The David Knight Show - 19Jan24 Bond Villains of Davos Reveal Their Plans — We're Near the End of the Movie
Episode Date: January 19, 2024(2:00) Bannon takes offense that Speaker Johnson says Biden was ordained as President by God. Since Trump is god to these people, how could he possibly ordain his opponent? Does Bannon have a problem ...with all the false prophets of Trump who continually told us Trump would remain in the White House?(20:53) Davos Bond villains' top priorities for the next 2 years and the next 10 years to establish the Fourth Reich, "ze new verld order". Ursula Fond of Lyin, President of EU Commision, brags about DSA — but there's also the CCPA from the USA(37:46) Javier Millei speaks at Davos. What he said in public is spot on regarding economics and feminism.(1:08:48) Milei's secular focus misses the bigger picture — the satanic conspiracy behind things like depopulation and transhumanism(1:23:51) "Ecocide": The Crime of Farming, Fishing, Manufacturing They're not trying to hide their agenda anymore…and Oxford presses on with using the people of town as lab rats in their 15 MINUTE CITY experiment.(1:39:48) Milei OK's local currencies in Argentina as he moves agains the central bank's currency and bitcoin begins to be accepted for payment; EU demands France melt down coins they just made for not conforming to the EU logo — is that the REAL reason?(1:52:55) Euthanasia for CHILDREN in Australia, fentanyl for children in Canada — this is the result of "Children's Rights" and destroying Parental Rights (2:05:39) INTERVIEW FDR's Harbinger of Things to Come — Concentration Camps, Surveillance, CensorshipHuman nature (especially politicians) does not change. FDR's tactics and goals in attacking the Bill of Rights differ from today's political class only in the technology available to him. David Beito, professor emeritus of history at Univ of Alabama and Senior Fellow at The Independent Institute joins to discuss his book, "The New Deal’s War On the Bill of Rights: The Untold Story of FDR’s Concentration Camps, Censorship, and Mass Surveillance".(02:51:28) Trump Delusion Reaches Pandemic ProportionsWill Trump stop CBDC? Who did more for Gates — Nuke-y Haley or Benedict Donald? ZeroHedge says if you include Trump's 4th year in evaluating the economy during his administration (lockdowns, stimmy checks, supply chain disruptions) — you "beclown" yourself! Who's the clown?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 Friday the 19th of January, Year of Our Lord 2024.
Well, today we're going to be talking a lot about some of the craziest things coming out of Davos.
And it begs a question, with their focus and their laser-like focus on us, on our speech.
Oh yeah, Biden is coming after Trump, but you understand that it has all been focused on us for at least the last five years, six years now.
It has been focused on stopping us debating.
They don't want to debate.
Why have a debate if the election is settled?
And as Klaus has now said, maybe we will just pick the candidates for you.
Has anybody been paying attention?
I think that's been going on for quite some time.
We're going to begin, therefore, with the election, and then we will get into Davos.
We'll be right back. Well, it made me furious when I saw people defending Trump and saying,
well, all that stuff about killing people with vaccines, that's four years ago.
Well, no, actually.
It's just so, I'm so tired of hearing this, said Tim Pool as he screamed.
That got me really angry.
And I said, well, you know, you're not tired of talking about the election.
It was four years ago in the midst of that betrayal.
And so everybody has their certain sore spots, right?
And it seems that Steve Bannon has a real sore spot when the Speaker,
who he has ample places to criticize what Speaker Johnson has done. But the thing that bothered Steve Bannon was that Johnson would say that the Biden presidency is God's will.
Well, yeah, it is.
I mean, the question, the open question is, these leaders that God gives us, are they a blessing or a curse?
That's the question.
Of course, if you want to go there, you can say that both Trump and Biden were curses
to America.
I think if you look at what happened, you have to interpret it that way.
But he got very upset about this.
He began his program.
He's got a podcast.
He said, be prepared to have your heads blown up he says um you know
speaker johnson said that the biden presidency was god's will and he said uh this is that just
outraged him and he says he's an illegitimate president and i'm not going to stop talking
about this four years later well you know what it what? It was illegitimate lockdown. It was illegitimate to tell us that we're non-essential. It was illegitimate
to destroy our businesses, our educations, our schools, our churches, all these other things,
as much as he could. And of course, you know, we talked about it yesterday. The churches,
just like the schools, people got an opportunity to see some real glaring problems that had been
hidden.
And the schools, as they brought the schools home and did Zoom classes, they could see what was happening in the classroom with the racism that was being pushed, the Marxism
that was being pushed, the sexualization that was being pushed.
And a lot of people took action on that.
A lot of people did nothing about it.
And we also got to see which of these churches really had any commitment.
And people changed accordingly.
Some of them found another church.
Some of them just dropped out and discussed.
And so when you look at the last four years, there's only one thing that matters to these Machiavellian power
brokers like Steve Bannon, and that's to get elected. Nothing else matters to him.
You know, he doesn't need God. He's got a Chinese billionaire called Guo. Who needs God when you
got Guo, right? That's where he was arrested. It was on Guo's yacht the guy's a communist Chinese Chinese
Communist Party functionary that's how he became a billionaire that's how anybody becomes a
billionaire in China you have to be part of the Communist Party he's now reinvented himself as a
anti-communist and Steve Bannon the Goldman Sachs banker has now reinvented himself as a man of the people that type of thing right uh but um you know he also uh he doesn't need any any morality either because you know he's also got
trump to pardon him when he does anything wrong so you know he's got he's got glow and he's got
trump who these people think is god right i mean I mean, how could God ordain that Biden win the election when Trump is God?
I mean, this is just, yeah, it blows my head up.
And it must blow up Steve Bannon's head and his listeners as well.
How could God take himself off the throne and put Biden in his place in the presidency, right?
Well, what is it that made him so upset?
Here's the quote from Speaker Johnson.
He said, the Bible says that God is the one that raises up people in authority.
I believe God is sovereign.
Now, this is what he said when he was asked if the Biden presidency was God's will.
He said, by the way, the founders believe that as well.
He said, they acknowledge that our rights don't come from government.
They come from God, that we're made in his image,
that everyone is made the same.
We're all given equal rights and value, and that's something that we defend.
So if you believe all those things,
then you believe that God is the one who allows people to be raised into authority.
It must have been God's will then.
That's my belief. Because, see, nothing's going to happen that God doesn't want to happen.
That's part of being God, right? One of the definitions of being God. And so Bannon
couldn't take it anymore. He cuts the clip. And he says, yo, dude, he's an illegitimate president. Have you lost your
freaking mind? This election was stolen. Don't be a theologian. I don't need a theologian. Oh yes,
he does. He needs one very badly. So pray for Steve Bannon. Um, he is a speaker of the house.
That's what this country needs. Joe Biden's not a legitimate president of the United States.
No to the Speaker.
So no, God did not raise him up.
And again, just like with Tim Pool, what is important to them is nothing but the election.
Nothing else had happened to us over the last four years.
And moving us so deeply into this fourth turning and this transformation of society.
By the way, in the third hour, we got an interview with an author about the New Dealer War.
The war within World War II.
It should be a very interesting interview.
Because that was the last time that we had a radical transformation of our society.
And it was a radical transformation of society and uh by the globalists by the marxists that type of thing anyway bannon uh you know when you look at this whole wall thing that they got him on
yeah he and brian i think it's kofology i I think is the guy's name. It was in a wheelchair. And the two of them were running this thing called We Build the Wall.
Why were they raising money privately to build the wall?
Because Trump didn't do it.
You see, Bannon nearly went to jail.
The other guy did go to jail.
But Trump pardoned Bannon after he was convicted.
And the reason they send them to jail, they raised money to build a wall on private property, and they actually did it.
They did it in a short period of time.
But they said you didn't use enough of this money to qualify as the same type of thing they're doing with the Italian Christmas cake to try to change the definition of, well, to try to censor social media influencers and that type of thing in Italy.
Yeah, you took this money for a charitable cause and you didn't use enough of it for the cause.
And so that was what they came after Bannon and the other guy for.
I take no opinion on that.
I didn't bother to look at it that much.
What I thought was more interesting, rather than the details of the case
and whether or not there was fraud involved,
was the fact that the very existence of that project,
to take money to voluntarily build the wall,
was a condemnation in kind and an embarrassment really to the Trump administration
and to Trump for not doing his signature issue. Now I've said all along I was not a big fan of
the wall. Walls can keep people in as well as keep people out. When you're not weighed down by high
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a lift. But if you've got a big enough welfare magnet, you're not going to keep anybody out, but they may keep us in.
I'm not a big fan of the wall.
I think that there needs to be some border patrol and border control for sure.
We need to know who's coming in.
However, however you do that, you're still going to get illegal immigration, massive illegal immigration and an invasion
if you offer people a lot of free stuff.
We want people who are going to come here because they want freedom.
That was what the waves of immigration from Europe in the 1800s
and early 1900s was all about.
It was people who had severe hardship,
whether it's the Irish potato famine or the aftermath of the Italian Civil War that happened at exactly the same time as our Civil War.
Whatever it was, people were coming for economic issues, but they were also coming because they wanted to be free.
And when they came, they would come with just some spare change in their pockets maybe sometimes, and they would work.
And they were willing to do that, to have a start and to live in a free country.
And so that's what we need.
We need immigrants that are like that.
We don't need people who want to come in and live off of everyone else,
and we don't want people who are criminals coming in.
And they may not be able to stop that, but we can stop rewarding that.
So it's the magnets, the welfare magnet.
That's the issue.
But the issue with that, we build the wall was that it was an embarrassment to Trump and it was his administration, his department of justice that charged both of them.
I think that had something to do with it.
And then what Trump does is he lets the other guy he doesn't know go to jail,
and Bannon, he pardons.
But what Bannon really needs is to find a real savior who's going to pardon him.
And these people, it just never ceases to amaze me
how the princes of this world shake their fist at God and his anointed.
Isn't it amazing?
Never ceases.
And it's a bipartisan thing, truly is.
So this article from The Hill reminds us that Johnson is a Southern Baptist who has faced
scrutiny over his faith and how it affects his viewpoints on things like abortion and the
separation of church and state, which there's nothing like that in the Constitution. What he's
talking about is the free exercise of religion instead of the suppression of the free exercise
of religion. The role of the federal government has been pursuing that since the middle of the 20th century.
The First Amendment talked about not establishing an official state church.
And they have twisted this into shutting down the free exercise of religion.
And everybody has the right to a free exercise of religion, even if they work for the government in some capacity, and even if they're on the job in some capacity, that doesn't stop your free exercise or religion anymore.
That stops your ability to have free speech.
But of course,
this tyrannical government hates all of those things,
hates free exercise,
religion,
free speech,
the rest of it.
And his first speech as speaker in October says the hill Johnson said,
God has quote allowed and ordained each and every one of us to be here at this specific moment.
A comment that likely prompted Wednesday's question about the Biden presidency.
See, we're at this situation now where Christianity is no longer understood.
And it's not tolerated.
And it's not tolerated or understood by people like Steve Bannon either.
You want something to criticize, Steve?
Well, criticize this.
Congress approved a funding extension, avoided a shutdown,
and keeps kicking all of these various cans down the road.
I mean, they've got so many cans tied together,
it's like honeymooners leaving the chapel, you know, and they're kicking
or dragging those cans down the road to do whatever they want.
And I think the honeymoon is over.
So this should be criticized.
The Senate voted 77 to 18 and the house voted 314 to 108 to extend funding for the government
to March 1st and to March 8th, because they
don't want to make the difficult decisions.
And they'll kick the can down the road again when they get to that.
And so as real clear politics says, shut the border or shut the government.
And I absolutely agree with that.
Tell these people, just go home.
Just go home.
Stop all these show trials that Jim Jordan is doing.
He never does anything.
He's always hamming it up for the cameras.
He's a successor to Trey Gowdy.
And I imagine he'll eventually go to Fox News.
But just stop all these pointless show trials and do
something. And what is the power that Congress has? The power of the purse, for sure. And they're
going to have to wheel that. They're going to have to shut the government down in order to shut the
border down. That's the power they have. And they don't want to use it. They need to figure
this out, go home, figure this out, stop all the, you know, the self-aggrandizing shows and
everything, and then come back and do the real thing. When House Speaker Mike Johnson and 60
GOP members of the Congress went to Eagle Pass, Texas recently for a photo op, that's all it was,
was a photo op. They were probably shocked that the first question they were asked was for a photo op that's all it was was a photo op they were probably shocked that the first
question they were asked was for a show of hands of those who would shut down the border if president
biden doesn't shut the border are you going to do anything about it raise your hand and i get the
raise your hand stuff i i find that annoying they've done that several times and the few
debates that they've had,
and DeSantis has shut that stuff down.
Don't treat us like school kids.
That's what one person said.
Don't treat us like school kids, said Republican Representative Pat Fallon.
We're not going to do a show of hands.
We're not in a classroom.
We're not doing a show of hands.
But they don't answer either, right?
So as RealClearPolitics says,
it's much easier to shut down a reporter who's seeking truth than it is to shut
down the border and save the country.
The show of hands question came from Ben Bergwam of real America's voice.
And he's been at the Darien gap.
He's been at the border for a very long time reporting on this.
This is what he has focused on.
And you've seen the clips.
I've played some of the clips that he does where he has the people
that have been brought in by the Border Patrol,
and they're waiting to be processed and be given phones
and an appointment in a few years to come back and talk to somebody
if they want to, and tickets to wherever they want to go,
and cell phones and all the rest of
this stuff and so they're sitting there waiting for their quote-unquote processing and um he goes
up and down the line and he says where are you coming from and where are you going and that in
and of itself is very instructive and so he says yeah a lot of uh they're coming from all over the
world and not coming from mexico or even central or south america yeah there, a lot of they're coming from all over the world and not coming from Mexico or even Central or South America.
Yeah, there's a lot of people from Venezuela, but just as many from Somalia, Egypt, West Africa or China.
And most of them are military aged men.
They aren't escaping from persecution.
They're not escaping from violence.
They're coming to America for benefits.
And to drain our country of resources.
That's pretty evident when you ask them where they're going.
Most of them want to go to New York.
And so from that standpoint, Greg Abbott is just helping them.
The Biden administration is helping them get across the border,
and Greg Abbott is helping them to get to their desired destination because they can know they they want to go to new york because they want to live off of the lavish welfare state he also goes to the cities where they say they want to go to
that have opened up their doors that have shut down schools so they can put
these people in the schools when the weather gets cold or whatever,
where you've got governors telling people,
you need to let these people into your home.
Let them stay with you.
How does that work out? What does that really tell you about the true agenda of all this stuff?
Well, the border showdown is, I guess, today.
Are we going to see something happen?
Yesterday was the deadline, not just for the natural asset companies,
which great news that those things were shut down.
But yesterday was January the 8th and 18th,
and the Biden administration says that Texas has got to stop enforcing the border,
stop enforcing laws against people who come here illegally.
And so something of a showdown was supposed to happen yesterday.
Maybe it'll happen today, or maybe it won't.
What is the Biden administration going to do with this, right?
