The David Knight Show - 16Aug23 Trump Civil War; "Furries" the Next Insanity; Greta Clones in Montana Win in Court
Episode Date: August 16, 2023Trump Civil War (2:13)Will "co-conspirators" turn on Trump? Was that what was intended by charging them?Trump stiffed many of co-defendants, did not pay themThese charges look much weaker than documen...t case BUT in both cases Democrats were not charged (Hillary in documents and Stacey Abrams in election denial)Dershowitz on what the Dem plan isNeither the President, nor the Governor of Georgia can pardon someone convicted in Georgia. But there's something else media left/right is NOT talking aboutFurries: Fetishes, Beastiality & Road to TranshumanismA public fight on a beach where "Furries" attack a man, shines a light on what's driving people to escape reality by wearing costumes. There are about 2.5 MILLION people doing this. Why? What is the demographic? This is a harbinger of what's coming as these people are being groomed for a grim life(43:10) Drag(on) given freedom to mock women and sexualize kids, finally crosses the line when he does this…(55:46)First Rolling Stone went after Oliver Anthony (Rich Men North of Richmond). Now "conservative" establishment National Review goes after him. And Christians go after him for some of the language he used. Here's what they're missing (1:04:06) Listener asks if DeSantis firing a Soros prosecutor (second one) is a violation of the doctrine of the lesser magistrate. Here's what I think…(1:34:56)The history and importance of jury nullification (1:52:34)A "children's crusade" to stop fossil fuel (like Greta they claim it will destroy their future) wins a decision in Montana from a local judge. Guess who's bankrolling this? Here's why it's nonsense and why politicians and media that oppose the absurdity are shooting themselves in the foot with their rhetoric (2:01:14) Biden has a new scheme to ramp up climate fear (2:15:24)Biden goes after uranium supply (2:19:31)Idiot "Tree-Hugger" Environmentalists Want to CUT DOWN TREES to Cut CO2These "scientists" are ignorant beyond belief. Biden wants to stop uranium production to stop nuclear power as well. It's full-on sanctions of energy, mobility, liberty. (2:26:23) EV Fires, Driverless Gridlock: They Pretend Not to NoticeCalifornia Gov Nuisance pushes failed "self-driving" cars that just did ANOTHER gridlock episode, adds new department to bully gasoline producers and EV semi-truck triggers recall over dangerous fire (2:34:38) There's no new functionality for PayPal's US dollar linked stable coin that people don't already have. But they're positioning themselves in a strategic new market. One that has implications for both small banks and cash (2:48:19)"Argentina's Ron Paul" wins primary in upset win. He intends to get rid of their central bank and replace it with… (2:54:49)What happens when AI feeds on AI content? Same kind of thing that happens when humans each other humans' brains (2:58:22)Find out more about the show and where you can watch it at TheDavidKnightShow.comIf you would like to support the show and our family please consider subscribing monthly here: SubscribeStar https://www.subscribestar.com/the-david-knight-showOr you can send a donation throughMail: David Knight POB 994 Kodak, TN 37764Zelle: @DavidKnightShow@protonmail.comCash App at: $davidknightshowBTC to: bc1qkuec29hkuye4xse9unh7nptvu3y9qmv24vanh7Money is only what YOU hold: Go to DavidKnight.gold for great deals on physical gold/silverFor 10% off Gerald Celente's prescient Trends Journal, go to TrendsJournal.com and enter the code KNIGHTBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-david-knight-show--2653468/support.
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You're listening to The David Knight Show. As the clock strikes 13, it's Wednesday, the 16th of August, Year of Our Lord 2023.
Well, we have a new chapter in the Trump Civil wars. We're not going to spend a lot of
time on that, but we are going to cover it. And we're going to take a look at furries.
They have now come into the news based on some, I guess we could call it infighting,
two wolves and a sheep. The guy that's a sheep was not dressed as a sheep, however.
Attacked.
Filming the furries on the beach.
It's a strange world we live in.
As Travis said, such a time to be alive.
Yeah, it really is.
We'll talk about that.
As well as the lesser magistrate.
Some updates on money.
They're coming after us again with the lockdowns and the masks.
It never will end until we tell them to back off.
We'll be right back. Well, it's been a day since the latest indictments against Trump dropped. And again, it's become a real clown show.
And you now have articles put up by the leftist mainstream media ranking the seriousness of these indictments.
Pretty much everybody agrees that the stuff out of New York is nonsense.
Not a threat, not a serious threat.
But there's a lot of reactions to this latest one in Georgia. And, uh, I thought it was a lot of reactions to
the fact that the indictment was put up on the internet in the middle of the night and then
taken down and then put back up. And people have had a lot to say about that. The, uh, there's
going to be a lot more reaction to it because it's a hundred pages long and because so many people are involved.
There's 18 other people that are indicted with this. And then there's another 30
co-conspirators. So we've got like 50 people out there.
And as some people have said, Trump is going
and his lawyers, his lawyers will be looking at it. He won't necessarily.
We're trying to decide who these unnamed, unindicted co-conspirators are
that are going to be saying things.
So it's going to continue to develop from here,
and that's exactly what they plan.
They want a civil war.
But I have a listener who is an attorney, and I appreciate his opinion.
He gave his opinion on the previous indictment for the documents,
which is not 100 pages long.
He read it, and he said, this is pretty ironclad.
And everybody has said that.
And, of course, Trump did violate the law.
The key issue with the documents is that so did so many other people,
especially Hillary Clinton, that were not prosecuted.
So it is unequal protection of the law, unequal prosecution.
It isn't that they don't have him dead to rights.
It's that they don't bother to look at anybody else.
That's the issue there with that one.
But even Alan Dershowitz could not really come up with any wiggle room for that indictment.
So that bears watching.
But in terms of this one, again, the lawyer who listens to the show says,
My take on the Georgia indictments is the effort that he and others made to try to get votes and overturn the Georgia vote.
The phone call opened the door, but that's not the main issue.
Seems like he used every person he could to intimidate and harass other people.
I don't think that call was illegal, by the way.
Yeah, I don't either.
All this stuff, I've got to find the votes.
And if you put it in context, what he said immediately before that, he said ballots are being destroyed, other things.
You've got to find these votes, right?
You've got to do this before they destroy all the evidence is the context that I see.
And I think they would certainly argue that.
That's pretty obvious, actually.
I'd be amazed if these high-priced lawyers that he's got don't notice that.
Anyway, he said, of course, the others were also on a mission for him.
And I suspect they did what they are accused of.
Now, are they crimes?
I don't know.
But dragging another 19 folks into it therefore my
prediction will be that some will plead to a minor offense that the prosecutor will learn more to
strengthen her case let's see time will tell he says and of course in fact there's another 30
uh unindicted co-conspirators means that they've already gotten some people who are coming in, most likely, to testify against Trump.
And so as we look at this, I thought there was a great take from Joel Pollack at Breitbart.
He said, Trump is indicted for the claims of stolen election in Georgia.
Stacey Abrams still walks free.
And so does Hillary Clinton over the document stuff.
See, this is the issue.
This is the glaring issue.
The unequal prosecution, which is persecution.
Political persecution.
Again, even in the case of the documents
where there are clearly crimes committed,
there's no persecution for that.
So what did Stacey Abrams do?
Well, exactly the same stuff that Trump is accused of doing.
Was she charged with racketeering?
No.
Twice failed Georgia gubernatorial candidate, despite having maintained for years that her 2018 race was stolen,
a claim for which Trump has been indicted.
Trump and 18 others, including lawyers, campaign aides, and supporters,
were indicted in Fulton County, Georgia,
on a collective 41 counts for their claims that the 2020 presidential election was stolen.
Not just in Georgia, but elsewhere.
The indictment, however, describes acts, acts that they committed.
Well, what are those acts that furthered the so-called conspiracy?
They largely consisted of public statements.
Oh, we can't.
So this is why people are saying these things are attacks on the First Amendment.
Public statements, protests.
You can't redress your grievances.
Claims made at hearings,
and even posts on social media.
This is what's being criminalized.
See, we should all be very concerned about that.
And, of course, we all have been very concerned about it.
Trump wasn't concerned about it when it was happening to other people,
just like he wasn't concerned about other people when January the 6th was happening.
He didn't issue any pardons because he thought he could save his skin
by not giving pardons.
As a matter of fact, many people are saying,
well, you know, they indict Trump and all this stuff.
Maybe now, if he gets elected, maybe now he'll care about us.
Do you really think so?
You're non-essential.
You're non-essential.
Just send him your money.
That's the only thing he needs from you.
The very same kinds of actions and statements that Abrams and her allies have made for years.
Public statements, protests, claims at hearings, posts on social media.
Like Trump and his associates, Abrams made her claims of a stolen election repeatedly from public platforms
and appears to have believed them.
Like Trump, Abrams enlisted the help of political allies and worse, other elected Democrat officials.
Like Trump, Abrams took her claims to court where they were dismissed even by otherwise sympathetic judges.
Like Trump, Abrams nevertheless persuaded media and supporters that her election was in fact
stolen, and many still believe it to this day. Yet no prosecutor, not in Fulton County, not in the
whole state of Georgia, and certainly not at the federal level, has ever prosecuted Stacey Abrams
for her efforts, which apparently are a crime in Georgia involving potentially serious felonies.
You see, this is the issue.
And even when you look at what happened January the 6th, you know, compare the documents stuff
with Trump to Hillary Clinton.
Compare this stuff in Georgia to Stacey Abrams.
Compare the insurrection, as they call it, the riot in Washington, D.C.
Compare that to Tennessee. You see the double standard everywhere? We can argue over these
details, but we know what is happening here. And we also know, as I said yesterday, and Jonathan
Turley sees it as well and talked about it.
I think Jonathan Turley is a pretty fair, even-handed person.
He's not a cheerleader for either side.
He leans to thinking conservatively, as I do.
But basically, he sees this whole thing the same way I do now. He wrote that op-ed piece I covered yesterday where he said this is both sides, both sides are playing
a very dangerous game. Trump is taunting these people. Trump is pushing them to escalate charges,
process charges of tampering or whatever, you know, and he wants the attention and the Democrats want this as well.
And he pointed that out in the context that 7% of the people polled would, um, support violence to put Trump back in office and 11%,
an even greater number would support violence to keep him out.
And combined,
we got about one out of five people in the United States,
about 48 million people, according to that poll,
are ready for violence over a Trump civil war.
We have to put this in context.
We have to understand this is coming from both sides.
We have to understand Trump is not our savior.
He was throwing us under the bus all of 2020
is not worthy of this support we also have to call out the unequal protection but of course
he did nothing to defend us when he had a chance you understand and it is interesting that some of
these people now who have been um indicted with all this were not paid.
And I pointed that out for a long time.
And we all know that Rudy Giuliani was stiffed.
But several of them were stiffed while Trump made $250 million.
And in this article from Reuters, they say several of the attorneys who spearheaded Trump's frenzied effort to overturn the results
of the 2020 election tried and failed to collect payment for work they did for Trump's political
organization.
Despite claims of election interference that helped the Trump campaign, allied committees
raised $250 million in the weeks following the November vote.
And as they point out, and as I've pointed out since before I was fired at Infowars,
that's the reason why I was fired, by the way,
because I opposed the grift by both Trump and Alex.
What was Alex doing?
Raising money was stop the steal.
What was that about?
They didn't even pretend that he was going to do any legal challenges.
Trump pretended he was going to do legal challenges, but if you looked at the
agreement, which they don't even cover here in Reuters, I've mentioned it many times, the first
$8,000 went to Trump, and he gave a percentage to the RNC.
And then if you gave $8,001,
the $1 would go to the legal fund.
That's how this was skewed.
And most of the money that was coming in
was small donations.
You didn't have people giving more than $8,000 typically.
So all these small donors who are out there still cheering Trump on,
all their money went to his legal fund
and to the Republican National Committee.
Trump and Giuliani had a handshake agreement, according to the attorney for longtime Giuliani
ally Bernard Carrick.
Let me just say this again.
I've called Rudy Giuliani 9-11 Rudy for a long time because he participated in that
cover-up in 9-11.
Get rid of the evidence.
Quick.
Do it.
I don't care if people get exposed to this dust, catch a respiratory illness, and die.
I don't care.
Get rid of that evidence.
Do it right now.
And who was Bernard Carrick?
Well, he was the police commissioner, top cop cop in New York City when 9-11 happened.
So they got the mayor and the top cop who covered up 9-11, literally covered it up,
and did not investigate.
And they're Trump allies.
What does that tell you?
What does that tell you?
But of course, they were all stiffed.
There's no honor among thieves, as they say.
So according to Timothy Parlatore, an attorney for Bernard Carrick,
the Trump campaign did not honor that handshake agreement.
Surprise.
Can you imagine?
This is a guy who has not only divorced his wives but thrown
them under the bus who has violated his oath to the constitution he you know just ripped it to
shreds who would have thought that it could have been torn up any more than the previous presidents
did but he managed to find a way and he didn't honor a handshake agreement i mean you know you go back
and look at these pictures they were practically lovers right you know the of giuliani dressed up
in drag for a little parody thing oh but yeah trump liked his perfume but something stinks
about this deal the records show that giuliani's companies were only reimbursed for travel when he wanted $20,000 a day.
I'm sorry, I've seen Rudy Giuliani on talk shows.
He didn't work $20,000 a day.
That's the guy.
But he's sweating now.
He had to stop using that hair dye that runs down whenever he sweats.
Parletori told CNBC that the Giuliani operation was never compensated for its work.
And according to Parletori, the failure to pay Giuliani and his team came up last week in a private interview between prosecutors on special counsel Jack Smith's team and Carrick,
a member of the Giuliani team in late 2020. Lawyers and law firms that didn't
do anything were paid lots of money and people that worked there, but off got nothing, said Carrick
when he complained in 2021. And as they point out in Reuters, no friend of Trump, they say,
Trump has a long history of not paying his bills.
We know that, too.
But the revelation that he likely stiffed Giuliani, a longtime friend, is all the more striking, given that much of the work that Giuliani did for the Trump Organization is detailed in a sprawling RICO indictment in Georgia,
where Giuliani is now a co-defendant. So when we look at the, again,
most of the money that came for this $250 million that Trump made
came from small donors.
The entire political network of Trump,
including his joint fundraising committees,
spent $47 million combined from the start of 2020.
So the $47 million that they spent on legal fees from the start of 2020 so the 47 million dollars that they spent on legal fees from the
beginning of 2020 they don't break it down as to how much he actually spent contesting the election
that was from the start of 2020 through the end of 2021 that money that was raised by trump's
political operation is instead being used to pay Trump's legal bills and criminal case against him.
Trump's Save America PAC spent over $20 million in the first half of the year alone on legal fees.
The PAC began the second half of the year with only $3 million in cash on hand.
So he's got to go out there and raise money by, you know, attacking judges and other people like that.
See how this just spirals down?
As a matter of fact, one person wrote an op-ed piece, said the GOP's got to move on from Trump.
He's dragging it down. You know, it's going to be, Democrats are going to have a complete sweep in this. And one of the things he said is that it's not good to have um somebody with this
much of a legal baggage dragging him down and he says well you know people are going to reply and
say well we can't we got to stand up and fight this because this is going to set a precedent
that they'll bring charges against any republican that's out there but Trump brought so much of this stuff on himself. It's his arrogance
that he brought on himself. Yes, they will use any means that they can, but also from the practical
standpoint, he says, look, just the pragmatics of this, what's Trump going to be spending his
money that he raises on? Is he going to be spending it on campaigning and on ads?
He's going to be in the courtroom instead of on the campaign trail. He's going to be spending it on campaigning and on ads he's going to be in the courtroom instead of on the campaign trail he's going to be spending his money on lawyers instead of on
any ads but of course trump doesn't have anything to say anyway you know i was talking about this
my son last night said look at this look at how desantis and it really is you know
again this horse race stuff in the polls don't mean that much.
Um, six months away, anything can happen, but at the current time, definitely momentum has
left DeSantis' campaign. And I said, I'm not for DeSantis. I'm not for any of these people.
