Knowledge Fight - #762: December 31, 2022

Episode Date: January 2, 2023

Today, Dan and Jordan check in on the final episode of Infowars in 2022. In this installment, Alex tries to pull in some donations, explains how to "turn the Satan dial," and possibly reveals his big ...predictions for 2023.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 I'm sick of them posing as if they're the good guys saying we are the bad guys knowledge fight. Dan and George knowledge fight. I need money. Andy and Kansas. Andy and Kansas. Stop it. Andy and Kansas.
Starting point is 00:00:44 Andy and Kansas. Andy and Kansas. It's time to pray. Andy and Kansas you're on the air thanks for holding us. Hello Alex and Mr. Sting collar. I'm a huge fan. I love your work. Knowledge fight.
Starting point is 00:00:53 No no no no. Knowledge fight.com. Yeah. I love you. Hey! I love you. Hey everybody. Welcome back to Knowledge Fight.
Starting point is 00:01:01 I'm Dan. I'm Jordan. We're good little dudes. Like to sit around, worship at the altar of Selene and talk a little bit about Alex Jones. Oh indeed we are Dan. Jordan. Dan.
Starting point is 00:01:10 Jordan. Great question for you buddy. What's up? What's your bright spot this new year? Oh boy. My first bright spot of the year. Oh. Jordan today it is, I finally, I've been resistant to join CBB world, the comedy bang bang, sort
Starting point is 00:01:27 of subscription thing. Sure. Sure. Sure. Because I, I find, I resent the idea of it. Yeah. I resent all of the ear wolf business models. Totally.
Starting point is 00:01:36 And everything sort of funneling people into this, this, this, the service and then, you know, they had the howl and then it went into Stitcher and then it just seems like get your shit together. Oh no. What the fuck is going on with all this, this like, hey what's under this cup? Oh another subscription that you should buy. I mean, the problem is it's not surprising that these creative people are bad businessmen. The problem is they're trying to be businessmen in the first place.
Starting point is 00:02:01 What are you guys doing? I, I don't know. I'm sure there's information that I am not privy to and there's some sort of an explanation. I don't know what it is, but anyway, I'm deeply resentful. Of course. Um, but I finally signed up and the reason was because I didn't realize that there was a show, uh, that, uh, Tim Baltz does, uh, uh, his character Randy snuts. Okay.
Starting point is 00:02:22 And he has a show called Hey Randy and it's the best. Okay. It's, it's so good. I don't know what it is. First of all, Tim Baltz is just amazing. Sure. He's, uh, I know, I think I've talked about, uh, how when I first moved to Chicago every Sunday night, me and my buddy, Dan Scharr would go to the family tree houseboat accident
Starting point is 00:02:41 at IO, uh, Tim Baltz and a couple other dudes, uh, their improv show. Yeah. Um, and he's just, he's brilliant and so funny. And, uh, this character, there's just something about it. This dirt bag guy, it's just that it's very relatable and his instincts are just so goddamn sharp. And the rest of the people who were on the show too, or just, it's, of course, I just very few things are like really laugh out loud kind of things.
Starting point is 00:03:07 Yeah. Yeah. They get like gut guttural. Don't I know it. And man, it's just the best, literally my entire career is trying to make you laugh and it's not easy. I've gotten, I've done what we've done seven hundred and eighty. I've got four or five good one hundred eighty was the misnumbering that I got four or five
Starting point is 00:03:24 good ones in there. I'm pretty proud of those. Yeah. Yeah. I think that's a good, bad to gather. Honestly. I mean, you shouldn't, you shouldn't feel bad. It's a low number and compare it to other folks.
Starting point is 00:03:34 It's on a curve. Um, but yeah. Anyway. Hey, Randy. Great, great. Fantastic. The last one came out in like November and I really hope that they're going to make more of them because there's only nine and they're all fantastic.
Starting point is 00:03:48 Oh, no. Need to make more. You had to subscribe for nine episodes. Get to work, man. Well, I'm trying to find some other stuff that might be worthwhile on there. There's more of the bananas for bonanza. Of course. Of course.
Starting point is 00:04:00 Yeah. Whenever they took that behind the paywall, I was, I was weeping, weeping uncontrollably. Absolutely. Well, there's more of it there. Of course. So anyway, what's your bright spot? My bright spot is I have absolutely torn through Ken lose the grace of Kings books. Uh, fan fucking tastic.
Starting point is 00:04:18 Cannot recommend them enough. What he does is he takes the hundred schools period of Chinese philosophy between, you know, 400 and 100 BCE somewhere around there and kind of anthropomorphizes it into a fantasy version of China around that time period. And instead of Confucianism running rough shot over everybody else, uh, you know, because they have all the weapons, uh, uh, in this, in this situation, uh, Taoism actually kind of has a greater sway, uh, along with, uh, I mean, it's fantastic. I, okay.
Starting point is 00:04:51 Sorry. I get really excited. I thought you were going to finish a thought. I know. I know. And that's why I was sort of not responding. I was like, oh, and then I got confused. You were doing great.
Starting point is 00:05:01 There was not an end to the thought. You were doing great. You were doing great. Let me, let me condense it a lot better. Okay. Uh, uh, there is a historian in the 20th century. Yes. Uh, for my money, the greatest historian of the 20th century, Alex Jones, uh, Dr.
Starting point is 00:05:13 Feng Yulan. Okay. He wrote, uh, the history of Chinese philosophy. And when I say the, I mean, like literally, he is the most important, like he's, he did it. He synthesized the history of Eastern philosophy and the history of Western philosophy. Put the knife down. I believe you.
Starting point is 00:05:33 Anyways, I've never read anybody who's all, I've never met anybody or talked to anybody who's also read all of Dr. Feng Yulan and reading this, this quadrilogy, the first time I've ever met somebody who understands it. It's amazing. It's amazing. I can, I can, uh, I can see why the, you have this, uh, this excitement. It's very lonely. It's very lonely whenever you care so hard about something.
Starting point is 00:05:55 Well, here's the good news. Yes. Uh, maybe somebody who's out there listening, uh, might connect with that and maybe you'll make a new friend. Oh, I'm excited about your weird niche interest. It's not niche. It's literally the fundamental. I would never, honestly, I would never argue philosophy with anybody if I didn't have that
Starting point is 00:06:10 book open and ready. Because it's everything, the hundred schools period is all of it. It's all of it. I, I mean, well, anyways, what I'm saying is anytime somebody says philosophy and a white person said it, I, I discount it immediately. For me, that's too many schools. That's, uh, well, that's also kind of why they got it all, you know, they had more schools. Sure.
Starting point is 00:06:33 You know, Greece only had a few schools. True. Yeah. Yeah. They had the 23 schools. Yeah. Period. Um, so.
Starting point is 00:06:41 Yes. So Jordan, today we have an episode. Oh, it's the new year. Okay. Hey, we're recording this on January 1st. Okay. 2023. All right.
Starting point is 00:06:52 We need to. Nope. Is that our new bit for 2023? Nope. No, we're in trouble. Um, but, uh, I decided, Hey, what do, what do we do? We got to send off 2022, you know, it's, uh, the, even though we are in 2023 as we're recording this, we're still emotionally closing up the book that was 2022.
Starting point is 00:07:12 There's no closure on it yet. No. No. And thankfully Alex Jones on Saturday, December 31st, don't tell me put out an episode final broadcast of the year. Okay. And so I said, Hey, final broadcast of the year seems like a perfect way to close the book.
Starting point is 00:07:27 We got to do exactly. So today we're going to be discussing Alex is Saturday emergency last broadcast of 2022. Okay. And we will see. I mean, as we go through this, I'll allow you to determine whether or not this rises to the level of needing an emergency broadcast. Okay. Maybe it does.
Starting point is 00:07:44 Maybe it doesn't. We'll see how much money he makes at the end of it will determine whether or not it was successful. Right. If he doesn't make a ton of money, it's not for lack of trying. That's kind of what I'm thinking. That's kind of what I'm thinking. He is swinging.
Starting point is 00:07:57 Um, anyway, we'll get down to business on this, but before we do, let's take a little moment to say hello to some new wonks. Oh, that's a great idea. So first, the magic salami spoiled his birthday surprise by becoming a policy wonk. Thank you so much. You are now a policy wonk. I'm a policy wonk. Thank you very much.
Starting point is 00:08:13 Thank you. Next. Ultra kills most insignificant fuck. Thank you so much. You are now a policy wonk. I'm a policy wonk. Thank you very much. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:08:21 Next. Richard from ports laid asks, am I alone in noticing that the red alert theme song samples wrong impression by Natalie and Brulia? Thank you so much. You are now a policy wonk. I'm a policy wonk. Thank you very much. This has come up many times.
Starting point is 00:08:33 It has come up a lot. It might as well address it on the show itself. The string portion of that is in the Natalie and Brulia song. It is also the theme song from Alex's end game documentary. And the reason is because it is a sample string cut that is in like editing software. And that is where they all ended up getting it from. So it's like one of those pre built in string. Let's bring it back down to you and I both know why.
Starting point is 00:09:07 Little bit lazy. Little bit easy. But it also sounds good in the Natalie and Brulia song. Totally. Totally. It sounds fine in end game. I'm not mad at it. No.
Starting point is 00:09:16 So next. A happy birthday from Jules to Waffles. Thank you so much. You are now a policy wonk. I'm a policy wonk. Thank you very much. A little late on that one or early. Come on.
Starting point is 00:09:24 And beefhouse. Thank you so much. You are now a policy wonk. I'm a policy wonk. Thank you very much. If it's if it's just beefhouse you end with beefhouse evergreen evergreen. And we got a technocrat in the mixture. So thank you so much to quoting past and present technocrat technocrat drops got Carissa and
Starting point is 00:09:41 Marcus to the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro. Thank you so much. You are now a technocrat. I'm a policy wonk. I have risen above my enemies. I might quit tomorrow actually. I'm just going to take a little break now a little break for me. And then we're going to come back.
Starting point is 00:10:02 And I'm going to start the show over. But I'm the devil. I got to be taken out of here. And all this. Fuck you. Fuck you. I got plenty of words for you. But at the end of the day, fuck you in your new world order and fuck the horse you rode
Starting point is 00:10:16 in on and all your shit. Maybe today should be my last broadcast. Maybe I'll just be gone a month maybe five years. Maybe I'll walk you out of here tomorrow and you never see me again. That's really what I want to do. I never want to come back here again. I apologize to the crew and the listeners yesterday that I was legitimately having breakdowns on air.
Starting point is 00:10:39 I'll be better tomorrow. He's not really. But also that was fortuitous. The name in that drop because Carissa is also the name of Randy snuts is on again off again girlfriend. I'm just I'm just blown away. Here's what I needed to start 2023 Dan. The idea of someone standing at the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro screaming Jar Jar Binks
Starting point is 00:11:05 has a Caribbean black accent is that's what we've made an impact right made an impact through the canyons echo the words loser little titty baby. Yes. Yep. So I'd like to apologize in advance for this out of context. This is this is mostly just in case Dan Arke wants to put this in a cell. Okay. Okay.
Starting point is 00:11:29 It's party time. I'm going to get in your guts. No. No. Not good. No. No. No.
Starting point is 00:11:37 Nope. But you can easily see where that fits it too. Yeah. That's going to be the track. Yeah. So here we go. We're going to start off the episode with Alex's emergency Saturday is day off. Of course.
Starting point is 00:11:52 So it's such important stuff going on here we are on the final broadcast the final emergency transmission of this insanely dangerous brutal but also important year for awakening 2022. Thank you for joining us on this New Year's Eve emergency transmission. The quickenings here the political cultural spiritual economic planets are aligning everybody from the Pope has died Barbara Walters has died Nazi Pope died I want to do a someone of a year in review the giant stories and earth changing events that have happened versus the distractionary things that are unfolding as well and I want to look at the globalist rollout of their climate lockdowns that are now being initiated how important
Starting point is 00:12:57 it is wherever you are in the world to fight back against those and not submit to it. Not sure that the former Pope and Barbara Walters dying requires an emergency episode but you know we all rationalize our actions in our own ways. He was the first pope to step down for several hundred years nobody knew if he was ever going to die or not you don't know he's Pope could be a loophole exactly considering the Walters was 93 and Pope Benedict was 95 this seems like too very predictable and unsurprising public figure desk but it's interesting to hear Alex so interested in talking about the big important news and complaining about all the distractions.
Starting point is 00:13:34 Generally speaking I completely agree there are way too many distractions in the world and particularly in the media but where we split paths is that I can say with absolute certainty that at least 75% of Alex's content is meaningless distractions that he's just reporting based on a tweet or a meme or something almost nothing he covers means anything and more often than not he's just making shit up. I would challenge anyone who loves Alex's show and thinks his content means anything to go back and listen to his episodes from earlier in this year and marvel at how many things were emergencies that mysteriously resolved themselves and were never mentioned
Starting point is 00:14:10 again. Alex's business model relies on constant distraction because if he doesn't keep the audience hyper stimulated there is a serious risk that they'll start questioning some of the basic details of the stories he covers and realize that he's full of shit. And there aren't any climate lockdowns but that is probably important branding to look out for in the future from the folks who are looking for a new place to put that anti-COVID lockdown energy. Yeah totally you gotta if you can't keep the COVID you gotta keep the lockdown.