This could be a very important precedent,
just like regardless of what you think about the marijuana issue, the fact that you would have so many states, and especially beginning in the left-wing states, who tend to think when anybody starts talking about self-governance and nullification, they immediately jump to secession, immediately jump to slavery, racism, all the rest of the tropes that are there and try
to shut it down and yet they nullified the uh illegal prohibition of marijuana and other things
if you want to prohibit it get a constitutional amendment like you do with alcohol otherwise shut
up and jeff sessions who really hated that had to shut up because he didn't have any legal authority whatsoever.
And the real question is if the Biden administration is not going to enforce the border.
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government is, what's the federal government going to do about it? They can't commandeer people in
the state to do something that the people in the state don't want to do. That's been
taken to court many times, a non-commandeering thing, very important.
And so I don't think that they can do anything about it.
And I think it's going to be a very important bluff calling that's going to happen at Eagle Pass and many other places.
We're going to take a quick break, and we will be right back.
Hear news now at APSradioNews.com or get the APS Radio app and never miss another story.
Excellencies, ladies and gentlemen, your annual global risk report makes for a stunning and sobering read.
For the global business community, the top concern for the next two years is not conflict or climate.
It is disinformation and misinformation, followed closely by polarization within our societies.
In a world of deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act.
You are listening to the david knight show
well that was ursula van der laden
it was like uh i think the first bond girl was uh ursula undress um that was uh
dr no uh but uh yeah they are literal bond villains and uh thank you uh angus mustang thank
you very much for the tip says uh should we not declare the world economic forum a terrorist
organization and eliminate them now yes yes they're terrorist organization they're bond villains
they're crooks criminals liars thieves murderers mass murderers and i think we shouldn't stop with the world economic forum we should
also continue with trump and biden as well and i'm serious about that they're mass murderers
you take them they're talking now about ecocide and making that a an international crime well
you know international crime they've been pushing all along the Pfizer stuff anyway our salivander laden as you just heard we've got to focus on the truth you know these
people I think it's appropriate to call them the fourth Reich yeah is German you
look at the EU look at Bilderberg again their first meeting 10 years to the day after the last Nazi victory and they had their
first meeting there at the Bilderberg Hotel at the site of the last Nazi victory and the two people
who were there Englishman and the German that were there, uh, Prince Barnhart actually Netherlands. Uh, but, um, the, um, the British guy, Peter, I think it's Peter Carrington.
If I remember anyway, the, uh, the two guys that were there at the beginning
were two people that, uh, because of that market garden failure there,
the, uh, the bridge too far, we see the movie, the bridge too far.
Uh, many people believed that prince barnhart had leaked
that information about battle plans to the nazis and we know that the british guy had command of
some forces that he would not bring up that also caused that defeat and so the two of them began
that at builderburg they talk about how they'll
have economic union. And then I think it was their second meeting. They talked about how they'd have
a common currency in Europe, the Euro. And so this is all recycled Nazis. And Klaus's father was a
Nazi industrialist and all the rest of this.
So when you look at where these people are coming from,
they've decided that they're going to rule the world,
but they got smart this time.
Rather than using the military,
they decided that they would use financial controls
and political unification.
So it's just a smarter, more dangerous version,
more subtle version of worldwide dominance that we're looking at here.
And so the Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, said these risks, actually we would say these truths are serious because they limit our ability to tackle the big global challenges
such as changes in our client climate shifts in our demography and in our technology
there you go so it's right there the climate mcguffin uh the migration mcguffin. And, of course, the technology that gives them control.
So it's not about conflict.
In other words, war.
It's not about climate.
In other words, sanctions, economies. The climate stuff is all economic sanctions.
And if that fails, they take us to war.
But, you know, that's on the menu further down.
But not war, not sanctions, but lies, propaganda, and censorship is what they must focus on right now.
So their list, they've got a list of the top 10 risks within the next two years.
And then they have the top 10 risks over the next 10 years.
And it's kind of interesting because um and they you know the
number one risk as she just said was misinformation disinformation in other words truth truth truth
and dissent that's what they got to stomp out the number two right now for the within the next
two years is um extreme weather okay so that's the climate thing that they're going, those lies are going to push.
And then, uh, after that, um, you have, um, cyber security, uh, you have, uh,
well, social polarization is number three, then cybersecurity and, uh, so forth.
As, as they go down, inflation is way down the list.
They're not worried about inflation, uh, because they can use that as a way to reset the financial system and push us into CBDC.
So the number one thing, misinformation, disinformation, that falls to the secondary concern.
It's always going to be at the top for them.
So within the next two years, that's the number one thing, and that's what they want to focus on.
But even within the next 10 years years that's the number one thing and that's what they want to focus on but even within the next 10 years that's still number two because you can't control
a population unless you've got big brother censorship and control of information but
what goes to number one over the 10-year time frame uh climate climate because again, these people this time around the fourth
Reich is using economic sanctions and these types of, you know, the
soft control and a subtle control from, uh, within to subvert everything.
And, um, so, um, the, um, I'm sorry, the, uh, misinformation, dis, censorship falls to number five, not to number two.
Number two will be the official change to earth systems.
Number three, biodiversity, loss of the ecosystem, natural resource control.
That's the NAC.
So you see how the climate thing is really the main thrust over the next 10 years for control for economic sanctions or chaos.
But immediately they have to control information, and it will still be number five, even as they continue to roll out their climate control
while governments hold many of the levers he said to deal with the great challenges of our time
business has the the innovation the technology the talents to deliver the solutions we need
to fight threats like climate change or industrial scale disinformation.
Industrial scale disinformation.
Europe is uniquely placed to show how this can work.
I think we need to talk about government scale disinformation.
Government scale disinformation is even bigger than industrial scale disinformation.
But you notice that she's making this appeal to the businesses.
It says you people can innovate.
No, they're making the appeal to the businesses. As I said before, you think of this public-private partnership.
You can think of the UN as the people who are creating these agendas
like the Agenda 21 for the 21st century,
then the more specific un 2030 agenda uh for
sustain sustainable development but they need to have some people going to actually run this thing
through so you can think of the un as this big legislative branch that um you know comes up with
these big schemes and of course they need to have somebody who's going to run with it not so much
maybe even an executive branch as it is a bureaucracy, because that's the way our
government operates. We have the Congress that says, well, we've got a big agenda here that we
want to do. So let's kick it over to one of the existing bureaucracies, or let's create a new
bureaucracy to get this done. And that's the role that is done by these various NGOs and
globalist organizations like the World Economic Forum, like Bilderberg and others. They kick it
over to them to get it done. Well, how are they going to get it done if they don't have any money?
And they don't have any way to tax everybody globally. The carbon taxes are not in place
yet. So the money is going to come from these corporations.
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Give your finances a lift and they will pony up to buy a stake in the future fascist
communist world that these people are putting together and so that will be their budget that's
they're not supplying the innovation they're really supplying the cash and they're also
supplying technology but that's the two things that they, they must have.
And that's why this is trending more and more towards the corporate.
These people in the big multinational corporations with so much money and so much technology technology understand the power position that they're in for
sure. And so they not only want a place at the table,
they not only want to have a, um,
monopoly or duopoly on what is happening,
they're going to have a say in all of this. She went on to say that disinformation and misinformation at the very beginning of my mandate, this is the EU president, she calls her
election a mandate. I guess everything that she's done has been, she desires to do as a mandate.
She says, with our Digital Services Act.
See, this is this most repressive piece of censorship.
That conspiracy theory guy from the EU came over.
Theory Breton.
His first name is Theory it doesn't spell it the
same way but you know he was the one who came over after elon musk kind of bought a place at the table
with twitter and he came over and told him you're going to do everything we tell you to do with the
dsa right and elon musk bowed and scraped before him in a very cringy video that was made of the occasion.
And so that DSA, which has just recently become effective, but they haven't really begun
enforcing it. They've made a lot of statements about it. But that is one of the most oppressive
pieces of censorship that has come out to date, especially when you look at it from Western standpoint.
I mean, the Chinese and the Russians and the Germans,
the Nazis have come up with this type of stuff before,
but this is unique to see something like this
in the formerly free Western civilization
where they valued individual rights and free speech
because we learned our lesson about 500 years ago
about free speech.
And now we're about to learn it again real hard with our digital services act we defined the responsibility of large internet platforms on the content that they promote and that they
propagate digital services act is the most ambitious regulation in the world
there is no other legislative act in the
world having this level of ambition to regulate social media online marketplaces very large
online platforms and very large online search engines uh that's so the first part of that was
her describing it that last part of it saying that it's the most ambitious regulation in the
world that's what they're boasting on the website that they set up for the DSA, Digital Services Act.
So as people are looking at this and commenting on it, one podcast, the all-in podcast, David Friedberg said,
The era of the open Internet as a decentralized technology platform for the benefit of individuals and not to be overseen and run by the government is over.
It's over.
He said the Digital Services Act is one of the most overreaching threats
to any open, transparent, democratic opportunity on the Internet.
And that's not anything that they haven't bragged about themselves
on that website description.
He says it gives this EU government the legal right to go into my computer,
pull information out of it, scrutinize it,
and make decisions about what I'm doing
and whether or not I'm compliant
with whatever the Commission's enforcement standards are that day.
This is about as 1984 as you can get.
It's really serious stuff,
and I don't think
people are recognizing the second order and third order effects of what this is going to do over
time to services and to the experience that we get on the internet. Well, understand this is just
the beginning of this and understand that it's not the, the EU by itself. It's a global agenda. And the U S government,
the federal government is ever much on board with this as Klaus is.
It is DARPA that is pushing out through Microsoft things like the CCPA,
the Chinese Communist Party of America,
or what actually stands for,
they say is the coalition for content provenance and authentication for, they say, is the Coalition for Content Providence and Authentication.
Once they identify, once they go onto your computer or on public
and they see something that they disagree with,
whether it's open dissent or they don't agree with the truth
that you're putting out there about what they're trying to do,
like the pandemic, then they will label you as a dissenter and
they will stop your stuff from even being posted and they will do it.
This coalition is a coalition of hardware manufacturers, CPU manufacturers, and the
software that creates the things that you're going to say online so whether it is a meme a picture or whether it is a text even or whether it is audio
and video they will shut it down and they're already talking about how they're going to do that
in this next election with uh open ai well we're going to control the memes that people do. And you've had problems as well, right, Travis, with trying to do thumbnails of certain people.
And it will not allow you to put their names in.
And so they can easily do that, easily exclude the voices, the faces, anything like that of individuals uh that's uh where they want to head with all of this
and completely control any satire humor any dissent uh argentinian president javier malai
was uh there to speak you know look at this and it's like i really get my spidey sense starts
tingling when i see somebody go to davos and you know when you got brian kemp or glenn
yunkin these two governors one from georgia one from virginia or you've got mayors who go the um
the alt stream media will immediately label them as davos traitors. And I don't necessarily disagree with any of that
assessment either. I think that when somebody goes to Davos, you can talk to these people,
you can talk about them, you can talk about their agenda without going there. And when you do go
there, you have to always wonder, well, what's happening behind closed doors with these meetings,
regardless of what these people say in public. And so I thought the same thing about Trump, but of course, oh no, Trump is there to own
them.
And we see the same thing now with Javier Malai.
He's there to own these people.
Well, he did have some good things to say, actually, in a much better speech than the
one that was written for Trump, which basically just bragged on himself and his administration
and how he's going
to make America great again.
The Argentinian president actually focused on what was happening with the decline of
the West.
We'll have to see what happens with him.
It's kind of a mixed bag as I look at him.
The New York Post, Douglas Murray said, you know, when he was commenting really about this opening blessing where i showed you
yesterday that shaman from brazil and uh and and i still the thing that struck him also struck me
the fact that people didn't say get away i don't want you blowing in my face this stuff and i don't
want to have anything to do with your pagan religion either um but you know
all he says a wise old friend once said to me that if christianity died out what would come
next would not be atheism but polytheism that is instead of worshiping one god people would start
worshiping a whole range of gods and that's what we saw this brazilian shaman was kind of like that
she blows right into their face and they all are very serious.
They're not surprised by this and everything.
It's like you talk about the political correctness and he says,
can you imagine if it had a priest come up there and offer them a communion
way for how they would have recoiled?
But no,
you got this,
uh,
this,
uh,
shaman and she can blow on their faces and all the rest of them.
They're just fine with that.
He said,
um,
they've also got, uh, another ancient shaman there at world economic forum john kerry a false prophet of doom
we're all gonna die and we should have died a long time ago i don't know why we're still alive i guess
i i didn't get it right uh shaman k described 2023 as, quote, literally the most disruptive, climate disrupted, most climate consequential, negative year of human history.
What a bunch of nonsense.
What is disruptive and climate disrupted?
What does it mean for something to be climate consequential?
And negative.
Negative in that and then uh he says after this dire warning
he then disappeared into the clouds on his private jet
he says this year however there was a party crasher to this pagan uh worship service of
their power and that was javier malai and again you know when i look at malai
he has a lot of economic uh things that he says that i agree with and i thought it was interesting
they said he's going to take on the central bank and change the currency and all the rest of the
stuff because they're having was 150 inflation or something but then as you look a little bit
closer you see the theatrics you see you know the personal life that he lives. And so that gives
me pause that I see him going to Davos with this. When you're not weighed down by high interest
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Just like I did with Trump in 2018.
But he is smarter.
He appears to be more principled.
He understands the issues involved.
And he has already started implementing some of the things
that he said he was going to do. So maybe it'll work out. Hope so. You know, we'll see how it
goes. Talk is cheap. Anybody can say anything. But when these guys get in, you have to watch
what they actually do. So far, he's been trying to implement his program. I think his program is
perhaps a good way to try to reform the abuses of the
communists. And he talks a lot about socialism, Marxism, communism, about feminism and things
like that. I talked to Axel Kaiser, who wrote a very popular economics book in Central America
and knows Javier Malai. They have, those, um, they have the same things
basically, um, that they're fighting that we are, they're global except for the racism
MacGuffin and the racism MacGuffin right now is really focused in the U S and in the UK
because, uh, you've got to have a diverse population,
different ethnic groups before you can start them fighting each other. Right.
But they're working on that in the rest of Europe very rapidly.
That'll become an issue everywhere else.
Maybe not even not in Argentina,
but everywhere else.
So he said,
while the gods of this is the New York post reporter still on his theme of
paganism.
He said,
while the gods of Davos have spent recent years warning against climate change and populism,
Mawai has a different prognosis.
He says that the West is in danger because those who are supposed to defend the values of the West
have been co-opted by a vision of the world that inexorably leads to socialism and thereby to poverty.
The world should instead embrace free enterprise capitalism to bring an end to world poverty.
And that was really the thrust of his speech, was to push the value of free enterprise, um, capitalism as contrasted to the centrally controlled
socialistic world that these people are all trying to push, whereas when
Trump spoke, he was touting not the benefits of the free market or
capitalism or anything like that.
He was touting, uh, the benefits of his administration and
the greatness of America. So, uh,
yeah,
he wasn't tackling the,
uh,
the,
uh,
agendas and the ideas that are destroying America and destroying the world.
He didn't tackle those things on head on.
Javier Malai did.
And of course,
in his country,
they've tried collectivism in a big way and it's led to complete ruin.
