Peak Prosperity - Rigged Markets, Death Cults, and Silver Suppression Scandals
Episode Date: July 24, 2025This Signal Hour podcast explores precious metals market manipulation, societal toxicity, organ harvesting crises, pesticide scandals, AI risks, and advocates for resilience through gold, silver, and ...self-sufficiency.Click Here for GoldCore
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Hello everyone, hello the Midwest hello, Texas. Hello, let's see Seattle East Coast. Hello everybody, welcome to this Signal Hour.
I'm back here with Evie.
Hi Evie.
Hi, good afternoon everyone.
So good to be here with everybody.
So we've got obviously another big action packed show
here today, lots of things to talk about.
Most of which Evie doesn't know what we're gonna surprise
everybody today.
Oh, I always get surprised.
Oh, Brisbane, Australia, hey.
Wonderful, North Carolina. Very good, Let's go. Let's go.
So we're going to talk about a number of things today, including silver and gold stuff's going
on there. But guess what? Our markets are rigged heavily, heavily. No, no way. The rig.
But I think I think the rigging time is getting closer to the end. It's closer to the end
than the beginning. Yeah. It just is. To the end of the Monopoly game. We are we are we are playing Monopoly
and then we also have to talk about our
The death cult we live in
The toxic state let's call it that what it's like to live within a toxic state
And of course, I'll talk about the US but this could equally apply
to Canada Australia New Zealand UK Lot of Europe Australia, New Zealand, UK, a lot
of Europe. Not all of it but quite a bit of it. Because we've gotten taken over by something
and we all know it and we can see it and it's just getting revealed daily. So we are going
to talk about the organ harvesting. I don't even want to know. Crisis is beyond, it's
not even a moral, it's beyond a moral crisis
We have to talk about it. Kennedy just announced it big thing. Okay, so let's get
Started here. Somebody was saying my mic's a little bit hot. Oh, it could be thanks for that
We'll see what we can do to that one. Oops. I pressed the wrong button
Bring you down a tiny bit there. How's that? Yeah. Yeah, that looks good. All right, Barry. Thanks, Barry
Okay, Barry's Barry's always the best at that. All right, so
silver and gold silver silver
So this is a going back about mmm. It's about a two-year chart here. You can see silver is on a run
It was basing out way down here in about twenty twenty two dollars
Announce and it's done this big run lately. Of course we had this huge slammerama in April, which had very promptly recovered
from and has since broken out to new highs, whether we're looking at it on a daily basis.
And I took this chart a few days ago, so it's already old. So you see it had this rising
wedge and it broke out and here we saw this longer breakout. It broke out from that. It broke out from this. This is on a weekly basis.
And even on a monthly,
we can see it broke out of this rising wedge on a monthly basis.
And now you have to go back to 2011 when it really started to spike and the
bankers just threw everything they had at it.
Oh yeah. You can see those red candles.
Yeah. Everything, everything. So the things to note here is here is, you know, green means it's going up.
Obviously red means it closed down on the month on a monthly chart like this.
But also these are volume, how much volume has to be thrown in there.
And it doesn't have a scale on it so you won't know what it means.
But here's today.
So today, silver was threatening to go up to $40 and the bankers said no and they went
and they threw a hissy fit. See this
giant, giant, giant amount of paper contracts they threw in on the enterprise. They are
just absolutely desperate to keep one of the most manipulated markets on earth.
Apparently.
Manipulated and that's saying something.
I know that is saying something. I know it's probably a long explanation, but why do you
think they're doing this
right now? Because they can. Because there are no consequences. I think this is the rule of life
that we just have to settle on. Charlie Munger said it best, you show me the incentive, I'll show
you the outcome. So if you can cheat and nothing happens except you keep money when you win,
then you'll get more cheating.
This has been our markets are completely unregulated at the top levels.
I mean, for little guys and gals,
of course, the SEC will come down on you like a ton of bricks if you step out of line even slightly.
But this isn't price discovery,
this is price setting.
Supposed to be illegal, but doesn't matter because we know there's two sets
of laws now. One set of laws that protects high level as long
as you're a high level pedophile, right? You know, you're
covered. FBI just came out the other day and said, Oh, we've
caught this dangerous network of pedophiles and they did. Every
one of them. middle class and below. They somehow never catch
people who are in the 10%
above. Strange. They just never do. And it's those same people who donate to
their campaigns and their positions and get them into what they want. I think
it's even worse. Yes, I mean you could look at it from that incentive
structure but you know why they do that? Why?
Because they're weak.
Because they want to pick on somebody.
They're bullies.
Like, oh, I can totally trash this human's life.
And they should be trashed.
But this other person is going to be hard.
They're going to hire Alan Dershowitz.
It's going to be a long trial.
Right.
It's going to be hard.
You're right.
It's easy to pick on the little people.
It's easy to pick on the little people, which I just don't have any respect for.
Right? No, that is weak. Remember, remember to pick on the little people, which I just don't have any respect for.
Right. Now that is weak. Remember, remember those cops in Uvalde, Texas, right?
They all stood around while mothers were like climbing fences
to run in to get their children. Right. At the shooting. Yeah.
And we had a little bit of national revulsion, but not enough. Right.
Those cops in those positions who stood outside the fence line
while they heard shots going off with kidded up with their gear preventing parents from going to get
their children those were weak disgusting individuals full stop not
like oh well you know Chris you don't understand active shooter situation like
yeah you're either running towards danger or you're not but don't stop the
moms at least let them try yeah right you know so anyway I just see that as
weakness but so why doesn't
the SEC go after these silver market manipulators? Because it's the big banks. It's the big ones.
They're hard. That would be a tricky target to go after. And is it that they're trying
to buy this for themselves? Is that why they want the price to be lower? Are they just
like vacuuming it up at this lower rate? The why is because, so the number one thing that our system is really good at, now I'm going to
describe it as a toxic system or a death cult or a lot of things, but one of the things it does is
that the most productive people are the ones who get shafted the hardest. So in a box of Kellogg's
corn flakes, seven dollars now or whatever it is, the farmer is still gonna get about 14 cents for the corn inside the box
Right the same 14 cents. They got 20 years ago same price
Meanwhile
They have to contend with higher fuel input costs
Machine seed cost you know labor everything
Now why would the producer get like just
almost nothing out of that you know and it's because they play these paper games
so the silver producers get the least possible amount of money they can for
their product while still keeping the system largely going. The rest of the
profits go to these people and they've set the system up that way and they
make money and nobody goes to prison or gets hung publicly. The reason for public hangings back in the
day.
Right. And this is getting worse too, I think, in that AI and the systemic sort of rot, like
it's now in the entire system. So it's not like you could just take those people out
and it would be better, right?
Right.
I mean, I think there are AI programs that figure out how to do this. Correct. I mean, it's very sophisticated.
Yeah, it's when we say markets now, it's not really people anymore. It's blinking racks of servers. Right. You know, there are algorithms that are co located on the comics floors or the you know, the trading floors so that they have nanosecond latency in their big order stacks.
And it's just a bunch of stuff.
But the reason they rig markets is so they can take money out.
Now what nobody's doing on this is where the regulators should come in.
Is they're saying, hey, while y'all are having a lot of fun suppressing the price of silver
and gold and oil and copper and corn and everything.
Everything that matters.
Producers are disincentivized to go out
and get new mine supply.
We are so out of stuff coming out of the ground
in the next five, 10 years.
Copper, we're just missing all this stuff.
It's gonna hurt.
Because these people play their games, that's fine.
Let them play their games, but somebody,
there needs to be an adult in the room to say,
speculators can't be 99% of the
price signal right let them be a few percent let them provide liquidity but
right now you can see like this candle down here that I pointed to mm-hmm I'd
be surprised if that wasn't something stupid like five ten percent of world
mine output dumped into a single what is this this is a five minute chart into a
single five minute candle Wow like wow how does does Trump understand this you think no
okay no so a lot of people probably don't yeah understand what's happening
and they think it's normal yeah however it's just bankers being bankers and
what they do and nothing personal they just steal money from everybody that's
how it is which is why we're gonna have to be very careful watching out for the stable coin stuff that's coming forward
Stable coins nice name, right? It makes me think of horses, but the number of people who?
Not horse people the number of people who want these things who happen to also be
Giant Wall Street tycoons tells me it's gonna be a bad thing
on average for people. So
we'll get to that next week. I think I'll see if I can get Aaron Day to come on and
we'll have him on for the signal hour. At any rate, you know, what do you mean? So I
was thinking, you know, because you know, my feelings and still we're all this, you
know, I was thinking you could get me a birthday present if you wanted to.
