Knowledge Fight - #296: May 8, 2019
Episode Date: May 15, 2019Today, Dan tells Jordan about one of the weirdest days ever on The Alex Jones Show. Alex begins the show really depressed about Satanists and finishes the show by barging out of the studio for one of ...the most childish reasons imaginable. The key is in what happens in between, like Alex thinking the show Gunsmoke is realistic.
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.
Jordan. Dan. Jordan.
How was your first experience with pandemic? Oh, we played a little board game the other
night. We did. You just got a grill recently, and so I came over to your house. We made some
delightful burgers. And we played the game pandemic, which I believe was very widely
recommended by our listeners in the wake of our talking about the Illuminati card game.
And everybody going crazy. Everyone loves games. And it was a lot of fun. It was great.
I enjoyed it quite a bit. I don't know. We lost. Yes, we did. It was pretty brutal.
I think that was part of the learning curve, though. Just taking it out of the box,
figuring out how to play. I think you're going to lose your first time. I don't have to take that
to self-consciously, although, you know, it was a little bummed out. Yeah, it is a little bit
weird to lose a cooperative strategy game and not feel like you're kind of dumb. Yeah. You know,
you're like, I lost to a game. That's not fair. Well, we lost because of the timer or like whatever.
Yeah, you ran out of cards and the built in like, we could have won if we had more time.
Yeah, I think that's the, that's how the world is going to let's climate change kills us all.
Well, we could have done it. But it was a lot of fun. God damn it. If George W. Bush hadn't
been, hadn't stolen the election, we might have survived this one. But pandemic was a lot of
fun. I look forward to playing it again at some point. Indeed. I enjoyed it. I enjoyed it as
well. And this will be enjoyable on some level because it's a podcast where I know a lot about
Alex Jones. And I only know what you tell me about Alex Jones. Indeed. We've got an episode
to do today. But before we get to that, I want to say a special thank you again to the dudes
from Q and non-anonymous. Absolutely. Had a great time with them too. I hope we get to play pandemic
together someday. And more pointedly, perhaps a thank you to everybody who with all the positive
feedback, it was a massive departure from our format. I was very worried about the idea of how
it was going to be received by the audience who I thought might be confused and wall-to-wall
everybody with very positive, nice things to say. So Jordan, today what we're going to be doing is
we're going to the present day since Monday was that Q and non-anonymous crossover episode.
Oh no, not the president. When? When? Wednesday is got to take that role this week. And when I do
these present day episodes, one of the things I strive to do is be as close to current as possible.
You want to cover things that are too late. Yeah. And today I wanted to do that, but I can't
because I started covering Wednesday, May 8th. Yeah. And I realized, you know, sure, it's all,
it's a week old at this point, this episode, but there was too much going on on it that I felt
I couldn't leave this uncovered. So that's what we'll be going over today. Wednesday, May 8th.
Sounds good. We'll get to that in just one second. But before we do, got to say thank you to some
people who have signed up and are supporting the show. First of all, David, thank you so much.
You are now policyawnk. I'm a policyawnk. Thanks, David. Thank you, David. Next,
Kevin, thank you so much. You are now policyawnk. I'm a policyawnk. Thank you, Kevin,
Next, Andrew, thank you so much. You are now a policyawnk. I'm a policyawnk. Thank you, Andrew.
Next, Roop Groove, thank you so much. You are now a policyawnk. I'm a policyawnk. Roopgroove.
Roofgroove. Thank you. Thank you. Uh, finally, I'd like to say thank you to somebody who donated
on an elevated level. We appreciate it very much. So, Genevieve, thank you so much. You are now a
technocrat. I'm a policyawnk. Four stars. Go home to your mother and tell her you're brilliant.
Someone, someone, Sonamite sent me a bucket of poop. Daddy Shark.
Jar Jar Binks has a Caribbean black action. He's a loser, little, little titty baby.
I don't want to hate black people. I renounce Jesus Christ. Thank you so much, Genevieve. Thank you
very much, Genevieve. Always like a Genevieve. Absolutely. If you're out there listening,
you're thinking, Hey, I like what these guys do. I'd like to support the show. You can do that by
going to our website, knowledgefight.com, clicking the button says support the show. We would appreciate
it. It would be delightful. So Jordan, May 8th, 2019, Wednesday. I don't know how else to build
this up. I mean, it's my birthday. It is. Yeah. See, that's why I did it. That's why you did it.
I forgot which day last week was your birthday. Yeah, that's why we did it. That's why we did it.
It was my birthday episode. Yeah, of course. How inconsiderate of me. So for your birthday,
maybe this is the best present you could possibly have. Sure. Almost the first half hour, 40 minutes
of the show. Alex Jones appears to be very depressed. All right. That's nice. Clinical
depression level symptoms going out of this bag. I'm liking this. So here is just sort of a cross
section of, I think that this embodies the depressed vibe Alex has got. Here's what's happening.
I don't even know if I continue on doing this show at this point. I think I may just
be in the show right now because things are so bad in this country. I think talking about it
is almost a way of just making it a form of entertainment. I mean, I really, really, really
do. We have to do some really, really drastic things. If you see any of these tech executives
in person, I wouldn't try to run them out of restaurants. I wouldn't try to do what the
Democrats have said due to us that are fighting back against the bullying, but I would definitely
let them know that you're aware of their criminal activity and that they will be brought to justice.
And if you live next door to them, you let them know that. If you run into them, you should.
If you can do anything to hurt their stocks. If you can do anything to let these criminals know,
because they're consolidating power and it's getting worse by the day.
So there's a fatalistic element to what he's talking about. It seems like he kind of is
resigned in some ways to like, I'm not doing it. Like whatever. Do I agree with him here? I kind of
think I do. Well, it's kind of him showing his cards. Yeah. Like coming around to the position
of like, whatever I'm doing isn't solving any problems. I'm just making entertainment out of
this. And maybe I should stop this show. Oh yeah. So get sued a lot right now.
It's just this super weird vibe. And I, I don't think that clip fully embodies it because there's
there's parts where there's just like frequent four second pauses where he's just like,
Oh, you can just feel it in here. Like this, this lethargy is like, I don't know what
it feels like the will to live has been sucked out of him.
And when I was listening to it, I was very puzzled. I was like, what the fuck is going on here?
I don't even know what I hate anymore. Do I want guns? I had so many theories about like,
what could possibly be going on. And like Alex does all the time, you don't need to have theories
he will just tell you. So I just watched the opening 20 minutes of up. That's what happened.
He did watch something. Okay. All right. I, you know, I got the vibe that he was really depressed
and that something must be up, you know, like, like a good friend. I sensed a difference in
him. Of course, of course. And thankfully about 40 minutes in, he lets us know exactly what's
going on and what has caused him to lose his will to live. We're dying. We're dying. And I
went and saw a movie last night and it was exactly what I thought it would be.
At this point, I thought it was Avengers endgame. Yeah, I legitimately thought like, oh, he saw
Avengers and it's the only thing that makes sense. Right. I thought that was for sure. It's a little
more indie than that. And worse, so incredibly boring, so incredibly predictive, so pathetic.
I still at this point thought it was gotta be endgame. I do. And I have heard a clip of him.
I don't remember, or not a clip. I heard it on some other episode where he was talking about how
endgame stole his title. Yeah. And so like, I thought for sure, it is like some sort of a,
it is not endgame. All right. And we will see what it is. The people so weak and so soulless
slaves. And it's exactly what I thought it would be. Yeah, but what is it? I knew it was
following it in the real world. And it was a giant PR rollout for Satanism. And not for the
fake atheistic Satanism, where the atheists claim, oh, I'm really an atheist. Yeah, totally.
As I was listening to this, I still thought like, he's going to get around something about Loki,
or I have no fucking idea. This is nuts. Thor cut his head off. Sure you are. Yes,
of course you are. These were actual devil wars person. And by that, they see themselves as the
devil and you as their food. It's a predatory thing. Do as thou wilt is the whole law.
What? And just thank God I'm not with those people. But being in the theater and looking at the weak
chicken neck people around me and watching their enjoyment
was soul sucking. Like when you're in the Los Angeles and feel the desperateness and the
emptiness and the lostness and the movie is Hail Satan. I'm going to talk about it later in the
broadcast. Wait, it's just called Hail Satan? It's a documentary. Okay. It's a documentary
about the satanic temple. Gotcha. It's sort of farcical a little bit. There's a real humor to it.
He's going to get into it later in the episode and so we'll talk about it. But Alex went and saw
this Hail Satan documentary and it is completely destroyed the beginning of his broadcast.
That was my first question. Why would you do that? What are you doing there? What are you going to
gain from this sort of? I wanted to give my children culture. I don't think he allowed his
kids to go. I think he went on a probably put on a false nose and glasses, a little fake mustache,
went to the theater, incognito. Oh, and shroyers right next to him wearing a balaclava? Also,
he went to the Alamo Draft House. So he's seeing a movie. He's probably drinking while he's there
too. So maybe this depression that he's manifesting is just a hangover because he saw about a
documentary where satanists are put in a good light and that is going to cause a pender.
Yeah, no, that's going to be trouble. So any of these possibilities are there. He saw satanists
in a documentary air go losing the will to lose or saw satanists in a documentary driven to drink
a little sloppy the next morning on there who long pauses between words both equally terrible
headache. So he sees this documentary and he goes on long jags about how these satanists are low
down, broke backed, soul sucked. Okay, all this is normal satanic imagery. That's all the people
in the audience. Of course. And he specifically takes a lot of those ideas that he's putting on to
the satanist. And you'll see very clearly in this next clip what he does is he takes those
characterizations and applies them to Democrats in order to conflate satanists and Democrats.
Sure. Why not? And I think that there is actually a specific reason that he's doing that. Okay.
I can tell you not just here, but in Europe, many other areas, the actual operating system
like a computer program like Windows 2000 of the Democratic Party is satanism.
And again, I remember, you know, three star Air Force generals telling me that 20 something
years ago, I didn't believe it. I remember even though I grew up, there was a lot of that going
on in Dallas and wealthy areas, which these weren't white trash, anti for methods. Wait a second.
These were rich people. And this was more Luciferian, but it was the real deal.
Wait a second. I got to pause there for a second because Alex's whole thing is about
anti white racism. And now he's throwing around white trash. That is not cool, man. Why not?
What are you doing? Most of your listeners are white trash.
I don't know. I'm not even fine with you throwing it around flippantly as a joke.
Like the idea that he is like his whole brand proposition is defense of attacks on white people.
And white trash is one of the terms that's used most derisively about poor white people.
It seems completely incongruous that someone with the market share that Alex does would be
okay with like throwing that around to insult some other white people.
Hey, you're depressed. You know, your filters are way at their lowest.
It's crazy. Maybe, maybe it doesn't even mean it. It's just his, his rage trying to get its way out
in a sad, in a sad direction. Fine, but he's still anti white. Alex Jones has turned on the whites.
What do they have left about time? Oh boy.
But even though I was around it, I still
couldn't believe that it was this rampant.
And that's what I'm going to be getting into at the bottom of the next hour.
I meant to write some notes last night when I got home or today of watching
Hell Satan, this new movie.
And it was just like, that's the Democrats. And when I first five minutes in, I went,
oh my gosh, it's the operating system. They're going to say this is the new religion of America
and the democratic operating system. They're going to show all these Democrats that said,
oh, I wasn't atheist, but now I'm a Satanist. And it's a tongue in cheek thing, but it's real.
So I have, I have a very strong theory as to why he sees these Satanists in the documentary. And
he says, Oh my God, it's the Democrats. But have you seen the documentary? I haven't. So
I want to say that like the depression that he was manifesting at the beginning of the episode
kind of made me feel a little bit gross and sad until it was contextualized in like,
it was a documentary. I saw this documentary about Satanism. And, you know, that's what's
causing it. So, you know, the previous night before this episode, he'd gone to the old cinema
and he'd seen the documentary Hail Satan, which I mean, the first question you had is the first
question anyone has, which is why the fuck would he go and do that? Of course, it's the sort of
thing. It's like, you know, better, you don't need to go see this. Yeah, just watch a YouTube video
about the, you know, the 80s. What? Yeah, what are you going to get out of it? Exactly. Well,
what are you going to get out of it that's gratifying in some way that you can't just get
that same charge from reading like a book by my uncle, reading books about satanic ritual abuse,
reading the title of a book by your uncle would be more than enough for him to get sad for those
who haven't listened to all of our episodes. My uncle wrote a number of books about multiple
personality disorder and how it's caused by satanic ritual abuse. And the only cure is Jesus.
He's not widely respected in the community. He's a little bit pariah. Yeah, maybe I don't know
about pariah, but he's certainly not seen as a luminary. Gotcha. Gotcha. So I've not had a chance
to see this movie, this documentary that Alex is talking about, but I watched the trailer and it
looks really pretty interesting. And I would be inclined to go see it. But it's also really easy
to sort out what the story of the movie is. The documentary follows a group of people who advocate
for marginalized groups and particularly against the oppression that comes disguised as Christian
principle and the protecting the separation of church and state. And they formed this satanic
temple in order to force the issue. Right. They're the ones who will be like, Hey, if you're going
to erect the 10 commandments, we'll get to put a statue of the devil. We'll get to that. Yeah.
So the group the documentary follows is called the satanic temple. And it should be pointed out
that they explicitly don't believe in a supernatural Satan. Satan is just a metaphor
that they use and a powerful symbol that they will to get free press and demonstrate how much
Christianity infringes on people's way of lives in ways that most people just accept as the default.
For instance, in 2013, they held a rally to support Florida Governor Rick Scott signing Senate Bill
98, which allowed children to pray at school in assemblies. They rallied in support of the bill,
specifically to illustrate that the bill meant that if a student wanted to pray to Satan at the
assembly, the school would have to let them. They were using the tool of people's response to Satan
as a way of highlighting that you're, you know, you're probably not cool with the idea of satanic
prayer in school, and possibly maybe someone else might not be cool with any prayer in school. So
they're using that as a lightning rod to get you to understand what your actions appear like to
other people. Yeah, they're describing a pendulum. Right. They've used the church to launch a number
of purely social advocacies. For instance, they started the protect children project where they
allow parents to sign up on their website if their child goes to a school that uses corporal
punishment or prolonged isolation as punishments for infractions. After the parents register,
the temple will contact the school and inform them that the punishments they're using are a
violation of religious principles and post a challenge to the practice as a way of protecting
these kids. Right. The religious principle here is that the satanic temple believes that your
quote body is inviolable and subject only to one's own will, which is a tenet that they hope they
can also use to provide religious exemptions to purely religiously based abortion laws. They
use these things very strategically as a way to advocate. Their works have ranged from little,
from things that are a little bit PR stunty, like when they married a gay and lesbian couple on
top of Fred Phelps mother's grave and then the satanic priest teabagged her tombstone. Pretty
funny. A little bit, a little bit stunty. Tasteless. Maybe. A little. Hilarious. Absolutely.
