after Trump's victory.
Stone suggested they both go to work for Info Wars, Corsi said in an interview.
Rondaza, the Info Wars attorney, told the post that Corsi was one of 15 people who Stone recommended to Jones as possible chiefs of the new Washington Bureau for the conspiracy site.
So like I said, I don't know, even with this information from this Greenwich Time article, like you get some interesting glimpses into like the version of the story that people are presenting.
But I can't suss the truth out about this. I don't know what those payments were to Corsi. I can't claim to.
It's an interesting thing that I think will develop as the two of them start shitting all over each other.
And that Corsi has indicated that he's willing to work with the probe, the Mueller probe.
So like this could get really ugly and we might learn a lot more in the future.
We're in a triple prisoner's dilemma now.
Yeah. And everyone's a liar.
So for now, we have to put a pin in the Corsi payments narrative, although it is something I'm very interested in.
So I feel like this is this is like a Tarantino Mexican standoff.
Like every one of them has a gun pointed at each other's head and they're both they're all going to wind up shooting each other.
Yeah, it does seem like politically that is what's going to happen.
Well, I mean, maybe literally, I don't know. It's going to be a weird couple of couple of years.
Yeah. So in this next clip, Alex is still trying to do his world exclusive interview with Roger and he throws it to Roger.
And then there's phone issues.
Roger, you have the floor to the real world right now to make the statements.
They're encamped at your house. The FBI has put a big tarp up so the helicopters can show it.
They're moving in to your home looking for anything they can. Obviously, there's nothing. This is so historic.
Roger, world exclusive, your thoughts about what's happening, what's unfolding.
Getting back on and his phone has people calling it boom, boom, boom, boom, boom, boom.
And I wouldn't be surprised if they didn't break into it and cut it off.
We've had a lot of that go on. Yeah.
I mean, my phone all the time, such dialing people and going places and doing things. It's insane.
It's absolutely insane.
I mean, Malware from all the porn he's looking at on his phone, all the bad websites.
I mean, we have evidence. He looks at porn on that phone.
True. There's no doubt about it. Anyway, at the office, that's an HR nightmare.
Yeah, not if your dad.
So the humor there is really fun of like Roger.
Shit.
Just though he's not there.
So this is the best you've ever done.
He's gonna kill some time now because Roger, they got to get him back on the phone.
And so he starts complaining about his position in life and then he starts talking finances.
And you might be surprised by some of these numbers.
Oh God.
Buzzfeed, it's $300 million a year.
It doesn't have the traffic of M4s with our combined network.
Are you fucking kidding?
Those videos, the videos that Buzzfeed has that are like 18 million views until like those channels are massive.
Also, Buzzfeed just laid off.
Well, I mean, these people are owned by fucking evil corporate motherfuckers.
Right.
But just the proposition that Alex is bigger than Buzzfeed is absurd.
Yeah.
We sell $40, $50 million a product, but it's literally marked down to half cost.
So then that's gross $20 million.
Well, no gross 40.
Then we keep 20.
Then you hire all the crew, pay all the services, pay for the bandwidth, do everything.
I'm left with a couple million and then it literally all goes to lawyers.
That is a bad setup.
Yeah.
If you're paying a couple million to lawyers, you are not doing things right.
Randaza is raking it in.
And Tim Fruget.
Yeah, he's giving up all other clients.
I would.
Yeah.
Actually, I wouldn't because you could multitask on this shit.
Yeah, that's true.
This is a cakewalk.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Just like file a motion who gives a shit.
The hours are billable, but the work is very...
Yeah.
I think one of the things that's really important here, most of Mark Randaza's work is delaying
and obfuscating, which doesn't take too long.
Yeah.
Most of what he could do could really be fit on a post-it note that he mails.
If Alex is bringing in 20 million after paying off the products and stuff like that, let's assume
that's the case.
I mean, rent that we saw the studio, not inside, but we went to where it was.
It's kind of on the outskirts of Austin.
So the rent probably wouldn't be that high even though it's a giant space.
Like six or seven grand.
Who fucking knows?
Yeah.
Who knows?
I would say it's more than that probably.
You think so?
Yeah, I think so.
All right.
But even so, it's not in like an area of Austin where rents would be super high.
Right.
It's not like in the middle of Austin.
It's not downtown Austin or something like that.
So I think that he could probably have a very reasonable but high rent.
Then you got to consider bandwidth because he has his own servers and stuff like that.
Right, right, right.
And that's probably a pretty serious expense.
Maybe to the tune of maybe a couple hundred thousand a year, something like that.
If he does get the traffic that he pretends he does, which we'll assume for this.
Now you got to assume Jerome.
Of course he's making $15,000 a month in totally normal severance payments.
Well, if you assume that even when he was working, that's what his salary was.
Roger's making more than him.
Of course.
So Roger's making something like $25,000 a month or something like that.
At least, right?
Yeah.
Roger's a much more important piece of the operation than the Corsi.
If that is a salary that is possible at Infowars, like I'm sure he's not paying O.N.
and David Knight that much, but like you got to consider.
Yeah.
David Knight takes home a respectable two or three grand a month.
I bet it's more than that.
I would put him in the 10 category, something like that.
I bet Buckley's doing great.
Totally.
Oh yeah.
If that is in the salary range for someone like Corsi.
Yeah.
You got to like, you got to cut down on some, I hate, as someone who is a big supporter of
workers, I still think you're paying people too much for what they, you get paid what
you're worth, Dan.
And that's not, that's way more than they're worth.
Unless part of that is don't snitch on the game or something like that.
Like in less, like it doesn't mean that the payments after the fact, of course he's
paying her hush money, but maybe all of it is like, you know, we're up to some shit.
Here's a lot of money.
Yeah.
So you don't get complacent or feel negative about it and feel like maybe I'll write an
encrypted email to somebody with our secrets.
I don't know.
That's a possibility because of course he is not worth $15,000 a month.
And you can put that on like grave.
I will stand by that.
If I was one of the journalists that, that were laid off at Buzzfeed or whatever, I would
hear those numbers and be like, I can give up on my morals for a little while.
Yeah.
What?
Just a year?
I can, I can freelance for the next three years.
I appreciate everyone who donates to our show tremendously, but the concept of $15,000
a month.
Cannot process it.
Bananas.
Cannot.
I've never even considered that much money as a thing.
Absurd.
So Alex gets Roger back and he's having phone problems again and it's not great and they
basically just talk in circles about the same.
Like you could kind of describe Roger's interview in almost in its entirety as being like, he's
channeling Mary and Barry.
Yeah.
That's what I would say.
Yeah.
Set me up.
That sort of thing.
So it works for him.
Yeah.
For a little while at least.
So Alex thinks that he's got Roger back on the phone and he gears up to throw to him.
And this is a little bit of a longer clip, but I think it's really important.
I think it's so indicative of where Roger Stone and Alex Jones' relationship is going to
be moving forward.
And also this made me laugh so fucking hard.
Roger, as you said, you're not going to be intimidated.
I'm very proud to know you.
I'm honored to know you.
You're fun to talk to every day.
You're a good friend of mine now that I've known you the last, I met you like five years
ago, but I've gotten to know you the last three or three and a half.
And it's just an amazing thing that we're in together, my friend.
And so just talk about again, the pre-dawn raid, your wife, what she's going through.
They're moving into your house.
We'll show the footage.
They've got big parks.
They're moving in.
I mean, this is just incredible, Roger.
Squatter's rights.
They're just having a picnic on the front lawn.
There's no doubt they're going in and dropping the phone.
All these phones are tapped.
I mean, tell them.
They admit there's taps out on them.
Nope.
So you better believe they are so pissed right now.
So pissed.
That we're able to talk to Roger.
They are so upset this is going on.
80% chance they're cutting the feed.
20% chance there's so many reporters and so many digital cell phones and so much stuff
out there.
Now it looks like a thousand reporters that that can also make things drop.
You ever been in a huge traffic jam?
And notice your phone keeps dropping because there's so many people on their phones.
20% chance of the most obvious thing happening.
Science.
Yeah.
And we'll obviously have Roger as this unfolds throughout the day, but you can hear that
his voice is almost gone.
He's, he's, he's been up all night long.
We have his exclusive statement up on info wars.com.
We'll obviously take the audio in the video of this right now.
Roger Stone's exclusive interview.
Your first interview after being released from jail.
We're going to post this immediately to info wars.com to the exclusive first statement
from Roger Stone after his arrest.
Is it exclusive Mueller as a rogue prosecutor sent text message last night said they're
setting me up for the kill.
Set me up.
Set me was a meme somebody made of myself, faith, Goldie and Roger saying the N word
disappeared.
And he said, I think they're going to probably arrest me tomorrow.
And I had a long conversation with Mr. Stan.
I said, how do you know?
And he goes, I could just see it.
He goes, there's all these puff pieces about how I've been treated bad.
And it's kind of mean.
Mueller asked for my testimony.
Knowing it's coming.
They don't want to look like bad guys for demonizing him.
So CNN reporter admits he was waiting outside Roger Stone's house.
An hour before the arrest.
He's still not picking up.
Well, this is just driving me absolutely crazy.
Well, at least we got the world exclusion, but he had a lot more to add and able to reach
out the president and tell the president what he thinks the president obviously needs to
do.
And I just got out.
They said we're being hit with a denial of service attacks.
You're not.
They're definitely not a service tax.
It's not just traffic.
It is.
They're attacking the feeds right now in fours live again.
And the cell phone to Grant Smith is lawyer cut out repeatedly.
And that's not Roger doing that.
So that may be, that may be again, all the bandwidth being sucked up out of there.
I'm going to text Grant telling to call us feel a landline.
I'm going to text Grant right now.
Okay.
Let's go to Roger Stoney came outside.
Here it is.
So you notice what happened there.
Alex didn't know at all that Roger had left and was going out to speak to the reporters
and crowd that was outside the courthouse.
Yeah, your world exclusive can go fuck itself.
Right.
I have actual media and I need to plead my case because I am horse fucked.
Yep.
I'm completely screwed and I need to in some way at least show like save myself a little
bit and fours isn't going to fucking do it.
Alex has a lot of power in a small sector.
If you're not in trouble, you can pretend you're in a great amount of trouble.
Yeah.
And it's a great cottage industry in order to make a ton of money in order to raise your
relative stature.
You can make your book a best seller probably by enough insinuation in Alex's world because
it just is what it is.
It's a cloistered bubble that you can exploit.
But when the shit gets real, Alex can't help you.
And I think that that is such a strong indication of it.
He didn't say, hey, Alex, I'll be back.
I'm going to go talk to the reporters.
He just disappeared and left Alex hanging and he knew Alex was on air.
He knew that Alex was on air and making a big deal out of how this wasn't exclusive.
This is disrespectful.
Oh, oh, oh.
It's a real dick move.
I am.
I think the only thing that I'm really furious about is Roger needs in order for his image
to work properly.
He needs one of those jokey voice mails that's like, hey, how are you doing?
No, that was his lawyer's voice mail that came up.
All right.
Okay.
He has a lot of lawyers.
That's disappointing.
Roger goes out to speak to the people and Alex plays the feed from CNN.
And I don't know if you watched any of this.
Didn't go well.
No, I didn't.
Do not go well.
Hey, Alex, just want to say I'm on TV.
Nope.
Nope.
That would be better.
This was, this was a tough, this was, you know what?
If this was a stand up, I would say tough set.
Oh boy.
You had a tough set.
Oh boy.
Thank you.
Thank you very much.
I think it's custom everywhere in Florida thrown at him.
Always said, the only thing worse than that is not being talked about.
Don't let him, don't let him speak.
That's the left.
Two year inquisition.
The charges today relate in no way to rushing collusion.
We'll get back to this here in a second, but you notice how it's almost exactly what
he was saying to Alex earlier.
Yeah.
He's reading the script of his statement in both places where Alex is pretending that
we have access to more.
And to be fair, he does talk to Alex for longer than he's able to stay in front of these
people.
He gets booed the fuck out of there real fast.
It's real.
It's way more fun if you get, if, if Roger is getting booed while he's given the statement.
Yeah.
And if you watch the video, you can see it in his face.
The same thing you see in a comic that's bombing.
Yeah.
Like, uh-oh.
Uh-oh.
I'm usually pretty good at these things.
And this is, this has gotten away from me.
God damn it.
He should have gone to crowd work.
Probably.
Yeah.
Hey, where are you from?
Where are you from?
Look at that shirt you're wearing.
Anybody celebrating anything other than me being indicted?
Wreckie League's collaboration for any other illegal act in connection with the 2016
campaign.
This is beyond a movie.
This is, this is, this is a mad mob.
No Russia trying to take his peak and put him in prison like you're doing the info wars.
So I need to talk about two things about this.
Oh, there's that thing.
Oh, it turns out it can be used both ways.
Oh, the first thing is I really, really hate to do this, but I might have to give in for
his partial credit for starting the locker up chant.
Now, not Alex himself, but it might have been his employee, Joe Biggs.
Yeah.
As we learned when we went over Alex's 2015 path towards accepting Trump, it took him
a while, but the whole time he hated Hillary, Alex would go on to accept Trump as his Lord
and savior around late December, 2015.
But by October, he'd recognized that Trump represented an amazing marketing opportunity.
So on October 15th, 2015, he sent Joe Biggs out to the rally in Texas.
So far, we have been able to basically weasel our way into the Hillary Clinton event.
And right now, as you can see, I have on my Hillary t-shirt and I'm standing in front
of this Stalin like photo of Hillary Clinton.
It's very eerie.
I'm literally deep in the lion's den right now.
So I've got my Hillary for prison t-shirt on under here.
I'm going to release that later.
Once she comes out and speaks and scream, Hillary for prison and take this shirt off
and then start screaming, Hillary for prison.
We'll see what happens.
Well, Joe, it's key you do this.
OK, it's key.
Sure.
The Independent has reported that Michael Stoker is credited with starting the chant
at the Republican National Convention.
But that is way after October, 2015.
And it's pretty easy to see how something that starts with Hillary for prison could be
made more chantable as we lock her up.
I can't find any references to the chant that predate this field report where Joe Big
says he's going to get a Hillary for prison chant going.
And he's kind of just doing it as an ad for this really cool shirt that he's got.
Rolling Stone was closest to capturing this in their piece about the Republican National
Convention.
Quote, you can hear the disembodied voice of far right conspiracy theorist Alex Jones
booming through downtown Cleveland from several blocks away.
Quote, now we're going to push even harder with more Hillary for prison shirts.
How many Hillary for prison shirts we got here today?
He screeches into the microphone.
So you can see even in that, it's demonstrative of this being a really good marketing
opportunity for him.