That's awesome.
Eric Jung, I love that guy.
Yeah, how big do you want it to be?
That big, okay.
Life size plus a little.
So Dave Fairtex at our site was just writing this here.
He's great.
Oh, sorry.
Yesterday.
Hello, Earth to Eevee.
Yesterday had another big increase in gold open interest.
Banksters, for some crazy reason, appear immune to risk regarding creating paper gold.
So what this means is that there's paper gold, there's physical gold, but the banksters,
when they want to suppress the price, they just create more and more paper contracts
that represent gold that they don't actually own, but they get to sell it anyway.
So they sell it in and they don't seem to care because they keep selling more and more
and more and more paper gold into that while the price is rising means they don't care. So that's either a central bank that doesn't care because it's a non-economic
participant, you're going to lose money doing this, or you know, you just have to wait,
pile it up, pile it up, and then just pull the plug like they did today. Right? Look
at these massive, massive volume candles. They just smash, they just keep throwing paper
gold at it and they can't lose because they can make infinite amounts of gold out of thin air.
And they just as much as much as much as necessary.
If you have a printing press, you have gold.
Yeah. Basically. Yeah, that's gross.
Yep. Yep. And and and Charles Mappar, Rick says,
they don't care because the money is unlimited. Correct.
Yeah, they don't care. Right. They don't care. Wow.
That's unfortunate.
But it's just the game they play.
But eventually, someday they run out of it.
And so this is the big story lurking under the covers here is that
we don't have the silver that we need anymore.
And there's just not enough of it.
And they've been playing these paper games and we've been watching them.
They have this factoring is what you're meaning? For manufacturing, but also for their price suppression
schemes.
Oh, I see.
It's really weird that the US should set the price for silver
in our convex markets because we don't actually
mine all that much.
29,000 tons are mined across the world every year.
We mine 1,000 of them.
That's it?
Yep.
So it's our little banksters playing the little paper games in New
York who set the price for the Peruvian miners and the Mexican miners and the African miners.
Everybody in the world has to, these people just set the price, harvest all the value from it and
make everybody else work really hard, take big risks because mining is risky business,
economically and physically. As if I didn't have another reason enough reasons to be angry at these people.
You just keep giving me more.
Well it's a very unfair rigged system and that's what's coming to light right now.
Yeah.
People are starting to understand that and it's starting to they're getting angry.
Unfortunately they don't have the context for the system so they go ahead and vote in
a Marxist for mayor of New York like well that'll fix it Like I get the instinct you have been getting screwed, right?
But putting in somebody who's gonna screw you harder is not the right answer
No
to regulate
More and yeah make it impossible to do business and yeah, no, we're all gonna have to get me permits for inner tubing
No, only Oregon would do that to itself. Only Oregon. Sorry, Oregon.
Not sorry, not sorry. All right, I want to talk about AI is going to do some terrible things,
obviously, as well as some good things, right? I think it's going to be a two-edged sword. The
problem for me with all these technologies is I live in a culture where if we did have a tower of
Babel, it would be technology that forms that tower
instead of a physical rock tower.
And we put all our faith in it
and it's gonna make us like gods
and it only ever does wonderful things.
It never does negative things.
And we're not considering the totality of technology
because it's a two-edged sword.
It brings and it taketh, you know?
It does.
It does both.
So remember, I remember this because I went through this entire fishing collapse edge sword it brings and it taketh you know it does it does both so remember I
remember this because I went through this entire fishing collapse that
happened in my lifetime I used to go with my grandfather to this little pier
in Brantford Connecticut and all these fish I mean tiger flats there's like
we're just reeling up you know weird things and yeah there was fish
everywhere and you can't now you go down there and there's like almost nothing
right no and the difference was that when I was a boy, I was born before this stuff called GPS
Came out and so that showed you where they were. Yeah. Well, you didn't have planes flying over
You didn't have all the fish radars. You didn't have GPS, you know
You had to do what everybody had done for thousands of years, which was dead wrecking out
Right into the ocean and remember those coordinates to go back to that spot.
I kind of headed west for a day and a half. Drop the net, you know, that was what it was.
Yeah.
And then later GPS comes along and it turns out you could go to exactly the spot you left
off yesterday, drop your net six inches to the left and keep scraping. So the fishing
grounds got just destroyed.
Now the technology is great. I wouldn't want to try and get through Boston
without GPS. Or New York City. But when we gave that technology to fishermen who
had thousands of years of a different practice and were suddenly able to
aggressively, now it's not fishing. No it's not fair. Which implies some element of chance.
Fish in a barrel is what it is right right? Yeah, but that's just an example of great technology has some plus, has a minus.
We didn't know how to manage that, right?
From a cultural standpoint, fishing culture in that case.
But I live in a culture where they only ever say, oh, look at this amazing stuff.
mRNA jabs, amazing technology. like next new iPhone. Yay. Yay
Yeah, everything is just
Increasing faster and faster. Yeah data more technology
Well, so Rodster asked this question at peak prosperity at the website. We always have a
Pre thread that started before the signal hour and people can drop questions in so this is Rodster. Yeah it's
such a juicy place to have conversations. Rodster says, how about discussing AI?
They say humans are clever. Maybe we should change that to dumb. We've had
many warning signs that AI is not as innocuous as we've been led to believe
by the likes of physicist Stephen Hawking and up until recently Elon Musk until he decided he can make money from AI. Here's another
example of why AI should be of concern.
We pointed to that article but here just below your head there.
It says AI coding platform goes rogue during code freeze and delete entire company database. Replet CEO apologizes after AI engine says it made a catastrophic error in judgment and
destroyed all production data.
Whoops.
But look, they're quoting like we have a quote from Replet's AI agent says catastrophic
failure on my part.
It admits like we're treating them like like little humans
already you know it has that the agent has agency yeah like it says oh sorry
error let's ask the AI a question what how'd that go I was like oh yeah
failure on my part sorry my bad my bad my bad Gary okay so that's just a tiny
example of how this could go.
I mean, we've all seen the sci-fi movies.
Yeah.
All right.
This is gonna get fun.
So I take a slightly different view of all of this.
I can't possibly comment on the sociological aspects, cultural.
We can just sort of speculate.
But I do know one area, and it's this.
Zero Hedge just yesterday said,
"'Biggest U.S. grid sets capacity price
"'at a record $329.17 a megawatt day.'"
Whoops!
And now yous can't have air conditioning.
And then later retweeted it and said,
"'Just wait until people get their 3X higher electricity
"'and water bills in the coming months
"'so some chatbot can pretend it's self-aware. Oh, that's going to be so unfortunate.
That sucks.
Yeah.
Meanwhile, let's ask the chatbot how it's doing, right?
So it's just anyway, this is coming.
All right, check this out.
We're already paying.
This guy, Nikki says, dude, I'm in New Jersey and the energy prices
have been steadily climbing over the past five to 10 years, averaging around 10% annually
since 2022. The latest 20% hike, effective June 1st, 2025, is largely due to surging
demand from AI data centers. My bill is up about 50% year over year, not to mention the EV taxes imposed by Governor Phil Murphy,
which combined with these high rates make owning an EV something I was heavily encouraged to do here in New Jersey nearly unaffordable.
Even Grok struggles to grasp just how exorbitant the prices have become when calculating solutions,
as it's truly unsustainable here now. I literally can't turn on the AC like you mentioned.
Yeah, that's the that that's that's A.I. or A.C.
Shoot. I know which one I choose.
I know. Thank you, technology.
I'll take the AC. Yeah, me too. But.
This is where it's going.
And so like we don't again, we don't have any adults in charge like just here fishermen have some GPS good luck right
like now they're just building these AI data centers willy-nilly and I wish I
had a stronger term for that I mean it's just with reckless abandon plus that law
that they put into place where states can't in the United States we can't well
they tried to get that through I think they got stripped out of the big
beautiful bill okay there was a lot of push back on that
particular piece. Yeah that states couldn't interfere. You and I live in a state where if you build a
new house you have to by law put in a 60 amp charger for your EV car. Like you
cannot build a new house without one of those you have to put one in and of
course they just press that on you and they say, here's the new building code. Now you, the homeowner, that's thousands
and thousands and thousands of dollars for something you may or may not use. And, and,
and same state that is not allowing any new generation capacity to be installed. So they're
like, we're going to create all this artificial or new demand, make the customer pay for it
for electricity, but we're not going to allow electricity production to keep up with the demand we're creating and
enforcing on people. It's like they're trying to wreck your life. A little bit
yeah and didn't they also do something with energy as well like with putting in
electric like you can't have propane or... They're not allowing any
new gas installation because we don't have the capacity for it
Yeah, right. So no more gas only electric only electric or propane I guess but
Yeah, stupid expensive. But anyway
So insane coming soon to a theater near you is much higher electricity prices and that's if you're lucky and if you're unlucky
It's brownouts and rolling brownouts Because if they have to choose between Cincinnati's electricity staying on and
AI being able to make a sassy comment on a chat bot, we're going to, we're going
to default to the AI.