It's, it's on the more PR focused end of it. Yeah, absolutely. But also the point is still.
Right. The point, I mean, you take away the teabagging and maybe I'm more on board with the
stunt. How dare you take away the teabagging. But some of them are a little bit more just
directly confrontational. Yeah. On the, on that side of things, the satanic temple were the ones,
like you mentioned, who after Oklahoma State Representative Mike Ritz planned to erect a
monument to the Ten Commandments on state property insisted that that meant that they had the right
to erect a statue of Baphomet. They didn't want to erect this statue of Baphomet at the state
capital. They only wanted to illustrate why they didn't want to monument to the Ten Commandments
and it worked. The case Prescott versus Oklahoma Capital Preservation Committee ended up getting
rid of the Ten Commandments monument and then immediately the satanic temple dropped their
plans and put up their statue. When Arkansas planned to put up a Ten Commandments monument,
the Satanists brought back out the statue and are currently in the process of challenging that one
too. The point they were driving at is very clear. It's basically high concept social progressive
trolling under the guise of using Satan as a theme. Yeah. Yeah. The satanic panic. Well,
why not just lean into it? Right. And use it liberal. Exactly. Which I mean, I don't know.
Members of the group don't even really have to be Satanists to join the church as one of their
New York members explains, quote, you don't even have to be a Satanist. You could just be a strong
ally who believes in the political and secular actions without being super stoked about all
the aesthetic aspects. So I get what they're doing. They're trying to fuck with right wingers. Yeah.
By using a lot of their tools against them. Right. Pretty much everything the satanic temple does
specifically about protecting the division of church and state and about supporting vulnerable
communities be it the LGBT community, immigrants, Planned Parenthood employees or kids who get hit
in schools. I admittedly don't know everything about the group, but from everything I can tell,
well, my personal taste doesn't go for some of the theatricality. It seems like they're doing
important work and are pretty effective. Well, I mean, consider the, you know, the almost certainly
or no, the unconstitutional unconstitutional Georgia abortion ban, all of those things,
if you're going to have a religious exemption law for, you know, a hospital, a nurse refusing to
treat a gay or lesbian patient, if there's a religious exemption for that, then almost certainly
you can argue in court that there would be a religious exemption for abortion if you were
a Satanist. Yeah, or the same logic tracks from the religious exemptions for vaccines.
Exactly. You could very easily, my religion specifically dictates that I have control over
my own body. Exactly. This is in violation of that. We're a federally recognized religion,
tax exempt status and all that. So ironically, Georgia may have created a million Satanists.
Well, the devil is going to go down to Georgia. So I see like a lot of what they're doing and
again, I'm not going to bat hole cloth for the organization. I don't know enough about their
various chapters and there could be, you know, I'm sure there's a bunch of assholes. There could be
some seedy shit or whatever. I'm not sure, but in terms of the, the higher profile, bigger stuff
that I'm able to find out about, it seems like stuff that I tip my hat to just short of me becoming
a Satanist. Yeah, yeah. I'm sure they got a turf or two. Right. But they seem to be doing some good
stuff, but Alex fucking hates them. And he likes to pretend that he hates them because they're
low down dirty fools, seduced into following a little literal personified Lucifer. It's pretty
clear if you look into what this group does. And if you watch the trailer for this documentary,
it's clear that it's mostly about their social activism. The conclusion is pretty tough to escape
that what Alex hates about them is their social conscience. He hates that they're into providing
pretty tough resistance to the merging of church and state, which Alex is pretty into. He hates
that they accept people of all sexual orientations, of all identities, of all races, and they don't
think that anybody is weird. He hates that they take the protections that his religion has exploited
forever and turned them around on him because he knows that the only argument he can really use
against them is an argument that also erodes his religion's hegemony. They have got him trapped
to a certain extent that if he argues against whatever they're doing on a religious ground,
he erodes his power. Or he's advocating for an out and out theocracy that is going to crush
all other religions. It's sort of forcing his hand. And so his only attack is that they're evil
worshipers of a literal Satan, which is pretty lame and absolutely against their own stated
positions for years. Yeah, I have a struggle anytime I recognize that people do believe in
a literal Satan. I'm always like, really? Are we sure about the literal Satan? I'm not sure. I'm
positive that there are some folk who do, but I've never met anybody who professes to be a Satanist
who doesn't look at things as a metaphor. Absolutely not. But you know what's interesting?
Those are Wiccans. This is pretty fun. In hating the Satanic Temple, which is the group that the
documentary is about, Alex Jones has an unlikely ally, and that is Anton Leves Church of Satan.
A representative of the Church of Satan has said that, quote, the Satanic Temple amounts to no
more than a bunch of trolls giving Satanism a bad name in a bald quest for attention. It is called
them not real Satanists. They're giving Satanism a bad name. My enemy is my friend. Alex Jones and
Anton Leves are too big up against the socially progressive Satanic Temple. Finally, finally,
they can agree on something. And what's weird is some of the criticisms that Alex has about them
are really strangely in line with those of Peter Gilmore, the current high priest of the Church
of Satan. Alex feels that the Baphomet statue that they use as a prop in order to get rid of
religious encroachment on state property is a monument to pedophilia, since there are children
on each side of Baphomet, the goat man. Gilmore said the statue, quote, seems pedophilic. Strange
bedfellows, as they say. Huh. Alex Jones and the Church of Satan getting together. You know,
it's nice to see that they can put aside all of their myriad differences and agree to call a lot
of shit pedophilic without any information or care for the damage it might do. You would think
that the people who were the Church of Satan would be more sensitive about things that lead to
satanic panic. You really do. Yeah. I don't know. You know what? We should be prosecuting Satanists.
No, no, no. The ones over there. The poor ones. I'm sure nobody else will mistake the two of us.
People don't react negatively to Satanists. The poor ones who are trying to protect minorities.
Those are the ones who should prosecute. Yeah, get rid of them. Seems to show true colors.
So I'm left with the very strong sense that Alex is triggered by watching this documentary
less because they are literal Satanists because they aren't worshiping a literal Satan.
He's more triggered by the idea that they make a very strong point of protecting the vulnerable
in these populations that Alex sees as non-desirable. Yeah. Can you imagine how much pain Alex must
have gone through listening to his arguments shot back at him whenever he whenever the cognitive
dissonance in his brain exploded? That's where we are right now because he's like,
shit. They're saying the same stuff I'm saying, but they're they're right to fuck. No, you're a
demon. My only move forward is to heavily demonize and basically manifest a satanic panic in my
audience. Exactly. That's the only way I'm going to spin out of this thing. All he's got. And that's
what he does. It's all about killing babies after they're born. And they talk about how
bad babies are and how we need to kill them and how they're scum and how we need to stop
putting up on a pedestal. How we need to trample babies. And I was in this theater with all these
Austin liberals, all these weak men like squirming and drinking their beer and getting off of it.
I looked at all the men and women. They were all ugly. The men were all super weak.
The weakest of the week, the ugliest of the ugliest. These are Satan's minions. These are
Satan's servants. Yes. Knights in Satan's service. We have to bring God back into America. We have
to do it now. So I mean, you see right there, you have the desire to push a satanic panic narrative,
and it ends with exactly what we've been talking about. There's this desire to bring God into
controlling the state. It's definitely a good idea to have a theocracy right now. Right now is the
perfect time for the theocracy, especially when you're yelling about Islamic theocracy.
Yeah, exactly. They're trying to put in Sharia law. We just need the 10 commandments to rule
our country, right? Completely different thing. We need Sharia. Sharia. Shri Kula. Shri Kula.
I don't know what that is, but it's something. There's something there. I don't know what's there.
I just I just mentally transported to like a mad TV writer's room. We've got to crack this nut.
We're Patton Oswald in the 90s. Just like there's a sketch here. I'm going to do some more coke,
and we're going to figure this out. We'll get to the bottom of it. We won't. Someone else will.
Somebody. So you see that there and Alex continues doing this throughout the episode,
getting more extreme with these ideas that are really just manifestations of his inability to
deal with this satanic temple as an actual intelligent group that is intentionally doing
these things for political reasons. Right, exactly. And so he just turns it into even more ugly
threats or fear. They're not coming for your children. They've already got your children in
most cases. So we're going to break it all down coming up today. Very, very serious broadcast.
Um, the enemy is highly funded. We are not. I try to make it easy to support us. Nice.
Bye, satanic panic. You're going to find out there. The Alexa pure. It's a great, great water
filter. Uh, yeah. So I mean, like you see there, that's that's exactly this extreme as they already
have your kids. Yeah. I need, I need some money. I need some money because I wasted a bunch on
booze at the Alamo draft house last night because I got so fucking depressed by this movie. I also
bought a ticket to that movie for the Satanists and I need to recoup that. So buy some fucking
secret 12 so I can, uh, make it up. Yeah. It's, it's so annoying. I hate that fucking that now they
are killing babies after they're born. Right. Bullshit. That's, that's what satanism is all about.
Oh God. It's such like the anti abortion people have already used all of their other shitty lies.
So because we're in the situation that we are where you can just say any untrue thing and
everybody's going to buy it or the people you like are going to buy it. You can just say,
ah, they're killing babies. Two years from now, they're going to be like, they're allowing abortion
up to five years old and you're like, what, what are you talking about? I wonder, I wonder about
how much that is. Like, uh, like we've had progression of argument A, B, C, D and now we're at like J.
Yeah. I wonder how much is that and how much of it is like, uh, like cause I, the way you said
that I heard it as like they retreated from these other arguments. I wonder how much of it is just
like, uh, escalation. That's what I was saying. I was saying they've escalated to get to. Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah. That's what I meant. And then next step, uh, you know what else is killing babies? Birth
control. Right. I need to get rid of all of that. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. That kills babies up to two years
old because their moms had birth control when they were conceived or whatever. I mean, it's crazy.
Like a lot of these, uh, same things were stupid ideas 20 years ago when I was listening to Love
Lion. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And they're still not fixed. Did you know condoms cause cancer?
Great. So the triple C's. The Satanists have your kids. Yeah. Uh, and you need to give Alex
money in order to get your kids back. I guess in most situations. It seems like a hostage. Not
everybody has, uh, not everybody has Alex is the only one who can get your kids back from these
Satanists and globalists, but you better fucking give him money or else he's not going to be able
to do it. That's a threat. That's an important threat. I believe I've ever thought about it that
way. I believe he is very reminiscent of, uh, uh, uh, the movie ransom. He's like some sort of good
guy who will only work for money. Yeah. Which makes him not a good guy. No. Um, so in his next
clip, he talks about his enemies, these demons, these, uh, Satanists, um, and they want to be
destroyed. So, uh, that's good. Oh, they secretly want to be destroyed. Yes. Okay. Gotcha. But
that's what these people do and they always want to make it uglier and uglier and uglier and uglier
because they're ugly at a spiritual level and they want to project their hate of themselves on to you
and they want to make their behavior more and more outrageous like serial killers do.
So they get caught. So you stop them. They want you to stop them. Alex and we are
listening to you. Don't worry because God's going to stop them. He does, he does ramble a little
bit, uh, after this about, uh, some sort of like godly retribution, but it doesn't make it better
because like what he's, what he's tapping into there is, uh, you can hurt them. Yeah. They want
to be hurt. They're trying to get you to stop them. Yeah. I think Alex is talking about himself
here. Well, you might be trying to rationalize beating up a Satanist. Maybe you beat up a
Satanist at that, uh, movie. No, I mean, I think he's, I think he wants to be stopped. I think,
I think he's now wants to be, he's in the stage of his career where he's like, Facebook, just
somebody actually stopped me. I'm losing so much money. I need to be stopped because I can't do it
myself. Save me. Save me someone. Maybe. I mean, that's an interesting reading of it. I read it
more as like justifying, hurting people, uh, who you disagree with. Yeah. That's always a safe
fact. And I think it's very possible that it's a six to one half a dozen of the other.
Yeah. Cause you know, there's a little flagellation going on right here. You can, uh,
sort of embody a justification of hurting your political enemies. And at the same time,
express, I am fucking out of control. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So, uh, maybe. So he gets off the
Satanism topic. Um, and he says this, uh, next thing and, uh, this is wild. I'm going to get a
bunch of other issues next hour on Trump and his tax returns and what's really behind that. And
Trump's noble moment, waving executive privilege on Mueller's report, something that no other
presidents ever done. So first thing he spent, he spends a long time on talking about Trump's taxes.
And I don't really particularly care to talk about it because I don't think he knows what
he's talking about. Absolutely. And I don't think I fully know what he's talking about.
Cause I, you know, the idea of losing a lot of money when you're, uh, investing in things,
I don't, I don't know enough to talk to coherently about it. Oh yeah. No. What do,
what are we? Jim Kramer over here? All right. All Alex is doing is talking about that report
about how Trump lost a billion dollars and we could talk about that too. I don't really think
that's a good use of our time. So I'm going to leave that alone. Now, the part about executive
privilege. Alex is directly lying. He's saying that Trump waved executive privilege about the
Mueller report and that is a hundred percent not true. There was an article in the Hill from
that morning, uh, May 8th, quote, Trump declares executive privilege over Mueller report. The
issue is that Congress wants the unredacted report so they can investigate the 10 instances that
Mueller laid out about possible obstruction of justice. Possibly. Interestingly, Attorney General
and cover up veteran William Barr has refused to provide them with the document, which has led
the House Judiciary Committee to schedule a vote to hold bar in contempt of Congress. Trump's
administration made it clear that they were going to assert executive privilege if they didn't cancel
or delay the contempt vote, basically trying to get them not to hold bar responsible by saying,
quote, even if you do that, you're not going to get your report. It honestly kind of feels like
threatening to hurt a hostage to get your co-kidnapper out of a speeding ticket. Not a great metaphor,
but it's what came to me. I'm going to stand by it. Okay. This threat didn't work. Barr was held
in contempt of Congress, which for something that sounds so serious, really doesn't mean anything.
And Trump asserted his executive privilege, thereby debatably obstructing justice in the
investigation into whether or not he previously obstructed justice. Nothing matters anymore,
and the government is a circus. Thank you. Finally, we got there. The only point here
that's important is that Alex is literally saying that Trump waived his right to executive privilege,
something no president has ever done before, which is crazy when literally the opposite is true.
This is an over explicit example of him telling his audience that two plus two equals five,
the very same thing he accuses his opponents in the media of doing all the time. Alex is directly
lying to his audience. And that's not something that's new necessarily, but it's often not so
brazen and direct as this. This is like something that is demonstrably like factually, you can find
out what the truth is about this. And Alex is asserting the exact opposite of that. Right.
