Knowledge Fight - #719: August 19, 2022
Episode Date: August 29, 2022Today, Dan and Jordan swing back a couple days to check in on how Alex Jones celebrated the end of Reliable Sources and the fall of Stelter. As a bonus, they get to hear Alex rant excessively about ...how he's God's chosen leader of the Patriots. Citations Dreamy Creamy Fundraiser
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I'm sick of them posing as if they're the good guys saying we are the bad guys knowledge
fight, then enjoy knowledge fight.
I need money, I need money.
Andy and Tansa, Andy and Tansa, stop it.
Andy and Tansa, Andy and Tansa, Andy and Tansa.
It's time to pray.
Andy and Tansa, you're on the air, thanks for holding us.
Hello Alex and Mr. Cuncun, I'm a huge fan and love your world.
Knowledge fight.
Knowledgefight.com.
I love you.
Hey everybody, welcome back to Knowledge Fight.
I'm Dan.
I'm Jordan.
We're double dudes, sit around, worship at the altar of Celine
and talk a little bit about Alex Jones.
Oh, indeed we are, Dan.
Jordan.
Dan.
Jordan.
Quick question for you.
What's up?
What's your bright spot today, buddy?
My bright spot today, it's been a little while
since we've checked in on the dreamy, creamy summer.
Sure.
And talked about some of the ice cream treats
that have been going in my mouth.
Yes, it hasn't slowed down since I've been gone.
It has not.
No.
And it's been going at full speed.
I think I'm up around like maybe 60?
60 ice creams.
I think so, yeah.
But this is, I mean, part of the problem is it can be tough
to find enough variety of easily accessible things.
You don't have to like special order,
get dry ice deliveries from some place.
Listen, most of the best ice creams
I've had have been in San Francisco,
and you're going to have to go a long way for that shit.
It's true.
And a couple of times I've tried to order ice cream cakes
and they have not.
They've fallen through.
No, we need to stop you from ordering ice cream cakes.
But I think there's obviously still
a good couple of weeks left of the dreamy, creamy summer.
So anything could happen.
But right now, I am feeling like I'm
pretty close to giving the title to Cool House.
Cool House.
H-A-U-S.
Well, yes, I assumed that.
I think that their consistency is pretty solid.
Like across the different flavors of ice cream sandwiches
and novelties.
So we're talking as a whole, not like best ice cream,
but a best producer of ice creams.
I think so.
I think so.
And if I had to choose the standout All-Star from them,
it would probably be the Street Churro cone.
That sounds amazing.
Yeah, it's quite good.
I enjoyed it.
It's, yeah.
But today, what I want to talk about
is a little head-to-head challenge that I did.
A head-to-head challenge?
I wanted to try out pop.
Churro versus any other.
Because Churros are incredible.
Yeah, they're too good.
They're almost enough.
The king of desserts.
They're almost enough to get me to buy a box
of that Cinnamon Toast Crunch Churros.
Absolutely.
But I didn't because I assume it's just
Cinnamon Toast Crunch at a different rate.
Absolute garbage.
I wanted to, you know, they have some ice cream treats
that are like, you know, poppable.
Yes, yeah.
You know, they're little ice cream balls and chocolate.
Like little ice cream popcorn.
Yeah, yeah.
So there's one that's like low class.
I'm sorry.
Is there a box of wine version of the poppable ice cream
snack?
Yes, it's the Nestle's Crunch Poppables.
Yes, now, of course.
I actually, the problem is the moment you said it,
I was like, yes, you're right.
Those are the, those are that type.
Pedestrian as hell.
Yes, that's what they are.
And then there's a classier version.
Sure.
That is like, I think it's called Dream Pops or something
like that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, whatever they are.
Maybe a non-dairy situation.
Disgusting.
Look, they're both bad.
That's the end result of this.
Interesting head to head.
Yeah.
Cheap one was slightly less bad.
Right, right.
But they both sucked.
Good, well, OK.
You know, I found it.
It can't all be street churro cones, man.
In situations where you're dealing with a subpar snack,
usually the snack that really goes for being the most subpar
winds up tasting better.
Oh, also that reminds me that also I got in under the wire
and got a Choco Taco before.
Say where?
Before they shut down operations.
Before they were victims of cancel culture.
The ultimate cancel culture.
Seasons.
Good, it was good.
Yeah.
I will say that I remember it being better,
but I think that's how almost everything is.
I mean, yeah, that's your taste buds were newer.
The rose colored glasses of history.
You look back on these ice cream novelties of your
and you think like, oh, God, it was so perfect.
The ice cream was just the right consistency.
True.
True.
But yeah, almost every time you're
going to get one of those, the taco itself, the shell
is going to be a little, the consistency isn't great.
Sure, sure.
Tacos are kind of a bad thing to have, like, too squishy.
You need a crunch.
Well, but the insides of it, like, you bite down on it,
ice cream is going to spill out.
That's almost inevitable.
That is true.
But yeah, still pretty good.
Better than either of the poppables.
That's not hard to do.
Yeah.
So what about you?
What's your bright spot?
My bright spot is Yakuza like a dragon.
I enjoyed it.
We'd talked earlier about how difficult we've
been finding a video game.
Yeah, we thought we'd play something simultaneously.
So we tried Yakuza zero.
And because it was on sale for like $5.
Yeah, it was a good start.
It was fun.
It was fun.
But I think both of us found the combat
a little bit monotonous.
I'm just not a punching punch guy,
which is weird because it's essentially the same game.
Like all the sense of humor is there.
All of the story beats are very similar and stuff.
But there's something about turn-based JRPGs
being dropped into modern-day Tokyo that is hilarious.
It's just very, very funny.
And it's a good game.
I like it.
Well, good.
Maybe I'll give it a try.
OK, maybe I won't.
We'll see.
You're not really a turn-based RPG guy too often, are you?
I think I was the person who told you to try three houses.
No, for sure.
But I mean, like, this is more like a final fantasy.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I have not historically been too much of that.
Sure.
But I think that maybe it's something
that I enjoy more than I know.
So I don't know.
I think I enjoy that.
You might appreciate it.
I don't know.
I like three houses.
Oh, there we go.
Hey.
Hey.
So Jordan, today we've got an episode to go over.
And here, this is, I don't know if it's unprecedented,
but it's rare, certainly.
And that is that we're actually going to go back to the past,
but only like a couple of days before our last episode.
Because I realized that we missed something
in terms of the catching up to the present day.
Sure, sure.
So we're going to be talking about August 19, 2022, today.
Interesting.
And that is because this is the day after Brian Stelter got
canceled.
Oh, that's right.
After we got Brian Stelter canceled.
Look, I don't think, I don't think there's a core,
like a direct correlation.
I don't know.
You don't know.
Well, certainly no causation.
There is correlation.
That's true.
They let us on.
They should never have done that.
The next week is the last episode.
They didn't understand the consequences cosmically.
I understand that maybe it wasn't us who got Stelter
specifically fired, but by us going on CNN,
cosmic consequences were going on.
It unlocked Pandora's box.
Absolutely.
And I do think that it had something
to do with your Chicago teacher's union shirt.
Maybe that got Stelter in hot water.
Yes.
So yeah, I was looking at some of the stuff that had happened
over the course of the time that we'd missed.
Sure.
And obviously there is the fake turning on Trump
and Dugan's daughter's death that they seemed like actually
important things.
And in that, I kind of just forgot that Stelter,
his show had been canceled.
And I don't know.
Maybe maybe there was a part of it.
There was block me.
There was blocking it out of my mind since we were on it.
Right.
Right.
Like I don't know.
Also, we don't really pay attention to TV, honestly.
No, but this is important for Alex.
Yes, that's the thing.
Yeah.
This is way more important for Alex than anyone
other than Brian Stelter, right?
I think it's probably more important to him than Stelter.
Stelter is going to get another job somewhere.
Yeah.
So we'll get into this and see how Alex takes the news.
But before we do, Jordan, let's say hello to somebody who
walks.
Oh, that's a great idea.
So first, this shout out goes to Emily from Laura
at least.
She's sorry.
She fall asleep to this every night.
Thank you so much, your now policy walk.
I'm a policy walk.
Thank you very much.
MyOK learnings the foundation to finally take
Alex Jones's daughter fishing.
Thank you so much.
You're now policy walk.
I'm a policy walk.
Thank you very much.
Myky next, the worst druid ever.
Thank you so much.
You're now palsy walk.
I'm a policy walk.
Thank you very much for going in next, the dreamy.
creamy.
Supreme.
Me.
Thank you so much.
You're now Pal玖 walk.
I'm a policy.
Thank you very much.
Thank you.
And Devin Stone, the legal eagle is a beautiful man.
And I now know that Mark Bankston is a handsome beast as well.
Thank you so much.
You're now policy walk.
I'm a policy walk.
Thank you very much.
Thank you.
And finally, we got a technocrat in the mix, Jordan.
And I'm going to go with the old sound bite for this one.
So thank you so much to Steven, the bachelor,
Squatch of Ireland.
You're now a technocrat.
I'm a policy walk.
Four stars.
Go home, give my mother and tell her you're brilliant.
Someone, someone, son of mine sent me a bucket of poop.
Daddy shark.
Bump, bump, bump, bump, bump.
Jar Jar Binks has a Caribbean black accent.
He's a loser, little, little titty baby.
I don't want to hate black people.
I renounce Jesus Christ.
Thank you, Steven.
Yes, thank you very much.
Bachelor of Squatch.
Bachelor of Squatch.
But of Ireland, which has fallen out of favor at Scotland.
They can't do that.
And the Knowledge Fight International Listener rankings.
Oh, boy.
Step it up, Ireland.
Oh, man, the Celts, the Celts are going to come for us, man.
So here we go.
We're starting off the the show here.
This is how Alex comes in.
It's the live August 19th, 2022, Friday edition of the Vaunted.
They attacked the embattled Info Wars transmission.
There's too much confusion.
There's too much confusion.
I can't get no relief.
Business man there, drink my wine, come and take my heart.
Have you thought the news was intense a year ago?
Learn what level I'm going through.
Do you think it's intense now?
Nobody has ever heard of it.
You ain't seen nothing yet.
Thank you so much for joining us on this live.
Uncensored, unfiltered, teleprompter-free transmission
of We the People.
It's interesting, man.
Essentially, nothing Alex says about his own show
is accurate there at all.
Like, I guess embattled just means consequences are mounting
for things I've done.
Sure, sure.
Yeah.
You could make an argument that he's teleprompter-free,
but that doesn't mean anything.
And he has a screen in front of him that producers put messages
on, he has a board that shows him the collars,
and he has an earpiece that the producers
are talking to him throughout the show on.
Yeah, but he doesn't have a teleprompter.
No, that's true.
See?
But it's not as freewheeling of a show as Alex wants it to appear.
Yeah.
The show is not uncensored because he can't swear on the radio,
so by definition he's operating under censorship.
And I couldn't imagine a show that's more filtered than this one.
Just recently, with the acknowledgement of Trump taking money
from Pfizer, we saw a crystal clear example of the sort of filtering
Alex does to the information that's acceptable to be on his show.
This is a common thing too, like Alex will conveniently pretend
to not be aware of certain things about figures he's trying to support,
but when they fall slightly out of his good graces,
he magically knows about all the things that should have been
a big problem for him before.
We saw another glaring example of this with Bill Barr,
who Alex loved, but then when he wouldn't back Trump's nonsense
at the end of his presidency, Alex suddenly had information
about Barr's family's ties to Epstein that never had come up before.
Wow.
This is an intensely censored, filtered, and produced show.
It just appears to not be any of those things
because Alex is too lazy to prepare,
so he has to fill his show with pointless rants,
and his imagination is disgusting,
so he ends up rambling about grotesque topics for long stretches.
Glad to see him rocking out to a little all along the watchtower though.
I mean, you know, I was thinking about that song,
and it is kind of interesting to really go back in time
and think about how much of that type of music blew people's minds.