And what's the New York post points out. So he offered a big way and it's led to complete ruin as the new post
points out so he offered a positive way out of the current trends where the davos crowd
now seems to see human beings as the problem he said no we're the solution there's no reason to
see population growth as a negative or to think of the world's resources as some kind of a zero
sum game instead of seeing
free markets as a challenge malai reminded davos that they are an opportunity and um he said uh we
also have to reject radical feminism the environmental agendas and uh that these are
all fueled by socialism as well you say marxism same essential thing again all the different
elements are there everywhere racism where he is is not that much of an issue yet in terms of their
agenda it's roughly 20 minute speech and he said socialism ultimately leads to poverty the state
is not the solution the state is the problem and how leftism has co-opted western
government institutions to further its agendas i'm here he said today to tell you that the west
is in danger in danger because those who are supposed to uphold the values of the west find
themselves co-opted by the worldview that leads to socialism and consequently to poverty he said as he opened his speech and so um he said
some people have embraced these leftist ideas out of a desire to help other people
but others have done so in order to belong to a privileged caste and that's the people he was
talking to they're davos we're here to tell you that collectivist experiments are never the solution.
On the contrary, they are the cause.
Believe me, there is no one better than us Argentines to bear witness on these two issues.
They say capitalism is bad because it's individualistic.
That collectivism is good because it is altruistic.
And consequently, they strive for social justice.
But he said the problem is social justice is not only not fair.
And this is good.
Listen to this.
Social justice is not only not fair, it also doesn't contribute to the general welfare.
On the contrary, it is intrinsically unjust.
And as I've heard some Christian pastors push back on it,
they said, social justice, justice doesn't need an adjective.
It's either just or it's unjust,
and what Javier Malai says is social justice is unjust,
and it's an unjust idea.
Why?
Because it is violent.
It is unjust because the state is financed by taxes and taxes are
levied coercively or can any of us choose not to pay taxes which means that the state is financed
through coercion and the greater the tax burden the greater the coercion he says it must never
be forgotten that socialism is always and everywhere an impoverishing phenomenon that
failed in all
countries where it was tried. It was an economic failure. It was a social failure. It was a cultural
failure. It also took the lives of 150 million human beings. What he fails to talk about, though,
and that's all true, and his audience is not necessarily the people there at Davos, but maybe
the larger world that he's talking to.
But this argument is lost on those people.
Why?
Well, because socialism works for them.
Socialism worked for Castro, worked for Mao, worked for Stalin, worked for Hitler.
It worked for Hugo Chavez.
It works for Klaus Schwab.
It works for Ursula von der Leyen.
It works for alllaus Schwab. It works for Ursula von der Leyen. It works for all of these people.
It doesn't take everybody down equally.
It lifts them up on the backs of everybody else.
And so that's why when we look at this, kind of like an educational system,
you can argue that the educational system that we have doesn't teach johnny to read
or write or to do math and that's true but you have to understand that's what it was designed
to do is designed to deliberately dumb down people the educational system is doing exactly
what they wanted it to do and when socialism and communism come in and take everything from
everybody and give it to just a few elites. That's what the Davos people want.
And it works perfectly well for them.
He also said socialism fuels a ridiculous fight between men and women through the feminist
movements.
He said libertarianism already establishes equality between the sexes, and we all have
the same rights, the rights that are granted by the creator the only thing
that this agenda of radical feminism has resulted in is greater intervention by the state to hinder
economic growth giving work to bureaucrats who did not contribute anything to society
whether in the format of the ministry of women or in international organizations dedicated to
promoting this agenda and so when when you look
at this again everything for him always comes back to economics uh that's his background he's named
his dogs after uh monetarist economists like milton friedman and so forth i don't know if he
calls his dog milton or friedman but you know he's named his dogs after these economists. And so it all comes back to money for him. You see, money can't
save us. And the love of money is the root of all evil. And so ultimately, it's not a satisfying
philosophy when you look at this. And just he uh you know i'm sure he realizes that
these people uh are the ones who are going to benefit from these systems of socialism and
communism and marxism uh you know he does he's he's not talking to them he's talking to the
bigger audience but um this is the bigger audience needs to understand that, you know, having the right economy is a good thing, but it's not a sufficient thing.
And they need to understand that what is really behind this is not even the greed of these people.
What is behind them?
And, you know, we fight this war.
We don't fight with flesh and blood.
As I said yesterday,
I got to keep reminding myself of that. I get really angry, angrier than I should, I think,
with the people, because they're somewhat victims, deceived victims, of the agenda behind them.
This is one of the reasons why this doesn't change. People can say, well, why is this agenda continuing on for centuries after centuries?
Is it the Freemasons?
Is it this group?
Is it that group?
Is it this family?
Is it the Rothschilds or the Rockefellers or whatever?
And yeah, those are aspects of it.
But it is a vast conspiracy.
And it continues because it's a spiritual war and because the spiritual war the
beings that are aligned against us that are really running this these people are just their
their front their minion everybody who is controlling this there obviously
is a sense of control people can sense that just like when you look at... When you're not weighed down by high interest rates, life lightens up.
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The world that God created, you see the design, the organism behind all of that.
And you know that there has to be an intelligence behind it.
And everybody knows there has to be an intelligence behind this evil.
And they're looking around for which group of people, which institutions are really focusing on this.
And that's why, ultimately, a political or economic answer to these issues misses the point, and it's
insufficient.
And if it is purely political or economic, it can easily be turned around.
If it's an economic solution, we're going to have free markets and people will be able
to compete against each other, and we're going to get rid of all the crony capitalism and
all the rest of it, then ultimately that will be turned against us as well if we begin to love money that much.
So everything he says, they're just right here. I agree with all of that,
but it still misses the core issue because just like Steve Bennett, he doesn't see God in any of
this. He goes on and God in any of this.
He goes on, he says,
the socialists maintain that human beings damage the planet,
and that it has to be protected at all costs, even going so far as to advocate for population control mechanisms,
or the bloody agenda of abortion.
I like that, the bloody agenda of abortion.
These harmful ideas have strongly permeated society.
So since we've decided to
abandon the model of freedom that has made us rich we have been trapped in a downward spiral
where we are poor every day again it always comes back to that and and you know the depopulation
agenda that must be something that really is a head scratcher for him because you know you
understand that people you know governments even get richer and more powerful if they've got a lot of people.
Typically, it's always been the most populous places
that have been the most dominant civilizations.
Nineveh was the most populated city, city, state, you know,
they had city states at that time.
They don't have the most people of any place on earth.
Later on, you would see it shift around.
London, at one point, was the most populous.
Then massive amount of people in America with resources, but it was also the system, because
there were always more people in China or Indiaia but they were repressed by this system
but a lot of people are actually a resource this system can stop it but what they don't really understand is that you know people like the chinese communist dictators will reduce their population when told to,
and they're following an agenda that is anti-human,
and it is a satanic agenda.
So again, I say he's certainly wiser than Trump. He's focused on broader issues that affect everybody.
On liberty, he's focused also on optimism.
He's not simply bragging about himself and how great Argentina is, like Trump did, about America.
And he directly challenged them on their existential premises, which are environmentalism, centralized control, control of speech, and control of everything, and feminism and all the rest of this stuff.
But again, he's started to act already.
Time will tell as to whether or not he gets it.
I liked what he had to say again about the bloody abortion agenda.
And today is the March for Life in Washington.
Interesting, isn't it?
I don't think any of the politicians who are running for office are going to that.
We'll have to see.
I don't know.
I didn't look at the roster, but I didn't hear anybody going to that. We'll have to see. I don't know. I didn't look at the roster,
but I didn't hear anybody talk about that. I know that Trump and Nikki Haley have kind of kicked
that issue to the curb. If anybody was going to go, it would be DeSantis to the March for Life.
Of course, Biden is adamantly opposed to life, but he's better on abortion than trump is in 2024 he called out population control
he talked about as i said the bloody abortion agenda he said neo-marxist claim that we human
beings damage the planet and so they gotta kill us with their bloody abortion agenda and um so
when we look at this he says given the dismal failure of collectivist models, the undeniable advances in the free world, socialists are forced to change their agenda.
They left behind the class struggle based on an economic system, and they replaced it with other supposed conflicts, which are just as harmful to life.
The first of these new battles was the ridiculous and unnatural fight between men and
women. But in our country, we also see this as instead of class warfare, you had people,
Marxists, the Weather Underground, Bill Ayers, Bernadine Dorn, they recognized very early on
that class warfare was not working in America, but that race war would work.
And so they took the idea of white skin privilege, renamed it white privilege, and pushed it really hard and pushed it through the educational institutions.
Also there, perhaps as a counter, who knows, was the president of the Heritage Foundation,
the largest conservative think tank in the United States, speaking at Davos.
And again, I always question when people go there uh he was there to comment on what was going to happen with a
republican nomination and is trump going to be coming back and that type of thing uh but um i'm
not a big fan of the heritage foundation uh when you know the the key agenda of Davos right now, as I played for you,
is censorship and repression of dissent
and stopping all debate about the elections
and certainly stopping debate about what they are doing.
It's interesting.
I never interacted with the World Economic Forum on Twitter,
and I saw an article within the last year.
I saw an article and I thought, you know, I should be following them and get them on my feed.
I used to only use Twitter as a news feed.
Now it's pretty much gotten back to that now as well.
Just interested to see what certain people have to say, whether I agree with them or not.
So I thought I should follow them.
And so I clicked on the article, it'll take me to Twitter,
and take me to their account there on Twitter to follow them.
And it comes up and says,
you've been blocked by the World Economic Forum.
It's like, what?
They know what is going on,
and they're using this to censor people
and the heritage foundation the cato institute when all the censorship hit in 2018 august of 2018
august 6 as a matter of fact and then after that trump did a little dog and pony show
at the rose garden and he invited a lot of people who had not been censored and
nobody who had been censored.
And he invited the heritage foundation and Cato Institute to come there.
Cato Institute being a libertarian think tank.
And both of them gave us the line that well, corporations can do whatever.
I don't like it.
We've heard this forever, uh, from reason from Cato, uh, from John Stossel. I don't like the fact that they're this forever from Reason, from Cato, from John Stossel.
I don't like the fact that they're censoring me.
But hey, they're corporations and they can do whatever they want.
No, they can't.
And are you really that naive and foolish that you don't understand where this censorship is coming from?
Really?
You seriously don't understand the corporation is just a beard?
We all see that now.
We've had the documents have been released.
And it's still hard to get these people.
So frankly, I don't really trust these think tanks and even though heritage foundation is the biggest
of all the conservative foundations i i don't think tanks i don't really trust them at all
i don't trust their judgment their discernment their knowledge their honesty i don't trust their
worldview that corporations are equal or superior to you and I.
And as I said many times, a corporation is a creature of God, of government.
We are creatures of God.
And the basic idea of the Declaration of Independence, which Javier Malai quoted, is that since we are creatures of God, we all have liberty and other rights as creatures of God.
A corporation is a creature of the state.
A corporation has privileges.
It doesn't have rights.
And even if you don't understand it at that level,
you ought to understand what is actually happening,
that they're the beard.
And so I don't trust their discernment on any of this
or their worldview, as a matter of fact.
So this president of Heritage was there in Davos, he said, to participate in a roundtable discussion that was titled,
What to Expect from a Possible Republican Administration.
In other words, Trump.
Roberts described what he saw as a divide between ordinary American views and elites' views on global issues such as climate change.
Let me just say this.
Their fear of Trump is not because he's not going to do what they want.
It's because it's just a game of thrones.
He's going to be a competing power center with them.
But he's going to be open to doing a lot of the stuff that they want.
He was open to doing everything that they
wanted in 2020 to lock us down and the rest of it. And they have ways to control him. They need to
know if he's going to be there. Okay. How are we going to control him? Who's our next Fauci?
And so Schwab has predicted that AI is going to make elections obsolete.
Well, aren't they already? As I said at the beginning of the program,
who thinks that the elections are open and fair and honest? It begins by controlling who gets on
the ballot. As I've said many times, we had Dr. Shiva Ayyadurai come on and talk about how
difficult it is for him to get on the ballot, how easy they make it for themselves. This is a
bipartisan conspiracy to close the ballots to people. easy they make it for themselves. This is a bipartisan conspiracy
to close the ballots to people. Now they don't want to have debates between themselves,
and they don't want you debating anything on social media.
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That predates all of that.
That's where the corruption starts.
If you don't have an honest ballot where people can get on,
if you don't have the ability to debate and you shut down all debate,
what does the election mean anyway?
Even if you counted the votes, honestly, you've now manipulated everybody to the extent
you propagandized them, you censored them, you've censored the ballot,
you've censored the public's debate.
What does an election even mean with that?
But Klaus goes a little bit farther.
Here's what he has to say.
Klaus Schwab The technology now is, and digital technologies
mainly have an analytical power.
Now we go into a predictive power and we have seen the first examples and your company very much involved into it.
But since the next step could be to go into prescriptive mode, which means you do not even have to have elections anymore
because you can already predict what predict and afterwards you can say why do we
need elections because we know what the result will be yeah he says uh ai is more than capable
of choosing a nation's leaders again who do you think is choosing him now um he called for ai to
go into prescriptive mode as as you just heard there, right?
Which means that you do not have to have elections anymore because you can already predict.
And afterwards you can say, why do we need elections?
Because we know what the result will be.
And that's precisely what the geospatial intelligence and social media was designed to do.
To give them feedback.
You know all this stuff that we've seen?
It's like, why do we need to have elections?
We already know what the result will be.
Isn't that what we've seen for the last year with Trump and these polls?
Mainstream and alt-stream media have been feeding you polls and telling you,
it's done, Trump's got the nomination.
And how much of that was predictive programming?
And how much of that was honest reporting from the polls?
It's not possible for us to know, but they do know.
And so they can manipulate public opinion,
and they do it all the time with push polls.
And if they go in and say well you
know we know what everybody's going to vote so we don't even have to have the election whether or
not those polls are accurate or whether or not those polls are honest they have a way and that's
what the social media was designed for it was what the internet was designed for as a way to feed you
their information and then take that propaganda and turn it into a closed-loop system, as I've said before. You look at the evolution of their control from print media to radio to TV to internet,
where they can then instantly look at how their narrative is working and fine-tune it.
And they can also predict what we're going to do very easily already. For the longest time with geospatial intelligence
and these other things that they've done on the Internet,
they've been feeding anticipatory intelligence as a part of that.
They work on that a great deal with the military, with the police,
to anticipate what people are going to do.
This whole pre-crime and everything, that's been their focus,
to anticipate what people are going to do.
And they love to say, we know what you're going to do before you do it.
And they're playing with that with everything.
You see that in terms of the content that they feed you, the movies that they feed you,
if you subscribe to one of their streaming services, any of that stuff.
They're always trying to predict what you're going to do.
And that especially includes the polls.
But they've been doing this for the last year.
We're already done,
right?
Trump's got the nominations.
No,
we don't even need to have any,
there's not going to be any surprises.
And maybe there's not going to be any surprises because their,
their control is so pervasive.
And so,
um,
I have a,
um,
email from a fan in the UK,
very upset with the way that I pronounced Ursula's name,
uh, the Bond villain.