I don't know on this one if he is like maliciously lying or wrong stupidly, because what he could
be thinking is that the simple fact that we have the molar report at all means that Trump had to
have waived his executive privilege, because he could have used his executive privilege to suppress
the entire report. It's possible. I think that's what he's trying to say. It's possible that it
is the result of a profoundly poor thinking. Yeah. And I would accept that on almost any other day,
but the fact that on May 8, it was in the news, the discussion of the executive privilege vis-Ã -vis
the molar report. Fair. It seems difficult for me to think it was like him dumbly misasserting
something or misunderstanding the actual molar report's redacted release. I kind of think it has
to be, I don't know why though. That's the only thing that leads me back to your stupidity
possibility. Him asserting executive privilege over this isn't tough for Alex to spin. He's supposed
to assert executive. Alex could just say that's what presidents, Obama used to assert executive
privilege all the time. He's trying to jam them up. Right. It's not a hard line to walk for him.
No collusion. So it seems to me very tough to figure out what the motive of lying directly
and specifically about this is, but I don't know. Whatever the case is, he's telling his audience
that reality isn't reality. Par for the course. Par for the course. So Alex has a big story,
bigger than Satanism. Maybe not. Satanism's pretty fucking big. Satanism is a worldwide.
I'm shocked that we got through all that Satanism stuff this quickly. I thought that was going to
take maybe a week. But Alex has another story here that I honestly think is profoundly disgraceful
and it's dehumanizing in a new way. We already know what's going on internally because at Facebook.
I happen to have some intel here that ties into intel we already had and why they're trying to race
and why they're going as fast as they can to have AI do all the censoring. But humans still
have to oversee it because AI can't understand memes. Guess what I have here? Memes that I printed
out. I'm going to do something and I don't do it. You guys remind me. Star of the next hour,
we'll have Dan Lyman on it. 115. When he said Dan Lyman was coming up, I was like, thank god,
cakewalk. I'm not going to have to do shit. I have never been more wrong in my life. That's
foreshadowing for later. Okay, that has nothing to do with this narrative. I don't know why I
pause this clip. That's strange. From EuropeWars.com, the amazing developments there. I'm going to
cover this at the start of the next hour and you're not going to, well, you are going to believe it.
Okay. But do you know what's happening
to the people that have to censor this show? Can you imagine?
I was told this by executives and then I saw some news admitting it but not saying my name and then
this obviously breaks it down from PBS. SJWs that are made to watch my show, to monitor it and censor
it, upwards of half of them are, quote, becoming programmed and brainwashed and then totally freaking
out and then, quote, quote, they are grabbing them in these facilities and taking them to mental
institutions. So the, yes, big tech is an actual cult, folks. So you heard him laughing about that.
He's laughing about it? So that's fun. So this is a really good teachable moment, I believe,
in our show. Sometimes these things pop up and I think that they're worth demonstrating explicitly
what's going on. Alex is pretending that he has internal intelligence about what's going on at
Facebook but all he really has is something that he found on PBS. That's all he ever has. He has no
information, he has no high level sources, he has publicly published articles that he covers and
pretends matches intelligence that he's already received. Literally publicly funded publicly
information. I've seen this play out way more times than I can even count on this show and we
don't often stop to take a point of what he's doing. So one of the other things that's important
to point out is that he says that this matches intelligence that we already got. I got this
intelligence, this PBS thing, the matches intelligence that we already have. And that
is a reference to the fact that the PBS article is just a transcript of an interview that they did
with this guy named Casey Newton. And it's just a conversation about an article Casey had written
about content moderators back in February. The information that Alex said it matched up with
is the article that Casey wrote in The Verge in February, which is the previous intel that Alex
had that this PBS article matches up with because it's an interview with the writer of that article.
I hate him. I hate him so much. So that is just to explain the process of how
he pretends there's sources and things match up with intel. That is exactly what's going on here.
The PBS article, I'm sorry, it's just a transcript of this interview about the
conversation about the article. The article itself was published in The Verge and it covers the
trauma that social media moderators are experiencing on the job. The article paints a
horrifying picture of the working conditions at Cognizant, a company subcontracted by Facebook
to moderate content. It's not the same company. But Casey in the interview does make a good
point and I think it's pretty fair. That is to say for all intents and purposes, they are Facebook
employees in everything but name. Yeah. And I think that that's a fine line to draw. There's
probably legal distinctions. Well, the government does that like FBI does security contractors
for so much work that work in the same exact office as FBI employees and that.
To say that their Facebook employees is inaccurate. Yeah. But it's
functionally. Yeah. They have to take the orders that Facebook gives them. So it's a weird line.
Yeah. Workers have to evaluate a constant stream of bullying content, racist content,
graphic videos of murders and all manner of other deeply disturbing things that people
post on Facebook and Instagram. The author of this piece talked to people who had experienced
severe reactions from the work from beginning to question the Holocaust to always carrying a gun
even while sleeping due to threats from people whose content was being rejected or at least fears of
reprisals from people whose content had been censored. The problem is compounded by Cognizant
being run in a manner that sounds exactly like an abusive factory. That doesn't surprise me.
Intense Korean animation factory. Intense micro management of employees time. What they can and
can't do with their breaks. Infectual counseling services being provided and harsh productivity
and accuracy expectations all add up to an incredibly hostile environment. Capitalism is great.
Even if these people weren't being made to experience horrors as a part of their job.
Employees described the experience of talking to a coworker as quote trauma bonding.
On bad days, employees would joke that it was time to quote,
go hang out on the roof code for wanting to jump off it. One employee describes how he
always loved cooking but now is afraid to be around knives because every time he sees one
he's reminded of a video he had to moderate where a man is stabbed to death and cries out for his
mother as he dies. Holy fuck. And now he also believes a ton of terrorist attacks were false
flags and wakes up every morning with a gun in hand and performs an armed sweep of his home.
He was recently diagnosed with PTSD and began treatment quote. I'm fucked up man. I don't
think it's possible to do the job and not come out of it with some acute stress disorder or PTSD.
This anecdote is the closest that anything in this article comes to what Alex is basing his
almost gleeful reporting that quote basically half of the moderators are becoming brainwashed and
freaking out and they're sending them to mental institutions. They didn't send this guy to a
mental institution. He sought help because of the awfulness that he had to experience.
They broadcast the Christchurch shooting for how long on Facebook Live. Imagine if you had to
watch that every day. Yeah, well maybe not. No, people reposting it every day. Exactly. Because
people do. Exactly. Every single day. Well, and you know, to be fair, like a more nuanced
like interviews and things about this topic, they generally do make a point that
the bulk of what they deal with is maybe a slur or bullying. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. And that not
the most of it is that sort of thing. But I would respond, who cares? Yeah, I would say
enough of it is any of it. Yeah. I can't imagine like I could never even come close to watching
the Christchurch video. I could never even come close to it. See those people die once
affects you. Yeah. It doesn't matter. It doesn't matter how much of a snowflake Alex might call
you for that response. Yeah. It's a response to your humanity. The article is about the human
toll that comes from running content moderation in the same way companies run customer support
call centers. It's a brutal job where people are expected to see awful things are either exposed
to awful things that make an impact on them no matter how sensitive they may be. And the greatest
indictment of this article is not on the people posting fucked up stuff. It's a Facebook and
it's subcontracting companies for not doing a better job of taking care of their employees.
Like they talk about how the idea that you can have these horrible reactions to the work that
you're made to do. But because the work is really awful and the places run poorly most people only
end up working there for like eight months. Yeah. And then you leave and the consequences linger
and a place where you worked for eight months isn't going to pay for you to go get help. Nope.
So these are the issues that are coming up in this article that that it's it's pretty much
a middle finger at these companies and the way they're doing business. Yeah. It has to be
it's very Alex only exists in it. Well first of all not at all specifically. Yeah. It's mostly
about like murder videos. Right. Right. Right. Stuff like that. And then he only exists as a
phantom as a byproduct of doing business. Like they don't even give a shit about the idea that
of him as some sort of monster or anything like that. It's it's about the companies.
Yeah. No. They're they're basically predators. You know they grab people who need work
and then they fucking throw them away. Yeah. Like they that's that's basically here's my job. I
wake up I get tortured all day and then I go home. Maybe not all day but most of it. Yeah. Yeah.
So that's what the article is about. And there's a real human piece to it that I think is an
important conversation we need to have. And if Alex were willing to engage with that conversation
he'd be able to score points against Facebook if he was actually looking at what was being
discussed but he's not. Well they're they're they're exhibiting weakness which means he'd
rather attack the people who are victims than I mean maybe but I don't think he's even doing that.
I don't I think he's just I think he's a monster. Yeah. Because these are real people whose lives
are being altered. Not an opportunity for him to make everything about his perceived plight
and score a cheap self-serving point for himself. Definitely. Because that's what I think he's
doing. Yeah. He's doing he's trying to make this argument that that and he's going to get into it
more later. He's using this story is kind of a rationale that he's right about things. And that's
the wrong way to look at this. I would say. Yeah. The interview Casey Newton did on PBS
literally had nothing to do with Alex Jones. Alex never came up. The conversation was just a
discussion of this investigative piece on the moderation factory. The very the only very
tenuous connection is that the host of that interview when introducing the segment mentioned
that a bunch of people were recently kicked off Facebook and Instagram and that's why there's a
renewed conversation about Casey's article from February basically just explaining why it makes
sense for them to have this conversation now. Yeah. Yeah. So that's the only Alex is just
making this about himself. Alex is just one of the people deep platform that they obliquely
mentioned up top. Yeah. Yeah. So in this next clip I just want to play this for you to understand
that this is what like we now kind of have an understanding of the article and the source
material that he's talking about. And here is how he talks about it. They're Baker acting people
at Facebook and at Twitter and other places that when they tell them I'm a Nazi and then
they go watch years of my show these people can absolutely finally find their soul and go oh my
god Alex Jones didn't do any of this stuff. So that is the angle and the narrative that he's using.
These people who are suffering these horrible consequences of being exposed to things like
videos of people being shot. And in addition to that some racist and hateful content in written
form. Yeah. And be a lot of people there is a tendency towards when you're not examining
things that are being brought in into your sphere there is a tendency towards just automatic
acceptance of them. There's when you when you're exposed to experience a conspiracy content on a
bombarding basis which this is set up to be. Yeah. Because there are quotas and you know you have an
expectation of doing a ton of work you will just be exposed to these ideas for a very brief
amount of time. Yeah. You won't be able to critically analyze them because you've got to get
on to your next piece of content that you have to moderate. Right. So there is something that
overrides your critical thinking skills and your ability to like look into a claim that's made.
So you'll just see Muslims want to kill everybody Muslims want to kill everybody.
And if you're not careful of your default you could let your guard down and eventually buy
into a lot of ideas that aren't true. Yeah. So Alex is using that reality as they're exposed to
my content and then they realize that I'm right about everything and then they're getting
Baker acted and sentimental on institutions because shit isn't going the way that the SJW
globalists wanted it to. They want to label me as some sort of an evil force but everybody who
sees me they know that they're wrong and I'm right. Well I'm living proof I've been listening
to you every day for two and a half years and I have not been Baker acted. No. I've not gone crazy
necessarily but I've also been moments. You're doing all right. There were some bad moments
early on. Yeah. But because I have the time to look into his claims and I have the time to deal
with what he is actually saying and look into historical context I listened to more of his
show than anybody probably and I come away with it with no indication that he's right about anything.
Yeah. So I'm living proof that that argument does not work. Yeah. Because you're not a
you're not a droog living in clockwork orange every day. I mean if I had to like do 300 of these
episodes it would be that's insane. No that's impossible. If I had the sort of time constraints
of someone who worked in a place like the Cognizant office I couldn't do this show
the way that I do and I think I probably would have had lost your mind. Yeah. Yeah absolutely
because imagine you didn't have any larger context and it was just short little clips of him saying
something very confidently that's untrue just bombarding you constantly over and over and over
again these short clips without context and you're just eventually it's going to infect your brain.
Especially when it's slick. Yeah. There's money behind it. The propaganda has
craft to it. It's very dangerous. We're starting to understand that. I don't think
that people really knew that that would be a byproduct of the attempts to moderate content
online but at the same time without those people who are doing this work. We'd have more people.
We would have unusable social media platforms basically. They would be destroyed by well videos
of murders. Yeah imagine everywhere was 4chan. Right. You know. Yeah. It's a post apocalyptic
wasteland. Yeah I think that's a fair assessment and so what actually this guy Casey Newton was
arguing for is or maybe not even arguing for but suggesting one approach would be to treat these
people who work in these centers the same way that you treat like EMTs and give them more benefits
give them a higher pay because have an in-house counselor for God's sake. They do but apparently
it's very ineffectual. Yeah. But okay and not available a lot of the time and whatever but
yeah absolutely that mental health resource would be very important. Treat them like they're doing
a service for society because in many ways they are. Yeah. And I don't think there's I don't
think there's much room to argue against that. No I absolutely agree with you. And I think that
Alex gets a lot of mileage out of turning it into being about himself as opposed to it being about
beheading videos and you know shootings. Right. Well I mean I mean think every time you go on
Facebook it's because of a moderator that I'm maybe not seeing a murder right now or crying.
Yeah exactly. The article the argument excuse me is Alex can make an argument when he makes it
about himself because that's safe you know you'd be like they're doing all this to attack me
right out of there. But he knows on some level that the argument as it really stands which is
about horrors. Yeah. He can't make that argument. He needs to make that argument if he wants this
to be compelling and successful but he can't. So he makes it about himself and yeah I mean he
might as well come out and be like I used to watch Faces of Death before I went to sleep every night.
Sure he did. You know for sure. Yeah. So in this next clip I think Alex kind of realized that that
was a dead end and he didn't really want to get into it. He does get back into it a little bit
later like towards the end of the episode. You bet. Yeah. So in this next clip Alex talks about
how the Satanists are correct about one thing and that is that God wants blood. Well the bottom
feeding lowest of the low Satanist that worked with Hollywood and the real Satanist to produce
Hail Satan. Hail Satan. Got one thing right in their film and that's when Abraham is going to kill his
own son that God gave him to show total and complete loyalty that it's God that does the killing
and God that delivers the vengeance and God that demands blood. So he does. We should get a different
God. I'm not a huge fan of his. His God is weird. Yeah. There is a there is a thing that he says a
little bit later sort of trying. I think maybe trying to wiggle out of how extreme that sounds.
Yeah. He wants blood of the good soldiers fighting. Sure. Sure. Sure. All right. Whatever. All right.
So in this next clip Alex explains that he knows Satanism better than literal Satanists.
That seems odd. These people would never get within a mile or never know about real Satanism
or real Luciferianism. I have seen it. Now let's continue. Let's wait.