Sure.
Right?
Like, now, that is fucking nothing to me.
Like, music has moved way beyond that.
But back then, that must have blown people's heads off.
Yeah, I used to think about that quite a bit.
Like, the idea of this being played on the radio,
like the first times you heard it on the radio,
like, what the fuck is this?
How could you get...
You were listening to fucking clog dancing before that,
and then all of a sudden, this happens.
Of course, you lost your fucking body.
You know, from Lawrence Welk over to Baba O'Reilly.
Oh, my God.
Everybody was talking about the latest fiddle player
before this happened, and now you're like,
holy shit, what am I doing in this small town?
I mean, I get it.
It's oversimplifying things a little bit,
but yeah, that wonder is kind of, like, it seems...
Maybe it's just because it's something that is inaccessible
to us and something outside of our life experience.
Sure.
But if you...
Yeah, imagining...
You know what it is, too?
It's a desire and an urge to go back to a monoculture.
Sure, sure.
I can see that.
It's like, you know, everybody was connected
by hearing these songs on the radio.
Sure.
You know, like, there was this thing
that everybody was experiencing,
or at least everybody within your sort of...
Your cohort, your age cohort.
I get what you're saying.
I'm gonna throw it more towards, like,
I'm longing for the days whenever a discovery
was more like, you know,
Pythagoras discovered A-squared plus B-squared,
you know, and it's like, holy shit,
nobody's gonna discover anything
for like a thousand years after that, you know?
So with All Along the Watchtower,
nobody had heard shit like that before, you know?
But whenever Kanye comes out with Jesus Walks, you know,
that's great, that's awesome,
and it's epoch-changing,
but it's not like back then,
because we already had All Along the Watchtower.
If I didn't have Jesus Walks, you know,
I could still listen to that shit.
They didn't have anything.
They had nothing.
Those poor, poor bastards in the past.
They were wasted.
It was all just nothing.
And then Jimmy Hendrix came along.
And then one day.
And I believe that's a cover of a Bob Dylan song, too.
Absolutely.
So they actually had another version of this song already.
Yup.
Your point makes sense.
Look, and one of the problems is Alex is so dumb
and boring that we end up being interested
on going down that road.
So Alex has a big news story
that I think will probably be his main focus for today.
Let me just do this.
Let me just give you the main stack headlines
that we're going to plow through them all,
take calls, and have special guests in studio.
They put out a press release yesterday.
They put out a podcast with Klaus Schwab and others.
And they had declared their number one enemy,
Info Wars,
and have said that they've hired 110,000 operatives.
Operatives.
That they called Information Warriors.
Where have we heard that term before, the Info Warriors?
The counter.
We the people.
I mean, man, I keep trying to explain to the listeners,
they're really scared of us, not just me,
but the fact that we've got the Death Star plans.
Oh, big, big if true.
Yeah.
Yesterday, they put out this press release.
A lot of agents for one press release.
That's true.
So I was able to find the story that Alex is talking about,
and it's an article in News Punch
about the World Economic Forum hiring 110,000 people
to combat misinformation on social media.
This was a post that was published on August 17th, 2022,
and it's based on a video published by a channel
called The People's Voice.
This is just like a junior varsity as InfoWars channel
on YouTube, and their main source is a podcast
the World Economic Forum put out
featuring the UN Communications Director, Melissa Fleming.
She never mentions InfoWars being class Schwab's number one
enemy, though she does discuss efforts they were taking
to push back against misinformation.
The first one she mentions is called Verified,
which is done with the help of a communications firm,
and it was an effort to take solid information
and put it into formats that would be easy to share
on social media.
The concern was that so much of the actual information
that you could have was buried in inaccessible PDFs
and large documents, whereas misinformation is packaged
so slickly and it's optimized for engagement.
That's the entire business model for misinformation,
so it's a primary concern for them,
whereas the folks at the UN were a bit behind
on making the information that was provided good for posting.
Well, I mean, their fundamental issue is that
they're running up against learning as hard
and chocolate is delicious.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, essentially.
Another initiative they were launching is called Pause,
where they were trying to spread the message
that you should stop and think before reposting something
that seems too good to be true.
It excites you, so you want to post it,
but maybe it's bullshit.
Take a second to think about it, and if you still want
to share it once that adrenaline wears off, go ahead.
Apparently the belief is that encouraging the sort of behavior
would cut down drastically on nonsense posting.
I'm skeptical, but, you know, maybe it couldn't hurt.
It also does say that they've recruited 110,000 information
volunteers who are applying these kinds of practices
and introducing good information into misinformation spaces.
I guess Alex could consider that information warfare,
and maybe he's right, but I also think it is defensive in nature.
All that being said, this podcast was released
in November 2020.
Ooh!
This is not news.
It didn't happen yesterday.
So close.
It's being presented in this News Punch article as if it is,
because Alex has no idea what he's talking about
or covering, he thinks it's news, too.
If only he'd listened to Fleming's advice about thinking
before you repost something.
Ironically, maybe he would have gotten this story
a little closer to accurate.
Yeah, that's possible.
Possible.
Doubtful.
Yeah.
I mean, I was wondering, here's my problem there.
Okay.
Can the, you know, with the News Punch thing,
can the World Economic Forum just hire 100,000 people?
That seems...
They're volunteers.
That's what I'm saying.
They didn't hire anybody.
That's what I'm saying.
Like, that's my big issue with that is, like,
what are you talking about?
Nobody has just the kind of cash to toss around
at 110,000 new employees,
let alone the World Economic Forum.
Yeah, and I'm willing to bet that a lot of this
is fairly unofficial.
I'm willing to bet that some of this is just, like,
people signed some kind of a pledge,
some sort of a symbolic pledge.
No, the Nielsen ratings are 100% accurate.
Thank God for them.
Yeah.
Yeah, but, I mean, Alex is getting a lot of mileage
out of this two-year-old podcast
that he thinks happened yesterday.
Ouch.
Two years old.
Oh, boy.
Not good.
So we get to Stelter here, and Alex isn't in a mood.
We have some celebratory things here to make fun of.
But I don't know if I can laugh because I'm going to cry.
Brian Stelter, who already had no viewers,
so he already, his show was already canceled.
If no one's watching, like, 100,000 viewers,
and small local radio shows have that,
we have millions and millions and millions
of listeners an hour.
OK.
So if you already didn't have any viewers,
it's a fact that he had a zombie broadcast like CNN.
It's dead.
It's not alive.
No one's watching.
It's a joke.
I think this is sad.
Yeah.
He can't even really muster the energy to dance
on Stelter's grave.
Yeah.
It's, that's, it should be his greatest day ever.
No, no, no.
When you have a nemesis, all right,
you can't be happy when your nemesis is gone
because your nemesis is what pushed you to the heights
that you couldn't have reached without said nemesis.
That's true.
It's not a, it's not a formal enemy, an enemy you defeat.
But Stelter, Stelter was a man among men.
We are about to play, I'm going to play a clip
a little bit later.
Alex is repeatedly yelling that Stelter is his enemy.
So.
Okay.
Well, maybe I did my best.
Yeah.
I get what you're saying though.
You have more of a bond with this.
Sometimes it's the only people you have a bond with.
Yeah.
And, and I think that there is a like, well,
I won't have him to punch around anymore.
There is probably a disappointment.
Like when, when Alex doesn't have like a Democrat in office
or whatever, he doesn't have that easy tool.
Yeah.
And for Stelter to be gone, it's going to be a little bit
easier for him to, I don't know, deal with Wolf Blitzer.
Yeah.
It must be, it must be bittersweet.
It must be a bittersweet feeling to know that you've,
you've perhaps outlived your oldest enemy,
but you're still an old wasting man yourself.
True.
True.
Deep.
So we're going to get into a little bit of coverage that Alex
has about monkeypox.
And I'm just going to give a little bit of a warning.
This is pretty intensely homophobic.
And why would I expect otherwise?
Yeah.
Pretty, pretty bad.
By the way, 99.9% of the monkeypox cases with no deaths in the
U.S. are gay men having hundreds of sexual partners a month.
And the media is defending it saying,
we want you to go under lockdown.
We want you to wear a mask.
But we want to continue, actually have articles of the gay
orgies.
So you got to wear a mask.
They're saying coming soon, but these men can get together and
give each other a bunch of diseases.
Disgusting.
So yeah, it's not good.
Wow.
Man, I hope all those people like Alex Lee Moyer and Glenn
Greenwald and Joe Rogan who love to carry water for Alex,
like the kind of messages they're steering people towards
because that's pretty, pretty cool.
Yeah.
No, no, no, it's great.
So while it is true that the available information does indicate
that men who have sex with men are disproportionately represented
in the cases of monkeypox that have been identified at this point,
the way Alex is covering this is unacceptable and is essentially
no different than the rhetoric you would have heard him
spout in the early days of AIDS.
Yep.
He has an intense disdain for the LGBTQ community, but he knows
it's unfashionable to just be honest about that.
So he finds other stories he can use as cover to express his
hate.
An important point about this whole dynamic comes up in a CNBC
article, quote, about 98% of patients who provided demographic
information to clinics identified as men who have sex with men
according to the CDC.
That's not necessarily saying that 98% of people who have
contracted monkeypox are men who have sex with men.
There may be a percentage of people who saw treatment who did
not provide that demographic information.
That said, it would be slightly dishonest to say that there's
not something statistically relevant here.
There do appear to be increased rates in the community of gay
and bisexual men, but it's dangerous to create this association
and even more dangerous to pretend that it's just an STD.
It's a complicated situation and people like Alex acting like
this are going to get innocent people hurt.
And I think that's what he wants.
Incidentally, there's no call for monkeypox lockdowns.
And in fact, the reality is just the opposite of what Alex is
saying.
Tedros, the head of the World Health Organization, said this at
the end of last month, quote, for men who have sex with men,
this includes, for the moment, he's talking about like mitigating
actions.
This includes, for the moment, reducing your number of sexual
partners, reconsidering sex with new partners and exchanging
contact details with any new partners to enable follow up if
needed.
Alex hates the LGBTQ community, so he makes up shit to
attack them with things that paint him as the victim and them
as a privileged class who the system wouldn't dare even suggest
inconveniencing.
He's pretending that the government is going to force good
people like himself to lock down over monkeypox, but they won't
even think of suggesting behavioral advice to gay men.
This is complete bullshit because the World Health Organization
has a goal of dealing with the outbreak by serving the people
who are affected by it while working to minimize any stigma
that's going to lead to discrimination.
Conversely, Alex's goal is that discrimination itself, so
furthering that goal is not best served by dealing with what the
World Health Organization is actually doing, but rather by
creating a fake storyline that conforms to your persecution
complex.
This is complete shit.
Yep.
Great.
Yeah.
Yeah, he sucks.
Yeah.
I mean, first off, only Wilt Chamberlain has had hundreds of
partners in a month.
Right.
Let's start right there.
And even if you want to, you know, take that and ground it a
little bit.
Sure.
The close contact that can spread monkeypox is not something
you need 100 partners to, you could have one partner.
Absolutely.
Go on a date with somebody and have a great time and even use
condoms conceivably and still contracted from skin to skin
contact.
I mean, and also all we're really seeing is what happens
whenever you have a community that is isolated due to shit and
then disease breaks out in an isolated community.
It is going to break out of that community eventually, but as
it stands right now, the only reason that it's stuck there is
because of a discrimination that's already inherent in the
fucking system.
True.
Like this is a self made creation.
Again, always.
Yeah.
It's very frustrating.
And there's a, there's also a self fulfilling this that Alex
is kind of working towards.
And I think it was fairly similar with COVID and that is that
his actions and a lot of the rhetoric that he's putting out
is exactly what you would do if you wanted the disease to
spread more.
We said it at the beginning.
He must have been paid for by COVID.
Yeah.
I mean, that's the only explanation is that he was working
for ladies and gentlemen, we are subsidized by COVID.
