The David Knight Show - 21Feb23 Is Pfizer Behind the Project Veritas Putsch, Removing James O'Keefe?

Episode Date: February 21, 2023

OUTLINE of today's show with TIMECODESDid Pfizer Push James O'Keefe Out at Project Veritas? O'Keefe strongly implies there's a connection between his outster and the biggest story they ever had — Pf...izer 2:065th Gen Warfare or Spiritual Warfare? Who is behind the coordinated global reset? Don't confuse tactics and strategy with the mastermind behind it 20:11UK Conservatives have a backdoor scheme for Digital ID. 25:30The world wants to be deceived. 35:10Four hypotheses about the secular corporatist Global Elite. 45:082023 "World Government Summit" releases document they prepared back in 2018 with their plans for 4 "eras" to take us into a transhumanist future 1:03:15Musk warned World Government Summit of dangers of becoming too much of a single world government. What does he REALLY mean? 1:14:02Global digital identity for everyone including newborns by 2030. 1:21:36America’s vision of being a shining city on a hill. 1:27:15Sanctuary Cities" for natural rights. Scott Lively on his inspiration for this from his friend, a Brazilian Christian refugee from Marxist leader Lula 1:30:05Presidents Day Memory-Holed by NEA Teachers Union. George Washington deserves his own holiday and why he would NEVER WANT it. 1:36:54First They Came for the Confederates. 1:42:09Slavery in the United States:. 1:44:46Hard times create strong men, strong men create good times, good times create weak men, and weak men create hard times — the Fourth Turning in a nutshell. Which of these describes us today? 2:01:30The more we depend on one person lead our nation, the more we slide from democracy and to demagogue. 2:08:19Trump wants to federalize discipline in schools. He has no idea of the Constitutional or practical limits of the federal government. 2:21:10As USA publisher alters Roald Dahl works for political correctness and the UK puts everything from Shakespeare to Tolkien on an "extremist" watchlist, how can we apply these ideas and tactics to other classic literature for fun? 2:32:54Find out more about the show and where you can watch it at TheDavidKnightShow.com If 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 through Mail: 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/silverBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-david-knight-show--2653468/support.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Come on, come on, yes, yes, come on. At this year's Cheltenham, glory rests in the lap of the gods. Oh, curses. Alas, our hero hasn't placed. But there are still divine offerings up for grabs, with all NoviBet customers getting a €10 free bet for every day of Cheltenham. And on top of that, we're paying up to seven places each way on selected races throughout the festival. I declare this a most generous offering.
Starting point is 00:00:25 No, we bet. More power to you. Using free speech to free minds. You're listening to The David Knight Show. As the clock strikes 13, it's Tuesday, the 21st of February, year of our Lord, 2023, day 1076 of the emergency. The emergency continues. The move towards world governance continues. We will talk about that today. But as Dr. Robert Malone has said, there seems to be something beyond all these people that seems to be orchestrating and organizing that. So he says, well, this is fifth generation warfare. I think it's something other than that. We'll talk about that. But we're going to begin with Project Veritas and the firing of
Starting point is 00:01:50 James O'Keefe. Because at the center of this, he strongly implies, very, very, very strongly implies, that the reason he was fired was because of the report about Pfizer. Well, you know, that's something of interest to everyone globally, isn't it? Not just in the United States, not just in the press, not just to conservatives. We'll talk about that when we come back. First thing, President's Day. We have a statement here from Project Veritas, but there was also a statement. James O'Keefe wrote up a paper so that he had his notes there, but it's pretty informal. It was given in the office to employees who were coming in, additional employees coming in as he was speaking, talking about what was
Starting point is 00:02:58 going on. And then Pfizer has put their information out. Other press organizations have opined on this. But I've got a little bit what I thought was the most interesting parts of what he had to say from a transcript. Let me read to you what he had to say here. He says, nothing really has changed in the way that I've conducted myself over the past 13 years. And he focuses on the tax returns and the other issues because, as you'll see, these are the accusations from the Project Veritas board that there were financial irregularities, that they were compelled to do this in order to comply with law, with taxes and that type of thing. And so they said, well, we had to fire him because of this and that. But this is what he has to say.