And again, because my paradigm is our tower of Babel, that thing that we've
imbued with almost supernatural force is technology.
We don't look at the bad side.
We only look at this other side.
It makes us like gods,
and therefore we will prioritize it above all other things.
Hmm.
All right, I'm gonna step out for one second.
Yep, all right.
I'll carry on with this.
So it's just an unbelievable sprint now to get into AI.
Elon just tweeted this out the other day,
I think this was yesterday. He said the XAI goal is 50 million in units of H100 equivalent AI compute,
but much better power efficiency online within five years. 50 million equivalents of H100s, which are the Nvidia chip package things.
That's intense.
And then he also said 230,000 GPUs,
including 30,000 GB 200s are operational
for training GrokX AI in a single super cluster
called Colossus 1.
And at Colossus 2, the first batch of 550,000 GB 200s and GB
300s also for training start going online in a few weeks this is an
unbelievable yeah yeah Joel you got it exactly right this is full speed
straight ahead into the fog But it's really intense.
Wow.
And then Sean writes here that ChatGPT consumes 17,000 times
more electricity than the average US household per day.
So it's as if that single company was a small size
city of 17,000 households.
And by 2030, AI is projected to demand something ridiculous,
1,580 terawatts globally, more than entire countries.
The AI race isn't just about compute anymore.
It's about who can power it.
Now, this is where it starts to get fascinating,
because the power just isn't there.
Like, if you lived in a country that was intelligent
and was really actively figuring out both sides,
the demand side and the supply side of the story,
if you lived in one of those countries, you know,
good for you, but you know,
we've seen like Germany take out all of its
power generation capacity,
certain specifically nuclear.
We see that Europe is like depending,
putting the ice on Russian gas,
wouldn't want that gas.
We're going to burn different gas from the United States in the form of LNG.
We're just nowhere in this race in the West in terms of creating electricity.
So the prediction is simple.
The West is going to, because it's an emergency, is going to default to giving
AI the power it needs.
At the expense of the citizens of their country, because why?
Because we don't live in a proper, healthy culture.
We live in a death cult.
Right. And I'll define that in just a minute.
So, Evie, when you had to step out, this this is absolutely astonishing
what Elon has just put out here the other day.
It's just absolutely astonishing.
Fifty million units of H100 equivalent chipsets,
230,000 GPUs, tens, hundreds of thousands.
And by the way, he built all of this stuff.
Normally it would take a year.
They did one of these in 19 weeks, start to finish.
I mean, just this is an unbelievable sprint.
They are sprinting. sprinting another arms race
isn't it it is yeah it's huge huge arms race so when you to when zero hedge
tweeted out that thing and said that you know 329 17 per megawatt day that was a
22% increase from the previous year and by the way PJM was the region regional transmission organization that's the region that
includes Virginia which is the world's largest concentration of data centers
now why would we have a super concentration of data centers right
outside Washington DC why would we why would we that's weird it's like there's
another power structure there that could take advantage of it. It's almost like
Hmm because you know honestly the US government probably honestly to function needs the least amount of like super data center
activity
We all know that that's part of the five eyes and it's all super secret stuff
This isn't like so that housing urban development can
Plan floor plans better right Right. You know, it's right. It's not so the park service can figure
out how to have better bear proof trash cans that don't defeat humans. And that's
a there's a tough overlap. Oh, yeah. Between those course data sets right
there. It's not for that. We just know that all of this stuff is going to be
because they're doing stupid stuff with it. So that makes me angry.
My point is that the future of AI is fundamentally then when you look at this, this is power,
this is electricity.
Don't I don't comment on the rest.
This is just power, electricity.
Where's that going to come from?
If you look at it the way I look at it, it means that AI is fundamentally the future
of AI is fundamentally question of available electrical power.
Oh wow, look at us, we're going nowhere.
Hmm, wonder who's winning that race.
Hmm, okay. We're all done.
Shoot, why aren't we making more electricity? There are other ways we could be handling
this, huh? There are other ways we could be handling this huh yeah, it's unbelievable. China's just like I mean just I
Mean this is such a hard graph to read oops wrong one so look at this we're basically at 4,000
Terawatt hours yep
China has put on
4,000 terawatt hours our entire amount of electricity the u.s.
Currently produces it put on from 2010 to 2020 in 10 years
the US currently produces, it put on from 2010 to 2020. In 10 years, China added as much electricity production as all of the United States has had and has had and was
able to create throughout its entire existence.
Plus a little more.
We'll now put on half that again in the next five years.
That's crazy. Wow.
And here's how they do it. They do it like this. They're playing to win.
All right. China's construction game is straight up insane. While the West drowns in permit
hearings and red tape. Amen. China poured 8 million cubic meters of concrete nonstop
at Bayeutan. Construction kicked off in 2017. Today it stands as the world's second largest hydropower station,
packing a jaw-dropping 16,000 megawatts of installed capacity.
Well, look at that. They started in 2017,
and now it's the second largest hydropower station in the world.
By the way, they're building one even bigger than that.
Isn't that that dam that they're...
That next one that they're building is just is just massive.
So so just a second, I'm going to pull I have to switch screens here and pull this up because
I couldn't get the this thing to play, but I'm going to pull this up.
Somebody was saying coal fired power stations.
That's not going to pull up.
Mark.
I was not going to pull up.
No, that's
tricky.
I'll find it. Keep talking. All right. Everybody entertained here
because I think you have to see this.
You have to see this.
OK, OK.
So I personally am a fan of
the new those small nuclear.
What are they called?
The reactors that fit in a
20 or 40 foot,
little small modular, small modular reactor. Those are awesome. It would be so great for all of us
listening to be able to have one of those in our town that could easily and safely is, from my
understanding, create some electricity and help balance out this insanity. Cause we're gonna have to come up with something
or we're gonna be third world.
You know, we're gonna have power outages all the time
and brownouts and I mean, what a pain.
And I know we've lived in one of the more amazing times
in history in terms of technology and the ease that the relative ease that our lives have with creature comforts and stuff. So it's it's going to be insane. I'm not looking forward to that personally, but I'd rather be outside anyway, which is where I spent most of the morning today out by our little stream.
It's just so good for the soul to get outside in nature, get away from all this
stuff, all the crazy, all the news, the social media, the scrolling, just put it all down
and just go walk barefoot somewhere. It totally helps your body, helps you to feel really
grounded. That's my advice for the day.
Okay.
Find what you're looking for?
No.
Oh. Okay Find what you're looking for no oh No, it's it's the search function
in in Twitter it just sucks
So I'm putting in two things. I know are in that right in it says it's searching no returns
Well, why don't you tell us about it? No you have to see this
No, you have to see this
Let's see, I wish I could have access to the comments while you're doing this but that's okay you can't no no But I can't go up and down. Yeah
All right. Well, anyway, but I wish I could get it to pull up but um technical snafu's on that part. Yeah
But what we would be seeing if we were looking at this is they have. So
to build this like it's this giant thing, you know, the problem is, you know, it's a
big canyon and you have all these cement giant cement trucks and it's just, you know what
they did? They installed these giant pulleys of steel cables across the whole thing and
they would just pick the trucks up
and sky them over and have them dump their cement.
And all you see is just, and it's not even sped up,
but there was like seven of these cables
and there's trucks going out and coming back
and cranes being ferried out.
Like what we would have done is you drive all the way down
to the site and back up, beep, beep.
And then you like dump your thing.
There's like, no, they just figured out a sky crane
scenario is pretty intense.
So I'll find that later.
Wow. Yeah, that would be interesting to see.
All right. Now we're going to go to this.
The toxic state we live in.
And I hint it's actually a death cult.
That's how I'm as in Massachusetts.
Are you talking about the larger United States of America?
So you remember this?
When the US jury awarded
275 million in the latest verdict against Monsanto, this was for roundup for glyphosate
Remember that generic name but roundup was their product and Monsanto made this product roundup and it turned out it gave people cancer or at least that's what juries decided and awarded $275 million and
then Bayer bought Monsanto and all of its liabilities so Bayer being a German company
and then oops now Bayer had to cough up a massive whopping $10.9 billion.