I mean, is it possible for a virus to like congeal together a
personality long enough to pay Alex $50 million in order to
spread itself?
I don't think so.
But if it is possible, that's what's happening.
That is what happens.
And Alex gets worse even, let's say about this.
That's great.
Yeah.
That's great.
It's completely disgusting to spread disease like that.
I don't care if you're heterosexual or homosexual.
Yes, you do.
Men and women, men and women were having hundreds of sexual
partners a month and spreading disease.
That's disgusting.
That's dangerous.
It's like saying you're going to go lit toilet bowls at the
airport.
Or you're going to go to a grocery store without a mask and
spit on people.
It's okay that Tim Cook runs death camps in China because he's
gay and he wears a little turtleneck.
It's like, oh, he's not threatening.
He's gay.
It's all right.
He runs death camps with suicide nets around him.
The same thing here.
Well, it's all right.
You know, we got to lock down society because what you're
doing, just keep doing it.
We're going to make little kids, though, wear a mask over
their faces.
And it's like, well, so what if they rape dogs?
PC ality and give them monkeypox and they got to be
euthanized.
It's liberal.
It's all about they can do whatever they want.
We got to just stand down and put up with this crap.
So yeah, Rogan, how do you feel about Alex suggesting that
there's a connection between being gay and raping dogs?
These motherfuckers for years, multiple years, bitched and
whined about having to wear a mask to stop spreading disease.
And now they're going to wring their hands at, oh my God,
someone spreading disease doing something I don't like,
instead of going into random strangers' home and spitting
all over their shit, coughing in front of somebody at an
abortion clinic, like all of this shit, they are disease
ridden horror monsters and they're going to come at me
with this bullshit.
That's very frustrating.
It is.
It's very frustrating.
I understand your frustration.
I think I'm more frustrated by the aggressively anti-gay
mentality that he's expressing.
Right.
Everything that he says is it's absurd.
It's awful.
It's fucking awful.
It is.
So look, Alex wants you to post his shit online.
Yeah.
Because you have to.
You have to fight back against Schwab.
It's the afore.
But man, let that sink in and put this full show headline up.
World Economic Forum publicly declares an information warfare
operation with information warriors to counter
info wars and other disinformation outlets.
How honored are you as the army of info wars to know that
you're in direct conflict and information warfare with
Klaus Schwab, the new ruler.
Now do you understand why I say share the articles of
videos?
Before?
Now do you understand why I say magnify what we're doing
because I don't want to be the best in the fight because I'm
not that good.
I want to stop these people.
I want to see other leaders like Tucker Carlson,
Bolsonaro, Joe Rogan, countless others stand up and
they're starting to.
But you know what?
The enemy recognizes us and me as the number one enemy of
their new world order.
I told you 20 years ago while I was eating a chicken fried
steak and drinking an iced tea.
Oh my God.
27 years ago.
Not again.
At Waterloo, I South after I done a two hour TV show that
I literally talk about a vision.
It was like a download and God showed me the future.
What was going to happen and also how dangerous would be
and said, are you ready to shine on for this?
I remember sitting there alone in that restaurant and going,
yes, I accept this.
I was floating.
I go, yes, I accept the mission.
And it went, here's the rest of the download.
And I got slammed with the imprint of data and it was like,
all right, soldier, you joined.
Get ready.
I literally was commissioned by God for this war.
Wow.
Yeah.
I mean, this seems like somebody who's like so much more
reliable than the mainstream media.
Yeah.
Yeah.
This is a guy who you go to to cut through the bullshit,
you know, right?
I mean, Jake and Elwood Blues were busy.
So God had to commission a different asshole for this job.
Honestly, their mission from God was saving a saving a bunch
of children practice run is lower stakes than this mission
saving an orphanage by doing a concert.
Yeah.
That I think is fine.
Yeah.
I mean, if you're going to have delusions of grandeur,
at least that's a good one.
Yeah.
Yeah.
This, this is a little bit different.
Maybe a little bit wrong.
So look, Klaus Schwab put out this podcast that he didn't
yesterday.
Sure.
Two years ago.
Yeah.
And Alex wants to explain to you why.
Here we are inside the new world order.
Well, the world economic forum, which is the mouth of the new
world order, the mouth of the UN, the mouth of mega
corporations, the mouth of the slave masters, the spokesperson
for evil has come out and said that their attempted world
continual never ending lockdown and forced injection failed.
It was still devastating.
And now there's a total rejection happening of them across
the board and billions of rotting poison mRNA gene
therapies that no one will take.
And their answer is a declaration of war next level
censorship with 110,000 volunteers inside media and big
tech, an army of Brian Stelter, Humpty Dumpty, Pennywise's.
Yeah.
So that clip brings up something that I want to stress for a
second here.
So a lot is made of how Alex just makes stuff up all the time
and rightfully so.
However, it's key to recognize that he does more than just
make up details and lie about concrete facts.
He also writes stories out of these fake facts that are
necessary to explain them within the context of his made up
world.
For instance, here, Alex has this headline that he's done
zero investigation into that he's presenting as the World
Economic Forum declaring war on info wars by hiring 110,000
information volunteers to counter misinformation.
In order to bolster this story, he needs to connect it to some
of his larger storylines.
In order to embellish the story, Alex says that the World
Economic Forum is doing this because there's so many
shenanigans.
And all the anti-vax people are winning the war of ideas, so
they enlisted an army to crush anti-vax voices like Alex.
This is tantamount to him running a disinformation campaign
against a campaign meant to fight misinformation, which
makes sense.
Liars really don't like fact checkers.
Yeah.
I mean, why would you not go after them?
Yeah.
But what's critical here is that Alex is making up the why for
this story out of thin air.
He's got a piece of information, this 110,000 volunteers
thing, but he has literally no other details about this
story, so he's just making it up.
He doesn't realize this was a story from November 2020 before
any of the vaccines were even available, which is kind of
sad.
In order to make sense of why the World Economic Forum would
be doing this in the present day, as Alex thinks they are, he
just falls back on what version of this story would be most
emotionally satisfying for himself and the audience.
That's why the rationale for their alleged action is that
Alex's side is too successful, and they have all these
expiring vaccines that no one wants.
This explanation is a fiction that creates a sense of victory
for the listeners, and more importantly, it frames their
online activity as a critical part of the fight against the
World Economic Forum's information volunteers.
Promoting Alex's content isn't just about getting new
people into his revenue streams and selling his dumb pills,
it's actually fighting back against Klaus Schwab's cyber
army, who are only even being enlisted because you all were
too powerful with your previous posting of Alex's content to
begin with.
This narrative works really well for Alex on a couple fronts,
but it's completely made up.
The simple detail that the podcast that this is the basis
for this entire story came out in November 2020 reveals it all
to just be shit that Alex is making up to stroke his own ego
and convince the listeners to continue working as his unpaid
social media team.
Yeah.
It's wild.
Yeah.
I mean, it is it is a little bit like somebody took a
Renfair too far, and it's just now his full life, you know,
just every day is the Renfair.
And whenever something like if somebody brings a phone in there,
they got a retcon the entire Renfair.
To make sense of the phone being inside.
And then every time you add a new thing, now we're in a cyberpunk
Renfair.
And so now we've got God over there.
Like it's just a bigger and bigger Renfair.
I was not listening to you because I started to think about
Renfield Renfair.
What would that look like?
Or a Renfair Renfield.
A Renfair Renfield.
So it would be a Renfield.
But he's got a Renfair.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I got a big take.
Yeah.
He's got a gallon of Mead.
A flag in.
Yeah.
No, I see that.
Yeah.
Sorry.
I know you were making a point, but I got distracted by
word play.
I think I just started talking about Renfairs.
Yeah.
So here Alex plays a clip of that podcast that again is two
years old.
W E F announces a recruitment of 110,000 information war
years close quote to counter info wars.
We specifically in their documents are named and the
American people and others resisting their design
planetary collapse.
Let's play a short clip of the podcast that the W E F
spokesperson just put out.
Just a part of this verified and pause campaign entails
all sorts of things.
This is all, I mean, it's just an elaborate fiction based on
Alex not looking into the story that he's telling.
Yeah.
It's sad.
Do we have any follow up on these volunteers?
Like it whenever she announces, we've got 110,000.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He announces we've got 110,000.
That's 110,000 people signed up.
Did anybody actually do fuck all?
No, but I know we didn't solve disinformation in the past
two years.
Nope.
But I did see a recent thread on the conspiracy subreddit.
Okay.
And the people were like, Oh, that explains all the shills
commenting recently.
It's like this recently because they didn't look into it
either.
Of course not.
Yeah.
They just saw this news punch article.
Oh my God.
The date on the article is recent.
So.
Oh, all the shills.
Yeah.
Oh, when will the shills stop chilling?
Yeah.
It really also brings into sharp focus the idea of what a joke.
This notion of critical thinking.
Yeah.
In conspiracy and like Alex Jonesy communities are.
What did you did any of the, did any of these folks and their
great leader, Alex, stopped to ask themselves, what's the
context of this?
Is there, is there an actual story here?
No.
It's convenient.
It's saying what you want it to say.
Right.
And so you will not only accept it as real and true and current.
You'll embellish and make up details about it to make it even
more perfect for your, for your ego.
I do appreciate anybody who gets an instant and a piece of
information.
And then instantly is like, well, that explains this other
thing that it doesn't have anything to do with.
Yeah.
I enjoy that because there's nothing in between.
There would be something in between, but now you're just like,
ah, that explains that my world makes sense again.
Hurray.
So Alex is mad at Sam Harris and I don't care.
Sure.
I want to hit this news because if you want to talk about a
Rosetta stone, if you want to talk about a skeleton key, if
you want to talk about something that really illustrates who
we're up against and their hubris, their smugness.
Their bravada.
It's this clip.
You are wasting time, dude.
Come on.
Sam Harris is a supposed deep dark web intellectual leftist.
And he's doing an interview a few days ago and he goes, well,
of course we censor conservatives and there's a conspiracy to do
it.
Trump's too dangerous.
Sam Harris is in charge of all media or something.
Obviously.
All right, whatever.
I don't, I don't really care.
But one of the things that Sam Harris was talking about was that
the corruption that, you know, you can find with Biden and Hunter
Biden, it doesn't come anywhere close to what Trump is involved
in.
So these, these kinds of arguments about the corruption and the
concerns about it are kind of weird and dumb.
Right.
Right.
Right.
One of the things that he brings up is Trump University and Alex
is going to latch onto that.
Sure.
Let's verify one thing really quick.
The, according to Alex and Alex's worldview, the crimes of the
Bidens are much greater than Trump.
Yeah, of course.
But in the real world, well, not really so much.
So if Alex is comparing Trump's University, let's say, for instance,
to the fake imaginary version of Biden, right?
Then yes, Trump University, not that bad.
Sure.
But if we're in the real world, Trump looks pretty shitty.
He does.
And that's kind of the, the, the tension that's at play in this clip.
And that's even if you want to add in all of Biden's shitty, like shady
Delaware shit that he's been doing for the whole time, like, oh,
credit card companies don't have to pay blah, blah, blah.
That's corrupt.
I get it.
But that still isn't, I got nuclear secrets in my house.
Yeah, I'm not a little different.
I'm not saying anything to like get Biden off the hook for any corrupt
dealings.
I'm just saying that he didn't kill kids in a basement.
He didn't kill kids in a basement.
Which Alex is going to allege in this clip.
He's a straw boy.
And then Alex loses the thread and gets really defensive about how he
didn't go to college.
Oh, that sounds about right.
That's not an issue according to Sam Harris.
No, it's, he goes, just look at nothing Biden can do, including
dead bodies in a basement of children.
Wait, the basement is of children?
It'd be compromised by foreign powers and compared to Trump University,
which I think was a great deal.
Weekends with Trump and top experts and brainstorming and networking.
I mean, I can tell you, people ask, why did you go to college?