And I'm not, um, I don't trust him. I don't trust any of them but I said it's about the issues
I said it's sad that the issues that he's chosen
to focus on
parental rights, abortion, these other things that Trump
and others and the GOP hate so much
I said it's sad that the voters
don't get that
I don't know if this is about personality
or whatever but you see
Chris Christie is
second and number two place
in New Hampshire. Of course, that's close to where
he is in New Jersey.
And it's still a distant second
to Trump.
Ramaswamy is in second
place nationally, still a very distant
position to
Trump. But the issues,
the issues, CBDC,
the first person to bring it up was DeSantis. These issues
that I think are very important are not being addressed. Instead, you got people trolling
DeSantis, calling him pudding fingers. My son laughed and said, yeah, we can't ever have a
president, anybody running for president who ate pudding with their fingers at some point in time.
This kind of stuff.
And the personal slurs coming from Trump, the juvenile personal slurs,
putting fingers with one of them coming from his organization,
but Trump tweeting out calling him meatball.
You got a problem with him being Italian?
Really?
And, you know, calling him sanctimonious.
Because of those policies.
Because of those policies that Trump is on the wrong side.
Trump is there with Biden on those policies that he calls DeSantis sanctimonious on.
So I find it sad that at this point in time, issues are not going to be discussed.
There will be no debate.
As I said yesterday, the RNc has never had as a debate condition the fact that you have to sign on to support other candidates if you're not the nominee whoever the nominee is you have
to support them that's never been there and you know trump uh came across as very authentic in the fall of 2015
at the first debate for the 2016 election.
That was the first question from Brett Baer.
He said, no, I won't do it.
Rand Paul discredited himself being a party hack for that.
And Trump set himself apart as an independent.
So he has, you know, that's really the right position, frankly, on that.
And he's already done that. I said, why is that being put in this year? Is that being put in
because the RNC made so much money from Trump and he's got pull with them? Put that in as a condition
and then I can have an out so I don't have to go to debates. I can just sit on the sidelines and
call him pudding fingers or whatever. I can make fun of Chris Christie being fat. He hasn't figured out
a way that he can attack people of color like Ramaswamy and Tim Scott yet. He'll find a way.
They're a threat. But he doesn't really have to. He started after DeSantis
because DeSantis was a real threat.
If you think back to 2022, it was absolute disaster with the people that Trump had selected and promoted.
That's how we lost the Senate.
Should have been a sweep.
They barely got control of the House, no thanks to Trump.
They lost the Senate when they should have won it because Trump endorsed very bad people like Dr.
Oz,
Blake masters.
These people had absolutely no spine who are flip-flopping.
There were celebrity candidates.
Even wanted to run a celebrity candidate here in Tennessee.
She was a Democrat.
She was an Obama Democrat, but she was a fashion model and she moved in as a carpetbagger into Tennessee.
Tennessee changed the laws and said,
you have to live here for three years before you can run for Congress,
because they already had put that in for anybody who runs for state legislature in Tennessee.
I think that was a great idea.
But, you know, Trump was just pulling in the worst people for the big races of Senate,
and it was disastrous.
And in that context, and everybody saw it,
DeSantis and the Republicans won big victory, huge victory,
the biggest landslide, what people were expecting was going to happen nationally.
That only happened in Florida.
So people, that's when the talk about running DeSantis for president started.
And that's why Trump started all the pudding finger meatball slurs at him.
That's where we are now.
It truly is amazing to see how this thing is, America is just spiraling into the abyss.
Dershowitz predicts that all four Trump trials will take place before
2024 elections and said there will be some convictions. As a matter of fact, you know,
I think he's absolutely right about this. They're going to run this stuff through.
They're going to get convictions because of the venues and where they put it, right? They're
going to have biased juries, just as we see with the January 6th people in the District of Columbia places. So he said, there'll be
convictions. And he says, and then they will be appealed and they'll be thrown out on appeal.
I think that's absolutely right. He says, first of all, the media is going nuts over the fact,
oh, look, we got this indictment. He said the indictments don't mean anything. You know,
the whole thing, you can indict a ham sandwich because you've got the grand jurors who come in,
they're not presented with anything from the other side. They're only presented with a
prosecutor's case. We talk about this every time something like this happens,
that the indictments don't really mean anything. The indict are you know just uh it's a way if the prosecutors want to do it it's a way for them to test how
strong their case is but in this particular case she's already decided what she wanted to do
so it was a mere formality that's one of the reasons why the indictment was posted before
the grand jury came in she'd already decided what she wanted. It was a hundred percent win. She knew
she was going to get everything that she asked for. They rubber stamped something that the
prosecutor puts before him. He said, the best evidence is the prosecutor was so confident
that she was willing to put it on her website even before the vote took place.
There's what it says, you know, it's Alice in Wonderland you do the verdict first execution
and then trial
that's what we're having here
oh the irony
take the guns and do the due process later
you know Trump
if you don't support the constitution
and due process it doesn't work
for you either right
just like you don't care when people get purged off of social media,
well, eventually they come for you as well.
And usually when there's a revolution,
it's the politicians who get put up against the wall first.
I think the strategy, he said, is to get bad convictions,
but to get them quickly.
And then they'll be reversed on appeal.
But they'll be reversed on appeal after the election.
And of course, when you look at the history of Jack Smith,
as we pointed out when he was looking at,
who is this guy running the special prosecutor?
That's exactly what he did to the Republican governor of Virginia.
It came after him.
He got convictions.
And then it was thrown out pretty much unanimously.
It was a bad verdict, and it got thrown out on appeal.
But that's what I said.
This whole thing, they'll get thrown out on appeal,
and or they won't send him to prison,
but they just want to smear him and affect the election.
That's what all this is.
Get him before the election, convict him before the election,
and then he wins on appeal. And so you've got all these different mainstream media
places. Slate is one of them, but you've got, I put a list down here of all the different sites
that have put this whole angle up. We've got Newsweek, we've got NBC, we've got British papers
like Telegraph, CNN, Business Insider.
All these different ones are saying, you know, Trump can't get a pardon in Georgia.
And they're right, but they're also wrong.
Because the governor in Georgia, Georgia is one of five states where the governor cannot issue a pardon.
There is a board of pardon and parole that does that.
And according to the law, they cannot pardon someone until the person has
served their prison sentence and been a big, a good boy or girl for five years.
Right?
Good behavior, five years.
You do the prison sentence and you've got a five year period where they look at your behavior. You don't have any other issues. You
can go before them and you can get that a sponge. It's kind of like what John Kiriakou was asking
Giuliani to present to President Trump. And John Kiriakou says Giuliani gets up and leaves the
room to reuse the restroom.
And his people there with him says, you know, well, that'll cost you $2 million, but we can do it.
He says, well, I've already served my time.
I'm just trying to get my pension back, you know, get a pardon for that so I can get my pension back.
The pension's only worth, you know, $700,000.
I don't have $2 million.
I wouldn't pay that to you.
And it makes no sense for me to pay $2 million to get
a $700,000 pension. Uh, but you know, that's the pardon and the way that it works in Georgia.
And so, um, you know, the, the, you know, Trump or any Republican president
could not pardon him for state charges. And so that applies to both the thing that's happening in New York,
which most people say that's a garbage case, not a really big deal,
but the one in Georgia, the charges are so many and so serious
that it could be a big issue.
So under the Georgia Constitution, a five-person state board of pardons and paroles is vested with the power of executive clemency, including, and this is a quote, including the power to grant reprieves, pardons, and paroles, to commute penalties, to remove disabilities imposed by law, and to admit any part of a sentence for any offense against the state
after conviction. Now, all of these mainstream media organizations are focusing on this as like,
see, look, the pardon. And the way they define it, the pardon is defined as a pardon in state law
is, quote, an order of official forgiveness granted to those individuals
who have maintained a good reputation in their community
following the completion of the sentence.
And they go on to talk about the five-year issue, right?
And before you even apply for a pardon,
you have to have completed your sentence five years before.
So you serve the time, you wait five years after serving the time, and then you apply for the pardon.
Well, all that is true.
And they gloat and they say, well, it's a piece of paper that would do little else besides getting Trump a job as a line cook at 97 years old.
The problem is, I read you, and they have it in their article,
there's a state board of pardons and
paroles, and they list all kinds of things.
Reprieves, paroles, commutation of
penalties, removing disabilities imposed by law,
and so all of those things are there.
And they conveniently ignore all of that.
They don't talk about any of those things.
The, you know, if they can grant a reprieve, well, if they can commute sentences partially
or wholly, as they said, they could get rid of it.
A pardon is a different category, but they could do all of these actions.
And so it's another example of media dishonesty.
And you're seeing this article everywhere.
Again, this is part of the Trump civil wars.
The board, if they wished could commute the sentence
and just end it right there, they don't have to wait to, you know, if they want an official pardon,
yes, there's a process for that. Got to do the whole term and another five years after that,
they could commute the sentence. They could wipe it away. They could give them a reprieve.
Why is it that the mainstream media doesn't talk about that?
Isn't that amazing?
They want to hype this up for their base.
This is red meat for their base,
just like the other stuff is red meat for the conservative base, because they're both trying to push us into a civil war,
and it's so obvious and stupid.
It's amazing.
You see this coming from the Georgia Secretary of secretary of state brad raffensperger
um so he's also pergur he's also talking about this he says the former president didn't respect
the constitution he's the one who took the call and um uh and the governor brian kemp who again
does not have anything to say about the cannot issue the parole,
but he would have sway over a parole board.
The governor there, Brian Kemp, said the 2020 election in Georgia was not stolen for nearly three years now.
Anyone with evidence of fraud has failed to come forward under oath and prove anything in a court of law.
Our elections are secure here and so forth.
Again, he did nothing to fix the monkey wrench that Trump himself threw into the elections with
the lockdown. He did nothing to fix that between the time of the November election and the runoff
election that happened on January the 5th, 2021. But again, if you look at Trump's comments in context,
this phone call to Raffensperger that was there,
Trump said, they're shredding ballots, in my opinion,
based on what I've heard, and they're removing machinery,
and they're moving it as fast as they can,
both of which are criminal.
And you can't let it happen. And you are letting
it happen. You know, I mean, I'm notifying you that you're letting it happen. So look, all I
want to do is this. I just want to find 11,780 votes, which is one more than we have. What do
they do? Same thing they did with the pardon stuff. I take one little thing and pull that out of context.
I just want you to find 11,780 votes.
Oh, he's telling him to stuff the ballots or to rig the election,
and that's absolutely not true.
So, again, then there's this big back and forth.
Well, I think his due process was violated because they put up the charges before the grand jury even voted.
This is sloppy.
This is clownish.
And it speaks to this particular prosecutor.
Very sloppy work.
That's the way I see it.
One of the headlines, I forget which news organization had it there said, Oh, it's a
grand slam. They've hit him and everybody else. All this kind of stuff. I told Karen, I said,
yeah, it's a grand slam, like a Denny's breakfast or buffet. It's a bunch of junk food to feed to
the masses. That's what this is. It's that kind of, it's a denny's grand slam that's what it is uh no no uh
uh you know no insults to the people who like to eat at denny's or people who
work at denny's or own denny's i mean denny's is fine i'm just saying um that's what this is
the document dated august the 14th obtained by Reuters revealed 13 charges.
And then it goes back down again.
But look, she's got a history also of escalating these conspiracy charges to RICO,
racketeering-influenced corrupt organizations.
Personally, I think all these conspiracy charges are absolute nonsense. Isn't it interesting that the FBI wants to call us conspiracists?
They call everybody conspiracists, so no problem with that, right?
If they come after somebody for a crime, if you had any interaction with somebody else,
well, then they can charge you both with a crime,
and they can charge you with a conspiracy to commit that crime.
They stack this stuff up.
It's one of the ways that they've gotten nearly it's 90 some odd percent.
It's up in the high nineties.
I think it was over 95% of the cases will go to plea bargaining instead of to
a trial.
And the way they do that is by adding a bunch of ridiculous charges,
typically conspiracy to everything.
And the,
um,
you know,
you know,
everything is a conspiracy except for the jfk assassination
that is not a conspiracy 9-11 well yeah that was a conspiracy even according to their official
narrative uh but you know they didn't try the um the lone pilot excuse
you know they had uh several planes only two planes in New York, but they had three buildings
collapsed in their footprint. Anyway, when they talk about conspiracy, again, this is
ramping up the charges. She takes it to the next level. She goes to RICO, and she's been
successful in a RICO prosecution. It was something about some fraud or something in some school district,
and because there was a bunch of people involved,
it really was a genuine conspiracy.
But she takes it up to RICO statute,
and she convicted like 11 out of 12 people with that.
So she was successful in doing that, whether or not it's a justified thing.
The question I have with the Rico stuff is, and this was used,
Rico was used a lot by Rudy Giuliani, as a matter of fact,
because it was really set up initially to come after the mafia.
It wasn't too long before they started using Rico statutes to come after pro-life protesters.
Seriously.
You have Randy Alcorn, Christian author.
He was a pastor as they were helping someone who had not been on his radar, really.
And he was helping somebody who had an unwanted pregnancy, a crisis thing that came up.
And he and his wife helped her.
And they got him involved in the abortion issue.
And then it got him involved in protests at abortion places saying, look, we'll help you
if you're in a crisis type of thing. And so Planned Parenthood, he's up in Oregon or something,
where it's really leftist. Planned Parenthood came after him using the RICO statutes. And anyway,
whatever they did, they got an $8 million judgment against him.
Now, he's written a lot of books.
He's written Christian fiction.
He's written a lot of heaven.
Was one that he had that was really, really big.
The Treasure Principle, where he talks about what Jesus has told us about money.
He's had incredibly,
a long, long list of very, very successful books.
He's made millions and millions of dollars subsequent to that.
But he turned over every penny
except for the amount that you're allowed to keep.
They let you keep what is equivalent to what you'd make
with minimum wage or something like that with that judgment.
And for 20 years, he didn't touch a penny of that.
He gave it all away so that Planned Parenthood would not get a penny.
But when you look at RICO statutes, I'm not a fan of that.
RICO statutes, as I said yesterday, was the beginning of what turned into civil asset forfeiture.
And I've gone through that timeline of how we slipped into that before.
Biden was a big part of that. So her excuse really is, hey, look, I'm not an expert on
administrative duties. Well, she may not be an expert on the law either when we look at this.
But you've got a lot of people screaming bloody murder. Ramaswamy, it says that Trump's due process rights have been violated.
Is he a lawyer?
I don't know.
I don't think his due process rights have been violated, but quite frankly, I don't
care about his due process rights.
This is a guy who for, uh, to violate the second amendment that he swore to uphold and
protect said, take the guns and do the due process later for red flags. He also,
in violation of that, he set a precedent that I'm going to do banning of guns or parts of guns. I'm
going to do it by executive order. So don't talk to me about due process for Trump. You know,
just as people get upset about the fact that Biden's crimes or Hillary's crimes are not paid any attention to, but they focus on Trump's crimes.
Well, guess what?
I don't care about Trump's due process rights when he doesn't care about our free speech,
when he doesn't care about the Second Amendment, when he attacks the Second Amendment.
But Ramaswamy is one of the reasons why I think he's going up in the polls.
He has positioned himself as a rising sycophant to Trump.
And he is positioning himself, and the smart people are positioning themselves,
to inherit his supporters.
And all this stuff is said and done.
On Rockfin, thank you very much, Michael Gregory.
I appreciate the tip.
Thank you.
Also on Rockfin, Doug Elkins. Thank you so much. He thanks us. No, thank you very much Michael Gregory appreciate the tip thank you also on Rockfin Doug
Elkins thank you so much
he thanks us no thank you
thank you for that
another one
says do you remember what
day you talked about not needing
to nuke Japan
Doug would like to rewatch it
I think it was last week.
You know, that's one thing I really have a hard time remembering.
I have a hard time remembering people's names when I first meet them for some reason.
I almost have to write it down in order to remember things, and I don't.