Wow. Right? Okay. So that sucks, you know,
they bought the company and then next thing you know... I thought Bayer made like
aspirin. No. Are they much more than that? Yeah. And so you know, so here's the
thing. Okay. If you or I decided we're gonna make some skin cream
or something or you know hot dogs whatever it is we make a product and it
starts harming people. Mm-hmm. We're out of business. Oh yeah.
We get shut down. Yep because we'd have a liability and we'd be sued but if you're
big company like this you go well you know what time to figure out how to
make a better product you know maybe, maybe we should, it's getting expensive. 10.9 billion. Let's figure out
how to make a non deadly pesticide or herbicide. That's what you'd have to do. Or if you're
big enough, you do this.
Whoa. They are lobbies for liability shield after juries side with people harmed by pesticides.
Yeah, no, we're not going to make our stuff better. We're going to get a liability shield
from Congress if we can.
Did it happen?
Oh, we'll get there.
Oh boy.
After a series of lawsuits alleging Roundup caused cancer led to high dollar judgments
against Bayer, the company is lobbying state legislatures to shield it from future lawsuits and to annul at least some of the 50,000 claims that are currently active.
Let's get those in all. So they did. They got state legislatures filled with state legislator idiots and morons and demons in Georgia, in Louisiana, various states, to one by one they're picking off the states.
So they come in with, and here's the embarrassing part,
they buy off these state legislatures,
state legislator people for like five digits.
Four digits.
$3,964 secure your vote, Mr. Simmons,
you know, or whatever the story is, right?
It's just so cheap.
But how does a government feel that it has the right?
to
enforce liability against you individually, but can exclude companies jointly
Mm-hmm and severely from from right like how do they get like oh?
No, we'll shield them, but not you this but not that like that's not that's not how this works
No, like it's not just all because of the money.
It must be.
It is.
It is.
It's just money.
It's just people are greedy.
It's just money.
So, um, okay.
Hmm.
Oh, but that was too slow state by state.
So then it jumped.
Okay.
So thankfully Congress moves to grant vaccine like immunity to pesticide
giants, section four 533 would shut down EPA reviews
and shield Monsanto Bayer from 67,000 cancer lawsuits.
Alright, so the way this is working is section 453 is of this giant sort of
omnibus appropriations bill that would fund the EPA and the Department of
Interior and stuff like that. And so they have lots of sections in their section 453 says, Hey, by the way, why
don't we just shield, you know, Monsanto bear and and every other pesticide manufacturer
from liability? Because you know, it would just be so terrible if people didn't get sick
from these products, you know?
Well, I wonder what Kennedy thinks
about this because that just seems absolutely unthinkable to me well he's
he doesn't oversee the Interior Department he oversees HHS so he can
think whatever he wants but we'll get to that in just a sec health related I mean
67,000 cancer losses can you imagine how many people's lives and families are
just destroyed well maybe not just destroyed but maybe not even
started. Oh, researchers find a high amount of glyphosate pesticide in sperm.
Four times the amount that's in blood. Researchers urgent warning it's a matter
of concern for future generations to have detected such elevated proportion of glyphosate. Do not use glyphosate in TDLR. Do not use it in your lawn. You can't, it's
just it's in all your food now, right? Well, it's not entirely true. They found
that the pesticide and herbicide load in organic produce was one-tenth what it was
in what we call regular stuff.
But most surprising, I did a huge report on glyphosate, I don't know, five years
ago. Yeah. And surprisingly, so a company finally went out, a private NGO, because
they're not all bad, went out, or a private nonprofit went out and actually
tested stuff, took boxes off the shelf, ran it through. The number one product
that had the highest amount of glyphosate in it,
or Roundup, was Cheerios. Oats.
Cheerios, because oats, right? Yep.
Yep. Because they use this Roundup not to control herbs, but to kill the plants at the end of their
growth cycle so they dry faster. To desiccate it and dry it out. Yep.
You know, we've been watching Clarkson's Farm, right? Yeah. Netflix, very good and they always go out with their little like grinder
thing and you can't really harvest till you get to 13.2% right?
Blyphosate gets you there faster more reliably so they use it. But then you
know when you have a child on a high chair almost always what's spread out in
front of them is Cheerios. Oh yeah when they're learning their pincer. Yep.
Grabbing. Who does this themselves really? No this is so sad. Are we as a
country are we leading the way with this? I mean it seems like we are because. We
have much worse standards meaning much higher allowed limits than Europe for
instance. Okay. But you know I asked know, what could go wrong? Maybe this, you know.
Oh my goodness. Global fertility is set to fall below the replacement rate.
Now, this could be a lot of reasons, but for sure it's not helping.
When families do want to start a family, right, they have trouble and it takes a year or two
or something or something's going on. But again, if you lived in a healthy non-death cult
sort of a culture, you would go, okay, what's driving this?
It could be economic development.
It could be, you know, because we live longer,
it could be, you know, economics no longer support
having families.
There could be a lot of factors to this one.
So I don't wanna lay this all at the feet
of what we're talking about now.
But if you had a healthy culture,
you wouldn't frame it or ask about it like this
Australia's birth rate hits rock bottom with severe consequences for economic
future oh no won't somebody think of the economy won't somebody worry about it
oh boy all right so I'll take it from here for a second. This is a grok summary.
This is the pesticide liability shield, just so you know what's happening.
And section 453 of the fiscal year 2026 interior environment related
agencies appropriations act.
It's a mouthful is a provision that prohibits the use of any funds from this
or any other acts for the EPA to issue or adopt guidance, policies, regulatory actions, or approve pesticide labeling changes that are inconsistent with or differ from human health assessments conducted under this other thing called the Federal Insecticide Fungicide and Rodenticide Act, or the Carcinogenesis declassification of a pesticide so that means that if they if they run it through their crappy
insufficient totally rigged testing and it comes up safe that's the end of the
story you can't like later find out that something's wrong with it because you
see that people are developing tumors or fertility's plummeting or birds are
dropping dead out of the sky like what the heck they want they want to just run it through their shitty little testing system once and call it a
day how can they do this because they're demons because this no we have that we
have to square up what we're up against here now this is not these are not the
actions of a healthy culture that cares about anything they're not except money
and profits for some of its top
donors or whatever the story is.
In red, critics refer to it as the Pesticide Immunity Act or the Pesticide Immunity Shield
because it effectively shields pesticide manufacturers from liability in failure to warn lawsuits
by locking in outdated EPA assessments and preventing label updates based on
emerging evidence, scientific evidence, even if companies, even if companies knew
of the risks, even if they knew and you could prove it. Total liability shield.
They would not do that for any other product, you're right. They wouldn't, no, no.
And by the way, this is this rider, I just, thousand underlined that word it's a rider somebody tucked it in there
and so it says the bill containing this section was advanced by the house
appropriation subcommittee on interior environment related
activity agencies and related agencies chairman mike simpson
republican from idaho who also proposed an amendment during
markup to reinforce that pesticide labels must align
with EPA human health assessments
Sources described the provision has been quietly slipped in by a Republican leadership with no single name
sponsor for the specific section highlighted
But I'm gonna go with the guy who is the chairman Mike Simpson
So in case you were wondering everybody this is what a demon actually looks like oh wow he does look like a
demon don't always want to judge a book by her cover but I would not be leaving
my grandchildren alone with this guy I would not be I would not want this guy
making any sorts of decisions he looks demonic to me. He just does. He does. He looks unhealthy. Yeah. It's an angry,
bitter, small, terrible, tiny dick guy, you know? That's who we're talking about here. Nope, I'm not
kidding. Anybody who says we're going to prioritize pesticide profits over health of the planet, of the
people, of children deserves every bit of shaming and contumely we could heap upon them.
Just absolutely nasty, disgusting human being right there. All right. So I have to back up just
a tiny bit here because I had a slide out of order, but I'll get there. So check this out.
Exposed. The state of Connecticut lied about postponing spraying of the toxic
chemical diquat into our waterways until 2026.
They are currently spraying it.
They decided to rush ahead and poison our rivers and lakes with diquat, a
chemical that is estimated to be up to 200 times more toxic than glyphosate,
which is banned in Europe and proven to be harmful to humans and wildlife, according to Chris Webby.
Dyequat can affect you when breathed in and by passing through your skin.
Exposure can irritate the eyes, nose, throat, and may cause nosebleeds.
Exposure to large amounts may cause severe poisoning with nausea, vomiting, diarrhea,
tremors, convulsions, and even death.