Starting point is 00:14:38 Right. It makes sense. And I imagine here's the way my brain sort of like sees what's going to happen is like it's going to be 130 in Arizona and people are going to be like don't go outside. Oh we're climate lockdown again. If you don't go outside then you're letting the government tell you that your skin can burn. I predict that that'll be like maybe part of the rationalization or where the rubber meets
Starting point is 00:15:01 the road. Yeah that is the problem with climate change is that like Barbara Walters in the Pope dying you can be like yeah there's going to be 140 degree temperatures in Arizona soon. There's a certain inevitability. Yep. And so we don't want to sit on the distractions here we're going to talk about the big stories. Of course. But what are the big stories.
Starting point is 00:15:20 Good question. But to try to chronicle this year is a dizzying prospect. What are the biggest issues of the year? It would cost you $1.5 billion to really. Well it's admitted that there is a globally coordinated UN controlled mass censorship program surveilling and suppressing the people of this planet to bring in incredible draconian authoritarian tyranny. So that could be the top story of the year.
Starting point is 00:15:53 I mean I would assume that is the top story of the year. That seems to take primacy. Uh huh. Well it's the first thing you mentioned. Sure. Um I don't know if this is accurate. Is anybody doing that? Do you mind your name?
Starting point is 00:16:07 I mean you know honestly is anybody doing that even if it wasn't the UN. I don't know that could be the top story. Sure. He's not saying it is. He's sort of spitballing. Right. This reminded me of the lead up to who is the most important person in the world. There's a lot of that.
Starting point is 00:16:23 There was a little bit of that vibe. It doesn't go that far but he does like is this the top story of the year. Are we are we going to hear me in 45 minutes going what is the top story? I thought we were going to go that direction but it's just a little bit of it's just a little bit of time. Little tease. Yeah yeah. There's a giant awakening that is cascading and exploding into bigger and bigger finales.
Starting point is 00:16:49 What? Is that the biggest story? Is the biggest story that in the last 12 months the back has been broken to the biomedical tyranny and that it's come out that they knowingly created COVID-19 and rolled out a poison shot and now it's confirmed upwards of 20 million people dead from the injections? Where is it Russia on February 24th invading Ukraine after eight years of the West proxy war enticing Putin to take that dangerous plunge while being on the precipice of thermonuclear war on the ladder of the Rand corporation's escalation chart?
Starting point is 00:17:39 I'm not particularly into year-end lists trying to quantify what the biggest story of the year was. I find that stuff to be a distraction but if Alex wants to play that game he's welcome to. Sure. And by the way the thing that I think you could say he lands on is that there's an awakening going on is the top story. Yeah that sounds about right.
Starting point is 00:17:56 Who right? Sure. Also none of the stuff he's saying is true and perhaps more importantly these are instances of stories that Alex reported very differently at different points of the year. COVID is basically an evergreen narrative for him where every day some new blog post or sub-stack article finally proves all his conspiracies correct and vindicates him forever. It's a fascinating improv game where he finds new ways to be proven right every day forcing his audience to pretend he hadn't already been proven right yesterday.
Starting point is 00:18:26 New and different ways to be proven right about different things simultaneously. We found the 40th smoking gun. Oh my god. Amazing. So many fucking guns. And then with Russia Alex has had to modify his story about that invasion repeatedly over the course of the year because he kept being wrong. Before the invasion Alex was certain that it wasn't going to happen and at most Putin
Starting point is 00:18:47 was going to annex the Donbass which was actually Russia anyway so he had the right to do that. Sure. Totally cool. Sure. No big deal. Then the war started and Alex has gotten solid intel that Zelensky was a Putin double agent and that Russia had paid off all the Ukrainian generals who would just submit and the war would be over in a day or two.
Starting point is 00:19:05 Yeah. That one was close. Don and Alex was forced to come up with rationalizations for why he wasn't wrong and why Putin was right to invade. He bounced around to a bunch of different storylines but the most popular definitely seems to be the notion that Putin got suckered into invading by the West. In order to distract listeners from questioning how wrong Alex has been about this at every step, he constantly talks about how nuclear war is just right around the corner so he
Starting point is 00:19:29 can heighten things to a ridiculous level and be able to fall back on something like you want to split hairs when nukes are right around the corner? It's just a silly game. I'm excited for a year in review type experience here though. It'll be fun to hear Alex lie about everything he's done and said this year. Unfortunately, we don't get that. It's kind of insane. It's a little bit like if Pitchfork ran all of their album reviews, but they just made
Starting point is 00:19:56 up the albums. They didn't actually exist and then in their year-end list of the top 30 albums of the year, they just made up 30 completely different albums of like anagrams of the previous ones. Or that's about what is happening. Or even like in addition to that, you'd have like an album that they reviewed harshly at the beginning of the year and then everyone loved it. Everyone else loved it. So they edited it upwards.
Starting point is 00:20:22 Holy shit. We loved it too. I don't know what asshole was saying. It sucked. That review didn't happen. I didn't write that. Never heard of that one. Some severe, severe things here to reflect upon at the end of the year.
Starting point is 00:20:34 The border is gone. That's one of them. Wait, already? It's the year where they admittedly just got rid of the border completely. It's the year Fauci finally after 45 years slinked away. It's one way of putting it. It's been a really insane year. But we're not really about focusing most of our attention on the past.
Starting point is 00:21:01 Study the past. We cover the past. We cover how the lines of history intersect together and bring us to where we are currently. But more importantly, infowars is known for looking into the future and predicting what is going to come in the days and weeks and months and years ahead and how we are not just pawns on the chess board that don't have any will, but we can decide to be major players in the destiny of humanity and God's great plan for us and we'll simply accept the mission.
Starting point is 00:21:41 We're about to find out what the secret of 2017 is, my man. Oh, God. We're going to get to it. Finally. Is it Megan Kelly? It is. Shit. It's about looking backwards.
Starting point is 00:21:51 It's about predicting the future. Our breaking news story is three years old, however, I will admit that we have just broken a story published three years ago in the New York Times. So there is that. Yeah. There's this is this is silly, but yes, it's a fun way to look at yourself and I understand why Alex is like sort of self perception would be would be this. Yeah, it's more way more fun.
Starting point is 00:22:14 Yeah. Yeah. Basically, this as the preamble, the beginning of the show talking about what is the top story of the year? Maybe it's this. Maybe it's that. Could be. The border is gone.
Starting point is 00:22:26 Fauci's slunk off or retire. Sure. Sure. There's a few different ways of putting the same thing, but really what ends up taking up the most of the beginning of the show is just long talk about how you got to give Alex money, but we need to now look at the nuts and bolts of their programs that have gone from beta into operational. So we're going to do that first after I mentioned some of what's coming up after that.
Starting point is 00:22:56 And then we're going to continue on here today, but please remember this is a very special thing that was built by God's providence and inspiration and by millions and millions of people spreading the word and telling the truth and supporting this broadcast. And it is reviled and hated by the enemies of the people, by the corporate press, by the corrupt law firms, by the corrupt governments, by the out of control, power, hungry corporations and intelligence agencies. They know and one little podcast out of Chicago that in full wars has been the most important nexus point or focal point of light in the gathering darkness.
Starting point is 00:23:43 What? And as the darkness intensifies, our light will also stand out even stronger. What? And that's why they want that light snuffed out immediately. And that's why you have to let it burn into your brain, burn into your psyche, burn into your guts. You should have weight. Chills going up your spine, realizing how important you are.
Starting point is 00:24:10 In just the last 48 hours, info wars has had the largest brute force attack in our history. It was 200 plus million yesterday morning. The brute force attacks went up to two billion request. There's only eight million people on the planet and you would look at the attack and say, well, it's a primitive attack, but, but it's not. It's millions of computers hijacked. We know what about thousands of operatives. It's 2023 now.
Starting point is 00:24:46 Everyone knows what a bot network is to then flood info wars with two. That was as of this morning. Please billion finish request a sentence. And of course they weren't targeting info wars.com. They were targeting info wars store.com. Those bastards info wars store.com. Those are why you're there. The site is awesome.
Starting point is 00:25:19 Your purchase is completely safe. They haven't gotten into the website. They're not trying to get it. Why would you think that we have maximum security on it? Some of the biggest firms in the world, they're just flooding it so that no matter how big the servers or how big the cloud, it gets overwhelmed by two billion request. We're talking millions of requests every few minutes. Don't you get it?
Starting point is 00:25:45 Don't you get it? They can't handle the idea that you would give Alex money, you know, they can't handle the idea that people would support Alex and his bright light shining in the darkness. And so they do these massive attacks on the store, not on the actual website on the store. They got to take out the store. And the only way to fight back against that go to the store and buy more stuff and two billion. This DDoS attack, something that sophisticated, it's got to be a state actor.
Starting point is 00:26:18 Probably the U.S. Like I don't, I have no idea why China, why anyone would think that the info war store is safe with their information. This year we've had a million different massive corporations hacked and like millions of passwords and information released all over the place. Why would info wars have better security than any of them? I mean, look, I think you judge some of that stuff by like surrounding context, you know, like you see in fours, you're like, this is a tight ship.
Starting point is 00:26:52 This is the kind of place that, you know, crosses their T's dots, their eyes, they're on, they're on top of shit. If there's one thing I think about when I think info horse, I think detail and thoroughness. I don't think I would trust them with a dummy address. No, absolutely. No, I'd be worried. Yeah. I'd be worried they'd find some way to get my real address just by looking at it.
Starting point is 00:27:12 If I opened a completely clean new email address, I don't think I would trust them with none of my information attached to it. But yeah, so they had this DDoS attack, but it's resolved now so you can go and give Alex money. You can go buy his shit. Now. Okay. Go to the store.
Starting point is 00:27:30 I don't know. He does this a lot. I mean, like maybe there was a DDoS attack of some sort. I'm not sure about the two billion number. That seems excessive. Yeah. But yeah, I mean, he, he has this a bit. I mean, I think he just has bad, bad security, you know, that sounds about right.
Starting point is 00:27:46 Bad cloud flare protection. I mean, I'm fine with that. That makes sense. So there's some sales going on, of course. One of them is something that I thought was sold out like six months ago. Okay. Think about how important that is that the enemies of freedom are desperate to block you from going to infowarstore.com and getting great products that boost your immune system.
Starting point is 00:28:08 And make you healthier and wealthier and why is your store so important for you and your family and everybody to get them. And while you're there, going to signed or unsigned copy of mine, world that is the Death Star plans of the globalist. By the way, we have a fundraiser going where you can buy the regular book for 20 something bucks hard, hardcover and support the broadcast. If you really want to support us, we're selling signed copies for $99 just like NPR gets billed millions of taxpayer money a year, but they still do fundraisers and drives.
Starting point is 00:28:42 We don't get taxpayer money or any globalist money. We have you supporting us. And so they'll sell a coffee cup for 50 bucks or a t-shirt for 100 bucks or a ball cap for 50 bucks. And of course, you know, the ball cap didn't cost that, you know, the coffee mug didn't cost that. It's a, it's a token, you know, a sign that you were supportive at a key juncture and a piece of history.
Starting point is 00:29:01 Look, I'm the most critical person of Alex in the world and of his business practices. And I have zero problem with him selling autographed books at a markup. I have no idea why he feels the need to be defensive about this. Maybe it's because there's a ridiculous level of price increase, but he's entitled to put a price on his time. And if he wants to say that it's 70 bucks for him to sign a book, that's his right to do so. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:29:26 I have no problem with that. I mean, I look at, I have a, I have a paperback of Douglas Adams, the long dark tea time of the soul. And I have a hardcover signed edition of the long dark tea time with the soul. I'll tell you what, I think one of them is worth more money. Sure. And if they were being sold, you would expect one of them to cost. Totally.
Starting point is 00:29:44 Incidentally, back when that book came out, Alex signed thousands of copies and wouldn't stop talking about how difficult it was and how they were all sold out. That was supposed to be a limited availability thing like his dumb silver coins, but I guess either they weren't sold out or there isn't a finite number of these signed books after all. Just trying to exploit the audience's fear of missing out on the opportunity to own a piece of history by creating artificial scarcity among this shit. Just sign the books and sell them, you asshole.
Starting point is 00:30:12 You know, the, the thing about the stakes for him is that all of these sales pitches have the like depth of gravitas, well, it's an emergency broadcast. Yeah. Exactly. Of your, of your St. Crispin's Day speech, but it's no, it's nobody's like, Oh, and they're laying in their beds. Won't they wish they had a signed copy of the info? You know, it's like, this is not, this is not good.