It is Ursula von der Leyen. I guess I got to take the D out. So I'll try to remember to do that when
I mock her. But I don't always try to get the pronunciation right when I try to mock people.
But, you know, I don't know. So, yeah, propaganda, the closed-loop feedback, debates unwanted, polls not needed.
That's where we are in elections.
No doubt about it.
They've already got really what they want.
We just need to understand where this is headed.
And there was an interesting discussion between Jake Sullivan, U.S. National Security Advisor,
and the World Economic Forum's president.
Now, here we go i'm gonna try this
foreign name here borja brenda i guess i don't know i didn't listen to somebody introduce him
b-r-e-n-d-e anyway uh the world economic forum president said we're on a way to a new order
so we are between orders do Do you agree with that?
What are we able to keep on the positive side from the old order to bring in the new world order?
It's a new world order.
I had to talk about this all this time.
And so Jake Sullivan is a little bit wiser.
He understands exactly how all this talk about world order,
new world order, and all the rest of this stuff is going to stick in the throat of Americans.
And so he immediately pushes back on that.
Well, I think this is a little bit more of a transition of eras.
I'd say errors.
More of a transition of orders.
But the two are kind of cousins of one another.
I don't think the international order, says Jake, built after 1945
is getting replaced wholesale with some new order.
It'll obviously evolve.
We have the capacity to shape what that looks like,
and at the heart of it will be many of the core principles
and core institutions of the existing order adapted
for the challenges that we face today.
So you see these people, it's republicans or democrats um the megalomania of the american federal government just as carl rove said
we are history's actors and you will analyze what we do and while you continue to analyze what we do
we'll continue to act and change things and make them.
And the same thing is essentially being said by this guy.
And, of course, as they keep talking more and more, they're not ashamed to talk about Zinuvra D'Orta in the Nazi World Economic Forum.
But, you know, in the U.S., they don't like to use that term.
It kind of wakes people up.
And, uh, Biden has already explicitly said, as a wine press points out, uh, he's explicitly said
the new world order is coming and the U S is going to be the ones to lead it. And the Republicans
want to do it just as badly as the Democrats want to do it. Uh, but, um, anyway, so this is going
back and forth in March of last year the trilateral commission
held an incognito meeting in india where they declared this year 2023 is year one of this new
global order well as i said i'll tell you one more thing before we uh move on to some other
things here and we'll talk about the ecocide week after we take a break but i i think what is deficient in javier malai's understanding
is again it's limited to economics he's very much about economics and so of course he would be
invited to the world economic forum they used to at the beginning at least say that they were about
markets and capitalism that's the way you get started. You know,
you get started as a globalist by saying,
uh,
I'm about making America great again.
You get started as a communist organization,
pushing a world dominance by talking about,
Oh,
let's have an economic forum.
Let's see how we can make the economy better.
Well,
life site news commentator here,
um, uh, talked about it in a perspective that's a little bit deeper.
Transhumanism.
And he said, remember, we look at the soaring cost of living that's been caused by the very governments and businesses and these organizations like this.
The SWAB wishes to further empower.
We've had our lockdown policies.
We've had our ruinous sanctions.
And I said,
from the very beginning,
I said,
this lockdown is a sanction.
Yeah.
They're talking,
I think about the Biden sanctions,
um,
on,
um,
really on Europe,
not so much on Russia.
Uh,
Russia was able to get around the sanctions,
but it created hardships for Europe,
especially the pipelines that we blew up
and the economic sanctions.
But the lockdowns themselves,
in each and every country that did it,
and they all did it at the same time,
just like the World Economic Forum wanted,
all of those lockdowns were economic sanctions against us.
And I said at the very beginning of that,
I said, they're going to war with us. That's how wars begin, were economic sanctions against us. And I said, at the very beginning of that, I said, this is,
this is,
they're going to war with us.
That's how wars began with economic sanctions.
And so the lockdown policy is a sanctions,
the popularization of the sense of a global environmental crisis.
All of this resulted in measures, which didn't address any of these problems,
uh,
made them arguably worse,
but lowered the standard of living for everybody now and
in the future.
But the moral inversion of our mass media-based culture, writes LifeSite News, has created
virtues out of vices in the minds of a nihilistic population of individuals who simply seek
pleasure.
Sex, self-indulgence, individual extremism without limit are the hallmarks
of the banality of an unrestrained desire. And our economic prosperity and freedom is really
what fed that stuff, you see. If you're pointed at the wrong thing.
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give your finances a lift. Find the credit card that's right for you. Visit mbna.ca
slash TrueLineCards. Give your finances a lift. Many times, you know, people remind you that sin originally comes from a term of archery.
You know, you missed the mark.
Well, you're not going to hit the mark if you're not even aiming at it.
If your aim is lower and you're looking at the fruit and not the root of freedom and prosperity,
if you're looking at your economic systems and not looking at God and
all the founders, whether people want to argue about whether they were deists or they were
Freemasons or whatever, they said that what they had been able to accomplish was a blessing from
God. They made that very clear. Well, if you think that you're doing this on your own,
you've already missed the mark.
People are now increasingly patterned socially on a screen-based simulation of reality,
which is feeding the mental health deterioration.
And so, as I said before,
when you look at transhumanism
and you look at the transgender stuff,
transgenderism is immediately about pedophilia.
If these kids have the maturity to do this,
they've got the maturity to do consensual sex
and all this other kind of stuff.
But beyond that, on the longer term,
transgenderism and what Javier Millay was talking about,
this fight between men and women and everything, that really is about pushing people into a virtual reality.
And we can see that now with the furries and things I saw an article one school
official or local official said, we're, we've had it with these people,
these kids showing up in school as furries and the, uh,
dressed up as an animal or something that teachers, uh, uh,
trying to go along with that. If you're going to continue to do that, we're going to call animal control and give you
a dose of reality.
It's just a fantasy world, and that's just a placeholder for putting you into a Ready
Player One type of environment where you're going to just stay there all day with your
headset in this virtual reality.
And that is a very gripping thing.
40 years ago, I had a friend who was in the military
and he was doing tanks
and they would train them with these simulators.
And even though the graphics were incredibly crude
at the time, he said,
you have a situation where somebody backs up and they run over a mine
and they jump and explode and they jump out of the simulator screaming he said that's that's how you
get caught up in this thing even if the graphics are not very realistic well they can make very
realistic graphics and that's that was done before you know they would get into these tanks and
you know every port where they would be able to look out was a monitor that was feeding them something to create that illusion.
Travis says my solution would have been to give all the other kids paintball guns and tell them it's hunting season.
Let the problem sort itself out.
Yeah.
But, you know, when you look at this, it ultimately is going into a virtual reality.
And that's what this author here with
LifeSite understands. He said, the means by which people are informed or malformed about the nature
of reality itself is making them mentally ill. What's more, these messages are shaped by a system
of algorithms patterned in the trillions of data points gathered from almost 20 years of social
media. In short short the agents of
the state have a hand in shaping your views about yourself your reality your life choices
without you even knowing it and we really are in a kind of a post-reality situation now that's what
we're headed for you know we used to talk about modernism. Modernism was where people would debate,
and it really was a philosophical and religious thing
where they would debate the truth of the Bible.
It's a Bible truth.
They called it higher criticism in Germany.
And then they got to the point where they said,
well, you know, truth doesn't really even matter.
I don't even really care.
You've got a truth, I've got a truth.
That kind of moral relativism they called postmodernism.
But now we're in a post, they're pushing us into post-reality is what I would call it.
He goes on to say, these formerly inalienable liberties of movement, of conscience, of expression,
were suspended for a dubious global emergency.
Trump did that.
Trump did that here in America.
This shows that our rights, far from being inviolable,
are to be dismissed when their free exercise
would prove inconvenient to the people who manage us.
And so that is the heart of the issue,
that these rights, therefore, are not rights at all they have not been postponed
but canceled this is what people don't understand this is why this is all still relevant four years
on let's just move on let's talk about trump and let's talk about his election four years ago but
let's not talk about the lockdowns and the suspension of liberties that have been recognized throughout
Western civilization and that the protections that have been refined of those
liberties throughout Western civilization.
Let's just move on from that.
And as long as you don't cancel that,
if you don't cancel those powers that they've taken,
they've canceled your rights.
And he said the policies over the global
health emergency those around the controversial mrna treatments uh got a pass without mention
and they're still getting a pass especially by these alt media uh alt stream media people
no one speaks about the free world anymore as the West has arguably lost its
legitimate claim to moral superiority.
I've talked about that.
I said,
you know,
I was going up people saying,
yeah,
but can I do this?
Hey,
it's a free country.
You ever hear anybody say that anymore?
No,
uh,
it's no longer a pluralist liberal democratic society,
strongly trend tending toward a one.
We're now strongly, uh, tending towards a one-dimensional ideology where we can agree
or we can suffer the consequences of public dissent if we notice a growing list of basic
facts and we speak it out loud.
To be a dissident these days is to speak as a normal person on social media.
The shocking transformation of our culture from one which was proud to defend the tolerance
of opposing views to a censorious surveillance state, enthusiastically policed by unpaid,
vengeful commissars, has no place in the world economic agenda.
The world economic agenda.
It is this kind of algorithm, unfriendly behavior, which will likely be edited out of our futures.
As people refer more to screen-based media than to one another for their sense of how to live,
we can expect to see the machine selecting the very independence of mind and strength of character that makes for the best in all of
us.
So Schwab is arguing for a technocratic vision of humanity that is transformed by the transition
to a less human future.
We have a management problem, he said.
Yeah, we do.
The people who manage us and manage our lives are
never held accountable for their disastrous decision-making. That's what I began the program
with yesterday, a half hour of, you know, these idiots like Tim Pool and Laura Loomer, and they're
doing it for their own benefit. They don't want to hold anyone accountable. That's what Luke was
saying to them. Luke Rudowsky says, can't we, can't they accept some responsibility that they did
the wrong thing? Can they own up to this and say they did the wrong thing and we're not going to
do it again? No, they will never do that. Men in power will never admit to a mistake.
They'll make two mistakes, but they're not going to correct that first mistake.
And of course it wasn't really a mistake it was an agenda finally he says uh
james lovelock this is the guy who came up with the term gaia gaia is a you know greek uh mythological
goddess mother earth that type of thing and the gaia theory that james Lovelock came up with was, Mother Earth is this sentient being that just came into existence on its own.
And it's wonderful.
And all the ecosystem that is there is wonderful, except for the humans.
The humans are a virus.
And the human virus is going to kill Gaia.
It's going to kill this wonderful nature that we see
and all the creatures that we see, all the flora and the fauna
are going to be destroyed by this human virus. So we've got to get rid of this human virus.
We've at least got to get it under control. And so that kind of weird pagan view was snatched up
big time. When we were in the UK, I took the kids there in 2001, March of 2001. Gaia theory was everywhere.
It was in the kids' museum.
It was on the cover of Science magazine that was left behind on the train that we're riding
and everything, and it just permeated everything.
And he's now pulled back away from this climate agenda, but people still are focused on this
Gaia thing.
He foresaw a future of human beings being replaced by cyborgs.
And that's what Elon Musk is selling people.
Isn't it amazing how the alt-stream media is selling you Elon Musk as the savior of humanity?
It's disgusting.
It's absolutely disgusting.
You see it all the time from conservative people.
Babylon B bought into it.
Alex explicitly states it,
that,
you know,
Elon Musk is going to save us all.
The world economic forum presents this attempt to encourage people away from
face-to-face human reality and to further blend their identities with pixels and algorithms they present this as a beneficial exercise
in human cooperation but it really is uh the virtual world that they want to put us into
as he points out it is creation reimagined by z Zuckerberg and people of his ilk.
And it has the depressingly childish avatars to match its fake reality.
These processes are not only sinister in their aim to refocus humanity
on screen-based virtual alternatives to real life,
but they're also infantile.
And infantilizing is making you kids, okay?
Infantilizing.
Infantilizing.
Thank you.
I had the emphasis on the wrong syllable.
I couldn't get past it.
From the point of view of technocratic management,
humanity is a problem to be solved.
And the way you solve it is to delete everything that anchors us into the real human scale world.
From belief in God to our customs of nations and kinship, everything which defines human
nature is to be altered in a project of rationalization. This is a dream for the masters,
but for those of us who are mastered,
their dreams will be the dreams of the machines.
And that is really what we have to be concerned about.
Okay, we're going to come back in just a moment
and I guess we'll go out with this uh one of these klaus schwab comedy things
somebody asked me who did these and um this is actually done by i've got it on the list here
here we go this is my list um time lies greatest schwabs and of they have been, you'll see it here on the thing, at SNICK, SNICK link, S-N-I-C-K.
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L-I-N-K.
So these are the people who produced it.
They did a great job doing this.
We'll be right back.
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You're listening to The David Knight Show. and you can walk 500 steps but not a single step more until the curfew activates and robot cops stand at your door yeah yeah the greatest hit from time lies uh another davos speaker that i want to talk about was the
one who came on talking about ecocide a new term they're going to start uh kicking around uh the
idea is that she wants to tie this to something like genocide so she calls it ecocide and she
wants the international criminal court to uh prosecute what she says is a crime against
humanity what she says is a war
crime well i'd like to see them process the the giant crime against humanity 17 million people
killed with this trump shot and these people who were uh the little princes of uh the world
economic forum and the who and all the rest of these people like Trump and Trudeau and Macron
and Bojo and the UK, they need to be brought up for criminal charges. And we need to find out
whose orders they were taking. I just have to break in here. This woman's picture,
it just reminds me of every nosy little busybody in our neighborhood that we grew up in, you know?
Yeah. She has the exact expression in face. Yeah.'s right they would call her a karen except we don't want to
use that phrase we we like karen um but she she talks this takes us to everything that people
are doing normally as well uh and uh talking about being a busy body farming fishing energy production all that stuff is uh got to be charged as ecocide
by the way she co-founded an organization uh in 2017 seven years ago stop ecocide and um
she's an ally of greta greta thunberg, what our organization and other collaborators aim to do is to have
this recognized legally as a serious crime.
Because one of the issues that pervades this discussion is that we have a culturally ingrained
habit of not taking damage to nature as seriously as we take damage to people and to property. So we're going to
take it as damaging as if you were killing massive numbers of people.
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Which we don't take very seriously, right?
That's just fine.
Here's the full quote from her.
I mean, ecocide as a word is becoming better known around the world,
and the concept is generally mass damage and destruction of nature um but legally speaking um what our organization and other collaborators aim to do
is to have this recognized legally as a serious crime because one of the issues that sort of
pervades all of this discussion is that we have a kind of cultural very grained habit of not taking
damage to nature as seriously as we take damage to people and property.
And that, I mean, if you're campaigning for human rights, at least you know mass murder,
torture, all of these things are serious crimes. But there's no equivalent in the environmental
space. And unlike an international crime like genocide that involves a specific intent,
with ecocide, what we see is actually what people are trying to do,
what businesses are trying to do, is make money, is farm, is fish,
is do all of these things.
But to criminalise this.
You know, producing energy and so on as well.
But what's missing is the awareness and the conscience around the side effects,
around the collateral damage that happens with that.
Yeah, that's from Rebel News.
Isn't that insane?