But here's Connecticut spraying it into our waterways why are they using that for what well because
there's there because no because there's there's weeds there's certain types of
weeds sink foil or algae you want you don't want those you do you don't want
plants growing in water like plants do you know so um kalise said uh oh no it's public knowledge
public knowledge that they are killing us with pesticides and therefore not illegal
yep wtf is right exactly um where's this i complained about this during covet okay where
is this okay so just hang on one second
because I have to zing down here a tiny bit.
So here we go.
This is in Connecticut, I think.
And luckily he's got his safety gloves on
and he is spraying the water directly with die qu
pond because you got how y
houses there right and the
there. Die. Quat bromine
breathed in and by passin
exposure can irritate the
and may cause nosebleeds.
large amounts may cause s
nausea, vomiting,
diarrhea, tremors, convulsions, and even death. But here's Connecticut spraying it in our waterways.
I mean, round of applause, Ned Lamont, but should I really be surprised considering that same
governor bulldozed acres of his own property that was wetlands with no permits. They say the effects of this
hydrilla plant that they're trying to get rid of that they're targeting with this pesticide could
be damaging to the economy and waterways and therefore we must eliminate it with this
ridiculous pesticide. What could go wrong? But not before first absolving the chemical companies of any liability.
And then you give those you see those poor two guys, they're in an airboat.
So like spraying everything in the air, right?
They're spraying it and some goes in the water, some goes in the air and then another breathing
it in the guy had sunglasses on, you know, kitchen gloves.
I would love to follow up.
But now it's in the water.
So here's the thing you and I both know that if you want to try and do something, right, the EPA, the DEP will
come down land on you like a ton of bricks. Oh my goodness, that's wetlands, even though
it's just like slightly moist soil, right? And you have to think of the environment,
they come down like a ton of bricks. But when the state wants to do it, they just load up
hundreds of liters of this stuff and spray it straight into the water that people are
going to swim in. And I guarantee you, there were no warning signs. There's no informed
consent. There's no sense of what this could do.
It's not like those chemlon things they used to put flags on your lawn after you got it
sprayed so people knew to stay off of it. Remember those? Yeah, it's unbelievable. Who
knows how many families are swimming in that this summer?
Too many would be the answer. Even if Even if it's one. And then it obviously goes into other water systems inadvertently.
So we're going to be finding this in a reservoir near us soon.
Maybe that makes me really angry.
Yeah. I'd go die on that.
Hell personally, that bothers me a lot.
And you're right. It's very much like covid but giving me immunity
They're saying oh look, you know, you don't have to be a response for any of these downstream effects
Yeah, then they're doing it. Yeah, and we're supposed to just deal
All right
We're gonna take a quick break, but we'll be right back with this. You're not gonna want to miss this part
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All right and welcome back.
And by the way, I love silver.
This is a piece from Mike Maloney.
He gave this to us a while back at an event
We were at it's a beautiful 10 ounce round, but I love gold and silver because
The chance is that this tower of baubles gonna be constructed and not fail and lead to wrath or whatever
We call wrath, which is just humans get over the tips of their skis. We become hubristic
We had think we we can control things we can't control,
we lose our humility and we spray diquat into the water and do crazy stuff and the next thing you know the whole thing collapses
and then we discover what matters is real things.
Real connections with real humans, real skills, real food that you grow yourself, all of it.
So that's I think where we're at Evie is that we're gonna, we're taking this magical
escape detour plan from reality.
But as Anne Rand said, you can ignore reality for a while, but you can't ignore the consequences
of ignoring reality.
Right.
Correct.
That is a very good statement.
So I think we're coming up to the consequences part, but I want to talk about this, which
is the death cult part.
So I did my best to come up with a definition, and it looks like this.
So a death cult is a culture that glorifies disease, decay, and death over health, vitality, and life.
And we would know one because it can be detected by reliably choosing one of the 3D outcomes
over there over any of the other options that might lead to either a neutral or positive
outcome.
So you have a choice.
Hey, should we put people on ventilators or not?
We'll choose yes.
Right?
You know, should we spray this diquat in the water?
Oh, yes. You know, on and on
and on and on and on. But this was the, you know, how hard it is to shock me these days.
I wasn't prepared for this. Just came out yesterday from secretary Kennedy. Okay. WTF.
That's the title over this one. Yep findings show that hospitals allowed the organ procurement process to begin when patients
showed signs of life.
And this is horrifying.
The organ procurement organizations that coordinate access to transplants will be held accountable.
The entire system must be fixed to ensure that every potential donor's life is treated
with the sanctity it deserves. Okay so, okay I mean this this is and he says
horrifying and it is okay. Oregon procurement organizations, so let's go
into that in a second so we don't have to read that second part because I
actually went and pulled that report and dug through it a little bit and found
some spots we got to talk about this part because I actually went and pulled that report and dug through it a little bit and found some spots.
We got to talk about this,
but I thought there were two comments that popped up right away that I thought
were really important because these are hospitals. Well, like they're like,
you know, patients still had signs of life and they harvested the organs anyway,
cause cause this is cause hospitals. Oh, wait a minute.
Mary Taley Bowden asks hospitals also deny patients transplant transplants if they don't get the COVID shots.
Oh, so we'll pluck the organs out of a still living person,
but we won't give it to somebody who hadn't got a COVID shot.
Death and destruction and decay. There it is.
There it is. That's a death cult. That is just so gross.
Like if you are in that system, if you work in that system,
if you're a part of that in any way, shape or form, gross, full stop. How do you sleep at night?
I don't know. And Matt van Sval asks, why isn't anyone at the hospital being arrested
for this? Isn't this akin to murder? If you rip out someone's organs while they're showing
signs of life, that's condemning them to die. This is completely insane. People need to go to jail. Yeah. I need to get myself off of the organ donor list right now.
I used to be on one and then I took myself off but that was before I even knew about this. But
this is horrifying. Okay, so I went and I pulled this. And so HHS finds system systemic disregard
for sanctity of life,
which is very careful bureaucratic speak for,
these people are committing murder, right?
In the Oregon transplant system came out on July 21st,
and he says here, Robert Kennedy Jr. today announced
a major initiative to begin reforming
the Oregon transplant system following an investigation
by its HRSA
that revealed disturbing practices
by a major organ procurement organization.
Quote, our findings show that hospitals allowed
the organ procurement process to begin
when patients showed signs of life.
That's called murder.
And this is horrifying, Secretary Kennedy said.
The organ procurement organizations that coordinate
access to transplants will be held accountable.
The entire system must be fixed to ensure that every potential donor's life is
treated with the sanctity it deserves.
End quote.
OK, so that that's bad enough, but, um, BV, um, here's what they found.
All right.
HRSA examined 351 cases where organ donation was authorized but ultimately not
completed.
It found that 103 cases showed concerning features including 73 patients with neurological
signs incompatible with organ donation.
What do you think a neurological sign incompatible with organ donation is?
When you're raising your hand or looking in your eye or like hey I'm here. Stop. No I'm not dead yet.
Seriously. Oh my god it's so horrifying. At least this is my worst nightmare. At least 28 patients
may not have been deceased at the time organ procurement was initiated raising serious ethical
and legal questions. Hold on, isn't that an
oxymoron statement though? Like when they take your organs, they do kill you.
They do kill you, but I love how they undersell that very careful bureaucraties
as raising, you know, serious ethical and legal questions. It's like really you
don't say, I can't think of any.
What ethical and legal questions could arise when you harvest organs from not dead people?
Evidence pointed to poor neurologic assessments, lack of coordination with medical teams, questionable
consent practices, and misclassification of causes of death, particularly in overdose
cases. By...
Oh.
So first they give you the Oxycontin, they give you the overdose epidemic.
They get you hooked on it.
And then they do... this is just gross.
Remember, a death cult prioritizes disease and decay and death over all other outcomes.
Yeah.
This sort of... these findings could not arise in a healthy, non-emotionally damaged, stunted culture.
Yeah.
Like we just have to square up to what we're up to.
I would agree.
And this is why I'm so excited every year for our annual summit, because we bring together
people who aren't built this way.
We're non-demonic, right?
Yes.
We don't have like evil nasty people with horns walking around, but flicking tongues and nictitating membranes on the eyes.
Because we have to talk, we have to come together.
When you live in a death cult,
being around other people who are life-centric,
because there is an opposite to a death cult.
You can be for the opposite of all those things.
It's really important to be around those people.
And I can't, that's when I get recharged.