You pathetic creature.
Well, I mean, I got out of high school and I went and got a job selling
memberships at a spa at a gym.
And I was making $100,000 a year when I was 19.
What?
I was driving a sports car.
I was in a nice two bedroom apartment.
I was having the time of my life.
$100,000 30 years ago was like a million dollars today.
I was 19 years old, making $100,000 a year, working four hours a day.
Because I became a salesman and I sold a good product and I look good and
people bought the memberships, especially the women.
But the point is, is that a few times we're on a date.
What?
I love that salesman job.
The point is, is that I'm red-blooded folks, I don't lie about it.
What is happening?
The point is that that was a real value.
That experience was real.
I should have paid to be a salesman at that hot club.
I mean, one of the hottest gyms in Austin at the time.
They said, hey, you want to be a salesman?
I said, sure.
Boom.
Salesman.
First weekend sold like 10 memberships.
This is about Sam Harris.
They say I don't have a college degree because I'm a loser.
No, I don't have a college degree because I went on the fast track to
success, but that doesn't even matter.
That's not even what I'm getting at here.
What are you getting at?
All these educated idiots like Sam Harris that talk real slow and
act real smug and sit there in their chair and say, yeah.
You know, the number one evil of Trump is his Trump University.
What is your problem?
Is your problem that he's sitting in a chair?
What are you talking about?
What is happening?
Alex is, I mean, look, I think that it's, you know, fairly important to
recognize that not everybody does need to go to college.
I think higher education is fantastic.
I'm a big proponent of it, but I don't think that people should be
shamed for not going to college.
I didn't graduate.
Yeah, it's not.
It's not the most important thing in the world.
People learning a trade is pretty fantastic.
A lot of people find a great deal of happiness.
You can learn whatever you want.
Just find some books.
Sure.
It'd be great.
So I just want to put that to the side just because I don't want to be
like shitting on Alex for not going to college or anything.
But he really is insecure about it.
Oh yeah.
It's very much what's being expressed here is very much a
feeling of why does everyone think he's so smart?
Right.
Right.
I mean, it is maybe because he doesn't go to college.
Because he doesn't go into shit like his monkey pox.
Nonsense.
Let's start right before we go any further.
All right.
Let's start with the easy smart thing to do.
Don't defend Trump University.
It lost the lawsuit.
You don't even have to just say, oh, that sucks.
I have another smart thing he could do.
What's that?
Not talk constantly about visions from God.
That would not.
I mean, honestly, that would bite into his bottom line.
Yeah.
Not defending Trump University is free.
That's true.
There's no downside to not defending University.
But there is a downside to defending Trump University,
which is where you go on to this weird tangent about how you
fuck good when you were at when you worked at a club.
Right.
That's it.
I also think that one of the things that maybe could use
some examining on Alex's part is how he never stopped being
a salesman.
Yeah.
No, I don't think that's something he can really.
He is not a researcher or a journalist or anything like that.
He is still just a salesman.
He's selling his dumb pills.
He's selling his worldview.
More importantly, that's really his primary product.
Yeah.
He sells you the worldview.
You internalize that worldview and it creates needs that he
can fill for you.
Yeah.
Yeah.
No, there's a cult shit.
There's nothing that somebody would find unfamiliar if they just
listened to like the whole rich dad, poor dad series and then
watched Alex Jones's cell sit and they'd be like, Oh, yeah.
No, I did.
Yeah.
You'd gone to Trump University.
Actually, I think you would.
Yeah.
You don't get sales skills at Trump University.
You get sold.
True.
You get conned.
So Stelter got canceled.
But it wasn't cancel culture.
Yeah.
No, no, he just got canceled.
Now let's spend some time on Brian Stelter.
Yeah.
We can celebrate all day that he's been canceled.
He's a joke, but he had 100,000 viewers for cable news.
For cable news.
That's not even a pulse.
Okay.
He was good.
Because he was waking people up.
He was a laughing stock.
He was a clown.
Now it's just her.
He was a officious, self-serving, arrogant booby.
He was the most smug.
Smug.
Person you could imagine.
Smug.
That's the armor they wear.
This fake pomposity.
And so now he's been canceled.
He's been canceled.
He's been canceled itself.
Seeing it spent $400 and something million on seeing it.
Plus it failed in a month and a half or less than that.
It was like 40 days.
So there's a lot of theories about exactly why Stelter and reliable sources got canceled.
And it's unclear what the precise reasons are.
But I think everyone is pretty comfortable with the idea that it's part of the aftermath
of the Warner Brothers discovery merger that was finalized back in April.
Yeah.
There have been all sorts of cuts made throughout their properties like HBO Max.
And this is actually part of a larger story about big corporate media consolidation.
But Alex is completely missing the forest for the trees.
He hates Brian Stelter.
And the story he wants to tell about this is that Stelter is a failure who got fired
because nobody liked him in his show had no viewers.
That's a story that's emotionally satisfying for Alex.
And it's what the listeners want to hear.
There's more to the story though.
But it doesn't matter because he's the tip of the spear.
He's the king of big tech and media watch doggery and just missing this entirely.
What a great time for somebody like Alex to like really dig into what happens whenever
media is monopolized and how the powers that be whenever they become a smaller
group and a smaller number all of them with control over the media.
A number of companies let's say smaller than 10.
You know and those companies have CEOs and they all meet in back rooms and they
control the media literally.
It would be a great time for somebody who is a conspiracy theorist to talk about that.
Well I think you're sounding a little bit.
I'm just saying I think that there is a real wonderful opportunity for Alex here to
like rise above his enemies as it were as it would be a great idea.
And he could instead of talking shit about Stelter put that aside because everyone
knows he already doesn't like him and all this.
That'd be redundant for him just to do a little dance and instead be like look
sure we can all be happy about that but there's a bigger picture here and also
it's actually a bad sign that Brian Stelter got his show axed.
It's a bad sign that HBO Max is streamlining and laying off all these people.
It's part of the consolidation coming together.
It just that the story plays though you know that like I would I would die to defend
you.
I don't agree with what you say Mr. Stelter but I would die for your right to
not be owned by one conglomerate.
I demand that this man my mortal enemy be freed from his prison of corporate
lockstep.
That's there that that message plays everybody loves that shit.
And it would be an impressive thing for Alex.
Totally it would be amazing and he just doesn't have it.
Doesn't have the guts.
No.
No.
Mr. Stelter.
Tie her down that wall.
Yes.
Come on.
This is this is the spirit got in me while you were mixing go into China man.
You got to do it.
So Alex plays some clips here.
Here's an old clip of Stelter that Brian that Alex we're doing.
This is your life.
Not really.
I just think there's a few that are like these are great clips of Stelter.
And so here's one.
Okay.
So let's play the late great founder of the weather channel meteorologist
schooling Brian Stelter years ago.
Here it is.
First let me bring in John Coleman.
He's in San Diego this morning.
Thank you for being here.
It's nice to be on CNN.
Hello to all your viewers.
I present you calling me a denier.
That is a word meant to put me down.
I'm a skeptic about climate change and I want to make it darn clear.
Mr. Kenny is not a scientist.
I am.
He's the CEO of the weather channel now.
I was the founder of the weather channel.
I'm the co-founder.
And I'm glad you did because I am addicted to the weather channel.
I watch a lot of cable news.
There's not talking now.
Hold on just a minute.
I'm not done.
And CNN has taken a very strong position on global warming that is that it is a consensus.
Well, there is no consensus in science.
Science isn't a vote.
Science is about facts.
And if you get down to the hard cold facts, there's no question about it.
Climate change is not happening.
There is no significant man-made global warming now.
There hasn't been any in the past.
And there's no reason to expect any in the future.
There's a whole lot of baloney.
And yes, it has become a big political point of the Democratic Party and part of their platform.
And I regret it's become political instead of scientific.
But the science is on my side.
I don't think we're going to have a conclusion about the topic right here.
What I do wonder though is when you see-
I know we're not because you wouldn't allow it to happen on CNN.
But I'm happy that I got on the air and got a chance to talk to your viewers.
Hello everybody.
What I do-
There's no global warming.
I forgot about that.
What I do want-
So the sea levels haven't risen a half inch in a hundred years.
So doesn't that clip actually kind of refute a lot of Alex's points about mainstream media?
No, they never put voices that dissent with them on the air, Dan.
Right.
It's actually one of the worst clips Alex could have chosen to play.
I know it's fun to hear someone be rude to Stelter.
Sure.
No, it's great.
I guess that appeals to Alex in some way.
But it's actually so counter to the perception of media that is essential to sell info wars as the alternative to it.
I mean, he's literally saying, thank you for letting me get my message across on the mainstream media.
Right.
And Stelter is being polite to this guy who's being incredibly rude to him.
Absurdly polite.
Yeah.
I can't imagine the reverse like Stelter coming on Alex's show and being a dick to him and Alex being polite.
Yeah.
It doesn't happen.
No, I can't imagine that.
Right.
No.
Alex would need to be more famous.
Alex would offer nothing but a hostile platform to somebody who disagrees with him.
And the media, for better or for worse, often does have a differential attitude.
Yeah.
A gentle platform for dissenting voices.
Maybe not as vigorous debate as Alex would like, which is, I mean, it translates to people screaming at each other and saying disgusting shit.
Sure.
Calling each other pedophiles and what have you.
That's a good TV day.
But yeah, I mean, this is, I would have maybe told him, choose a different clip.
I think this hurts your argument.
Yeah.
I mean, it doesn't help Stelter either.
That's it.
I think that's a fairly good clip to play for everybody to look at the media and just
go like, we're not doing a good job.
Whatever it is that is, that's not good.
Well, I mean, there's certainly questions.
Like how did you do?
Did you have any reason to suspect this is how Coleman was going to act?
I mean, that's on you.
Maybe you could have prepared to field him being a dick.
You got a mute button.
Anyway, Alex, he, instead of really celebrating Stelter, he decides he's
just going to play some old clips.
He's reminiscing about his enemy.
Kind of, but also reminiscing about how much he yelled at Stelter.
He's kind of naval gazing reminiscing.
Sure.
It's Brian Stelter.
There it is.
Oh my God.
I mean, that is a horror movie cover.
Seriously.
He is scarier looking than at the clown.
Did you let your children anywhere near that psychopath?
I mean, that is a psychopath right there.
I mean, look at him.
God.
Oh, I mean, it just, it cries out.
Danger.
Danger.
Alert.
Alert.
I am a scumbag.
I am filth.
I am your enemy.
I would literally not be able to finish my dinner if somebody walked over and talked
to me that looked like these two guys.
And I'm sorry.
They're not just lying anti-American scumbags that want to run us all on the ground because
they're little men.
They're pieces of crap.
They think they're better than everybody.
Okay.
That's what it's about.
It's the spirit of evil.
We must break them.
Good point.
I've tried to do joke photos like this to look disingenuous and I can make any face I want
to.
I can't pull it off because the eyes, Chico.
It's always in the eyes.
Oh, oh, oh my gosh.
Oh, hell on earth.
He wants to run your life.
He wants to control every aspect of your life because he knows he is a cowardly degenerate
sack of anti-human trash.
I pledge before my Heavenly Father that I will resist them every way I can.
These people are the literal demon spawn of the pit of hell.
Look at him.
And you know what?
He is better than you if you keep letting him run your life.
He runs your kids.
He runs the schools.
He runs the banks.
This guy, the spirit, this smiling, leering devil that thinks you can't see what he is.
He is your enemy.
Period.
So fun.
I like the music in the background.
Yeah, that is fun.
So does one of Alex's old rants about Stelter that he just had to replay, probably because
he can't be bothered to put any energy into the show today.
I was going to say, yeah.
And he knows what people want.
Thankfully, there are these old clips of him putting a little gusto into his Stelter
hate.
But this actually is a curious clip to play on the day after Stelter's show has been
cancelled and he's out at CNN.