Why did you just veer into a PowerPoint presentation? Yeah. All right. Next slide. Yeah. I think that's
weird. Certainly. Wait. Is he talking? He's talking about the Satanic temple and comparing
them to the actual Satanists. Right. So what he's saying is he wants his cake and eat it. He wants
his cake and to eat it too. Right. And he's saying that they're not real Luciferians. Well he's
saying that the people in the documentary are at the behest of Satan and they're working for
literal Satan and worship literal Satan. But they're also the sucked dry minions of true Satanist
who are rich people. God damn it. It takes a long time to get through his ideas. It does.
It's kind of tired. Well in this next clip I think he gets to talking about
what the version of real Satanism looks like. Yeah. And it turns out it's basically just sexual
honey traps. To the old Satanism model the sexy beautiful voluptuous woman to lure in businessmen
and powerful people and to really that's real Satanism. Cults. This is meant to be stunted,
dead eyed, super weak and shown as powerful because they've already gotten the giant masses of
leftist to be soulless and have no connection to God. And so they'll never know what hit them
when the devil tells you at the start. We don't believe in the devil. We don't believe in God.
Get rid of that actor. I do believe in devil. I'm God. I wrote in the title of this clip.
This doesn't make sense. No. I really need to. What did he say again? I don't know. It has to do
with tricking atheists into becoming Satanists because I don't fucking who cares? Who cares?
What are you talking about? The real Satanism is sexual busty women and making honey traps for
businessmen because I, Jordan, I have seen the devil's advocate. I have seen Al Pacino and
Keanu Reeves and Charlize Theron and I know how the devil works. It's weird. It's kind of exactly
like that. And there's basically the queen of the damned. It's nonsense. Jesus. So in this next
clip, I think he expresses more the idea that I was putting forth that what he is responding to
in these people in this Hail Satan documentary, which by the way, I should point out it's Hail
Satan question mark. Hail Satan. Hail Satan. Even in the title, there's a little bit of ambivalence.
But I believe that what he's responding to in them is a resentment and an opposition to them
because of their interest in equality. And I look at the people in this film and you can see
they're gone. There's no one left there. Lowest of the low, lowest level. And this is who they
will march out against you in the public schools. You think drag queen story time,
room of the same people's bed. They are having Satanism clubs with your children,
with them sitting on their laps right now. And that's what the Bathoma statue with the children
is all about. Bathomet destroying the next generation. And it's a celebration of the death
of children. Yikes. The music behind that makes me want now. Now is an insert like patent speech,
the inspirational swelling music behind it. Just overlay it with what Alex said right there.
See, I see it more visually. What I see when I hear that is like a good, bad, and the ugly.
I see Alex drawing like having a duel with the devil, like a literal Satan to the 20 paces in
turn. That's what I see. Now I want to do a Hail Satan with a period and it's just about a cab
driver named Satan. Oh, I think I'd love to ton. Yeah, that'd be wonderful. You could drive all
kinds of interesting people around. I was trying to figure out a way to make that meat substitute
indie movie like my dinner with Andre. Sure. Um, so what Alex is doing is really trying to
drum up a satanic panic. Like that's really what he's doing. It's pretty overt. It's pretty gross.
It's really, uh, it's dumb. It shouldn't be, it shouldn't be allowed. It's 2019. I maybe,
maybe the satanic panic made more sense in the seventies when everybody was stupid.
And everybody was still coming off the high of the, you know, the whole thing. So
Satanist is probably fine, but it's 2019 50 years later. Come on, man. Well, Jordan, I have bad news
for you. What? Um, first of all, you're stupid. Fair. Uh, the satanic panic was real. Okay. Uh,
I mean, not, I mean, it was not in the sense that we understand it. Uh, it was actual demons. Okay.
And the devil, well, then where have they been for the past? What? They've been hanging out,
but we didn't talk about them for like 35 years or whatever. They were biding their time. They were
biding. Okay. Uh, but here's the thing satanic. They're like a cicadas dude. The satanic panic
was real. Satan demons really trying to get in the mix for sure. And Alex has one piece of evidence
that he's going to present in this next clip of how real the satanic panic was. And man, this is
bad evidence. Oh, there was the big freak out of the 1980s about the Satanism invasion
and Geraldo Rivera and all of it. Ladies and gentlemen, I was living during that period
in one of the wealthiest areas in the country. Wherever you get around wealth, you find satanism
and the Satanist I knew had private jets and helicopters and Mark Dice had it happen. They
were offering him a national TV show with a member of Motley crew. The Motley crew guy wasn't like
this. He's actually a pretty good guy. Which one? The major director got Mark Dice in a meeting room
and said, uh, you're Christian, aren't you? Shull dice. It's his full name. And he goes, yeah.
He goes, yeah. Uh, well, we're going to give you this national TV show and all this money,
but we want you to pronounce Jesus Christ and we want you to worship Lucifer.
Uh, cool. Mark says, this is a joke. And the guy said, no, I want you to pray with me right now.
And Mark said, are you just messing with me? And he goes, no, I'm, I'm serious.
I am 100% messing you with you. You understand that folks? That didn't happen. If your story
about like Satanism being real is that Mark Dice told you a story, get the fuck out of here. Also,
again, it must be so good to work for Alex when you can tell him stories like that and believe
it. Here's what really happened. He didn't get the job, but you can't do that. You just got
to tell him it was, it was Satanist. That's why I didn't take the job. A big part of your brand
as a con man is not really having the losses in your, in your background. Right. Right. Right.
So every loss has to be recontextualized as a win. And so yeah, you don't get this job. I mean,
who knows? I mean, show business is really fucking tough. You can be really talented
and not get something. It's not, it's not a shame to you personally, or it shouldn't be.
I mean, you should start worshiping Lucifer anyways. Well, I mean, that's implied.
Yeah. I think that's the point of our show. Right?
So yeah, I mean, Mark Dice has to turn that around because it's a sign of weakness that you
weren't, you know, he feels it's a projection of I'm not good enough to have gotten this show. So
in reality, it was a situation where this guy told me I needed to worship Satan in order to get this
TV show. And I said, no, because I have principles. Bullshit. Mark, though, I mean, when was
this? You don't want to do, you don't want to do a show with a washed up motley crew member.
Might not have been washed up. You don't know what this was. Oh, okay. That's possible.
I don't know. I mean, like what was it? The time frame would have to be really interesting too,
because like Mark Dice has had a lot of fucking scams in his life. Like he used to be, he used to run
like a memory scam, like improve your memory. That's fun. He also used to be a pickup artist scam
guy. Jesus. Yeah. Before he really landed on the, uh, getting on ancient aliens and talking about
Illuminati went by the code name John Connor online for a while. He did not. He did. Don't even tell
me that. He is a pile of shit. He's a nerd. He's been all over the place in terms of these scams.
So I'd like to know when this happened in the chronology of it, because that would, that would
probably be worth noting that I imagine this story only exists in service of his
later career post pickup artist history channel. Yeah. Yeah. Somewhere in there. Yeah. So less
do you think that Alex was just implying that the satanic panic was real. Uh, here you go.
So they tell you there wasn't a satanic invasion in the eighties, which there was,
but now we are taking over and we're going to overturn Christianity before free speech
overturn Christianity and this very satanic group is anti Alex Jones and does what they
guys should be on the air. They don't care. A lot of people are mad that they might overturn
Roe v Wade, but what we should really be scared of is if they overturn God be the devil. Yeah.
Yeah. Satanism is going to overturn Christianity. Such bullshit. First of all, it was a demonic
invasion. Oh, for sure. For sure. Yeah. I mean, anybody who looks into it just a little bit,
that was the like, Oh my God, fingerprints of demons every way. Haven't you seen the amazing
Keanu Reeves movie Constantine? Haven't you seen the amazing Keanu Reeves movie devil's advocate?
Haven't you seen the amazing? We could do this all day. A lot of movies about devils.
Haven't you seen anything with Gabriel burn? Um, so you might, you might wonder about the nature
of the devil. Sure. In this next clip, I literally found this to be one of the more
troubling clips I've ever heard Alex say. This is part one of the things that I find really
disturbing. Okay. This is the first one. And then the next later in the episode, there'll be
the one that I truly find disturbing. Okay. This is more just insane. This. Okay. All right.
That's where Silicon Valley came from. It's where it all came from. Just like God said,
the devil is a fallen ancient entity imprisoned on this planet. God did not say that is testing
us and God allows that to happen because we have free will. And the devil had knows about a lot of
ancient technology that God has built before remain the image of God. And so the devil doesn't even
really know how to do it all. The devil comes to us and tells us what been done before. Sure.
You're getting the big, deep stuff here, folks. So you're what this is the big, deep stuff is that
the devil is trapped on earth by God, which God told us. Right. And he knows a lot about the past.
And there have been a lot of ancient civilizations that have been highly technologically advanced.
Sure. So he knows about those technologies, but he doesn't know how to build anything.
And so he can seduce people to Silicon Valley, to create Silicon Valley with promises of this
ancient technology that is actually futuristic to us. Right. God says all this. Okay. This is nuts.
I'm glad you cleared that up for me. This is nuts. I'm good. I got it. I realized that the
ultimate plan of the universe make perfect sense. When Alex says you're getting the big,
deep stuff here, that's really upsetting because that means that on some level,
he's presenting this as information that he believes, but has held back. He doesn't want to
give you all of it. This is stuff you got to work for. Right. That's fucked up. That's fucked up.
Well, I mean, look, you don't want to just look, if you come out on a first date and say that you
believe we're locked into a struggle of good and evil and that the devil is somewhere entrapped
underneath the earth because God did it for whatever reason he has. We have free will,
although that means he's not a Calvinist that we can rule out there. I suppose so. He's more of an
Augustinian than, you know, you're not going to get a second date. You wait 24 years into your
marriage to really get that one out. Now, honey, I should tell you, do you know what I've been
keeping in my backyard? Honey, the devil's in a hole. He gave me a calculator. Now I must build.
All right. These businesses are stupid. So Alex believes that there are a lot of Satanists
at democratic events or more accurately, the people who are at democratic events are Satanists.
It depends on how you want to track the inference entirely. But I think he's going to say something
really stupid here. But I think if you really listen to it, there's a better way to understand
what he's saying. I'll talk about that on the other end. But remember, if you go to a democratic
party event, the people look dazed. They look scared. They look soulless. They look like they're
lost. And that's the high end. Half of them or the low side are crazed and screaming and shaking
with hatred. And they believe that those of you who have the light of God in your eyes of the
enemy and that they could simply extinguish that light, then they could finally have power.
In their search for power, they have found the opposite of power. They found the dead space,
the phantom zone. And now their only wish is to take us with them.
I would posit that I think that that clip is perfectly understood if you look through what
he's saying as a defensive white supremacy. Okay, because what he's talking about is people at
liberal rallies, they are gone. The devil has taken over them because they're on a quest for power.
Right. So if you understand that, you know, people who are at, let's say a Black Lives Matter
rally that Alex seems to hate or the woman's march, the versions of power that they're trying to
take are more liberations from societal oppression. It's more about making things equitable than it
is taking power over white straight male Christians. The contextualization of these calls for equality
as being trying to take power over us. Yeah. It's purely a defense of, you know, a system where in
straight white male Christians are seen as the de facto default thing that the society works for
and where the power lies. I thought he was just criticizing Danny's turn into
No, no, no fucking spoilers. No spoilers. I've seen it, but I don't know what the audience has.
Okay.
I think people can figure out from there. Sorry if you're waiting. I don't know why you would be,
but just in case. Well, Elizabeth Warren came out today against people who are mad about spoilers.
So she once again is Elizabeth Warren at loggerheads. I'm not mad about spoilers,
but I like to, I don't want to, you know, people, I don't know who's listening. I understand.
So I don't know. I don't think that my thought is too far off. Now, obviously,
No, I agree. I agree with you. But obviously, outside of the facetious nature, I do agree with
you. Obviously, that's not what Alex is saying. But underneath what he's saying, the effect of what
he's trying to communicate to his audience, the people he's trying to get them to not like,
and the reason he's trying to get them to not like them, it tracks. If you understand the code
that he's using as being the defense of, of white defaultism or whatever, 100% white, straight,
white male Christian, absolute supremacy. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, there's, there's room for, you know,
at least he supports ethno nationalism. There's room for semantic debate, but
I'm going to leave it be. So he gets done talking about Satan for now. I bet it comes back up.
But he's mad about Facebook and Instagram kicking him off. Right. And I thought initially that
that was what was really making him depressed at the beginning of the episode. And it might have
been, it might have been a part of it. Because he complains about how we need to break up Facebook
and social media. Just like, just like Teddy Roosevelt broke up the railroads because there was
a monopoly. And I can't tell you how excited I am about how this clip goes. Mike down.
You know, back in the days of Teddy Roosevelt was a pretty good president.
He said, bully, the railroads won't let their competition pay
to ship their own fruit or their own cattle when there's room.
That's a monopoly. We're going to break that up. He told Northern Pacific and all of me,
you're going to ship people's products or I'm going to have your ass arrested.
That's a private business. They can do whatever they want. The big railroads advertised. They got
open land. They got all the exemptions. They got liability protection to open up the west and
have commerce. And then once they had the railroads coast to coast, they started saying there's even
like a gun smoke on it. I saw once it's based on true stories where they want to ship the peaches
a thousand miles. And the kids dads died. I'm going from memory. The kids dads died. Was it a
gun smoker? Was it a bonanza? Oh boy. I can't tell you how much I fucking love that.
How? One, I say was it gun smoke or bonanza all the time? So many references. First thing I
should probably tell you is just right off the gun smoke and bonanza are not documentaries.
The second thing that I should point out is that those are two of the most boring as shit.
We're just trying to figure out how to make TV shows in this era racist as hell programs ever
to air. Gun smoke ran for 20 seasons, but it ended its run when Alex was one year old.
Bonanza ran for 14 and was done before Alex was ever born. Man. Yeah. I mean, on the other hand,
like I've somehow I can reference gun smoke and bonanza all too often. And it was it ended long
before I was shot. I mean, sure. They ran in like reruns that bored the shit out of you as well.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Exactly. Yeah. Yeah. Gun smoke was mostly a show about a law man being forced to
make hard choices. Going over the list of episodes they put out, there's a curiously high incidence
of plots of episodes circle surrounding white children who were raised by Native Americans,
something that must have been a hot topic back in the fifties when the show was created. No,
as much as I'd love to talk about bonanza a little. This was definitely a gun smoke episode that
Alex is thinking of. He's referencing episode 472, which is less about a railroad monopoly,
as it is about corporate eminent domain. It's kind of mixing topics up a little,
you know, and he's close enough for peaches, as they say that episode aired 51 years ago.
So it's pretty relevant. I'm going to be the first to openly admit here. You know, I like to be very
open and clear, even when my I have to admit that my research went astray. And this is one of those
cases later in the episode, actually in the next clip, we're going to hear Alex is going to make
clear that he's talking about that episode 472. But before he did, I started trying to solve the
mystery of what episode he was talking about. I came across an episode from season four called
monopoly, which had to do with a goods transporting business. So I figured it must be what he was
talking about. In the end, it wasn't the right episode. And I accept that. However, I did watch
an episode of gun smoke in preparation for this episode. So there's no way I'm not going to not
tell you about it. The episode was originally aired on October 4, 1958. It's called monopoly.