Way less chantable.
Yes.
Hillary for prison.
No, that's not terrible.
It's not terrible, but lock her up is much better.
Lock her up is so good.
You can see the linguistic path that could have been charted from that.
Absolutely.
Alex has brass fucking balls to complain about people yelling stuff at Roger while he tries
to give a press conference.
On October 6th, 2016, Alex Jones announced the Bill Clinton is a rapist contest.
I was going to say, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Where he would give anyone $1,000 to wear an Info Wars branded Bill Clinton shirt on
TV for at least five seconds.
You'd get $5,000 if you could be heard saying Bill Clinton is a rapist.
Well, now that I know he could afford that shit, he hasn't been paying anybody.
Naturally, this took off and Info Warriors began interrupting news remotes and Democrat
speeches in hopes of getting a payout, or honestly, probably not even caring about the
money.
Alex had provided a focused strategy and completely normalized the antisocial behavior they were
longing to express.
In Alex's Bill Clinton contest, sizzle reel, there's multiple clips of his listeners interrupting
speeches and press conferences at Alex's own behest.
I would say that yelling lock him up at Roger's press conference could be seen as, you know,
being like rooted in the same antisocial impulse that those Info Warriors were engaging in.
But I think the context is different.
Yelling that at Roger falls under the heading of parody as well as coming from a place that's
closer to righteous indignation.
Yeah.
So I'm going to give it a pass.
But Alex is insane to be like, they're trying to take away his free speech by doing something
that I literally paid people to do not three years ago, two and a half years ago.
And in that Joe Biggs clip we played from December, from October 2015, he's going to
a Hillary rally and trying to create a spectacle and yell Hillary for prison.
So it is the same behavior.
Yeah.
It's just, you know what?
It turns out a lot more people will come and yell at Roger Stone.
It's not hard.
Yeah.
I'm usually against mobs, but I wish I was part of that mob.
It's, it does seem like it might be a great time.
That's going to be what?
What would you scream at him?
I don't know.
I'd need to workshop it for a bit off the top of my head.
Nothing really comes to mind off the dome.
I think I would scream cut his dick off, but that's not really chanceable.
I think that would be like after the chant has kind of died down and you got that one
guy who's trying to get it started up again and he's just like, he's just a little bit
off and he's just like, cut his dick off.
And everybody's like, wow, dude for a second.
And then they're like, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's when Roger flees back to the courthouse.
All of a sudden somebody needs to be passing out pitchforks.
That's the, that's the real tragedy here.
There weren't enough pitchforks there.
Now the agrarian life is gone by the wayside.
So Alex is mad that people are booing him.
I understand why.
Cause it's bad optics.
It turns into a situation where it's like, huh, maybe a lot of people don't like Roger
Stone.
And his listeners have to be like, why don't they?
And then maybe they start looking into it and be like, oh fuck, Roger's a bad dude.
Yeah.
But Alex cuts that off at the pass by, he says this repeatedly over and over again,
that the people booing are reporters and they're not.
No, of course they're not.
They're not.
They're a crowd of people that have gathered there to boo Roger Stone.
Yeah.
Which is a very understandable impulse.
But as long as Alex presents it as this is the liberal media, the enemy of the people,
the fake news media, they're all booing him in order to create the perception that he's
a bad man and all this stuff.
Yeah.
That's a successful propaganda narrative.
Right.
You're going to trick some people with that.
It's not true, but you can trick some people with it.
I, again, I'm usually against mobs and I, I believe that all like not all journalists.
Hashtag not all journalists.
Yeah.
Oh boy.
God damn you.
It would, it would ever consider this, but I will be God damned if it wouldn't be the
most satisfying thing.
If at a White House press briefing, all of the reporters were just like.
It would be interesting.
Yeah.
So Alex is mad about that, but he has one criticism of Roger Stone.
And I don't, I don't know how I feel about this.
I felt it was, I was a little surprised.
Let's go to this feed here of stone.
Let's, let's, let's hear this live feed of stone walking down the steps.
I guess this is from when he came down earlier.
Yeah.
He makes that joke and does that Nixonian thing.
I don't, I don't think any of that's funny.
I mean, I like Roger and everything.
He said that the FBI agents, the way they came.
He said, if they just called me, I would have come in.
I want to, are there guidelines?
Yes.
Are there reasons that the FBI, that that's what I'm going to get to that they had some
reasons.
That's enough from CNN.
They did that to make him look like a guilty criminal.
I love the idea that he's trying to present that the media is trying to make him look
like a guilty criminal when 20 seconds earlier, he's complaining about Roger doing the Nixon,
I'm not a crook son.
Yeah.
Well, that makes him look super guilty.
Yeah.
That was, that was a weird move.
I'm going to go with a two on the nose.
You know, when Alex is like, this is like a movie.
This is like a movie that move.
If it wasn't a movie, you'd be like, guys, come on.
Yeah.
That's silly.
So Alex at this point, Roger's, he can't get him back on the phone.
He's still in front of these people and like doing poses and stuff.
And so he can't, he can't call Roger.
He's a man adrift.
He doesn't know what to do.
Right.
So he starts going through like these feeds like MSNBC, CNN and all this, but he'll only
play like a second of them because they start making valid points.
And so he's like, get enough of this, enough of this.
As if he's fed up with the media when in reality it's like, I can't let this be on my show.
I'm going to have a tough time spinning out of this.
So instead of dealing with anything, Alex gets like really fucking weird, trying to make
a comparison about what the media is doing to Roger and those FBI agents who SWAT teamed
his house, how they're trying to make him look guilty.
He makes a comparison that none of us could have possibly expected.
And it's about.
Somali pirates.
Nope.
I wish.
I wish.
They did that to make him look like a guilty criminal.
I've told you this a thousand times.
They'll have like year long stings I've seen on Amish people who don't even sell.
Weird.
Milk or cheese, but the government wants their property in a famous case in Pennsylvania.
Another one in Michigan.
Oh, like Trump down by the border.
Hold on.
Hold on.
Hey, between a federal and state park, they wanted that land to build a road a couple
hundred acres.
I've had the lawyers for them on years ago.
Well, several Amish groups.
And so for like a year, these neighbors move in and they keep begging, please sell us cheese.
And finally, the Amish guy goes, I'll just give you cheese.
And they go, is that an Amish accent in the next state?
Well, give it to her.
You want, Sonny?
Interstate crime now.
Got an Amish guy.
Are you sure?
That's not a 49er at age two.
That's a real criminal.
You got their real old chopper.
And then they come in with SWAT teams, guns, shoved their heads down and everything.
But see the average jury thinks, well, they must be bad if they did this instead.
No, this is bad.
Oh, you're so close to getting it.
What he's trying to present is the idea that they did that to create the appearance that
Roger merited a SWAT team.
Ergo, he's bad.
And Alex, I mean, that character work is strong.
I don't think it's good for Amish or Mennonite, a farm person or anything.
There's gold in them hills.
It's really close to that.
I'm going to give you some cheese from all across the state line.
Sonny, you can give it to whoever you want.
There you have it.
Roger Stone is the Amish of evil.
Alex is way off about this story.
He's kind of just making things up to make it seem like the government is constantly
just trying to make, you know, make stuff up about people to jam them up.
And that's not even close to true in the case of these Amish and those sorts of farms.
Alex is presenting this as a case of just one Amish guy who's so nice and kind that he
gives an undercover agent some cheese.
The agent then gives it to someone in another state and boom.
Out of nowhere, international sales of unlicensed cheese.
This Amish guy is going to prison.
Got to get him.
That's bullshit.
Take him down.
In 2010, Rainbow Acres Farm was raided in the culmination of a drawn out sting operation.
The issue was not cheese.
It was the fact that Rainbow Acres sold tons of raw milk, which has been illegal to sell
across state lines since 1984.
Within a state, rules about raw milk are left up to the state's discretion, but federal
law prohibits interstate sales and for a good reason.
Raw milk is not pasteurized.
And since, and as such, there's no good protection against things like E. coli, salmonella, and
the pathogens responsible for causing tuberculosis and typhoid.
And in the decade between 1998 and 2008, over a thousand illnesses, 104 hospitalizations
and two deaths were proven to be caused by drinking raw milk.
Raw milk proponents claim that pasteurization kills off the good bacteria along with the
bad, so they're against it.
Those people are dumb.
Yep.
Rainbow Acres was selling a lot of raw milk outside of Pennsylvania.
A Lancaster online article about the operation cites one example of Liz Reitzig, a woman
from Maryland who paid over $6 a gallon for raw milk from Rainbow Acres.
And she was far from the only one.
This is a really large operation.
One of the ways that these farms try to get around the law is by doing what's known as
a cow share program, where instead of buying actual raw milk, farms allow people to pay
a certain amount for a stake in a claim on part of an actual living cow, which then gives
them rights to that animal's eventual milk production.
So they literally are 49ers.
It's kind of like that old saying, you need to buy the cow when you can't get the milk
legally.
Oh man.
There was another farm in Pennsylvania called Amos Miller Farms that ran afoul of the raw
milk laws also.
But their case is even worse than Rainbow Acres, since they were only on the government's
radar because they were definitively traced down as being the source of a Listeria outbreak
that killed at least one of their customers who lived in Florida outside of state lines.
There was also Mark Nolt of the Nature Sunlight Farm in Pennsylvania who got arrested for flagrantly
violating state regulations by publicly refusing to maintain a state raw milk permit.
And apparently also refused to allow routine testing of his cows for infectious diseases
like TB.
He was also selling tons of products across state lines.
In an article about his arrest, it was said that he received a fine of $5,100, which is
nothing.
He, like the other cases that we're talking about, we're running large operations.
These aren't little individual farmers being targeted by the feds.
It's mid-sized to large businesses who are being punished for breaking the law.
The Michigan case Alex is referring to is Family Farms Cooperative, which was a little
bit of a smaller operation, but also sold raw milk outside of Michigan.
In March 2010, 12 of their customers reported getting sick after drinking the same Friday
shipment from Family Farms milk.
Stool samples revealed the presence of Campylo Bacter, which indicates food poisoning.
None of the cases I can find of Amish busts in Pennsylvania match up with stories like the one Alex
is telling.
In fact, all of them are cases where the people who got arrested were in fact breaking the law
because it was more profitable for them.
Probably not the analogy Alex wanted to make about Roger, but it seems like it's kind of
fitting.
It is.
So it's accidentally him making a good point there.
Yeah.
He is like these Amish farmers.
Yeah.
They broke the law and then got in trouble for it.
Yeah.
All right.
If those diseases weren't contagious, I would be a little bit fine with people getting sick
with drinking raw milk.
If vaccination, if those diseases weren't contagious, I'd be like, hey, you fucking,
you're stupid.
In both of those cases, I kind of agree with you except for the part of it being like that
one case, that Maryland woman who was interviewed in that article, she has a bunch of kids.
Right.
No, no, no.
You're still feeding these kids that they don't have the right to choose what milk they're
drinking.
Yeah.
So I think I agree with you in terms of adults.
Like you can make your own decision.
If you have all the information in front of you, you still want to drink raw milk, go
have a fun time.
Yeah.
You're running a risk, but whatever, you can do your thing.
Once you start having it be like, this is what is being given to children in the same
way with the vaccines.
It's like, if you're an adult, choose if you want to get vaccinated or not, except for
the contagious part of it.
Yeah.
But in terms of like, the kids don't have a choice.
Right.
And they might be the ones who get polio or get, you know, measles, mumps or rubella.
So, yeah, I agree in principle, but applied to children.
It's out.
I mean, actually applied, it's out period, but it does make a certain logical sense of,
if you're dumb enough to do this, then you accept the, you know, it's like...
If the principle of you're only hurting yourself were true, then it would be fine.
Right, right.
It's like, guys who climb a mountain and then die and you're like, you knew it was a possibility.
It's kind of on you, man.
High risk, high reward.
Yeah, exactly.
You knew going in, scaling K2 might kill you.
Right.
Did it anyway?
Because how awesome would it be to get on the top of that mountain?
That'd be so cool.
I totally understand the impulse.
Not glad you're dead, but whatever.
I think that's different because I don't think drinking raw milk is an achievement.
But whatever.
I mean, at the end of the day, what is climbing a mountain?
Just drinking raw milk.
It's just getting high.
Right.
So, at this point, Alex is furious because Roger Stone went out there and got booed,
which is understandable.
I understand it.
I get it.
I get it, buddy.
Where was he?
What?
Like what city was he in?
I don't know.
Fort Lauderdale?
Fort Lauderdale.
Yeah, one of those Florida cities.
I don't know what city Roger lives in.
He's in Florida.
Yeah.
Whatever.
It's where he lives.
I'm just saying that if that was even, like if I got any kind of alert by that, I would
start running.
If I got Jerome Corsi's salary, I would have jumped on a plane.
Oh, for sure.
I would have been on a plane to just boo him myself.
Just sitting next to somebody tight in a spirit airlines flight, just like, hey, what are you
doing on here?
I'm going to go boo an asshole.
For me, like, it legitimately would be like going to Woodstock.
Yeah.
We'd set a tent down.
Well, I mean, it came out of nowhere, so there's no way to prepare.
Right.
It is the sort of thing where like 15 years from now, based on how my life is going the
last few years.
Fair.
It is one of those things like, I would love to be able to tell people, I was there.
I was one of those people booing Roger Stone.
I wear it like a badge of honor.
Grandpa, what's your favorite memory?
One time.
Let me show you this clip.
One time there was a slipper on an asshole.
He got arrested.
I booed him.
It's 70 years later.
We don't even have phones.
We're all on holograms and shit like that, but I've saved this one phone.
I brought my friend along and he said, cut his dick off and everyone cheered.
So Alex is furious about it, but he's furious for another reason just than the fact that
like it went that way, which should be enough.
Yeah, that's that's fine.
But he's mad because he feels that Roger didn't listen to his advice because Alex
told him, if you go out there, they're going to boo you, which is pretty Alex did tell
him that.
I, he said he told it to him off air.
So there's no, there's no on show, but Alex is mad that he didn't, didn't realize this
is going to be what happens.
But then secondarily, he's mad for another reason and that again is that no one is recognizing
that before he went out there and got booed, he was on info wars and no one is reporting
that he did a world exclusive.
No one is listening to me.
He's so mad.
It's a little bit of a longer clip, but again, tracking the, the infuriate, like how he's
getting madder and madder throughout this next three minutes, I think is very important.
I said, you go out there, they're going to shut your whole speech down.
You should make it about the attack on free speech when they do it.
Call Dave Rubin.
They did it.
You know, when total victory is just handed to you, why the hell take it?