Starting point is 00:03:52 He says a public tax return is required by the IRS and my compensation is set by an independent board of directors via a compensation committee. Four times a year, our chief financial officer has submitted company financials to the board. That's every quarter, he said, and our board approves it in quarterly meetings. He said, we've had audits from outside independent accounting agencies every year, and every year that happens. That has always been happening. Nothing about how I've conducted myself over the past 13 years has really fundamentally changed until now. So what has changed in the last three weeks, he says? What has changed? Well, the only thing that has changed is that we broke the biggest story in our organization's history. You know the one I'm
Starting point is 00:04:36 talking about, Pfizer. The week, last week, he said, of January, 50 million views. It broke the record that we'd previously had by like a factor of 10. Our video became a global phenomenon because this is the centerpiece. Well, it doesn't matter where you live, right? You live in Europe, America, North America, Australia, Africa, anywhere. This is a global story so i got 15 million views 50 million views and more than 10 times their previous record it was about pfizer when the director's discussing mutating the virus our confrontation video where he locked me in a pizza restaurant and he smashed equipment and they called the police he said that became phenomenon, a riveting television for audiences glued to their screen.
Starting point is 00:05:28 That was probably one of my favorite things that ever happened. It was just really unbelievable. So he said it was like too true to be false, seemingly too false to be true, but it was real, he said. A few days later, an officer sent an email to the board with bizarre hyperbole and innuendo about certain acts, expenses related to our business needs. These included, and you can't make this up, that Project Veritas paid for James O'Keefe's down payment of his wedding. He said, I got a chuckle out of this because I'm not married. This was hastily put together accusations, apparently, right? They didn't even know that he didn't get married. This was hastily put together accusations apparently, right? They didn't even know that he didn't get married. He said, I've never been married. I do hope to get married
Starting point is 00:06:14 one day. In fact, I got married to you in Oklahoma, he says to one of the people there, but that was pretend. That was fun. Everyone enjoyed it. We rented a charter bus. We all went down. Everyone enjoyed that musical, or a charter bus. We all went down. Everyone enjoyed that musical, or at least I thought. But I'm not married. The truth of the expense is that the $12,000 was payment for our annual Project Veritas Christmas party. Remember that? You guys were there. Some of you brought your spouses. The officer lied by omission, excluding that the purpose of paying the $12,000 for the wedding venue, he said it looked like Project Veritas was reimbursing me for a wedding venue.
Starting point is 00:06:55 It was held at a wedding venue, so he just quickly goes through and grabs it. Oh, he used this. That's got to be personal. He used it at a wedding venue. It was a Christmas party. Why would the officer lie like that, he says. There were also, again, bizarre complaints. And this is where you come in, Asha, about having too many trips to too many meetings.
Starting point is 00:07:13 Over the course of a year, I think there's something like 305 cars I had taken to meetings and to donors and journalism assignments, including all the quote-unquote black cars. I saw that. I read the statement from Project Veritas first. And they said, black cars. I thought, what? What do they mean by that? Black cars? Taken from airports to various meetings.
Starting point is 00:07:38 I don't know. Is that a company that, you know, like Hertz or something like that? I've never seen that. Black car, black car rental company. I know there's a silver car rental company. Yeah, there is. They have Audis that they, they got one model of Audi and they're all silver, but maybe there is an equivalent of black cars.
Starting point is 00:07:58 Anyway, including all the quote unquote black cars taken from airports to various meetings. I have a copy of that. So you don't have to take my word for it. The officer stated to the board on February the 13th, this week that we should do things such as, quote, reschedule meetings, and the IRS would prefer Zoom meetings over in-person meetings. He says, I'm going to let that sink in for a minute.