Starting point is 00:30:36 It's not good. No, it's, it's not. And Alex has this habit of undercutting some of these sales pitches because he's saying like you got to get this signed copy of the book, but why would you do that? Once you hear this, we're going to have signed books for two more weeks and then there will no longer be any more signed books of the great reset and the war for the world, except for one limited edition that I'm going to put out sometime in the future where I'm going to do a piece of original Alex Jones art and sign it and put it inside each book.
Starting point is 00:31:12 I don't know when I'm going to get around to that. I want two people requested that. So there will be a limited number sometime in the future, a few thousand copies that will be signed with art. And then that's it. No more signed copies of the great reset and the war of the world. So if you want a signed copy, it's one of your last chances. If you're thinking about buying a signed copy, like you'd obviously rather have the copy
Starting point is 00:31:35 with some art in it. Yeah, right. Alex does that ass that everyone drew on their folders. That's the, that's the art that he puts in there. Um, yeah, I feel like that's, that's an anti sales pitch. Like all wait, if I'm going to buy a book, I'll wait until you buy this thing now, but it'd be better if you bought it later for different. Cool.
Starting point is 00:31:53 Why not buy it now and also buy it later, but actually the one that's more valuable is the one you buy later. I, uh, got this paint by numbers kid of Hitler's dogs, you know, all of his dog painting. So I'm going to put one of those and I'm going to sign it Alex Jones in each one of my books. Wait, that doesn't sound right. Valuable. So Alex, uh, you know, eventually he's going to put some art in these books.
Starting point is 00:32:13 Sure. Eventually that's going to happen, but he doesn't get, you know, he has these projects that he doesn't get done. It happens. Um, and did this clip. He discusses another project that he's going to get done, which I'm going to say he's never going to get done. This is your last chance to get it until that final offering comes out six months from now,
Starting point is 00:32:28 or God knows when I'm so busy on our, all our projects are six months to year behind. We have three or four big projects that are beyond nine months pregnant that will be getting done very, very soon. Um, I'm not complaining. This is a total war. I'm always putting out other fires and attacks where they distract me away from my main work and the information out. And so I apologize to listeners that some of the projects we had planned already be launched
Starting point is 00:32:52 six, seven, eight months ago have not gotten launched reset. And, uh, that includes people that are founding member, uh, bought coins from 1776 coin.com. You're going to be getting all sorts of free deals and perks and you've already gotten your emails with 50% off specials that nobody else gets. And there's going to be a lot of other stuff. I'm going to leave it at that that you're going to be getting exclusively for free because you are a 1776 founding member, a coin purchaser. So you want to support the broadcast, the fourth coin that really wasn't a founding
Starting point is 00:33:21 member coin. It was a one off. We did at the Teddy Roosevelt man, the arena, there's a couple of thousands of those coins left. We're going to give founding member status to everybody that leaves their email there as well, uh, that, uh, wants to be that information and material. I mean, I'll just go ahead and tell you, I've been planning this for over a year. That doesn't sound true.
Starting point is 00:33:38 Uh, and I am going to start some commercial free podcast, uh, that are on a subscription site. I'm sorry. I'm going to be doing documentaries and special events and a bunch of other stuff. It's all built. It's all ready. I just have not gone and started producing the media yet and the information, but a lot of really cool stuff.
Starting point is 00:33:57 Now that's going to be done and everybody that's a founding member is just going to be sent a free lifetime passcode to it like that. This isn't going to work. Nope. Why make a subscription site? Like the problem isn't like, man, Alex doesn't put out enough content. Yeah. That is not the problem.
Starting point is 00:34:14 That's not a problem that anybody has. He can't fill his shows. Nope. His shows are boring. His shit. He doesn't have enough content. No. Why is he putting out more non content?
Starting point is 00:34:22 It's mostly rambling. It's all like, ah, the good stuff will behind this paywall furthermore, furthermore. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, there's no ad breaks because the whole thing is an ad. It's all an ad. The whole show is an ad. It's all one big ad.
Starting point is 00:34:34 All right. And a commercial free podcast that's behind a paywall is like, if you put commercials in the thing that was behind a paywall, you're an asshole. Yeah, exactly. It better be commercial free if it's behind some kind of subscription service, but make no mistake. He's still going to have commercials for his shit. Oh, of course.
Starting point is 00:34:50 In the stuff that's behind a paywall. Yeah. Yeah. Naturally. This is, this is silly. I mean, look, we have the, the constant talk of, you know, there's going to be this, this show of all callers that's going to be coming out. This is just, I don't know, infrastructures there.
Starting point is 00:35:10 Great. Maybe. That doesn't sound like it. Talent isn't there. No. And this is a step backwards. Honestly, like he used to have the prison planet TV thing that was the subscription service that like had a lot of the video content in it.
Starting point is 00:35:26 And what have you, this is a move back to his old model that clearly wasn't like enough or didn't work in a way that this excessive sales shit does. Right. Right. And that's missing after diminishing returns, even if he follows through with it, which I don't think you will. No, I mean, if he follows through with it, the only other smart thing to do is wind everything else down.
Starting point is 00:35:51 You know, that's what you would have to do in this situation because he's not going to come back. But that's antithetical to the way that he presents himself is who wants to get all the information out. Can't wind up. If you want to get the information out and you want to like have a awakening among the masses, then your shit shouldn't be behind a paywall, right? Because then you're selecting for who has access to that information.
Starting point is 00:36:14 And that's just, I don't know, with enough money and a lack of intelligence enough to spend it. Yeah. I feel, I feel like this is, this is bad for him from a like sort of subtle messaging perspective. True. And it's also bad from a financial perspective because no one is interested in that. And if the people who bought the founding member coins are going to get free subscriptions
Starting point is 00:36:36 to this anyway, those are the people who would have bought the subscription. So there's nothing here. You've already cut your entire listener based out to size. Yeah. And not just that, but I mean, everybody can see with the way that this is going, how desperate sounding it is like, Hey, if you were a 1776 founding member, like here's the thing about founding member stuff. If you were a founding member and then they're like, and also now we're going to give a founding
Starting point is 00:37:03 member status to all of these other people. They're like, okay, so it doesn't really mean anything. Does it? I don't feel that special about the thing that I did that was special. The thing supposed to make me feel special. You have now removed the one thing that it does. Yeah. This member's only jacket.
Starting point is 00:37:20 Yeah. It's not very members only anymore. Is it? Yeah. The flaps are stupid. Yeah. Yeah. It does kind of, it's a little disrespectful to the people that you are who founded.
Starting point is 00:37:32 Yeah. And it, it sucks because it is clearly like the last ditch effort they have at creativity towards finding new revenue streams, you know, I mean, this year has seen a bit of that. I mean, like a reset wars was an interesting swing. They kept, they, they keep swinging for more money. They just don't, they never knew why they were successful in the first place. So they don't know why any of they, their ideas aren't working now. But here's the ultimate irony is that like prison, planet TV, when Alex was doing that
Starting point is 00:38:02 was successful. Yeah. That if he could have kept like a bit of homeostasis, if he hadn't been a greedy asshole and he hadn't tried to like constantly chase money and grow this shit to a point where his overhead is ridiculous. Yep. Like if he hadn't done that, if he didn't lust for like being a celebrity and being really rich, right, he would have been shockingly successful, able to do all of the information
Starting point is 00:38:31 based stuff that he ever wanted to do, if he would have just kept it there. Right. I mean, I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm going to say this and I'm not going to go, I feel like it's not a new story. The man with talent who lusted beyond his means, I think we've got that one on lockdown. Yeah. Well, you know, you'd think considering the sheer volume of stories about just this same thing.
Starting point is 00:39:02 We wouldn't be living through another example of it. Short hand. Yeah. Exactly. Yes. It's so old. Yeah. So anyway, Alex has taken a bath on, uh, on, uh, the website and everything he's who he's
Starting point is 00:39:17 losing money. Uh-oh. But I do humbly ask all the viewers and listeners to really understand that we're having a fundraiser right now because we're having about a 230, $250,000 underage each month, the last six months. That's not good. And I put in all my savings, everything, all my money's gone. I have like, I think I'm $50,000 in my private bank account now.
Starting point is 00:39:41 I don't have any extra bank accounts. I don't have trust or anything. Um, there's, you have a trust in your name. I mean, I have a trust in public things like that. My children, I put like $200,000 in their accounts. They were kids and they've now grown up and they've gotten that money. Uh, so I'm just telling you, there's, there's nothing there. Uh, and I understand you'd be happy if I was wealthy and had a bunch of stuff and that'd
Starting point is 00:40:05 be fine with you. I get it. But I'm just telling you, when I tell you that I'm on E on my children, which I don't like to do, but on my children and before God, I have put 98% of my resources. Other than my home into this fight and that's it. I'm totally committed. And what's so frustrating is we're right there. I mean, 200 and something thousand dollars with an audience as big.
Starting point is 00:40:37 It's not hard each month. And people just say, Hey, I really need vitamin D three. Oh my God. I mean, look, $200,000 a month or whatever in the, in the underage is bad. That's not good. Because I would assume that's factoring in all of the sales and everything that he's bringing in. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:40:55 His growth, his net is under. Yeah. In theory, that's what he's saying. That is what he's saying. And that's bad. Yeah. That is bad. I mean, I, I do appreciate whenever he, he throws in that one little detail as
Starting point is 00:41:07 though you were already arguing, you know, you're like, I put 98% of my stuff, except my house, of course, sell his house. Exactly. You said you sold your house. You said, you said you had put your house. I sold one of my seven houses. Like of all the things you think I'm going to argue with on, on that lie, it's going to be me being like, aha, you haven't sold your house.
Starting point is 00:41:30 He's absolutely lying about all of this, but I do like the idea that he's putting it on God and on his kids, that he's put 98% of his resources. Now let's, let's find a way that this lie works. Let's, let's, my emotional resources. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, like resources is a very specific word in this particular name, my private bank account, very specific words you're using here. I don't believe for a second he has $50,000 in his bank close. Good God.
Starting point is 00:41:58 Ridiculous. How dare you? Um, also, come on. If you're at no point in time has ever, but has anybody ever sworn on God and their children without the intent to lie about it? Yeah. Yeah. You just say the truth.
Starting point is 00:42:12 If it's true, it's typically performative. When you're lying, yes, that's the whole point of it. Generally when people whip stuff like that out. So look, give him money. Okay. Give this guy money. No, it's not the Democrats. It's not the deep state that are going to decide whether we're on air or not.
Starting point is 00:42:31 It's you, you hold info wars in the palm of your hand. You decide whether we're going to stay on air or whether we're not going to stay on air. So I know a lot of you were supporting and I thank you and I appreciate you. But all these people have been on the fence over the years or maybe you ordered something a long time ago and liked it or whatever, but, you know, just, just you're too busy and well, you already know about the new world order. And so maybe you think info wars has served its purpose.
Starting point is 00:42:57 And if that's the case, then, then, then, then, then, then, I guess we will, uh, not be on the air in the future because maybe I am passé. Maybe I've been proven right so much now that it's time to hang up. Yeah, that's the problem as far as, but that's the problem. We have new people tuning in all the time that are waking up at record levels. We have millions of people every week that are new listeners, millions who, who are finally getting this is going on and the blinders are coming off. And I know we're becoming more influential in the halls of political,
Starting point is 00:43:28 cultural thought than we've ever been. If I were a listener who had tuned in for this, I think I would have turned it off by now, I would conceivably be looking for a year end type of show or there's some information being covered, but it's just an excessive, protracted financial whining session. Yeah. Even if you believe in Alex's narratives, this is just unacceptable as content. It's all good and well to beg your audience for money, but at a certain point
Starting point is 00:43:52 when that's all you're doing for the first half hour of your two hour year end show, that's too much. It's okay to have ads that help fund the message, but when the message is basically just the ads, what value do you offer an audience? If I were a listener, I would probably be recognizing that this is actually a very fitting year end show for Alex to be doing. There's nothing unique or new about the idea of him spending way too much time complaining about his heroic financial battle.
Starting point is 00:44:20 And I would be asking myself, if I ever saw that changing, is there conceivably a time in the future when Alex isn't going to be doing this, when he's shifted into a place where the money is fine and he can focus on actual information? Obviously, if you're honest with yourself, you have to recognize that until he flames out, this is how things are going to be. Yep. He's going to be an angry, passive-aggressive panhandler pretending to be fighting imaginary super villains.
Starting point is 00:44:46 When you look back on his career, you have to ask yourself why he even needs money. He did his most influential work long before he had the supplement line and every major event that he's been involved in past that point has been a disaster. In the before time, he had things like Bohemian Grove, 9-11, Waco, and being the true voice of the tea party. I was the real tea party. I'm here with Ron Paul, Ron Paul Revolution. Oh man.