But I love Roger to death.
When I've asked our wonderful crew on target focused, awake people, which they're doing
to take all three of those segments with Roger on with us and say Roger Stone's exclusive
global statement on his indictment that they don't want you to hear or see because you
heard him come out and I said when he first came on, let's, let's get the first five minutes.
He'll just re-air all of what Roger said next hour and Roger's going to be popping back
on with us.
But imagine my frustration knowing the next move they're going to make, generally proving
we can get people elected and defeat the globalist.
What do I know though?
I'm an idiot.
I'm a moron.
So we're going to come back in the next hour and play the three segments.
That means the three segments.
He doesn't do that.
I'm going to cut in here really quick.
I don't think it's intuitive or very brilliant of Alex to predict that in an uncontrolled
environment outside a courthouse, there's a decent chance that Roger's not going to
be able to spin things as well as he does on the phone with him.
Yeah.
Like that's not a great, like bold prediction.
He's not Nostradamus.
This is where you go, Bernie Mac.
Just walk out there.
I'm scared of you motherfuckers.
There's the, there's the defense right there.
I ain't scared of you motherfuckers.
Roger Stone, a hundred percent could have gotten on Mike and been like, y'all don't
even understand.
I pulled my shit out.
This whole room gets dark.
Yeah.
Kick it.
He could have had a DJ.
Yeah.
He's making over $15,000.
That would be great.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Or he could have gone with Bill Burry.
He's going to be like, I'm going to be here for 10 minutes.
There's so many great DJs in, uh, in Florida.
Could have gotten Khaled out there.
Khaled.
DJ Khaled makes a guest appearance at Roger Stone's conference.
That'd be incredible.
That'd be incredible.
Holy shit.
Buckley should have been on a flight at six AM this morning.
Even better.
Yeah.
But then when he tells him to kick it, it's like weird sort of acid techno.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That wouldn't be bad.
Yeah.
That'd be very fun.
One, two, and three of the last hour, uh, when Roger Stone was on, because why?
Because when he went out to a thousand plus so-called journalists and reporters and TV
cameras, they weren't all journalists, they booed and screamed him down and videos coming
out, they couldn't help themselves.
They're so out of control.
They're so crazy.
That's the only place that linked to the one place you could actually hear Roger Stone
saying the same thing.
dredgerport.com outside of info wars.com.
That's the only place they all, with great discipline, we're all angry.
We're getting upset.
We had people in the crowd going, oh my God, he's on with Alex Jones.
Well, yeah, he works here.
They're trying to get me.
Who in the crowd was saying that?
They're coming after me.
They asked about me in the grand jury for a year and a half.
They're trying to say if I pay employees that I'm involved in push money for your stupid
Russia crap when it's Mueller and Hillary and you globalists that have the Russians up
your rear ends.
I'm a little wound up today, but we will get you not a piece of Roger.
The entire interview aired live in the next hour.
We're going to air it 123 Swedish pie so you can hear what Roger Stone actually had to
say in one of the biggest media frenzies, if not the biggest, the world's ever seen
where they piranha like have no Russia collusion.
They're totally trying to set journalists up ending all basic freedom in this country.
All of it.
And they drowned him out where he can't even talk when he's got a giant press conference
because they had democratic operatives all look at their phones saying shut him up.
Don't let him talk when he comes out.
Don't let him have this giant crowd because they've all got to cover it.
What they wanted was him being booed and shut down.
And so he was in a big disgusting coup for the deep state bastards.
That was a coup.
Bastards.
So here we are, ladies and gentlemen, covering this all, witnessing it, watching it happen
in slow motion, watching the public drool and not know how to add all around and not
know what's going on.
But you know what?
I'm awake and I'm here and I'm covering it and I'm going to just say this right now.
If you want the globalists to win, they've already successfully basically stopped the
expansion plans here in full force.
That's a huge victory for them.
I'm not going to lie.
That's their victory.
The lawsuits, taking our sponsors, taking our platforms, harassing the living hell out
of us ahead of silencing us, which they failed to do ahead of the coup de gras, taking Trump
out and all those little establishment minions around him that they're lying to him.
They're going to flush them down the toilet as well.
So we're here as an emergency, warning the public, exposing globalists of doing it.
And I need your financial support.
Oh, God, that is a fucking ad pivot right there.
So much of this fucking episode is just Alex and Roger begging for money.
I slipped on the ice.
I slipped on the ice.
That was black ice there, man.
Crazy.
Yeah.
I mean, you could see a deterioration there in terms of like, he's just so pissed off
that no one's giving him, except for Drudge.
No one is giving him his like, you got, you got this Alex, you got a world exclusive.
He's also probably pretty pissed off because as soon as he saw Roger speaking, he had to
have recognized those are the same things he was saying when he was talking to Alex.
Alex is being treated like another outlet, not his best friend.
Yeah.
And I think Alex probably has to realize that means something on some level.
Now Roger's still giving him lip service enough because he does show back up.
He does call Alex back, but I think that's probably just like, let's not, let's not
ruin this.
Got nothing else to do.
Right.
What am I going to do?
Go home to my wife who's been terrorized by the FBI, along with my dog.
I don't know.
Um, so in this next clip, this is so key, I think Alex explains what he thinks that
the media is doing to him.
And then he repeats it over and over and over again.
And he is wrong.
These people can't beat us politically.
So they want to silence us, then frame us, then put us in jail.
Silence us, frame us, put us in jail.
Silence us, frame us, put us in jail.
Silence us, frame us, put us in jail.
Silence us, frame us, put us in jail.
Silence us.
And then he tries to go out and give a press conference and the press itself, they were
involved because they're not the press.
They're a bunch of Jim Acosta's that shout him down his big opportunity in front of every
damn news entity going out globally because that was hundreds of millions of dollars of
publicity.
That was him getting to say he could do something.
So the silence us, frame us, put us in jail.
Silence us, frame us, put us in jail.
Now let's look at what Alex.
Pop it.
Kick it.
Crystal.
Let's look at what Alex did with Hillary Clinton.
Huh.
He sent Joe Biggs out to her rallies as early as October 2015 in an attempt to silence her.
Yeah.
Yelling Hillary for prison, making a big spectacle in the audience in order to derail her.
Speeches in the same way that he is now complaining about people doing to Roger Stone.
That silence us in the way that Alex is describing it.
I'm starting to think that you're going to come up with some parallels.
Frame us.
Alex always talks about the uranium one deal, which is bullshit.
He talks about Mueller on the tarmac with uranium, which is bullshit.
This is all stuff we've gone over.
He's trying to frame them for crimes, whether or not they've also committed other crimes.
I'm not interested in talking about positive.
They have.
That's irrelevant.
We're good.
Yeah.
That's irrelevant.
The things that Alex is specifically talking about are lies.
He's trying to frame them.
He's a huge supporter of and has made millions of dollars selling shirts and bumper stickers
about sending Hillary to jail.
He's tried to silence her, frame her and put her in jail.
This is literally what most of the Trump energy was about that Alex glommed on to throughout
the entire 2016 election season.
It's something that Roger Stone was instrumental in helping create and helping perpetuate.
So Alex repeating this over and over again as if it's what's being done to him is bullshit.
It is his tactical strategy.
Yeah.
Now, what's happening to them is the consequence of other things they've done because they
can get away with that.
They can get away with all of their actions in terms of paying people to disrupt speeches
yelling Bill Clinton's a rapist or whatever.
That's fine.
That's not illegal.
That's fine.
Lying about Hillary Clinton, you know, selling off the uranium, I mean, we can get to the
bottom of it.
We can know what the truth is, but that's within your free speech to lie about it.
That's fine.
No big deal.
If she wants to press charges, maybe, but that would be probably too difficult for her
and she knows that who gives a shit.
Yeah, fine.
And it'd be boring.
Making money off of calling for her imprisonment.
It's all under the free speech.
Other things you have done, like lying about Sandy Hook families, for example, or, uh,
Hamdi Ulacaya, and I, he settled that one, but that's another one.
There are things you can't do and Alex has done those things and the chickens are coming
home to roost.
If he just had never done those things, he could do everything he's doing and no one
would care.
No.
If Roger Stone hadn't lied to the House Intelligence Committee, he'd be fine.
There wouldn't be a perjury charge or let's be totally honest.
If he hadn't threatened Randy Kredico, I was going to say, that's the one where my point
that I'm making is that like, if he hadn't done things that are in that indictment,
right, be fine.
Right.
It's not anything that they're doing on a political level that has caused the downturn.
It's specifically illegal things they've done.
Yeah.
So, no, Alex, Alex went home, uh, that night and he asked, uh, Rex, he was like, I don't
know.
He was like, Hey, hold on a second.
Are you, did you know that what goes around, it comes back?
Like there's a, there's a, and Rex says, I've heard Justin Timberlake.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Did you know there's a really, really famous and common saying about this?
It's called what goes around comes around and Alex was like, who the fuck told you that?
Justin Timberlake.
Ah, there's the globalists.
Sorry to force my Justin Timberlake joke in there twice, but get it in, get it in.
Um, so I ain't afraid of you.
You think Justin Timberlake's ever had pecan pie?
Kick it.
So, uh, Alex gets Roger back on the phone and Roger starts now that he's done his public
humiliation.
Yes.
He is now a little bit freer to talk to Alex.
Right.
And so he starts telling him about his experience, what happened after the FBI came, um, and
uh, he's a sleazy fuck.
Listen to this.
He's not being put in a holding cell and he even in the middle of that story has to get
in a very not true plug for Trump's policies.
I was in shackles and in foot heavy metal shackles, uh, and it was taken to a holding
cell, um, with a group of other gentlemen and all of whom are African-American and all
of whom were there for some drug related charges, every one of them, by the way, supported the
president's new policy regarding sentencing guidelines.
Cool.
I'm sure, I'm sure, like, I don't believe that happened because I don't believe Roger had
that conversation.
But of course not.
Hey, let me pull the room, guys.
What do you think about Trump's new bit of it?
But also, I mean, it's such bullshit because these are rules that have been, uh, in the
process since Obama was in office.
Yeah.
Trump has just taken credit for them.
Roger has given credit for them and then pretending that he had a conversation with
all of these wonderful black people in this holding cell, uh, that, uh, boy, there's just
so much there.
It's like, why?
All of these people in this holding cell were black and I will draw zero conclusions
from this.
I think what he was trying to say might be the benevolent side of racism.
I think he was trying to do that.
Yeah.
Well, but I think that the thrust behind it wasn't to, like, say, hey, I was in a prison
cell and everyone there was black.
It was to say that, like, there are a lot of black people who were jammed up on unnecessary
drug charges.
Right.
Right.
I still think that that's behind it, but what's behind that is trying to support, uh,
the idea that Trump is, uh, making things right.
It's, it's the, it's the white savior narrative that he's trying to push there.
Yeah.
Maybe, maybe it's one of those things that, uh, it appears racist, then you look at it
a little bit more and it appears like it's not.
And then you look a little bit further and say, oh, no, it's super racist.
Yeah.
Maybe it is.
That's entirely racist.
It's a racism that comes in waves.
Yeah.
Much like the illness that'll happen if you drink raw milk.
So the fever comes in waves.
So, uh, Roger, one of his big complaints, and I understand this cause he runs a style
blog, uh, and is a dapper gentleman who wears lots of funny hats.
Yeah.
He has a style stone style blog.
I did not know that.
Yeah.
That's one of his big things.
He also puts out lists of like best and worst, uh, politically dressed people.
So it's nonsense.
Alex, they're going to put me away for 20 years.
And the worst part of that is I will have zero hats.
Zero.
I bet his lawyers could get some hats.
You think you have to smuggle them in a cake, but how do you pair them with a, like a jumpsuit?
That's a challenge that only Roger Stone could rise above.
I'm going to go with a bowler.
I'm going to go with a nice bowler hat.
Yeah.
Perhaps something subdued in height.
Right.
So look, the point is that's not his complaint, whether it is style based.
He's mad that when he got, uh, jammed, uh, when the FBI showed up in the morning, he's
like, Hey man, if they just told me ahead of time, I could have showed up in a suit.
I could have showed up.
Yeah.
I would have looked good.
Yeah.
You know, I didn't have a chance to shower.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He's mad about that.
And he makes this complaint a number of times.
Um, and while he's making it this time, Alex's response is pretty funny and very bootlickery.
All they had to do was ask my attorney, uh, and I would have volunteered, I would have
surrendered voluntarily.
It would have come properly dressed instead.
You know, I didn't shave.
I didn't even get a chance to put a brush from my hair or brush my teeth.
Hold on.
I gotta say, you look right in the t-shirt.
Okay.
Calm down.
I, I actually think he's telling the truth.
Well, yeah.
No, I do.
I think he, I think he really would have, if they had just been like, Hey, come to the
it depends on the advance notice.
Right.
Right.
I don't, I don't know.
He didn't have, he didn't have a passport.
Not now.
Right.
But there's, there's a good reason to still think he could be a flight risk.
You know, like, for sure.
Like, I understand why any law enforcement agency would be like, let's not take chances.
Oh, for sure.
But at the same time, knowing Roger, his, his extensive history, the times he's been
in hot water in the past, he hasn't run away.
No.
So like it does appear to me that there's a, he really thinks he can get away with all
of this.
Yeah.
I think he still think he thinks he has a lot of moves left to play, but it doesn't appear
that he does.
But yeah, I think that he probably is sincere in saying that if they just told me, I would
have shown up.
Yeah.
I would have shown up wearing a monocle.
Yeah.
It's, it's one of those things that it's impossible to litigate because you're like, we're trying
to talk about what hypothetically could have happened.
Right.
But yeah, I'd believe the same way with coursey shit.
I'd believe both sides of this that he would have run and then he would have showed up.
I wouldn't believe either.
No.
If he, if he had said like, I had a biplane in my backyard, I would be like, yeah, that
probably sounds right.
You were, you were getting out of here or like, I made some El Chapo tunnels, man.
It's no big deal.
Did you see that one of the first tweets about him getting arrested was from Chad Ocho
Cinco?
No, I did not.
It turns out that Ocho Cinco lives next door to him.
It's so, uh, so, uh, Ocho Cinco was, that is fucking fantastic.
He tweeted that he's out for his morning jog and he sees his neighbor Roger Stone getting
arrested.
I've only seen shit like that in movies, just such an awesome, like weird cameo.
Yeah.
That's so good.
Maybe in a Roger Stone getting indicted and arrested story, could it be like Ocho Cinco
is involved in a weird way?
Yeah.
Yeah.
All right.
So fun to imagine that like for years they've lived next door, they have to have talked.