And truth be told, it has barely anything to do with the monopoly. Of course, I think that this
is important, even though this isn't the right episode. Yeah, to walk you through how gun smoke
plots aren't about what they're about. If that makes sense, it will in a minute. Okay, Sheriff Matt
Dylan comes to work one day to find a lovable local character sleeping off a wicked drinking binge in
the town holding cell. The drunk wakes up and as he's leaving, Dylan gives him his gun back, which
is almost certainly what Alex was referencing when he recently claimed that back in the 50s,
the cops would give you your guns back when you got out of prison. Holy shit. Small clarification
though, this show was made in the 1950s, but it's set in Dodge City, Kansas in the 1870s.
That does sound right. So back in the 1870s in the old West, they gave you your gun back,
but the show was made in the 50s, Alex. So how, how, what kind of racism would they be?
If it's set in the 1870s, what racism was there? The lots. All of them? Seems to be a real hard
swing at Asians, Asian American immigrants. Yeah. A lot of episodes were there dealt with as
particularly weird, which makes me pretty uncomfortable. Deadwood. Yeah. Yeah. So this
drunk has given his gun back and he apologizes for being so drunk the night before and says he
only drank because he had just sold off his frating business. And so had pretty much all the other
mule and wagon cargo people in town. The mysterious Mr. Ivy had come to town from St. Louis, as they
insist on calling it every single time. They call it St. Louis. St. Louis. Oh boy. And he's
buying up everyone's businesses. So Dylan goes to meet with Ivy at his lodging and he finds out
that he's hired Cam Spiegel as his bodyguard. All right. I like me a good Cam Spiegel.
Dylan and Spiegel have a history, you see? Of course. Spiegel had shot a man in the back years
ago in Wichita and he got away with it because Dylan just didn't have the evidence to convict him.
What? They cared about evidence in the 1860s in Wichita? Apparently they fucking did. Sure.
So now Spiegel's come to Dodge City and he's working for Ivy. This doesn't look good,
but Dylan doesn't really seem to care at all except to say to Ivy, hey, hiring this guy's
bad news. It's going to be trouble. And then he leaves the hotel room. Oh, and then they just move
on. Okay, cool. Just basically gives him a warning of like, hey, by the time that he becomes a
problem, it might be too late. That's basically all it does. So the last freight runner who hasn't
sold out, man by the name of Joe Trimble, he comes to Dylan because he's received a note from Ivy,
but it turns out he's illiterate and needs Dylan to read it for him. Oh, no. Plot twist. Ivy wants
to buy his company for $1,000, which even with inflation considered would only be a little
bit less than $20,000 today. It's a nice little chunk of change, but if you're running a business
that sustains you, it's not like that's going to be some kind of luxurious all be set for life money.
Definitely not. Probably because that's not that much money. Trimble turns down the offer.
Ivy later tells him that he's going to double his rates and the Trimble needs to as well because
if he doesn't, his lower rates will cause a flood of demand that he can't handle.
This doesn't make a lot of sense, but it doesn't matter because I have to stress,
this is not a huge part of the episode. It's only there to be window dressing for the feud
between Sheriff Matt Dylan and Camp Spiegel. Okay. Long story short, Camp Spiegel birds down
Trimble's house, which kills Trimble's wife. Oh boy. He pays a saloon girl $300 to be his alibi.
Jesus. Yeah. It takes a harsh turn. This is roadhouse. It's crazy. This is crazy.
Patrick Swayze is going to rip Spiegel's throat out. I have to stress that even with this craziness,
this is still super boring. So he pays this saloon girl $300. Dylan in prison.
The saloon girl can't go for that shit because people around these parts love the Trimbles.
Although IMDB tells me that this character only appeared in this episode, but that doesn't stop
the actor who played him from appearing four more times as different characters on Gunsmoke.
I love it. Gunsmoke was the law and order of its day. They wouldn't even do allowed
five appearances by the same actor, I think. Either way, the saloon girl tells Dylan about
the bribe and he's about to go confront Camp Spiegel about this when he gets news that Spiegel
has shot Joe Trimble at the local saloon, shot him dead. Again? Yes. Jesus. He has taken the
Trimbles out one by one. Yeah. Dylan goes to check things out and Spiegel claims self-defense saying
that, you know, Trimble had come in and drew his gun on him. Sure. And then Dylan says that
Trimble had a good reason to draw on him since he had burned down his house and killed his wife.
Spiegel says he has an alibi and Dylan tells him, no, he knows about the bribe.
Dylan tells him he's going to jail and they need to lay his gun down and they'll let a court decide
about the arson. Spiegel starts to draw on Dylan and Dylan shoots him dead. The town doctor,
Doc, who's there, well naturally, he comments, quote, it's just as well. He probably would have
won in court, which is a fucked up response to watching a cop kill a guy. Okay. Oh boy.
So it's been there all along. It's been there all along. That was such a crazy response to see.
Well, probably would have been fine anyways. He would have gotten away with it.
After all this drama, Ivy claims he knew nothing about Spiegel's actions and Dylan tells him that
he needs to get the fuck out of town. The citizens of that town will kill him on site because they
love the Trimbles, who I repeat have not appeared in the previous 120 episodes of this show,
nor in the 480 episodes of its 11 year run as a radio drama, which I stress is about a small town.
Ivy is terrified. He runs out the back door with his tail between his legs,
never to be seen again, explicitly leaving behind the companies that he had bought on.
Obviously, the first issue is that at no point in this episode does Matt Dylan care about the
monopoly aspect of the business operation. The closest he comes to it is commenting that
Ivy is an idiot since the shipping business isn't very profitable. He doesn't care about that stuff
at all. He only cares about Cam Spiegel and righting the wrongs of Wichita.
It seems like they should have paid more. Wait, so he's missing the point of becoming a monopoly in
the first place. So he's calling the guy stupid when the guy's buying up all these businesses to
jack up the rates to make it more profitable. God damn it. I am frustrated. I don't think these
1870s sheriffs were that smart. No, that's somewhat implied by the subtext of the episode,
but Matt Dylan doesn't give a fuck about that. He doesn't care at all. Now, the natural problem
that the ending of this episode introduces is now that with Drembel dead and Ivy ran out of town,
you go from an attempted monopoly to literally no one in the city having a transportation business.
The people who got bought out aren't given the chance to buy their ship back from Ivy before
he runs back to St. Louis. So if they take their mules and carts back, they're robbing him.
For the show, ostensibly about the noble law man in the Old West, I see literally no indications
of any respect for actual law. It's mostly just about duels and people being found guilty by insinuation
and ran out of town. Yeah, that sounds right. So it's exactly where Alex would get some of his
ideas about reality from. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So again, and the way things should be. That's not
the episode that Alex was talking about, but I didn't want my time to have been wasted. Absolutely
not. And they wanted is very entertaining. And one of the other important things to point out is
that Teddy Roosevelt and trust busting is a thing, you know, it is, it is real. And yeah,
Roosevelt directed the Justice Department to sue the Northern Securities Company,
which had become a railroad monopoly. Right. But it's an unhealthy thing to give him sole credit
for busting the monopoly up because Congress was involved as well. It's inappropriate to look at
the unitary executive. No, it's always a good idea to look at the executive as being the prime
mover behind all positive or negative. Well, I mean, Congress even said explicitly that the
executive branch shouldn't be in the business of deciding what is or is not a monopoly. Yeah, so
whatever. Also under their purview. Also, it's true that Roosevelt was involved in this trust
busting and shit, but it would be unfair to ignore that it wasn't the his presidency that was the
entirety of the progressive era and that more trusts were busted up during Taft's tenure and
office than during Roosevelt's. So he doesn't get much of that credit because he was too fat and
got stuck in a bathtub. Yeah, that's all people remember. Yeah, there's no way that people are
going to give Taft credit. Taft. Yeah. So in this next clip, Alex talks about the Gunsmoke episode
that he was talking about. But you read history books, that's all over the place. And then you
know where they Louis Lamore and others. And you know, you've got those ideas that are in those
Western books. They're fiction. None of that stuff's fiction. They've just gone and rewritten old
newspaper articles and found the library. What? And want to ship your peaches.
That old Western, I think his dad had died. His mom had died. He wanted to keep the little farm
and the big local corrupt guy wanted to take it because it had watering holes on it or whatever.
And then he goes down the road and makes a deal with them where they won't ship his
peaches or similarities. The thousand miles so he can make the money to save his farm.
But in the end, he loads them up in a wagon, takes him a month or so to get there. The guy
sends bandits to stop him, but they get stopped. And then when he gets there, he thinks all the
peaches are dead and rotten. But under the first layer, all the peaches are alive.
Pretty good story. What? The peaches are still, still not bad. They're still ripening.
Okay. Those are real stories, though. That isn't just Gunsmoke or Bonanza.
It's Gunsmoke. That you're watching.
That isn't just Gunsmoke or Bonanza that you're sitting there looking at. This is the real world,
folks. No, it's not. I was not able to find that episode of Gunsmoke because I was going to try
and like write the wrongs of my bad research into the other episode. But it's not available online
anywhere that I can find. But I did read a review of it and it's 100% about eminent domain.
So if Alex wanted to talk about it that way, I think it's fine, but it doesn't really have to
do with the monopolies and the idea of breaking up Facebook. So anyway, he gets off that topic
and I teased earlier, like I said, that first clip where Alex is talking about the devil being
trapped on earth with ancient technologies. Yeah, God said that. God told us that.
That was where I was like, this is insane. This is troubling. This next clip I legitimately think
is one of the more disturbed things I've ever heard Alex say. This clip is fucked up.
If you think people are dumb and evil and stupid now, you haven't seen anything yet.
If you think devil worshipers all over the news saying we're going to come to your school and
talk to your kids whether you like it or not is bad and we're going to kill babies after they're
born. If you think that's bad in 2019, Bubba, you ain't seen nothing yet. Done, done.
Because before the globalist can release the bio weapons, God has to remove his protection.
Oh, the devil would nuke this planet in 10 seconds.
He's got to remove his protection and God is going to remove the protection,
but for one hour, one hour and we're going to be ready before hunters anglers.
It's the funniest time for it to be cut off.
God's going to lift his protection for an hour. I'm riveted. I want to know what's going to happen
next. Boom, commercial shit. And he doesn't get back to it.
That's upsetting. That's deeply upsetting. Why an hour? So the globalist devils,
they're going to nuke the planet and release race specific bio weapons. They would have done that
already. They can't because of God's protection. Of course. But God, for some reason, is going to
remove his protection for an hour. He's got to take an hour. Everybody, he's bigger than us.
What does God give a shit about time? All right, on the clock, 60 minutes.
As someone who's omniscient and omnipotent, it sure seems like he would exist outside of time.
Why does it have to be an hour? It could just be a minute. Like if it's nuking the planet,
or like the consequences of that are going to last way longer than an hour,
and the act of doing it would take a second. Why does that be an hour?
No, it's going to be an hour. It takes a while. What if you need to do it again? What if the first
one misses? Also, you just want to give yourself some wiggle room, better safe than sorry.
Deeply implied by that, right where he got cut off by commercial is that he knows when that's
going to happen. Yep. And he's prepared. He is preparing for everybody's going to be ready for
the hour is going to remove protection for an hour. Devils attack. Alex prepared. Yeah. Totally
cool. Yeah. That's disturbed. That is a very fucked up way of thinking. Yeah. If he believes
that's true, I think we do need to call someone. Yeah. I mean, it's a level of untethered.
You hear that and you're like, oh, yeah, we've heard a lot of crazy stuff before,
but when you get to that level, it's like, yeah, we're talking, we're talking different.
You got to do something. God's protection ideas, you know, that line of thought definitely isn't
foreign to us, but him coming out and saying, God will release the protection for an hour,
and that's when we're going to get hit. Yeah. That is pretty, pretty fucked up. And also,
that's new and fucked up. God's protection is the only thing keeping us from being nuked
and hit by bio weapons. Yes. Which implies that God can protect us,
but isn't going to for that hour. Yeah. And also doesn't for the rest of the horrible things that
go on right now. Yeah, that is implied. So, so God could be protecting us from everything,
but he's only choosing nuclear weapons and biorepons right now.
You may or may not support who asked their people. Yeah, exactly. Yeah, weird.
So now I foreshadowed earlier in the episode that Dan Lyman was going to become again.
Yes. And you thought you could cake walk through it. Unfortunately, I can't because
his appearance has very harsh resonances to Alex Jones narratives that he's pushing in the
present day. And he actually dips his toe into a story that I started looking into. And I found
very interesting and it requires unpacking. So here we go.
Dan Lyman joins us.
Best Gative Journalist. Patriot. Heads up.
EuropeWars.com. And boy, there are a lot of articles at EuropeWars.com. They're exclusively
there. Brussels busts to suspend service to no go station, shouting malaria, TB outbreak.
So malaria, TB, that's really never been there, especially malaria. But now it's there,
just like all the diseases pouring over in the United States. The Ellis Island days,
they checked everybody for a few months at least. Not now, Dan Lyman. Thanks for joining us from Europe.
Oh, no, immigrants bring disease again. God damn it. But this is so fucking awful.
But the window dressing is interesting because he's talking about this bus station,
the Garde du Nord in the north station in Brussels that has been closed. It hasn't been
closed. There's a bus line that has stopped serving that station and going to another bus stop because
of a lot of immigrant population there. Now, in order to understand this story that Alex is
telling on the show, it's essential to understand the surrounding context of it. I'm going to grant
him that it is true. There is a story he's covering in a Belgian news outlet, HLN, that does
discuss the plan to not have buses stop at the north station, the Garde du Nord,
quote, prompted by recent rumors that scabies, malaria and tuberculosis had broken out at the
station. But as is always the case with Alex, there's more to this story than he cares to
understand or report. There's a large population of itinerant immigrants, or as they're called
trans migrants, who are, for lack of a better word, stuck in Brussels. Many of them fled from
various countries in turmoil, ultimately arriving in Europe, landing in Italy. They've then made
their way north to Belgium. Many of them finding it almost impossible to make the next step of their
journey, which is getting to the UK, where they feel that they would have less of a chance of
being forcibly sent back to where they originated. For many of them, it's as simple as a problem as
not having proper identification to make the trip, often because they left it behind when they
fled their home country. Because they fled. They didn't just mosey on out of there. Some others
wish to stay in Belgium, but are afraid to apply for asylum after seeing many immigrants that they
knew apply only to have them that put them on the government's radar for deportation.