Starting point is 00:45:12 While he's been rich, he's got Trump, Pizza Gate, defaming the head of Chabani, the Sandy Hook Lies and Trials, his divorce, Jade Helm. It's all been embarrassing. He really shouldn't have money. I mean, it is, it is unfortunate, but the thing that makes the most sense to me is like, this is a behind-the-music VH1 from the 80s, you know? Like this is, this is like... He can't go back to his roots though.
Starting point is 00:45:34 No, no, no. I mean, like he's, he's death leopard behind the music and then we're going to get to the end and it's like, what was it all for, man? During their meteoric rise, it was all fun and games. And then it got dark. Well, yeah, I mean, I think, I think if you take a step back and look at like the, the sort of trajectory of his career, he, he is like a band that had like better chops before they made the big time.
Starting point is 00:46:02 Once they made the big time. He's Kings of Leon. I don't know what their early stuff was like. It was pretty good. Okay. It was pretty good. Was the, they did the sex on fire song. They were the ones who did the sex on fire.
Starting point is 00:46:13 Their first album was like six years before that. It was pretty good. Sex on fire is the metaphorical, um, J. Hell. They were like a slightly more, uh, like add a little bit of black rebel motorcycle club to the strokes and that would be their first album. Okay. That makes sense to you.
Starting point is 00:46:32 Nope. Oh, it's damn. I remember the strokes. There we go. That, uh, album was unescapable when I was in college. It did seem to be that way. So, uh, we jump away from this nonsense, super long, uh, ad shit. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:46:48 Um, and we get into a little bit of discussion of Alex's family. Um, and, uh, we get a little story about his dad and how he was the smartest boy in Texas. Sure. And the story is a little different than other times he's told in the past. Print up flyers, go to the mall, put them on the windshields of cars. This is how we're going to win because I know this is the most far flyers out there.
Starting point is 00:47:11 We're having the biggest effect. And the things I talk about, I know we're real and I know we're the globalist plan. They tried to recruit my father to join the eugenics cult when he was top of his class in high school. He was his, my grandmother thought he was being, they told him it was NASA. He's part of that Eisenhower whiz kid program. Sure.
Starting point is 00:47:33 And I think the stuff when my dad was 14, they shipped a 18 wheeler with a giant ruby laser to his house in East Texas. Do you have the top test scores? And that's what Eisenhower was doing. Then it was JFK, it was all over and he, and he, and he, and he built the laser. And they said, that's it. Really? They didn't even give him the plans of the laser.
Starting point is 00:47:54 Really? It was a bunch of pieces. Are you sure you didn't just see real genius? I'm starting to kill him from Houston and, and looked at the laser and operations and they hired him. And then he thought he was in a program for NASA. He was not in the program for NASA. And by the time he got into college, he got out of it.
Starting point is 00:48:15 So this isn't how Alex has told the story about his dad's recruitment in the past. Every time I've heard him tell the story before, it's been that his dad was the smartest boy in Texas. So Dr. Irwin Spear tried to recruit him into the extermination project. Spear was a professor of biology and botany at UT Austin. So it doesn't quite match up with this laser story. And his dad ended up becoming a dentist, which seems like a waste of such
Starting point is 00:48:37 amazing laser talent. Uh, I mean, it really does sound eerily similar to real genius. Right. But it is fun. I mean, this is how, I guess if I were a liar, I would try to like shift stuff about like my being in the gifted program. Sure. That was them trying to recruit me into the farm system and triple E.
Starting point is 00:48:57 It wasn't just like, Oh, by a vagary of chance, I had a reading level a little bit higher than it should have been. Or maybe I was behaviorally slightly weird, but in a non disruptive way. Yeah. I would not be recruited. Maybe this guy'd be better if we just let him learn too much about the nights at the round table instead of what we're teaching in class. Cool.
Starting point is 00:49:20 He could be a problem if we bore him. Yeah. Yeah. But I would, I would, I would recontextualize that as like the beginning of the globalist plot to try and bring me in. See, that's one thing in those David Jones deposition. Oh, I would love to just grill him on his personal history. Like Alex says, you did this.
Starting point is 00:49:38 What did you do? Were you the smartest boy in Texas? Were you the smartest? First question. Were you the smartest boy? So Alex, uh, his dad made a laser. And then because the, uh, super, the principle was, was mean, they shut, they changed the trajectory of the laser to hit his house where a lot
Starting point is 00:49:57 of popcorn was waiting and then exploded and then Eisenhower showed up exactly. You need a jobs, huh? So that happened with his dad and that is uncle. Um, this is on his mom's side, I believe this is the Hammond uncle. Buckley's dad, uh, was apparently a human trafficker and my uncle was an Iran contra told me about it. It was hard, right? Since you know why he got out, the US government was
Starting point is 00:50:23 trafficking children out of central America through orphanages. He was one of the guys down there in charge of a bunch of stuff. I go further and then these fools online, when I tell these stories on air, they go, well, they go, Jones is one of them because some of his family worked for the system. Dr. Robert Malone is a hero. He invented him RNA. He's been exposing it before the shots even began.
Starting point is 00:50:52 People go, Oh, he can't be trusted. He's one of them or Dr. Huff that ran eco health alliance as their vice president was their head of medical operations. He went public and exposed everything and is probably going to send Fauci to prison. Nope. People say, Oh, we don't trust him.
Starting point is 00:51:07 He was in special operations and he was in the military and he had a top secret security clearance and yeah, and he's going public. You judge a tree by its fruits, but none of that even matters. You are now staring down the barrel of this thing and you're going to have to decide whether you're going to speak out and fight back. And there's no better place to speak out and fight back than supporting info wars and info wars store.com. Amazing.
Starting point is 00:51:33 So go there and don't let these people win. Yeah. Wow. Pretty good. Just. Also, your uncle, if you was in charge of stuff, you know, he was, he was just thinking that the more I think about his personal mythology of his family, the more it's like, wait, every story you tell
Starting point is 00:51:54 about your family is at best morally dubious. Your family fought for the Confederacy on average. Your family is a destructive force for evil in this world. Yeah. Your uncle was involved in a wrong contra and was trafficking humans. Your dad built a laser that I assume they used for nefarious purposes. And apparently was a so, so dentist, which has its own after, right, right, right. Own negative unintended consequences is very much like if his moral compass is
Starting point is 00:52:21 shaped by what he thinks are war criminals, then yeah, I mean, I imagine this would be like, well, the only way I can justify my family being filled with murderers, child traffickers and awful people as if there's an even worse globalist empire out there. Sure. That is a possibility. In that case, there is no good in the universe. There's none and that's zero, zero, but also just think about the people
Starting point is 00:52:43 he associates with or the long time people who have been like in his world, like folks like Steve Pachennick or Larry Nichols. These are horrible people. Monsters, absolute. But then heroes within the info war and Alex's audience, which is sort of like how Alex looks at his family. Apparently it's topsy turvy. Bunch of bad folks, but you got to donate.
Starting point is 00:53:09 You got to buy Alex's shit. I, you know, you know, you know, it's going to wind up at the info war store. Every all roads, but sometimes the journey is just fun. Sometimes you got to sit back and enjoy the way you get there. Well, I think that time was definitely one of the less predictable. That's true trips to the store. You could have, you could be forgiven for thinking that that trip to the store was going to wind up at a different place.
Starting point is 00:53:31 Yeah. So look, um, there's a high cost to the info war. Sure. Um, there have been a lot of soldiers who have been lost. Info wars is just a focal point. Barbara Walters resistance. Hope to know a lot of people that made major sacrifices. You don't know about to bring you this information.
Starting point is 00:53:49 I'm going to leave it at that. I'm talking about people have died to bring you this information. Many dolphins died. People close to me have died to bring you this information. I've paid an extremely heavy price. Bring this information, but I've done it because God's watching. And I know we can beat these people and the children are counting on us to do this. God's watching.
Starting point is 00:54:12 This is a test. And if you don't do what's right, and if you don't stand against this, you got God to deal with. Well, who's who died? If you don't turn off your targeting computer and trust the force, those fucking missiles aren't going anywhere near that death star who died. And like to get this. Jack Toto porkins did.
Starting point is 00:54:33 Does Alex know him? Sorry. So look, this is all nonsense, but we've had a bit of meandering. Sure. Um, in the beginning of this, this episode, because this is what Alex is doing, so he chooses to end the year, but gets down to business and like we get what we were really looking for, which is the 2023 predictions. Yes, finally coming this year.
Starting point is 00:54:59 Yes, you are here to tell us the future. Tomorrow's news today. I'm taking this year and wrap up shit. This is why you show up. Absolutely. I tried to write notes last night this morning of what I predict is going to happen next year. And it's such a big subject and it's so hardcore and it is so nightmarish.
Starting point is 00:55:24 It's such a big subject that I don't even feel worthy. Oh God, not one of these again. Not one of these again this year. Ah, I don't want to make a mistake. This is an emergency broadcast at your fill of time. Really, really, really. What are we doing? Myself in a dark room for about six, seven hours.
Starting point is 00:55:43 Okay. With a little math light on and I really need to look at all the information and then try to put the pieces together and look into the future. Cause I've already got a really good idea of the stuff they're going to pull. Tell us that then. That zone, which I haven't been able to get into the last few weeks. I get in this zone where it's like all the, all the pieces, the equations there that I could see exactly what they're going to do.
Starting point is 00:56:09 And then the different projects they've got and then how we can stop them with critical information. I guess we're not getting those predictions. Yeah, I doubt that. Cause Alex has got to go into dark room for six hours. Strongly doubt we're going to get Alex in a dark room. I've got to go trip balls in a room by myself so I can see the future. I got to go pretend I'm developing photographs.
Starting point is 00:56:30 I'll never take right. Right. We've got a map light on map light. Oh my God. Yeah. I do love your reaction there because it is, it's like, oh God, this again, whatever it says, it's so nightmarish. I'm not even worthy to deliver this code for, I got nothing.
Starting point is 00:56:49 I got nothing. I'm going to fill some time. It's, it's also code for there's every reason why I should have something. Totally should. There's, there's an expectation that I would have this prepared. Here's what you're expecting me from me and I would give it to you, but I don't have it. So let me tell you about how hard I tried to get it. And I'm being modest.
Starting point is 00:57:11 I'm being responsible by, by saying, I can't cover this right now. I am but a mortal vessel for this, this information that is so important. It's because it's supernatural. If I could be supernatural, I would have been able to achieve it. However, it's a goal that is only achievable by the supernatural. Right. So I'm going to go lock myself in a room. That's what I got to do. It doesn't get more supernatural than that.
Starting point is 00:57:34 So failing to get to these predictions, at least we can cover the news. So can we? I mean, look, it's a little bit of a second place. Consolation prize now. Well, let me do this. Let me move on from that now into the news. But when I tell you that we are in your hands and that it's your decision, whether we stay on air or not, that's the truth.
Starting point is 00:57:59 And I'm asking you to really think about the fact, is there really a question of whether or not you're going to support the broadcast? I mean, really? You want to give up to these people because that's what it is. I guess we're not getting to the news. Man, we are pushing a little bit too hard here. Yeah, this is a little pushy. If I were on the fence, this sales pitch is making me want to stay
Starting point is 00:58:21 away from that fence. Yeah. Yeah. It's a he's going to try and get you in a time share. Really? The end of this really you're not going to give to me. What? What? And do you know God to answer exactly?
Starting point is 00:58:33 Yeah, boy. Oh, great. So anyway, we're not going to get to the news. Instead, we're going to get fucking so weird. This show gets weird. That's how the energy works. Your brain is a giant electrochemical transceiver. All right.
Starting point is 00:58:48 Sees and transmits. And let me tell you, you can you can dial your brain to any channel you want right now with my free will. I can dial to the Satan channel in two seconds. I can go into that bathroom in there and look for about two seconds and decide to let something else jump right into me in the driver's seat. And absolutely tear people's arms out of their socks. That that that thing could could could could give me all sorts of evil
Starting point is 00:59:19 inclination and understanding, but only how to hurt people. And so when you look at the New World Order in Bill Gates and people like Fauci, let me tell you, folks, there is a system of anti God, anti human inside that body that's running that body. And that's a biological Android with one mission. And that is to humiliate you and cut you off from God before they kill you. Reminder, people you disagree with are demons. It is not just a disagreement.
Starting point is 00:59:50 That's all this is, is people turning the dial. And how do you turn the dial to Satanism? You kill people. You hurt my less children. How do you turn the dial to Satanism? Breaks their DNA. They've got the first and more than a hundred studies that this M RNA with a spike protein goes into the cells for generations
Starting point is 01:00:10 and has passed on to the children and causes mutations. They are turning people into mutants. Dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun, dun. Now, don't think God didn't put a little something in us that will deal with that. What? What? No weapon formed against us. He'll prosper. What?