Yeah, unlike international crime like genocide
that involves a specific intent,
you're not really trying to commit ecocide.
What you're trying to do is to farm, to fish, to produce energy,
but we're going to make that a crime.
And we're going to make it an international crime.
And we're going to intimidate people.
She says, if you create a criminal category of ecocide, it would, quote, unquote, steer individuals and businesses and governments around the world in a healthier direction.
What an amazing, what do you say to this kind of lunacy now these are the people
who kill us for the climate mcguffin just like they did for the pandemic and by the way uh west
robertson says uh charles eisenstein on rfk jr's campaign team is a gaia worshiping web three nut ball. Well, I don't know anything about Charles, but I do know that, um,
RFK Jr himself, it's an environment worshiping nut ball.
When it comes to that, uh, he gave out some good information in terms of
pandemic and some vaccines, but it was limited as far as he would go.
Uh, and, uh, when he was, uh, just focusing on the environment, he wanted to lock up anybody
that, uh, disagreed with him.
I guess they were committing ecocide and give them three hots and a cot, uh, very dishonest
in terms of how he later characterized that one.
As I said, when he was finally asked about it, he said, well, I was talking about the
corporation.
No, he said about the corporation, he said they should be given as a fraudulent corporation
and give them a death sentence.
And I agree with that.
I think JP Morgan, for example, ought to be, uh, shut down and the assets sold off.
Because it's a criminal enterprise.
Just look at his rap sheet.
Look at its convictions.
These are not charges that have been put against it, but it's
convictions, but against it.
So why would you let that continue with with somebody like um jamie demon at the helm
just shut the thing down and but that's not what he was talking about uh because he was talking
about putting somebody in jail and giving them hot meals and that you know giving them a cot and
three hots so uh the latest buzzword just dropped from the devil's den in davos says a twitter user
cat canada farming fishing and making money is now called ecocide so basically if you want to From the Devil's Den in Davos, says a Twitter user, Cat Canada.
Farming, fishing, and making money is now called ecocide.
So basically, if you want to live, you're committing a crime if these people get their way.
Jeff Flynn on Twitter says, I guess ecocide doesn't include killing whales to put up windmills.
Person responds, that's right. net zero is net population growth of zero
that's what they were after all along no more euphemisms about carbon emissions
they're moving on and it will get more explicit and it'll get more authoritarian as time goes on. So as we began this with, and you will walk 500 steps, but no more.
The 15-minute city guru is coming to town in the UK, into Oxford.
And this is from the Daily Skeptic, Alex Klosshofer.
He said, with COVID over, I was hoping that Britain would begin a process of reflection.
And the core values of my country would reassert themselves.
No, see, you were governed with the core values of the World Economic Forum
and the UN and the WHO, and those things have not been repealed.
And everybody else wants to move on,
except when it comes to things that affect Donald Trump.
Then we have to stay focused like a laser beam on what happened to him four years ago.
But forget everything that happened to you.
And forget about all your friends and family that were killed and crippled by all this stuff.
It's their fault, as Laura Loomer said.
You know, you've got a decision to make.
Somebody is coercing you, saying we're going to take away your ability to have a business, to work.
We are going to take away your ability to get an education, to travel.
And you were stupid enough to do that, says Laura Loomer.
Well, that's on you if you went ahead and did that.
I've got a lot of sympathy for people who are lied to, who are coerced.
I don't think you blame the victims who were coerced into this
and give the people who coerced them a free pass, which is what she's doing.
What Laura Loomer is doing is essentially the same as when somebody, when you got a female jogger going through Central Park and she gets raped.
You got these people saying, well, she should have known never to do that.
They don't talk about the rapists.
They don't talk about that.
They talk, it's her fault.
She did it.
That's what Laura Loomer is doing to the people who are coerced,
who are deceived into taking the Trump shot,
or as he likes to call it, the Trump scene.
That's what he wants to call it.
Give him credit.
Same dynamics and behaviors as took place under COVID.
That is a creation of two groups.
One group is good.
The other group is bad.
Along with the good group insulting the latter for questioning new policies,
they're repeating themselves again in another form.
Well, what he doesn't see, of course, is the MacGuffin.
And although the goal, although the idol, the God that you are trying to appease or the goal that you are pursuing is going to be different, I call it a MacGuffin because they still want you to do the same things.
It's still to get you to do the same types of things.
It's still about depopulation with both of these things and many other things like that, limiting your movement for all these.
And so what he's talking about is the Hegelian nature of this,
pitting one group against the other, divide and conquer,
but the thesis, the antithesis, all this.
But the MacGuffin, it's just multiple idols to achieve the same outcome.
So he said at his core of all this stuff is the big idea of the 15 minute city he said next month february the 29th the 15 minute city guru himself is going to come to
oxford in the uk to give a talk carlos moreno uh is an urban planner and uh he was, he got his start, was given, you know, the ability to play around with his theories in Paris by the Marxist mayor there.
He coined the term 15-minute city at COP21, a model for future cities, which has since been enthusiastically embraced by bodies such as the UN, has become the focus of numerous websites.
So think about this. This isn't that long ago you know cop 21 so this new term is catching on
like wildfire the idea behind the event is clearly to gain support for an experimental scheme that
was approved by oxford Council, November 2022.
And the cabinet member there explained at the Sunday Times that the idea was to turn Oxford into a 15-minute city.
So then in autumn of 2024, as we've talked about many times here,
six traffic filters will effectively divide the center of Oxford
into 15-minute zones.
They've already started dividing it and they've got cameras and they've got, you know, obstacles that they put in different places.
Uh, you know, trying to get people to do these loop type. This is all aspects of the 15 minute
city. You know, you can go from within your little area or like, I think maybe adjacent
areas or something like that. Uh, and you can get out of those little areas only a certain number of times.
That's the whole theory behind the 15-minute city.
And they're implementing all this stuff in Oxford.
They're pleased to be one of the test sites where they turn their citizens into lab rats to try to navigate this maze of obstacles,
prohibitions, and rules to be able to live.
The city will be monitored by cameras, and any journey taken without permits will result in fines.
Unsurprisingly, the scheme, along with Oxford's low-traffic neighborhoods, has generated a great deal of controversy.
Yeah, a great deal of controversy is to put it mildly.
So, yeah, you will not go more than 500 steps.
We're going to take a quick break and we'll be right back.
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Well, we were talking about Javier Malai earlier,
and I mentioned this briefly,
but didn't talk a great deal about the fact that one of the things that he's already started doing,
he already had some of the bureaucracies
that he was going to shut down.
Unfortunately, a lot of times when they do that,
they just take the people and the policies
and they put them over into other ones.
So it remains to be seen
whether that's really going to be anything
other than musical chairs and window dressing,
or if it really will be a reduction in the size of government.
We'll see what happens with that.
But something else that he's done, he's been focused a lot, of course,
on the Argentine dollar that's got 150% inflation.
And one of the things that he's doing that's very interesting
is that he's going to allow the provinces to circulate their own currencies.
And again, this is one of the reasons why so many people are trying to focus on state banks and gold depositories.
And just yesterday, we had another state that jumped into that to try to have a backup to that because if the central banks and the central control by the government
of the currency is failing and it is everywhere to a large degree then you've got to have some
kind of a backup and as i pointed out even during the depression you had some people that would coin
wooden coins in communities and use those as kind of a community coin or set up barter exchanges and that type of thing. So President Malai promised not to oppose any provinces' attempts to launch their own currencies.
After a public exchange between him and the governor of another province,
on January the 14th during an interview,
he confirmed that he would not legally oppose the creation of local currencies
by provincial authorities in Argentina.
He believes the market will ultimately decide.
He said those who receive payments in quasi-currencies from irresponsible governors will clearly
see a loss of their income.
What is not taken from them through budgetary adjustment will be taken from them via inflation
in the quasi-currency. Meanwhile, in Rosario, Argentina's third most populated city,
a local landlord and a tenant sealed an agreement
for the rent to be paid in Bitcoin.
The contract is the first of its kind in Argentina,
made possible by recent law,
with amendments by the new presidential administration.
So we're going to have to have some way to exchange goods and services.
And the question is, as we look at what is happening in Argentina,
I think it's going to be very interesting to see them as a laboratory
trying to do these different things.
He wants to shut down the Argentine Central Bank.
That was his campaign promise.
And as a temporary measure and as a temporary measure
as a temporary measure uh tie it to the u.s dollar he said all the central banks are awful
he goes but ours is the worst of all so it's not like he's he's naive enough to think that the
federal reserve is a good central bank he's just looking at this as a transitional step. This article from Gold Switzerland, the gold wagon, catch it or lose your fortune, says Von Greertz is the writer for this.
With the U.S. shooting itself in the foot again, we're now certain that this is the final farewell to the bankrupt dollar-based monetary system. He said, I decided 25 years ago the destiny of the world economy and the financial system
necessitated the best form of wealth preservation that money could buy.
So the total mismanagement of the U.S. financial system has led to the dollar losing 98% of
its value since Nixon closed the gold window in 1971.
Most other currencies have followed the dollar down at varying speeds, but now comes the
really exciting phase, the race to the bottom, because we're going to live in interesting times,
as they say. He said, we've only got 2% left for the dollar-based currency system to go to zero.
But as Voltaire said in 1728, paper money always returns to its intrinsic value of zero. But he said, think about the fact that for to go this final 2%,
it's got to lose 100% from where it is today.
He says, I know skeptics will say this is not possible,
but these skeptics don't know their history.
Since fiat currencies records are perfect,
no one must believe that because we live today,
it's different than it has
been over the last 5,000 years.
And we've got a faultless record of success, or should we call it failure, of currencies
always going to zero.
Question is, of course, with any kind of economic investment, the timing.
He says, owning gold will not solve all of our problems, but it will at
least give us a very important nest egg and also protection against the coming financial debacle
that is going to hit the world. And it's something that is coming not by accident,
not by mismanagement, but by design. France is melting down millions of coins.
Isn't that interesting?
And this, again, is because of this increasingly authoritarian EU
demanding to control every minute detail.
They have to remelt 27 million coins
after they failed to get approval for their design from the European Commission.
So I guess that was part of the mandate of Ursula.
Ursula von der Leyen, I guess.
Or Lion.
She'd be lying, I guess.
The executive body rejected the new money after it had already been minted.
The 10, 20, and 50 cent coins were produced with a new design in November.
However, the bloc's legislative arm decided that the way the stars of the EU flag had been depicted on them was not compliant with the European Commission's strict and precise requirements.
So, I mean, is this just kind of an obsessive-compulsive disorder?
Are these people perfectionists?
Are these totalitarian bureaucrats?
Or maybe they just don't want any coins made.
I mean, I was surprised to see that France was minting any coins still.
Everything must be controlled
and be compatible with the euro.
The reversal has reportedly saddled the facility
with costs of up to $1.6 million
to melt and to re-mint the coins.
So again, what surprised me about all that
was that they would even allow coins
because coins,
something that you can hold
in your hand uh physically hold in your hand and completely anonymous uh from them they don't like
that they want to know everything everybody's doing and be able to control preemptively
everything that everybody is doing everywhere that's one of the reasons why um yeah uh we'll
fight this we're going to be coming up we're gonna be talking
about uh the new deal's war on the bill of rights and um uh and of course a big part of that is
taking your money and uh and doing other things with it they may try to take our coins and melt
them down but again uh that is um when the government does something like that i think it's going to get some pushback
this time but um if you want to get some coins probably uh they don't like because they don't
approve of you having any kind of uh cash that is especially cash that has an intrinsic value
it's not a fiat currency uh david knight dot gold will take you to Tony Ardaban and his Wise Wolf Gold. And there
you can buy gold and silver and you can even do it. He'll work with you. Any size purchase, he'll
catch it at the price that it's at right now. You know, you go to the big retailers that are
bragging about that because there is a lot of consumer demand. Everybody's very concerned
about what is going to happen to the financial system. So people are going to some of the big retailers, but when they're out, they're out.
Now, Tony can lock the price in for you and get that at that price,
and he can also help you to accumulate it on a gradual basis.
He set up a monthly purchasing program there.
So any amount, small or large, Tony can handle there at Wise Wolf Gold,
and you can find it with DavidKnight.Gold.
We will be right back.
Whether you're feeling like the blues or bluegrass, APS Radio has you covered.
Check out a wide variety of channels on our might want to hear it in your pod.
You'll owe nothing, and be happy.
Ain't got no cash, ain't got no car But 24 booster shots in your arm
Oh, nothing
Be happy
You can't even buy shit in the store
Because of your low social credit score
Oh, nothing
Be happy Your low social credit score. Oh, nothing.
Be happy.
You will own nothing.
And be happy.
Be happy and eat some bugs.
Yeah, be happy.
Just eat the bugs. Yeah, be happy. Just eat the bugs.
On Rock Fan Angry Tiger.
Good to see you there, Angry Tiger.
Of course, Angry Tiger, along with Jason Barker, they do Nights of the Storm.
Angry Tiger has the Tiger and Snake Economic Report.
He says, farming and fishing done correctly are good for the environment.
People have farms and outdoorsmen want to conserve the environment responsibly that's right some of the best stewards of that it's kind of like when you go back and
look at at rodeos you know when we lived in texas right after we got married we really enjoyed the
rodeos that were there and um there's a little small town rodeo outside of houston where he lived
and uh in symington and it was an indoor rodeo and it was always a lot of fun.
And, and we would go there frequently on a, as every Saturday.
And, uh, they had, uh, amateur cowboys, which makes the rodeo a lot more interesting.
And you would see the same animals week after week.
And, um, and they had some of the same characteristics. They had one that they called April showers that when they let this one out of the pen,
its bladder would always cut loose.
And if you saw this happening and you weren't in the first row, you would not come back. But when you saw that happen, you would, um, you would not want to sit in the front row.
And everybody knew that.
And they had a foreign delegation that came in from, uh, the Chinese government to see
the rodeo.
And, uh, the announcer welcomed them and pointed out that they were sitting in the front row,
and then they let out April showers.
Anyway, I always enjoyed the rodeo.
Like I said, it was the same animals week after week.
They had a hard money event where you try to take a bag from around the neck of this Brahma bull that was very aggressive.
And if you were successful in that, you would win the kitty.
And, you know, everybody in order to enter the event,
they'd have to pony up some money that would go into the kitty. And then you would share it,
except that it accumulated week after week, after week, after week,
because people can get that off.
And that was always the same one as well.
It was a white Brahma bull.
They called cocaine
but um we would see these same animals all the time and and they would have to take care of
these animals because that's their business right no more than if you were uh had a taxi company
that you would abuse your taxi because then you're not going to be in business
anymore. So they would take very good care of these animals.
And then we went to North Carolina and we saw, Oh, rodeo is coming down.
Let's go see the way we went there.
And it was all these animal rights people demanding that the rodeo be stopped.
And that's exactly what angry tiger is talking about.
People who do this are good stewards of the environment
and that's the difference between stewardship and radical environmentalism that is born out of a
pagan religious worldview that these people have it also makes me wonder if they've ever seen a
rodeo it's generally not the bull that's in danger that's right that's right it was especially the
amateur rodeos uh the bulls were doing just fine.
The horses were doing just fine.