Under EU rules, and specifically a rule called the Dublin rule, a country is not supposed to deport
asylum seekers back to their home countries. But under the right circumstances, they're allowed
to send them back to the first EU country they arrived in. For many of these immigrants in Belgium,
that would be Italy. And there's a reason they didn't just stay in Italy. To quote a 25-year-old
Sudanese man who spoke with the Financial Times, conditions in Italy are bad. Quote,
you stay in the camp and there is nothing. They don't want to risk applying for asylum,
only to be sent back to Italy, where they'll be put in a camp. And they can't make the trip
across the English Channel, so they're left in a weird in-between state stuck in Brussels.
Human rights charities work with people, and they found that once they're able to
establish with a refugee that they're exempt from the Dublin rule, because many are,
many submit to the process and apply for asylum formally, which gives a positive indication
about a direction forward there could be towards progress. Yeah, that's nice. But there are even
greater risks in being sent to an Italian camp. Because even though they're not supposed to do
so generally, sometimes refugees are deported back to the countries they left. And in 2017,
they called some real serious tensions to flare up after there were allegations that people who
had been sent back to Sudan had been tortured when they returned. These people were sent,
despite warnings from international human rights groups, and leaked notes from the government
that indicated that they were aware that some of the people who were sent back were from the
regions of Darfur, the Blue Nile, and South Cortifan, which made them automatic recipients of a
protected status. The government's motivations seem to be, quote, cleaning up public areas
where stuck itinerant immigrants were congregating, places like Garde du Nord and Maximilian
Park. So it's probably unclear off the bat here why there would be large populations of
itinerant immigrants coming to this Garde du Nord. If you had to assume, I would guess,
that you probably just think that it's where the train disembarks. So they get off the train and
then just stay there. But that's not true. Immigrants come to Garde du Nord specifically
because it's an established humanitarian hub. Several non governmental organizations have
banded together to provide essential help to people trying to immigrate, many of them leaving
war-torn areas and wanting a chance to start a new life. Doctors without borders, Oxfam,
the Red Cross, and some more local organizations have established this center within the Garde
du Nord as a place where immigrants can help, can get help that no one else is providing.
This ranges from psychological services, basic medical care, legal assistance, food, clothing,
Wi-Fi, and electrical outlets that they can use to charge their phones. While all this help is
definitely life-saving. The psychological services aspect of this is really crucial.
According to a psychologist who works at the humanitarian hub, he's seeing a trend of immigrants
developing depression based on harsh disillusionment. Quote, they imagine Europe as the continent of
human rights, but when they arrive here, they're completely disillusioned. They never imagined
that they'd be sleeping outside in a state with a rule of law. So that's a little bit of a bummer.
It's a bummer, but it's also part and parcel of a reality that there are these people who are
providing this help. And that's why there are large groups of immigrants that congregate.
They turn Garde du Nord into almost like a strip mall of life-saving.
I don't think it's the full station, but there is a part of it that is this life-saving thing.
And then there are other good things to mention, positive things. A volunteer organization called
BXL Refugees launched a movement in September 2017 urging people to open their homes to refugees
who found themselves in the impossible situation they're in. When they began, they were only able
to find 10 families willing to house a stranger in need. But by 2018, the number had swelled to
over 3,000 families opening up their spare rooms. One family, the Gillises, have opened their home
to two refugees in need. One of them speaking to EuroNews said, quote, this family in Brussels
is very, very good. People in Belgium are very kind. They love everyone. And we return that
feeling. These people have welcomed us. I don't have any problem in submitting application for
asylum here. There are many good-hearted people who are going out of their way to do something to
help mitigate the problem. And that is a very inspiring sign. But as we've learned so well on
this podcast, anytime there's something inspiring, there's something equally depressing hanging over
us like a sort of Damocles, waiting to dash any kind of optimism we may have.
Yeah, go ahead and hit it.
Since 2010, as nationalism began to sound pretty good to people again,
the political situation in Belgium has been moving pretty far to the right. The Flemish
Nationalist Party, the New Flemish Alliance, has made major strides. And in 2014, they became the
largest party in the Chamber of Representatives and in the Senate. The New Flemish Alliance
sucks. And their leader, Bart Dwever, has been pretty clear in his harsh stance towards itinerant
immigrants, proposing prosecuting them and seizing their cell phones to send the message that,
quote, Belgium is not the place to be. In a good news-bad news situation, the New Flemish Alliance
lost a bit of power in 2018 when they left the ruling coalition that they were a part of,
which included the Prime Minister ship. That's the good news. The bad news is that they left the
rule- Do tear one there too? No. The bad news is that they left the ruling alliance because
Prime Minister Charles Michelle refused the New Flemish Alliance's demand that he rescind his plan
to sign a non-binding UN migration agreement. All UN member states other than the U.S. have signed
it. And because Michelle decided to sign the NVA, which is their initials in Flemish, pulled out of
his government. This is a bad sign because they're still the largest political party in the Senate
and Chamber of Representatives. So when they're leaving the ruling coalition in an effort to be
more xenophobic and push further hard right, it's concerning. And one of the reasons that they need
to do this sort of thing is to hold on to their far right base, which is starting to be eroded by
an even more fucked up Flemish nationalist party, Vlam's Belong. Hard right Flemish nationalist
parties are starting from an unfair disadvantage, I would say, and that is that their movement
traces its roots to the post-World War I world, when a party representing their interests emerged
called the Front Party. While the party may have been started with Flemish representation as a
front party, are we gonna, oh boy, they might have started with an interest in Flemish representation
as being their primary concern. By the early 1930s, it had pushed pretty far right and a bit
absorbed by the Flemish National Union, an explicitly authoritarian party that were over
collaborators with the Nazis in World War II, because Hitler had promised them greater Flemish
rights. It deserves mention that VNV, that's their initials, the Flemish National Union,
VLV leader Steff de Klerk was collaborating with the Nazis before they invaded Belgium,
with the hopes that they could help him come to power, which led directly to his party helping
organize the deportation of Jews to the camps. So you can see how that history gives people a little
bit of hesitance about hard right Flemish nationalist parties. After the liberation
of Belgium by the Allied powers, the VNV was outlawed as a political party for fairly obvious
reasons. This led to the rise of the Christian Flemish People's Union, which worked to make
sure that they were nationalists, but also didn't put anyone in office who had collaborated with
the Nazis. That was nice of them. That was nice of them at least. It's an interesting proposition.
Jesus Christ, do you know what, that's, wait, fucking the NRA hired Oliver North, they're better
than we are. Oliver, they didn't hire him. He's their leader. Right. So that was an attempt
that they made, but this led to the group being nationalist in nature, but also fairly moderate
left in politics. So a lot of folks jumped ship and created new radical options. Oh, surprise.
Which would eventually be merged into the Vloms Block. Vloms Block was a very specifically
anti-immigrant, far hard right nationalist party. Their slogan in the 1987 election was,
quote, own people first, which sounds really bad when translated. Oh boy, that doesn't sound
bad. It's easy to read the word own as a verb. Right, right, right. We're going, we're going
with our own people first. Right, right. Yeah, yeah. Translation is tough. Yeah, yeah, yeah. The
translation might actually be more accurate. Maybe. Yeah. The party found increased success
with focusing on immigration issues as opposed to harping too hard on Flemish separatism in the
same way that our right wing may profess an interest in small government, but riling people
up about nativist resentment and populist bullshit is way more effective as an electoral strategy.
And it worked well for Vloms Block growing from relative obscurity in the 80s to a very serious
political party by the late 1990s. Then the year 2000 happened. A complaint was filed against
the party claiming that they broke Belgium's anti-racism laws in their party's stated platform.
We hate everyone that based on race. An issue was that they had called for an entirely separate
educational system for foreign children, new taxes for businesses that hired non-European
foreigners and restricting benefits for non-European foreigners. The case bounced around courts until
2004 when the Belgian High Court, the Court of Cassation ruled that their party platform was
indeed racist and effectively disbanded the party by taking away their state funding and
banning them from being on television. I bet they took that well, put their tails between
their legs and just moved on, right? Well, they did. They had to. They had to. They were dissolved.
Yeah. They had no chance of any relevancy if they were banned from television and the state
funding of elections, if they aren't, if they don't have access to that money, they're fucked.
Right. So they dissolved and then they reorganized. That's what I was saying. Yeah. They, of course,
they, yeah, they dissolved that party and then they were like, cool, now we're going to groundhog
into some other fucking. They reorganized in 2004 as Vloms Belong, which is now the party that is
challenging the New Flemish Alliance from the right. So you can kind of see how this all fits
together a little bit better now. Yeah. This situation that they, they find themselves in.
We want a cage immigrants. Whoa, whoa. You are not going far enough. We want to kill them. Hey.
That's an interesting conversation of ideas. Yeah. One of the members of the New Flemish
Alliance that left the Michelle government was their migration minister Theo Franken,
who incidentally was the one responsible for sending protected refugees back to the Sudan
to be tortured. Now, before he left the Michelle government, Franken actually had a bit of a hand
to play in making sure that the issue of guard du Nord in Brussels was not taken care of. His
New Flemish Alliance has a hard right position on immigration who wishes to punish or deport these
people, not to help them. And in the recent years, he's had groups like Vloms Belong happy to make,
to be even further right and more shitty than him to make sure that he's not able to give an inch,
because if he does that they start attacking him from the right. It's a terrible situation.
The party with the most members in Brussels Parliament, the local government in Brussels,
is the Socialist Party. And a large majority of the members of that body are not hard rate
nationalists. Most of them are liberal. Members of the Brussels Parliament have tried to do what
they can to alleviate what is legitimately a humanitarian crisis for these trans migrants,
but they've been pretty vocal that they can't solve any problems without federal government
cooperation. There's just a, there's collaboration that needs to be done. To that
complaint and request, New Flemish Alliance migration minister Theo Franken said they can quote
count on zero euros. I've always been against this migration hub that Brussels apparently wants to
be. If Brussels wants to be a kind of safe haven for illegal trans migrants, they should go ahead,
but not at the expense of the federal government. He doesn't give a shit. Folks like this only care
about humanitarian issues like this when they escalate to the point where they feel that they
can rationalize dealing with their problem through violence. And so the problem has been
allowed to fester. So I know this has been long, but I think it's really important to understand
the forces at play when we see a situation that's being lied about by right wing propagandists in
our country. We live in a place where most of us are incredibly unaware about Belgian politics and
the day to day of this sort of stuff. So it becomes something that's easy to manipulate people about.
Foreign events are often the most fertile soil for local propagandists because the disconnect
involved and the almost guaranteed ignorance of the topic in your listener. This is why Alex
loves to trot out crime statistics from the UK and Sweden and lie about them, knowing that his
audience won't look deep enough into them to understand the context behind the data. And
the same is true, the situation here at the Gardner Nord in Brussels that he's talking about.
So all this situation is, you can see kind of the forces at play and all that. But at the same
time, from what I've been able to sort out from the reporting I've read, I can't contest the fact
that buses are saying that they are going to stop servicing the station. That does appear to be
factually accurate. However, it should be pointed out that it's not the government that's behind
stopping the bus services, it's the trade union. The union that represents transportation employees
decided that they weren't going to be stopping at the underground bus terminal there, instead
rerouting to nearby stops. In an article in the Brussels Times, it makes it explicitly clear
that the concerns about scabies and TB are rumors and that there's literally no evidence of either
disease. And DeLine, the group that runs the buses and the federal public health ministry,
have said that this amounts basically just to unfounded rumors. The real issue comes down
to complaints from customers about the smell, the litter, and being hit up by trans migrants for
change. There's a climate where people don't feel safe. And when unfounded disease rumors appeared,
it was enough justification for the transportation trade unions to act. Unfortunately, the place
that they've rewrote the buses to, Rogier Square, is in the neighboring Saint-Jos, whose mayor,
Amir Kier, is not happy about the mobility problems that the increased traffic has brought with it.
So he's seeking to stop the buses from stopping in his city, saying in a press release, quote,
it is incomprehensible and unacceptable for the federal government to abandon a place as
important as the Gare du Nord. I call on all parties involved to find a sustainable and worthy
solution for everyone. So I'm not entirely sure exactly what's going on, but this seems
kind of like a good strategy. And it might be effective in getting the local, I'm sorry,
the federal government to act. The idea of like, we've rewrote these buses here. No, you're not.
Maybe that'll force their hand. I'm not entirely sure, but time will tell.
The reality of the situation in Brussels is incredibly complicated, but could be helped
immensely by a government that was willing to do what it needed to do to help people in a crisis.
A huge step forward would be removing the fear that many of these refugees have of applying
for Belgian asylum. If they knew that it wouldn't result in them being sent back to a country where
they might face torture or death, or back to a camp in Italy, it could go a long way to getting
them back on their feet. Removal of that threat could be a big step forward. It would be nice
if the state could help with getting those who wanted to apply for asylum in the UK,
helping them facilitate that. For instance, like a lot of them want to because they have family
there. But it seems unlikely that they would do that since it would be decried by anti-immigrant
politicians there. The UK would lose their fucking mind. It doesn't seem realistic that Belgium
would help the immigrants get to their final destination in the UK, if only for that reason.
So that was all a lot, but you can see that this is a complex story. Oh, sorry. Also,
I should point out, adding to the complexity, it's not just itinerant immigrants that are there
at the station. It's also homeless Belgian citizens. Of course. Like, so there's a larger
issue here than just immigration, and Alex refuses to look at any of it. So when you really look at
what's going on, the hard-right nationalists are not the good guys in this story. What? And when
you hear Alex's coverage of it, what does he say? He says, you know, he hits the points that are
convenient to his narratives. He pulls out that there's a disease angle and an immigrants angle,
since he's been working to push the immigrants are causing the measles outbreak narrative
in recent weeks. And that's all he really cares about is that the story seems to fit with his
narratives. He's a monster pushing rhetoric that will serve to demonize a population.
And there's literally no excuse for behaving like this. And it's, there's even less of an
excuse for someone to fucking think that people were routinely kept for months at Ellis Island.
So now we already talked about that one. We did. But just because this bothers me, I want to talk
a little bit more about Ellis Island. Okay, I want to read to you a little bit about Ellis Island
from their medical screenings. We didn't get specifically into that too much. Sure. This is
from an article in the American Medical Association Journal of Ethics, quote, the diagnostic protocol
emphasized the physician's gaze demonstrating the conviction that disease was written on the body.
Dr. Albert Newt argued that quote, almost no grave organic disease can have hold on an individual
without stamping some evidence of its presence upon the appearance of a patient, evident to the
eye or hand of a trained observer. Dr. Stupid. So you understand they basically relied and almost
entirely on looking at people. Hey, hey, look over here. You look good. Get on in there, you scamp.