Starting point is 01:00:30 But it is electrochemical and transmission. So we need to turn the dial to the Holy Spirit, the big broadcast. And obviously, if you've been all the other way, you're not going to want to turn the dial. It's not going to feel too good to turn the dial towards God. What? But if you don't want to be cut off from the creator of the universe forever and be with these things who have free will and decided to be these things,
Starting point is 01:00:59 then you better take that dial and you better turn it to God and you better than a sledgehammer and break that dial off where you can't even turn the damn dial. And I finally got to that point in the last few years where I should not even turn on the second dial. Wow, what progress he's making this progress. You know, when I was when I was little, when I was like nine or 10, the pastor at our church, he had me, he had me hooked. I thought he was, I thought he was very smart because he was really well read and
Starting point is 01:01:28 he could quote all the stuff, right, you know, do the whole thing. And then I went to the youth group for the first time and the youth group was trying to do the exact same thing, but because he sucked at it, he accidentally revealed all the bullshit, right? That feels so much like a youth group speech of like, listen, you're not ready for the pulpit, buddy. You got to stay in the gym with a bunch of kids around you playing the guitar. I know all of your friends are telling you that hyperventilating a bunch is really
Starting point is 01:01:55 cool, but then a devil will come in. Exactly. Oh, oh, whoa, you got me. Exactly. Oh, oh, whoa, you got me. So there's three points in that, uh, that clip that are that play together that are really weird. And one is Alex saying at the end that he is no longer able to tap into that devil dial. That one's weird, which is contradictory to the beginning part where he said he could stare at
Starting point is 01:02:19 himself in the mirror and turn that on me wanted. That's contradicted by him saying that, uh, in order to turn the devil dial, you need to kill people or abuse children. Exactly. Apparently you can just look at yourself in the mirror. Well, you should have tried looking at yourself in the mirror before you killed that child. Right. Seems unnecessary. Either that or Alex is revealing that he has killed a bunch of people and that is why at any time he wants, he could turn it. Exactly. You know,
Starting point is 01:02:41 he's already turned the devil dial shirt. He can do whatever he wants. He's a daywalker. I mean, again, the more he talks about how he's morally righteous, the less it sounds like he understands what morality is. Yeah. I don't think he does it. No, I don't think so either. Um, also I think that Alex said that like God has a thing that helps with the mutants or whatever. I think he said that in order to be like, uh, Hey, you know, otherwise the answer is go kill. Right. Right. Right.
Starting point is 01:03:09 Anybody who's been vaccinated, you gotta kill him. Right. Right. You know, that kind of thing. Yeah. It's a little bit of a precarious, his language. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And so the, like God has this answer or whatever is the sort of back door that you can get through. Don't hurt anybody. Right. There's a self-destruct button God put in there on his own. You can just hate them forever and give me money, or you can talk to them and convince them to turn off their mutation through the Holy spirit, whatever, turn that dial, turn the dial. Uh-huh. Oh my God.
Starting point is 01:03:37 What a great metaphor. So we got some more talk about dials. Uh, this metaphor is pretty, pretty big in Alex's head today. Okay. And I finally got to that point in the last few years where I cannot even turn on the Satan dial. I've not even tried. So then your dial is broken mode. I think anybody experienced it knows what I'm talking about. Which makes you. I don't even think I've got that switch anymore. And that's a good thing. It's like rear view mirror. It came and see it anymore.
Starting point is 01:04:06 Oh, bye-bye Satan. Get behind me. Not even in accordance with what you believe. Get behind me. I got a mission. I'm going someplace. I'm on a path. I'm on a trajectory. I want to get in line with the Holy spirit and then move to the future. I want to be teleported to the next dimension. Oh, yes. I was like, Oh, you want that here? Have that. And I'm right there right now. I just, oh, wow.
Starting point is 01:04:36 Feel the presence of God right now. Unbelievable. Oh, speechless in the face of God here. I have you come to me. Yeah, I just see, I just turned the dial to see my dial is not turned all the way to God. The more I stand up against evil, the more I go through persecution, the more I could turn the dial and then it becomes a good thing. The more I'm attacked, the more I'm lied about, the dial keeps turning further and further, further. I keep getting stronger. Sure, my body looks weaker,
Starting point is 01:05:12 but it's just a vessel and it's sign of its vigor and its pain is a symbol of the strength. All right. I got a lot of year end review stuff. I don't know if I thought about what's coming next year. Very. It's got to be done. It's got to be done.
Starting point is 01:05:38 I can't procrastinate on this. Let's do this. Should this be on air? The prison grids here. OK. So let's play these clips back to back. I played part of this one yesterday, but I want to get to the rest of it today, because it was so important.
Starting point is 01:05:54 It's Sky News out of Australia. With Ronan Dean, seven minutes long, it's the best summation of what we're dealing with. And then. Oh, my God. First, I want to air. A.J. explains genocide planned in five minutes from about a year ago. About. And then I want to play. The clip from Sky.
Starting point is 01:06:25 And then I want to play. Clip eight. Is this live and. Then later, I'll play Clip 10. Maybe you shouldn't have like no commercial broadcasts. If you're going to have production meetings. Yeah, I'm. During as opposed to do it.
Starting point is 01:06:43 They could have had a very brief conversation about this prior to starting a dumb show. Have a meeting before the show starts. That would be something I had a thought. Is there a Marvel hero that like gets stronger when you hit them? Probably. There's got to be. I don't know the characters well enough, but there's got to be some super probably a villain that seems like a villain.
Starting point is 01:07:04 No, I think one of Black Panther's powers is that if you hit his suit, it absorbs the energy and then he can later channel it back. That seems more like a suit thing. It is a suit thing. That's not like the power. That's not really the power. No, it's powerful. There's there's the guy who can travel through time.
Starting point is 01:07:22 Who if you shoot him with lasers, he absorbs the lasers and then he has a gun cable, maybe something like that. Who would be bad against him? Who Alex's dad? That's true. He would be bad. He's not good at lasers. Well, I mean, he's good at lasers.
Starting point is 01:07:33 Yeah. Thereby, neutralizing his abilities. I just I that's all I could think about when he's talking about how like all these people, they they shit on me and it makes me stronger and God's dial. Shut up with the fucking dial. All I could keep thinking about was like at the end of this speech, I'm waiting for them, somebody to be like, OK, Alex, I don't think you can share at these a meetings anymore.
Starting point is 01:07:56 Yeah. Yeah. Listen, we'd like to give it to everybody, but Alex, Alex, Jay, is it? OK, I don't think you you can come back. But maybe for the next few weeks, don't share. Yeah. Bill W. Doesn't want to be friends anymore. Exactly. Your acquaintances.
Starting point is 01:08:15 Boy, so Alex, I don't know why Ted Bundy is on the mind. Why wouldn't he be, Dan? Yeah, there's lots of stories, you know, and it comes out in the court. All the details of Ted Bundy, the famous serial killer that would drive around in his yellow Volkswagen because it looked non-threatening. And he'd see an 18 year old woman coming out of the mall after work and he'd say, hey, we're a nice suit. Hey, let's go get a coffee and have dinner.
Starting point is 01:08:43 What's your name? I think you're really nice. Oh, I'm a medical student. Why don't we go over over over here to McDonald's? And then do we need to anthropomorphize this story? Lock the car doors, put a gun to their head and say, put these handcuffs on. Now, he finally got caught because one woman did run. But the point is, is that all the rest of them did what he said. And then he took them to a farmhouse in a basement and put electrical tape on them
Starting point is 01:09:15 and tortured them and raped them for days until they were used up. And as soon as they weren't begging and pleading and crying and he wasn't getting demonic power out of their out of the horror, as soon as their eyes went dead, he'd go ahead and strangle them. He bite big, bloody chunks out of them. You know what? I ain't getting in the yellow Volkswagen and I ain't putting your handcuffs on. And metaphorically, I'm going to bite your nose off, Ted.
Starting point is 01:09:45 You're not going to win. We're not in here with you. You're in here with us. Understand? No, metaphorically, New World Order. I'm going to pull your teeth out with pliers and I'm going to gouge your eyeballs out. What? Stand, then I'm going to stomp your guts out like that.
Starting point is 01:10:11 Good. Like hurting kids. I like hurting you. You stand, I mean, good. So let's get serious, people. No, no, no. Murder them with the truth. Murder their credibility.
Starting point is 01:10:27 Assault them with the data. Destroy them and then they will rot in prison. You're so close, so close to getting our hands around their political necks. That mass murdering serial killer, Fauci, is a hundred times more evil than Ted Bundy. Look at his eyes. Look at his actions. He loves killing children. Well, I mean, there's a, you know, this is a grotesque and in shape,
Starting point is 01:10:57 but like there's something that I really think about, you know, like his, his show is called info wars, you know, like, and there's this idea of like, there's a war of information and, you know, so he has these violent ways of talking about like information naturally, but like you hear stuff like this and you take in the like the way he like does his show and conveys things and tell stories. You really get the sense that he's more into the war aspect of it than the information. Yeah. Like the information is just kind of an excuse for him to like have these
Starting point is 01:11:29 disgusting fantasies about murdering his enemies. Like that's, I'm going to put my hands around your political throat. Like there's no informational relationship with this. It's just miring in disgusting fantasies. I think that's what he really gets out of it. And I think mostly emotionally what the audience connects with too. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, it is, it is kind of emblematic of that type of relationship that
Starting point is 01:11:54 toxic toxic masculinity has to the present in so far as it cannot express itself the way it used to with, you know, just indifference and impunity. So toxic masculinity now has to tie itself to some sort of imagined justification. So the war is all that was ever interesting. It's just that after the war had to be combined with info, fuck it, we'll do the info war too, if we have to, you know, but this isn't like the way that the information war felt in like our 2003 episodes necessarily. True. True.
Starting point is 01:12:28 It's not spending long periods of time having a J.O. fantasy about murdering Fauci. Yeah, that one's weird. Yeah. But this is pretty common on his show now. Yeah. I mean, his brain is also deteriorated quite a bit. Maybe that's another effect of those supplements. It does seem that those two should go hand in hand. Much like I don't trust them with their private information, my private
Starting point is 01:12:53 information based on surrounding context, I would not take his supplements based on his changing behavior. I think this guy screaming about how everyone who disagrees with me a demon is probably someone who should give me something that I put into my body without asking questions. Yeah, he might need less X too. Yeah. Yeah. Anyway, he goes on yelling about how he wants to kill Fabio. Sure. Sure.
Starting point is 01:13:16 He's powerful. He's in charge. He's going to kill you because he's God. A miserable demonic maggot of hell. Look at that man. If you have any discernment, if you have any spirit of God in you, you know that is Diablo Satan, the old serpent. Dr. Fauci. Right there. That's what I'm looking at.
Starting point is 01:13:44 That's an accomplished psychopath, though, that's been doing it for 45 years and gotten away with it and thinks he's God. He looks very tired. He knows not to open the eyes up with the satanic look of the Ted Bundy. No, no, no, he just gives you that look of I am a psychotic and I have killed millions and I'm going to kill millions more. And you're not going to stop me. Your children are mine. I'm going to murder them slowly.
Starting point is 01:14:14 I'm going to snake a ventilator down your grandma and I'll let you see her. While we chill her while we ship in covid patients to the vector and will murder logic right in front of you. Let's go to the new world order lockdown prison city reports when we back. So this is a good clip to use as a little reminder that Alex is basically an idiot who can't even do his job anymore. He spent the first half hour of this show begging for money and complaining about how if you don't give him money, you'll have God to answer to.
Starting point is 01:14:45 Then he spent the next half hour yelling about completely insane nonsense about tuning your brain to God or Satan frequencies and then rambling grotesque fantasies about torturing and killing his imaginary enemies. After that, he throws it to reports produced by other people. This highlights perfectly what Alex is good for. He's a really effective con man in terms of sucking money out of people he's already convinced to enter his revenue stream. And he's better than most at improvising violence fantasies.
Starting point is 01:15:14 He doesn't have the shame that most people have, which would stop them from descending into these disgusting diatribes about what they want to metaphorically do to their enemies. Most people would find that embarrassing, but Alex has cultivated a persona where he gets away with pretending that that's a mark of his passion. Sure. Neither of these things rely on any work. No preparation is required to peel off improvised murder fantasies.
Starting point is 01:15:38 And Alex basically has a working script for begging at this point. So he could do that more or less in his sleep. Anything that takes work is antithetical to his present day way of doing business because Alex really doesn't give a shit about this stuff passed where he can get out of it. He cares about the performance of trying and the performance of caring so deeply. But at the end of the day, it's crystal clear that he would rather spend his time off air doing anything else other than working on making a good show.
Starting point is 01:16:05 Yeah, yeah, yeah, because this sucks. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I mean, I think the problem is maybe he used to care about the performance more. You know, he used to care about performing to the best of his abilities, maybe. But now it seems like the performance itself is garbage, too. It is, you know, like he doesn't even, you know, like he cares over the top. Yeah. And it's it's unbelievable, transparent. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:16:33 I feel like he used to be a better actor, at least there. There was some plausible way to look at him and disagree and be like, I think he probably means that, you know, I think it's problem. But like, I don't think he believes that people are deep. Like, yeah, like, like rubber to the road. I don't think that he actually believes people are possessed by demons. I think that this is a heightening of his wanting to other and demonize exactly his political enemies and the people that he he disagrees with.