It was the cowboys that were taking a beating.
And in those days, they didn't wear any vests.
They didn't wear any helmets, any of that kind of stuff.
And we saw some people get seriously injured.
It's like having Hulk Hogan resting a three-year-old and then worry about Hulk Hogan.
Calling it child abuse, yeah.
Yeah, they don't care about the child abuse they care about care about hulk hogan um let's uh talk in a little bit of
time we got before a guest joins us here the depopulation agenda of course and today is the
march for life but uh you've got in australia as well as in Canada, they're pushing euthanasia very hard.
And in Australia, the people who are, um, shepherding this, uh, voluntary assisted dying
bill through, we're actually trying to open it up to children under the age of 18.
And of course, this is exactly what we've been seeing with the transgender stuff. You know, pushing the idea that children have rights and that they can make responsible decisions, which we all know is not true.
And this is why there's been they've been treated differently in the past.
Why God gave them parents and gave created the family to nurture children because they're different.
They can't make these kinds of decisions.
They don't have the experience or the maturity.
They don't even have the ability to think critically that they will later in life.
But this is the fruit of this transgender stuff pushing them towards transhumanism.
This is the fruit of all that. The idea that children have rights and if they've got rights, well, they got a right
to be killed, right?
The ACT Commission critiques that the bill does not make this form of suicide available
to minors under the age of 18.
And you got to do that because you've got to have due consideration for the rights of
children.
Children do not have rights.
Adults have rights.
Children have parents.
And we need to focus on parental rights.
And this has been where this thing has been headed for a very, very long time.
For over 15 years, I've been pushing this thing maybe longer than that now.
Anyway, the minor meets all the requirements of the bill.
And if they can demonstrate maturity, demonstrate maturity, do you have to
demonstrate maturity and kindergarten to decide that you're different gender now?
No, no, they're having their way with the kids.
They said that we understand this is fraught with ethical issues,
say the least.
And they want this committee to consider making these changes when the bill has been in place for three years, because, you know,
they got to do this gradually.
As Fauci said, you know, you do it from the inside,
you do it with disruption and you do it iteratively.
So let's get people used to the idea
of government-assisted murder and then we will extend this to the kids gradually over the next
three years all this has been requested on the guise of human rights and the catchphrase death
with dignity allowing children to request legal suicide is a dangerous proposition when it's known
that decision-making skills are
not fully developed in humans till their early 20s. Minors may also be more easily influenced
or coerced by caregivers and parental decisions, friend groups, and social media, all of which make
voluntary assisted suicide appear to be the best solution for their pain. These efforts to broaden
the scope of assisted deaths are likely to
follow in Canada's footsteps.
So this is what's happening to the English speaking world.
Now, not only are we getting rid of individual rights, but we are because
of this depopulation anti-human agenda.
They want to focus on children and they want to harm children.
Then immutilate them.
They want to kill them. They want to mutilate them. They want to kill them.
They can't kill them in the womb.
They can help them to have government-assisted death.
And this, in British Columbia,
they want to quietly authorize free fentanyl for kids
without parental notification or concern.
Again, children's rights.
All of these different things are being done in the name of that.
And isn't it interesting how this contradicts the whole basis of abortion?
Abortion, we don't really care about the kid at all.
It's what the mother wants.
And then after the child is born, we don't care what the mother wants we're going to do what
we want to do to the kid but the only way to understand that kind of lying hypocrisy is to
understand what their true agenda is and that is depopulation and harming children british columbia
apparently authorized distribution of free fentanyl to children without parental consent, perhaps even without their knowledge.
The influential research organization told National Post that their protocols for the prescription of safe fentanyl tablets to children were to, quote, further support clinicians prescribing safer supply across the province. According to the protocols, the only special requirement for children to obtain fentanyl is the use of a
quote to prescriber approval system.
This means one doctor will run the initial patient interview while a
different doctor will review the child's charts before signing off on the drug
prescription.
You're going to have two opinions.
In other words,
big deal, especially considering words. Big deal.
Especially considering the low ethical bar of hospitals,
as we've seen in the last four years.
In addition to having low requirements for children to obtain the drugs,
it fails to list a minimum age for receiving recreational fentanyl.
Furthermore, the protocol is completely neglect to mention the rights and the roles of parents.
According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, fentanyl is 50 to 100 times more potent than morphine,
which is a highly addictive drug as well.
Because of its potency, the drug is often mixed with other less powerful drugs,
which can easily lead to an overdose.
Additionally, fentanyl users will need to increase their dose as the brain adapts to
the drug to receive the same results.
And just like we saw with opioid epidemic, how many times do people go in, they need
something for pain, and they're not looking even to have recreational use of drugs.
They're not looking to get high.
And yet they still get addicted to these things by their doctors.
As a matter of fact, Chris Christie, when he was running in 2016,
used that as an argument for the drug war and for banning marijuana.
It was a lawyer that he knew that was very successful,
lost his practice, lost his uh lost his
practice lost his family and committed suicide because he injured his back and they got him
hooked on opioids but now they want to do fentanyl to kids in canada since release of the national
post expose canadians have voiced their disbelief and their dismay over this as one of them said on
twitter now in british columbia the national hospital system supported by trudeau has approved
the handing out at taxpayer expense actual fentanyl including to minors under the age of 18. Now that's pretty consistent with Trudeau.
And then in Finland,
I've not really talked about this,
but I've talked about it in the past in our previous trials.
This is a senior Finnish politician who has already had two trials because
several years ago she had between 2004, 20 years ago, and 2019,
she had on several occasions on social media discussed the Bible because she's a Christian.
And because at her church, they were going to have some kind of an event or something
that was going to honor homosexual marriage and she disagreed
with that based on her religious beliefs and for that quote-unquote crime that thought crime
that religious crime this finnish public prosecutor has taken her now for the third time, took her to a lower court, and she was found not guilty,
appealed it,
and at another trial,
found the same thing.
As a matter of fact,
that court said it is not our business
to make determinations about what the Bible says
or what Christianity believes.
And so it appeared to be
that might be the end of it,
that of the appeals court,
but no, not with this particular prosecutor. He's going to be the end of it out of the appeals court but no
not with this particular prosecutor he's going to take her all the way up to the highest court
so now this will be the third time that it happens and it's um all about hate speech
this is one of the reasons why i say you know hate speech is is such a vile construct
of persecution uh and of um you know to persecute both speech and religious views.
And so, as they pointed out, the people who were defending her, Alliance Defending Freedom
International said, we think that she's going to win in this.
But they said, the reality of these hate speech trials is that the process itself has become the punishment.
And so that's really what they're looking at.
She said, I know that it is going to be an ordeal, but she's going to do it because it
would establish such a dangerous precedent, not only for Finland, but for all of the European
Union, if this guy were to get his way.
The inquisitor is not necessarily a persecutor get his way. The Inquisitor.
He's not necessarily a persecutor, but he is an Inquisitor.
Okay, we have our guest ready, and I'm very anxious to talk to him about his book,
The New Deal's War on the Bill of Rights, the Untold Story of FDR's Concentration Camps,
Censorship, and Mass Surveillance.
Yeah, he kind of set the ground rules for what we're starting to see, getting it good and hard right now.
And of course, if we don't understand the principles involved here, it's going to be much worse with the new technology.
So we'll take a quick break and we'll be right back. © transcript Emily Beynon Thank you. Analyzing the globalist's next move.
And now, The David Knight Show. Plant the seed in our homeland, boys Let it grow where all can see
Feed it with our devotion, boys
Call it the Liberty Tree
It's a tall old tree
And a strong old tree
And we are the sons, yes we are the sons
The sons of Liberty ¶¶ Liberty. It's your move you're listening to the david knight show
interested in a curated list of the finest classical music find it now at apsradio.com
all right joining us now is David Beto.
He's an emeritus professor of history at the University of Alabama.
Right now, he is a senior fellow at the Independent Institute, an excellent organization.
And we're going to talk to him about freedom issues.
The book that he has here, published by the Independent Institute, is The New Deal's War on the Bill of Rights,
The Untold Story of FDR's Concentration Camps, Censorship, and Mass Surveillance.
Thank you for joining us, David.
Thank you.
This is something that I think everybody's going to find very interesting because we know so much about FDR and what he did with the war.
People talk about Pearl Harbor.
They talk about the economic takeover.
But this civil liberties aspect is something that's not usually talked about much.
Yeah, it isn't talked about.
And I'm interested in those issues, certainly.
But I said to myself, why don't I just zero in on this?
And the more I found, the more I found there was a story here that really has not been told or it's only been lightly told about FDR's attitudes toward the Bill of Rights, towards the protections of the First Amendment, toward privacy and so forth.
And FDR's record is atrocious.
I would say worse than Woodrow Wilson.
And that's saying a lot.
It really was. I would say worse than Woodrow Wilson, and that's saying a lot.
It really was.
And, of course, it was a major change, and so many things were restructured.
You know, when we look at him, he really did rule as a tyrant. And we've always had this kind of construct that, well, you know, liberals are for civil liberties,
and Republicans and conservatives conservatives for economic liberties.
You know, they're good on those two things.
And actually, they're not.
The liberals are not good on civil liberties at all, are they?
And FDR is proof of that, isn't he?
He's proof of that, although one of the more encouraging things that I found in this book is there was pushback against FDR coming from a lot of people on the left uh not only conservatives but people like
norman thomas a great defender of civil libertarianism who was a socialist uh there
were new dealers in the justice department that really pushed back against a lot of things that
he did including japanese internment so in contrast to woodrowrow Wilson, FDR is getting a lot of pushback
from people, from subordinates, from new dealers, from conservatives, some socialists. And that is,
for me, an encouraging lesson for today that maybe there is potential for people on the left
and the right to get together to defend civil liberties because if they don't, then they're more isolated.
Let's begin with the concentration camps because that is the one aspect of the civil
liberty stuff that people are somewhat familiar with. But break that down for us exactly
what was done to the Japanese Americans and when this all began
as the war was rolling out?
When did the concentration camps begin?
Well, the standard view of FDR you're going to get in textbooks as well.
Japanese internment is a bad thing, and he shouldn't have done that.
But they often portray him as distracted.
It's really, this is done by subordinates.
He went along with it.
There was hysteria.
I see that with Trump all the time about the lockdowns.
Yeah, he was distracted.
He was playing 40 chess or he didn't know what was happening or whatever.
But yeah, that's always what the apology is.
Yeah, FDR, the great leader, right?
The guy that's always on top of things is somehow clueless and distracted.
That was not convincing to me.
And the more I looked into it is that fdr
is a leader on this he's very much proactive in the 1920s his attitudes towards the japanese were
very clear he said california has a right to deny japanese immigrants the right to own land for
example we can never have racial mixing with them it just it just isn't going to
work in the in the late 30s he said that if there is a war with japan we need to put any japanese
american who who had met with japanese sailors or their family members uh we need to put them in
his words he uses the term concentration camp there's a debate are these
concentration camps well i think they are they're not death camps i don't think they're the same as
the nazi death camps but fdr called them concentration camps and that and i think
that's what they are so he was prepared for this he was already talking about it um and but he's
very smart fdr has deniability he's very charming he FDR has deniability. He's very charming. He would not
talk about this in public, but he lets it happen, right? After Pearl Harbor, it took two months
for him to issue his executive order. And he's sort of subtly opening the door to people from
below to say, all right, you want to put them in concentration camps? Well, we'll consider that. And then he signs off on it. But the initial attitude of Americans after the
attack on Pearl Harbor and the press is not one of, gee, we should put the Japanese Americans
in concentration camp. That takes time to happen. And FDR lets that hysteria develop and signs off on it um so he is proactive in this he's not clueless
he's a very well-informed man he he knows about the issues he knows what's going on and there are
a lot of top people that are telling him you don't have to do this including his own attorney general
nick uh francis biddle and and biddle is very much against this he ends up
going along with it but he he tells mr president we don't have to do this there isn't this demand
for uh j agar hoover is against it uh secretary of the interior a lot of top people in the justice
department are telling him don't do it and he he doesn't. And, of course, it served a very useful purpose for him if he could, you know, always to create
the enemy, especially an enemy amongst us.
That heightens the fear and people running to the leader for help, and very easy to do
that when you've got people who don't look like you.
You know, they couldn't do that with the germans so easily and people of german descent uh but um i mentioned they might have squeezed
some of that stuff in there in more subtle ways but that that was really kind of a pr thing what
was he did it with an executive order so what is the presumed authority that that he might have
claimed to be able to do something like that to arrest people just because they're uh japanese yeah well you
look at his executive order it's right and and i used to have students read it but they didn't
they couldn't figure it out and i i realized when i looked at it i couldn't figure it out because it
uses terms like uh persons whose removal is uh who who be removed. He never uses the term, it's like the Constitution, never uses the term,
Constitution never mentions the word slavery.
FDR's executive order never mentions Japanese Americans.
He says, basically, it's a military argument, right?
He sort of says, well, the military, you know, this has been deemed necessary for national defense.
So we have to remove these people from these areas, namely the whole West Coast.
And then what we'll do, the initial order says we'll remove them.
Then it says, well, then they have to go to these assembly centers and so forth. So they're told essentially they can't live where they are and they have nowhere else to go.
And we will create these these camps for them.
But he never uses the term Japanese or Japanese Americans.
That comes later in the enforcement orders, which are signed by the military.
And that's why they he's able to shift blame to them and it's all
people all people of japanese ancestry i didn't do it that includes people in orphanages so they
actually say well they got to go to the camp yeah yeah yeah but i didn't do it it was the
democrat governors who did it or it was the military who did it and so i guess it was the democrat governors who did it or it was the military who did it and so i guess it was the if you were a japanese american uh you're minding your own business and then you get a
knock on the door and it's a bunch of uniformed soldiers was it the military that was going on
and rounding people up and taking them in yeah uh what they do is it's it's it's publicized right
so they'll go to the neighborhood they'll'll put posters everywhere and say, report to this assembly center on June 8th.
Right.
You go there and they're going to they take you to camps and you got you got a family dog you love.
Well, too bad.
You know, you can't take that dog with you.
You better figure out what to do.
You got some property.
Well, you better sell it.
And of course, that put a lot of bargain prices.
So they're only able to take the bare essentials with them.
Wow.
It's really quite cruel.
And the cruelty of this is part of the story.
FDR keeps them in the camps until late, well, 1945, basically,
keeps them through the 1944 election.
Even though by 43, the U. even though by 43 the u.s is winning the war
again the advice advice he's getting is even more overwhelming from top people in the government
let you can let them go now but he says well there's that california you know i want to carry
california and so he keeps him there and so they didn't there's a cruelty there, a cold-blooded aspect to him that people haven't picked up on.
So they kept them interred until the papers were signed, essentially, with Japan, I guess.
And then it was clear that the Supreme Court was going to rule on.
And they did this in, think was december 44 so he knew that they the court
the court sustained it but he also knew that it was going to be ruled on so to deflate that
basically they announced uh you know well we're going to let him go we're going to wind down the
camps by the end of 1944 um and uh that's what they So the, it was a kind of a farcical,
uh, situation, but they knew basically at that point, the election is over and that, you know,
the, the, and now they, they decided at that point to do it. Wow. And they knew the courts
were going to start ruling on it. And yeah, that's, that's that's amazing and and of course um and as we were talking um
off air uh you pointed out that there was also uh some uh uh actions that he took against a
black gop member tell us a little bit about that oh yeah that's that's one of the more interesting
chapters of the book for me someone told me me about this, and I said, well, this is interesting,
but how does it figure into the broader story?