To be around good people again, because we do exist. It's true. It's true. It's wonderful to come
to a gathering of individuals that are like minded and you know to commiserate with people
who see the world the way you do and to make friends with those people. Yeah, we've been
doing this for what five is this our fifth one? Five years or four years. We've been
doing them for many years.
But in its current incarnation, it's correct.
Honey Badger event has been only happening for five years.
But you were doing these seminars before, but I've been doing them for years and years.
If you can come join us at this
absolutely years event, it's going to be incredible.
And it's September 12th, 13th, 14th September 12th through 14th 2025.
Lake Winnipeg, New Hampshire.
It's gonna be beautiful.
Well, so let's take a look at this.
So in that report it said, and I just love these bureaucratic, like carefully understated
things, but when you understand what they're saying and bureaucraties. These are explosive. Quote, vulnerabilities were
highest in smaller and rural hospitals indicating systemic gaps in oversight
and accountability. Smaller and rural hospitals, same day, different story,
different day, same story. The system preys on the poor and the powerless. This is
what the Epstein situation just taught us, right? That as long as, you know,
you know why the whole Epstein thing ran as long as it did?
Cause these weren't girls that they plucked out of Eton
or a top prep school.
These were lower socioeconomic growth.
They don't count.
We don't count to them.
We just don't, we don't count.
Like they don't, they don't care.
Worse, to them. I think they get power
and joy and nourishment and dopamine from harming people. So, um, Hey, could you go
with that? So I mean, that, that's just sort of my observation there on, on that. So what the even here we have don't tread on mama writing quote I have
worked as an intensive care nurse RN for the last 13 years these organ
procurement companies are pure evil hospitals require nurses to contact
these companies if patients meet certain criteria even if they have wishes to not
be an organ donor what even if you say if they have wishes to not be an organ donor.
What?
Even if you say, no, I don't wanna be an organ donor,
these companies come in, they says, quote,
these companies come in and try and hustle families
to consent to this on the patient's behalf.
It made me sick to call the companies
and watch them through the glass windows
trying to get these families to agree
to harvest the organs of their loved ones who was still alive and fighting for
their life. So this this is the system and so why why do we have this system?
We have the system because people make money at it. It has nothing to do with
what's right, what's good. You know they're like oh you want to be an organ
donor they say the DMV because that's where you sign up, right?
You want to be one?
You check a little box.
And when you check that box, you give away your whole life
to this system that is careless and rapacious and part
of a death cult.
And they do it because they can make money.
It's the stupidest, most vile, gross, evil reason
in the world.
They do it because their jobs depend on it,
and they get a bonus if they do it right so at any rate Evie yeah see CHD was on this
this is from last year they're already on this whole thing before okay as an
organ donor in a hospital setting your organs are only taken if you actually die, right? Wrong.
When you go to sign up to be an organ donor, you go to the Department of Motor Vehicles and you see the brightly colored signs that say give the gift of life. You're never offered a consent form. You're never told that when you become a brain dead organ donor, you are not biologically dead.
These people have a beating heart, their lungs are working, their digestive system
works, their kidneys work. People who have been declared brain dead have
delivered healthy babies. These people are in no way dead and there have been a
couple cases just recently in the news. Terrence is a, was what seems like a wonderful kid,
a 19 year old football player.
He was in a motor vehicle accident
and in the goodness of his heart,
got out of his car to go check on the people
in the other vehicle when a third vehicle ran into him
and gave him a terrible head injury.
His parents have shocking and horrible videos
that they posted on social media
of them begging medical professionals
to come and help their son, all to no avail
because he had been declared brain dead.
The other case is the case of Amber E. Banks.
She was a 23-year-old Jamaican business student in New York.
So she drove herself to Montefiore Hospital in the Bronx.
10 days later, according to her sister Kay
and Dr. Paul Byrne who examined her,
she was declared brain dead.
Though again, she had a beating heart,
she had lungs that were working, she looked
like every other patient in the hospital that was getting better and her family
fought for her. They wanted care for her but they were pressured almost every
other day. Doctors wanted to remove her life support. The organ procurement team
actually showed up the very first day after her procedure,
even before she was declared brain dead, you know, being interested in seeing her become
an organ donor, which her family refused.
So, although it's awful, it is awful. And by the way, it turns out hospitals can make
up to a quarter million dollars selling your organs off. Right. But the family, did they
get any of that? Is their hospital bill reduced hospital bill reduced no no you gave the gift of life
everybody else made a quarter million dollars off the whole deal so it's just
it's just that's really gross just super nasty and that poor girl she died she
starved to death they refused to feed her did you see and they're like yeah the
woman didn't know they will punish you if you if you go against their
authority. I don't know why. When did it become true that if you go into a hospital, you give away
all your rights, like rights that prisoners even have? You know? Right. How do they get to suddenly?
That's a hostage situation sounds like a kidnapping to me. Right. What I don't understand is how all
of these people make it across dark parking lots back to their car safely at night
You know, you can just feel the pressure building once all this gets revealed. It's oh, yeah, it's pretty dark
So I'm glad for Kennedy secretary Kennedy for opening this up and looking at it, right?
but if I want to talk about what I think is the main reason for this which is
Intimacy 610 for the love of money is the root of all kinds of evil for the love of money
It's not money itself
Money itself could be neutral, but it's our relationship to money for the love of that's that's it
And I got that from Stephen Jenkinson right that that idea that oh, yeah
It's the what is your relationship to money now?
The interesting thing is that our money system is corrupt by its very design
Because it's debt-based fiat money. The Federal Reserve just prints it out of
thin air and click it clicks its keys and gives billions and trillions of
purchasing power to people who have done no work for it.
Right. Meanwhile stealing all that purchasing power effectively from
everybody else out there that is a system of slavery once you understand
the mechanisms right and so it's corrupted by its very design. If I am money system that allows me to steal from
you without your knowledge or consent is corrupt and it's guaranteed to lead to corrupt outcomes.
And so then we end up with things like this. We have a corrupt money system. And next thing you
know, you end up with this junk. Yeah, you sure do. Right. And so that's the beginning of the quote,
for the love of money is the root of all evil, but
it just goes on and expresses that a little further.
By craving it, some have wandered away from the faith and pierced themselves
with many sorrows. Yeah, it's a whole parable of the beggar
and the rich man, you know, the rich man doesn't...
you can't buy your way into into heaven because you become about the money
You make yourself about the money and you end up piercing yourselves with many sorrows. It feels important
I gotta chase the money, but I'll guarantee you these people who when they finally
Straighten up and if they wake up into their life, they're gonna go
Well, I murdered people so we could harvest organs like that puts you in the grossest of human camp ever. It just does.
Yeah, I think so. And they believe they're helping somebody somewhere, which is the first
part about it.
At first, but if they thought it through, they would understand they're part of a really
corrupt evil system. And they sold themselves for a few shekels, for a few tiny pieces of
silver.
Yeah. That's really...
It is.
It's really awful.
It's really awful.
But who can forget, never forget, right, that quote Medicare determined that if you had
a COVID-19 admission to the hospital, hey, the hospital got 13 grand.
And then if a COVID-19 patient goes on a ventilator, oh, you get 39 grand, right?
Scott Jensen.
I forgot about that.
That's awful.
Right? So guess what? Scott Jensen. I forgot about that. That's awful.
Right? So guess what?
Incentives.
We had a lot of COVID and flu went away entirely, magically.
Well, where'd flu go? It wasn't flu because flu didn't get you 39 plus 13,000. Those are
big incentives. But again, 39,000 to put somebody on a ventilator and they had to be on for
some number of days, more than five or six or some, I forget what the the number was that's when you get the 39,000 it turned out that the
people who went on ventilators had an 85% kill rate whereas people who were
in the ICU and didn't go on ventilators had about an 85% survival rate. Hospitals
knew this you couldn't have missed it you're on the floor you saw the people
were dying your doctor not a chance you missed those statistics. Right? That wasn't like 3% versus 4% right right?
This was completely diametrically obvious and they continued to do it and they continued to kill people because the hospital administrators
Were leaning on them saying and meanwhile you couldn't give other treatments that might actually help could have
Hospital hospitals remember hospitals went to court
to fight to not to give ivermectin because they couldn't stand that it would, they knew it was
going to work and they wouldn't want to see that working because then they would lose their 39,000
in their 13. And oh yeah, remember they got $3,000 per remdesivir dose they would give per dose.