Starting point is 00:08:26 IRS doesn't want us to do in-person meetings. They'd rather have us do Zoom meetings. He says, I'm going to let that sink in for a minute. IRS doesn't want us to do in-person meetings. They'd rather have us do zoom meetings. Yeah, I'm sure they would. So they could listen in. Um, I'm packing up my personal belongings, starting to get emotional from, uh, moving from the headquarters intending to start a new, and I don't have the answers to what they've been doing with this or why board members are going directly to employees to collect grievances on the week of our biggest story ever, or why the board members are going to employees directly discuss removing me from this organization, even saying, I will give you a raise if James is
Starting point is 00:08:55 removed. This might be illegal, I don't know, he said, but why would they do it on the week of our biggest story ever. But I'm confident that those reasons and motivations will come to light. You better believe they will. These people, just these, the board of directors that just fired probably one of the best investigative journalists out there. He's going to get to the bottom of this. And there's a lot of people there who worked with him. We're friends of his. They're going to be helping him investigate this board and its connections
Starting point is 00:09:28 to Pfizer. That's going to be one. That's going to be an even bigger video. All I can think of is the scene from Spider-Man where the board calls Norman and tells him we're selling the company, Norman. Yeah. Well,
Starting point is 00:09:41 all I could think of was Steve jobs. And he actually referenced Steve jobs as well. Of the board engineered, pushing Steve jobs out and keeping, uh, John Scully, who was brought in as the CEO of Pepsi. And of course, Steve jobs naively approved that it's jobs was focused on products and he wasn't focused on the business end of it. And, um, I don't pay any attention related to marketing this program or anything i'm just trying to focus on the news but you know that was what he was all about it was all about the products and they kicked him out and before they brought him in under uh john scully
Starting point is 00:10:16 and i remember because i was a very early adopter of the macintosh and i used it for, I mean, there were hardly, there was no databases out there. There were no hard drives initially. Microsoft and IBM beat them to the hard drive. But as soon as they came up with the first external hard drives, because Steve Jobs made the mistake of saying, we're just going to have a floppy disk. And then that was impractical. It was entertaining, but it was impractical. At this year's Cheltenham, glory rests in the lap of the gods. Curses.
Starting point is 00:10:54 Alas, our hero hasn't placed. But there are still divine offerings up for grabs, with all NoviBet customers getting a €10 free bet for every day of Cheltenham. And on top of that, we're paying up to seven places each way on selected races throughout the festival.
Starting point is 00:11:07 I declare this a most generous offering. NoviBet. More power to you. T's and C's apply. 18 plus. Bet responsibly. Gamblingcare.ie. But after they put a SCSI interface on it
Starting point is 00:11:17 so you could talk to a hard drive and you could use external hard drives. I remember the first hard drive I got was five megabytes. I was able to fit the entire database of our stores. We had about 15,000 different titles and way more items. And I had to write a relational database myself and fortunately got just the bare minimum of tools. I had Pascal, I wrote a relational database on that and hooked it up to that. But the reason I mentioned all that was because I had been working very closely with the Apple
Starting point is 00:11:59 stuff. I was even a certified developer at one point for Apple. And I was going to market it, but then we just decided to focus on the retail side of it because it was too much of a lift to try to convince people to use anything other than the IBM PC. A graphical interface? I don't want to use that. I've got function keys and I've got one font,
Starting point is 00:12:21 but it's got eight colors. And it was just like, okay, nevermind. I'm tired of beating my head against the wall. I'll just use it myself. So anyway, I was following it. And we'd been using it for a number of years. And Apple, even Macworld, the trade magazine around Apple, was saying,
Starting point is 00:12:46 it looks like they're going to go out of business. Why is this thing for them to do? It would be to follow the Microsoft thing and license their operating system. Great operating system that's there, but let other people do the hardware. And that was the way that Scully was going. They were losing money hand over fist. It looked like they were circling the drain. They brought back Steve Jobs.