We'll try to take a look at it and see.
It might have happened last week when Travis was gone. So we'll take a look
at it. Maybe why it didn't ring a bell with him. Also on Rockfin, Angus Mustang, thank you very
much. He says, thank you for the hard work you do to deliver us true information we need. Well,
thank you. That is really kind of you. And I really do appreciate that. You know, we have
a few people who do a lot of heavy lifting for this program. And that's the
thing that concerns me because that's not sustainable. I put that kind of a burden
on just a few people. And so just ask people if you're able, you know, if you can just give us
a small donation once a month, even $5, that would be many multiples of what we make right now and would not be a problem at
all. We wouldn't have to even talk about this stuff, which I don't like to talk about. Uh,
but we wouldn't have to talk about this, um, at all. Uh, if, um, you know, people who listen,
uh, gave a dollar even, you know, once a month, uh, to this stuff. We'll be right back. Thank you. You're listening to The David Knight Show.
Well, let's talk a little bit about the furries.
I said we'd talk about this.
The first time I heard about this was a couple of years ago kids were showing up in school wearing fur you know dressing up like
animals and calling themselves furries and i thought what in the world is this and it's just
the latest fetish the latest lovers of self the latest removing yourself from reality that's what
this is all about it It is a continuum.
We look at LGBT stuff, and I've said it for a long time,
is that where this is headed, especially with the transgender stuff,
it's headed to pedophilia.
And we've seen this.
And I said it before they started the Drag Queen Storytime Hour,
what they call the Drag Queens, the Dragon Story Hour.
And I said the reason I say that is because we have always said
that you cannot have sex with a minor even if they consent to it.
It's statutory rape.
I'd called out Planned Parenthood for many years for not reporting statutory rape. You've got a pregnant minor, you got statutory rape,
call the police. They don't do it. But I said, if we're going to say that children
can permanently alter their body and there's no coming back, I mean, certainly the sexual stuff and statutory rape,
that has real psychological, spiritual scars that are left on people.
It's one of the ways that they propagate homosexuality.
You go back and look at people and say,
yeah, I was molested as a child,
and it affected me psychologically the way that i related to
people and all the rest of this stuff um that's a real heinous thing but if you're going to say
that kids can mutilate their bodies even chemically castrate kids at the age of eight
and that's what they were going to do in texas you a judge agreed with the mother, was going to do that.
You know, the Save James story.
I forget his last name. James Younger.
And his father, I interviewed his father.
And, you know, eight-year-old.
You know, he's six years old at the time.
The judge said, well, wait until the kid is eight,
and then we'll chemically castrate him.
It's like, if you're going to support that,
then that's a way to move in.
Well, if they can consent to castration,
then I guess they can consent to anything, right?
So I said it's headed towards pedophilia.
But then the other way, the other part of this,
it's two-pronged, okay?
One of them is to take us into pedophilia
and all kinds of abuse.
The other thing is to take us into transhumanism,
to take us into this virtual reality where nothing is real,
everything is imagined, and they want to keep us controlled,
as Yuval Harari said.
We'll do it with drugs and we'll do it with video games.
We'll put people in a virtual reality.
And a good example of this is this furry stuff. Right now, you've got people, adults as well as kids,
going around these conventions and dressing up as furries,
dressing up like a costume character or something like that.
And, you know, going to these as much as they can,
hanging out with each other.
You've got another group of homosexuals, mermaids they call themselves.
Guys who dress up and put on like a mermaid pants without legs,
make them look like they're fish on the bottom half,
lounge around a pool and stuff like that, this kind of stuff.
These people are ripe for being put into a virtual reality prison of their own making.
They want to drop out of reality. They've had it with reality. A lot of these furry people,
furry fetishes, say that they were bullied extensively and so forth. And so, you know,
they're trying to escape into this costume. And this is the way that they can feel accepted and so forth.
And so we have this really strange thing where you have a guy was filming
these furries who were at a public place, Huntington Beach in California,
where else but California, right?
Sunset Beach Bonfire Fur Meat, they call it.
This is when the furries get together.
They have a fur meet.
And so one person who is not in costume,
but apparently was known to these people,
apparently was kicked out of their group for some reason.
He's filming with a phone.
And then there is, you know, guy uh has uh this to say to him
which one are you faced i'll fight you both together if you want
i'll fight you with one poor tie behind my back
i'll fight you standing on one foot. I'll fight you with my eyes closed.
Oh, pulling an axe on me, eh?
Sneaking up on me, eh?
Why?
Actually, it was worse than that. He was the one who was armed.
He didn't have an axe.
He had a bullhorn.
And he ran at the guy and hit the guy in the head.
And the guy was in a great deal of pain.
As a matter of fact, here's the actual clip where the fur is flying.
And you've got to watch this closely.
It's right at the very beginning of this clip where he runs at him and hits him in the head with his bullhorn
and then is immediately tackled.
And you hear this guy who's screaming in the background.
He just keeps screaming for a very long time.
He's in a great deal of pain.
Oh, my God.
Oh, my God.
Yes.
So, yeah, I'm going to have to have stitches, he's saying. I'm going to sue you. Oh my God! Oh my God! Yes. This is what police do to you!
So yeah, I'm going to have to have stitches, he's saying.
I'm going to sue you.
And the other guy had said, I'm going to sue you.
And then I'm going to sue the person who's doing it.
Yes, this is America. We hire lawyers to settle our differences unless we can hit somebody with a bullhorn.
Yeah, the real attack was even more cowardly than uh the cowardly lion you know at least the
cowardly lion is like go ahead put him up put him up i'll take you on with this but uh that guy just
jumped now these guys were dressed as wolves and that may have been an indication because there was
another guy that was there also dressed as a wolf and he also jumps onto this guy and um so uh
hundreds of furries were there but only the wolves went after them.
It's interesting that the Daily Mail called this guy who was filming them a voyeur.
What?
I mean, honestly, if I was on the beach and I saw a bunch of adults, you know,
dressed up and prancing around or whatever they do in these costumes,
I would pull out my camera too because it'd be so unbelievable.
But, you know, to call them a voyeur,
they say this is something of a sexual fetish for these people,
and I don't understand that either.
You know, this is, is again this is another one of
these things like sam britain and um when you look at some of these people also fun fact about the
furry community they're constantly getting exposed for being zoo files and necrophiles surprise
surprise oh bestiality okay okay well there you go i guess that's where the sexual kind
i don't know.
These guys better stay away from real wolves though.
I, I, I've heard tell that a wolf can bite the tail off of a, of a, of a cow in one chomp.
So you might want to not take out your furry fetishes on a real wolf.
This is a couple of guys there with their heads removed, um,
an older guy and a younger guy. What's going on with that? Uh, so, uh, anyway, this is, uh,
the man who was recording the group before the fight search was screaming on the ground.
Uh, and, and then as, uh, the camera clip continues to go on he says this is what furries do
to you and then they start making the allegations saying that the threats saying that they're going
to sue other people um and so i said it's not clear how it started the man recording so that
but you know that part of it is not really all that interesting it's really more interesting what is going on with the community and this
whole weirdness here they say in this article daily mail they call it a sexual fetish they say
it's also the fastest growing fandom in the world with an estimated two and.5 million adherents worldwide, we're living in really sick times.
2.5 million.
Each animal represents a different personality.
Fox furries are sly or mischievous.
Dogs are fun types.
And cats are for people who want to be seen as aloof.
And we've just seen what wolves do. Uh, they have what they call
their fursona based on what it is that they do. And, uh, this guy that was posing with a young
kid, uh, they interviewed him in a previous article. He says it's weird, uh, but we kind of accept that it's a lot of fun. And so they had an anthro weekend in Utah
in July. Ogden, Utah, you know, to celebrate all things furry. I remember when Ogden, Utah was
known as the home of the Osmond brothers and, you know, Andy Williams. And that was, that was when
America had it set on straight. I don't know what's going on with this stuff.
The 2019 event was called Furlock Holmes, themed on Sherlock Holmes,
featured specially created characters such as Periarty
and murder mystery treasure hunts where attendees could win
furry-related merchandise.
Well, you know, any of this stuff could be harmless,
but there's something else going on here. Simple fact of the matter is that these guys are like lost boys.
Really like it. I mean, when you look at the pictures of the lost boys and,
you know, they're in what? Like little animal costumes. These guys are never going to grow up,
even as they're going to grow old. They're not going to grow up. And that really is a big issue for our society.
Some of them talk, some of them squeak, some of them stay totally silent.
But the key issue, if we look at the demographics with this, according to a website that collects data about these two and a half million people
worldwide, fur science, they call it, the majority of them, here's the demographic,
they're male, 84% male and 83% white. Now, again, the bullying stuff is what a lot of them said,
I was being bullied in school and I got into this type of thing.
Even some of the females who were doing it said that they were bullied in school.
But, you know, you look at how men are bullied in society, and I'm not excusing it.
I'm just saying that these guys, instead of tackling this stuff directly and head on,
they retreat into a costume. And again, you know, if you are male, if you are white,
you are not liked in this society right now.
The institutions have turned against those people,
and they are creating mobs against those demographics.
Three-quarters of all furries are under the age of 25.
Less than a third of all furries consider themselves to be heterosexual.
So it's two-thirds homosexual.
And 75% under the age of 25, white males.
This is what's happening to white males in the future.
First Science statistics reveal that many furries have a history of being bullied,
with 61% saying that they were picked on during their high school years.
And so they've now just retreated into this.
Truly is amazing.
Now, here's another example of this.
Here is a tranny who has been part of RuPaul's Drag Race.
Here's what the guy looks like typically on the left when he's mocking and making fun of real women.
And here's what he looks like on the right when he's mocking and making fun of real black women.
And we've now figured out that there is a line here that must not be crossed.
He's learning really hard that there is a ranking to intersectionality. And there are certain things that must not be crossed. He's learning really hard that there is a ranking to
intersectionality and there's certain things that must not be mocked, but it's okay for him to
mock women because, and it's also okay for him to sexualize kids. As I said, many times,
the types of stuff that you see, these so-called drag Queens, I call them dragons.
You see these dragons doing lewd dances in front of very young children,
you know, like stripper dances and, you know, giving them money and all the rest of this stuff.
Heterosexual woman could not do that, could not do those kinds of stripper performances out
in public, but it's okay for these guys too. But you better not dress up
in blackface in a cartoon mocking of black people. But you can mock women and you can
sexualize children. Pearl Liason, real name Matthew James Lent, slammed by other drag race stars for the usage of blackface.
When people carelessly play with blackface and use slurs,
I think the public outrage overshadows the private hurt that we go through,
said one of them.
But again, it's okay to flash kids and to mock women.
It is interesting how these people, I don't think any of this stuff is okay.
But, you know, they've got their little carve-outs for, you know,
the privileged classes that are there.
On Rumble, Harps, 338LM.
I wonder if that's Harps in Australia.
Yeah, it is.
Okay, Travis says, yeah.
Thank you very much. I appreciate he's put a tip of $5 and said, Don, thank you very much. I appreciate that. He's putting a tip of $5 and said, Don, thank you very much.
And that's exactly what CB Madman said, 1313.
Thank you.
I appreciate that.
Thumbs up and a tip, says Frank Neeb.
Thank you so much on Rumble.
Those three on Rumble.
On Rockfin, Richard Williams.
Thank you very much for the tip.
He says, I care about Trump's due process.
I care about everybody's due process because it is just. If Trump faced due process for his crimes and I was on the jury,
I would vote for his execution. Even Trump deserves due process. Let's give him justice,
good and hard. That's the problem. That's the thing that bothers me so much about this
because there's real big crimes, even
bigger than just like Biden.
Biden's got big crimes of graft and corruption and who knows what else.
But Biden has a long history of crimes against the Constitution, as I said before, going
back to the Reagan administration.
He's been committing crimes against the Constitution as a senator for decades.
But yeah, the big crime that they're not
going to take a look at that's what they did to all of us that's amazing on rockfin amos pool thank
you very much that is very generous i appreciate that i agree with my fellow scotsman angus
appreciate your clear honest analysis thank you very much and on a rumble north american house
hippo thank you for the tip.
I appreciate that.
He says, the last Democrat I had any respect for was a late Jim Traffickant.
I remember him, vaguely, yeah.
He used to conclude his speeches by saying, beam me up.
So here we are, beam me up, yeah.
Well, we got one more to show you here.
This is a school trustee.
This is an elected position.
It's like a school board trustee.
It's like, you know, getting elected to the school board here in the U.S., but they call them trustees in Canada.
This person looks like a guy.
And you can pull up that article and show them what this is.
This is a woman who dresses as a man going the other way.
And the rainbow bow tie that's there.
Well, it's an elected position.
This biological female who pretends to be a male also makes no issues about how much he hates Christians.
Or she hates Christians.
See, I get confused with these people. Um,
the name is Terry Westerby director of an LGBT propaganda arm called the Chilliwack pride society.
Chilliwack is the name of the town there.
Uh,
we're not talking about some other kind of sexual practice here or something,
which means that she is a radical sex activist who happens to also be an
elected school board trustee.
And so after she posted this meme here, you see what a stupid meme this is.
You got Barbie down in the bottom corner there, the Barbie from the movie.
And then they have a rainbow-colored steamroller.
Then they put a label of Barbie on there,
trying to tie it into this movie.
I don't know why that has to be there.
Anyway, then they have in front of the steamroller
a bunch of black and white NPCs.
And they're labeled traditional family, Christian values, sanctity of marriage,
et cetera. And they're being steamrolled and run over by, uh, people in the Barbie steamroller,
steamroller, mowing down a group of terrorized Christians running for their life. As a result of that, this person has been removed.
But I believe, yeah, no, I'm sorry, did not get removed, did not get removed.
The trustee posted a non-apology statement on August the 5th. She attempted to justify what
she shared as an anti-Christian meme.
She assured her readers that she would, quote,
not promote violence or hatred against anyone for any reason whatsoever.
But she's also done this in the past.
She also posted this meme about a priest.
It says, Father, I'm a lesbian, says the other character of the priest.
Ask God for help to cure you of that sin, he says.
And so she says, God, please let my problem disappear. And the final panel of the cartoon is that the priest disappears. So she doesn't have a problem with sin. She has a problem with
somebody pointing it out to her. That's the key. And as they point out in this LifeSite News article,
this person is a trustee who hates, clearly hates Christians and is bigoted towards Christians,
is now in charge of kids, some of whom are coming from Christian families.
And I guess they think they can take care of that.
We'll be right back. In a world of deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act.
You're listening to The David Knight Show.
Well, I guess it's sad news, but not unexpected.
Many news organizations have picked up this report.
America's addiction crisis laid bare.
Two-thirds of adults have a family member who is hooked on drugs or alcohol.
One out of ten have lost someone to an overdose.
Is that surprising?
And that doesn't even talk about sexual addictions to porn or fursuits or you know whatever else this stuff is i mean it is
amazing how enslaved our society is and as we are enslaved to these things which are really
pressing on us immediately you know the alcoholism the drug abuse the sexual addiction as we are
enslaved to these things,
it's clear that we're not going to be seeing the chains put on us by these people,
the literal chains, well, not literal,
but the open-air prisons that they're putting us into
and the wireless chains that they're forging on us
as we go in all this stuff.
No, we're going to be focusing on our obsessions,
our addictions,
those kinds of slaveries. We're going to be focused on, well, what happened to Trump after
the election in 2020? We're not even going to take a look at what Trump did the first part of 2020.
And so our hindsight is not 2020. It's only part of 2020. And it's misdirected away from the real issues,
and we can't see what is coming for us in 2030.
National Review, by the way, I talked yesterday about how this guy,
Anthony, Oliver Anthony, always have to think twice about that.
He's got two first names.
But I talked about the fact that he had been attacked,
a lot of people did, by Rolling Stone's writer.
Well, he's now been attacked by National Review.
National Review, who came after the John Birch Society
back in the 1960s,
led by William F. Buckley, who was a CIA guy, coming after the real genuine conservatives,
the John Birch Society.