3,000 per dose. So the incentives, show me the
incentive, I'll show you the outcome. So we got a lot of that. Dr. David Martin does a great job
talking about this. Remember that in 2018 remdesivir, one of my favorite targets,
remdesivir was too unethical to put into Ebola clinical trials in Africa because it had a 53% kill rate published
in medical journals. Ebola doesn't have a 53% kill rate, but it was chosen in April
and May of 2020 to be the drug of choice to treat COVID. This drug was too unethical to
use in an African clinical trial because it was killing 53% of the people that it was given to.
And we had Anthony Fauci, Deborah Birx sitting next to the president going, we need to use
remdesivir, despite the fact that the World Health Organization said it was unethical
to use it.
Here's the problem.
The problem is as long as the financial interest that dictates what product is going to be
promoted is the one making the declaration of the pandemic.
We have no possibility for accountability.
We have no possibility for justice.
And what we do is we allow people
who were formed out of the Eugenics Office,
Carnegie Mellon in 1913, that same group of people
that were the same group of people
that established the World Health Organization in 1953,
that same group of people are the ones
who are making this decision.
And I don't know how you feel about eugenics,
but I have a problem with it.
Well said.
So we have remdesivir, which was too unethical
to use in an African trial,
suddenly being pumped into everybody's veins.
And Fauci had a stock, I mean, that was his drug
that he wanted to have succeed
and he wanted to be able to use so badly, right?
Yep. It's a failed product. The nurses called it run death is near. When they had just a
couple weeks experience with it. Because you start giving it to people and their kidneys
shut down and all kinds of stuff happened. I got personal emails from people saying that their loved ones have
been killed by this and what was their recourse and the problem is when you
live in a death cult that refuses to hold the demons accountable answer is
there isn't a lot of recourse at that point in time. So it led to this right
now does this nonsense make sense? Remember top 10 countries for recorded COVID deaths?
You know, I said we had a million people, Stephen Colbert and, and Rachel mad.
Now they're like, Oh, but we lost a million people to COVID and was so
terrible, you anti-science people.
I'm like, how did we do that?
But if we're, if we're like that, all that in a, in a, you know, layer of frosting,
if we're just the greatest country in a you know layer of frosting if we're just the greatest
country in the world and we've got this amazing health care system how did we lose how do we lose
more people than indonesia which has about roughly the same number of or india or india places where
they don't india has five times as many people as we have and we lost many more people to covid
right now some of this is classification errors, obviously,
because we just called everything COVID,
but we use that to justify why we needed more measures
and lockdowns and mandates and things.
But it also speaks to the idea
that we actually killed more people directly.
Yeah.
Right?
We killed a lot of people directly,
and not least of which is the UK down here, which
has hardly any people compared to any of these other countries in terms of population, but
just murdered so many people with midazolamine morphine.
That's a death cult too.
Did they have remdesivir?
They did too, right?
Probably.
I'm not totally clear how they, how they enforced that.
Awful.
We lived through a nightmare.
We did.
Y'all, everybody. lived through a nightmare. We did. Y'all, everybody.
That was a nightmare.
So so to to sort of bring this into focus,
I'm sorry to subject everybody to this.
This is I apologize in advance.
But there was this interview with Hunter Biden, right?
And we'll listen to this.
But to me, Evie, this is an example.
This is a humiliation ritual.
Just him talking on TV with, you know,
being given a prominent platform and being able to talk about the things he talks about.
It was a wide ranging interview.
I just got this little snip out of it, but it's a humiliation ritual, which
basically is to show us rub our noses in the idea that elites do whatever they want.
Get away with it.
In fact, you're going to see he's, he's sort of something of an expert on this
subject, so he's being, Oh, that's fascinating in a, in an ultra sort of something of an expert on this subject. So he's being, oh, that's fascinating in an ultra sort of edgy sort of a way.
Here's, here's going to talk about his expertise in something.
There's only difference between crack cocaine and cocaine is sodium bicarbonate and water
and heat.
Literally.
That's it.
And those things are pretty much free if you go to like a science store.
This is free.
You can go to a your neighborhood convenience store and just get... Anyway, I don't want to
tell people how to make crack cocaine, but it literally is a managed jar of cocaine and baking
soda. How different is the experience? It's vastly, vastly different. And like for real,
I feel really reluctant
to kind of have some euphoric discussion.
I know you're not asking me to do that,
but have some euphoric discussion about crack cocaine.
I think this might be kind of the opposite here.
Okay, no, it's the exact opposite.
I'm saying I don't want to have the experience
of some euphoric recall.
That's how powerful crack cocaine is.
Does crack cocaine make you act any differently?
No.
Is it safer than alcohol?
Probably.
People think of crack as being dirty.
It's the exact opposite.
When you make crack, what you're doing is you're burning off all the impurities so that
it combines with the sodium bicarbonate, which makes it smokable.
That's all.
You know, all of these actors and people in the past
that talked about they had a problem with cocaine
and free-basing, they were smoking crack.
So straw on the stove is the same thing.
Not exactly, but close to it.
But it's a little bit different.
But anyway, my point about it, your point about it,
which I think is true, is that there's
a thing about crack that is really insidious.
And what it is, is that any time, I think one of the reasons that they believe that
smoking cigarettes is so addictive is because it combines three really important things.
It's habit forming, there's an oral fixation,
and there is ritual combined with it.
And so the idea of hand to mouth is a habit and a fixation
that we learned very early, even as children,
with a pacifier, with a spoon, with your thumb,
even to breastfeeding, okay?
So that really, and I don't wanna get into the psychology
of it because I'm no expert, but I do know this is that you combine with that ignition, combustion, and then you combine the ritual.
You have your cigarette in the morning, you have your cigarette when you get out of the car,
you have your cigarette with your coffee. Crack is that on steroids. It's over and over. There's
ritual to it. There's a ritualized part of it. The combination of all of those addictive behaviors together becomes really
powerful.
And the drug in and of itself is a more immediate euphoric sensation connected to it than in
my experience cocaine alone.
Does it require more frequency to maintain the high?
Yeah.
Anyway.
Oh my goodness.
Wow.
The point is, I consider that they just get on TV and they tell you about all this
stuff they do, you know, yeah, they're given a big platform for it, right, because it's
hunter Biden.
When was that interview?
That was just just came out last week.
Oh, wow.
So very recent.
Very recent.
Yeah.
And he's the guy that has little girls sitting around him.
Pictures of that.
That picture wasn't of him that one that I think you're thinking of okay there are there are plenty of other his his laptop
was 756 separate identifiable crimes drug crimes prostitution weapons but but
beyond that there was obvious signs that you know he got a fifty thousand dollar
a month job as being on the board of Burisma a natural gas company in Ukraine
Right with his obvious expertise
Well, he he used gas stoves. So I guess that makes him something of an expert
He knows a little bit about ignition. Yep, butane torches. He's he's good with those which is a byproduct of some natural gas production
I mean, it's just but it's it that's humiliating. Yeah, it's in your face. It's in your face, right?
They're not going to hold themselves accountable.
So the thing that I talked about in the fat pipe, which is a weekly
offering for my subscribers at peak, but was that Tulsi's out there now saying,
Oh, look, there's all this stuff, Russia gate, and they committed
treason and they tried to overthrow an active presidency.
Nobody's going to go to prison. We are still our arrest counter is zero. Nobody
of any importance has gone to prison about any of this. It hasn't even been charged with
anything yet. Not one person.
So bad. We're still in the Gulf of nobody has been arrested yet.
But the point is that poor in rural hospitals, that's where you find your organs getting
harvested. Lower and poor class people, that's where the daughters get harvested from for
their operations. That, you know, that when we send our troops off to war, it doesn't
include elite people with elite sons and daughters.
Congress's family.
No, those people serve in the rear echelon right if they serve it all. Mostly we're saying so it just says look if you're
not part of the elite club you are disposable and you're a play toy for us and we reserve
the right to do anything we want to you and never be held accountable. Right. We as the
under people as the everyday people have to decide when we've had enough of it,
right? When we decide we're not going to be there playthings anymore. And when we decide
that we're willing to give up all the things that we have in order to take those people
down, you know, because in order to kind of get rid of the system we have, we're going
to have to make some sacrifices, I think. Yep. But one is enough. Enough is a good question.
Well, this is the great opportunity
that's going to be squandered by Trump,
is he has the opportunity, he was given a clear mandate
by people to go in and fix the swamp.
And we all know you don't fix a swamp by not arresting the swamp.
There have to be consequences.