Starting point is 00:13:04 They gave him the title of interim CEO. And when he was in that position, he put that on his door. And as interim CEO, he came up with the iMac and the iPad and the iPhone and all these other devices because he was the interim CEO. and the guy was a genius as a Larry Ellison said, uh, head of Oracle. He said, uh, Steve jobs saw my yacht. He loved it. He wanted one just like it. He said, so he goes to the yacht builders and, and Steve jobs says, oh, this is what I want, but I want you to change this and change that
Starting point is 00:13:37 and change this and change that. Uh, Larry Ellison said by the time he was finished, he had changed everything about it and every change that he made was an improvement that was his masterpiece he was a editor of what other people were doing um in a large way it reminds me of walt disney as well who'd go around and you know just kind of tweak things here and there when the animators were working on it anyway um i'm getting off on an aside here. The bottom line is that he created this company. He's not stopping. He's highly motivated now, if ever he was, because now it's personal and it's the biggest story ever.
Starting point is 00:14:15 And this is a worldwide story. And so you've got people like Kim.com on Twitter saying, I have asked Project Veritas to return my donation. And Oscorp. There you go, yeah, telling them, we've just moved you out of the company. This is what happens over and over again. People start, the thing starts to grow. You create this organization, and the organization takes over
Starting point is 00:14:41 and kicks out the person who created it, Oscorp. But anyway, Kim.com said, I want my money back. Um, and, uh, he said, and I've told, uh, James O'Keefe, I'll be supporting him wherever he goes. And he said, I suggest all of you do the same if you've donated to them. Uh, anyway, um, that's his take on it. He said something really strange happened. Nothing unusual in terms of the way we do it.
Starting point is 00:15:07 We have income tax things every year. We have accounting. We have auditing. Nothing has changed in the way that we're doing. They came up with some bogus charges about a wedding, which was the Christmas party. The Project Veritas statement, I'll give you their version of it. As of today, President's Day, our office was closed. We had a board meeting scheduled for tomorrow where James was invited.
Starting point is 00:15:35 And there was also a board meeting on Friday, February the 10th, where James was invited but did not attend to discuss the financial malfeasance that was discovered. Now, that, in his statement, I didn't read that. But he said in his statement, he said he was on a plane. As the plane was about to take off, the last email he gets is that there's a board meeting scheduled for today. And it was scheduled to begin as his plane was touching down. So he couldn't even attend it as a Zoom conference. He was on his way to Nashville, he said. So that's a bit disingenuous.
Starting point is 00:16:04 It's easy to verify those types of things. There were two subjects that the board wished to come to terms with James on, the company's long-term sustainability based on staff retention and morale, and the company's financial health, which has been a serious concern for several months now. Although Project Veritas leadership's not concluded, looking into the full scale of financial issues. Over the years, a preliminary review of this time indicates that James has spent an excessive amount of donor funds in the last three years on personal luxuries.
Starting point is 00:16:33 You know, like his wedding. Here are a few examples they said have been uncovered. $14,000 on a charter flight to meet someone to fix his boat under the guise of meeting with a donor. $60,000 in losses by putting together dance events such as Project Veritas Experience. Over $150,000 in black cars over the past 18 months. That's one of the things that really got my attention. Anyway, thousands of dollars spent on DJ and other equipment for personal use, hundreds of other acts of personal inurement.
Starting point is 00:17:09 So I guess maybe some of that is the Christmas party they said for personal use, his wedding or whatever. So it'll be interesting to see how this turns out. But again, at the center of this is Pfizer. So all this stuff broke as that story broke. They allege that he was outright cruel to his staff, according to the Daily Beast. If you can believe anything the Daily Beast has to say anyway. Uh, but he said, you know, a few days after the Pfizer story, I was informed by an officer that he would resign unless I stepped down as CEO.
Starting point is 00:17:36 We've been having a conflict of vision over fundraising. There was a tactical disagreement about the boldness of approach soliciting donations. O'Keefe said he confronted one executive at a meeting on February the 2nd, said that if the person would not follow his lead, he would have to exit the group. He then fired the man, they say in their statement. He had no authority to do that, but he was the CEO. They said it had to be approved by the board. Anyway, later that same day, a different officer informed O'Keefe he was going to the Project Veritas board to restructure the company.