They have to be like, good terms.
Yeah.
No.
Top 30 wide receiver of all time.
Why not?
Can you imagine Chad Johnson and fucking Roger Stone just being like, Hey, how's it going?
To get the morning paper when they're mowing their lawn and everything.
Hey, really?
We should have you guys over for dinner sometime.
There's a true comedy to that and imagining that they did have each other over for dinner.
I'm sure they did.
Maybe.
I don't think they did.
No, probably not.
No.
Good walls, make good neighbors to quote Roger Stone.
It's probably not a quote, but I'm using the Alex Jones School of Quoting where you
don't actually have to quote something.
William Shakespeare.
Shakespeare.
I don't even remember how we mispronounced it.
Shakespeare.
That wasn't it.
No.
This next clip, Alex and Roger start talking about Roger's financial sob story.
It's real bad for him right now.
Real bad financially.
I don't believe most of this.
And then Alex says something inexcusable.
I've lost my life in health insurance in December.
I had to sell my car.
I had to liquidate a small fund I had and put aside for my book sales for the college
education of my children.
You have children?
No stocks.
No bonds.
No real estate.
Thank God for Info Wars because you guys have kept me alive.
I have a couple other very small gigs, but not much.
Facebook and their war of censorship against Info Wars and against me has really hurt my
book sales.
So the idea is to put you under such intense financial pressure, you're forced to plead
guilty to something you didn't do and then in turn to turn on President Michael Cohen
style.
And let's be clear.
Let's be clear.
Let's be clear.
You make that statement, but they're making their move now.
They're going to move on the president.
Dershowitz is smart.
He's admitted it.
So there's two things there.
First is...
What's most offensive is Dershowitz is smart.
How dare you?
How dare you?
Well, look, it's funny to me that Alex is saying positive things about Alan Dershowitz
for a number of reasons.
The first is that after Roger called to threaten Elliot Spitzer's dad, like we talked about,
Dershowitz blasted Stone's involvement as evidence that the investigation was tainted
from the start, the investigation of Elliot Spitzer for corruption stuff and everything.
He said, quote, this whole story does not pass the smell test.
What others have done to Elliot Spitzer, Roger, is more serious than any crime Spitzer committed.
So Dershowitz and Roger have a little bit of a history.
Also fun fact, Donald Trump also shit all over Roger after he got caught harassing an
83-year-old man with Parkinson's saying, quote, they caught Roger red-handed lying.
What he did was ridiculous and stupid.
He went on to call Roger a stone cold loser.
He's a stone cold loser and I'm going to hire him any moment now.
Right.
The reason Alex shouldn't be into Dershowitz is that he's Jeffrey Epstein's lawyer who
helped him cut a deal on those, you know, running an underage sex trafficking operation
charges.
If that isn't enough to get Alex to not trust the guy, multiple girls who were Epstein's
victims have gone on record to say that Epstein directed them to have sex with Alan Dershowitz.
The way Alex conveniently doesn't care about things like this should really drive home
to anyone paying attention that he doesn't care about the exploitation of these children.
He only cares about using it as a blunt instrument to attack his political enemies with everything
as a means to an end with him.
And it's gross.
Wait, so I didn't know that Dershowitz was a participant in the Epstein.
I'm not sure if that's been proven in court, but there are multiple of Epstein's victims
who have said that they were directed to have sex with Alan Dershowitz.
That should be his chiron whenever you, whenever he appears on TV, it should be like accused
fucking pedophile.
I think you might get into some sort of credibly accused pedophile every, it should roll on
the bottom.
I don't, I don't, I don't know what the television news, their, their policies are on that, but
I wouldn't, I wouldn't say it's a bad idea.
That's amazing.
Yeah, it's pretty fucked up.
And I mean, Dershowitz is a bio shit otherwise too, but like Alex should, like based on
everything that he says about all this stuff should, the way he makes hay out of anyone
being kind of associated with Jeffrey Epstein, except for Trump, who of course is associated
with him.
Ignore that stuff.
Ignore that.
Okay.
Now Bill Clinton, racist and rapist, Bill Clinton, he loves Jeffrey Epstein.
Yeah, great.
So Alex, like whenever his political enemies are sort of related to Jeffrey Epstein in
some way, it's the biggest deal in the world.
It's proof of X, Y and Z, everything.
Someone who supports Trump or is literally Trump, you just ignore that stuff.
Just ignore it.
Don't worry about it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It means that he doesn't care.
Oh, absolutely not.
Absolutely not.
The second piece about this is Roger's telling his sob story about how this fucking, the
revelation of crimes he's committed is hurting his book sales and stuff like that.
There's an episode of his goddamn radio show that I was going to pull a clip of, but who
gives a shit?
He's talking about, the WikiLeaks stuff had just come out and he's talking about the
idea that Seth Rich was the person who gave Assange the documents.
And he's saying that, like I have it from a reputable back channel source that Seth
Rich was the person who gave Assange the documents and I would say, you know who else
was saying that around that time, fucking Jerome Corsi.
You know who else is a guest on that episode, Jerome Corsi.
Really?
Interesting.
The other piece of it though is that as he's talking about this stuff, he goes into a little
bit of a diatribe about how like, oh, Podesta is saying that I knew about it ahead of time
because I tweeted about how his time in the barrel was coming and stuff like that.
And he's like, oh, well, you know what's really great about this is that I've been
able to go on TV a bunch and that's been great for my book sales.
God damn it.
So if you're going to exploit this sort of situation and also exploit the murder of
somebody to sort of further your political conspiratorial bullshit and you're going to
be like, help my book sales.
I'm not going to feel any sympathy for you when you complain about, I don't have any
money now because of crimes.
Now that I know that he has, how many he has kids?
Yeah.
Multiple.
I don't know how many kids he has.
And I think he has some grandkids too.
God damn it.
Just the idea of being related to Roger Stone must be a fucking bummer.
Man, that fucking sucks.
Roger just called them from the press conference and he was like, holy shit, did you know that
what goes around comes back at you?
That's Justin Timberlake you're quoting.
He's one of those dudes that I think, if you ever hear stories about the children of like
old school pro wrestlers who had to keep kayfabe, you know, like them being like their dad would
fake an injury and then to be at home faking an injury and so like he's going to let the
kids know.
Yeah.
And so I imagine Roger Stone is with his kids, but instead of it being like sports entertainment,
it's like malicious international propaganda and dirty tricks and hatchet work.
Kids.
Kids.
I know your age is four and nine, but the first thing I need to tell you, and I wish
I could have told you when you came out of the womb, never Google me.
Never.
Never.
He said that before Google existed.
Exactly.
Yeah.
But this next clip, Alex reinforces that he is really afraid that his dad is going to
get indicted.
As you know, Roger, we're next in the hopper.
We told everybody they were going to try to frame my dad for hush money because Corsi
signed a contract where he'd get paid out once it was for cause.
So to be nice, we paid out the last six months of his contract.
It was for cause though, because Alex is saying that his writing sucked and he wasn't living
up to his obligation.
So his contract could not have been paid out.
But again, I, the quote from Alex Jones's dad that was in that article was about like,
we decided to pay him out based on considerations and the fact that he's been a guest for so
many years.
Right.
And I believe that too.
I don't know.
And I'm a dentist.
That just so happens to end of January.
That's when it was signed two years ago.
So it's written every year and I've got my phone ringing off the hook like, are you going
to jail next for your hush money?
So now paying your reporters is hush money.
I mean, these people are going for broke, but put them on the defense.
They're in uranium one, hundreds of millions from the Russians, Mueller at tarmacs, uranium
silenced some frame them, put them in jail, paying your reporters fine, paying your reporters
$160,000 a year.
That's a different fucking story, especially when that reporter is worthless like in the
entire time that we've been covering Alex Jones, Jerome course, he hasn't done shit
except pretend he's opening that Washington bureau.
Yeah.
He hasn't done anything.
There, there was the time that he tried to come up with the ma'am, which was just a dumb
Seth Rich narrative.
We've heard him just shit the bed over and over again and then be kicked off being allowed
to be on the show because he went to into the QAnon stuff.
He's served no purpose and he's actually a bad writer though.
I will believe that part.
I haven't read any of his books, but I bet, I bet his prose isn't great.
So I think that there's a lot of people out there who are probably like even before we
put this episode out and as they're listening to it, they want more answers about the Corsi
business because I think this is a really big piece of the stone indictment.
But unfortunately I, I, I regret to say we can't offer much on that, but I do think we
will be able to soon.
We will eventually be recording a documentary called the Corsi business.
Yeah.
As soon as that information is available and soon we can digest some of it, I assure you,
we will do a Corsi episode in much the same way as we're doing a Roger episode now.
Although I don't think Alex will even talk about it if, if Corsi turns south, if he goes
states evidence, states property, like Beanie Siegel, another wrap reference.
How you doing?
There you go.
There you go.
So as soon as I woke up, did you consider your Justin Timberlake reference a wrap reference?
No, I was talking about how the last like three episodes have been like three, six,
oh yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Man.
Jadakiss is coming up.
Oh no.
The next episode.
Swizz beats.
Drag on.
That means dragon.
But there's.
I got it.
Yeah.
The Rough Riders.
I'm surprised there wasn't a dollar sign instead of a dollar sign.
No.
When I woke up on Friday, one of the things that I had in my mind first was I woke up
pretty early.
Yeah.
I was surprised that I woke up pretty early on Friday.
I cracked my back, sat down, sat in this chair here and got to work and immediately
saw tons of texts.
Yeah.
Twitter messages and like everybody, Roger still got indicted.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I thought I woke up early, not early enough.
I was going to say, I imagined that you woke up at 5.30 because you sensed it in the
ether sphere.
I was up kind of late and Roger is on like an hour ahead.
Eastern time.
That's true.
So it's possible that I couldn't sleep because I knew it was going on.
Yeah.
But it also is possible that I was just playing Hyrule Warriors.
Who knows.
Also possible.
Well, Stone did text you last night saying, I think it's coming.
Yeah.
He texted me.
He was like, Hey, Lincoln's a pretty cool character.
I agree, Roger.
So I didn't like, when I woke up, I was kind of overwhelmed by the amount of people messaging
me about this, which I think is cool.
And I appreciate it.
Don't get me wrong.
But then my immediate first thought was like, if I'm Alex right now, when I started, it
took me an hour or so to make like an egg sandwich and process and like sort of just
get my bearings about me.
I started to think like it's 10.
Alex knows that in an hour, he's got to get on air.
Yeah.
He knows that right now.
Yeah.
Like as I'm sitting here eating this sandwich, Alex knows he has to get on air.
And secondarily, Alex knows everybody is tuning in.
Yeah.
Alex knows that like he's not kicked.
He's kicked off YouTube and stuff like that.
He can still broadcast.
He can still live stream all this shit.
He knows that there are all eyes are on him.
Yeah.
There is no way that people aren't going to be like, how's Alex going to fucking do
that?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And lo and behold, it was, it was a ratings bonanza for him.
We were getting 50,000 unique IP addresses a second and we've got some of the biggest
server companies in the world.
Our regular bandwidth, you know, bills are $500,000 a month.
What?
Today's going to be $500,000.
I mean, this is insane.
We have tens of millions tuned in just on the streams, not on radio stations right
now.
Normally it's not even a million tuned in at one time.
So this is all going on.
This is insane.
And imagine the imagery.
He comes out and they won't let him talk.
Well, you just heard him speak and none of them are picking up what he said.
So Alex is still mad that no one's giving him credit for the world exclusive.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I don't believe like, I think we made this point when we were on the great behind the
bastards podcast with Robert Evans, the idea that Alex is real bad with numbers.
Yeah.
I don't believe those specific numbers, but I believe the trends behind them, the idea
that he had massively elevated traffic.
Oh, for sure.
What is Alex going to do?
Is he going to kill himself on that?
Right.
I know that probably some people had that impulse.
I thought it was going to be like, he's going to pull out a triple indie.
Yeah.
It's going to be the most amazing obfuscating excuse making thing I've ever seen in my
life.
I was watching live and I know that from our group, go home and tell your mother you're
brilliant.
There was at least a number of our policy wonk folk who don't generally watch who were
like, I got it tuned in today.
Yeah.
Yeah.
There probably was thousands and thousands more people who were like, Oh boy, here we
go.
For sure.
So Alex knew that.
And yeah, I think his bandwidth costs are probably high.
Not nearly as high as he's saying, but all that stuff does make sense.
And it brings into focus why he's more restrained at the beginning of the show because he realizes
there are a lot of people listening, watching.
They have an expectation.
I'm going to freak out.
Yeah.
Keep it together.
Also explains why him and Roger keep asking people for money, right?
Because there's so many more people.
There's a better chance that some of them are going to give you money.
So all of this makes total sense.
He knows that this is sweeps week.
Yeah.
As bad as it is.
Yeah.
As bad as it is.
His best friend is definitely going to prison.
He's still a businessman.
Is the best thing that's ever happened to me financially.
It's possible.
Yeah.
It's possible.
I don't do this without Roger.
I don't understand bandwidth costs.
I don't really either because I use a, you know, like I just use a flat rate hosting
service.
Yeah.
But from what I understand, like if you host something somewhere, like if you have a
server and you host something somewhere and there's tons and tons of people downloading
it, the price just goes up as the traffic goes up in order for the server to handle
that amount of traffic.
Holy shit.
So we can't afford to be popular, can we?
No, we can because we use the flat rate.
Oh, is that how that works?
Yeah.
How many of it works?
The service that I use, you just pay a certain amount per month and no matter how many people
download it or anything like that, you pay for the storage space.
So however large the files are that I post there, that's the factor that they charge
about.
Gotcha.
And I think that their strategy is that they host thousands of shows that no one downloads.
And then that helps offset the ones that are the traffic.
It's called Medicare for All.
Right.
All right.
Liberated syndication has figured out socialized medicine for podcasting.
I think that that's their strategy.
I'm not entirely sure.
I'll be honest, I haven't really looked into it too much, but it doesn't seem to matter
at all.
It only comes into play if you're hosting your own shit and your own servers and you
have to pay for that.
I gotcha.
And fine, do it.
I mean, the reason that he does it is because then there's no way for anybody to take that
down.
Yeah, exactly.
He has entire control of it.
Right.
He's having to pay that.
Yeah.
You know, that's the downside of the freedom that you so desire.
Which you should be happy about since it's libertarianism.
Sure.
So in this next clip, Alex has a new guest.
Roger is gone.
He's got to go take a shower, got a shave, put a comb in his hair.
All that nonsense.
Go comfort his dog.
Nice little top hat.
Absolutely.
I assume his dogs both wear top hats.