And now they're continuing to do it.
You got National Review executive editor has attacked Oliver Anthony.
He says, I just don't understand this adulation of this guy.
What is the big deal?
It just goes to show
how out of touch both the left and the right establishment are with what is happening here.
Because there's a lot of people who see what's going on as part of his lyrics. You think we
don't see, but we do. And I see it as a very encouraging thing. Now, the National Review
editor looks at this and says, so what's the big deal?
You know, he's got a lousy job where they're not paying him.
Well, you know, pull yourself up by your bootstraps.
Go get an education or go do this or go do that.
Maybe the National Review editor should ask himself what happened to that American ethic
and why people have lost hope in that thing and
are losing hope in a big way because he doesn't understand that. He doesn't understand why this
resonates with people. It's because he's isolated from this. And John Nolte at Breitbart takes him
on on that. But actually, even John Nolte kind of misses that aspect of it.
He says, come on, give me a break.
This is art, right?
And, you know, don't take this quite so literally,
but I do think that we should take it literally,
and we need to understand where National Review is coming from.
But I thought it was funny what John Nolte did.
He said the best way to read these excerpts from National Review is coming from. But I thought it was funny what John Nolte did. He said, the best way to read these excerpts from National Review's hit piece on it is in the voice
of Thurston Howell III. You know, Jim Backus' character from Gilligan's Island. Yeah, it's
just damn shame what the world's gotten to. But we thing but we can fix it lovey we don't just
have to dream about it that's what he said in his uh that's a quote from his thing we don't have to
dream about we can fix it indeed if we want to we can fix it on our own even if washington is
standing in our way or looking down its nose at us lovey he says he also suggests that anthony
remind everybody in a song of, quote,
what makes America such a great land, a land of opportunity, not of guaranteed success.
Lovey.
You're fit.
You're an able-bodied man.
And you're working overtime hours for BS pay.
You need to find a new job.
And you can do it.
There's plenty of them out there.
There's great jobs that don't require college degrees and all the rest of this stuff. Well, you know, where does this come from? Maybe this national review editor might want
to go back and look at 2020 where we were told we were not essential. Where people who had worked
all their life in the American dream to have a small business, had that small business crushed by the president and his minions,
by the governors that he paid, and the minions of that governor, these public health dictators,
telling you, you got to shut down your business. I'm sorry. I don't care.
I said, that really bothered me because I come from a tradition of that. Both my
grandfathers had small businesses. My father had a small business.
At one point in my life, I had a small business. I know how people work and how they pour themselves
into that. And to just have some government bureaucrat, unelected, but bribed by the
president, bribed by the governor as that tyranny trickles down to people. It's trickle down tyranny
was what Trump gave us.
That's what I said all the time about this PPP stuff.
I said, don't PPP down my back and tell me it's raining.
This is trickle-down tyranny.
Oh, here's a little bit of a stimulus check.
Get used to it because we're going to put you on universal basic income because we're going to destroy your job,
we're going to destroy your business, and the rest of this stuff.
Don't talk to me about the American work ethic
if you're not going to me about the American work ethic. If
you're not going to criticize Trump for what he did, this is a response to what Trump did. This
is a response to this 2030 stuff with Biden taking away everything from us, even taking away the
conveniences that we have in terms of appliances, our freedom and our mobility to move around with
automobiles. And they're taking all of it.
They're not just taking the internal combustion engines.
They're going to take the electric cars as well.
Yeah, Biden is out there shutting off areas
where we could mine uranium.
I say, we're going to make this into a monument
to some Indian tribes or something.
You can't touch it. What's that about? They can't make an argument, their emissions argument,
for nuclear power plants. They've got other issues, quite frankly, that I think are far
more important. I'm not worried about emissions. Emissions can be cleaned up at the site. They can be cleaned up on the cars. And, um, you know, it's, I drive around all the time in a convertible. Very rarely
can I smell the exhaust of some car. It's kind of unusual when I can. They run very clean now,
but look, they don't want us to have fuel of any kind. They began by trying to stop coal because we have so much coal.
But now they're even going for uranium.
And since they can't make an argument for it from an emissions standpoint,
they're going to go for the uranium by just keeping it in the ground.
Just lock it up. I don't want it out there.
And, you know, so to paraphrase Obama, you like your electric car?
You can keep your electric car in the garage
because we're not going to have any electricity for you to charge it.
There's not going to be anything to run the grid on.
This is what is happening.
You think we don't see it in National Review, but we do.
You think we don't see it in National Review, but we do. You think we don't see it, Rolling Stone, but we do.
And we see where you are as well.
You leftist and rightist establishment elitists
who skirt above all this stuff.
It's just amazing to see this.
After being told they were non-essential.
And, you know, the other thing that we see, National Review, which maybe you don't see,
is 80,000 IRS agents coming for us in a couple of years.
What are they going to be for?
They're going to be to shut us down.
You know, it's amazing.
I look back at my life and, you know, my grandfather during the depression,
one of them had, uh, he'd worked as a, as a streetcar conductor, saved up his money,
had a general store and he got that before the depression happened. So, you know, on my mother's
side, they rode that out pretty, it's not a big store, right? Certainly not a chain, but they rode that out on that side. On my father's side, uh, he was basically making, um, medicines and cosmetics
and stuff like that in the backyard. Nobody ever had a problem with any of that stuff,
but of course the FDA would not allow that. And as my father and uncle continued that business
and expanded that business and they did private labeling for
some other companies, but it was still a pretty small business. And, um, it was, it was clear
that, you know, they had about 40 or 50 employees and it was clear to both me and to my cousin
that we were not going to be able to continue in that line because regulations are coming on a, on a regular basis to shut that down.
And so they regulated out of existence,
any small individuals ability to manufacture anything in this country,
they put it, and then, you know, that,
that was even in the sixties and seventies when they were doing that.
And then they doubled down on it with a trade with China,
which Ramaswamy loves.
He likes that.
Let's use people in China as slave labor,
and let's bring in cheap labor from India with H-1B visas
to take your jobs.
And so once they began outsourcing all the big manufacturing even to China,
everybody turned to retail businesses, and that's eventually what we did.
I mean, I looked at it.
It's like, well, there's no future in this.
I went to college and got a degree in electrical engineering,
get out of the business, did that for a few years,
then wanted to be, you know,
Karen and I wanted to be our own boss with this stuff so
we did the video stores and my interest in it we had uh she had some relatives in new york who'd
open up a video store and they were real excited about it's working really well for them the early
days of video stuff but everybody's doing stuff uh with three by five cards that's how they were
tracking who had what they'd have a three by
five card for each tape and they would write this down and manually track it like this is crazy
and so the macintosh had just come out it was a first graphical user interface
this is a great idea so i was just we started the test the store just to be a test bed for that software
but about that time the movie studios opened up the catalog and it just took off and so we
started opening up stores and um and it was also a difficult thing to try to convince people at
the time that a graphical user interface was better everybody wanted to have an ibm pc because
it had four colors or something. And it had a one
font that looked like a kidnapping note. If you remember that and a bunch of function keys,
it was just abominable. The user interface. I thought, Oh yeah, I can easily, this thing,
it just runs circles around that. But everybody's like, well, it's kind of small screen. It's in
black and white. I don't know. You know, but, uh, anyway, I was like, I'm not going to try to
educate these people about this stuff. Um, let's just run the video store thing't, you know, but anyway, I was like, I'm not going to try to educate these people
about this stuff. Let's just run the video store thing. But you know, that was the type of person,
you know, that's what's allowed to us now. When you look at 2020, what do we have here?
We've got service businesses, restaurants, nail salons, hairstylists, and these are the people,
barbers, these are the people that the public health officials were brutalizing in 2020 with the trickle-down tyranny from Trump.
And it just made me sick to see that.
And so you've got this elitist snob at National Review, the CIA rag, pushing war and everything else. So the, you know, the neocon review makes me sick to see this.
But Nolte has a different take on it.
John Nolte at Breitbart.
He says, look, understand, first of all, singers are actors.
Believe it or not, Bruce Springsteen never went to Vietnam.
Gordon Lightfoot wasn't on the Edmund Fitzgerald.
Jim Croce didn't know Leroy Brown.
And he says in parentheses, well, I'm told that Croce might have known a Leroy Brown,
but I know for a fact that he never tugged on Superman's cape.
And he says, and no one named Billy Joe McAllister ever jumped off the Tallahatchie Bridge.
All Oliver Anthony is doing is using his talent in the same way that singers and songwriters
have for as long as there have been singers and songwriters.
He's getting into another person's head and heart to express how this person feels.
And that's the issue.
He doesn't talk about that, but that is the issue, as I said.
You ought to ask, this National Review guy ought to ask himself, why is this message resonating with people?
But instead, National Review wants to shoot the messenger.
Then he asked some other ones.
He said, we can only imagine what National Review might have said over the many years.
Why does Al Jolson keep cry-babying about how much he misses his mammy?
This is America.
Frank Sinatra is a young and wealthy and talented superstar,
and he's whining about the wee small hours of the morning?
An abundance of health options are available in this amazing America of ours,
and yet I've got to listen to Patsy Cline whine about how she's crazy?
Hey, I've been to Hotel California.
None of that happened.
Same thing with Heartbreak Hotel.
Oh, you crybabies.
He says, how out of touch, said John Nolte.
Do you have to be to rip apart a song that speaks to a disaffected group of people and says, I get you.
I hear you. I'm with you. You're not alone.
We're in this together. He says, that's what art does. And the best art grabs hold of something
inside of us and helps us to make sense out of it. We've all hit our lows in our own lives,
he said. But this is a different thing, quite frankly.
And this is why this has gone so exponential.
I think he's gone over 10 million views now easily.
As I said when I talked about it earlier this week, I said, you know, he's got the number one song.
But even more importantly, he's got nine out of the top 20 songs on iTunes.
But, you know, when we look at this systematic forced austerity on us,
you know, it wasn't enough that we're going to shut down all these other avenues of people.
If you want to try to manufacture something here in the United States, well, good luck with that.
You got every regulatory agency that you can imagine on you.
I mean, you know, even when you put together,
even as they were putting together perfume, they would have to have rubbing alcohol and stuff like
that. Uh, my dad had to have a permanent deposit with the BATF, uh, to ensure, assure them that
that was not being used to manufacture something somebody would drink.
And it was more than the price of our house, a couple of times more than the price of our house.
Tied up in a permanent deposit with them. As soon as you had proved that you had made perfume,
and you had to prove to them, you had to take the time and trouble to prove to them that you'd made perfume. Then after you approved to them that you'd made perfume, then said, okay, you can have your money back, but now I've got to make another batch and I've got to buy some more.
So, okay, here, you just leave it there.
And that was at a time, it really bothered him because that was at a time when he could have made money in the bank on interest.
But see, now in our generation, you can't make any money on the money that you put in the bank.
They pay you nothing, and yet they charge you 20%, 30%.
Write a song about that.
That bothers me.
National Review is fine with that.
Republicans and Democrats are fine with the usury that's happening right now,
and it is usury.
It is loan sharking.
When you look at the prices that are paid on these credit,
that they charge on these credit card things and what they pay in the banks,
as I've said before, go back to the 1960s.
You know, when the interest rates went up to 5%,
they said, well, interest rates got down to 5% on the houses or something.
So this goes back to 1960s.
And I looked at it.
They were charging people 5% for home loans, but they were paying them 4% on their savings accounts in the banks.
They paid you a tiny fraction of 1%, tiny, tiny fraction of 1%. And yet they charge you 20, 30%
on your credit cards. How is that allowed?
And what does it tell you?
Just like all this vaccine stuff,
all this pandemic stuff,
what does it tell you about the Republicans
as well as the Democrats
when they turn a blind eye to all that stuff?
Country music industry is confused by man
actually from the country making actual music,
says Babylon Bee.
That's funny.
My son, not Travis, but my other son, said,
and he really hates country and Western music.
He hates the corporate stuff.
Well, he doesn't even like bluegrass.
I like bluegrass.
But he doesn't even, he says, I actually like that song.
I don't like country music, but I like that song.
He identifies with it as well.
And now we have churchleaders.com, also coming after Oliver Anthony, the editor of churchleaders.com.
He says, this has drawn cheers and jeers from Christians, but of course he's mainly got jeers for this guy.
He says it is a foul-mouthed patriotic country ballad.
According to High Value Dad, who's got a Twitter account, Jason Howerton,
Oliver Anthony, he said, is a non-religious man, a former Virginia factory worker turned country singer who went viral after promising God he'd get sober
if he'd help him follow his dream.
30 days after Anthony cried out to God
about his mental health struggles and his alcohol issues,
the sober Anthony was asked to record a song
for Radio WV's YouTube music channel
that went viral, and the rest of this is history.
Now it is well over 10 million.
I mean, this was put out yesterday afternoon, I think.
Now it's 12.5 million views in just a few days.
You know, how does God work with that, you know?
I mean, does God, is God a genie in a bottle?
Of course not.
We all know that.
Even, you know, new Christians find that. Even, you know, new Christians find that. But it is interesting that, you know, and I said,
far bigger, and don't I give people hope, as I mentioned at the beginning of this, you know,
two-thirds of Americans have a family member who's addicted to alcohol or drugs or something like 10% of them committed suicide and stuff.
So the bigger miracle here is not the recording contract.
I said that from day one.
I said the bigger miracle here is giving him hope in his life and stopping the alcoholism.
How do you just turn that off?
Well, you can, as a matter of fact.
God can make those types of changes.
That's the miracle. The miraculous transformation in his life.
Whatever happens to him with this now,
I'm sure he'll make millions of dollars off of this stuff,
but even if he squanders that somehow, loses it,
if he's got God, he's got everything.
Seek me first, and all these other things will be added to you, we're told.
The lyrics argue that the American working class citizens struggle to make ends meet while wealthy
government officials in Washington, D.C. seek to take control of our nation. Yeah, that's what
National Review doesn't get, isn't it? And so, you know, that's how he says this all began. And then, as I mentioned, when he did his concert,
he said, I remember just back in June, just two months ago, I played here for about 20 people.
He played in Currituck, North Carolina at a farmer's market. And so he said, so last time
I was here, there's only about 20 people. He mentions that there was enough cars to fill up the 25-acre parking lot.
So he said, I just felt, I just have something I feel compelled to share with you.
And so he reads to them from Psalm 37.
This is what he read.
He said, the wicked plot against the righteous and gnash their teeth at them,
but the Lord laughs at the wicked, for he knows their day is coming.
The wicked draw the sword and bend the bow to bring down the poor and needy, to slay those
whose ways are upright. But their swords will pierce their own hearts, and their bows will be
broken. Better the little that the righteous have than the wealth of many wicked, for the power of The Lord's enemies are like the flowers of the field,
they will be consumed, they will go up in smoke.
And when he finished reading, it says they broke into applause.
And so all of that is good.
And you want real hope?
Look at that passage there.
That's your real hope. It doesn't say God's going
to make you super rich, which he did in Oliver Anthony. But he's not going to leave you addicted
to things if you really ask for that. It's not God's will that you be enslaved to alcohol or drugs.
And he says, you know, ask.
He says, just ask and you'll receive.
And so we know that we can ask that because he does not want you like that.
So they take him on, though.
They say, well, that's all well and good. But do you realize that he's
got profanity laced lyrics? I thought, what? Well, I noticed that he said BS and, uh, you know,
you know, he says, uh, uh, working for, uh, bull wages or something like that, or they don't,
you know, dollar isn't worth. And he says, damn. And I thought, okay, fine. But
you know, is, is that blasphemy? Yeah. I remember, and I've told this story before,
Karen and I went to see Penn and Teller once. And, um, uh, in the middle of the show,
he gets up and he starts talking about how much he hates profanity.
And he says, you know, the F word, everybody uses the F word. They use it
every form of speech and I'm sick and tired of hearing it. It sounds stupid. Get a vocabulary.