Starting point is 00:18:12 O'Keefe said he received an agenda for the board meeting as he was set to depart a flight. I mentioned that. It became clear to me at that moment that I would be removed from my position at Project Veritas, and they did remove him at that board meeting that they scheduled while he was on the plane. So I think probably what he needs to do is follow that jobs lead. I think he needs to come up with a new company. He could call it, I don't know, I Investigate, the interim investigative journalist. James O'Keefe resigns from project veritas says the headline from the daily beast who never gets anything right i'm here the daily beast always wrong
Starting point is 00:18:52 when i was fired by alex who first started telling everybody it was about money he just couldn't afford me you've seen the statements coming out of law uh lawsuits and stuff about how much money he makes uh that was uh he's still making over $3 million a year in bankruptcy, where he's got a $1.5 billion judgment against him. He was making, taking 10 times that amount of money out of the company in the run-up to this lawsuit. But he had to fire me. So when Daily Beast saw that, oh, that was like blood and water to them they said look at
Starting point is 00:19:26 this alex jones is circling the drain financially as if i was the drain of the company it's like every time alex would see a new color of dodge hillcat he'd have to have it and go pay cash for it i mean the most ridiculous thing i've ever seen. But when you look at James O'Keefe and his vision of the company, that was kind of interesting as well. You can see that in the very beginning. He's very adamant about the fact that he's simply about straight journalism. No opinions, no analysis. He says, as a matter of fact, we've got good people who have political opinions and want to analyze things and add that to what they're doing is they don't work out here. I would never be comfortable working for James O'Keefe.
Starting point is 00:20:13 What he does is very, very important. It's important to gather the facts, but it's also important to analyze them, to connect the dots, to put them into context. That's what I'm interested in doing. He's a great investigative journalist, probably put them into context. That's what I'm interested in doing. He's a great investigative journalist, probably the best out there. And, you know, that's incredibly important. And I think that his investigation of what's going on with Pfizer, and if there's any connection with Project Veritas, I think that is going to be a real key issue. So let me play for you. What is happening with all, who is behind all this? I mean, does Pfizer have enough money
Starting point is 00:20:53 that they could contact somebody who's an employee in a company and start destroying it from the inside? Well, of course they could. I don't know if that's what happened here. Again, he'll do the investigation. But Robert Malone, I just saw this video where he was talking about, he calls it fifth generation warfare. I would call it spiritual warfare, but here's his take on what's going on.
Starting point is 00:21:24 In true fifth generation warfare, you do not know who your opponent is. Example, who is responsible for, who's the puppet master behind the COVID crisis as we've experienced it? Who is it? Anybody here know? Was it Klaus? No. There's something above Klaus was it Biden um was it Tony Fauci these are all surrogates okay you don't really know who is managing the message that has been propagated on you that's fifth generation warfare over the last three years Western governments governments, non-governmental organizations, transnational organizations, pharmaceutical industry corporations, media and financial corporations have cooperated via public-private partnerships, which I assert is a euphemism for fascism, to deploy the most most massive globally harmonized psychological and
Starting point is 00:22:25 propaganda operation in the history of the world okay over the last three years you have been subjected to the most massive harmonized globally coordinated propaganda campaign in the history of the Western world full stop Full stop. With this campaign, the governments of many Western nation states have turned, okay, this is key, military-grade psychological operations strategies, tactics, technologies, and capabilities developed for modern military combat against their own citizens. These are inconvenient facts. The world that many of us believed existed no longer exists if it ever did.