That's because if anything Alex was saying meant anything, then it shouldn't have been
so simple to remove him from his perch.
How important is Stelter to the globalist plots if he can just be fired?
Honestly, knowing that Stelter was just axed over business considerations and it didn't
cause widespread chaos among the globalists kind of makes this entire presentation that
Alex is putting on seem pretty stupid.
It seems so weird to hear how worked up Alex was about Stelter in these clips now that
we're on the other side because now that Stelter is out, Alex just seems like a worked up
baby who is so mad that someone was criticizing him that he decided to make up a bunch of
stuff about them being central to the globalist plans.
And like this isn't even the full rant, it goes on.
Disingenuous, fake, false, broke back, twisted, a defiler, a betrayer, a backstabber, a devil.
You will pay.
Yeah, you think I'll see your face come?
Is he still praying?
Yeah, Stelter.
Or did he end the prayer?
See you, you understand me.
I forgot.
I don't know what you think of me and my family.
I see you right back.
You understand that.
You understand that, Stelter.
Yes, Stelter.
So, do you want to bring humanity down?
God is going to destroy you.
Get him off the screen.
Get your shit together, God.
So this is an illustrative moment.
When Alex is saying all this shit about Stelter, none of it has any connection to reality.
It's just Alex trying to put some kind of an elevated appearance onto his petulant anger.
He knows well enough that if he got on his show and started yelling and lashing out about
how he doesn't like people being critical of him, his audience would rightly see him
as the weak child he is inside.
By masking that immature insecurity with over-the-top pronouncements about Stelter probably being
a pedophile and how he's a betrayer, whatever that means, Alex is able to protect himself
from being seen for what he is, which is a hypersensitive loser.
Now, the issue is that the audience doesn't really realize that they're just watching
Alex play out a psychodrama on air and may think that he's actually saying something
about Stelter as opposed to just yelling about his own hurt feelings.
They form opinions, post things on social media, and even harass Stelter over things
that Alex says as if there was anything behind it other than Alex being a baby with a boo-boo.
Anyway, I probably would have played a different clip on this episode if I were him.
Seems dumb to portray Stelter as some kind of a big high-level big bad guy the day after
his show ended with no real pushback or fanfare.
Seems like that should have been a much harder fought victory if anything Alex was saying
meant anything.
And this is kind of a grandiose thing because he got fired.
Yeah, no, no, no.
The show got canceled.
I mean, here's the problem.
Here's the problem.
It's just a show.
When you choose your enemies, you know, to be of the demonic realm, you know, like you
think TV is a great choice because it's so big and it's so, you know, like, oh, it's TV,
but it's really not that big.
It's not as big as you might think because you can just get fired.
Like you can't claim that if you didn't get the job at a Denny's, you can't claim that
the manager is the anti-Christ because eventually he's just not going to be the manager anymore.
The manager can't be.
It's not even the manager.
It's like the shift supervisor.
Yeah, you can't.
It's not even.
He's a fry cook.
Yeah.
He's not the anti-Christ.
I used to work at a Dairy Queen when I was like 15 and the guy who was the burger guy,
yeah, he was a Satanist.
Well, yeah, that's great.
So.
Counterpoint.
Counterpoint.
Well, now that now you've, now you've brought that piece of information to light.
I do retract.
Aha.
Take that.
So Alex just played that old Stelter rant and he's feeling good about it.
Everything, you know, like you got a bask in your work.
No, it reminded me of that time that you remember Hannibal's bit where he played his own joke
and just vibed with it as a, yeah, it reminded me of that quite a bit.
So here, here, Alex lets us in on a little media secret and I can tell you that little
ranch, not my best Brown Stelter rant, but I'm told that that is shown in the newsrooms
for years every week as the resistance.
In fact, you want a little Tucker Carlson inside dope.
That is required viewing at least once a week.
So that's a little gift to old Tucky.
So that's brainwashing.
Uh, I mean, honestly, I don't believe it's true, but if it is true, that's brainwashing
that they're doing a Tucker show or they're laughing at him.
Yeah.
I mean, I think I feel like as far as like ways to end your five o'clock on a Friday,
you know, instead of doing the whistle, you just start playing that clip and you're gonna,
you're going to leave with a bit of a smile.
All right, I think I can go get drinks now that's happy hour, but that's only like really
funny to you because you haven't heard that in a long time.
It has been a while.
If you watch that every week, you would get really annoying.
Hey, you know, I don't think you watch it every week, but you play it over the PA.
I love this though.
Like all of Tucker's employees have to watch this once a week so they can keep their head
in the game.
Sure.
They can understand what it's like to resist.
They can watch me fake being nauseous looking at Stelter.
Okay.
I understand.
I understand about demons.
I'm the key grip.
Do I really need to?
Yes.
No, but I mean all it's in your contract.
God damn it.
I hate this show.
Yep.
Hannity's people have to watch it once a month.
That's why they're not so hardcore.
So a caller calls in and he wants to know how Alex finds the time to read so much.
This is a bummer.
I wanted to say, I'm very excited when your new book comes out at the end of the month.
Now I admit that I normally read Kindle books and am highly addicted to the internet like
so many of us are.
By ordering your hard book and I can't wait to read the physical book, it made me have
an epiphany that I'm so bombarded with information, I'll admit I'm in a trance of a low attention
span.
Now you read so much, sir, you digest so much information.
I would love if you could share with me and the audience how you find so much time to
read suggestions on how we can use the internet, use our cell phones in a way that promotes
enlightenment, but also a way that promotes a long term attention span.
Do you speed read or what would you recommend to focus our attention span so we can take
the time to read entire books?
Do we have a cyber free Sunday?
Get away from the internet.
How do you recommend, because it's a strong part of the information war, to manage information,
sir?
Well, when you study the globalist, it's a really good question, we can talk for days
about it.
You have an old college course on it or an old degree in it.
They have the same programs over and over again.
So once you know their operations, you just see the same permutation of it over and over
again.
So that's not hard.
Like, oh, I've seen this press release before.
I've seen that before.
There's only a few dozen things they do.
There's only a few dozen plays they have.
So this reminds me of a conversation I had with a comic years ago who was really proud
of their ability to do crowd work and respond to hecklers.
In reality, they weren't that good, but they were very confident and they explained to
me that there are only a few possible types of responses you need to be ready to have.
You can respond to something with an angry slash mean retort, a nice retort or a confused
retort.
As long as you had one of each of these in your pocket ready to go, you could respond
to just about anything an audience can throw at you.
The rock, paper, scissors theory of stand up comedy.
Yeah, that's all good and well, but what it's actually doing is taking the act of responding
in the moment on stage and reducing it to a parlor trick.
You're creating the illusion of being in the moment and fast on your feet.
You're faking being clever because you know that you aren't clever enough to be it for
real, and you're terrified of being seen as not clever and getting caught in the moment
of being like, oh, I don't know what to say.
This is kind of what Alex is doing with this globalist playbook idea.
He's constructed a couple of stock responses to world events that he's decided to call
the globalist playbook, and it's basically just his crutch, so he never has to appear
like he doesn't know what's going on.
Think of a tragic event as the equivalent of someone heckling in terms of how to interpret
Alex's show and the narrative.
He needs to be able to respond to it quickly or else he'll risk showing weakness to the
audience.
So just like that comic I knew, Alex has preloaded responses to stuff.
Instead of angry, nice, or confused retorts, Alex has things like false flag, it was secretly
Antifa, or elaborate deep state plotting.
These are go-to responses he can whip out to apply to any situation, and he can then
rationalize based on some detail and be like, oh, this is part of that globalist play.
Means nothing.
Alex has nothing to say, and he hasn't read anything.
It's pretty telling that this guy asks this question, and Alex's first response isn't
that he reads all day every day, because I think even he would know that that's silly.
His response is just that he knows everything already, so he can see things happening in
the world and then make stories up about them.
Considering Alex's track record of being super wrong about almost everything he's ever called
to play from the globalist playbook, this should really worry the caller and the audience,
but they're not paying attention.
Alex satisfies their emotional needs with rants like the one about Stelter, and their
need to feel like a part of something important with the nonsense about fighting Klaus Schwab's
digital army by posting info wars links.
As long as those needs are met, and as long as that's the case, the reality that he's
just making shit up all the time, it doesn't really matter at all.
The audience will never care or notice.
Yeah, that caller scares me a lot, because he sounded so rational and so sane and had
a clear thought process.
But if you listen to that, that's the most insane thing anybody's ever said.
That's the most insane thing-
That Alex reads a lot?
That Alex reads a lot, like how do you do it?
That's an insane thing to say to Alex Jones.
That's more insane than, I swear to you, I would rather...
I believe more that raptors would eat chocolate than I do that Alex reads well.
What do you believe more?
Alex reads a lot, or Alex had a vision from God over chicken fried steak?
I believe the second one more than Alex reads.
At least the second one is possible.
Yeah, because Alex is a passive participant.
Exactly.
It requires no effort on his part.
Yeah, fair enough.
I can't prove that God doesn't speak through chicken fried steak.
I can prove he doesn't breathe.
It could have been great chicken fried steak.
It could have been great.
Alex should work out a deal with that company for advertising, because this is making their
steak and ice tea sound really good.
It'll give you a message from God.
So Alex goes on to explain his work process to this caller.
Oh my God, no.
But really what I do is, I scan him full wars, I scan a bunch of mainline sites, I scan legislation,
I go and look at what Jack Passobic's saying, I look at what Mike Cernovich is saying, I
look at what Ron Paul's saying, what Senator Paul's saying, I look at what DeSantis is
saying, and I just quickly scan through all of that.
But I already know the Globalist Agenda from reading their books, reading Klaus Schwab statements
and knowing what they're doing.
And I really go back to the key books written by the population controllers, and the statements
put out by Brzezinski and the books written by Brzezinski and Henry Kissinger and the
program.
And so once you know that, it's pretty much reading the same thing over and over again.
And so that's where we are, lawlessness, collapse of society.
See, this would be a huge red flag to anybody who's listening to Alex's show.
I mean, like he has basically these old texts that I don't know if he's even read or not
or if he's just like taking them in by way of like John Birch Society literature that
demonize those books.
Right, right, right.
I think that's more likely.
They're more part of the lore than they are actually read.
Yes, yes.
And like he talks about like Ecoscience by John P. Holder and you haven't read that fucking
textbook.
Yeah, yeah.
So and then his workflow is just like, I skim my own website.
Isn't that what he's saying?
I skim some other websites and then I go check the Twitter accounts of shitheads like Pasobik
and Cernovich.
I mean, that's not great.
He's in the context of the rationality of the question that he is responding to, of
which I do.
I mean, that idea like, oh, should we have a cyber Sunday where we get rid of all of
our things and actually just fucking read books?
Hey, that's not a terrible idea.
Not really.
Sure.
To respond to that with, here's what I do.
I skim shit and then I just kind of get the vibe of how people are talking about it and
then I go with Cernovich and Ron Paul and DeSantis are putting out talking points.
Yeah, I mean, and then I just double down on the things that those extremist shitheads
are doing.
I grab what they say and then I go plus one on the crazy and that's my job.
And I start the day by looking at my own website, right, that I pay people to write headlines
for.
So I'm responding to people who are paid to write things that will tickle me.
Yeah.
I guess.
Yeah.
That's a bizarre circle.
That's a that's a or a boros of bullshit.
Right.
Right.
So what I did is I created it like, okay, do you remember Elvis's group of yes men that
always said yes around Elvis?
Yes.
Yeah, exactly.
So I turned that into a job.
Now it's their job to say yes to everything I have to say.
So Alex, Alex gets to thinking about like what he needs to do.
And there's one thing that he needs to do read.
No.
Oh, pray with his dad.
Yeah.
Again, I appreciate what you do.
And I know that you speak about Jesus and I just want to remind people to not give up
hope.
There's a really is an answer out there, but we have to keep fighting.
We must operate and determine.
I believe in these days we must prepare a house.