There's no doubt about it.
So Alex has a new guest and it's so pathetic.
His next guest is Roger Stone's lawyer.
Tyler Nickson is the great guy.
We're the chief lawyers.
For Stone, I asked him this morning when I first got a first statement from his lawyer
there at the jail.
His first thing was how's my wife.
Okay, she's okay.
Here's my directives and information from my lawyers and get Tyler Nixon on and Alex
Jones.
Let him know, you know, this information.
So we put a statement out that's on m4s.com.
That was the first statement.
I had ABC, CBS, NBC, Washington Post going, is that really Roger?
I mean, how do we even know you?
Oh, he only works here.
That's how they operate.
Like everything we do is fake when they're the fake ones and I'm battling for m4s very
live.
So Tyler Nixon joins us when a Rogers lawyer, he's actually a spokesperson.
He wanted on Alex was trying to like, all right, but it's not his lawyer, but he is
his lawyer.
Yeah.
Um, so he's a spokesperson.
He's not his lawyer.
He's a spokesperson.
It's interesting that Roger Stone's lawyer is named Nixon.
I was really curious about this.
I was really, I was really confused on the note.
I wanted to know if he was related to Richard Nixon, seeing as Roger was so connected to
Richard Nixon, but it doesn't look like he is at least not closely.
Richard Nixon had two daughters and neither of them has a kid named Tyler and both took
their husband's names when they got married, Cox and Eisenhower respectively.
That's right.
Nixon's daughter married Eisenhower's grandson.
So it's cool.
Everybody's great in America.
There's no sort of a powered elite that intermarried pitchforks, pitchforks.
Why, why aren't pitchforks appearing whenever we talk or how do we not know that?
Like how is that?
Yeah, that's a weird.
I'm sure a lot of people do know that, but it's weird that that's not more public knowledge
that Nixon's daughter married Eisenhower's granddaughter.
That's weird.
That's weird.
So it just appears that if Tyler Nixon is a part of that Nixon family, he's a second
cousin or some shit.
I have no idea.
Yeah.
Tyler Nixon is one of Rogers lawyers.
However, he's a bad person for Alex to have on the show and present as an unbiased source
of information.
You see, back in November, 2018, Tyler Nixon was questioned by Robert Mueller about Rogers'
connections with WikiLeaks.
You remember all the news stories about Rogers associates being called in for questioning?
Yes.
Tyler was one of them.
In his testimony, he indicated that Randy Krediko was Rogers intermediary with Assange
and said he witnessed Krediko admitting his son.
The lawyer is going to get fucking, oh my God, this is a problem because it means that
if Krediko was not the intermediary, which he wasn't, then Tyler is making up information
that he told Mueller about Krediko indicating that he was Rogers go between.
And that means Tyler Nixon is in trouble too.
This isn't a lawyer trying to help his client.
This is a man who realizes that he fell into the same perjury trap his client did.
Yeah.
And on some level has to realize that his fate may be entwined with Rogers since it's
clear they both lied to achieve the same end result, which is, it might not have been
Tyler's primary motivation to do this, but the end result is covering up Jerome Corsi's
involvement with Roger Stone early on vis-Ã -vis the WikiLeaks interactions.
I'm sure he could probably, I don't know, even if you have attorney-client privilege
and you're directed by your client to say something, you still lied to Congress.
So you're kind of fucked on that front.
There's no, there's no, he lied to the FBI too.
And even beyond that, what he did was introduce new information because he said that he witnessed
Krediko saying that he was the go between, which isn't, like it's one thing to say Roger
told me this or whatever.
It's another to introduce new pieces of information that are specific to you.
So in that case, I mean, who knows?
I don't think that he's telling the truth and I don't think anything Roger is saying
is true based on my knowledge of Roger Stone.
Yeah.
I feel like Roger must have, the sequence of events must have been Roger like accident
or like Googling like Nixon lawyer and this guy came up and he was like, haha, wouldn't
that be on brand for me to have a Nixon lawyer?
It's entirely possible.
I didn't know he wasn't related to Nixon, but his name is Nixon.
So Tyler Nixon doesn't, much like that, that sort of backstory being how he got hired.
He doesn't comport himself on this show as any kind of a professional.
He's just thrown around.
The globalists are coming.
He's just a lawyer.
He might as well be like Alex's nor like regular guest.
Yeah.
He's, he's, he does not, he doesn't say anything.
He doesn't even use words like pro bono or a jurisprudence.
Yeah.
I don't know.
He doesn't say any legal lawyer words.
No, not at all.
Yeah.
And he does say this.
He didn't graduate and he did not pass the bar.
No.
He also shows himself to be fucking stupid because he says this.
The tactics deployed on Roger Stone, who would be just the first, I'm sure, if these people
have their way, would make LaVrenti, Beria and Stalin and Himmler and the rest of them
embarrassed or, you know, proud, let's just say, proud as far as, you know, they'd be
envious.
I mean, this is, this is real.
It would be envious.
Yeah.
They would absolutely love to have this type of power.
So Alex Jones beat you to vocab.
That's not good.
That's not good as a lawyer who doesn't know how to read was like, Hey, let me correct
you on what it is you think you're saying.
Let me help you out of that little pickle.
Yeah.
You fucking God, this guy's stupid.
Also, I'd like to remind you that Stalin put hundreds of thousands of people in gulags.
I don't think Roger Stone being embarrassed or like a charge that he almost clearly is
guilty of.
I don't.
I think Stalin could have pulled that off.
It would be envious of how they made Roger Stone sad and still let him go on the fucking
radio.
Whatever is going on right now is well within the abilities of Stalin, Himmler and anybody
else they, they referenced.
This is pathetic levels of exaggeration.
Yeah.
It's radicalization of what they perceive to be what's happening to them in order to
convince the audience that the situation is so much dire, so much more dire than it
is because they need their money.
They want their fucking money.
Man, it's just constantly give Roger Stone legal defense money.
Why is the defense money is going to Tyler Nixon?
I didn't even think about that.
Yeah.
The whole thing where he's like, of course, donate to Roger's defense fund, you're the
guy who's getting it.
Yeah.
Pay me.
That's nuts.
I didn't even think about that.
You didn't think about that?
No.
It just dawned on me.
I know.
I was so right.
That's why he's lying and pulling this bullshit.
I was wrapped up in the weeds of the details.
Yeah.
I forgot that Roger Stone legal defense fund dot com probably is paying Tyler Nixon.
Yeah, absolutely.
This is so fucking stupid.
Oh my God.
This, this masquerade of like the idea that they're saying anything is, is so wild.
So nuts.
I, I don't know what exact term I would use for him, but I'm going to go with Huckster.
I think that one would be the, like,
You mean Nixon?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And ambulance chaser.
Exactly.
What is it with right wing idiots and hiring the worst fucking lawyers?
Like Giuliani is the worst fucking lawyer.
I think what it comes down to isn't being right wing or anything like that.
It's that you've exhausted all other possibilities.
Like, like a real lawyer would be like, Hey, I'm not going to take this case on account
of you did that shit.
Yeah.
And, and it's going to be way too hard.
I'm going to lose.
Yeah.
It's going to be a lot of work for nothing.
And my name is going to be drawn into this.
My reputation will be completely fucking destroyed in terms of Alex.
I think that they're just like his like sort of resources are, are thin.
Yeah.
And in the same way that you talk about like the idea that like this is just to ching billable
hours.
You also have to recognize that like what you're doing, the possibility is you're going
to be defending Alex Jones in court against Sandy Hook victims families.
And the optics of that are never good.
And you, if you're talking as a human, you know that Alex is guilty of those things.
Whether or not it's provable in a court of law is another issue, but you know that spiritually
he did do that shit.
So you can, it's one of those things that you're only going to be able to get the sleaziest
fucking people.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And people like Mark Rondaza, like he's going to say, yeah, yeah, he's, he's turning this
into his like little, he's laying stake to immorality, but I also don't think that's
necessarily wrong of him.
I think it's opportunistic on some level, but those people still do need representation.
Everybody has the right to a fair trial.
Yeah.
And if he wants to try and if Mark Rondaza is your lawyer, you are not going to have
a fair trial.
Well, it's an indication, I think that you have come to a point where you're willing
to pay way more than you need to, because no one else will take you on this client.
And you're trying a Hail Mary free speech type pass.
Yeah.
And I think that's, I think that's what's going on.
It's like a cash for goal error.
It's like a short term loan, like a, one of those like, oh, is the, why is the interest
rate 200,000% that doesn't seem fair.
You know why.
Yeah.
You know why.
Yeah.
Everything turns.
Yeah.
This episode is no longer substantive after this point.
We have reached the point where Alex, I don't know what happened to him, but he starts losing
his mind.
Does he start talking about God?
I assume God, I was going to say, I was like, he's, he's only got nothing on Roger Stone
because Stone bailed on him ghosted him.
Then Stone comes back, but Stone's sad.
So Alex can't like pivot to other news.
What is he going to pivot to?
There is no news.
Oh, oh, there's a chai comms are out of control.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Come on.
Fuck off.
Soros has criticized Xi Jinping at, at Davos.
Oh, you want to talk about that, Alex?
Isn't that weird?
Doesn't that sort of puncture whole, whole narrative?
Sure.
Sure.
Sure.
Sure.
Sure.
No, he doesn't want to talk about that.
No news.
No news.
He has to look inside of himself and pray because he also thinks he's going to get fucked.
It's pretty amazing that you, like I was going to do this whole thing about like Alex
is done with his work and now it gets weird, like try and give some sort of like real vague,
real fun sort of introduction and you're like, he starts talking about God, doesn't he?
Yeah.
And in this next clip, he starts fucking talking about God.
Well, we've been doing this for two years.
I should be at least a little bit aware.
I'm complimenting your instincts.
Thank you.
Mainstream national news host calling up saying, word is Mueller's coming after you next.
Want to comment?
Yeah.
I'm going to cover up Terry Epstein and his little kidnap kids on there, so it's not
Robert Mueller.
And so I don't look forward to getting hung up by my toes and torture to death, but you
know what?
That's a limited time.
I don't want the full, I don't want the full Monty in hell with you guys.
So Mueller and all you guys in Hillary, you can choose Hades.
I want to go with Jesus Christ.
That's where I stand now.
Okay.
So he has pivoted towards the religious section of the show.
Yeah.
There we go.
Very, very fucked up as it goes along.
Like I, when I was listening to this on Friday, I thought the first hour was a disaster and
super boring.
Yeah.
And we've gone over it in terms of like Rogers, Bland statements, his boilerplate defense
on Alex's show.
I thought the dynamic of Alex being pissed off that no one recognized the exclusive stuff.
Pretty interesting, but I didn't think there was a full episode out of that.
But then it got towards the mid to end of the show and Alex gets so unbelievably weird
in the way that you would have expected him to come into the show with.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He just somehow delayed it because he knew there were so many fresh eyes watching.
Right.
And what I imagine, I can't prove this, but I imagine he did his first hour and a half
or so lost a ton of listeners.
They're like, all right, whatever.
This is nonsense.
I'm just going to watch on CNN or whatever.
Yeah.
Alex isn't bringing it or whatever.
And then he started to be like, all right, we're all cool here.
I'm going to talk about God.
I was going to say, we're in four ways to learn territory right now.
I mean, I don't know.
He's not drunk as shit, but we're in that level of weird, right?
We will get to galactic quests.
That is what I'm looking for.
By the end of this, we will get to galactic quests.
That's what I'm about.
That's what I'm about.
But before we do, there's one more clip where Alex is talking sort of political nonsense.
And I think he's lying.
Almost all of DC sits back pissing itself while they send in Muller's people trying
to set us up over and over again.
And I haven't released the big setup stuff yet.
And I because you don't have any, I mean, I'm getting close to that, but it doesn't
even really matter anymore because there are people that are either for the country or
against it.
If you don't know that every Democrat group says America sucks and needs to go away and
it was never great and it'll never be great.
And they have chance that we're not cherry picking.
You know, they go to some women's march in Austin in front of my Soros or LA or DC.
I've been to all of them where I see my reporters footage.
You think I feel good when I go, Oh great.
The main march was America's going down.
That's not what it is.
But also I love the way he under his breath was like, I've been to all of them.
I've seen my reporters.
Yeah.
You've been to any of them.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Also, I like in a statement about how, Oh, America's never great.
They're saying, he says cherry picking and you're like, you're really close to saying
cotton picking, which is kind of the point.
Well, I mean, he also just refuses to engage with the actual arguments that these people
are making.
You know, he says, America won't be great until we get to X point, you know, when we
have, you know, just enough equality among people and we deal with issues realistically.
Those arguments aren't saying that America sucks.
It's saying that we do sucky things.
Yeah.
It's the same thing that you do in therapy, you know, you understand the difference between
shame and guilt, those sorts of things like you have like a shame is I am bad.
Guilt is I did something bad.
There's a very important distinction to make between those things.
And when people critique America for like, I don't know, our interventions in Venezuela
now are interventions in all of South and Central America, our interventions all over
the world.
Turned crime against humanity into a wonderful store.
It's fantastic.
Our deeply, deeply racist history of slavery that pivoted and transitioned and was probably,
to some extent, made worse by convict leasing programs that became the prison system.
The new slavery.
Right.
They're all this sort of thing.
It's not to say that we suck and should kill ourselves or America should be gone.
It's to say we did bad things.
We need to own up to those things and that's the only path forward.
We won't be great until we acknowledge those things and work through them.
And Alex is, it just is inability to understand what people are saying, not, not inability,
unwillingness to understand what they're saying leads into be like, I just hate America.
You choose a side.
Yeah.
Overly simplistic.
And it's what you'd expect, but who cares?
Still a bummer.
Now we get to the part where this is the beginning of the freak out in earnest.
Okay.
You already talked about God a little bit.
I'm excited.
This is interesting because in this next clip, Alex starts fake crying, but what triggers
him to start fake crying is that he starts talking about a time that he actually cried,
which is weird because the memory of him talking about crying leads him to fake crying.
It's very strange because it shouldn't be a memory that's super painful.
It's fascinating.
Whenever I think back on times I've cried, that doesn't make me super emotional.
But when I was crying, it was because I was thinking of something else that was an emotionally
resonant experience.
Yeah.
The time I'm sitting there crying isn't the emotionally, it's a byproduct of the emotionally
resonant experience.
Right.
So Alex for him.
Cause that's cause you're a human being.
Oh, that's true.
Yeah.
Alex isn't.
And so when he talks about crying, he's reminded, I should probably pretend I have emotions.
I literally walk in to my bedroom and sometimes just lean up against the wall because I've
got strength, but sometimes I start to falter when I think about my kids and the people
are this evil.