Starting point is 00:23:18 Exactly. And if you look, when he talks about militarized stuff, if you look at it, I remember as I was doing investigations in asymmetric warfare and how the U.S. government was training for kinetic operations in the United States. Admiral McRaven, who was, I forget his exact title in the Special Forces, he was head of it in some way. And he said, we need to remember that kinetic forces are not really what special forces are really about. Special forces are really about identifying people that can be used, about running psyops and determining who is with us, who is against us, and the people that we can use before we do kinetic operations he said that is really the basis of what we do and of course it was explained to us uh and this is
Starting point is 00:24:15 broader than just getting people to take a shot but you know Fauci explained it to us uh you have to prove that this works and then you've got to go through all of the clinical trials, phase 1s, phase 2s, phase 3, and then show that this particular product is going to be good over a period of years. That alone, if it works perfectly, is going to take a decade. Why don't we blow this system up? I mean, obviously we can't just turn off the spigot on the system we have and then
Starting point is 00:24:49 say hey everyone in the world should get this new vaccine we've been given to anyone yet. It's gonna be very difficult to change that unless you do it from within and say I don't care what your perception is, we're going to address the problem in a disruptive way and in an iterative way. At this year's Cheltenham, glory rests in the lap of the gods. Curses. Alas, our hero hasn't placed. But there are still divine offerings up for grabs, with all NoviBet customers getting
Starting point is 00:25:21 a €10 free bet for every day of Cheltenham. And on top of that, we're paying up to seven places each way on selected races throughout the festival. I declare this a most generous offering. NoviBet. More power to you. T&C Supply 18 plus. Bet responsibly. Gamblingcare.ie. Wait, because you do need both. But it's... The David Knight Show is a critical thinking super spreader. If you've been exposed to logic by listening to The David Knight Show,
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Starting point is 00:26:24 Wear your mask. Take your vaccine. to trust me. I mean, trust the science. Wear your mask. Take your vaccine. Don't ask questions. Using free speech to free minds. It's the David Knight Show.
Starting point is 00:26:49 That cracks me up every time I see that. Yeah, my son did that, the one who did the whistling. Not Travis, the other son who did that. And so let's talk about where we are on this iterative process. And we know where it's headed. We know what the end game is. The end game is digital IDs, CBDC, which is the ultimate digital ID, because it comes with financial control, financial surveillance, surveillance of every activity that you do. That is the ultimate digital ID. But we have an article here from Daily Skeptic, government consults on digital id this is the uk government and this is coming out of their cabinet office who who is in charge of the cabinet office now it's a conservative government if you want to call it that i mean you see boris johnson you see rishi sunak these guys Sunak. These guys are hardcore globalists, Davos aficionados, lieutenants, if you will. The cabinet office under the conservative
Starting point is 00:27:51 government announcing plans to share our personal data more widely across government departments so that our digital identities can be verified when we access public services, but without creating ID cards. He said, see how they did that? Think about the fact that the government's got to know everything about us. We're going to have identification to do everything, especially to travel, except to vote. Isn't that interesting? Isn't that an interesting exception that the only activity for which you do not need to have identification is to vote because they seek to subvert our society by giving the vote to people who aren't even citizens or alive.
Starting point is 00:28:38 I mean, that's not a theory. I have personal experience with that. My brother-in-law Keith, in the 2012 election, his friend went to vote in North Carolina because no ID is in North Carolina. You walk in, you give them a name and address, and they look it up in their computer printout. And the person says, you've already voted. And so has this other person at your address. He said, what? He says, I haven't voted yet. And that other person is my mother. She's been dead for years. I could not get him to go public with that, his friend. But I've told that story many times.
Starting point is 00:29:13 The press in North Carolina says any ideas that the voter rolls are not legitimate, that they're not maintained, any ideas that people are voting because we don't have any picture ID, that's just nonsense. It's a conspiracy theory. It's just sour grapes. Elections are garbage. Our elections are garbage, have been garbage for decades, folks. It didn't happen under Trump. He made it worse. He added a new wrinkle of corruption with his lockdown election and the mail-out of ballots and all the rest of this stuff, but it was already hopelessly corrupt, which tells you something about how he got president to become president in the first place, okay?