I said, yeah, absolutely. Absolutely. I agree with that. He says, now I, on the other hand,
I don't believe in God and I use every chance that I can to blaspheme God. And so every chance
that I can, I constantly, I don't want to use the F word. It just makes me sound stupid. So I like to blaspheme Jesus.
And I do that all the time.
And we got up and we walked out when he's doing that.
So, but, you know, I looked at that and thought, is that what Oliver Anthony is doing?
I don't really think so.
You know, some people obviously go for that.
I confronted Alex about this at Infowars, because Paul Joseph Watson started doing this on a regular
basis, and everything that Paul Joseph Watson was doing would be copied by everybody else.
And so at one point in time, he just throws in there gratuitously, Jesus H. Christ, as he puts it in.
And I told Alex, I said,
well, you say you're a Christian.
I said, do you think God's going to bless this business
if you condone that kind of stuff?
It stopped it for a short period of time,
and it started up again.
So when you look at stuff,
it's somebody's intention with that, I think.
And when I look at his lyrics,
I even had to go back,
and one person said,
well, he takes the Lord's name in vain.
I had to look at it.
I was like, really?
I didn't notice that.
What he does say a couple of times
is Lord knows that this happened.
Well, I don't see that as using it
differently. But then another time he just says, Lord, this is something. So again, you could take
that in a couple of different ways. But look, when we become Christians, everybody's coming
from a different perspective. This is a guy who was an alcoholic. Look at how far he came
with this stuff. If he's kicked off of the alcohol, that's a big deal. I had a pastor once who was a sailor, and he said when he became a Christian,
he said, you know, he used to curse like a sailor, as they say. They said when he became a Christian,
that just stopped immediately. He said for some people, you know, they stop alcohol. Some people,
they stop cigarette smoking or something like that. He said, for me, it was profanity.
But we don't judge people based on, they're in a process.
Everybody's coming from a particular position when they get into this.
And so we don't know what they're going through or how far they have come.
And that's the key thing.
Nobody's ever going to follow God perfectly in this life.
And so another person called him a foul-mouthed, sweaty redneck with no MDiv. I guess that's a
master's degree in divinity or something. I don't know. Or a coffee bar just telling off the
government leaders and upstaging big Eva.
I don't know what that is.
This is not winsome, but it is attractive in so many ways
because he's speaking truth.
Okay, well, I guess that's kind of a backhanded compliment with that,
but here's the deal.
Again, that's one thing that we need to think about
when we're looking at other people who are in process.
I see that in some of these people who are in process. You know, I see that in some of these people who rock stars.
I mean, they've lived the most depraved life you can imagine,
and then they say they become a Christian.
They look like, you know, you look at them,
they've got some really rough edges on them.
But you can have somebody who's grown up in the church,
and they never drank or smoked or did anything,
and they can be real proud about that.
That's something that God really hates.
That's something that Christ called out all the time. Oh, you're proud of your righteousness,
are you? Okay, well, let's teach you a lesson. Meanwhile, in Texas, there is a lawsuit against Planned Parenthood to get them to repay $17 million in Medicaid funds that the state attorney general there says is not warranted.
And this is headed before a judge, U.S. District Judge Matthew Kaczmarek, is maybe the way you pronounce his name.
That judge recently, quote, put access to the most common method of abortion in the U.S. in limbo.
That would be the abortion pill, I guess.
With a ruling that invalidated approval of the abortion pill,
Mephistopheles, which is the way I prefer to pronounce that.
That devilish thing.
So he's not too friendly to the abortion pill.
So this lawsuit against Planned Parenthood is going to be going before him.
The attorney general of Texas,
Ken Paxton is doing this.
And of course,
this may be something that Ken Paxton is hoping is going to help us cases.
He goes before the Senate to be impeached in his trial.
There's, you know, you look at what is going on with this stuff.
It is, in Texas, there's a lot of politics being played here.
But look, we just take this thing one at a time.
And I think this is a good process, regardless of what his motivations were.
In January 2022, he hit Planned Parenthood with a lawsuit in an effort to recoup millions of
dollars that the abortion business had received via the state's Medicaid program after it was
defunded. Specifically, Planned Parenthood received reimbursement from Texas Medicaid,
to which it was not entitled, says the lawsuit. Planned Parenthood received reimbursement from Texas Medicaid, to which it was not entitled, says the lawsuit.
Planned Parenthood knowingly and improperly avoided its obligation to repay money owed to the Texas Medicaid program.
Planned Parenthood performed the second highest number of abortions ever, while also experiencing record high revenue during 2021 to 2022 and of course this is going to be it was put
on to brought according to the federal False Claims Act I don't know what the
details are on this but if he's able to recoup this money from Planned Parenthood, it is going to be a big issue because they got $1.9 billion in revenue for the year ending
June 30th, 2022. And an outlet said $670 million of which came from taxpayers in the form of government health service reimbursements
and grants. And so this would be a major blow to them if some of the pro-life states start carving
back some of the money that has already been given to them or cuts them off from this stuff.
Because that's the way that you can really put the screws to them is to defund them.
Before we take a break, let me just read some of the comments on here.
On Rockfin, Bernie says, 56 months sober.
Good for you.
Good for you.
And God save me.
Good for you.
Good for you.
On Rumble, perfectly up.
Thank you for the tip.
I appreciate that.
He says, I appreciate your authenticity. Please don't hold me to it, but I intend to make it a habit of sending a dollar. Well, perfectly up. Thank you for the tip. I appreciate that. He says, I appreciate your
authenticity. Please don't hold me to it, but I intend to make it a habit sending a dollar.
Well, thank you. And as I said before, you know, it is, we have a lot of people who have, um,
heroically supported this program with big donations. But if the people who download this,
um, on a regular basis were to send in a dollar, that would do it. So there's a few people that have been doing the heavy lifting to keep us able to do this.
So thank you.
I appreciate every dollar that people put out there, actually.
On Rumble, Atomic Dog, thank you.
He says, you make me a better man.
Well, that's kind, but no, I can't do that.
Jesus can, though.
On Rumble, Christoa, thank you for the tip.
And on Rockfin, Eric Karma, thank you very much.
That's very generous.
I appreciate that.
We'll take a quick break, and we're going to come right back,
and we're going to talk about the Lesser Magistrate.
We had a listener who had a question about that
and DeSantis firing one of these people.
And I was going to get to it yesterday,
but I didn't get a chance to.
So we're going to talk about that when we come back.
We'll be right back. Decoding the mainstream propaganda it's the david knight show all right let's talk a little bit
about the lesser magistrate and desantis firing a soros prosecutor and this is a question that
was sent to me by michael uh you know before we get into it and just a little bit of a background
about what actually happened.
I just mentioned that it was the second time that he had fired a Soros prosecutor.
A little bit more detail about it.
It was a week ago today that he did it.
I mentioned it last week.
He fired, suspended the top state prosecutor in Orlando last Wednesday, accusing her of incompetence and neglect of duty
for what he characterized as lenience against violent criminals.
So, again, you can make an argument about this,
whether or not his accusations are justified or not.
That's a separate issue, though, about the overreaching thing.
We do know that this prosecutor is a Soros prosecutor, and I say that because this prosecutor who was elected
spent $2 million on the campaign. And that should be a red flag to us right there,
you know, spending that kind of money to get elected. I mean, there's way, way, way, way, way too much money in politics. But half of that came from George Soros.
And so I don't know the details of what she specifically did.
That's not in any of the articles that I saw there, just and, um, you know, allied with a Marxist like,
um, um, the one that was in San Francisco, his name escapes me for the moment, but he was adopted
by Bill Ayers and Bernadine Dorn, uh, the weather underground terrorists who were able to escape
prosecution. Uh, the father of this guy who became the San Francisco prosecutor.
Look it up, Travis.
I'm having a hard time remembering his name.
It's been a while since I talked about it.
But his parents went to jail.
They did not beat the rap like Bill Ayers and Bernadine Dorn.
And so they raised this kid to be a minion of hell, a Marxist.
And that's essentially what he turned into.
Cheza Boudin, I just got it.
See, my mind still works.
Unlike Biden, it's starting to get slow as it gets down there.
It's like eventually, you know, it's kind of churning around.
The access drives are starting to slow down.
Anyway, Chesa Boudin, and of course, his counterpart there in L.A.,
who had been the prosecutor in San Francisco.
They were about to recall him as well.
They did recall Chesa Boudin, but Gascon, the guy in LA, he beat that by playing
games with recall petition signatures. And so he was able to escape recall by keeping his name off
the ballot, by claiming that whenever you do a petition signing thing, it's a really difficult
thing. I've been involved in that many times trying to get third parties on the ballot.
And you always collect a significant number of signatures above and beyond
because they'll always go in and challenge it.
I can't read that signature, this or that.
And so they played that game, said, well, you don't have enough signatures,
and it was just under the number.
And so they did not get to have their election on this guy. But anyway,
back to Florida. DeSantis was heavily criticized, says this, and this is a left-wing press outlet,
The News, that is talking about this. DeSantis was heavily criticized in August of 2022 when
he removed Andrew Warren, top prosecutor in Tampa, who had signed a statement along with 90 other elected
prosecutors across the country vowing to not prosecute people who seek or provide abortions.
Providing abortions is the issue. Nobody's being prosecuted for seeking an abortion.
They're coming after the abortionists. And so critics and even a federal judge
decried Mr. DeSantis' ouster of Mr. Warren
as politically motivated.
But Mr. Warren remains out of office
and Mr. DeSantis mentions his removal
in just about every campaign stump speech.
So what's going on with this?
Well, this guy has sworn to obey the laws.
And again, when we talk about lesser magistrate, we also talk about nullification.
If there's an unjust law, you are not obligated to follow it.
Now, he looks at this and he thinks that it is an unjust law. But ultimately, it is not the law of the land or even the Constitution
that is the ultimate arbiter of what is a just law. God's law is higher than all of them.
And we're talking about killing babies here. And so he says, no, I'm going to allow people
to kill babies. Well, then I'm going to remove you from office. And this is the kind of conflict that we're going to have with lesser magistrates. You can, you know, if abortion
were legal, for example, let's switch it the other way around. Let's say this is a prosecutor
who was, or let's make it not about abortion, let's make it about the transgender stuff,
right? Because we did have this situation here in Tennessee, in Knoxville, they had some of these
dragon story hours, and the pedophile dragons were out there, you know, doing lewd displays
in public and in front of children.
And the people who were there locally said, well, we can't do anything about it because there's nothing on the books about dragon storytime hours.
Well, they subsequently put in a law saying that you cannot, that, you know, defining these things in a broad sense, not using the terms that they use,
but saying that if it is lewd and of a sexual nature and things like that,
if it's adult entertainment, cabaret,
they've had all these different ways of trying to describe it,
that you cannot do it in public and you can't do it with kids.
Just to help these people to enforce the general principle that we don't sexualize
kids and we don't support public nudity. And you see during Pride Month, you see these people where
they've accepted this years ago. Now you've got men parading around on the streets naked during
Pride Month. This is how it's going to go if you accept this stuff. And so let's say that you were, let's say that it was not illegal.
Let's say that it was even protected.
And let's say that you're a sheriff and you arrested somebody for public nudity.
And the governor says, no, we have a law that protects public nudity,
so I'm going to kick you out.
So that's the kind of situations that we get.
There's always, when we talk about lesser magistrate,
we're talking about a situation where there's somebody that is technically above you,
the governor, for example, technically, I guess, above the sheriff,
even though the sheriff is elected by the local people and really accountable to them.
We've had situations in the past, not DeSantis, but I remember there was a harassing gun law
that one sheriff refused to enforce in Florida.
I remember talking to him about it.
He had a lot of support from the Constitutional Sheriffs Association that Sheriff Mack has.
And yet he was removed from office.
I think he eventually got reinstated.
He was removed from office by the governor because he wouldn't enforce this bad law.
And so you're always going to have that type of thing.
And when you have a situation like that, the community is going to have to get involved
in order to protect somebody like the sheriff if he's doing the right thing but you also have these situations think of it in the terms of the sanctuary cities
for example it began with sanctuary cities against any kind of immigration law well the
immigration law whether or not you agree with it the immigration law uh the government did have the power to do an immigration law.
And so these cities that said that they're going to defy the immigration law,
that was clearly them trying to nullify these laws.
But they did not have the law behind them.
They didn't have the greater law.
The U.S. Constitution was not behind them.
And so there was a conflict there. On the other hand, you had sanctuary cities were going to be
a Second Amendment sanctuary city, for example. And we're not going to enforce these laws by the
Illinois governor. You've had a lot of them say that we're going to nullify that. I think that
happened in New York as well. You had a lot of rural communities where the sheriff said, we're not going to enforce that law. And of course it happened to a great deal
during the pandemic. And so when it comes to something like that, you can have a governor
who says, well, I'm going to take that sheriff out. I'm going to send in my state police or
whatever. You may have a situation like that, you know, and you may need to stand with the sheriff
and it may look like something like, uh, Athens, Tennessee in the 1946 or whenever that was, right?
Ultimately, you can get into situations like that.
But as we look at it as Christians, it's going to be how does this comport with the higher
law and the higher principles that are here. Somebody who's a lesser magistrate, certainly the governor,
because of the Tenth Amendment,
I don't even see the governor as a lesser magistrate.
I see the governor and the states and the powers that they have,
I see them as co-equal with the federal government.
You have three different branches of the federal government,
and they have different responsibilities.
None of them are subordinate to the other ones or should be.
They have set up a pecking order now
where you have both the president and the Congress
will say that they're subordinate to the court system,
to the judiciary.
They do that because they don't want to have responsibility.
They don't want to take responsibility for certain actions,
and so they can pass the buck to them.
That's what Trump did with DACA, for example.
And they've done it many times, both Republicans and Democrats.
And when the Congress wants to create some new freedom-sucking law,
what they typically do is create an agency
and let the agency write all the devilish details. And then when they get it too painful,
then the Congress can come in like they're the saviors. On a white horse, they're going to save
you from these bad regulatory agencies. So they can kick that out there if it gets too bad and
people get upset with it. They can come in and put themselves in the role of protector, even though they weren't at all.
So both the Congress and the president have the, the Congress abdicates to the bureaucracy,
which is under the president, but then the president will also abdicate his authority
as well as the Congress to the courts.
It wasn't always that way.
As I mentioned many times Andrew Jackson who
did absolutely the wrong thing
to the Cherokee it was horrible
what he did but he had the legal
authority to do it
and he could have been opposed by local
officials and should
have been opposed by local officials
but the Supreme Court
first said he could do it and then when they
saw what was happening with the removal of the Cherokee,
they changed their mind within a year.
And he said, well, they've issued their opinion.
Let's see them enforce it.
He went ahead and did what he wanted to do,
which he did what he had the legal authority to do.
So all of those are issues that I see in this.
The point is, is that,
you know, the lesser magistrate is not above the greater magistrate.
Both of them are under the law in our American system. The law is the king. They all swear
allegiance to the constitution as stewards, if you will. And when either one of them are unfaithful to the Constitution,
or I would say even the higher law, God's law,
we don't have any conflicts with the Constitution and God's law,
not that I'm aware of.
And so if they're unfaithful to the Constitution,
then they have lost their authority because they violated their oath to uphold it.
The same thing is true with the lesser laws or the other laws, the state laws and things like that.
But then there is also the issue of who has power, right?
So we look at it, there are certain moral principles as to whether or not they have authority to do this.
Is it the right thing to do?
But then there's a whole separate issue of power.
And a lesser magistrate may need the help of the community to stand with them because
of the greater power of someone like the governor, if it is a situation like that.
You have communities, for example, in Texas.
Austin made itself a sanctuary city for trans kids.
That's an abomination.
Nobody wanted to take that on at any level, though.
And so, anyway, when you look at it, he says,
I'm by no means a fan of George Soros' prosecutors,
but how do you reconcile supporting the doctrine of the lesser magistrate
while also supporting what DeSantis did by removing this Orlando prosecutor?
Arguably, Monique Worrell is a lesser magistrate, and she decides what laws to enforce for her
circuits. And again, it isn't a question as to local having a superior issue. The issue is the law. They're under the law.