And they looked into it, and it fits in just perfectly.
Now, there was this guy named J.B. Mark.
He was the head of the National Negro Baseball League.
He owned a drugstore.
He's African-American in Memphis, and it was kind of a showcase drugstore.
A lot of people went to it.
He was a pretty wealthy guy.
Well, he was a Republican.
And he was the head of the Shelby County Republican Party, the Memphis Republican Party.
And they had a weird deal with the local mayor there.
Well, he wasn't mayor.
He was mayor briefly.
But he was the city boss, Boss Crump. And Crump had a deal with the local mayor there. Well, he wasn't mayor. He was mayor briefly, but he was a city boss, boss Crump. And Crump had a deal with the black Republicans. He said, you guys can vote.
However, when I need you for particular things, you know, you're going to serve me. And they were
in charge of vice and that kind of thing, right he sort of uses them as a tool well by the late
30s crump no longer needs them as much because he's become very close to fdr he's getting a lot
of new deal money but martin doesn't know that uh you know maybe he shouldn't push it so 1940
martin wants to carry the state for the republicans for Wendell Wilkie and he organizes a quite
massive interracial rally so there are white Republicans in Tennessee they tend to be from
the mountain areas and they have this alliance with these black Republicans and he has this
rally gets over a thousand people boss Crump is upset and he says you don't do any more of those
rallies or I'm going to police you and Martin says well I'm sorry I'm going to do upset and he says, you don't do any more of those rallies or I'm going to police you.
And Martin says, well, I'm sorry, I'm going to do it.
And he did it.
And what does that mean?
Policing?
Well, Boss Crump sent in police to search every customer, white or black, coming in or leaving the drugstore.
Wow.
Every customer. drugstore wow every customer and eventually uh basically crump had a kind of license to bond
prisoners and so forth but it was informal so it was clear that crump was going to uh throw martin
in jail so martin leaves however he comes back two years later to go to a baseball game in a stadium he helped to build the police come to his box at
the stadium and tell him uh basically put him in a holding cell and then he's told he better get out
of the city wow all right now okay so uh martin and others go to the federal government and complain and um what happens is that the department of justice
civil rights division the guy there just says this is a really a slam dunk case against crump here
this is like reporting the newspapers and you know it's like a big deal right that he's doing
this even the local memphis paper saying this is going too far and uh he's ready to prosecute deposes martin and so forth but it goes to higher ups and it's vetoed
and uh a philip randolph the labor leader who's very strong on civil liberties comes to the aid
of martin and goes to eleanor rosabeth and she sends a very brief note saying you know
I've been told we just don't we're not supposed to look into this that this isn't a good idea
and nothing happens nothing happens and and and again Crump is very close to Roosevelt to both
Roosevelt's he had supported Franklin since 1931 he had paid played a key
role in getting him in the nomination he gets a lot of federal money um he's an important figure
in 44 to get truman in um and so forth so roosevelt is this aligns with big city bosses like
crump and they can do whatever they want suppress the vote and he's not going to do anything and that's exactly what
happens in this particular case wow wow and of course you know they um many people try to point
out the history of the democrat party vis-a-vis a black community uh and uh and it was still
happening at that point in time and then very quickly they just kind of reversed themselves
it's kind of interesting it's kind of like seeing uh the guy who started a southern poverty law center morris dees and how
he was he went from defending the ku klux klan all you know takes a takes a powder uh works on
building a business that is uh direct mail and then uh comes back in as an anti-klansman even
though the only thing he did in the civil rights was to defend the Ku Klux Klan.
It is interesting to see how the Democrats very rapidly did a complete U-turn on all this stuff and made that their issue, isn't it?
Yeah, and Roosevelt really, you know, I mean, I don't talk about anti-lynching,
but there's an anti-lynching bill and it's filibustered and stopped by the democrats
previous presidents coolidge and harding had supported the bill roosevelt does not support
the bill and it is uh it is he doesn't do anything for civil rights basically but a lot of money is
spent and um a lot of relief money and he's able to use that effectively with not only african americans
but whites uh throwing that money around in a big way it's very important um there's stories that
people at the wpa will get the phone and they did forget themselves and they'd say democratic
headquarters right so it was intermixed intermingled the relief money and the political machines and these local
political machines fdr is perfectly willing to use them but creates his own machine in a sense
yeah let's talk a little bit you know you mentioned woodrow wilson uh another uh a very
dangerous president i call him a president but he's also a precedent. A lot of
precedents that he set. When we talk about censorship, that's one of the other aspects
of your book here. With Woodrow Wilson, I frequently talk about the Supreme Court case
where he threw a guy in jail for a movie that he did. And I talk about in terms of, you know,
hey, the Supreme Court reverses itself frequently. You know, when everybody says this is such and such as a law of the land, they're always reversing themselves and making wrong decisions.
Sometimes they do it pretty quickly.
Sometimes it takes decades.
But they lock this guy away because he did a movie called The Spirit of 76, which had the British as a bad guy.
And the Supreme Court upheld that.
He got a jail sentence and a pretty stiff fine because Woodrow Wilson wanted to portray the British as our allies.
What was the kind of things that FDR was doing in terms of censorship?
Well, FDR, of course, had experience during the Woodrow Wilson administration.
He was assistant secretary of the Navy. And his attitude was, if anything, more anti-civil libertarian than other people in
that administration. One guy, for example, did an article. He said, well, why isn't, kind of implied,
satirical, why isn't FDR in uniform? Assistant Secretary of the Navy is in his 30s. Why isn't
this guy in the Navy himself? And FDR was so mad that he went to the federal prosecutor and said, why don't you prosecute this guy?
And the prosecutor said, well, we really don't have a case.
And FDR said he should be in the penitentiary.
You know, he should be, you know, that was his attitude.
So he comes in with this kind of attitude.
And FDR's view is social good, right?
We need social justice.
The ends are the important thing, and let's not worry about the means.
All right.
Well, censorship.
There was a senator named, this is one of the cases where there was pushback. There was a senator named uh this is one of the case where where there was pushback there
was a senator named sherman mitten there's a bridge in indiana named after him when i look
him up that's the main thing that comes up but mitten was head of a committee in the senate that
was investigating anti-new deal organizations and he was getting a lot of pushback from these people. So Mitten got very frustrated
and proposed a bill that would have made it a felony to publish any newspaper article known
to be untrue. Again, the president and the new dealers are very worried about misinformation.
They're very worried about fake news. In fact, I think they even use that expression. Now, the question is, who put Mitten up to it?
And I don't have slam dunk evidence, but people at the time said Mitten was not the kind of guy to do this kind of thing on his own.
So I think FDR was floating a trial balloon.
That's my opinion.
But what happened was there was universal opposition to this bill coming from the left
and the right and mitten had to pull it pull it even though you know these leading new deal
newspaper publishers said you can't do this this is going too far um and he had to pull it now
more direct fdr involvement was with minton's predecessor, Senator Hugo Black,
who was an attack dog for the New Deal in the Senate. Black had a committee, was having a
similar problem. He was investigating anti-New Dealers. They were not being very cooperative.
They were getting some public sympathy. So Black said it comes up with the idea or someone does.
What if I could get access to their private telegrams?
Then I could really ambush them.
Now, telegrams are the email of the day.
Over 50% of long distance communication.
They were instantaneous.
In many cases, companies would have telegraphers.
You would say things in telegrams. You wouldn't say in letters, off the cuff, et cetera, et
cetera.
You didn't save them generally.
And so he went to the telegraph companies, Western Union says, I want to get all telegrams
sent, for example, by every member of the Congress over a nine-month period to and from going through
washington i want all those and uh you know western uses well we don't want to we're not
going to do this you know customers aren't going to like this and so he goes to the roosevelt
administration and the fcc we're working in tandem and they basically instruct western union to do this and they don't want to do it but they agree
so black staffers and western union people go i mean and fcc people go into western union one day
and said um okay give us you know these telegrams right right? They went down the list, who's in Congress and so forth.
And they would bring out these big stacks
because the law required Western Union
to keep copies of all telegrams, right?
So they had to keep copies of all of them.
So they go through these copies.
They go through several thousand today
and it adds up to over 3 million that they go through wow and
the instruction comes from blacks staffers as well if you see things of a personal nature
don't worry about that don't look at that look at anything having to do with lobby
and what is lobby any attempt to indirectly or directly influence uh i don't know uh political
policy so what we're doing to be lobbying right yeah uh so anything like that it's it's it's about
as broad as you can get and they go through these and eventually it comes out because Western Union starts to inform people that this is going on.
One of the people they inform is Senator Newton Baker, who had been secretary of war under Wilson.
Baker is kind of a moderate, you know, new dealer, kind of quasi new dealer, you know, kind of just this mild-mannered guy. He is so outraged by this that he finds out his telegrams have been searched,
that he says, look, if somebody saw somebody lynching Senator Hugo Black,
I would not join the lynching, but I would not stop them from putting the noose around his neck.
And this is a mild-mannered guy anyway there's this is a long
story and there's a lot of pushback there are court suits and uh that are successful against
this but black is able to get all this booty and then he gets on the supreme court because
roosevelt is very appreciative this is the main thing that Roosevelt,
reason that Roosevelt puts black on the court. He's very appreciative of this.
So anyway, that's the story of that. But it is condemned, though. Again, this is another thing.
You get people like Walter Lippman, someone who's a liberal. You get a lot of Washington Post.
You get a lot of people in the press who are normally supportive of Roosevelt saying,
this is going too far, and there is pushback against it.
That's interesting.
Human nature doesn't change, especially the human nature of politicians.
It's just that they've got better tools today.
All this stuff that you're talking about, well, we're going to look for misinformation. We're going to see if we can find something on anybody.
It reminds me very much of what Truman said about J. Edgar Hoover.
He's got files on everybody.
He's trending towards the Gestapo.
This is really pretty pervasive.
It's just that it wasn't as widely reported as things are right now.
And it wasn't directly affecting the public in the same way the social media surveillance and things like that are rolling out.
And so it was kind of the people who were inside politics that knew about this that were getting directly impacted with this.
Now with the technology, they can do this with everybody. the the impulse is always the same isn't it uh to well i i will
disagree in one sense this is headline news front page news black committee the black inquisition
that's what it was called i mean i'm not just talking about right winger i mean this was
this was kind and it's interesting how historians had just yeah that's the thing you
know you don't just do just do a search at proquest you'll just see black committing my god
all the stuff coming up and historians have not paid attention to it but you're right in a sense
that uh a lot of this can be hidden a lot more effectively yes right and it's been hidden by
the historians and it's been hidden by the historians. And it's been hidden by the historians. So it's good that you brought that out. It went out well-documented at the time, but then flushed down the memory hole for the most part as they polished up the image of FDR.
Let's talk about something that a lot of people that listen to this program are being concerned about.
And that, of course, is what FDR did with gold in terms of talking about civil liberties. It was H.L. Minkin who said, you know, a year ago, if I had a flask of whiskey in my pocket and a gold coin, the whiskey was illegal and the gold was legal.
Now, this year, the whiskey is illegal and the gold is illegal.
Tell us a little bit about that and people's reactions to his gold confiscation.
Well, I didn't, you know well i didn't you know i didn't
focus on that very much but i but i you know i certainly i certainly agree with you i could
have done a whole chapter on that i'm sure um you know just a fundamental violation of the
you know freedom of contract of contractual rights um and again there were people in the
administration who recognized this and were
outraged by it but fdr is able to take advantage of this window of opportunity which doesn't last
that long when he becomes president but it lasts for a while where he can just you know everybody's
willing to say well this is the president this is a crisis worse than as bad as the Great World War.
They're often comparing it to the war.
This is a wartime situation.
It's very much like, you know, what we saw with the with COVID.
Right. And oh, I don't know, the Patriot Act and so forth.
This wartime footing and people are willing to defer to the executive branch and that's another
that's another example of that and of course you know what we look at is is the standard
proceed as i said human nature doesn't change uh the tactics that these people use doesn't
change their technology is the thing that's changing uh but it's always about generating
this sense of fear uh the sense of fear about the others.
We see with the Japanese concentration camps
and that type of thing.
And just using this sheer demagoguery
and the power politics behind the scene
to get whatever they want done
and to keep people quiet about it.
Talk a little bit about some other instances
of mass surveillance and censorship
that were going on in the fdr regime
uh well um during world war ii you had a situation it was very different in world war one
one there remained a lot of opposition to the war uh most of roosevelt's opponents pre-war
you know including these some of these big publishers and
so forth the chicago tribune and uh and and uh the so-called uh uh patterson mccormick interests
they all said after pearl harbor we're in we support the war right so there really isn't
much opposition left world war one there's a lot of opposition
a lot of people go to jail and so forth so fdr really wants to go after these people who had
opposed him before the war however he's getting some pushback his own attorney general basically
says well they're you know they're they're not against the war anymore they're not obstructing the war they pledge support for it but he blames them
for holding uh for for restraining him in the pre-war period and he very much wants to go
after them but he gets pushback but they do prosecute uh uh so so in other words the standards
are the same as world war one if not even more severe to be prosecuted.
However, there just aren't as many people that are opposed to the war.
So they're sort of searching around for people to censor, in a way.
FDR wants to do a lot more censorship, but he's getting pushback from the Justice Department.
And they go after one little paper called the, it's almost got a vendetta against it's called the boise valley herald
and this is a pitch this is a paper that's anti-new deal defends japanese americans is pro
civil rights and but they remain critical of the war they're one of the rare people to be critical
of the war and so they go after this little small time newspaper daily
newspaper has weddings and obituaries and off to that they make a they make a case out of it they
prosecute them under the espionage act where world war one they were prosecuting a lot of people but
a lot of people were still against were still against the war um so uh uh the situation is a little different than in world war one in that sense but fdr is
not more tolerant i would say he's less tolerant because he really wants to he wiretaps people
leading publishers uh he goes after the black press in a major way that story has not been told
because the black press is very critical of the administration and they are talking for about
prosecuting them for sedition but people go to fdr and say look you can't prosecute the chicago
defender and uh the pittsburgh courier for sedition because you want the black vote and
they're their main source of news right you don't want to alienate them so
what they do is fdr has the fbi go around to these uh black publishers and basically tell them
okay cooperate or you might get prosecuted and uh and and basically the black publishers said
we'll give us more access to news and we'll cooperate.
And they don't get more access.
But what happens is there were all kinds of stories in the black press about federal mistreatment of African-Americans, about discrimination in the military, about discrimination by federal contractors, discrimination in government programs.
Those stories disappear over time
instead you're getting some stories criticizing private employers private discrimination
or uh you know things like that they're they they actually start pulling their punches
because there's this kind of really quite effective indirect censorship where they get a visit from the fbi and they say we're very concerned about
this wow and these black publishers back off so they're not formally charged with sedition but
they are strong-armed and intimidated to ease up on their criticism of the administration now you're
talking about earlier you know there was a sense of, you know,
like a war that not happened yet, but the sense like we have,
like they use with the Patriot Act and 9-11 and that type of thing.