And I start to cry.
I'm not going to lie to people and it's not that I'm crying a weakness, it's that this
is a fake.
I just can't believe it.
Wow.
This is bad.
We have people openly saying they hate America funded by chai comms that have killed five
times what Hitler did and then all we're trying to do is stabilize the country and defend
our people.
Watch the heaven.
Watch the heaven.
And then we're attacked by a bunch of scum that's involved with the Russians and the Chinese
and everybody else and it doesn't scare me for myself.
I'm not scared of Mueller.
I'm scared that I'm not strong enough and I didn't do a good enough job to make sure
that a God damn pedophile army of devil worshipers and I don't mean that in the Lord's name
and bang.
I mean they're damned to hell, didn't get control of our country and that more people
don't realize how serious this is and how they're planning false flags and how they're
doing all this and how they're trying to destroy the very essence of a nation existing.
My favorite thing about Alex is when he gets on a roll and he has nothing and he's like
they're doing all this.
Yeah.
All the things.
Yeah.
That was Spielberg's wife and temple of doom level of acting right there.
So bad.
Not good.
It's so bad.
Not good.
But also it's really interesting because you know, you know it's all fake and performative.
The way that Alex can only contextualize this fake showing of vulnerability if it transitions
to rage.
Yeah.
That's the only way that he understands the presentation of that emotion because he deems
it weak.
Right.
He thinks it's a weakness and then in order to compensate for that you have to pivot then
in strength.
Right.
And it's sad.
It's really pathetic.
Yeah.
It is, it is one of those like I kind of don't think you understand humans like it's one
of those like psychopath test kind of things where it's like I don't know if you feel human
emotion.
I know you know how to say because so much of his performative like exactly it's totally
possible that he feels normal emotions in his day to day life and then this like it's
it's so it's so hard to say you see this fake crying and it's just just pathetic.
Yeah.
And on the same level with this performative aspect and me like calling it psychopath behavior
is like I'm a performer.
There have been plenty of times where I've felt like absolute garbage but you know you
put on the you put on the common face.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I accept that.
And if you're making $40 million a year.
That's true.
You're not making it.
But if your business is pulling it in.
Well gross.
Gross.
All right.
And it's all him.
Yeah.
No, none of that money is coming in from David Knight's show.
Uh-uh.
Maybe a little but none of it like it's on his back.
So he knows he's got to bring it.
Um, it's kind of David Knight gets paid 40 bucks a show.
It's kind of like having a big set every day.
Yeah.
Or at least in terms of like you got to do what you got to do for this operation to continue.
Yeah.
Well, if you've ever read the late night wars, it's like, Oh, you guys are fucking crazy.
The pressure is insane.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I don't I don't take that away from my consideration of Alex and like how bad he's living.
But like it's still, I mean, it doesn't matter, but no amount of pressure is going to make
you this awful.
It's going to reveal that you are this awful.
Yeah.
Perhaps.
Yeah.
Um, so in this next clip, we've been talking a little bit throughout this episode about
how Alex Jones is like, they're going to take my dad, you know, like my dad's going
down because of this coursey payoff shit.
Um, and he's been sort of like, he's been basically making the point that like I'm, you
know, I'm, I'm paranoid about this.
That's bad.
Yeah.
And in this next clip, he just completely does a 180.
Tyler, you know, my dad, they're, they're literally calling up like, Oh, Jones, you're
not afraid.
We'll put your dad in prison.
My dad.
Oh, no, no, nobody is off limits.
They will, they will take everything that you have.
He's ready.
My dad's ready.
Wow.
Fuck my dad.
Take him.
God damn it.
I, I can't imagine how funny it would be if they did.
Just grab Alex Jones, David R. Jones, David Ross Jones, going to prison.
Anyway, in this next clip, we find, I mean, this is really what it's all about.
Like this next clip, this is, this is it, the God crying, Oh my God, they've got me.
I just want listeners to know that the, that one problem is we're, we're too confident
on one end, but if I wanted to really go and shoot the bat signal out, we need to be flooded
with money.
I know for a fact less than 1% of people buy products on a regular basis.
If just a few percentage, we would have everything we needed to defeat these people, but it's
how God works.
We always just, just get enough.
But if I didn't have to spend time and I'm not bitching, going around, why don't you
just throw Roger overboard or why don't you, because that's not, he didn't do the things
they said because I like Roger.
Well, I think the second one is more important than the first.
I like him.
He could have, he, one, he stole that from John Mulaney for sure.
What?
A blooded from a John Mulaney special, radio city hall special.
It'd be funny if that was true.
I think that might be true.
It's possible.
And two, he does steal a lot and two, he missed the perfect opportunity, the perfect opportunity
to say, go ahead, take my dad, please, take my wife, you're stealing from a cat's face.
So we've heard a lot about Alex's dad possibly being involved in all of these operations.
But what about his mom?
What does his mom have to say?
What is his mom do?
Well, I don't know.
She works at Info Wars in some way, but she kicked him off his knee.
That's what we know about that.
But what does she have to say about all this shit about his dad being targeted?
That is a good question.
Her husband.
I really do think that's a good question.
What does she think?
You know, my mom and 25 years I've been on air, 24 and a half has gotten mad at some
of the things I've said or done, but when she learned that they're trying to indict
my dad for making stuff, man, she just said, we're good people.
We love God.
You just get out there and you kick their ass and he's strong.
Yes, son.
Go out there and kick those globalists ass.
Oh, who is his mom?
His dad, Clint Eastwood.
They're just imagined figures in his head.
They're not.
This isn't happening.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's fun.
Anyway, so at this point in the show, there's been enough time that is elapsed from Roger
Stone's press conference that I know that in our show, it's been a couple hours since
we talked about that, but I'm still tickled by the booing boo.
I can't cut his dick off.
I will watch that.
Like in the same before we started the show, I forced you to watch Orson Welles drunkenly
doing a champagne commercial happily did it.
Yes.
And that brings me so much joy.
I love that commercial so much and adding like in that pantheon will be that Roger Stone
getting booed and seeing his face because his face is so like, uh oh, uh oh.
You just see that fear in his face of like, this isn't going to go well.
God, I wish I was one of those people.
I can't bail immediately.
That's like somebody who's like, uh, I was at the first Radiohead show.
Like that is that level of like, I wish I was there.
I wish I was there.
See it live.
See that fear happen live.
God damn.
Oh, beautiful.
Like you've been to like a stand up show and you've seen someone like two minutes into
their set be like, I want to, I want to not do this, but you're, they have to do 15 or
whatever.
Yeah, you have to do your time and you see that in Roger's face and it's fucking awesome.
But that happened earlier and now there's enough time has passed and the White House
has given their response.
Sarah Huckabee Sanders has come out and said, this doesn't have anything to do with Trump.
Whatever.
What a fucking lying asshole.
She goes on CNN and does her deflection does like whatever Roger said, you know, like,
yeah, sure.
He's, he talked to Trump, but he's been someone who has been an advisor for so many people
and this has nothing to do with Trump.
No big deal.
Whatever.
God, I wish she had, I wish she just breaks with the narrative and just goes, dude, I'm
going to be honest.
If Trump weren't the president, the FBI would show would be showing up at his house at six
a.m.
This dude is fucking guilty.
Yeah.
Holy shit.
This guy's guilty.
I know I'm getting paid a lot of money for it.
I have like a, you want her to have like a network?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
For sure.
Screaming in the streets.
Mad as hell.
Trump.
Can't take it anymore.
Yeah.
But it's never going to happen.
No.
She's a bought and sold chill.
No, she is.
She's great at it.
Dead on the inside.
Yeah.
Yeah.
She's very talented.
I mean, not in, not in as much as like she does a great job because if she did a great
job, she'd be better at deflecting.
Yeah.
But she doesn't crack.
No, never.
And that is her job.
Never.
That is the job.
It really makes me sad for her.
And like that.
I mean, that's why Spicer got fucking fired.
No, that.
Yeah.
Exactly.
Spicer.
Spicer.
Correct.
Yeah.
But that, that makes me sad for her because I just imagine the childhood that a Huckabee
gave her.
Who?
That turned her into that, you know?
Like, can you imagine growing up with Mike Huckabee as your dad?
Seems like.
Yes, you can because you turn into a psychopath that stumps for fucking bullshit.
It's honestly weird because like Mike Huckabee's politics are terrible, but his brand does
seem to be like, he's a good guy.
Yeah.
You know, like.
That's what he pretends to be.
Yeah.
Maybe he's not.
He like, he plays the bass and shit like that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He seems folksy and kind of nice.
Yeah.
Maybe he's not.
He's your daughter and you're like, oh, you fucked her up hard.
The proof of the pudding is in the eating, as they say.
So the reason I bring this up is that Sarah Huckabee Sanders has come out and said, like,
fuck this noise.
That's not on us.
Don't done that basically, like fucking Rogers on his own, which is a good thing to say.
Right.
As opposed to we're going to pardon him so he doesn't squeal or like, oh yeah, we're
in on this or something like that.
Yeah.
Of course that's the response.
And it leads Alex to be super fucking pissed off about how the Trump administration isn't
rallying to Rogers.
Hey, surprise.
And you know what?
It turns out they're just jealous.
They know that info wars and stone and all of us, the listeners got him elected and they're
all hacks.
We don't want to go attach ourselves to DC.
Stone didn't ask for a job in DC.
Exactly.
So this is his competition.
Yes, he did.
They ought to be listening to us.
I know the president and a few others do listen, but you're right.
They're very angry that we're the real brain trust and they're not exactly dumb asses.
We didn't come from where you are.
We built our own thing.
We called the country jackasses testify, my brother, testify, my brother testify.
Also, I don't know if you heard that, but there's a leaf blower going on.
Yeah.
It becomes a real serious issue on the show.
Yeah.
They do.
I like, I like this.
I wish I would have pulled this clip because they start making jokes about how the globalists
are blown their leaves, but they're not serious.
They're not serious.
They're doing, and that kind of indicates that all of this is a joke, all the blaming
things on the global.
It's almost like they're doing a parody of themselves.
It's very weird, but that's still Alex.
I'm sorry.
Roger's lawyer, Tyler, who's saying that right testify, my brother.
Get me a Nixon.
Yeah.
So I promise you that in a couple of clips, this will deteriorate back to the God fake
crying part for sure.
But still, this is a deterioration like this, this like, they're just all just fucking jealous
of us.
They're in D.C. and we just love the people.
They are so fucking pissed off that we're the real power.
And that's why they don't respect stone.
And then Stone's lawyer is like, yeah, hey, fuck yeah, buddy, thumbs up.
He's a bad lawyer.
It's bad optics.
God, he should, he's probably, he should go to jail.
I think he might.
I mean, based on what I know from his testimony, like he did get questioned by Mueller and
yeah, from everything I can tell from public statements, from that indictment, from things
that critical is said, like, I mean, whatever he said does contradict what is, yeah, seems
to be the truth.
Yeah.
So, and it's not just because critical says this, right?
It's because it's documented.
Yeah.
And Roger documented it and, and Corsi.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's, uh,
God, his, his only out is, is Mueller being like, you're just a shitty lawyer.
You didn't, you're, you're just bad at your job.
Well, I mean, I think you should be disbarred, but I think he, I think he could like in situations
like this, I think that a lot of like lower rung people probably are going to get a pass.
I think he might be able to, in terms of like, this is inconsequential, maybe a tiny piece
of information that was gleaned from your questioning has helped us figure out X, Y,
or Z, but like, yeah, I wouldn't, I don't think anybody gives a fuck if Tyler Nixon
goes to prison.
Right.
I do.
I kind of want him to go to prison.
I wouldn't mind.
Yeah.
It wouldn't be a bad day.
I'm not going to put my flag on that hill though.
Cut his dick off.
Boom.
So Alex is still sort of reeling and earlier we heard him talk about his $40 million amount
of money coming in.
Yeah.
He is putting his business out.
Yeah.
And then this next clip a little bit later in the show, he talks about it some more
and he is fucking weird.
We're organic, bringing in $45 million a year now.
That was five years ago, 27 million.
We started bringing in 45 million.
Now I've got 20 million to work with after all the bandwidth taxes, I mean, today will
be hundreds of thousands of dollars in bandwidth.
We're so gigantic right now.
That person doesn't buy anything.
Fine.
So then I end up with a few million, pay it to lawyers, have nothing and I'm like,
well, I could sell my house and fund the place another three months.
Bad business model.
You see where we're getting into here.
I can't get in that position.
I don't give a rat's ass.
I mean, even about my own body when it comes to war, I just need the fuel.
So we're down to this folks.
And that's when we're down to the wire.
Bringing in $45 million this year.
The way they've shut us down.
Milwaukee was 30 million this year and I'll have to lay people off and start shutting
down.
Jesus.
Because again, 30 million gross, half of its product costs with $15 million.
I've got 10, $5, $10 million or whatever it is in bandwidth costs.
You're like, oh, just do it yourself.
I'm doing it myself.
I'm fighting as hard as I can, but I need you to commit and go, damn it.
I'm going to go to inforwarstore.com and I'm going to buy the best products, the best
fish oil, the best brain boost, the best turbo force.
I'm going to go there and I'm going to do it.
It's a war.
Help.
Please.
Then it jumps to commercial.
That's the hard out.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's a dark glimpse, dark, dark thing.
I want you guys to go to the Info Wars website.
I want you to go to the store and I want you to buy the single product that I advocated
you not buying.
The turbo force.
I took half of a packet and I got fucked up.
When I was watching the live stream of it, I recorded it, but I didn't use it for cutting
the clips of this episode.
On the GCN streams, they have different commercials than on the live, like Alex's own thing, because
it's just all Alex's commercials.
Well, Diamond, guess it loves the new wizard.
Spoiler alert.
Spoiler alert.
When the Stone Cold Truth was a show, Diamond Gusset was a sponsor on that, too.
Hell yeah.
Through GCN.
When Alex just does his own commercials, he has one where he's just like doing a real
fucking weird turbo force commercial where he's like, listen, when you, if you take this
the first time, take a quarter of it because it's fucking weird, you're going to be fucked
up.
And then it ends with him like somebody's selling you an edible or the, hey, hey, you
want to start out with a half of this, working way in, working way in, you're going to be
like, this is an hour.
And I know you're cool.
I know you're cool.
I know you're cool.
I'll eat the other half.
Don't do it.
Don't do it.
Don't do it.
Give it, give it an hour or two.
Your gut tells you to do it.
Don't do it.
Don't do it.
It's cool.
Turbo force is real cool.
This cookie will fuck you up.