That's what I'm telling my friends.
I said, you got to do what you can naturally to prepare your house, but also seriously,
you've got to prepare your house.
No, I totally agree.
And I'm going to tell a personal story right now.
I never told because the Holy Spirit wants me to.
There's been three times in my life where I was under incredible attack and I went to
see my dad and where we prayed and literally within hours, it wrote you a check and there's
something really special about believers coming together, but also men and women coming together
and family members and I'm going to pray with my father this weekend for awakening and
victory.
And because I don't know all the ways of God, but it's just powerful because our ancestors
did so much before us.
And by praying with your father or your mother, it connects to the people before you and it's
incredible.
I think I'm going to pray with my father and my mother this weekend.
Let's all confirm.
We have fathers and mothers left with us or our family members.
There's something particularly electromagnetic.
It's all confirmed that religious spiritual about that.
Do you hear what I'm saying?
He's gone.
Must have been a must have been a spirit.
Taking it back to that place where I was really under attack like eight years ago.
I was out with my dad's backyard by his pool.
I said, dad, I want you to pray with me.
I remember he just put his hands in mine.
Who did you knock up this time, son?
We made that prayer was going to happen.
It was in alignment with God.
And we have to do that now.
My hands are just like this.
He put his hands in mine and we made the circuit of the past, the present and the future.
And that's why the Satanists hate us because we have that power and we're not using that
power.
Oh, man.
Howie in New Jersey.
Howie.
Wow.
What a ride.
What a fucking ride.
Also, if it's the past, present and future shouldn't like your son have also been involved
in the prayer.
No, he doesn't give a shit about it.
So Alex is the present and the future.
Oh my God.
This is okay.
I like to though the idea that eventually I mean, I don't look, I don't wish this upon
him or anything, but eventually Alex's dad is going to pass away.
Yeah, that's how it was.
And then Alex will put out a Luther van draw style.
Pray with my father.
I think the dance with my father.
Yeah.
I could see that.
I could see that.
Put some, put some prayers on an album.
If I could pray with my father one more time, man, that's what you do.
That's what Alex does.
Deathbed prayers records them with his dad.
That'll give everybody the, the magical energy of a father and shut the closed circuit.
Absolutely.
That closed circuit energy.
You got some money to be made my friend, Alex's son is like, dad, let me hold your hand and
pray.
No, I will not be the past for this closed circuit.
I am the present and the future.
I will eat your soul son.
You will not steal my vitality and youth.
Yep.
So Alex gets another call.
Yeah.
Hey Alex, I just wanted to say like the sex, Cobra, go to the family that you talk about
they are an RH negative bloodline.
They're actually from Ukraine.
Sorry.
What now?
They are what people call fallen angels or you say fallen and that's what you say that
they, they believe they're their own species.
Right.
Yeah.
I mean, they, they took over the Saxons of Germany, like the direction is right.
I think they went from Ukraine to Germany, took over the Saxons and the Anglos are the
angels.
Sounds right.
The angels, the demons that have merged into the actual, the true humans or the true
humanity.
They've grafted themselves into it and that they took over the Netherlands too.
And that's where like the West India company is pretty much the basis for the evil side
of the American colonization really.
Like you say Anderson Cooper is the extension of the Vanderbilt and the Vanderbilt are just
an extension of the West India company and I know parasites just live in colonies even
in your body.
That's why they need to get your products, you know, get your, your parasite cleans and
everything like that.
Smooth into a plug.
Wow.
That is pretty good.
I mean, here's why, here's my take on this, sir.
That's too much.
That's too much.
You know what?
Normally I'm cool with conspiracy people.
I'm Alex Jones, but that's too much.
You got to go talk to somebody about that.
That's too much.
Yeah.
The Sax Cobra got the fallen angels too much, too much already took over the Anglos, their
angels.
See, that's already another too much mixing with the
real humans.
Why did they do that?
Nephilim type stuff.
Yeah, yeah.
Giants.
And they had to go to the Netherlands.
Right.
Yeah.
And then the, maybe the West Indie company, that's the one that you don't know about.
Yeah.
That's the one that's underground.
The Dutch East India company, I guess is related to the Vanderbilt, right?
Because they're both of Dutch descent.
Duh.
Okay.
Yeah.
See, I think we, I think we nailed it.
No.
Talk to somebody.
Well, the Dutch East India company that dissolved around the time that Cornelius Vanderbilt,
right?
The sort of the founder of that family's great fortune was a child in the U.S.
Right.
But didn't they defeat the Anglo-Saxons and then absorb them into their powers, thus gaining
angel and sexo powers?
I'm afraid you are much mistaken.
Am I mistaken about this?
That was the Wombat aliens.
Oh God.
Damn.
Wombats.
Yeah.
The Wombat aliens.
Yeah.
How about the Mighty Ducks?
Are they still doing okay?
The Mighty Duck aliens are.
Okay.
Good.
Yeah.
So Alex gets another call who's a little spiritual.
I enjoy your products and I look forward to receiving your product.
Alex, this is a message for all the infiltrators, the FBI, the CIA, the New World Order.
Cornelius.
This is economics for all who are listening right now.
I love you.
First of all, Alex.
First of all, we are decentralizing the influence, decentralizing your power and control.
Alex Jones, you have been chosen by our Lord to be the leader of the front.
You are the lifter of the body.
You represent the body of the left and the right wing who are taking us or manipulating
us in the direction that they have been using to maintain control.
George Washington warned us against the power of political parties and replacing our nationality.
We are, you're standing up against who we have been chosen.
The majority of the masses support info wars or obviously there are those who are against
you, but they cannot stand against the masses of us because we are using the power of our
Lord, which is through quantum communication.
You talked about.
Brother, I totally, only going to continue, but what do you make of Klaus Schwab declaring
information warfare against us and saying he's going to launch info warriors?
I mean, they are scared.
Yeah, they are.
Yeah, totally.
I guess this guy doesn't know that it's two years old.
Yeah.
Neither does the Lord.
Did you ever notice how the Lord is exactly as dumb as the person talking about him?
Yeah.
The deity has the information that the individual.
So weird.
Yeah.
You think they would have more.
Well, yeah.
And well, but Alex only knows what the Lord wants him to know because that's a download
that was a part of such a good out.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Good call, Lord.
You got me on this one.
So apparently Alex is chosen as a leader by God and the majority of the United States
supports info wars.
The masses.
That's absolutely not true.
Yeah.
That seems like a lot for the masses to have changed in just a short, short, short period
of time.
In my experience, obviously professionally, sure, you can't really judge the temperature
of Alex because I run in circles that are pretty anti info wars naturally.
And so I, you know, I put that to the side and there are a number of people that I interact
with just, you know, whether it's somebody in a in a service capacity or, you know, just
a random person.
And generally, you know, if anybody asks me, you know, sometimes lift drivers for instance,
I've been there.
They will ask me like what I do and I'll explain it.
And usually it's Alex Jones who yeah, like most of the time.
There was that one guy in Austin who was a fan.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But other than that, the masses have really not just a low level of support for Alex so
much as they have no idea who that motherfucker is.
Yeah.
And that guy in Austin sticks out in the memory because he was so unusual.
Yes.
Absolutely.
I have encountered in the wild really that has been somebody who is an info wars supporter.
I think generally it's people who have no idea and maybe would be like, oh, he's that
guy.
Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He's that guy who likes big, big Trump guy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That guy who was a January 6th or something.
Alex is not Star Lord.
No.
He is a character actor in this show.
Yeah.
He's an extra.
He's an extra.
Yeah.
He's an extra to most people.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He's the deity appointed leader to his fans.
Right.
And a fucking child with a boo boo.
Right.
Right.
To most people.
Right.
Pay attention.
Yeah.
Anyway, Alex said he was going to have a guest.
And he does.
Sure.
But it's not a guest.
Oh, no.
Well, my old friend, Greg Reese, a great researcher is in studio with us.
I saw him yesterday in the game.
My hug.
I was busy.
He was busy.
Only only talked for like a minute.
It's not a guest.
He's your employee.
He's a guy who works in info wars.
It's not a guest.
Does Alex know that?
Yes.
Alex.
Yeah.
But I mean, with the rotating cast of people, no, he knows for sure.
Because Greg Reese, um, he, Alex plays his reports all the time on the show.
Talks about how each one is the best that's ever been made.
Right.
And if you go to band.video, you'll find that his videos get significantly more traffic
than even like Owen or Harrison Smith's stuff.
So like Alex is somebody who's nothing if not motivated by traction.
True.
True.
Because his videos are pretty slickly done.
He shows competence in certain aspects.
I winced at that.
Yeah.
I did see that.
Yeah.
I wouldn't say that.
Maybe in terms of editing, like there's some competence there.
Sure.
His voiceover I find incredibly boring.
Well, uh, jarring to listen to and the stuff that he says is just stupid.
Um, like this, he has an idea.
I want to see if you can come up with some ways this idea might go bad.
I think everyone in the world is starting to wake up to that fact right now that the
Federal Reserve fiat currency system is what's responsible for all the problems in the world
right now.
Sounds right.
And people are talking about a silver and gold mines going into private business as banks
since they have the vaults already and they tie a crypto card to a gold and silver.
And then the private market, the free private market can just compete for people's trust
and serviceability and start creating a parallel banking system.
So the end of their systems here, they're trying to rope us into it.
Instead of them going to prison, they get more power.
What they want is they want to toss us an idea of some type of digital fiat currency
as if, I mean, only a fool is going to accept anything that they take after all of the death
and destruction that they've caused for decades and decades.
But that's obviously the plan.
Doesn't that look to us get 8 million in Bitcoin?
Look, this is a dumb idea.
No, no, no, you don't understand.
He just invented mining towns.
It makes perfect sense.
All right.
Here's what we do.
All right.
We go all the way to the West.
Okay.
We get a covered wagon together.
We get all buds together.
We build a little tent.
We open up our own general store around the mind and people will pay us with the gold
that they recently banned out of the river.
The only people who could really afford to run that store anyway are the people who are
on the mine.
It's so I think that's a great idea.
They should they should actually give their own currency out that they guarantee using
their money so you can only buy this stuff.
I think that's implied.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's a smart move.
This is wild.
I mean, also just logistically, I think that people who have a lot of resources right
now are going to be able to buy those mines.
Yeah.
And I think you'll end up with probably oligarchs of mind banks.
Yeah.
Who will be able to maybe set unregulated by the way.
This is that's also definitely an implied part of the system.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, no, no, no, no, no way.
No, no, no.
Absolutely not.
There's so many opportunities for abuse of this system.
It's just it's almost parody of itself.
I appreciate it when tech bros and all those stupid people invent things that we already
invented a long time ago and then they put a new name on it and you're like, oh, you're
a genius.
You know, like that kind of thing.
I really don't appreciate it whenever we do have like a history where people did the
step by step thing that you're recommending and you can go back and you can read about
how it turned out.
You can just read about it there.
It happened before.
Yeah.
And it was bad.
It was so bad.
That's why we had to not do it.
We had to stop doing it.
Why are you going like, oh, no, no, I've got an idea that bad thing we did that led to
everybody dying in the Great Depression and all that shit.
But what if we did it again?
So Greg's got another dumb thing to say.
Sure.
Big picture.
You're a smart guy.
I really respect your opinion.
Like your reports every week.
People love you.
Why are you optimistic?
Where do you think we are historically?
I think the test is clear.
I think the I think we're being offered.
It's all for an acceptance and they've been doing this for years.
They're offering us slavery.
They've actually started to offer a slavery years ago.
I think they started to make that offer right after the Revolutionary War and try to rope
us back into it.
And ultimately it's our choice.
Ultimately we don't we don't have to be slaves.
We could actually become independent, become responsible.
If they're offering you slavery, that's not really how it works.
And back at the Revolutionary War, guess what?
Some people were not offered slavery so much as they were forced into it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Generations.
These people are so stupid.
I it's just so amazing.