So and then when they saw something look bad, they made a chalk mark. And so quote, officers
immediately transferred those bearing chalk marks typically 15 to 20% of the arrivals to either the
physical or mental examination rooms of all the people who are found to be sick. This is not a
quote. This is me talking here of all the people who are found to be sick, which is just that small
percentage 15 to 20%. Quote, somewhere confined often for months and sometimes years in the isolation
units in the southernmost wing of Ellis Island. So now for years, very few of them is a very small
Yeah, but that's crazy. But a lot of it was under medical care. Oh, okay. That's also for people
with chronic or severe conditions. Right. So it's a very, very small number of people who came in.
But a number of people who had, you know, less severe conditions might be held for a week,
and it would pass, of course, but they'd be held in these cells and they wouldn't apply for hospital
treatment because they knew that they would have to pay for it themselves. And ultimately,
most of the people who were treated for diseases at Ellis Island were deported, not because they
were sick, but because they couldn't pay for their own hospitalization. So a lot of the people that
Alex is referring to America, the people that Alex is referring to the very small number of people
who were held for possibly months were just poor. Well, I mean, they ended up getting deported
because they were poor. Yeah, but they ended up getting deported because they applied for
hospitalization and then couldn't pay for it once they were fine. I find this passage particularly
important to remember. Quote, of those who were denied entry, most were certified not with a
loathsome or dangerous contagious diseases, but with conditions that limited their capacity to
perform unskilled labor. Sinality, old age, varicose veins, hernias, poor vision, and deformities of
limbs or spine were among the primary causes for exclusion. That so many more, that so few of the
more than 25 million arriving immigrants inspected by the PHS were excluded, sets into bold relief,
the country's almost insatiable industrial demand for cheap labor. Of course, even though that this
was the case at Ellis Island, where a vast majority of people arriving were European,
it should be noted that quote, non Europeans faced more considerable medical obstacles to entry
at the nation's Pacific coast and Mexican border during immigration stations. At Texas border stations,
PHS medical inspectors stripped, showered, disinfected, searched for lice, and physically
examined large groups of immigrants. All second and third class Asian immigrants arriving in San
Francisco endured a physical exam similar to that conducted along the Mexican border in addition to
routine laboratory testing for parasitic infection, which required detention on Angel Island for one
or two days. Disease health officials argued was not easily read in the inscrutable Asians,
particularly the Chinese. So you see a little bit of a little bit of a racism when you go back
to the old racism, like the real inscrutable. Yeah, that that's when you're like, damn,
you guys were not because they were racist. They were awfully racist. But in such a ridiculously
ignorant way, just like I'm they look different from me. And I have no idea what that looks like.
So you're sick or you're fine. I don't know. My magical medical vision can't read your Asian
face. Yeah, no kidding. It's fucked up. Jesus. So it wasn't until the immigration act of 1924
that things started to change. We set up a visa system where American consular offices in other
countries would grant visas to people before they embarked on their journey here. This was
specifically to cut off the flow of immigrants from quote undesirable Southern and Eastern European
nations. Weirdly, under the system between 1926 and 1930, almost 5% of immigrants were refused
visas for medical reasons. Whereas during the days of Ellis Island since 1891, the rate had been
around 1% turned away for medical reasons, approximately 2% turned away period. The immigration
system has always been a backbone of racism and exploitative capitalism. Medical rules have always
been a tool of that exclusion before 1924 of those who wouldn't be good cheap labor. And after
1924 of people of ethnicities, we didn't want here to pretend Alex's position is based on some
kind of concern for public health is ludicrous. Yeah, he is merely a more overtly racist grandchild
of this same system. So that's my point about this. It's so much like you, you think all of these
hard right guys right now, if we didn't have a system of automation would be like, Hey, we need
to get rid of their rights. But I mean, come on in, come on in, we need you to, we need you to do
the factory stuff. So get on in here. Let's have a great time. Totally. It would be a whole different
conversation. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Because they need it. So you may have forgotten, but we're talking
about a train station in Belgium. Sure. Sure, we are Dan. So we're talking about so much more than
one train station in Belgium. I think we are. Alex is specifically talking about that one train
station in Belgium. He's also talking about more, I guess, because he's trying to apply it to his
narratives about immigrants bringing measles and causing outbreaks. God, I hate him so much.
He's the worst, man. For causing, for helping to cause a measles outbreak and then
state goading, man. And then blaming it on immigrants. That's so fucking evil. It's dirty.
It's so evil. So I agree. I agree. And I think you're kind of now getting the sense of why
I could only cover the eighth. Yeah, yeah. There's these sorts of things that pop up. You know,
it's like, you want to just, you start the episode, Alex is depressed, and then he starts yelling
about Satan. It's like, well, I guess that's what's going to happen. This might be a short one. Yeah.
And then before you know it, I'm reading fucking pages and pages about Belgian political parties.
And here we are. And here we are. So Dan Lyman brings up a new story about this guard,
you know, and he's misrepresenting things a little bit. Would you believe it? No,
just comes out today. Just after we published that story that the cleaning staff that work at
this train station are now going to be vaccinated for a variety of different diseases, including a
variety of hepatitis strains. And so they're also downplaying this one and saying, Oh, that, you
know, there's no, there's nobody that's been infected. We're just doing this as a precautionary
measure. But I think that this ties into the larger situation. We have this measles outbreak
that's just exploding across the U S. See, he's even making it explicit. Can't you just believe
that that it is a precautionary measure? I don't know. Can't you just do that? Can't you just
do that one time? Just be like, Oh, are they vaccinating people before they get diseases?
That's very smart. So the first thing that's super important here is that you see the intention
of covering the story crystal clear. Oh, boys, it's too obvious. He weaves from this Belgian bus
station to US measles at the end of that clip. It's very clear that this is only in service
of bolstering that argument. Look, the Belgians are doing it. We should get rid of them too.
This is what the story is about to these people like Alex and Dan Lyman. Fuck the details.
God damn it. Second thing, the article that he's using as a source for this is from the Brussels
Times and it doesn't involve local officials downplaying anything. It involves news organizations
quoting public health organizations that are on the ground and actually know the facts saying,
quote, the me the measures are only preventative as there have been no reports of contamination
among the personnel. That's not downplaying. That's straight reporting of the fact. Is he trying
to insinuate that there actually have been contaminations of the staff? Yes, because it sure
as shit seems like it is what he is. But he has no data to back that up. No source, no information.
Why would you? It's just a combative mindset where the default position of anything that
doesn't fit the narrative must secretly be a cover up. This mentality is incredibly dangerous,
especially when it's being wielded to perpetuate these sorts of dehumanization narratives,
because it's based on nothing. But idiots think that he has some reason to suggest this is
downplaying. Third thing, Dan Lyman is completely misrepresenting his primary source. This Brussels
Times article. If you read it, it clearly says quote, around 10 workers are concerned and will
be vaccinated against hepatitis A and B. Oh, it's not even like a policy. Nope. It's just a few of
them got together and they were like, this would be smart. Nope. Yep. If you take the God, I hate
everybody. If you take the hyperlink that that is referencing, it takes you to an article in the
Le Dernier-Hubert, which is a French paper out of Belgium, where you learn that around 10 means
12 and that their primary concern isn't with the transmission of sicknesses that Alex and
Lyman are trying to scare you about. It's about fecal transmitted diseases like hepatitis that
could be a risk to cleaning crews. Also super important. Oh my God, I hate everyone. Also
super important to point out that you immediately caught is that the whole staff isn't getting
these vaccines. It's done by 12 employees request to themselves. I hate everyone. This is crucially
important. I am rooting for climate change. It's this is crucially important. These people,
Alex and Lyman, these people like them, these propagandists, they cherry pick their information
in an abusive fashion because they are not journalists. They're cruel propagandists whose
current primary objective is implanting and solidifying in their audience's mind that people
who are from where who aren't from where you are from should be suspected of being transmitters
of infectious diseases. They're basically biological weapons being used by the Democrats who want
them to get in specifically to get you sick. This is repulsive stuff. And the fact that they can
engage in this kind of talk so flippantly is legitimately terrifying to me because how do
they not understand that this is what they're doing? I don't I don't understand. It's like
it's it's so much like
the creation of the border between India and Pakistan, where it's almost like
this propaganda just built up and then overnight, your neighbor now became your suspect,
you know, just like the next day you're like, Uh oh, this dude might be a disease carrier.
Just not even not even realizing that you're one step away from fucking it would be like total
eradication. It would be like the Stanford Prison Experiment if that wasn't discredited.
Yeah, exactly. So they talk some more about, you know, just trying to make you afraid of
immigrants because that's the game. Yeah. And Alex asks Dan Lyman to talk about no go zones
and immediately Dan Lyman kind of proves that they don't exist accidentally. Giant no go zones
everywhere. What just a few years ago, Dan, they denied the no go zones. Tell folks that don't know
what a no go zone is. Yeah, I've been in them myself. I really well really no longer no go
zones. You've been inside a no go zone. Yeah, exactly. Okay, who would let you in? Well, who?
So they talk a bit about about the no go zones, which I think that it's testament to that term
meaning nothing if you're saying I've been in. Yeah, yeah. So here's a little bit of but it was
before it became a no go zone. It was a Denny's actually. Here's a little conversation about
no go zones, which is real fun. Just to give people an idea. I mean, you go into these areas,
yes, technically you can go into them. You're not allowed to go into them. But you do risk
anything from a robbery to your own life, depending on how bad the zone is and how fearful the police
are of going in them. I've been in them in Paris. I've been in them in Hamburg, Germany. I've been
in them in Italy last year during one of our reports. And these areas are basically areas where
the police won't go or they're afraid to go or they're just afraid afraid to enforce the law.
And I would say that at this point, there are areas of places like Portland, Oregon,
which are also becoming really lawless areas because of people like Antifa, who are just
basically, they're running the show there. Yeah. I mean, we don't have time. We don't have time to
get into it. For making me listen to a man say that. I don't have the time to get into why that's
so stupid. The idea of Portland being run by Antifa. Yeah. You know, if you look into the police
situation there, you just go do some reading. Hey, no, the Pacific Northwest has a long and
wonderful history of being accepting. It's probably a topic that we will deal with in a future show,
but it's too big for now. But in terms of these no-go zone things, this is a fun game that these
assholes get to play. They get to come up with terms like no-go zone and they never really
define what it means. Or you could hear in what he's talking, when Lyman's talking there, he's
talking about it in just vague enough of terms. It's a place where like police aren't really
interested in going. Right. And nobody enforces the law there except for Antifa, which suggests
that there is still a law and it is still being enforced. So with their audience, here's them
talk about it, a no-go zone. Generally, this is one of the first times, not the first times,
but one of the first times on Alex's show, perhaps, that the term has been applied to like an
Antifa area. Yeah. It's pretty much exclusively used to demonize Muslims. But their audience gets
the message that they're trying to get across. Namely, that there's areas in these cities where
Muslims have completely taken over. They operate under Sharia law. Non-Muslims aren't welcome to
enter and the cops are afraid to come in at all because the Muslim Sharia law is more powerful
than their absurdly overpowered police power. Sure. In reality, what these fucking asshole
right-wing piles of shit are describing is predominantly minority neighborhoods where
they feel uncomfortable. What? No. No, no, no. It's a no-go zone, Dan. They're telling me that I
can't go there. It's not that whenever I go there, I feel like I'm not the dominant person.
You'll notice that Dan Lyman is not being specific about these areas he's been to at all,
just naming cities, or in one case, just saying it was in Italy. This is very intentional because
the less specific you are, the more able you are to wiggle out of your lie when you're called on it.
If you take away, or if you add specificity, you're nailed to the wall whenever someone's like,
you're fucking full of shit. So in terms of Paris, a woman named Holly Koch put together an
interesting mini documentary on YouTube that I found where she set out to do a two-week investigation
checking out all the alleged Muslim no-go zones in Paris, along with her camera, specifically
pointing out that she's a blonde woman alone, something that all the people who propagate
the no-go zone ideas would say would make her a huge target. Not to spoil the documentary,
but no one harassed her. Although she did say she was cat-called twice in the two weeks,
which is bad. Yeah, that's a man thing. That's not a neighborhood thing. That's everywhere
that men are. And she didn't find any evidence of Muslim-only neighborhoods or neighborhoods
where Sharia law was in place at all. Her video, full of actual footage of her all over Paris that
pretty well documents and demonstrates that these ideas are ludicrous, has about 1,300 views on YouTube.
Paul Joseph Watson paid definitely not a Nazi, but seems to hang out with Nazis quite a bit.
Tim Poole, $2,000 to go explore the alleged no-go zones in Malmo, Sweden, and even he had to admit
that he didn't find shit, even in the areas that everyone said was the worst. That hasn't stopped
his documentary as being used as evidence of no-go zones, and it has 2.1 million views on YouTube.
So you can kind of see, yeah. The idea of no-go zones has been flying around for quite a while,
but the talk of them has really ramped up since 2015, because that's when about a million refugees
fled almost certain death, mostly from Syria, Afghanistan, and Iraq. I can't be any more explicit
than this. These people who push these narratives are not doing it because they're concerned about
an imagined increase in crime, or whatever high-minded reason they profess. Pure and simple,
the idea of no-go zones exists as preemptive conditioning to desensitize people against
the idea of violence against minority neighborhoods. It's a rationalization for looking the other way
if police crack down on Muslims. Of course, they had to send the National Guard in there,
Dan. It was a no-go zone. The regular police just couldn't handle it. That's 100%.
Well, and of course, you know what, it turns out that really, we just need to send in a few
special ops people, just some crack military guys, maybe send a 20, 30, 100. This is the
implication behind no-go zone propaganda, that eventually we're going to have to suck it up
and send the military in, or reclaim the neighborhoods ourselves. It's a deeply insidious
narrative meant only to further stigmatize immigrants and people who folks like Alex
hate and make sure that there is no chance of integration and no chance of people living happily
together. And here's the thing. In order to reinforce these narratives, these motherfuckers who
push this stuff have to make shit up. When Tim Poole went to Sweden, he didn't get any footage
of anything. But in order to make it look like his trip wasn't a total waste of time for right-wing
narratives, he claimed that, quote, several men started masking up and following us. Police told
us to leave and had to escort us to our car. This was when he was in Rickenby, which is just outside
Stockholm. He went on to later say, quote, they got in their car to escort us out and we had to
walk alongside their vehicle and followed us to our car. As we were walking, there were people
just following us yelling things. You suck you racist piece of shit. Fuck you. See, it's a good
story. And it's just enough to leave the taste in your mouth that these stories of no-go zones
are true. And maybe it's just a reality a little bit deeper beneath the surface than Tim Poole has
the skills to dig. It's precisely the sort of thing that someone who went to Sweden and found
nothing to support the idea of no-go zones might be inclined to lie about in order to make sure
that the documentary that he makes still worked to reinforce no-go zone narratives. It's important
when performing any kind of scientific experiment or investigation to figure out what outcome you
want to have first and then get yourself to that conclusion regardless of whatever reality.
You don't want Paul Joseph Watson to ask for his two grand back?