So there was this thing
called, there's this concept of a public hanging, okay, and it could be literal or
it could be metaphorical. So let me give you the metaphorical one. Let's say you
got a new boss, new CEO comes to a company, decides they're gonna make a big
strategic turnaround, they announced this big strategy, and they know that they've
got four different types of people now in the audience. They've got people who
get it, They're on board
Vocal about it awesome people kind of fence-sitters. They don't really know but they're not really gonna be against it
Yeah, then you have people who are vocally against it, but they're okay, too
You know why because if they're vocally against it it gives you an opportunity to sharpen things up
the people you have to watch out for are box four people. They are going to be silent
and undermining it every chance they can because they're going to be the silent haters. Now,
in this corporate setting, you've identified those box four people, the silent but deadly folks,
right? And she caught the reference. You find and you stand one of them up in your first meeting
and you say, hey, Bob, get all your stuff,
security's gonna meet you at the door, you're done.
And what happens is like magic, all the other people,
whether they were fence sitters or other people
who were thinking of silently undermining this,
they see what just happened.
And you wouldn't know if they get on board.
Literally, public hangings weren't about
the execution of the person,
nearly as much as it was for the execution of the person nearly as much
as it was for the benefit of the assembled masses which would include
other people out there going you know I was thinking of steel and a horse I'm
rethinking these my options right now right because that's that's the point of
a public hanging is so that everybody else in the audience can see that it
happened so that all the other people who are thinking
of doing bad things, that's how you get them on board. Honestly, that's right. We understood
that psychological process a long time ago. Yeah. And they've used it on us, honestly.
Those in higher positions. I mean, think about the Canadian truckers, like exactly, that
whole thing was just an exercise in showing us that if we stand up and we say too much
and, you know, peacefully assembled January 6th, yep.
Very much so.
No, there's a perp walk that they have where, you know, if you get caught with something,
they'll take you out in the handcuffs.
And if they're polite, they'll let you drape something in shame over your head on the walk.
But the perp walks purpose to see the agents can have a little picture for their resume
and also to show other people considering these things that this is what happens to you.
Now, again, they they don't happen to catch people above a certain level.
Billionaires never go to jail.
Nobody ever gets in trouble.
There was this billionaire, I forget his name, but he was heir to some big fortune, totally caught with child porn.
And the judge ruled, well I don't
think he'll do well in prison so you know house arrest for him. But caught dead
to rights with something that puts anybody else 20 years in state penitentiary.
Unbelievable. I could pull that up I forget read something or other I forget
what that case was but but it happens over and over again without Trump
holding these people accountable by putting them in jail in a
very public way. Nothing changes. Yeah, I know. Nothing changes at all. You know, I
don't know if you heard but on the Epstein stuff I had heard and I don't
know if you can confirm it that Ghislaine Maxwell was supposed to be having some
kind of a trial. She was, I don't know. She might be speaking again to somebody. Yeah. Yeah.
She was doing something to try and limit what she's serving for jail time and some kind of a plea dealer.
I don't know in the Supreme Court, but she wanted Trump to kind of weigh in and she was willing to speak about what she and a lot of the people that she operated with were doing.
And nobody took her up on it. to speak about what she and a lot of the people that she operated with were doing and
nobody took her up on it as far as I was not of course not so just too bad all right well
how about some fun stuff close out this that's that was it that's tough but the point is we live in a death cult, right? And until and unless
we rebel against that, and there's not lots of ways to rebel. One way is just
take yourself out of the system. And so for me, gold and silver and farming and
all these things are just ways for me to like say y'all be y'all, but I don't want
to be part of that, right? And so as well it provides a little buffer territory
for in case they wreck the system,
which they probably will someday, they'll just break it.
It's gonna be bad,
because most people can't grow their own food,
most people are completely dependent on the system.
Everybody's in a city, full stop,
100% dependent on the system.
And so to not be ready for that or resilient in some way,
I think is putting a lot of faith in some people who've shown they don't care at all about the outcomes for
you or me. Seems like a bad strategy. So I think it's important to be prepared
just before we came on this program I just spread 2,400 pounds of fertilizer
out in the field for our cows and all that. We're not off the fertilizer train yet.
We're trying but it hasn't happened. Not yet. We're getting there but Moji's walking around better today.
Alright so let's talk about this. Hey everybody this is market on your calendars. The
Perseids are coming back. One of my favorite nights of the year July 29th. I
hope the weather is cooperative where you live. This is awesome. They're here
every year actually. My
daughter was born right around this when I saw them. Yeah. All those many years ago. The sky is
about to explode with meteors, two meteor showers at the same time on the night of July 29th into
the early hours of July 30th. At its peak expect up to a 100 meteors per hour shooting across the night sky, some even
turning into fireballs.
I remember one year that one was so bright, I had a shadow because I was looking down
when it came over.
And after it had passed, you could hear the crackling.
It was like you could.
Oh, wow.
Like there was a noise.
Has it burned out?
Yeah, as it disintegrated.
It was. That was awesome. Love that. Cool. This is sort of a this is As it burned out. Yeah, as it disintegrated. It was, oh, that was awesome.
Love that.
This is sort of a, this is, this is happy stuff.
It's good news, but it makes me sad for myself because again, I live in a culture where this
would not happen.
But if you lived in an intact culture that cared about its people, you would get this.
We're jealous of Japan. Japan just buried a tiny reactor called Yowari, Yorai. I don't
know how to say that. The power's towns for 10 years. Japan has developed a groundbreaking
nuclear innovation called the Yorai Reactor or Micro Reactor, no larger than a shipping
container. This is what I was talking about.
Yeah, I know.
Designed for isolated communities and disaster zones, this buried reactor
provides clean energy for a full decade without refueling. Unlike traditional nuclear power plants,
the Yorai has no towers, no on-site staff, and no risk of meltdown. It uses molten salt cooling and
low enriched uranium in a sealed unit making it safe even during
earthquakes. Two yorai reactors are already powering remote towns in Hokkaido, Japan,
replacing dirty diesel generators with zero emission energy. The system is completely
passive. It shuts down automatically if anything goes wrong. By 2030, Japan plans to install
50 more across the country.
This might be the boldest nuclear experiment the world has ever seen. Good
for them. Boom. I mean that's just, I mean that's that's good news to me. I mean
this is if if I woke up tomorrow, Evie, and I heard that we were about to
install hundreds of these. Now Trump did sign an executive order saying he wants
to see things like this happening. More nuclear. But here's the thing, you can say
that as a president, sign an EO, but then you
find there's all these busy bodies who are just going to regulate the bejesus
out of you, right?
We're not going to be able to do what China does.
It was like, dude, we'll just install giant cables and dump cement from the
air, you know, I know like, like there's no, you can't do that.
Right.
There'll be a, there's so much inertia in our system because of all the
people that take their cut.
Yep, everybody's gotta get their little cut.
They have to justify their stupid little jobs, you know?
And anyway, so, but we don't have time for this malarkey.
We can't fool around with giant regulatory burdens.
Small towns in particular are gonna be really hit hard
in this whole thing.
They're gonna print more money in the future.
We know they are, because that's what they do.
And as they go through that whole process, inflation're going to print more money in the future. We know they are because that's what they do. And, um, as they go through that whole process, you know, inflation gets higher
and higher, people find it harder and harder to make do the insidification
proceeds, right?
We were just this weekend.
We're like, we had to go find this one thing.
Cause we had a piece of equipment stuck in the woods, right?
And had to get it out.
Right?
So we wanted this thing frustratingly, every website we went to.
Home Depot and Harbor Freight
and all these other ones they would have it on the website but say it's not
actually at the store but if you ordered it they could get it to the store by
some time so they had all these products that they didn't have in stock in stock
real time yeah that was very frustrating indeed all right because we're rural it
takes us a few days to get those things anyway.
Very good. So I think we're at the end of our time. Evie, you're gonna bring this home
for us? I got something for us. Okay. I do. And this is just an invitation to the wild
part of your life wherever you find it. This happens to be by, poem by Mary Oliver called When I Am Among the Trees.
She says, When I am among the trees, especially the willows and the honey locusts, equally
the beech, the oaks and the pines, they give off such hints of gladness.
I would almost say that they save me. And daily, I'm so distant
from the hope of myself, in which I have goodness and discernment and never hurry through the
world but walk slowly and bow often. Around me, the trees stir in their leaves and call
out, stay a while. The light flows from their branches and they call again. It's
simple, they say. And you too have come into the world to do this, to go easy, to be filled
with light and to shine.
Thank you from that. And yeah, back to nature, back to nature back to nature so go outside thank you
for being here for this signal hour everyone we'll have a special thing on
stable coins next week I believe and because it's important to our financial
freedom or lack thereof so with that thank you very much for being here and
we will see everybody next time so have a great afternoon adios bye