We're being offered slavery.
How do you get to say these things?
How is that allowed?
Man, you're working in four wars.
You know, I people are like, oh, it's shame deferred, not going to college.
I swear to God, you should be shame for not reading comprehension in fourth grade.
That's what should be happening here.
Well, I think that I think that they can read and there's some reading comprehension.
There's just like, I don't know what you're reading.
Yeah.
Maybe you're just reading shit.
Wingdings.
I think when they read a real book, it's just a bunch of, it's like, it's like what?
Bork.
Or you're just suspicious of everything you read.
And so, like, when you read a line that says X, you're like, well, maybe it's trying to
trick me into thinking X.
Yeah.
Maybe what this book is actually saying is Y.
Why is it that nobody believes in the double bluff of books?
You know, they're like, ah, they think you're tricking you, but they're actually telling
the truth.
It's a double bluff.
What about the triple bluff?
Well, you can't trust a triple bluff.
So anyway, researcher, great mind, Greg Reese.
Reason I believe that that we're going to win is because you can see that the way they've
had this thing whole planned, they had it.
They weren't expecting this much pushback.
They weren't expecting this much to the fines.
They were definitely expecting more people to take the vaccine, which tells me that.
Oh, posh swab comes out and says, today we've hired 110,000 info warriors.
They use our term.
Right.
Right.
Right.
I mean, they're, they're desperate.
Yeah.
Just going along with Alex's bullshit story about a two year old podcast that he's now
saying Klaus Schwab said, and making it all about himself, which wasn't the case unless
you identify solely with the idea of misinformation.
Yeah.
And yeah, Greg Reese, just going along to get along.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That is such a weird example of just total capture.
Yeah.
It's like, Hey, the sky is orange.
The sky is not just orange.
You bet it is.
It's green and orange.
Yeah.
Totally.
Now it's striped like the flag.
It's nuts.
It just changed.
It's so crazy.
And you're like, Oh, wow, there's just no bottom, none.
Fact capture.
Yep.
So look, these people love the individual.
They're so into individualism.
They think that you are the greatest thing and God is like working through you.
And that's why they do whatever Alex tells them to do individuality.
And also maybe some people are so dumb that we need leaders.
If you were to tell me, you know, three, four years ago that we need leadership, I might
have argued that.
But after seeing COVID and realizing that a large amount of the population is sheep-like,
we need out of respect and love for our fellow man, we do need leadership.
Well, that's right.
As leaders, we don't want to lead people.
We want them to be leaders.
But if they're going to be under the control of people, we've got to not control them,
but lead by example.
Be the good shepherd.
That's what we have to be.
We want people to be independent and lead themselves.
But if they believe things that are different to what we believe, we must for their own
good lead them as a good shepherd.
Yeah.
No, I don't understand why people don't understand that religion is great.
If people don't believe what you have to say, you torture them until they do.
It's benevolent.
Why isn't this obvious?
It's the way that God meant things to run.
The Lord gave me a message.
And to be fair, I mean, I do think that we need leadership as well, not because I think
people are too dumb to lead themselves or anything.
I think that there are other benefits that we gain through leadership, things like morale,
things like feeling connected to each other.
They're all kinds of benefits, but the way that they're looking at it has a real patronizing
view of just the public, which makes sense.
They don't care about people.
They don't think people are great.
No.
It's nonsense.
No, they don't want somebody who's a leader who's going to listen to the people who's
going to synthesize information and then ultimately is going to take responsibility for the decision
that they make.
No.
That's called leadership.
And another thing that's great in leadership is providing hope, providing a message that
people can rally behind.
Now one other form of leadership you could consider would be something along the lines
of a iron fisted dictatorship.
Now is that leadership?
It's a good shepherd.
Well, it's a shepherd of sorts.
It's an effective shepherd.
I don't think that's true.
So you like beef?
Not if it's shepherd it wrong.
Well, Alex loves beef.
Beef is actually one of the most nutritious.
I mean, it's the sacred cow.
It's a life sustaining.
What?
Do you not know what the sacred cow thing means?
Everything that's alive is only alive because it's consumed.
And a cow eats grass and is self-fulfilling to feed you beef.
The Bible, Genesis starts talking about beef.
Yeah.
I mean, it's like.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So Greg's just going along with whatever.
Whatever.
Just whatever.
So I think that Greg is trying to point to the idea that cows are sacred in Hindu culture,
which is dumb because they're specifically like they don't slaughter and eat cows because
they're considered sacred.
That's the sacred cow.
Yeah.
They aren't sacred because beef is delicious.
Because they fucking love it.
Yeah.
This is the steak of steaks.
Also, Genesis does not start by talking about beef.
Beef.
It's what's for dinner.
Say it the Lord.
It starts with God existing in a void of formless nothingness and creating the earth and light
and all that stuff.
Yeah.
It's not until Genesis 124 that land animals are created and that's after birds and quite
a bit after vegetables.
Sure.
There's no mention of beef, but humans are said to be lords over the natural world.
Interestingly, though, God does say, quote, I give you every seed bearing plant on the
face of the whole earth and every tree that has fruit with seed in it, they will be yours
for food.
Anyway, the Bible doesn't start with a passage about beef, and it's really embarrassing for
Greg to just a yes and that shit, who cares.
I mean, act capture.
The irony is that the first real discussion regarding beef ends with a murder.
That's in the next book, the next chapter.
The first big like what's beef about murder.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Seems pretty obvious from the get go.
It's also what's for dinner.
You already said that.
Yeah.
Catchphrase marketing.
Yeah.
Anyway, we get back to the sacred cow idea and Greg has the wrong idea about the sacred
cow kind of, but he actually even has a worse wrong.
Okay.
You know, I was I'm doing the report on that now and one of the interesting things that
there's a myth of like vegetarianism is sort of connected to yoga and there's a bunch of
you know, yoga so popular and there's all these vegans into into that.
But that's a whole myth because if you actually look at that that was based on the caste system.
Vegetarians were just a lower caste.
Please explain Indian culture class were given meat and the only reason the lower castes
were given vegetarian meals was so that they could save the meat for the upper class.
Exactly.
That's in the Vedic scriptures.
And that's all they're trying to do.
I'm sorry.
What did you just say?
We're all these lower peasants eating bugs and then they can fly around in jets and have
all the good stuff, you know.
So there are definitely some connections between the caste system and rates of vegetarianism
and traditional Indian culture, but what Greg is doing is oversimplifying things in a way
that is specifically designed to compare one to one with modern day info wars talking points
like how Klaus Schwab wants you to eat bugs.
Many of the lower classes in the caste system were not practicing Hindus.
So they wouldn't have been concerned with the dietary restrictions that largely stemmed
from Hindu beliefs and nonviolence.
Conversely, many of the Brahmins were actually, you know, their priests and members of the
scholarly class.
And as you might expect, they were more observant people in terms of Hinduism.
The phenomenon you see when you look at historical trends related to the caste system and vegetarianism
is actually that the higher someone is in caste, the more likely they are to be vegetarian.
It's actually the reverse of what Greg is saying, but this doesn't work for the Klaus
Schwab wants you to eat bugs thing.
So he's pretending that there's no Hindu belief in this do no harm thing.
Yeah.
And they're just trying to trick poor people into eating plants so they could save the cows
for themselves.
I do recall reading the Upanishads and thinking, man, this is all about how the rich need jets.
That's what it is.
Yeah.
That's what it is.
The argument that Greg is making is absurd, but the reality of this dynamic is actually
far more complicated than even the picture that I've described.
And I'm not doing justice to the nuances of how this plays out in tradition, the number
of present day in India.
Like it's there's a lot of Indian subcontinent has a history that is almost impossible to
unravel.
It's incredible.
It's very, very complex, but the notion that it's like, oh, they were just tricking the
poor people into eating vegetables so they could keep the cows for themselves works for
me.
Wow.
Righted on the board.
That sounds true.
It's in the Vedic scriptures.
The Vedic strip.
Come on.
You don't know it's in the Vedic scriptures.
Yeah.
So Greg.
Eddie Vada.
Greg thinks back to his time beginning it in four words.
Right.
Right.
And honestly, I think that what he does here is he isolates a real serious problem.
You know, when I first came here, you know, four years ago, I'm a very open minded, very
skeptical, suspicious, suspicious person.
And I've heard all the stories about, you know, controlled opposition, everything.
So who knows?
But what I got here, I was just basically told to try to pick a story that I think is
important and and do my best to get it right and stick to the truth.
And that was it.
And I remember asking Rob when he told me that I was like, shouldn't I show it to anyone
first to make sure that it's approved?
And he just looked at me almost with disgust and said, we don't have time for that.
You know, and that's true.
Everyone out here, we're working.
Oh my God.
We saw your work.
We chose you because we believe in you.
Oh my God.
We have no time for quality control.
Oh my God.
We have no time to check anything to see if it's full of shit.
Wow.
Wow.
That's that's that's a bad process.
Is there is there an employee handbook or can I at least train with somebody?
No, find a story.
Put it out.
Well, technically there's an employee handbook, but it's just boilerplate.
Yeah.
We just copied it.
We stole it from reliable sources.
We did control F for reliable sources and put info wars and so I would think that one
of the things that could aid info war is the most.
Actually I take that back because it would completely destroy the process.
I was going to say, you're you're you're misunderstanding their business, nothing would
get on air.
Nothing.
There was.
What are you talking about?
If someone said, hey, hold on, you want to, they would quit.
Yeah, definitely.
I mean, that's the thing that they really are.
You know, we talk about how they're lying and they don't give a shit and they're making
everything up.
But what we're really not talking about is if they did face any challenge on the way
to publishing one of those stories, they would give up and they would do a different story.
That's probably true.
And I think that they've not they're not only lie and make all this shit up.
They've also constructed a system that like aids that they've constructed a system that
is complicit and complimentary to making shit up.
No, no, it is it's it is a little bit like when you see apes put a stick in in a tree
and then ants come off it and you're like, you guys figured that out all on your own.
That's fucking amazing.
You figured out that no quality control means you get ants from your stick.
Exactly.
Yep.
So, Greg's dumb.
I believe that this is the most divine inspired job I've ever had in my life.
I've never felt name your other job so purposeful in my life.
And it's interesting because the majority of my life I was very aware that I was lacking
a sense of purpose.
And for the past four years, I feel like I've been doing God's work and it's been extremely
humbling and we believe in humanity.
So we believe you believe in humanity.
We're fighting for our survival.
We think anybody should just join us.
Yes.
Why would you not join us?
Right.
Almost everything you say.
But that's why I wouldn't join him.
Wow.
Also, I think you're full of shit about caring about humanity so I don't take much stock
in that either.
Yeah.
Yeah.
A lot of reasons not to join you, Alex.
Yeah.
A lot of talk about divine ordainment surrounding various info wars stuff on this episode that
I find real troubling.
You know what?
That thought occurs, all right?
Maybe info wars doesn't have a handbook, all right, but there is a handbook that they're
supposed to follow.
True.
And that book is the Bible.
And those motherfuckers haven't read that because the Bible is very clear on the story
isn't just stick to the truth as close as you can and we don't have time to work out
the kinks.
Well, I think they have not gotten past the beef part yet.
Yeah.
That is a good part.
Yeah.
It really sets the stage.
There's so much to get through.
Right.
Right.
We haven't even gotten it.
I mean, hey, later on, did you know that the Pope classified beaver as a fish?
What?
Yeah.
You know why?
Fridays couldn't eat fish.
Or, you know, whatever.
Genesis chapter three is all about beaver fish.
Well, it's a beaver fish.
So the devil.
What about it?
Unloyal.
Don't they get they're going to be left with the bill?
Well, that's the thing.
You know, they're that shows you how loyal the devil is because all these people, a lot
of these people, the Pelosi's and all these people, they've dedicated their lives to this
evil force.
And what do they get in return?
They're just getting put out to pasture and used one last time.