And so you have different jurisdictions,
but everybody is subordinate to the law,
to the Constitution, to God.
And so we have to make these determinations
on a case-by-case basis.
That's the way I see it.
We're going to take a quick break,
and we will be right back. You're listening to The David Knight Show. Now on Rock Fan, Brian Taylor says, if people understood jury nullification that's a key thing
and mass non-compliance with tyrannical laws government tyranny could be rolled back very
quickly jury nullification the founding fathers believed was one of our most effective tools and
that's effectively been taken away with us from us because most people now are intimidated into a plea bargain with all these trumped up charges that they bring
with everybody. And it's not just Trump who gets the trumped up charges. That's what I was talking
about, about how they add, you know, everything they can think of, uh, without justification.
And then they say, well, you know, you're looking at 700 years in prison, you know, okay, you want to make a deal with us. And then they come after them and get
them to plead guilty to what they wanted to get them in the first place. That's the game. Most
people go for it. Nearly a hundred percent of the people is very rare that you have a jury trial.
Um, as a matter of fact, I worked really hard to get a jury trial off of a traffic case once.
And I, I, cause they have to give it to you in Texas if you want it. And,
uh, eventually brought the prosecutor to his knees. He let me go because he didn't want to
do a jury trial. I mean, it's called his bluff on it. They do the same thing in reverse though.
And most of these other things, I really wanted to do it. I was going to get somebody to record
it. I wasn't going to do a Mr. Smith goes to Washington, whether I, uh, got the book thrown at me or not. I was going to talk about
this thing, but, um, never got my chance to do that. It just was like, what? He gave up. I didn't
want to do that. I wanted to argue this in court. Uh, but, um, yeah, that's the key thing.
The jury, really a jury of your peers. And the other part of it, though, is that the judges lie to the jury.
And they tell them, you do not have the, you're here to judge the facts of the case.
That's it.
You're not here to judge the law.
No, the jury is supposed to judge the law as well as the facts of the case.
That is one of their key duties, is to judge the law. One of the reasons
that they pulled back alcohol prohibition was because juries were nullifying it everywhere,
left and right. And that is a tradition that goes back to Edward Bushnell and the jury that
let William Pinoff. That was an amazing case.
It established habeas corpus, but it also established
trial by jury and jury nullification.
Jury nullification was established by that.
You had William Penn, who went on as a religious protester,
eventually left England, came to America for religious freedom.
They founded the colony that became Pennsylvania.
And he was a Quaker, but they had
an official state religion, and they were not tolerant of anything else. And so the Quakers
were meeting in their church building, and they were told they couldn't do that. They continued
to do it. And so they padlocked the doors. And so then they held their church meeting on the church steps. At that point,
they arrested William Penn. And so both the foreman of the jury, Edward Bushnell, and the
number two guy, I can't remember his name, they said not guilty. Now he clearly had,
there was no question he had violated this law. The jury was nullifying that law, saying that you cannot meet in religious assembly unless it is Church of England.
So there's no question about the facts of the case, none at all.
They were nullifying the law.
And the judge was furious that they had a jury verdict.
He was so angry that he threw the foreman
and the number two guy into jail themselves.
And they stayed there for a while.
And eventually their lawyer said,
filed a writ of habeas corpus.
Show me the law that these guys broke.
And it's like, well, I can't find any law
that says that juries cannot nullify these
verdicts, and so he let them loose, and so that was a very important trial.
Establish a lot of things that we've forgotten about, that we no longer value, and people
put their lives on the line in many ways for the laws and the freedoms that we have today,
and we're just letting this stuff go.
It was given to us.
We inherited it.
We got it freely.
And we look at it as if it's some kind of junk,
and we're throwing it away
because we don't understand the history of it.
We don't understand what it's like without it.
And, of course, we can take a look at what it's like
now that you have judges come in and say,
even though you have many state constitutions that specifically say juries are there to judge the law.
One example of that was in New Jersey, and I interviewed a New Jersey weed man.
He's a Rastafarian who smoked pot.
As a matter of fact, when I was interviewing him, he lit up during the interview and started smoking pot on screen. But, um, he, um, he looked at this thing
and they got him and he had enough pot that they were going to charge him as a dealer,
even though he wasn't dealing, but he was a heavy consumer of this stuff. And so they were going to hit him with a dealer charge,
distributing or whatever.
And he's faced a really long sentence.
And so he said,
I knew at the time that most people in New Jersey did not agree with
marijuana laws that were there.
It was out of step about 60,
about two thirds of the people did not agree with the marijuana prohibition.
So he said, I decided that I was going to do jury nullification. And so he argued that in his first
trial, he had printed up the section of the New Jersey constitution that says the jury is here to
judge the law, not just the facts of the case. He held that up and he showed it to the jury.
And the judge said, take that down. I'm going to hold you in contempt and put you in jail, throw away the key, that type of thing.
So he put it down, but he said it was too late.
The jury had already seen it.
And so they voted seven to five to acquit him.
It was a hung jury.
So the prosecutor could come back for a retrial, which he did.
And when he came back for the retrial, he did the same thing.
And that judge was friendly to it and let him show the jury the same thing. And that judge was friendly to it
and let him show the jury
the state constitution.
And he was acquitted.
12 to nothing.
And there's nothing the prosecutor
could do anymore about that.
So we need to stand on our rights.
Very few people do it.
As a matter of fact,
the report that I did
to get hired for Infowars
was with a guy who was a professor in Pennsylvania who had focused on jury nullification education.
He was with the Fully Informed Jury Association, which I don't know, that organization may not even exist anymore.
But he would hand out literature at courthouses about fully informed juries.
And he was constantly getting arrested.
He was a very frail guy.
He was in his mid-70s or something.
And, you know, he had been manhandled and everything so that when he saw the
police coming, he would lay down on the ground and put his hands behind his
back and they would still find a way to hurt him.
But he kept doing that, and I interviewed him.
But shortly after I interviewed him, he left the country.
He was Jewish.
He immigrated to Israel so that he could get away from this kind of harassment
because they just kept coming for him.
But they didn't fire him from the university because he was a tenured professor.
Anyway, it's a fight, and it never stops.
But if people understood juror nullification,
that would be the easiest way for us to do it. It'd be even better than having a lesser magistrate
like a sheriff. It's really, you know, and if you're going to have a situation like that,
you know, that is one of the key things is to get people to understand how they can nullify
laws. That is the peaceful way to do it instead of doing secession. Nullify their illegal laws.
It certainly shut up Jeff Sessions during the Trump administration when he was so angry and
he wanted to prosecute people for marijuana, as all these states were legalizing marijuana
medically or recreationally. He never did a thing about it because he knew that he didn't have the power.
He knew that prohibition was not legal. And these people are nullifying, you know, you've got more than half of the states now have nullified the federal prohibition against marijuana, which they
have in there as a schedule one drug, a lie saying that it has absolutely no medical use.
So let's talk about climate. The Montana court has ruled for young people in a landmark
U.S. climate trial. This is coming from AFP, and they think this is a really great deal.
You know, this is straight out of Greta Thunberg's book. How dare you? The young people and all the
rest, don't you care about us young people? And they found a sympathetic judge in Montana.
I guess this judge wants to make America Greta.
Angst.
In a landmark climate trial,
a Montana judge,
they say a court, but it's a judge.
There's no jury or anything with this,
ruled on Monday in favor of a group of youths who accused the western U.S. state of violating their rights to a clean environment.
District Court Judge Kathy Seeley said a state law preventing agencies from considering the impacts of greenhouse gases when issuing permits for fossil fuel development was unconstitutional.
Really? What does it say anything about that in the Constitution?
Well, of course, it doesn't say anything about fossil fuels or greenhouse gases in the Constitution.
You won't find those terms in the Constitution.
So what is Kathy doing?
She is making an extrapolation of some vague principle that she thinks she sees in the Constitution.
And that is, she said,
plaintiffs have a fundamental constitutional right
to a clean and healthful environment.
Really?
Where does it say that in the Constitution?
It doesn't even reference this 100-page ruling.
I don't know.
It doesn't mention it in this article that it's sympathetic to her.
It doesn't mention what the rationale to any of this is.
You have a right to a clean, healthful environment?
No, you don't.
And again, what are rights?
We talk all the time about rights versus privileges.
Humans have rights.
Corporations don't have rights.
Corporations are government-created entities, artificial entities.
They are granted privileges as such by the government.
But because, as the Declaration of Independence says, because we are created by God,
each and every one of us, every human, has natural rights because of our humanity,
because we are created in God's image
and so that is the basis of our rights and the purpose of government says the
Declaration of Independence is to protect those God-given rights not to
grant us privileges and Obama when he talks about rights, when he was a professor and he talked about them,
he was very cognizant of the view of the Bill of Rights.
The Bill of Rights is a bill that was presented and put into the Constitution to say,
these are our God-given rights.
You will not infringe on them.
You will pass no law to take these things away.
You will give us due process, no excessive fines, and all the rest of these things, right?
And oh, by the way, if we forgot something, that doesn't mean that we're giving it up.
And unless you get it expressly, you don't have the power to do that.
All of that stuff was part of the Bill of Rights.
And Obama and the Democrats call that the negative concept do that. All of that stuff was part of the Bill of Rights, and Obama and the Democrats
call that the negative concept of rights. And what they mean by that is that those are prohibitions
on government treading on our rights. And they come along and say, well, we don't like negative
rights. Well, nobody likes anything negative, right? They always use the terminology to get what they want.
So they say, we have positive rights.
We say you have a right to an education.
You have a right to housing, or you have a right to this and a right to that that we'll give you.
And that's where this is coming from, a healthful environment. This judge is fundamentally wrong. That's not what rights are.
The Constitution does not give anybody any positive rights. It does not impel anyone to
provide you with anything, including an education. There's no way that that is in the Constitution. As a matter of fact, we could argue that compelling people
to pay taxes to provide a state education is against the Constitution.
It was one of the Communist Party's tenets
for how you turn a country communist.
You have a compulsory education funded by state taxes, that type of thing.
There's nothing about that in the Constitution. And so this wholeory education funded by state taxes, that type of thing. There's
nothing about that in the Constitution. And so this whole idea of giving stuff to people, you
have a right to this, and you have a right to be given that, and you have a right to be given that,
that is the fundamental principles on which the Democrats operate, but that has nothing to do at
all with the Constitution. It's unjust as well. It's unjust, because somebody has got to be compelled to provide that stuff to you.
So this is 16 kids before the judge,
ranging in age from 5 to 22.
So, yeah, so some kind of a children's crusade.
They get together.
They thought of this on their own, did they?
Of course not.
Who's running this stuff? Children's Crusade? They get together. They thought of this on their own, did they? Of course not.
Who's running this stuff? Well, Julia Olson, the executive director of a nonprofit called Our Children's Trust. And so they're the ones who are doing this. Now, this AFP article,
of course, does not go into who is our children's trust.
And it's important that we understand who this is.
I looked at their site and they listed their major donors.
And there were three major donors that they had.
One of them, of course, is the Rockefeller Foundation.
No surprise there.
Another one is the Libra Foundation.
The Libra Foundation,
if you go to its site,
you see that their issues that they focus on
are, besides the environment,
they focus on immigration,
on abortion,
and on race issues.
So you know politically
where they're coming from.
All these issues
that we typically see all the time.
And then, of course,
the environment climate issues.
They are funded by the Pritzker family.
So you've got the Rockefeller foundation.
And if you want to look at the Libra foundation,
it's really the Pritzker family.
Who are the Pritzker family?
Oh,
they're the ones behind the fortune of the Hyatt,
um,
Hyatt hotels and governor Pritzker in Illinois is part of that family.
These are two other people.
Of course, he's got a cousin who is
the spitting image of him, as I've seen that picture so many times of him and his transgender
male cousin dressing up like a woman. I said, looks like Jethro and Jethreen from the Beverly
Hillbillies. But the Pritzker family has been an early advocate and pusher, not just of immigration, abortion, racial politics, and climate politics,
but they've also been big pushers of transgenderism.
And so the Libra Foundation is part of this.
Children's crusade.
Yes, children's crusade, of course.
And then the third organization was something called AVAZ, A-V-A-A-Z.
This came from MoveOn. Soros is involved in that.
They get small donations, mostly from the small donations that they get, other than the MoveOn
stuff, come mostly from foreign countries, France and Brazil. So these are the people who go to
Montana and say, we want to lock up fossil fuels in
Montana. And this judge says, yeah, you got a right to a clean and healthy environment.
Did that judge say that about masks? You know, when they're smothering people with their own
exhaust, you know, the stuff that you're, you know, you eliminate waste through your exhaling stuff, right?
That's what makes the masks so nasty.
It hurts people's health to put masks on them.
We used to recognize that fundamental fact with OSHA.
Can't keep a mask on for more than 20 minutes.
It might be mandated by OSHA in some really dusty environments where those N95 masks would have done some good.
But you can't wear them for more than 20 minutes.
You've got to give people a break, let them breathe.
Well, it's even worse than that.
That wasn't enough protection.
But no, a healthy environment, you sat there and you didn't do anything
as people were told they had to wear masks, as they were told they had to lock down,
they had to social distance, they had to have mandates of every type of thing,
including an injection of a genetic code thing here, the GCIs.
How do you define health?
Who gets to define health?
See, this is exactly the same type of thing we see with a censorship.
I'm sorry, I'm not going to let you put false information out there.
Who gets to decide what's true?
Who gets to decide what is healthy?
We're taking that away from you. We're going to decide that as part of a group. We're going to have some public health official who's going to decide that. Emily Flower, a spokesperson
for the Montana Attorney General's Office, denounced the ruling, said the state would
appeal. This ruling is absurd, she said, and it is. But it's not surprising from a judge who let the plaintiff's attorney put on a week-long taxpayer-funded publicity stunt.
So now we've got a bunch of people, ages 5 through 16, brought in by this organization,
just like Greta Thunberg has been groomed and presented, and they did this this last week.
Montanans cannot be blamed for changing the climate, she said.
Even the plaintiff's expert witnesses agree that our state has no impact on global climate.
That's the amazing thing.
Even if you were to accept that the climate is changing,
even if you were to accept that it is man-made,
you're going to give China and India a free pass on building
as many cheap and dirty power plants that they want to build,
and you're going to say that sparsely populated Montana,
where basically nobody lives,
that they're going to be polluting the global environment.
It's just absurdity stacked on top of absurdity.
The youth said that they had been harmed by the, quote, dangerous impacts of fossil fuels
and the climate crisis.
Well, prove it.
Prove that you've been harmed.
Prove that it's warming.
Prove that it's man-made. Prove that it's coming from Montana. Andve that you've been harmed. Prove that it's warming. Prove that it's man-made.
Prove that it's coming from Montana.
And prove that you've been harmed.
None of that.
This is all just politics.
And this is why, again, they can get bad verdicts on Trump.
They don't have to prove anything to anybody.
I mean, it's just, you know, flat-out bias from courts.
And hopefully there'll be some type of uh in this particular case
appeal where they will shut this thing down um so uh russell said that uh this is montana
assistant attorney general michael russell um and um his argument is he says the state accepts
that man-made emissions were responsible for warming,
but they have not been able to quantify the damage that's been done by Montana.
That's not a winning argument. Do not ever concede something like that. That's a false
assumption. Man-made emissions are not responsible for warming. He says he wants the expert witnesses to quantify what is happening with this.
Will you quantify how this is all being man-made?
Like I said, prove that it's warming, prove that it's man-made.
The lead plaintiff is 22, Ricky Held, whose family runs a ranch in Montana,
said that their livelihoods and their quality of life
have been increasingly impacted by wildfires,
extreme temperatures, and drought.
Okay, well, why didn't that happen in the 1930s?
Why didn't you sue people in the 1930s for this stuff?
The extreme drought was much worse.
The Dust Bowl and all the rest of the stuff,
the extreme temperatures and drought was much worse. The Dust Bowl and all the rest of the stuff, the extreme temperatures and drought was much worse.