No, absolutely not. You don't want the Koch brothers to tell you that your climate study
didn't work out the right direction. So I'm suggesting that Tim Poole made this up in order
to make it look like maybe there is something here. You're suggesting that, but let me guess
a question. Do you know who else might be suggesting that? The Swedish police.
Is it the Swedish police? There we go. Because he did make that shit up.
When the local Swedish news outlet contacted the police, quote, a press officer said that
Poole did not receive an escort. Frida Nordloff of the Swedish police said, quote,
when Tim Poole took out a camera and started filming a group of young people, they pulled
their hoods up and covered their faces and shouted at him to stop filming. The officers
then told Tim Poole that it wasn't wise to stay there in the middle of the square and keep filming.
So he's completely misrepresented this interaction as being followed and, you know,
somehow it was a fucking bullshit. Hey, Tim, could you, could you quit being an asshole?
All right, get back to your car. I've seen literally no evidence of no-go zones that
doesn't somehow intrinsically involve dishonest reporting or things that could just be seen as
the normal sort of thing, you know, where some parts of cities have higher crime than other
parts of the city. And a lot of that could be explained really easily by economic realities
that don't really have anything to do with Islam or immigration specifically. Yeah.
But go ahead, guys. Keep on pushing your narratives. That's cool. Yeah. So this is the end of Dan
Lyman. Lion Dan man. In my life. This is the end of Dan Lyman. And the end of his interview because
Alex lets him go. They've done what they need to do. And now Alex wants to talk about his
personal agreement and how he is a victim. And then he compares himself. This is an unfair
comparison he makes. Okay, this is the info. So they sit there and they demonize us. They lie
about us thousands of articles a month, hundreds of TV shows a month. That's conservative just
saying horrible things, never showing you a clip of me saying it. They just do it. They have no
respect for you. They just churn out these lies. And the corporate America kicks you off your bank
accounts. You get kicked off social media. You get treated like you're a Jew in Nazi Germany.
That's a good historical parallel to what's happening. I hate you so much. That's pretty
crazy. I hate you so much on on day. I hate him so much on days like this. This is my birthday.
He said that on my birthday on days like this. It's really tough to hear that kind of comparison.
Like it's real brash. I guess I just sum that up by saying nope. Nope. Nope. You're more like an
Israeli Jew that supports Netanyahu. So after his self-agreement complaining and very unfair
comparison to Jews in the Holocaust, Alex gets to getting back to what he had claimed was his main
story, which is the the Facebook sensors who are coming down with trauma symptoms. Sure. And
he gets back to spinning it as just it being like SJW snowflakes. Right. And then the globalists need
to send them mental institutions because if they watch his stuff, they start to agree with. Of course.
And so years ago, I began to learn that one big reason they wanted to go to AI computers doing
censorship, which more and more they're doing is because humans that have to listen to shows like
this at Facebook and Twitter and Google and places in YouTube and censor it. Well, they get
radicalized. You see, they actually tune in and hear what we have to say versus what mainstream
media is saying about us and what the corporate system is saying about us. So you can see that
this is just trying to reclaim the ship a little bit. This is a, hey, you know what people are
starting to find that there are mental health problems with listening to you. Yeah. Well,
the way I interpret that is listening to me makes people see the truth. Yeah. That's not healthy.
That's that's really fucked up because if you read the actual article in The Verge, I it's very
hard to come away from that article without a decent amount of empathy and concern for the people
who have to make social media space is livable for us. Yeah. So for I mean, I'm sure he didn't
read the article, but Oh, absolutely. Now, but for him to have this take on it is so
indecent. Like it's so it's so lacking and caring. It's it's it's very hard to hear. And he's turning
himself into the most powerful man you could ever see because those moderators, they can watch Fox
News all day on their own right. And it doesn't radicalize them. But when they watch even a little
clip of my show, they're radicalized because I am so powerful. Right. And he's imagining
that these people watch like half hour videos of moderate content. They have to go through like
three, 400 things a day. Yeah, they're watching tiny snippets of all they need to do is see one
second of an info wars logo and they're like, Boop, get it out of here. Yeah, it's probably more
about seeing memes and stuff like that that, you know, convey a point much quicker. Yeah. And much
more appealingly to simplistic thinking. Yeah. But anyway, Alex claims that he has inside sources
in Facebook moderation. It doesn't seem to know that it's not Facebook that employs these people,
which seems weird. I don't believe him. But also he just gets real gross and cruel at the end.
And so PBS put out a report a few days ago. We're going to play some clips of it right now.
And notice the attack. It's multifaceted here. They talk about snuff films and child molestation.
That's all the stuff the Democrats are into. And they talk about, Oh, the terrible stuff
Facebook has to go through. And you see the articles about Facebook employees have to
moderate while they get PTSD, having to listen to the conspiracy theorists.
And then they talk about, Oh, why we have to follow them around and watch what they're doing.
And I've talked to sources inside these groups, they have PIs that watch them, they spy on them.
And then sometimes like Kanye West got sent to a mental institution for a week,
when he said he liked Trump, sometimes they grab them and bake or act them.
Because, you know, if you decide, Hey, we shouldn't be smiling everybody and then lying
about it on the news. Hey, we shouldn't be controlling what words they can say. Hey,
we're calling people things they aren't. Well, then that's their highest turnover.
That's the groups they've got to target. That's the groups they've got to watch.
And so really this is your takeaway to this big segment. Is it is around half the people that
work a year longer in quote, moderation that have even been Southern Poverty Law Center trained,
they were brainwashed for years in college. They were then given a fake template about us.
And then they get into the moderation and they freak out. That's why we get internal Google
documents about how we're targeted last year. So no, he read an article saying that the
moderators themselves have turned. They've become patriots because of their experience.
And they leak him documents, which isn't true. He's referencing an article from like a year ago.
Yeah. Like I remember when he covered that back then. Yeah. He was just talking about publicly
available information. Oh, yeah. He's turning this into some sort of a noble crusade that these
people who are being affected by this content are engaged in. And it's not there are people who are
hurting. And so I don't know that way he opened with just like, Oh, they see sexual child molestation.
Oh, that's what the Democrats are into. Yeah. And then later on, he says that they're they're
getting PTSD from watching his show. Yeah. And it's like, you, you already explained why they're
so he's saying that they're brainwashed to think that the child molestation is totally fine.
It's only maybe in college they are. Maybe that's what he's trying to imply. Yeah. I don't know. I
mean, I get the broader point that he's trying to make and the lie that he's presenting. Right.
But I don't really understand a lot of the finer details, nor do I care to necessarily what kind
of template do you think they get? Bad man. There you go. That was not hard. Nope. So I only play
some of that stuff because I don't I don't really care. I think we talked about it enough at the
beginning of the episode, but I only play that because it leads into what I think is actually
maybe a good birthday present for you. Okay. And that is how this episode ends. Lionel. No. Okay.
Mike Adams hosts the fourth hour. But before he ends up coming into studio, Alex loses it. Okay.
And you know what he loses it about? He's trying to cover this story. And he wants on screen for the
the source of the article, like the article that he's referencing. He wants it to be an
Info Wars article. But it's a different sites article. And this pisses him off to no end.
And really, and Mike down because he ends up storming off the set of Facebook calls me dangerous.
Imagine my shot. No, really. And if you scroll down the article on info wars.com for some reason
they've got human events pulled up and hell, I'll just show you my site. I'll just go to my site.
That's quicker and easier for me to do. And I'll just go to the old info wars.com. Hell,
I'll just go off here. That's what I'll do. Can I move to Canada? So they start playing some video
like I've what in the what just happened in all the time I lay it all out for you. Okay. In the
time that I've listened to his show over the years in the past, I've never heard him. I've
heard him leave the studio. Oh, yeah. I've never heard him leave so gruffly that I could hear footsteps
like you could hear. Oh, yeah. I thought it you know, if there wasn't video, I'd be like,
that's totally photally work. Yeah, like there's no way that that's because that was clear. Like
what is he wearing fucking heels? Like what's going on? Of course. Jesus. So I also really
should have been a lot more build up for him to have just walked off the show. That was like
three sentences. Yeah, it was well, I mean, I can actually I can explain my very strong theory
about why he did. All right. But what happened is he's covering this Facebook story and they
have pulled up an article from human events, which his lawyer is involved in. Yeah, running
and also national or Nazi. Maybe. So he they have that article up there. And Alex is like,
fuck it. I'll pull it up on my phone. I'll pull up our article on it so you can get an overhead
cam on the article. Yeah, to cover the story. Just pull up the old info wars.com. And I think
as he pulls out his phone, maybe he realizes like, I forgot the code, or maybe it's like,
ah, this is going to take longer, more dead air than I want there to be. I'm going off air to
find the article, or maybe just doesn't know what the article is called. Doesn't know how to search
for it. Maybe they didn't have one. Maybe. So the reason that he storms off, and the reason
that it the buildup is so short, I believe is that Alex realizes that his only fucking chance
is driving traffic aggressively to his website. That is the only place that he has control over.
They aren't taking away his IP address. They're not taking away his hosting anything like that.
He's safe. Whereas all these other platforms clearly go away. You know,
YouTube's kicked him off now, Facebook and Instagram, he's gone. The only thing that he can
really control the flow to, and what you do with the flow to monetizing the amount of traffic that
comes to his site, that is his site. That's all he's got. So when even a site like human events
that he's ideologically aligned with, he has an interest in by virtue of his lawyer and guests
being involved in it, he doesn't want to drive traffic to them. Because that is a zero sum game.
That traffic that goes to that article isn't going to him. Yeah, covering the same story.
So he knows, and is really mad at his staff for doing that. It should always be an info wars
article. That is all we've got. Yeah. And I think that's what facilitated his freak out and going
off air. Gotcha. I everything I know about him and especially his current situation leads me
like that's the only conclusion because it is abrupt and it is weird. Yeah, that is crazy. Yeah,
it's weird. So now we have one last clip. Okay. And Alex has come. He's already walked off the show,
but he comes back. Oh, he comes back. He comes back while they're playing the video of the PBS
interview with the guy who wrote the article about the Facebook moderators. This is literally how
the show ends. This is going to be another Mike down clip because it is completely fucked up.
He is so mad about them using a different article. Okay. Man, this is this is happy birthday.
They're gonna control how you live your lives. That's how they do it. And I shouldn't say visit
info wars.com or news wars.com. Who really cares? You know what I mean? Nobody really cares anymore.
Everybody's going to watch Netflix till the reactors start melting down and the new war
starts. It'll be a huge world war and billions are going to die because humans are weak. People
are stupid and they want to die. Alex has officially turned heel on humanity.
That is what somebody is saying. Whenever they say I'm taking my ball and going home,
he's just walking out the door just like everybody. They just don't appreciate me the
way that they're supposed to. And you know what? If you don't appreciate me, you can go fuck yourself.
And I don't like any of you and everybody can die. There's going to be a world war. There's
going to be a world war and we're all going to die. So I'm taking my ball and going home.
It's worse than that because so much of Alex, especially his early career, was predicated
on this idea that humanity is so good and it's worth defending and humanity is powerful and we
can take power back from these globalists that have enslaved us. And then now just because
the plug didn't work, right? And he put his step foot the wrong article up because clearly that's
what he's complaining about. Yeah. Yeah. Why should I even try plug it? Who cares? Who gives a shit?
Who fucking cares? Let's plug it. Let's plug somebody else. You know what? Go to the fucking CNN's
website. They probably got something on there. I don't even give a fuck because of the petty
squabble there and that that he's like, fuck it. Humanity sucks. They're stupid and they want to die.
I do like that. I do like that's all it takes. Yeah. I know that's what I was. The pettiness.
Okay. The fact that it just escalates to the world exploding is my favorite part. You could
throw a tantrum. Yeah. You could complain about stuff. Sure. But your ultimate end game for your
the website didn't show up properly. Shouldn't be there's going to be a world war and billions are
going to die. That's your fault. Hey, staff and put a news wars. Put a news wars on there because
people want to die. The man who wants it. They want to die and they're fucking stupid. So who cares
about plotting my website? God, that's almost a veiled threat to the employee who put the wrong
one up there. I wouldn't doubt that. People want to die. I'm looking at you, Terry. I'm guessing
they're fired already. Yeah, I'm I have to assume. Yeah, I threw a real big tantrum. So I think that
this episode blows my mind from a from a narrative arc situation from him showing up super depressed
because he watched a movie about Satanism yesterday. It to the these weird dare of like roads that he
goes down with the Belgian bus station and gun smoke being factually ripped from the headline
literally ripped from the headlines to what else? What else was on the headlines today?
To this just dehumanizing talk about Facebook moderators who don't even technically work for
Facebook, just self serving exploitation of their pain. Just awful. And then you reach the end and
just because of like he didn't get a plug for his own website on his own show, he throws a tantrum
and says humanity wants to die. Yeah. Yeah. I think we close the narrative circle there pretty
well. It's amazing. There's episodes in the present day that are like deeply, deeply painful to
listen to. And because of the farcical nature of so much of this, it really wasn't so bad,
but it was a lot of stuff. Yeah. And it's like, I could handle this, like as much as I hate the
present day. And I never look forward to listening to it. This I relished. This was kind of like,
you got a lot of meat on the bones. There's a lot of stuff for me to learn about. You're acting
like a real fucking idiot. Yeah. So he very much seemed like he went through one of my bipolar
cycles in three hours. Totally. Yeah. Like probably all the krill. Yeah. He's been fucking tripping the
whole time. I've taken five caps before the show. So you see in Santa Claus. Yeah. There's a real
possibility. Oh boy. Well, man, it's, you know, that episode on Monday doing that was a lot of fun,
but I missed doing this, you know, like missed actually covering his stuff and like our normal
format. So it's nice to get back to it. Yeah. Absolutely. And I'm glad this went well and
we're technically still finishing on time for me to go to therapy. Well, then we're perfect. Yeah.
So that's nice. In the meantime, I think we have a website. We do. We have a website. It's
Knowledge Fight.com. Indeed. Are we on Twitter? We are. Knowledge underscore fight. And you're
on Twitter. I'm at Go To Bed Jordan. Right. We're on Facebook. We are on Facebook. Also,
we're on iTunes. Indeed. So many other places. I might bite the bullet and get on Spotify.
Why not? Let's do it. I don't know why this has to be a month long conversation. That's basically
how we start. Yeah. But man, I don't know. This is interesting. I don't think we have a hero here.
Well, we have several heroes. Well, we got Satan. Satan's doing all right.
Satan's never killed anybody. Satan does not exist. That's an interesting one for this. But
yeah, I'd stand by that. I'd stand by it too. Satan's never killed anybody. Now are we talking
about the way people are? No. Okay. And also not talking about fictional portrayals of a literal
Satan has never killed anybody. There we go. But one guy who technically probably has is Alex Jones.
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.