And then the, the commercial ends with Alex literally screaming, beware the power of
turbo force.
It's like, oh boy.
That is kind of a, that's not a terrible sales pitch for the person who would get turbo
force.
The person who's still there.
Yeah.
Well, not just that, but the person who's like, oh shit.
Are you telling me this is dangerous?
Fuck yeah.
Yeah.
You might as well just say, do meth.
I'm too cowardly to find a dealer, but I want something scary.
I want meth.
I want meth.
Alex does another commercial too that I wish I had cut one of, but like, he's doing a commercial
for the idea of posting hashtag Alex Jones.
It's like a 30 second spot where it's just like, hashtag Alex Jones.
If we do this, we will win.
Yeah.
You're doing a commercial for a fucking hashtag.
That's like a podcast that's famous where they're like, well, we don't have a sponsor
for this little bit right now, but it would be nice if you continued listening to the
show.
Anyways, on another level, it's incredibly sad that Alex constantly talks about how fuck
these social media platforms.
I don't care that I'm off them and then does a commercial of please use those to let me
on those social media platforms because they won't let me.
So we get back to this and Alex says something about how much of a pussy Donald Trump is and
how his whole administration is full of dumb cucks.
And also he needs money.
By the way, Jacob, you know, if they don't support Roger or me or others, then I don't
even really care at the end of the day.
You know what?
Fine folks, if you don't see what we've done, we're at, I think the listeners, this is show
cut and dry.
I can't imagine that America isn't more pissed.
Like Sarah's.
I could be Sanders is like glad there's no Russian collusion says it has nothing to do
with the White House.
Oh, great.
Cut him loose when Trump called him a hero a few months ago.
It's like that is like blood in the water.
But again, they're a bunch of damn cowards.
We need wartime presidents.
We're fighting for our country.
We need people committed to this damn country.
Hell, yes, Alex.
Let's get angry.
Let's get wild.
Who the fuck is that?
Now.
What the F are we going to get in the fall flat ready?
They're going to make their move.
They got their turn.
It's ready.
All I know is I've committed my will to this and everybody has been maneuvered into whoever
gets banned.
Oh, don't defend him.
You'll get banned.
They've already taught you how to be cowards.
You've already failed lesson one.
Now you'll fail forever if you don't wake up.
That guy was the guy who published Roger Stone's book.
So it's kind of just a parade of Roger Stone associates on the show.
Who cares?
His interview is terrible.
I don't know if I've ever heard you.
That's so funny.
Just dork.
God damn it.
I mean, I'm sorry.
I lost my shit.
No, I know.
I know.
It's a dork.
It's a dork.
But you did.
You guys are nerd patrol.
You always have the name and you're like, this is the guy who published Roger.
I know what he is.
I don't give a fuck what his name is.
Yeah, no, dork.
Yeah, there's a certain amount of research that I can do and like in a given amount of
time.
Right.
And then what I have to do is kind of prioritize what's important.
These bigger issues, not important is what else this fucking nerd has published.
I don't give a shit.
His interview with Alex is boring.
It's just the same things Alex has been saying the whole time.
Yeah.
Who gives a shit?
I've published some fucking stupid books and we could talk about that for another 20 fucking
minutes.
But instead we got to talk about how Alex is getting weird.
Now.
What is he?
Pete Holmes?
Hey, he makes it weird.
We have one clip and then it's off the cliff.
It's off the fucking cliff into esoteric, weird nonsense where Alex is spoiler alert
going to essentially say that he is the voice of God.
There is a tree.
It's in the river of life.
It's not.
No, no, no, no.
But the tree is life.
Nope.
Nope.
That's more fun because that's vague.
Yeah.
Alex is being a little too specific towards the end of this.
But before he does, he's got to talk a little bit more about what we learned on Christmas
Eve 2018 about how Alex told Roger to get in touch with Assange.
Alex starts talking about it again.
And I think that's what kicks him into like full on freak out stone new credit code and
a bunch of others.
You know, he works the media.
He was trying to get a hold.
I remember saying, Roger, get Assange or you interview him.
It would be bigger.
Fine.
Well, I hear it's really big.
I hear all this.
I was there.
He was asking for a job.
And I said, you get me, Julian Assange exclusive.
You've got your job.
And back then he was a Fox News contributor.
Pay $50,000 a year.
He didn't want to make a big deal out of that.
They've got hundreds of people on the payroll.
As a contributor, as soon as he worked for us, he lost his job at Fox.
But I was hiring Fox.
Was that why?
You know, of course he used to work and write for Lou Dobbs at CNN.
So I'm getting the big wig, anti-globalist guys hired.
They turned that this criminal thing we're involved in.
And it's just like plastic banana, fake bologna BS world.
But what I'm getting at is we don't take it serious because we know it's not true.
Then it happens and 29 SWAT team people attack the house to make it look like it's legitimate.
And now Roger's confident now, but my God, next week he gets arraigned like Manafort
a year ago, a year and a half ago, walking into that, that federal courthouse and never
coming out again, man, except in a damn wheelchair.
So, so, you know, we're talking here, folks, about real persecution.
And if they, this is a test, like a parrot test of perch, you know, put its beak on it,
see if it can stand on it with weight.
If America fails this test, if Trump and Sarah Huckabee Sanders fails this test, if
they fail this test, we're done.
So I'm a big Trump booster, help get him in.
He's a great guy.
But right now I'm two by four upside the head saying, listen, get in gear, honcho.
So that seems like, uh, I don't know, I, I'm tired of Alex's like lines on the sand about
Trump.
You know, like I, I don't, I can't get it up for him being like, hey, Trump, shut up your
dirty asshole.
And then tomorrow you're like, ah, you know, you gotta get a little chance.
This seems more real than the others if only because it's like it affects his bottom line.
But I still, I still don't give a fuck.
But like the way he's talking about this, it makes it seem like he a hundred percent
like believes Roger's version of the timeline.
And that's not true.
Like Roger's version of the timeline isn't true as we just discussed at the beginning
of the show.
You've absolutely proven that has Mueller, you know, like I'm only going off of the
documents that they have released.
No, I'm not saying that you research.
Listen, I have a special investigation.
Yeah, no, you directed yourself two years ago to learn more about the, yeah.
So I've been, I've been sort of teasing you a little bit.
And, and that's not, that's not intentional because Alex freaked out a little bit earlier.
Yeah.
And he does freak out really hard.
But I kind of forgot as we were going through it that there are a couple of like just sort
of substantive clips.
There are some peaks and valleys.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
He came back to reality to talk about like how I gave Roger this job.
And I told him to get a son as a condition of getting this job.
Right, right, right.
I hired him, which implies that he did get in touch with the son.
Right.
He's Alex is now saying he didn't get in touch with it.
Right.
Who knows? Who cares?
All that stuff is he, that's the grounding aspect of this.
Right, right, right.
But then in this next clip, Jordan, he goes up, there goes gravity.
No, mom's spaghetti comes.
Because Alex accidentally starts talking about why he does his show.
Uh-huh.
Why does Alex Jones do his show?
He admits why.
And so the one crime I have, the one skill I have, why'd you say crime?
Is I got a hell of a lot of life force and I have a lot of will.
And I'm ready to die.
In fact, I'm not just ready to die.
Giving into these globalist is unlimited death.
I can feel hell on the other side.
And in fact, I do this out of fear.
There's no way to join them and get out of this.
The only thing you can do is resist it.
And those of you that have any discernment left will have chills up
and down your spine.
You need to go with God right now.
You need to understand you can't beat this by yourselves.
You need to ask for Jesus Christ right now.
And you need to reach towards God, everything you got.
Now there are those of us that have to stand in the gap to try to get time
for people to wake up and I'm willing to do it.
But let me tell you, he didn't fun with his brother, Dominic.
So I'm going to tell you right now, folks, you better decide which side you're on.
You better to do it forever.
I've decided I'm against you, Alex.
I don't care to side with your imagined enemies, but I'm against you.
I think he's trying to pull himself off as like, what if Obi-Wan Kenobi?
Was Alex Jones?
Like that's the only corollary I can think of.
What if Obi was racist?
Yeah, exactly.
What if what if Obi-Wan Kenobi instead of being a wise Jedi master who helped
fuck up the empire or whatever, what if he instead was a fucking lunatic?
Like a Yosemite Sam in the desert?
What if he was a controlled opposition agent trying to lure Skywalker into a
false flag attack?
No!
The Death Star was a false flag.
Last Jedi was a great movie.
Fuck everybody who disagrees.
Um, I've, you know, that that was, you know, that clip is is pretty insane.
And one of the reasons that I think that last clip was really deeply fucked up
is that, like Alex is admitting that I operate off of fear.
I only do this because I'm scared.
And I know that a lot of that is performative, but I think there's a kernel
of truth in there.
Like I think, I think that there is a fear that drives him.
And one of the problems that I have with that is that his fear is based
on an imagined enemy.
Right.
You know, this idea of these globalists and all this stuff, like when you
really break it down and you start to parse what he's talking about, you look
at the documents that he references and you realize like those don't say what
he's saying.
You look at like the, the, the things that are formative to him.
Things like the naked capitalist by scousin.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
None dare call it conspiracy.
Right.
Then you realize like, Oh, this is just crock of shit.
Like communist conspiracy theory bullshit from decades past.
It's all just war warmed over protocols of the elders.
The Zion kind of ideas worked into a new framework.
Right.
The Russians know how to propagandize in a way that has resonated through
the past hundred and 10 years.
Right.
And not like the modern Russian state can't be blamed for that.
No, I've
seen it in the past, but, but like you, you start to recognize that and you
start to think about it.
It's like, that's where Alex got the conception of these imagined
enemies that he's so afraid of and you start to look at it a little bit.
And I, I might be reaching a little bit too much.
And I know I, I, I try to practice radical empathy with Alex because I
think it's the only way to approach him, you know, deal with exactly the
things he's saying on a literal basis.
Right.
You deal with insanity by bringing acceptance of that insanity and then
analysis of that insanity.
If you respond with anger and like, ah, look at this fucking asshole and get
mad, you're never going to get anywhere.
You dismiss it.
You're also never going to get anywhere.
So when I hear stuff like this, I recognize what he's saying and I try
to hear what he's saying.
And I hear that I hear there are these demonic weird and the enemies that I
have that are based on this misunderstanding of history that was
based on all these books.
Yeah.
And when I sit with it a little bit longer and I hear a clip like that where
Alex says, I am motivated by fear.
Yeah.
It's hard for me not to think about the idea that he encountered these ideas as
a child and he got fucking terrified about them.
Yeah.
Like, I don't, I don't mean to let him off the hook at all.
Again, like as much as that like sleep apnea, brain damage stuff, like I'm
not letting him off the hook for his ideas, just possibly his behavior is
explained by that in the same way.
You look at this and you think like the brain of a child could be very
traumatized by the idea of this demonic world force that's against you and
they have tendrils everywhere.
Right.
The idea of a 12 year old mind taking in this, none dare call it conspiracy
where it's like the, every single powerful entity is working against you
and they want to commit genocide and all that stuff.
Right.
There's a really decent chance that that book fucked his mind up and he's been
living in like a PTSD kind of state since he operates off fear because of
that child brain.
Right.
No, the thing that I have occasionally gone back and forth on is are we a true
crime podcast?
Do you know what I mean?
Like to a certain extent, we are watching a serial killer and we are tracing
technically probably killed one guy.
He's yeah.
Well, okay.
Individual killer.
Like in a certain sense, we are tracing this man who you cannot have empathy for
back to a place where you could have had empathy for.
Yeah.
And so with something like that, I feel like that is a layer cake of like the
first layer is if you take him literally, he is afraid.
Yeah.
The second layer is this is a performance.
He's not actually afraid, but the bottom layer is he was or is actually
afraid and he is hiding this reality like a chai-kong nesting doll.
Yeah.
I mean, because, you know, because what you, you have to wrestle with is the idea
that what he's afraid of isn't real.
Yeah.
Like it's just not.
Yeah.
And so then the question becomes after that, where did he get those ideas?
And as you start like going down that road, the further and further you get
down that road, the more you realize like, this has just been a lot.
Yeah.
I mean, it's basically what we're doing is serial, but with too many episodes.
And that was like a 10 part series and no end point.
Like we have no preparation and WBZ is not involved.
And neither is male kip.
Yeah.
Male keem doesn't care.
Um, so I think that's really fucked up.
And I think it tells a lot.
I think, I think it speaks volumes, but in this next clip, this is where Alex
starts to get like a dangerous level of grandiose.
This, this next two clips, I think are so fucked up.
If you love God and you love justice and you hear what I'm saying,
it means you resonate with God.
That is deeply fucked up.
I believe it was Jesus who said Alex Jones would be the rock of the church.
I believe that Alex Jones is the lodestone who holds up the church.
That sounds, I mean, like on a very basic level, what he's saying is that
like I speak for God.
Yeah.
And if what I'm saying resonates with you, then you resonate with God.
Yep.
That's, I mean, that's not, this isn't a political show, man.
This is, this is like that.
If it wasn't on the radio and just being said in a small room, that's cult shit.
Yeah.
That is cult shit to a T.
If Anderson Cooper goes on TV and says, if you understand what I'm saying, you
understand what God is saying to you.
Holy shit.
The entire world would fucking explode.
Yeah.
And rightfully so.
Yeah.
It would be insane.
It would be insane.
And the thing is, this is the type of shit he could get away with when he was on
social media.
Yeah, totally.
This is, yeah, this isn't something that's going to get, this is just like,
Hey, you're weird.
You're fucked up.
Yeah.
I mean, he's implying that he speaks for God.
Well, he does.
Sure.
And it's a weird God.
In this next clip, he kind of implies that info wars is an outpost for God.
And you decided which side you're on.
That's why this is all here.
There's not just evil in the world.
God made sure that there'd be platforms.
Halter's until the last minute of the last hour.
Halter's always saying, we're here for you.
Halter's we love you.
We're inclusive.
Life is inclusive.
Don't go with Satan.
That's crazy.
That is crazy.
That is insane.
That is fucking crazy.
That is literally what?
The part about like God is going to provide platforms and wear one of them.
Like that sort of idea.
That's crazy.
The other one is Facebook.
But of course, but the other, the other like more grounded part of it is that
Alex thinks he's inclusive.
That part is even crazier because you can, you can, you can toss aside the like God
and delusions of weird mania.
That, that sort of stuff is like, you can put that in a box.
The idea that he thinks he's inclusive is so inexcusable.
Okay.
There is a, just from a, a, a literal definition standpoint, inclusion
does not necessarily a preclude exclusion.
Sure.
Do you know what I'm saying?