The wildfires, well, I think we kind of know
why they can't control the wildfires, don't we?
See, nobody asked that in the 1930s.
Nobody asked, who can I sue and what can I ban?
Wasn't asked in the 1930s about the Dust Bowl.
Nobody's looking to blame this on somebody.
But as the New York Post says, they said, well, this is absolute garbage.
But then the New York Post concedes that carbon output, they said,
contributes to warming.
You notice they don't even say carbon dioxide.
They just say carbon output.
Yes, carbon output contributes to global warming,
but warming is a slow motion risk,
whereas carbon drives currently everything in the modern economy,
refrigeration, clean water, farming.
No one needs to be protected from emissions, they say.
How can they put that conclusion in there
when they say that carbon output contributes to warming?
Are they going to, who's going to quantify this?
If you don't have to prove that there's a connection between man-made activities
and global warming, if you believe it's warming,
then how would you then try to quantify that if you're just going to wave that away
and say, no, it's human activity is causing global warming,
then how are you going to get to the point to say,
well, but it's just happening in slow motion?
Well, prove that.
You see, you cannot accept these premises
and think that you're going to get away.
This is the first Our Children's Trust case that has ever reached trials.
And the New York Post said that it should also be the last one to ever reach a trial.
It's a frivolous lawsuit, if ever there was one. But take a look at the frivolous statements from
Biden about heat. This was sent by Mary Ellen Moore. Thank you very much, Mary Ellen. The Biden-Harris administration takes action to help states and cities fight extreme heat.
And so they've got five actions that they've taken.
First one, issuing a first-ever heat hazard alert that clarifies worker protections from hazardous conditions.
This is all designed to alarm people.
Everything here is a fire alarm.
Oh, warnings.
And we're going to make this a federal warning so that we can scare people more.
It's the same thing these weathermen are doing when they, you know,
paint the temperatures in bright red.
And, you know, these, oh, look at how hot this is going to be.
Number two, intensifying enforcement and increasing inspections
in high-risk industries like construction.
Inspections?
You're going to be harassing people?
Oh, I'm sorry, it's just too hot?
You're going to have to shut down?
It's global warming and assuming that the people here are on the job,
I don't know if they get paid.
If they don't get paid when they shut down, maybe they won't like that.
By the way, they're going to intrude themselves. Where does it say they can do that in the
Constitution, in this stuff? Number three, making buildings more energy efficient and opening
cooling centers to keep residents safe. We have cooling centers. It's called air conditioning.
And if you hadn't raised taxes and taken away
jobs, you wouldn't have so many people who are on the streets. Number four, expanding water
storage capacity across Western states. I know one thing you can do. You can shut down your NSA
data center. That's using as much water and electricity as an entire city.
Finally, launching a new partnership to improve our nation's weather
forecasts. This was something I saw at the American Meteorological Society when they operated and when
they had their meeting in Austin. I've talked about it many times. You had all these scientists
who were there, and just like the founder of the Weather Channel, who always was a global warming
skeptic, he said, you can't,
there's no evidence of this whatsoever. The guy who started the Weather Channel pointed out that
you don't have the kind of accuracy to say that this is going to vary by one and a half degrees.
You know, where are you putting your thermometers? How are you reading your thermometers? You got
digital thermometers now? You really believe that stuff? Right? Most of these records that you got were taken
with mercury thermometers.
We have a parallax view.
They weren't that accurate. They weren't accurate
within one degree, and you're telling us that
if the temperature rises one and a half degrees.
But of course, you can get massive
change in temperature just where you place
the thermometer. You're going to put it in an airport tarmac,
or you're going to put it in the shade.
Where are you going to put it? In a forest. All're going to put it in the shade you know what we're going to put it in a forest all this stuff is nonsense and the weather people who
were there the weathermen the meteorologists who were there they all had their presentations and
it was a floor that was filled they had hundreds of people who had been doing experiments and you
had several days of this stuff and people some of the people had been chosen to give presentations
about their stuff and i sat through a lot of these things and they're all saying, well, this is what we think is affecting
it. Uh, we did this computer model and, uh, then we went out and we tested it and yeah,
it's not quite there yet. We couldn't really predict the weather looking at these factors.
And so that was the standard story that you heard everywhere. You know, they had a theory about what
the different factors were that they could use to predict the climate, but then they go out and they measure it and they
couldn't do it. And that kind of a climate, quote unquote, are you going to tell people who can't
predict the weather a couple of days in advance, you're going to tell them that you're going to
predict the weather 50 years from now or something, or even 20 years or five years from now? This is
why these people constantly fail. They have absolutely no idea.
And so the meteorologists at that point in time, about a decade ago, were very skeptical of all this climate change stuff. And so there was a booth there that was set up by George Soros,
lecturing the meteorologists saying, people trust you. You can teach them about global warming.
And that's what Biden wants to do with this final thing, launching a new partnership to improve our nation's weather forecast.
It's going to be propaganda.
And as he's putting that out there,
the Biden administration is planning a Grand Canyon monument
that will inhibit crucial uranium mining,
which is kind of interesting because there was a big
tanto national forest in arizona was uh something that obama grabbed and um that was
a very important battle like one of the last battles of the apaches or something like that
so they had uh it had religious significance. So it had religious significance to them.
It had historical significance to them.
It was being used for recreation.
And the Obama administration turned it over to an Australian mining company
that was going to take out copper.
And their extraction process was going to leave a crater so big
you could see it from space.
And so you had all these different groups protesting it,
but because of crony capitalism, Obama said, yeah.
Now what they're doing, because they've got to shut down their energy supply,
you've got the Biden administration,
and you remember people were making jokes about it,
that, look, his handlers are letting Biden walk around
on the edge of the Grand Canyon here, this precipice here.
What, are they trying to get rid of him or something? You know, because he's got this
history, of course, of falling and stumbling over things and they're letting him walk around,
you know, but that's, that's what the news media focused on. This is the important issue.
And this is picked up by Zero Hedge. they want to preserve a part and turn this into
a national park the monument is going to be called and i'm not even going to try to pronounce this
this about half a page long and indian language it has in two different native languages. It means where tribes roam and our footprints in two different native languages.
So I'm not going to try to pronounce it.
I have no idea.
Republican lawmakers and the mining industry both pushed back on the idea of this monument
because this is about taking it away, right?
Again, we're going to take away fuel.
This is a process of deliberate energy starvation.
I said this about the lockdowns that Trump did. I said these are economic sanctions against the
middle class. Sanctions are an act of war. Sanctions are the first act of war. We see this,
what was the first thing they did against Russia? Sanctions. And we see
this all the time. Iranian sanctions, Iraqi sanctions. Your sanctions killed a half million
kids, they said to Madeleine Albright. Was it worth it? Yeah, it was worth it. I like that.
Yeah, I like killing kids, she said. Yeah, it was worth it. Didn't even try to defend. No,
we didn't kill that many kids. No, it was worth it. It was fine. I have no conscience at all about killing a half million Iraqi kids with sanctions.
Sanctions are an act of war.
When you go back to the times when we had city-states and regional power centers and things like that,
they would, you know, people would run if there was a war, they'd run to the castle or whatever.
They would put a siege around the castle, try to starve the people out.
Now we do that on a national or international level.
And of course, everybody in every country was being sanctioned.
All the people of the countries were being shut down, told you couldn't work, can't do this, can't do that, can't go anywhere.
We were under siege, literally under siege.
It was
literally an act of war. All sanctions are an act of war. It was a siege. It was a sanction. It was
a war against us. And this is about energy sanctions. It's about energy starvation. And
this is what Biden has been doing from the very beginning. It began by stopping pipelines
and shutting down leases. He escalated it with his crackdown on Russia and everything.
The big part of that was energy starvation.
Now, it did not stop the Russians.
The Russians profited from it.
They were able to sell their oil on the black market.
And even at a heavy discount, Biden's actions jacked the price of fuel up so much.
They made $320 billion in just the first couple of months.
And who did they make those extra profits from?
Mostly the Europeans who are paying the higher energy prices.
Yeah, there's sanctions against us.
Even these Russian sanctions were sanctions against us. Even these Russian sanctions were sanctions against us.
Everything is being done to lock us down and starve us,
whether it is the pandemic MacGuffin or the climate MacGuffin.
As I said before, you like your electric vehicle?
Well, you can keep your electric vehicle in the garage
because there's not going to be any energy to charge it on the grid.
They're going to shut down the nuclear power plants as well.
You know, they can say, well, for fossil fuels, we've got emissions.
Well, they don't have that with the nuclear.
They're just going to shut it down by shutting down the source,
by declaring it to be a monument and off limits.
A tribal councilwoman, Diana Sue White Dove Uqualla.
Little white dove.
Running bear.
Is he there too?
Anyway, that song.
She's made it clear that she wants to stand in the way of such mining.
She said, it's really the uranium that we don't want coming out of the ground
because it's going to affect everything around us.
These people always keep it in the ground.
Whether it's oil or coal or natural people always keep it in the ground, whether it's oil or coal or natural gas.
Keep it in the ground.
You know what they're trying to do?
They're trying to grind us into the ground.
That's what they're trying to do.
A U.S. geological survey from 2021, however,
showed that most springs and wells in the area of northern Arizona known
for uranium mining meet federal drinking water standards despite decades of mining. Currently,
there's no uranium mines operating in Arizona. Buster Johnson, a Mojave County supervisor,
told Fortune that the monument feels like it's politically driven and that mining
uranium will make the country less dependent on Russia. We need uranium for the security of our
country. Well, that's a twofer for Biden. First of all, it makes us dependent. Everything they do
seems to make us dependent on Russia and China that are focused on mining and building and all this other kind of stuff,
while we just focus on financializing everything
and locking us all down.
See, net zero means not zero emissions.
It means zero energy.
They say this is all about the emissions,
but as I said before, it's about omitting things from your life.
You want to know how ridiculous this has gotten? They're now talking about cutting down trees to save us
from global warming. Yeah, you heard that right. Cutting down trees to save us from global warming.
The headline off of the New American, tree euthanasia. That's what some of these idiots
are calling it. They now warn that our forests will worsen global warming. Now, how is that?
They've told us that it's about CO2. Trees remove a massive amount of CO2. They release
oxygen. They provide shade. If the problem is warming, how is this helped by removing the trees?
Back in the 1970s, says the New American, when trees became almost a protected class,
that's when we had everybody becoming tree huggers, remember?
We heard that we had to ditch paper supermarket bags and move to plastic
because we were decimating too many forests.
Now, 50 years later, with more tree cover in the U.S. than a century ago,
the green topians have another complaint.
American forests will become CO2 emitters by 2070, they say.
Joining 10 protected forests worldwide that already are net spewers of the gas.
I would just like to know how that works.
They say, the theory is, that their growth slows and they use less CO2.
In fact, the amount metabolized is lower than that produced by wildfires and dead tree decomposition.
Oh, that's what they're saying.
They're saying because you are not following any stewardship methods,
as I've said over and over again about Hawaii, about Canada,
all these other places, why can't they put the trees out?
Well, because they leave the trees there and let them decompose.
They become fuel, massive amounts of fuel for wildfires that happen.
And so now they're saying, well, because we're not removing these things,
they could in the past, they would let people go in and cut the dead trees down,
make log homes out of them or make lumber out of them or something like that.
But now, no, it's sacred land.
We can't touch it.
You know, they've essentially made it a monument, just like they're doing with this Indian monument to take uranium off.
No, no, no.
Can't go in the forest.
They're too sacred.
And now they're saying because the dead trees are there, and this is why they're pushing this out into 2070.
There's going to be so many dead trees.
And then leaving the dead trees there,
they're going to exacerbate the wildfires and all the rest of this stuff. Well, here's a solution
you may not have thought about once you try stewardship again. Stewardship would solve all
those problems. It'd stop these dead trees decomposing, let people put the wood to good
use instead of just letting it decompose in the forest. You take it out of the forest and now you don't have fuel for wildfires?
Oh no, don't want to do that.
Some scientists have suggested a remedy.
Euthanasia, the tree version.
Destroying the senior citizen trees and replacing them with young whippersnapper ones.
I guess this is kind of the soylent green proposal, right?
For trees. Kind of reminds meylent green proposal, right, for trees.
Kind of reminds me of Treebeard, right?
He's one of these people, altogether, I'm not on anybody's side
because they're not on my side.
Now the environmentalists are coming for Treebeard.
Sorry, you're too old.
I have to get rid of you so we can have some saplings in here.
It said, thankfully, the U.S. Department of Agriculture dismisses this idea of being pushed now by some people as poor science.
I take no consolation in that.
How many times have we seen poor, insane, absurd scientific theories seized upon for people by their agenda.
And why would they want to cut these trees down and do this other thing?
Well, look, Biden is already working with several corporations who want to make a lot of money by putting up big mechanical contraptions,
Rube Goldberg stuff on a massive scale to extract carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.
If these people can sell the idea that plants, trees that God has put here for that purpose
in a symbiotic situation by design, if they can sell the idea that that doesn't work,
we're going to have to build
factories, and I've got to give hundreds of billions of dollars to my pals to do it,
to extract CO2 from the atmosphere. Of course, when they do that, they'll not only be transferring
massive amounts of money from people, but they'll also be killing the environment,
the real ecosystem, the way that God designed it.
As this article in New American says, you know, calling CO2 carbon is like calling H2O hydrogen.
Yeah, I got to hydrogen my lawn or something.
Yeah, H2O is water, and I got gotta get me a big glass of hydrogen no carbon is a solid and but they
don't make a distinction between carbon they don't make a distinction between carbon dioxide which we
all breathe out and the trees and plants breathe in they don't make a distinction between that and
carbon monoxide which will kill you they don't make any of those distinctions. He also points out atmospheric CO2 was once more than 12 times as great as it is today.
They know that from ice cores.
5,000 parts per million versus the 400 parts per million today.
And so, again, when we look at the carbon dioxide that's in the atmosphere, it's a very, very small part of the atmosphere.
0.04%.
And how much of that is produced by us?
Well, not that much, actually.
One last thing before we close on the environment.
Well, we'll talk about it when we come back.
I'm going to take a quick break.
And we will be right back.
The Common Man.
They created Common Core to dumb down our children.
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Their Commons Project to make sure the commoners own nothing.
And the communist future.
They see the common man as simple, unsophisticated, ordinary.
But each of us has worth and dignity created in the image of God.
That is what we have in common.
That is what they want to take away.
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They desire to know everything about us while they hide everything from us.
It's time to turn that around and expose what they want to hide. Please share the information and links you'll find at TheDavidKnightShow.com.
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TheDavidKnightShow.com A little bit about transportation, electric vehicles. We have a semi-truck company, electric semi-truck company.
It calls itself Nikola, right?
Poor Tesla.
He's had both his first name and his last name stolen.
In his lifetime, he was used by the rich guys, Edison especially, and Westinghouse.
They abused him.
Now he's still being used by billionaires to make money.
Isn't that amazing?
Anyway, Nikola, the leading electric semi-truck manufacturer,
has announced a massive recall of battery-powered commercial trucks
due to concerns over a defective battery component that can cause fires.
It's the result of an investigation into a fire at their own facility.
Ominously, the truck caught fire when it was parked at their facility.
A battery part was probably to blame for the coolant leak in one of the trucks.
The battery overheated, which resulted in a fire.
And so their safety and engineering team
discovered a part inside the battery-powered truck
that's probably to blame for the coolant leak.
How many times do we have a coolant leak,
an internal combustion engine that's going to cause a fire
that could possibly burn down the
entire place. When we look at this, very much like these electric buses that, you know, in Germany
had a couple of fires. One of them burned down an entire bus station because there were other
electrical buses that also caught fire and burned down the entire station. Uh, but it also, that happened two different times. Uh, they got
rid of them. Uh, in France, you had electric buses. I've shown pictures on the show of them
just spontaneously combusting as they're parked. They got rid of them. In Canada, they had some
electric buses. They caught fire and, uh, they went back and converted, reconverted them to a diesel. I guess they detransition.