They're having a great time work.
There's no loyalty.
All these people.
He has a hundred million dollars and all there is all there is is loyalty.
They don't even get it.
No.
Where's David Knight?
Where's Millie Weaver?
There's any of your old all there is is loyal and they were disloyal, so they must be tossed
into the sun.
I see.
Yeah.
You see, the loyalty only flows one way, right?
Loyalty does not go both ways.
Loyalty is not a two way street, my friend.
I would think I think that Alex is not a good example of loyalty, loyalty, yeah, loyalty.
Think about all the names that he can't get away.
You know, Jacari calls him up every weekend.
Yeah.
I'm so loyal.
I want to try and help you find a new gig, Jacari.
Uh-huh.
Yeah.
Very loyal.
I mean, he couldn't even remember Jason Burmese.
Yeah.
Like on the stand or when he's talking about his early career, his early broadcasting.
Metaphorically speaking, gun to his head.
He could not remember Burmese.
Yeah.
Sad.
Disloyal.
Some might say.
Yeah.
Pretty nice in comparison, honestly.
Sure.
He gave Pelosi a hundred million dollars, Jacari didn't get shit.
So Alex is, is, I think some of this divine ordained business is going to his head a little
bit.
Oh, you think?
Yeah.
This is really fucked up.
You know, just we're, we're really at the, at the peak of all this right now.
And the way I see it, total victory is going to be to where info wars can exit appropriately
to the point where we're no longer needed and we can bow out.
That's my vision.
You are.
That's my vision.
Yeah.
Company man.
So, uh, at this point is when we need the most support so that, because the, the, the
they see our defeat as, as the defeat of the populist movement.
And so it's very symbolic.
And so that's how I see victory as to where, and I actually see us pushing all the way
and being destroyed publicly as Christ like, I compare myself to Christ, but it repeats.
I'm actually know that.
It repeats.
But we got, what repeats Christ does.
Right to the end.
Exactly.
Because that will, like the heads of the Hydra, you know, once they, if they can cut us off,
it's just going to create a, a legion of info warriors pushing the truth because you can't
stop the truth.
Yeah.
Um, the it repeats is fucked up.
It repeats.
I don't listen.
I'm not comparing myself to Christ.
I'm just saying that the cycle of Christness repeats now.
I would suggest that the it repeats, uh, undoes whatever sentiment you're trying to convey
with.
I don't think of myself like Christ.
You think?
Yes.
You think that that clause then, uh, uh, negates the previous part of the sentence?
Now I don't think of myself the same as Jesus, but yeah, now we're talking that, but really
changes things.
So Alex views himself as somebody who will be sacrificed and for the sins of the left
or something, I guess, and through his sacrifice will bring about, uh, the cleansing, uh, that
the, the Patriots need to rise or something.
You know, this is really, really unsettling shit.
If that's the case, just fucking get it over with, man, sacrifice yourself, jump into a
volcano.
No, because I don't think he actually thinks this.
He wants the audience to think he looks at things this way because it's so noble and
selfless.
Right.
In reality, what Greg Reese is talking about is far more accurate.
It's like what we need to do is find a way to land this plane without a crash.
And so you all need to give us a bunch of money so Alex can have millions of dollars
that he can disappear with or something.
That's the, that's the great ending for this story.
That's really more what they, I'm sure they all want.
The ending for this story is a sequel to that McAfee documentary.
You know, Alex is on the lamb.
That's where this goes.
Well, the McAfee documentary, uh, well, I mean, his life as a documentary didn't end
well.
I guess Alex thinks he got Epstein.
Yeah.
I don't fucking know.
Anyway, uh, Alex, take some more calls with Greg Reese and this call is awesome.
Greg's comment about the lesions of the info lawyers.
I'm thinking that maybe that would be something that does a response to a class swabs, a hundred
thousand info, uh, checkers, so to speak.
And that it might also be a way to add a little money to the, to the checking account
that info wars is if you had just a real not subscriber, just a basic membership, 10
bucks, uh, get it for that.
We get a little decal that I can proudly put in a little short class on our ethics.
No, that's a great idea.
That's a great idea, brother.
That is a great idea because by, I think, I think people are more inclined to take action
if they invest in it.
This is just going back to what he did originally.
Yeah.
He used to have memberships.
This is, this is going full circle back to what he did when it was much smaller.
Yep.
Yep.
He took sponsors when he could bring his two toxic to have sponsors, uh, that went away.
He sold gold with his weirdo friend until he lost his license to sell precious metals.
Right.
Sold a bunch of supplements.
Maybe now that's too expensive.
Alex, I've invented this new idea.
It's called lowering your overhead and taking donations.
This is brand new.
It's going to revolutionize the industry.
Pretty sweet.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Get a smaller studio and then, oh no.
So Alex likes this idea.
Of course he does, but he also has to make sure that the scholar knows that he had it
first.
That's right.
I thought of this this morning.
It's, it's crazy.
You called.
It's from the past.
Cover most of it.
I was thinking we should launch an army to counter swab.
We've already launched it.
We should make it very clear now.
What?
The basic directives are code of conduct, the camera misrepresent us and then launch
it.
Greg, help me do it.
Yeah.
You're, you're lovely Larry.
We love you.
Lovely Larry.
Here's the thing.
Okay.
20 years ago, we created this army.
We called him info warriors and then two years ago, somebody did a podcast and then
yesterday I found out about it.
So they called themselves 110,000 into info warriors.
So we need to announce that we're 110.
You already were.
Also Jason Bermas didn't do a show called info warrior.
No.
Um, yeah.
Uh, this is dumb, but I do love Alex's impulse to be like, I thought it was this morning.
It is me.
Not only, not only am I glad you called in, I had this idea this morning.
So when, if I do it, I'm not stealing it from you.
It is, it is even dumber because it's all, it's like, Oh, no, have you, it's not a really
new idea.
Have you thought about this thing that's got four wheels and you put a motor on it and
propels you forward?
What?
Yeah.
I mean, it's a car.
You should really look into cars.
Okay.
Well, I gotta tell you, this is a great idea and I love it.
Yeah.
I thought of this this morning.
Oh shit.
You already thought of the car.
Yeah.
So I'm going to do that.
Damn it.
You're a genius.
So Alex says something really weird to discuss and this is just grandiosity.
It's pretty remarkable.
Well, let me just go ahead and say this now and I don't make this announcement to try
to act tough or powerful or any of this and in fact, it's so big, I can't talk about it.
I'm not, I'm not being dramatic there.
I'm not ready to talk about this yet because it's such a big deal.
It's actually quite frightening.
Everybody thought the cube movement was secretly in touch with army intelligence and the resistance
movement and all the rest of that.
Most the Pentagon leadership are globalist.
Most our militaries control the grassroots of great people, but I can tell you that over
the years and here currently, I don't get orders from these people.
In fact, I was always listened to for over 20 years, but now it's been recognized and
I'm the leader and I don't say that to act powerful.
It's actually great responsibility.
It's not recognized.
I'm the leader and so whatever's left of the CIA and the military actually looks for us
for leadership and have asked us to be the leader and I don't say that again to act powerful
or to say this is a big deal.
The enemy already knows it.
That's why Klaus Schwab was doing all this, but God did this.
You did this.
Klaus Schwab didn't do this and that podcast was from two years ago, but look, there is
a really fucked up delusions of grandeur going on here.
Like obviously, whether or not Alex believes it, one thing, what he's expressing to his
audience is fucked up enough on its own.
The divinely ordained leadership nonsense that's going on throughout this show is fucked
up.
Alex is saying that he's been selected by the good people within the CIA and the FBI
to be the leader of whatever their insurgent nonsense is.
This is, I mean, I don't know how else to put it.
He's basically appointed himself a revolutionary general or something.
Can I ask you a question?
Was it last week that Dave and Gareth were on?
It was one week ago.
Yeah, exactly from today.
Okay.
Now, I recall last week we learned that Glenn Beck was the FBI and in fact was the entire
United States government.
That's true, but he got overthrown at some point.
We have to assume.
We have to assume that.
So that was treated as a bad thing and yet now in this time period, Alex is the FBI in
the CIA.
No, no, no, no.
No, there are good people within the FBI and CIA and Alex is in charge of them.
Right?
Okay.
That's different.
Everybody is always in charge of everything.
Well, here's the fun part.
What?
It's all imaginary.
That is the fun part.
That is the only part that is fun.
I guess the consequences really are just in what effect it has on his audience.
Right.
What kind of emboldening or radicalizing effect it could have on people like, Alex is the,
he is essentially George Washington.
Yeah.
I mean, I think everybody, I think the infowars should just start making themselves FBI badges.
Why not?
Yeah.
They're in the CIA.
I mean, it would be kind of like just a new Bill Cooper thing with his deputize everybody
as an FBI agent, his citizen core of researchers or whatever it is, investigate in.
Yes.
Arms.
Yeah.
So we have one last clip here and it's Greg swearing allegiance to Alex as the leader.
Sure.
Great.
No, that's awesome.
Trump is good.
We need leadership.
We need a president.
I see you more as a leader for this movement than Trump.
Well, that actually scares me to think that divorce is the best we got.
I know.
Oh my God.
It's, it's, it's, um, actually said, they said, I said, I'm not the leader.
They said, you're all we got.
That's how bad this is.
Folks, we're right back with your phone calls on her before it stay with us.
Oh, this is why you can't have a show without continuity.
Okay.
Well, this is not okay.
Cause I know we're in the future.
This is even in the past.
This is the 19th.
Yeah.
The last time we talked, he wasn't the head of the CIA.
It didn't come up.
It should come up.
No.
That should be a daily come up.
I mean, honestly, the last episode seemed like he was pretty excited about Elon Musk
tweeting something.
I understand that.
This is an issue for me.
Yeah.
He's the head of the CIA or something.
Part of the CIA, part of the real CIA.
People are pledging fealty to him.
And then the next day he's like, this is the most important tweet Elon Musk has ever
had.
It's a great tweet.
It's a great tweet.
He wanted to run CERN.
I got a message from God.
Also Elon Musk's tweet.
I got a message from God and from the good people in the FBI and CIA.
I am more named by both to be the leader of this Patriot movement because Trump won't
go against vaccines or something.
So if Alex is the leader of all this, I mean, he gets to choose the president.
You would assume.
I mean, if he's now the leader of the deep state, the deep state is who has chosen the
stuff.
It's not the leader of the deep state.
It seems like he's the leader of the deep state.
The deep state or the other people in the FBI and CIA.
Well, yeah, but I'm assuming that the other people in the FBI and the CIA will call them
the deep state.
You can't.
You can call each other the deep state, but you're still both the deep state.
Are you double bluffing again?
I've always unless I'm triple bluffing.
Oh, no.
Yeah.
So this is dumb.
Yeah.
But scary.
Yeah.
And we'll see where this ends up going.
It's dumb and scary places.
I assume.
I would have to.
I would have to bet.
It would be that.
But it's really, really fun to know that there are those people in the world like Alex
Lee Moyer, Glenn Greenwald, Glenn Beck.
Yeah.
I mean, Glenn Beck is sporting Alex now, but Joe Rogan put a big stamp.
You know, approval on that.
Yeah.
Yep.
This is what you got.
This is a picture that was missing from that documentary.
I'll tell you what, it should have really been way more about how Alex was ordained
by God at a young age or also whenever he eats something delicious to be reupped in
his ordainment.
That's right.
You know, like he was.
He was a Satanist for a little while.
I mean, you get baptized again when you're another evangelical Christian, you do the
double.
Your vows.
You do a double.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But until then, we have a website.
Indeed we do.
It's KnowledgeRite.com.
We are also on Twitter.
We are on Twitter.
It's at knowledge underscore fight.
Yep.
We'll be back.
But until then, I'm Neo.
I'm Leo.
I'm DZX Clark.
I'm Wilford snibble snabble of the Gribble Pibble.
And now here comes the sex robot, 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.