Limited inclusion.
Yeah.
You can still be inclusive, but if your inclusion is only white people, I mean,
technically you are inclusive.
I should say, before that clip, he did say, you could be brown, black,
no, you can be black, black, white, Asian, true, whatever.
Yeah.
He did it.
He did his like, we all bleed right.
As long as you are a white supremacist, it doesn't matter what skin color
you have or where you're from or what you practice.
He was trying, you know, he did his lead up to that, uh, that, that comment there
with the like, you could be white, black, brown, Asian, uh, Hispanic, whatever.
Like that sort of standard boilerplate, but I really don't think it's important.
Like the fact that he said that, and which is why I didn't include it in the
clip.
Yeah.
Well, now you're exclusive.
No, I don't care how he prefaces that.
I know, I know.
Imagined idea of inclusivity is, is so exclusive.
It's, it's, it's not the only good Islam that isn't radical is Christianity.
So Alex is getting into this really weird headspace where he's like, I speak for
God, if you listen to what I'm saying and get a boner, yeah, then
you resonate with God and that's great.
And then also God has made it.
So there will be places where you can come until the last days.
And that's me.
That's us.
That's what we're doing here.
We are an outpost sanctioned by God, which is really, really deeply fucked up.
And we have one more clip.
I want to be clear.
This last clip, uh, really demonstrates entirely what Alex's entire
operation is about.
And when we enjoy these sort of like weird esoteric dalliances that he has,
yeah, it's important to realize why they're there.
And then also realize that Alex is, you know, I mean, there's indications
he's struggling to, but he's struggling with ghosts.
Imagine every way, the things that he's struggling with that are real are
things that he's created himself, his own like roadblocks he's built.
But like, listen to how this, this clip, I think is a full demonstration of like,
where that like fun, interesting esoteric nonsense pivots back into the real world.
And it's the same thing when he's fake and crying and it turns into rage.
It's, it's always something that he's marginally in control of.
You don't think I don't know the enemies on operations, all their maps,
all their plans, it's a weakness of mine that I won't project into it and
actually look into what they do.
But I do it, I do it when I have to, and it's, it's, it's not fun.
And I'm not complaining.
I'm not, here's the thing, I'm, I'm actually weak.
I really should look into the enemy's mind more and I, I've promised I would.
I've not had the will to do it lately, but I'm going to try.
Maybe the night, maybe the night it's, it's really horrible though.
I, you see what they're doing to kids and everybody.
It's, it's, uh,
Dershowitz, it's not fun.
I'll just drop that and, uh, but I'll do what has to be done.
All I'm telling you is we need your prayers.
We need your support now tomorrow, not next week, not next year.
This is it.
This is the big push for the decision on a planetary level.
Whether we are destroyed as a planet or whether we go to the next level,
our spirits, God's already going to divide those up from the good for the bad,
but this is an intergalactic quest.
It's a great moment to be alive.
And I'm just very blessed and very humbled to be here talking to you.
And I just encourage you again.
The power you have when you get excited and you get focused is unlimited.
When you understand the potential you have and when you financially support us.
You see, you see, he's in control of that.
Yep.
He's saying a bunch of shit, a bunch of nonsense.
And it's fun on some level, like this, this, like he's getting esoteric and
talking about like it's a, it's a galactic quest.
We're on the destruction of our very planet hinges on Roger Stone's indictment.
Somehow Tim Allen is involved.
But like that nonsense is all within his control because he's easily able to weave
it towards like, you have to financially support us.
He has an ad pivot out of one of the deeper esoteric nonsense kind of idea.
Like I'm going to look into the enemy's mind.
I tried to, but it's too painful.
It's too painful.
Maybe tonight, maybe tonight.
And he's still doing the exact same voice he's doing in that weird esoteric breakdown.
When he gets into like, you have to give us support financially, financially.
It's now the battle is now.
Yeah.
And so I know I break myself away from any kind of ethical ideas about like,
like, I don't know, just in any way feeling sorry for him.
Because when you see stuff like that, you don't know, there's, there's nothing
that is not intentional about how he's using his fucked upness.
Yeah.
We, I don't, I don't think that there's anything wrong about you and I taking
time out of our day to wrestle with the possibility that we're wrong in mocking him.
I was, oh, I was thinking the whole time that clip was going on.
I was getting back to this, like we've done this so many times where you've
listened to him and this is his talent, his talent is truly even while we have
spent two years dissecting all the dumb fuck shit that he has said and, and proving
that this is intentional while I was listening to that clip.
I was kind of halfway in the list place of like, what do you really believe?
Is this all, what, what is you?
And then it's like, and then it's like, Hey, we need your financial support.
And you're like, that's, that's it.
That's it.
Well, he's, uh, well, he's trying to defend Roger.
Obviously he doesn't want any more questions to be asked about himself or his dad.
Of course not.
But he's mostly primarily concerned with the idea that I have the exclusive and
no one's talking about it.
Yep.
We have so many people coming to the website and 1% of you buy our product.
It's kind of pissing me off.
Yeah.
And then as the show goes on, he loses a ton of the fucking audience because
they're like, he's not really even talking about any Roger stuff.
This isn't really that interesting.
Yep.
And he gets into an existential crisis, starts talking about God, gets into
this weird fucking place where he says that he speaks for God and info wars is
an outpost for God and he's going to get into the enemy's mind, but it's so
painful, but it's really just a way to continue what he's been doing.
The whole show, which is trying to get people to give him more money because
he's making less money than before.
Yep.
So fuck all of this.
Um, I'm going to say at the end of this, my summation is I think that first of
all, I made my point clear earlier, Roger stone is fucked.
That indictment is pretty open and shut.
God damn well, should be, uh, we will be back, uh, in the future talking about
the coursey stuff as more information is available.
Yeah.
Right now, I don't think there's enough for us to have a solid position on it.
Although if I were a gambling man, which I am, give me my wallet.
Where is it over there?
Uh, I would bet you should really know where I would bet that coursey is probably
cooperating in a substantial way.
And there might be a lot of information that comes out from that.
Cause I also think the coward, uh, he's a coward.
I think he is a, uh, he strikes me as someone who, uh, is
probably overtrusted in that world and also very malleable.
No, I would, I would say it took forever to break Manafort.
And when the FBI called coursey, he was like, you're the FBI.
I will tell you literally everything right now over the phone.
I don't even know Manafort, I don't even want you to bring me in.
Manafort since the early 80s, literally has worked for dictators like murderers.
He has lobbied for and gotten paychecks for blood.
He knows that and has done that.
The same with Roger.
They have known that their business is built on the deaths of people in other
countries and they've made peace with that.
Not, not just the deaths, hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of thousands of
tortures and yet torture, absolutely brutality.
Like the, the, the things that even just the, in Zaire and in the Philippines,
yeah, even just though, like the, the, you get into like the specifics of what
those people were doing that were contracted by their firm.
Like it's unspeakable stuff.
Like Ferdinand Marcos, like he legitimately had a policy in place where he,
what he would like to do is he would take people and then he would disfigure
them, like political dissidents.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You disfigure them and kill them and then leave their bodies in the open for
people to find in order for them to find it and be terrified about this is what
happens, right?
Roger Stone and his firm still were fine taking their money.
So the point that I'm making here with this, this sort of like real
distillation of the brutality of people Roger Stone is comfortable working with
and Manafort is that those dudes have ice water in their fucking veins.
They don't give a shit.
Yep.
Like they will protect their ass as best they can.
But when it comes down to it, if they're in a courtroom or Mueller is talking to
them, they have faced down people who have murdered thousands of people.
So they have some experience with that high pressure situation.
Yeah.
Corsi has written for world net daily.
Corsi wrote a bullshit book about Obama not being a citizen.
Yeah.
Like he poses like someone who's like, I have all these contacts with the people
in intelligence and whatever.
He's not made of the strong stuff.
And I'm not saying that is a positive thing that Manafort and Stone are.
They have been deeply mixed up with people who are much more dangerous than
even the United States judicial system.
Right.
Do you, when we did the Joe Arpaio episode, I had to stop because you went
through line by line an insane number of torturous, murderous fucking bullshit.
And negligence and straight, intentional negligence intentional.
Arpaio is a true monster.
Absolutely.
Roger Stone and Paul Manafort have been the Himmlers for many dictators.
Like even Himmler was just a fucking propagandist for only one dictator.
Right.
When they go to hell, which doesn't exist.
And that's why I hope they get lit on fire.
It's bomber.
Hell doesn't exist.
No, because of them because of them because they are worse than Nazis.
Yep.
And the big problem that I have is that like Roger Stone plays into his images
like I'm a fucking dirty trickster or whatever to like.
And I think that it's so important to draw a line between like what is the fun
image of him and the reality.
Yeah.
Because it's different.
It's different.
Like he's like, ah, look at this.
I like back when he worked for fucking Nixon's reelection campaign, he's like
sending invitations to Democrats to a fake dinner.
Yeah.
They're like, aha, prank.
You know, like that sort of stuff.
Like, okay, cool.
Yeah.
You were also involved in Watergate shit.
That stuff did come out.
Like, oh, that's, but it's still like, that was when you're like 20, there's
trickster-ish elements to it.
It's cantankerous.
Yeah.
That's not who he is since then.
And it's not been who he has been since at least the fucking 80s.
I mean, there's a ton of people who are involved with infowars that we could do
an episode that would be like scathing.
Yeah.
And damning.
Yeah.
And just because it's not the most pressing thing ever, it would take a
ton of work and it would be like, well, we just got to keep the process moving
forward.
Right.
People like Paul Craig Roberts or like Wayne Madsen.
Yeah.
Like these people have deep histories of really fucked up things that they've done.
And when they're relevant, we will do a whole episode about that.
Oh hell yeah.
And Roger Stone just forced our hands by getting indicted.
Yeah.
But the important thing is that he is no joke.
He is a fucking monster and not in a fun way.
No, it's fun to treat him as if he's a monster in a fun way.
Yeah.
It's more fun.
Well, it's how you get through it.
It's one of those things where I, and this is the hard part of just pure morality.
If you want to go with a fucking point system, when you talk about the dictators
that they fucking worked for.
Sure.
They tortured and murdered hundreds of thousands of people who never, ever.
And it shouldn't have happened.
It should never have happened no matter what.
But somehow there are people who have truly done enough to actually deserve that
treatment and they will never, ever, ever get it.
Like I don't care.
I don't care as far as.
Look, Roger Stone deserves the worst of what I hope he gets a very comfortable
accommodation in a federal prison where the state pays for him to survive for
the rest of his life.
So, so Jordan, we're at the end of this episode.
We are done.
Um, and I don't, I don't know.
I, I think, uh, I'm exhausted.
I don't know how to sum anything of this up.
Roger's screwed.
We'll see what happens.
The Corsi stuff will play out over the next bit.
We'll see.
We'll see.
I don't know.
It's, I would like you to sum this up because I'm, I'm burnt out.
Okay.
I, I will do my best to sum this up as well as I can.
Uh, Stone is fucked.
Corsi is fucked.
Everybody is fucked.
Somehow Alex is not fucked in the same way.
And I think he is financially fucked.
Well, he's financially fucked, but he's not fucked in the way that he's going to go
to prison like, and I think that is both something that he is jealous of, as well
as something that he is grateful for.
And it's, it's a weird place for him to be.
So for him to do an episode like this, he is watching people become martyrs in
their own minds in a real way.
And it bums him out because he is a martyr in a fake way.
But it also bums him out that he's not getting the exclusive with Joan.
It does.
So it does.
Yeah.
But because that's really what it's more about is like his bottom line.
Yeah, it's interesting that the day his best friend gets arrested, he's concerned
that no one's giving him credit for, like, if you got arrested, I wouldn't come on
the podcast, do an emergency episode, or it's like, Hey, Jordan's on the phone.
Hey, Jordan has gone and then do an interview with you and then for fucking 40
minutes be like, no one is recognizing that I talked to Jordan.
Like that's a weird impulse.
That's a very way like, but, but it's a, it's a perfectly logical impulse for
their relationship as both of them being psychopaths.
Yep.
Because Roger was on the phone with them and then fucking bailed.
I don't give a fuck with no like goodbye or anything like that.
I got to go fuck out of him.
It's just a voicemail.
Yeah.
And Alex is on air and he's not saying, uh, we should take care of stone.
He's saying, give me money.
Yeah.
He's, he donate.
He says, Hey, donate to Roger Stone's legal defense fund once, twice.
And he says, donate to info wars or buy info wars products a million times.
And most of the times he's saying donate to stones fund.
He's also then pivoting into like, we also need money.
Yeah.
So it's a, it's a, it's, it's two parasites sucking off each other to some extent.
And it's an untenable, like unsustainable situation.
I don't know.
We'll see what happens.
We have done this episode with the amount of information we have at our
disposal.
Now there will be more information coming in the future that may color some of
this stuff, but I think that for now we've done as best as best we can.
We'll be back.
But until then we have a website.
It's knowledge fight.com.
Oh, fill your hand.com.
It's also Alex Jones, show.us.
Love that one.
Love it.
Thank you Ian.
We are also on Twitter.
What's on it?
At knowledge underscore fight.
Lot of new followers there.
Thank you so much.
Everybody.
All right.
Hey, are we on Facebook?
Facebook.
We are there.
You have a group called go home.
You tell your mother you're brilliant.
Lot of new members there.
Thank you guys so much.
Wonderful.
We're also on itunes.
We are.
You can leave a review, subscribe, download it all.
Download them all.
That would be like Pokemon.
God, so many posts in the group have been like, we started
listening or I started listening from the beginning and now
I'm losing my mind.
Guys, this show is the turbo force of podcast.
It's too late in the episode to say this, but yeah, I've made
this point a number of times.
Be careful with even our show.
Yeah.
The rhetoric that Alex employs is so toxic that even with
context and all that and humor, it's still, if you listen to
too much of it, it will be painful.
Yeah.
But be that as it may.
We'll be back.
I'll say, indeed, here's what I would say.
Do you think Stone has killed a guy?
I don't know.
Oh, man, I feel like he had to.
He's strangled a dude or at least somebody slaughter.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, but his lawyer, Tyler Nixon, I assume,
probably hasn't killed anybody possible.
That guy seems like he's just unless he took the, I think he
may have taken the identity of the real Tyler Nixon of the guy
who, the Eisenhower grandson who married into the Nixon family
possibly, but we can't prove it.
But one guy who has technically probably killed a guy.
That's Alex Jones.
Andy and Kansas, you're on the air.
Thanks for holding.
So Alex, I'm a first time caller.
I'm a huge fan.
I love your work.
I love you.