So we would say, and then here in the U S we have the electric bus company that Lala Harris
loved so much. And Biden gave so much money to they've gone bankrupt. So they burned down in
a different way, but these semis are going to be, I think, a much bigger fire hazard,
because I imagine they've got, I'm just guessing, but you know, they've got to have a lot more power
than even a bus does. Buses have really big power, you know, battery array compared to electric car.
But the trucks are going to be much, much bigger. And of course, the trucks,
there's going to be time pressure put on them. And they're going to be trying to do speed charging
on these things as well. Instead of a supercharger, I think Tesla's got, I think they called a
hypercharger or something like that. Certainly there's a lot of hype involved, but a 60% of the
heavy duty battery electric trucks that Nikola has produced over the last year are now part of this recall.
And then Sam, listener, sent this to me.
Driverless cars added again in San Francisco in a malfunction.
And people in San Francisco are just furious about this.
But, of course, they're powerless to do anything about it with the way their government is. Their government doesn't care. If people go around and loot stores
out of business, and of course, they're going to allow these electric car companies to loot these
people of their time and of everything else, they're going to just turn this over to their pals.
That was where, if you notice, a few weeks ago, as this was coming up for reauthorization,
they said, just to show people how much we hate these things and how much they've been in the way
of emergency vehicles, how much they, how much time they've cost everybody. If you see one of
these things, you can take a cone and if you just gently put it on the top, you don't damage the car
or anything, but you make it stop. And we can stop these things with a cone on them, take pictures of them and tell California we don't want it.
Well, California doesn't care what they want. So they approve these things anyway. And we just had
a 10 car driverless traffic jam. 10 of these Johnny cabs, no human driving them,
blocked two narrow streets in the center of san francisco
in the middle of the bar and restaurant district people said they might as well have been boulders
because nobody could move them so the robo taxis sat there with their parking lights flashing for
15 minutes before they woke up and then eventually
moved on. We've had situations with this. This is cruise, which is the driverless taxis for General
Motors. They've had situations in the past where all of the taxis went to one intersection and then
just stopped, create a massive traffic jam there but here they are they
just 10 of them stopped and put their blinkers on uh so aaron peskin who represents north beecher
on the san francisco board of supervisors said these robo taxis could jam streets close in the
event uh could jam them closed in the event of a major emergency or a fire where people needed to evacuate an area.
And, of course, that's not a theory.
They've already blocked firemen from being able to get to fires
and that type of thing.
Cruz, who oversees the project for General Motors,
blamed cell phone carriers for the problem.
Well, you think when there's an emergency,
there's always going to be functional cell phones there?
You know, these cars will block everybody with everything. Uh, it makes me think of, um, the time that we got stuck in Buffalo. They had, um, a tremendous amount of, of, uh, it was a day
before Thanksgiving and, um, we were driving through Buffalo. We just had to, um, we'd just
been through a long thing with a legal fight over the sale of our business,
and we just had to get out of there.
I've told that story before.
But we get up to Buffalo, and because of the lake effect,
all of a sudden a massive amount of snow, and they are known for their big snowstorms.
This is the most snow that had fallen in that period of time.
They have different ways of doing it, right? The one that has the most total snow or the one that lasts for the
most days or the one that has the most snow that falls at a particular time. And so at that point,
it set that record and it trapped people is the point. A lot of people there in that area,
because they're used to snow, the city
has all these snow removal vehicles.
And so people, a lot of them did not have, uh, SUVs.
And, um, so, or anything like that.
Um, they had very small little subcompact cars and the snow came down so quickly they
were getting stuck everywhere.
And even if you had a car that can navigate through the snow, and we did, and we couldn't get past them, they
were blocking everything. Oh, it was a mess. People got stuck there for a couple of days.
School buses couldn't get home. And they had kids who got stuck in fast food restaurants for a couple of days.
It was insane.
And that's what's going to happen with these things.
You have an emergency, and power goes down, the grid goes down,
cell phones go down.
You're going to have these things stuck everywhere as obstacles,
as boulders in the road that people can't get around.
They're literally going to break down. As I understand it,
the phone outside lands impacted LTE cell connectivity and ability for RA advisors to
route the cars. Well, we got an explanation, but of course, this is not a solution of what's going
on. But one person said, if you're looking for an example of regulatory capture,
you're seeing it now. It's unethical. It's immoral. Nobody in San Francisco apparently
likes this. They all hate it, but it's being shoved down their throats. Why? It all goes
back to the state government. They said, bottom line, this all goes back to Gavin Newsom, or as I call him, Grabbin Nuisance.
Governor Grabbin Nuisance is pushing this.
By the way, they're going to have these people who are going to try
to push for gun control at this special session coming up next Monday
here in Tennessee.
The Democrats are going to bring in Grabbin Nuisance right after it
for a fundraising dinner.
This guy is really pushing to be president.
They have, he's put in a new California gas czar as well.
And as Epoch Times says, of course, it will be responsible for boosting prices in California
even higher, highest in the country.
I have a real problem calling people in the American government a czar.
Why do we have a king, a dictator, a Caesar?
That's where it really comes from.
We've crossed the Rubicon, haven't we, when we have a czar?
It infuriated me when William Bennett, who bragged about his book of virtues,
and then they put him in, Reagan put him in as a drug czar.
Oh, he loved that title. Like, Reagan put him in as a drug czar. Oh,
he loved that title. Like, you should be ashamed of that. But he wasn't ashamed of his drug war,
and he wasn't ashamed of his drug czar title. You know, Caesar, that's where you get the term czar, the Russian king, where you get the term Kaiser, the German king, and all the rest of this stuff. It's a Caesar, dictator, who's crossed the Rubicon.
So they've got a gas dictator, a gas Caesar.
He's going to seize the cars too.
Little seizures all over the place, civil seizures.
Leading a new state agency that will watch over the oil markets for possible illegal activity that drives up the cost for Californians.
A new bureaucracy that was just created.
They call it the Division of Petroleum Market Oversight.
It was signed into law last March by Governor Graben Nuisance.
And Nuisance's new law, of course, is going to make everything higher.
Do you know why they have high prices?
It's real simple.
They've got high taxes.
And why are their prices so much higher than they are in high-tax places like Oregon?
Well, because in addition to the high prices,
they dictate that there has to be special blends, custom blends of gasoline
in California. So what is the solution to all this? Getting rid of these taxes and regulations?
No, it's to add more taxes and regulations. And of course, that's going to make everything more
expensive. The new oil watchdog office is part of Governor Nuisance's gas price gouging law.
According to the AAA, California currently suffers the highest gas prices in the country, always,
averaging $5.11 a gallon for regular.
Neighboring Nevada, it's at $4.36.
Arizona is $4.
So, you know, they're 25% higher than their neighbors there.
And if you look at the lowest in the country, Mississippi, $3.32,
and I say that's not that much different from what we saw in Tennessee
and in Arkansas when we traveled a couple of weeks ago.
If you compare it to that, California is 67% higher than Mississippi.
You know, two thirds higher.
Uh, so governor nuisance said to the oil companies prove that you're not price gouging.
How do you prove a negative?
He's the one who's gouging everybody again with the bespoke blends and the high taxes,
all this done by the state.
We're going to take a quick break.
And when we come back, we're going to take a quick look at artificial intelligence. Thank you. ¶¶ Well, we're getting close on time here,
so I want to run through this.
But before we get into artificial intelligence
and an update on that,
there was a couple of things about money that have happened
that is even more immediate that I want to talk about.
And before I do that,
I just want to quickly thank some of the people
who have sent us checks as of the second week of August. Stacey P., Anna Maria
A., Alessandra R., John R., Rene M., John and Pam M., Aaron W., George M., Travis S., Scott C., Margaret, Mary T., Daniel H., Jack H., Stephanie K., and David and Angie W.
Thank you, all of you.
I really do appreciate that.
Let's talk a little bit about, this is a letter from a listener. He says in the Friday show, last Friday show,
he said David and Gerald Slinty in a roundtable format,
David was complaining that the dollar had lost practically all its value due to inflation.
Well, you ain't seen nothing yet, he said.
Wait until CBDC is ushered in, perhaps as early as October or November this year, he says.
Paid at the end of the month or at the middle of the month.
Either way, you're going to spend it all within five minutes of receipt or the whole caboodle expires.
That's one of the things I think we ought to start calling it.
It's not a bug, but it's a feature for the central bank so they can evaporate your money.
Put a time limit on it.
It just keeps disappearing.
Call it a negative interest rate, or you can just say,
yeah, we just wipe this off.
If you don't spend it by such and such a time, it just disappears.
They love that.
They've been talking about that from the very beginning as an important feature.
You work your butt off, and then the proceeds of your hard work,
the money expires within five minutes of clearing your account
if you don't spend it within the allotted five-minute grace period.
Bloomberg will finally get the population taking umbrage and going after the globalists with a pitchfork. CBDC will finally drive the general public over the edge. They'll take sticks,
bats, bricks, and whatever they can lay their hands on. They will come after the globalists
and there'll be literally everyone out to get the globalists. The cops will be in the same boat as everybody else.
The savings will also expire.
Well, again, there are things that we can do on an individual basis.
And I'll just point out davidknight.gold.
Tony set that up to take you to Weiswolf Gold.
That is an important thing that we all need to do to provide for ourselves.
And we don't want to get caught up in this CBDC control
grid. That's one way they can bring us to our knees. And so gold and silver is something that's
simple, that you can control, that's outside of their grasp. And it's going to be there even if
they take the power grid or the internet or both of them down. Meanwhile, though, PayPal is setting up this PayPal USD,
a stable coin that is tied to the U.S. dollar.
And as I said the other day, why are they doing this?
Well, there may be an explanation for it.
Not a great one, but it is their picture of the future.
Again, PayPal is trying to take this thing. You can redeem it
in US fiat currency. And so to me, it's got like all the worst features. You've got something that
is redeemable in a fiat currency that's being manipulated by the central banks.
You have to, you've got all the problems that you have with crypto in terms of security and
things like that. And then you've got to deal with PayPal, which has shown its willingness to confiscate
people's money as well as turn off their accounts.
Turn mine off back in 2021.
Then they said last year, well, we're going to, we don't like what you have to say.
Well, not only shut your account down, but we'll fine you $2,500.
And they claimed that they didn't know any, how that got in there.
I don't know who did that.
And, uh, bring out Martinin short again it's funny you would say that i don't know why that came in there but then as soon as the outcry died down they put it back in there again
and so the question is why are they doing this well they think that this is they're tying this
into web 3 now web 3 is something i don't know a great deal about yet i'm afraid we're going to Well, they think that this is, they're tying this into Web3.
Now, Web3 is something I don't know a great deal about yet.
I'm afraid we're going to all find out about it.
The move to support Web3 seems to be a strategic one, says Cointelegraph.
A strategic one for PayPal, as Web3 is widely hailed as the next generation of the Internet.
Oh, great. In Web3 environments, users will have more control over their data interactions and their digital identity. Oh, well, yeah. So you'll
have, they'll create the digital identity and they'll tell you that you've got control over it.
They will have control over it. You think we don't know? You think we don't see that,
but we do, says Oliver Anthony. Yeah, we do.
Direct peer-to-peer transactions in Web3 will eliminate the need for intermediaries such as banks or payment processors.
Bingo.
That's it right there.
They're getting rid of the banks because they want to get rid of anonymity
and they want to get rid of cash and all the rest of this stuff.
Get rid of the banks, big part of this banks don't realize it. Banks are, their heads are on the chopping block
and they don't even realize it. If they did, they'd be begging as you know, Senator nicely
here in Tennessee has been trying to get small banks. They see a state bank as has been a state
bank in North Dakota and the independent small banks have prospered. They've been going out
of business left and right as the big guys get bigger and bigger, consolidating this stuff.
And that's been happening rapidly since the 2008 financial crisis. But they don't realize that,
you know, their head is on the chopping block and their head is on the chopping block with even with
this Web 3. even if the federal reserve
and a engineered financial crisis doesn't take them out paypal has got designs to replace the
banks and of course they're going to work hand in glove with the sensors um it's going to be cbdc
and stuff like this paypal um stable so-called stable coin that's going to take them out of the
process you may not like the banks and i'm not real fond of banks either but you wait and you stable, so-called stable coin that's going to take them out of the process.
You may not like the banks, and I'm not real fond of banks either, but you wait and you think that what they've got planned is going to be better. It's going to be much worse.
You know, just because we got a situation we don't like right now doesn't mean they can't
make it worse. And that's what they're trying to do. Meanwhile, in Argentina,
we have a guy who did really well in the elections.
He's being characterized as a rock-singing libertarian outsider,
an anarcho-capitalist, and he's headed for, in the primaries,
his party did better than any of the others that were there.
And as I say, this is, uh, being seen as punishment for the two main political establishment blocks. They have some, uh, conservatives and then they have the Peronistas,
the leftist Marxist authoritarians. Yeah. Don't cry for them. Don't cry for Evita, any of these people.
And so the Argentine peso is already at historic lows.
As Zero Hedge puts it, it puked immediately after far-right political outsider Javier Malay won the country's primary election on Sunday.
He wants a dramatic overhaul of the country's entire political and economic system. And he's even vowed to ditch the currency. After winning 30%, just tying whatever they do,
just using the American dollar, for example. Good luck with that. Anyway, it'd be better than what
they've got. Again, you're going to get perfection. You're going to just go for better. After winning 30% of the vote, beating the main conservative opposition bloc at 28%,
and the ruling, currently ruling, Peronistas, who came in third place,
they're calling it a political earthquake, they're calling him the Ron Paul of Argentina.
He is 52 years old.
He has pledged to abolish Argentina's central bank.
That's why they're calling him the Ron Paul of Argentina.
And to replace the peso with the U.S. dollar.
So get rid of the Argentinian central bank and go to the Federal Reserve.
Hey.
Got to take this a little bit better.
Maybe there's some other alternative here.
Year on year, you know, there was some group of people, what do they call them?
Oh, yeah, the founders who said, you know, you can coin money in gold or silver.
Just go back to something like that.
Year on year inflation is above 115%.
One in four people are living in poverty.
The peso has in recent months plummeted so much.
Listen to this.
When they go to soccer games,
foreign fans will taunt the Argentinians by burning their pesos.
You're so worthless.
Here's your money.
We're going to light our cigars with it or whatever.
That's one way to troll them. let's hope that doesn't happen here um he's told his supporters on sunday we've managed
to build this competitive alternative that will put an end to the parasitic thieving useless
political cast you know those rich men north of rich. And that would include New York as well, where they have the Federal Reserve.
Good morning to a world in which a libertarian who says that he wants to burn down the central
bank and consider it a crime for the government to print money is the top vote getter.
And Argentina's presidential candidates put out Ed Martin.
Yeah, yeah, good morning.
That is an interesting way to wake up.
Well, we don't have enough time really to get into artificial intelligence.
We'll pick this up tomorrow.
One of the things that I wanted to talk about was just how interesting things get
when artificial intelligence starts training on artificial intelligence generated data.
And, you know, as the AI is putting out all this content,
and, you know, once it starts putting out content,
it can pump it out really quickly.
You know, it can overwhelm real art, real music, real writing,
real articles, and all the rest of this stuff.
But then something very interesting happens.
And because when the AI starts reading its own stuff and making decisions about its own admittedly
skewed, hallucinatory information, then things start getting really crazy. And before you know it, I guess we're all going to be furries.
This is one crazy world that we're living in.
And so now the AI is going to start beating on itself because it is insatiable in terms of having to have more and more information,
always constantly searching more information.
How is it going to identify that?
See, that's what I said before.
Instead of saying, look, AI is going to be doing deep fakes,
and AI is going to be spewing garbage out there and everything,
so you need to identify yourself as a real human.
Like, why don't you identify the AI garbage?
If you identified the AI garbage,
then you wouldn't have to worry about the AI cannibalizing itself and essentially
developing a mental illness.
Thanks for listening.
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