Starting point is 01:17:08 Right. I mean, ironically, it is more acceptable to literally demonize your opponents than it is to metaphorically demonize your opponents. Yeah. And and I mean, look, it's trash. It's just trash. It's just trash. Yeah. It's unlistable garbage. It more or less is. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Except for like little funny moments like I'm going to do this predictions and then maybe not. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:17:33 I would just say that he should try. He should maybe try. I know that he is averse to that, but I, you know, when you're saying that like the performance is worse now, yeah, I think what it comes down to is that previously at earlier points in his career, he didn't have anything. Right. He didn't have like an empire. He didn't. He didn't have this stuff. You're funnier when you ride the bus, that old Sinbad quote of like,
Starting point is 01:18:04 you're funnier when you ride the bus, sum it up that way. Yeah. When you're flying around in a plane, you're not as funny. Yeah. And when you can have your own private jet, you're not really all that convincing as a populist propagandist. Yeah. It's a little bit thin. Yep. This kind of bullshit. Yep. So anyway, Alex plays a bunch of special reports. And then he comes back with this.
Starting point is 01:18:27 All right. I'm just going to go about another 30 minutes or so in the special year in emergency broadcast. It'll be streamed out until four p.m. tomorrow. Let me do this Sunday show four to six p.m. Then Owen's back in six to eight. I can't stress this enough. Alex has done nothing on this show. It was 30 minutes of begging, 30 minutes of meaningless ranting
Starting point is 01:18:47 about spiritual radios and then 20 minutes of special reports. There truly feels like there's no reason for Alex to do this show at all, except to try to bring in money and for him to lash out a little bit to an audience. It's really wild because even I kind of thought there would be more meat on these bones. I saw like emergency last broadcast of the year, like at least try to do something. I mean, to me, to me, what is most emblematic of what's going on here
Starting point is 01:19:14 is just that that like it's you who's going to decide whether Info War stays on air or not. Right. You know, when he says that that's such a fatalist viewpoint. Well, he does that a lot though. But but it is and it is true in a sense, you know, it is going to be whether or not the audience responds only you can stop forest fires and only you can give me money. Right. Right. Right. But at the same time, you need to project the idea that you are doing
Starting point is 01:19:40 something to earn that money, you know, and he's not doing that. It would be good. Yeah. Justify your existence. Yeah, absolutely. Why is this investment worth making? That's so good. That's kind of more what we're what I'm feeling lately is like he used to at least try to make the pitches worth it. You know, like he's justifying the the reason that you would give him money.
Starting point is 01:20:05 And now it's just give me money. Well, yeah, you know, even though I was kind of thinking about that. And I think that is one level of looking at it. Sure. And I think I think that's wrong sort of because it is correct. If you look at it with wrong sort of well, it's correct. If you look at it from a perspective of like trying to deliver information and like even if the information is wrong or or stories or stuff like that, sure, then yeah, he's doing essentially nothing to earn the the investment.
Starting point is 01:20:37 Right. But if you look at it as like it's no longer really info wars. It's feelings wars. Sure. If you look at it that way, then he is doing something to elicit the the donation and the investment, right, which is creating bizarre emotional stimulus for the audience to to react to. You know, I just watched because I think you I think you have a really, really good point. I just watched his dark materials with my wife. And the largest issue with that is that it is emotionally manipulative.
Starting point is 01:21:13 It's not actually good or bad or anything like that. It knows the ways to make you feel something without having earned it. It's poking. Exactly. Yeah. And that's that's kind of more. And I think that there is something that an audience finds gratifying about that emotional manipulation, whether or not it's conscious. People like a roller coaster, right? You know, you go up and down. It's not like you want anything. Great.
Starting point is 01:21:36 I mean, you're not going to get from other media outlets, somebody screaming at you about how you buying vitamins from them is fighting the devil. You're just not. And that is, in some ways, kind of cathartic. You can't you can't say it's not. Otherwise, there wouldn't be. We wouldn't be here if there wasn't something about it. Yeah. And I think that that might be part of what is
Starting point is 01:21:57 unsatisfying about a lot of his present day stuff is it's just like, what do you do with that? Yeah, he's just do it like making the audience feel things, I guess. Yeah. What is there to talk about if what you're really doing is just going, Hey, you feel like this. Hey, you feel like this. Hey, you feel like this. It's a it's a little bit less meaningful.
Starting point is 01:22:21 Yeah. Yeah. Anyway, Alex talks about how he gauges some of this. There's there's some victory going on. And I would say that this is a bad way to gauge things. Sounds right. It's out of control for the new water. I mean, they are in trouble. I remember. About a year and a half ago, Joe Rogan put a clip of myself on his show
Starting point is 01:22:44 out when whenever the media was saying Bill Gates never said 80 percent of people in studies of this vaccine gets sick. Alex Jones is a liar. Well, Bill Gates just said it himself. So Joe Rogan showed that clip and it got more than 10 million views on his Instagram in 99 plus percent. I mean, you would read 300 comments. I spent hours several times looking at it.
Starting point is 01:23:10 News articles about it. I mean, probably 99.9 percent of the comments were we know you're a eugenicist. We know you want to kill us. We know about the New World Order. We know about your dad in Planned Parenthood. We know about this clip, that clip. And just that video that had over 10 million views. Last time I looked at it had something like a million comments.
Starting point is 01:23:33 And I've read thousands of them and it was just all exposed in the World Order. And that's just a snapshot, folks. It's now like that everywhere. So there's your AI. There's your censorship boards. There's your CIA. There's you all trying to silence us. It didn't work scum.
Starting point is 01:23:51 We kicked your ass in this round. Yeah, you killed a lot of people. Yeah, you made a lot of people. We made hundreds of billions of dollars. Yeah, you're regrouping to do it again. But you just found out we're not as easy to run over as you thought we were. That's because of comments on am I what am I hearing that correctly? Yeah, I mean, who cares about these comments?
Starting point is 01:24:11 First of all, I mean, second of all, I don't believe him. But let's pretend he's telling the truth. Why not? He spent hours reading these comments. That's a serious problem. Do other stuff, I mean, this is not a useful. That's not a respectable way to use your time. If you're Alex Jones, you know what I thought?
Starting point is 01:24:31 I thought a little bit of show prep that isn't just reading comments. Yeah, and here's the thing in social media. I think I think he's I think he's got. I think he's on to something here. I think it's time we replace democracy with governance by YouTube comment. Sure. Like however many like plus minus whatever it is you need. It's an ungameable system. Boy, oh, man.
Starting point is 01:24:58 Yeah, but I do like these ways that he gauges things. Like in the past, you had randomly coming up with numbers about how effective his tapes are. 85, 90 percent effective. And now we have skimming through comments on a social media. These comments are as good for me as a condom. Ninety nine point to nine percent effective. Yeah. So we're going to get to these future predictions
Starting point is 01:25:24 because he's had he's at that time. Yeah, you know, he was playing special reports. Right. So let's get to it, man. Think about the come on. OK. I think what I'm going to do is this. And I'm not. Copping out here and I'm not. Try to have suspense here. So you tune in tomorrow or tune in Monday.
Starting point is 01:25:51 But. You're going to have to tune in tomorrow. I'm going to have to call my wife today. I need to go lock myself in my office and get on the computer. I'm better with a pad and paper. And I really need to predict what's going to happen next year if we don't stand up. What the different probabilities and possibilities are.
Starting point is 01:26:14 Honey, I'm not coming home. All right. I got to lock myself in my office to see the future. OK. And OK, in my other jobs, you know, when I was doing another job. Sure. Me going like, hey, listen, you know what? You're right. I got to buckle down. I'm going to handle that. I don't want to make you wait till tomorrow.
Starting point is 01:26:32 So I'm going to work all night for it. I'll get it to you tomorrow. And that's that's fine. Sure. Because I'm not on air. Right. Yep. Well, yeah, I mean, look, debatably, debatably, a year predictions episode. Sure. That could be on the 31st of December or January 1st.
Starting point is 01:26:55 True. It's appropriate for either. That's true. Now, when you're doing an emergency December 31st episode, the word emergency, bringing up predictions for the future. Emergency carries a lot. Yeah, you'd think that it would be in there. But no, he's going to he's going to tell his wife he ain't coming home. But actually, he hasn't yet.
Starting point is 01:27:14 Actually, I'm going to get out of here. He has another plan. OK. You know, I'm going to do something even better. Sure. What's that? I'm going to take off. I'm going to leave. I was right. I'm going to take off. I don't know.
Starting point is 01:27:30 It's going to be a day or five days or what. And I am going to go to the country. I'm going to go to the mountain. Because nothing makes you think clearer than I can five thousand feet up a mountain and. Georgia banks has a Caribbean. I'm going to go to the wilderness. I'm going to go to the mountain. And like Hanshawn, when I'm ready,
Starting point is 01:27:56 I'm going to come back and lay out what's going to happen next year. And you know, I. Oh, my God. I build it up because I need to build it up for myself. How important this is and how I need to really focus and really get in that zone when all the pieces come together. So sometimes it happens when you're at the gym because blood's right through your brain or sometimes it happens when you're taking a jog or sometimes it's happened when you're driving in the car.
Starting point is 01:28:15 I need to really immerse myself by myself. By myself in the woods, in the hills. And in a cabin. And then I'm going to come back. And I'm going to tell you what I believe they're about to pull next and how we stop them. Yeah, man, I got to go to the woods. OK. Got to go to the woods to see the future. Now, I'm trying to work on I'm trying to work on the conversion here
Starting point is 01:28:43 because I know about inflation. But so God, Thomas sat underneath that tree for like decades, right? He sat under there for a long, long time. Well, it could be one day. It could be five days. Sure. But he was coming up with a life philosophy that could last for eternity. You know, so just picking out a year's predictions. What's that, like 30 minutes? I mean, it depends on how good the air is.
Starting point is 01:29:06 No, that's a good point. Depends on how alone he is. The woods. Yeah, you can't get distracted by a squirrel. I got I love this escalation, though. I'm going to get this escalation. It's like I am not worthy to deliver this information. All right, that's stage one. Fair enough. Stage two is I'm going to tell my wife I'm not coming home.
Starting point is 01:29:27 I'm going to lock myself in a dark room. Respect that. You know what? I get that. And then, hey, you know what? Fuck it. I'm going to the woods. I'm going to the woods. And who knows how long I'm going to be there. And I'll come back when I'm good and ready. And I've seen the future movies. This is all me. This is all movies.
Starting point is 01:29:43 There's similarities to cry Walker. He's a cry Walker now. I'm going to the woods. I'll see you in the air, assholes. So we are recording this on Sunday. And it's actually when Alex's show is on. And so I have it pulled up here on mute. And it's unfortunately in a commercial.
Starting point is 01:30:08 So I don't know. You don't know if he's in the woods today. Yes, you have to know. So I'll give an update as soon as we get out of it. Commercial break to to see. I'm very excited. Oh, my God. I hope he's in the woods. I hope he's in the woods. We are now currently watching or I am
Starting point is 01:30:23 because you're on the other side of the screen. But there's a CBD commercial. Alex is doing CBD. What are we doing with life? What's happening? Yeah, I mean, it's cool now. So yeah, Alex is selling it. There's a there's a there is an interesting thing
Starting point is 01:30:39 I was thinking about about how, you know, he has these things that are so important and they don't really follow along with who his sponsors are right at a particular time. Right, you know, not really. That's that's not his style. I know I never heard him talk about CBD in the past. Now it's super important.
Starting point is 01:31:01 It's very according to his commercials. It's very important. I don't hear him talk about gold that much anymore, which is interesting. Here's what I'm what I'm confused about. Before you had a supplement line, I never heard about how important like X2 or I was. It is strange how those things
Starting point is 01:31:16 became very important once he sold them. It is weird. Yeah. We're now seeing a commercial of Alex in his tank, yelling at people trying to cross the border. Good, good, great. This is this is weird to have on a mute. We can't be doing this. We can't be doing this simultaneously.
Starting point is 01:31:31 Alex popping out the top of a tag, yelling at a bullhorn at immigrants. Who dark, you know, it makes me a despair of a future because when I was, you know, when we were growing up, you had those dare commercials where it's like if you smoke weed one time, you're probably going to kill your little sister. Right. You know, like you're going to die.
Starting point is 01:31:53 Your brain is going to be a fried egg. And now a version of cannabinoids can be sold on the fucking corner street. Everybody who's old used to be like, hey, if you smoke weed, you've got to go to jail for the rest of your life. They're popping gummies left and right. And at no point in time has any did anybody go and like,
Starting point is 01:32:10 well, here's what we're not going to do this all over again. Let's just stop this. Let's get rid of this criminalizing drug shit. We got to figure this out. We've been there for so many times. It's very unfortunate. I'm sorry. I get distracted because Alex is at a creek.