And so in the lead up to this, a lot of this stuff is happening before the war.
We expect to see some censorship stuff.
They're going to make the statement of national security,
but this is stuff that was happening a lot of this before the war. Talk a little bit, you mentioned the FBI,
J. Edgar Hoover. He was right there with Woodrow Wilson. He kind of cut his teeth on all that
stuff with the Palmer raid and helped to create the FBI. He was keeping files on everybody.
What was the relationship between FDR and um jerry hoover and how did he
use uh the fbi besides what you just talked about intimidation well hoover was a you know was a was
a loyal servant of fdr uh um i i don't find him to be as big a player as as as a lot of people do
because if you look at hoover's wireaps in a single day, for example,
he might be wiretapping, you know, 150 people, right? You know, it's a lot, a lot of this is
illegal, black bag jobs off the books. But it isn't this, this quite this massive scale.
Hoover is actually against Japanese internment. So in some cases, he kind of pushes back on FDR
in a good way. Now, the main way Hoover had come in...
Well, let me ask you about that. What was his argument against it? Was it...
I can't imagine J. Edgar Hoover being a civil libertarian. What was his argument? Was it a
pragmatic argument against it? What was his argument?
He does make arguments like, well, these are American citizens. We shouldn't do this. He says
that. However, he doesn't want anything to do with it right right it's just gonna be he doesn't he
doesn't want his agency to have anything to do with that so he hands it over to the military
but he is against it um he doesn't think it's necessary he in fact does tell fdr look we don't
have that severe problem with the japanese american population there isn't an
espionage problem here um you know of any significance you know we don't have to be
concerned about that now the fbi there is one thing during the war that the fbi does play a
role in is investigating that i didn't talk about but it's very timely and that's the great sedition trial of the war this is a trial sounds
very familiar here where they get 30 defendants from all around 32 defendants from all around the
country they scoop them up and you know you'd find some guy that has a little newsletter
in topeka kansas well let's bring in. And these are people that had been,
you know, a lot of them were kind of anti-Semitic
that had been anti-war, but some of them weren't.
And they're all brought to Washington
and prosecuted in D.C. under the Smith Act.
And there's a provision of the Smith Act,
which was originally aimed at communists,
but most of these people are right-wingers who had supported the Smith Act, and there's a provision of the Smith Act, which was originally aimed at communists, but most of these people are right-wingers, who had supported the Smith Act, interestingly enough.
And in this, it says, promoting insubordination in the U.S. military with the goal of participating
in a worldwide Nazi conspiracy. All right. most of these people didn't even know each
other they didn't like each other and they're all and they're all a lot of them are kind of crazy
and they're all brought to washington in one courtroom they each have their own lawyers and
it's completely chaotic and over time a lot of people on the left recognize that look the
government really has no case against these people they start watching in post comparison to the moscow purge trials and a lot of these lawyers
court-appointed lawyers and new deal lawyers end up becoming sympathetic to the case of these
often wacky defendants and the trial it becomes very chaotic and it ends because the judge dies.
He has a heart attack.
And a lot of people think he just he lost control of this trial in this.
You know, he dies.
And then the government for a while thinks about continuing it.
But people in the Justice Department, like Biddle, didn't really want to do this anyway.
It's a sop to FDR.
He wants to
prosecute the head of the Chicago Tribune. So he says, I'll give you these sedition trials.
And people on the left are thinking, these are a warning. This is just the beginning. We're going
to get these small fry, but we're going to get the publisher of the Chicago Tribune and the
Washington Times Herald. We're going to bring these people in eventually. That never happens.
But I think that there's a hope, even by FDR, that these are just going to be the beginning,
but it ends up backfiring for the government, and they have ultimately have to dismiss the
charges.
But only a few months after this is over with, they start prosecuting communists under the
Smith Act.
And of course, a lot of these guys that were prosecuted are all for that.
So there's hypocrisy on both sides yeah yeah so yeah jay agarhoover is always a very astute politician he didn't want the optics of this uh the japanese internment camps uh but he um
he would go for these other trials of uh you know political viewpoints uh It's kind of interesting to see how that evolved. Talk a little bit about
the switch out of the vice president from Henry Wallace. I've always found that to be fascinating
to Truman. What was going on behind the scenes there between Wallace and FDR, and what were the
power politics behind all that? Okay. Well, Wallace is made vice president in 1940 that the predecessor to wallace was
john nance gardner who was was kind of a conservative democrat um who interestingly
enough thought that it was time to have an anti-lynching bill and fdr when he found out
about this laughed laughed he just uncontrollable laughter and of course fdr did nothing to bring about an
anti-lynching bill they thought even garner supports this uh anyway um garner is the vice
president and uh he uh he you know wallace he he doesn't get along with fdr and they bring wallace
in who's a big pro new dealer guy right real idea and kind of a younger guy he's
kind of a dynamic speaker he's a little wacky but he's he's got a base of the pro new deal elements
in the party seemed to me like initially wallace is going to run wartime mobilization but it's he's
so inefficient and the people around him that it doesn't work out very well and there's a lot of people in the business community that are very upset by wallace um fdr likes wallace i think you'd rather
keep him in there but in 44 basically the people in the business community and a lot of these big
city machines are telling fdr look he's going to be a drag on the ticket. And FDR is, you know, near death in 1944.
That's covered up in a massive way.
He's in terrible shape.
And so they don't want Henry Wallace to be president.
FDR may mean now to figure it out, but, you know, he's probably not going to live much longer.
And so they engineer basically kind of a coup at the convention.
And Wallace is sort of out of the country during the pre-convention period so he doesn't prepare very well but it's kind of a near thing
but they're able to get in truman who's considered much more of a kind of moderate
uh democrat pragmatic guy uh not a woolly headed idealist um and uh you know they they you know um they
basically you know they're able to engineer this and truman gets the vice presidential nomination
that may be an fdr i think was willing wanted wallace but he wasn't willing to stick his neck
out for him because he was pragmatic he wanted to win and he thought these party bosses want wallace out well
you know i'll kind of pull back and let them take him out maybe a foreshadowing of what's to come
this election cycle right kind of a woolly headed ideologue that uh can't really do anything if you
give him a read some of wallace and you know he's not as
he's more pragmatic guy than you know i thought he would be you know he's he's sort of like he's
into small business and all that stuff but yeah he's still you know you can see why they got rid
of him yeah uh but he's allied with the new pro new deal element in the party and he's seen as
he's a as a loose cannon yeah well it very important, and it's important for us to see, again,
I forget who said it, but history doesn't repeat, it rhymes,
and we see so many different rhyming aspects
in what you've been talking about here.
And, again, human nature doesn't change.
Political nature doesn't change.
The nature of men in power doesn't change.
The only thing that changes is their reach. And so we can see how all this stuff plays out and um it really is amazing to take a
look at the bill of rights aspect of uh the new deal and fdr and um but but it's always uh the
bill of rights has always been and it was designed that way as an obstacle to these tyrants. And so it's not really a surprise, is it, that he would take it on directly?
Yeah, that's not a surprise.
That's right.
He's not somebody that cares about due process and individual rights.
I mean, maybe he cares in some sense, but if they get in the way of some goal that he has,
he's not worried about
these little procedural issues he wants to get the goal achieved that's right yeah in the same
way that we can see that in the in pearl harbor you know hey if these these ships and sailors
get in the way of my goal uh so what you know they're expendable and all this stuff and uh so
the bill of rights was expendable as well well Well, that's a very interesting perspective on FDR and a very interesting perspective
and real warning for what may happen to us in the near future as we see our society going
through this massive change and with this part of the fourth turning.
It is really a book that should be on everybody's must-read list, I think.
So thank you so much for joining us, David, again.
This is published by the Independent Institute and I think is available on Amazon or do they
need to go to the Independent Institute?
No, it's available on Amazon, but you can get it directly from the Independent Institute
as well.
And that'd be better because you can help to support them instead of supporting Jeff
Bezos. It's a great organization, independent Institute. And again, our guest is David Beto,
who is working with them as a fellow and a professor emeritus of history as well.
Certainly do know your history. Thank you so much for joining us, sir.
Thank you for inviting me. Thank you. And we will be right back, folks.
Stay with us. In a world of deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act.
Your... You're listening to The David Knight Show. Whether you're feeling like the blues or bluegrass,
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Check out a wide variety of channels on our app at APSradio.com.
You know, I think it is amazing as i um i spoke yesterday people's um delusions about trump and we see this on parade yesterday uh as a matter of
fact there was an article that was done by axios talking about the selective memory of trump
supporters on economic issues and i talked about this this before with David Stockman in his book,
Trump's war on capitalism,
but I was surprised to see the pushback on zero hedge.
And this is not an article from somebody else's is actually zero hedge
writing this.
And,
um,
they say Axios be clowns itself in an anti-Trump rant.
They've gone full BuzzFeed, they said.
And actually, their article was factually true.
It is Zero Hedge that has be clowned itself.
It's Zero Hedge that has memory hold how awful things were.
And we see this over and over again.
It truly is amazing to me to see how this is spreading to anybody who has been organized on free market or conservative principles and how they're falling in line with this partisan division. become even more partisan as we get closer and closer to the election, because there's
going to be more of this Hegelian dichotomy that they offer you.
Well, it's either this person or that person.
It's like, no, that's a fake choice that you've given me.
There's other things that I can do in my life that are going to make a lot more difference
than getting caught up in this.
And I'm absolutely not going to support somebody
that did the things that trump did the first time around and i hope that you're like that as well
i'm not going to change i'm going to oppose these actions that were done and here's what they had
to say this is their um their headline you know zero hedge said they'd be clowned themselves with this headline. Why Trump supporters give him a pass on record high unemployment.
I pointed this out at the time that it happened when he did this two weeks to flatten the curve.
I remember going back and looking at this, how they just shut down the economy.
Everybody's losing their jobs.
We can't get product to marketplace.
What kind of a strategy is this?
Nobody could be that boneheaded stupid to think that that would work, as I said before.
And as I said at the time, if you're going to shut down and lock down everything, how are we going to get medicine to people?
How are we going to get food and fuel around to people?
If you just shut everything, oh, well, we'll keep the essential places open.
Well, they didn't.
We saw shortages on the grocery
store shelves why because um by shutting down these institutions what they didn't realize
is that uh when they closed down the offices a lot of people were getting food and an industrialized
not industrialized but in a a setting where they would get it from restaurants or other places like
that and the food that was going to those restaurants,
it was feeding a portion of the population could not be repurposed and sent to
the grocery store.
Just like the toilet paper couldn't just that simple.
A lot of people,
as they had jobs and were going to school and going to work,
uh,
and other things in public that got made off limits to them.
Well,
they would use the toilet paper at those places.
And then when they shut them down,
they didn't have the toilet paper in a format that they could sell it
to consumers at the stores.
It's just that simple.
Simple economics.
I spent a long time talking about iPencil,
trying to explain that to people.
The invisible hand and the way the marketplace serves these needs and this ham-fisted response
to just shut everything down.
I said, you're crippling yourself even if it were a real pandemic.
And so I remember when this happened, I went back and I looked at statistics with the Great
Depression and everybody thinks, well, 1929,
the stock market crash has kicked it off.
But it took a while, took a few years
for unemployment to reach high levels.
And we exceeded those high levels of over 20%.
We exceeded that immediately
and kept it there for several weeks
before things started to ease up a little bit.
And so what Axios said was,
well, they like to point to the first three years of Trump,
and they don't pay any attention to the last year.
And what you hear from these people is, well, he doesn't have any control over that.
That was a pandemic.
Isn't that interesting?
We condemn that when Fauci says, well, the pandemic did this,
or somebody else said the pandemic did that. But the defenders of Trump will say the pandemic did it to him. He didn't do it.
No, it's his response, his response to a pandemic, whether it was real or whether it was fake,
which it was fake. It was his response that was boneheaded. And so they point out even the
inflation, and this is why David Stockman
pointed out, even the subsequent inflation was due to the massive spending and the welfare
checks that he was handing out to try to placate people that he had locked down.
Trump supporters want to reminisce about his time in office. I thought he was an excellent president,
said a woman in Davenport, Iowa. I'm really happy how the country used to be, said another one.
The country was running really smoothly under Trump.
I think the economy was a ton better.
And we weren't paying $6 a carton for eggs and on and on.
His track record speaks for itself.
It's like 2020 never happened for these people.
And, you know, now you see them coming on board with that and criticizing Nikki Haley
for bowing down and kissing the feet of the vaccine king, Bill Gates.
This is a headline from Revolver.
But of course, I talked about how she did that.
Did Trump do that?
Did Trump bow down to Pfizer Moderna?
He did more than kiss their feet.
He gave them tens of billions of dollars.
He gave them factories.
He even set up Johnson & Johnson.
Hey, you want to get into vaccines?
We'll give you a factory, and we'll give you billions of dollars,
and we'll give you immunity from all of this stuff,
and we'll use the military to deliver it.
They want to portray the MAGA media wants to portray their opponents
as being sycophants to Bill Gates and the pharmaceutical industry.
Nobody did that, more so than Donald Trump.
And then there's the announcement about CBDC.
He came out very briefly and said,
Oh, and one more thing.
I'm not going to let him do CBDC.
As a supporter, and thank you for the tip sent on,
on a cell.
And he says,
well,
I guess he got enough social media analytics to see that there was a lot of
support.
If he just says,
I'm going to get CBDC.
Does he know what it is?
Does he know that his treasury secretary began the process?
Steve Mnuchin,
former Goldman Sachs banker.
Does he know that his son-in-law Jared Kushner was working with Steve Mnuchin, former Goldman Sachs banker? Does he know that his son-in-law, Jared Kushner,
was working with Steve Mnuchin to get this ball rolling?
Do you believe that Trump is really going to oppose CBDC?
Or will he reassess the options and the needs for it
when he becomes president like he did everything else that he promised?
Look, when you're a candidate, it's important that people understand
that you share their
concerns he's taken a very long time to talk about this perhaps it was the influence of ramaswamy who
was quick to catch on to that desantis had already talked about it he'd held a conference on cbdc
called it big brother digital money but then when he got finished with his 20 or 30 minute
presentation the very first question was but what about president trump in new york and this big brother digital money. But then when he got finished with his 20 or 30 minute presentation,
the very first question was,
but what about president Trump in New York and this district attorney and all
this other kind of stuff is like,
they weren't interested.
They're not interested in the policies.
They're not interested in the existential issues that affect our lives.
Nobody's interested in anything except how it affects Donald Trump.
And quite frankly,
I don't believe for a minute that he's going to be an obstacle in the way of CBDC.
Thank you very much, Emulated Void.
Thank you very much for the tip.
I appreciate that.
I didn't get time to get to it, but we'll talk about it on Monday.
A cloud of doom hanging over the commercial real estate under the Biden economy.
Under the Biden economy, under the Biden economy.
How many years did Gerald Cilenti and I talk about how the lockdown of Trump was going to destroy commercial real estate, but now it's the Biden lockdown, supposedly. Thank you for joining us.
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