Starting point is 01:32:26 Reset wars. No, he's not in the creek. Oh, well, then what's the point? Exactly. All right. We're coming back from break coming back from break. All right. What do you think? Do you think it's going to be Alex? Not in the woods. I don't know if it's going to be him.
Starting point is 01:32:39 Are we in the third hour? Are we in the fourth? He does the whole show on Sundays himself because it's only two hours, so there's no guest host. Gotcha. See, here's the thing. I could see him being there because he talks a lot of shit. But I could also see him being gone because all it requires is him to leave.
Starting point is 01:32:55 Yes. Yeah. And not working is something he loves. He prefers the latter to the former. Yeah. So is it going to be Owen? Is it going to be Harrison? Is it going to be Alex? What? Don't stop this.
Starting point is 01:33:07 You're doing the who's the most important person of 2017 thing. It's Alex. I know it. This is says it's live. But I mean, I don't know. It could be it could be a rebroadcast of some sort. But yeah, it looks like Alex didn't go to the woods. I wonder if he's predicting the future. Well, we'll see.
Starting point is 01:33:24 Anyway, Alex used to be way better at predicting the future back in the past. I mean, well, you know, he predicted 9 11. I mean, and that was from a dream. OK. You know, I went on air in July of 2001 and did dozens of shows up until September 11 saying they're going to blow up the World Trade Center. Joe Rogan was on.
Starting point is 01:33:46 He uses a pretext for domestic control and to bring in their control system. Then in the future, they're going to use that anti terror apparatus against the American people and its gun owners and patriots and Christians. And people said, how did you do that? I got in the zone. And it's almost like close encounters of the third kind. And I'm not saying that's what's happening here, but it's an allegory
Starting point is 01:34:13 where the aliens are sitting on a psychic transmission. Everybody's kind of building the mountain. Everybody's feeling guided to the mountain. The government's having their meeting with the aliens, but the aliens actually want to meet with the people themselves. The aliens are sitting in transmission out psychically. Come to this mountain, come here, meet with us. You know, this is a 40 year old movie to me.
Starting point is 01:34:31 And that's really the allegory here is that. I need to. Really get in that zone because. In 2000, I would have intense understanding and just intense thoughts of what they were going to do. And I then had dreams of the burning buildings of the World Trade Center. And I understood it was a key. Signpost of where we were going.
Starting point is 01:35:02 And so there was a lot of interdimensional power going into the future because you see, time, space, continuum, information is going out. Possible futures are there. Our actions decide much of what those futures are going to be. But I don't do that on our radar. It's not how that works. Events that do happen. They send back.
Starting point is 01:35:21 Nope. A signature. Stop what's happening in the future. Into the past. God damn it. And so it's it's it's a radar. It's a it's an interdimensional sonar. Sonar is a better word because I would describe the space time continuum
Starting point is 01:35:36 like a waterfall or why. What? Yeah, it's like a waterfall. What? Look, I don't know. I like some sort of new agey nonsense. And every now and again, if you want to talk about time, space, continuum and all this stuff and like there's possible futures, whatever, I'm going to leave that alone in terms of judging that. Sure.
Starting point is 01:35:55 Now, I will judge Alex on this front. And that is he doesn't know how to read a word on the page. There is that. I'm not going to trust him to interpret signs from the possible futures of the space time continuum. Yeah, he doesn't know anything. You know, I do. I do appreciate celebrating talents that are not, you know, like, hey,
Starting point is 01:36:14 some people can't read, but they're very good at visual art. I recognize that that's possible. However, if you are talking semiotics, learn how to read. Sure. Or even like interpret concepts or any of that kind of stuff. He's very poor at that set. So I would imagine he would get a message from the aliens and he'd completely whiff the game of telephone, trying to explain to us what it was.
Starting point is 01:36:39 Well, I mean, I basically if what I heard is correct about his explanation of the allegory of close encounters of the third kind. I do not trust anything he says about anything. No, I would imagine the aliens are telling him to shut the fuck up and that he's telling us a really different message. The aliens are screaming out of shape like me. So Alex, you know, a lot of his reporting is based on deep sources that people have died to bring to him.
Starting point is 01:37:06 Technically not true, but true. Well, definitely not true. Most of it is actually memes and dumb stuff that he saw on social media that he doesn't know anything about. There's that like this. And I know Keanu Reeves had dinner with him a few times and talked to him quite a bit when I was a consultant at Darkly. And he even reached out a few times through his producer and through his assistant over the years.
Starting point is 01:37:29 He liked my films and they ordered more of them. And they even invited me out one time. And I never got out there. I never did it just because it's not it's not important. But I got to tell you, this is a really creepy Keanu Reeves clip. Is it from a movie clip three? I want to play this because and they cut it short. So I'm wondering what he said after.
Starting point is 01:37:52 But he says it's amazing and really cool. That a little girl at a director's house, he was at, said, I don't care if things are reality. I don't care if they're real. Well, that's the whole thing about the matrix is that's where they're taking us is a false reality where they can control the input and try to manipulate a spiritually to make false decisions.
Starting point is 01:38:12 That's how they believe they short circuit and defraud free will. I thought they just wanted power. And so there's Keanu Reeves. You're like, literal, literal power. Like, like they just needed power. Interviews very often, you know, people say he's stupid because they don't actually know him. He's really smart.
Starting point is 01:38:27 He actually opens up and talks to you. He's just a talk to most people. Do people say he's stupid? No, I feel like everybody likes him. This is a very dangerous clip. Because they're a child. It'd be one thing if you're an adult and a philosopher and you decide you want to be a major, if you decide you want to be in a fraud,
Starting point is 01:38:45 but children can't differentiate. That's why they can't have sex till they're 18. That's why they can't run the military. That's the only reason I cigarettes till they're 18. They can't buy liquor till the 21 because we've made a decision that statistically it's good to protect them until they're able to make those decisions. Whoa, I think that people
Starting point is 01:39:03 they don't think that Keanu Reeves is stupid, but a lot of his characters were stupid when he was younger. He played a good stupid person like Bill and Ted. Right. All right. I feel like most people can recognize that when you're in a movie, right, you are pretending to be also was kind of typecast in a lot of that. I think that some of that impression can linger in people's minds, but particularly in the last like 10 years, 15 years, 20 years.
Starting point is 01:39:31 I think people have taken quite a different view of Keanu as he's become an adult. Yeah, much more. But I don't know. I don't think that Alex, I mean, maybe they talked in passing like during waking life or during a scanner dark. Yeah, I wouldn't surprise me. Sure. But I'm playing this up Keanu Reeves. I'm a huge fan of yours from Bill and Ted. And he's like, yeah, cool, man.
Starting point is 01:39:52 Your point is very correct too about the plot of the matrix. People into making false choices certain that it's just we needed battery. Hey, listen, I've when the batteries on your controller, you know, I had a wireless Xbox controller way back when. Sure. When the batteries go out, you get desperate. I get it. Now, I wouldn't enslave an entire race of people, but they were they weren't nice to them either. So you get it. I understand.
Starting point is 01:40:18 There is one way that Alex is kind of correct in as much as the very select people that get out of the matrix, the architect and the machines are trying to get them to play out a false choice right in order to reboot that cycle. Correct. Or whatever, you know, again, still want their batteries. Right. Yeah. But that that is close to what Alex is talking about, except it's only a very select people.
Starting point is 01:40:46 The rest of the people, they don't give a shit what choices they make within the matrix. And once again, completely irrelevant. Importantly, it is an allegory, not a true story. Now, this clip that Alex has found of Keanu Reeves, terrifying. Oh, no. I mean, it's a dangerous clip. I mean, if it's dangerous, then it's terrifying, right?
Starting point is 01:41:06 We should probably hear it. Let's see it. I maybe I'll try to get a hold of Keanu Reeves. Good luck. Please do. Please try to get a hold of Keanu. What do you really say on the clip? Because I don't want to judge what you said off of clip, because I don't know the context of it. But this is creepy as hell. Here's clip.
Starting point is 01:41:26 I don't I don't know. I was having dinner at a friend's house, this director, and he had some kids and there was like a 13 year old, a 15 year old, 17 year old and this is a pair of they hadn't seen a film matrix. And so the director was like, well, why don't you just tell them it's about? So I started to say, well, there's this guy who's in a kind of virtual world and he finds out that there's a real world and he's really questioning
Starting point is 01:41:52 what's real and not real and he really wants to know what's real. And the young girl was like, why? And I was like, what do you mean? She was like, who cares if it's real? And I was like, what? You don't you don't care if it's real. And she was like, no, it's awesome. You think it's awesome?
Starting point is 01:42:17 I mean, it's awesome. I mean, it's awesome. Did you catch that right there? Did you jump cut? Play that again. Play the clip again here in just a moment where it jump cuts and then he says it's awesome. I don't think Keanu Reeves said that that's awesome, that she doesn't like reality and that she wants to be in the matrix. I think he said something about a film or something he's doing is awesome
Starting point is 01:42:45 or something else he said was awesome. That's another deception. In fact, my gut tells me knowing Keanu Reeves that I think here's the clip again. Oh, my God. So here's something Alex could do. He could take two minutes to figure out where the clip he's playing came from. He's just playing a little snippet of a clip that was spreading on social media. But if he really cared at all and wanted to present his audience
Starting point is 01:43:09 with any real information, he could have taken the literally two minutes it took me to find the full interview that this is from. This is from an interview that Keanu and Carrie Ann Moss did with The Verge in advance of the release of the fourth matrix movie. Right. It's a year old interview that Alex only has any awareness of because one of his underlings found it on social media. And now he's blindly playing it and wrestling with what the context for this could possibly be.
Starting point is 01:43:35 When if he cared, the context is easily accessible. It's right there for him to find. He doesn't need to call Keanu and find out what he said. Just watch the fucking 18 minute interview. How did you get there? Did you did you call Keanu to get this information? I didn't. I just found the interview with with what power? Google. Oh, well, that seems to guess what, dude.
Starting point is 01:43:57 It is a jump cut. Yeah. But it's also more or less in context. Here is the actual interview. You know, I feel like it's the first time in a long time that that the real world is almost a head of our science fiction. I mean, the whole idea of trying to pursue like when can we make it photo real? When can we fool? I mean, all of the deep fake, you know, technologies that are happening
Starting point is 01:44:27 Wow. Yeah, it hurts the mind. No, no, but it's like it's it's it's almost. You know, it's like we're it's the why, right? We can't we have to keep the species has to keep creating the species is like, oh, I can do that. Let's keep going to do that, you know, and no one can predict the future. I don't I don't know.
Starting point is 01:44:52 I was having dinner at a friend's house, this director. And he had some kids and there was like a 13 year old, a 15 year old, 17 year old. And the they hadn't seen the film The Matrix. And so the director is like, well, why don't you just tell them what it's about? So I start to say, well, there's this guy who's in a kind of virtual world and he finds out that there's a real world and he's really questioning what's real and not real and he really wants to know what's real. And the young girl was like, why?
Starting point is 01:45:28 And I was like, what do you mean? She was like, who cares if it's real? And I was like, what? You don't you don't care if it's real. And she was like, no. Isn't that wild? It's awesome. You think it's awesome? I mean, it's awesome. I mean, it's awesome.
Starting point is 01:45:48 I mean, this idea of that. You know, so in a way, what you and I are kind of speaking about is kind of like a legacy feeling. We're almost like all your older versions. Just let it go. I know I'm the mom at the kitchen table, like talking about the possibility of like a virtual world for my kids. And I'm crying, you know, like that's how it feels for me.
Starting point is 01:46:15 But now I just, I don't know, just kind of like sitting around the table and talking. I don't know how I got me crazy. No, no, but you'll be able to sit around at your table and talking. And what if it's not a real table? What if I don't know if it's real or not to be a table? Well, that's that's the other question, too, which which is one of the issues that we're being, yeah, confronted by very quickly.
Starting point is 01:46:40 It's a really interesting interview. And the jumping off point for a lot of this is the creation of the matrix game, which utilized the Unreal Engine to take assets from the actual movie, as well as digital recreations of the actors in the film to create very realistic avatars. This prompts the conversation about the implications of being able to create virtual versions of actors. Will they even need the people to make movies in the future? This touches on like Carrie Fisher being in Star Wars, posthumously, among other points.
Starting point is 01:47:10 Sure, Keanu was saying that this perspective that the young girl was bringing up was awesome, but it wasn't like in the really great definition of awesome. It was pretty clear you meant it in the inspiring, awe definition. It was even does this hand gesture. It fills you with awe. Yeah. Yeah. Anyway, this is an indication of Alex's work process. He doesn't literally know preparation for the show
Starting point is 01:47:31 because he doesn't give a shit about the quality of the product he's making. He knows that the audience is captured and they don't require much of him. So he's just freestyling this bullshit out. Well, pretending to be friends with Keanu and that's a good day at work. Yeah, whatever. Yeah, I feel I found this dumb clip and now I'm going to make it suspicious that there's a cut in it, but then not do any at all. No curiosity based investigation to what was going on here.
Starting point is 01:47:58 Yeah. If I was going to guess, I'd be like, oh, so somebody found that clip and Alex was like, I know Keanu, I'm going to talk about that. Or I was plausibly I'm plausibly able to claim I know him because we were in scanner darkly, theoretically together. So anyway, Alex didn't go find the clip at all. Sure. But he's decided he's going to make some conclusions about it. This is what the deceivers do. You saw they spliced that tape.
Starting point is 01:48:25 And so I'm going to try to get a hold of Keanu and find out the truth. But but the issue there is that's what the left does. They deceive. How is this the left something? Where did we even show up? We don't know if he really said it. And let's let's let's make him say what we want. Let's get rid of his free will. Let's actually capture his identity and then misrepresent what he really said.
Starting point is 01:48:46 And let's do it not with a deep fake, but with an edited video. And let's do it right in front. Of your face. This is really sad. This is one of the reasons it's really sad is that if Alex knew anything about where this clip came from, he could make this so much more of a meaningful conversation because, ironically, the issue of people's images being made to say things is exactly what a lot of this interview is about. Huh? It's Keanu and Carrie Ann
Starting point is 01:49:17 wrestling with the technological advancements and how that impacts the dynamics of creation. Their conversation is way more insightful and interesting than anything Alex has. But if he tried any work, he'd be able to fold in some of their comments into this presentation and that would elevate it past the point of just being an idiot blindly responding to a clip someone else found on Twitter. And he just decided, oh, I'm going to talk about this today. Oh, the left edited this. Oh, the left.
Starting point is 01:49:44 I forgot that we had done that one. Oh, man, the left again. This is how they deceive the left is trying to take Keanu from us. A far right figure of note for the past however many years. And now he's on the left saying that stuff is awesome. Well, I know that the left doesn't want him because he is an FBI agent. Wait, the right doesn't want him either.
Starting point is 01:50:10 They don't like the FBI. They don't like the FBI. Anyway, but he was a great college quarterback, so they do like him. This is all very stupid. And if Alex did a grain of work, just a tiny little bit of just Google it. Yeah. How do you see a clip that has a jump cut in it? And you're like, just Google it. Where is this from? What does this actually say before you decide to get
Starting point is 01:50:30 in front of your billions and billions of listeners? Totally. And it's just pathetic. I mean, half the time when I write a joke or even a premise, I Google the premise just to make sure that somebody hasn't already written a better joke. I don't know. I don't know. Very sad. I don't know. Anyway, Alex saw something else on Twitter that he's mad about.
Starting point is 01:50:50 Sure. OK, let's let's let's hit some of the news here. This is the news. I want to play clip nine because if you go to Twitter and you see this clip. It's. This is microscopic life and it's titled Watch a cell bite and kill another cell. And it's under an electron microscope and it shows another cell go over excrete some enzymes.
Starting point is 01:51:24 Gross and burst the membrane. What? Of the cell and then the other cell on Amoeba starts eating the guts from mitochondria. Sure. Of the cell. It's just killed as its guts spill out. Now, if you go to Twitter, I read like a hundred of the comments this morning or more.
Starting point is 01:51:51 Oh, poor cell. It's so sad. It's so mean. It's terrible. Oh, this shows why we need the vaccine to save us. Oh, my God, these horrible governance by YouTube comments detected by Fauci. And they show all this compassion. For the cell. But not the compassion for the unborn baby. Yeah. Oh, my God. Yeah, man. Wow.
Starting point is 01:52:19 You didn't think that's where that was going. Wow. Quite. I mean, that's that's a twist at the end that I almost want to relive. That's that's that's some fucking serious M night Shyamalan level twist. Surprise. You didn't know. You're almost 50.
Starting point is 01:52:43 Alex, stop paying attention to fucking Twitter replies. I don't know. I when I was growing up, I always resented when I would go to the library and I'd pick out a book and somebody one of the librarians or something would be like, this is above your reading level.
Starting point is 01:53:02 I don't think you want to do that because I was like, no, I can. I can absolutely read at this level and I want to learn more. And now I'm like, oh, I totally understand like the moment he starts talking about cells, I want to be like, no, no, no, no, no, no, we got to go all the way back. You're not ready for this yet. I cut out a long portion where he tries to talk about mitochondria. Just because I was like, oh, my God, I could.
Starting point is 01:53:24 I couldn't even handle it. No, no, no, like, go back to the beginning, dude. This is above your reading level. I know you're trying hard. Well, you bring up an interesting idea about this, like beyond your reading level thing, because I think I think that there's like a dynamic that when you're younger and you're like trying to read above your reading level,
Starting point is 01:53:43 that's good because what you're doing is challenging yourself and like, you know, trying to show up in your blade on a, you know. And I think that you can grow through that as long as you step up to the challenge of this other material. Maybe you don't fully understand it all the time, but you pick up some pieces, accept it with accept your failures with humility as corrections to be. Yeah, I think that's a positive thing.
Starting point is 01:54:08 And I think what Alex does is the reverse, which is he bases a lot of his ideas on YouTube comments and Twitter replies and like that is reading below anyone's reading level and basing ideas on that just like it softens you. Like there is nothing. There is no challenge to that. There's nothing. There's if you want to make whatever argument you want,
Starting point is 01:54:33 you can find Twitter replies that'll make that for you. Sure. Sure. It's just a shortcut to being able to make whatever point you want and pretending it's based on something. Right. Won't somebody think of the unborn babies? They care so much about this cell. That's a stupid point. But all these people are saying it on Twitter.
Starting point is 01:54:51 And therefore it has meaning. Yeah, there is. There is something to be said about a stream of passive information completely ruining your ability to actively search for information. It's true. That's why I avoid a lot of any of it. Yeah. Yeah. So probably why I started reading a lot more whenever I quit Twitter.
Starting point is 01:55:11 Sure. Oh, God. Imagine if my work process was finding Twitter comments that were against Alex and the number of things, the number of slight changes to either of our personalities at this whole thing falls apart. So we've got the news. Um, there was a clip of counter eaves that Alex didn't see that he has decided to draw conclusions. I forgot we called that the news.
Starting point is 01:55:36 That was the news. I forgot that. Yeah. Also a cell ate another cell. I love, I love the complete inability to recognize the like it's not the cell. The human beings are reacting with empathy to the situation, imagining themselves in that situation. And I'm going to get it. Comparing it to other situations.
Starting point is 01:55:57 And I'm going to guess that's not a very widespread response of empathy for this. I think a lot of people don't personify necessarily a cell. If you were going to, you're not like the cell itself is under attack. If you're Alex, you do what you're going to do. So there's other news and we get back to those deaths. Those big unexpected deaths of 90 plus year old. Sure. Famous people. But who else?
Starting point is 01:56:22 The queen this year. Well, on the last day of the year. Rat singers funeral mass on January 5th, 2023, and the number 23 in Luminati's synchronicity, we're going to try to get Leo Zagami on the show the next few days. We tried today, but he didn't answer. I get it. It's holiday. He's in grieving. He's in he's having a very I get that that's you today.
Starting point is 01:56:47 Also, just a little point. If the number 23 was really all that important, then they probably wouldn't have killed him for another day or two. I mean, he's 95. Yeah. Hold off for a day. If that because he died in 2022. So the 23 number isn't the oh, it's the funeral. That's important. There's no rush in either direction, you know. This next clip is about the other celebrity that this is about Barbara Walters.
Starting point is 01:57:10 This is just mean Barbara Walters trailblazing TV icon dead in 93. Who cares? Damn, damn. Holy shit. Root disrespectful. Oh, I understand. Like that is very funny, though. I understand being a kind of classic and not liking the media and what have you.
Starting point is 01:57:35 But that's rude. That is just all right. Oh, man. Cool. Oh, boy. That's that's very funny. So those are the news. That's the news we've got. See, that seems more reasonable for him to say about the queen that it does about Barbara Walters. Like Barbara Walters worked her ass off and the queen was just born
Starting point is 01:57:55 and the queen, you know, well, I mean, the queen did some things and we forgot that day that she was a patriot. So Alex, that's true. He did have to memorialize her. Yeah, you're right. Three one last clip and here's how Alex wraps things up. Please commit in the new year to spread the word more than ever, to share the clips, to share the articles, to share the reports,
Starting point is 01:58:15 to share the videos and to buy great products that will empower you and your body and your family's immune systems at infowarstore.com. Make the commitment. Make the decision today. However, you can help fight and I salute you and thank you all. That's it for the final broadcast of the epic insane wild year of 2022. And I'm here to tell you, 2023 is guaranteed to even be more insane and we'll be here
Starting point is 01:58:40 dutifully fighting as hard as we can, clinging on to dear life. We hope you keep us on air. God bless and I'll see you in the year. Twenty twenty three. What a meaningless show. Wow. It's just I was, you know, trying to find things to hold on to footholds and I'm like, look, I don't expect much. This guy has disappointed me for coming on six years now or whatever.
Starting point is 01:59:09 You know, like it's I get it. He sucks. Yeah, whatever. No big deal. It's where we're a little bit late to be surprised by it now. But I'm still surprised at how bad this was. I mean, like bring some, do a number, do it, do a song. Anything like it's your it's the end of the year. If you're going to do this is why we can't do a year end roundup or anything because we'd go too far.
Starting point is 01:59:32 We'd be like, well, if we're going to do a year roundup, we have to do it. I'd rewrite old line design. We do the whole thing. It'd be a mess. It would be. Yeah. And we had nearly the resources. Alex, we've got nothing. Yeah. This is just just, I don't know.
Starting point is 01:59:51 It's a wet blanket on a year. You know, he could have, he could have tried. Instead, it's just excessive begging for money, rambling about meaningless nonsense about a fucking Satan dial. Yeah. And then the actual news that he's covering are clips that he saw on Twitter. I mean, celebrity deaths. He doesn't care about.
Starting point is 02:00:13 And one maybe that he could have covered, but Leo Zagami didn't answer. He can't talk about the Pope if Leo Zagami isn't around. No. What are you going to say? I don't know. I don't know. You can't can't do it. And then also, like, let's not forget the promise of the predictions just being completely unpaid off. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:00:32 That I'm going to go to the woods. And now we learn here on Sunday, you didn't even go to the woods. Yeah. So how are we going to find out what's going to happen in the future? If Alex does believe he can see the future, he is depriving us of a vision of the future by not going to the woods, by not locking himself in his office. He is by not doing that.
Starting point is 02:00:52 He is harming the world. Yes. Yes. The the to actually follow the things that Alex believes to their logical conclusions. One can only assume that Alex Jones himself is doing massive amounts of harm to the world by being lazy. I can sign off on that. Yeah, I mean, that's that's what he believes.
Starting point is 02:01:16 You know what? It's ironic because I think that if you tried harder, he would do more damage. True. Conceivably, because he does such little work, his carelessness causes a lot of problems, too. Right. Right. Right. I think he probably caused as much damage, whether he did a lot of work or not. It's just what kind of damage is it in my estimation of him?
Starting point is 02:01:36 I think regardless of what he does, he should probably have two or three people watching him and controlling his behavior. You know, like he can't he can't not be the worst at anything. He's just the worst except, like I said, improvised murder fantasies. He's pretty good at that. But that makes him the worst, you know, I don't disagree. Yeah. So I here's here's what's going to happen.
Starting point is 02:01:58 Was that on our next episode? Yeah, find out if he gets these predictions. I fucking better. I demand to know these predictions. I know I'm going to be on him like a hawk. I'm going to be I'm going to be going to find tooth comb through everything he puts out until he gives me the predictions of what's going to happen this year.
Starting point is 02:02:19 Here's the thing. I don't we're I'm not thinking any New Year's predictions or anything like that. I don't do that. No. What I'm interested in, though, Dan, what is your prediction for one of Alex's predictions? What do you think one of his predictions may be? Lockdowns. Sure. Another bio weapon.
Starting point is 02:02:37 True. Probably something like that. He's got to take one big swing, though. Here's my guess on his big swing. Hillary becomes president. My guess on his big swing is he's going to say that they're going to take out Putin for reals this time. I don't know if Alex would want to have that concrete of a prediction. But hey, we'll see. I don't know.
Starting point is 02:02:59 Here's what I'm willing to do. Never mind. I'm going to walk. I was going to say I'm willing to go to the woods with Alex in order to get these predictions. But no, I am not. You are not. I'd like to go to the woods, but Alex would ruin it. Yeah. So anyway, we'll be back, hopefully with some predictions of the future possible.
Starting point is 02:03:16 But until then, we have a website. Indeed, we do. It's knowledge fight dot com. We're 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 going to go lock myself in my office with the lights off
Starting point is 02:03:30 and a pen light for seven hours to see the future. And now here comes the sex robots, Andy and Kansas. You're on the air. Thanks for holding. So, Alex, I'm a first time color. I'm a huge fan. I love your work. I love you.

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