Starting point is 00:29:52 Anybody that becomes president that they don't want president, why would they want Trump in there? Well, he got everybody to stand down, didn't he? So you got a conservative government saying, we're going to have to look at sharing all this information across agencies. Don't worry. We don't want to create a digital ID. We just need to share that information. He said, no doubt MPs inboxes, members of parliament's inboxes have been filling up with desperate cries from constituents demanding that government extends its provision for sharing and verifying
Starting point is 00:30:25 our digital identity he said by coincidence a similar demand came from a former prime minister in davos only blair who was with the labor party see it's a they're completely opposite of each other of course right and they do oppose each other on certain hot-button issues to maintain this professional wrestling illusion. Heroes and heels, depending on where you stand. But when it comes to things like digital ID, they are exactly on the same page. I played you the clips of Tony Blair at this most recent Davos meeting demanding that we have digital ID and demanding that we do it
Starting point is 00:31:04 because, of course, we have to have it demanding that we do it Because of course We have to have it to make sure people have been vaccinated Gates has always By the way This guy satirically I don't know if it's It is a woman Jean Marat
Starting point is 00:31:19 Wrote this article But she says satirically I guess their inboxes are filling up with people demanding a digital ID. You know, that's exactly the way that Bill Gates has been selling his push to have a global ID for everybody. He said, these poor people in India, they don't have an ID. That's just awful.
Starting point is 00:31:40 They're not in a bank. They're using cash for everything. They need to be, you know, they're left out. They don't have banking services and all the rest of the stuff. And we want to make sure that we get them welfare services with an ID. And so then they use that to twist their arm and to say, well, you know, we will, this Aadhaar system that Gates created with the Indian government, we'll give you welfare, but only if you take the ID.
Starting point is 00:32:06 So anyway, they go back to say no consideration was given to those who might actively wish to opt out of this cross-sharing of information in the UK government. It will all be so convenient. The argument against any dissenting group has already been well rehearsed over the last three years by not embracing your digital identity you are excluding yourself from accessing public services see exactly the way they did it in india now they're doing it that way in the uk and uh who is that
Starting point is 00:32:38 that's gates as a matter of fact uh there was a clip uh there was a conservative member of parliament and he gets on twitter and goes, who do we have here? And up behind him walks a smiling Bill Gates. He goes, it's Bill Gates, and he's here. And then they roll this out. Just a coincidence, I'm sure. Not embracing your digital identity, you are excluding yourself from public services.
Starting point is 00:33:00 Just as surely as those health workers made themselves unemployed by exercising their right to decline an injection. Maybe they should call it the choice ID, because that's what they did in India. You got a choice. You got no money. You got no job. You're poor. You're injured or whatever. The government will give you money, give you food, but you got to take the ID. But you choose to take the ID. It has to be laid out this way if you understand who's behind all this. You know, Satan wants you to make a choice
Starting point is 00:33:33 for the number, right? So it's a choice ID. It's kind of like the choice lanes that are being sold by a Tennessee governor, right? The choice lanes, the choice ID. It's your choice. You can have a job and the vaccine, or you can choice lanes, the choice ID. It's your choice. You can have a job and the vaccine, or you can have no vaccine and no job. It's your choice. It's all about choice,
Starting point is 00:33:53 and we want to honor your choice. Who will you serve? Like programmable CBDCs, the digital identity is a cornerstone of the fourth industrial revolution agenda, which has completely captured governments across the Western world. Does anyone seriously believe that our government will not implement these proposals? Regardless of public opposition, Australia is pressing ahead with its own digital identity scheme. In Canada, Trudeau has made it clear that federal funding for local health care services will only be made available to the provinces that fully embrace and implement digital identity systems. You know, these governments that are bankrupting themselves with spending, they've got to be fiscally conservative. We don't want to give any services to people who don't have the digital ID.
Starting point is 00:34:45 What are they doing with the open borders? What are they doing giving welfare to people who aren't citizens, votes to people who aren't citizens? But no, we have to make sure that you've got the digital ID before we can waste money giving people any of these services. Our government websites, they said in the UK, contain page after page setting out the framework for regulation and implementation of the Fourth Industrial Revolution, which is already finalized, apparently. After the last public consultation, which attracted 270 responses out of all the UK, this is how they get away with it.
Starting point is 00:35:20 Similar information appears on the websites of other governments, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, US, France, Germany, Netherlands, all of them. And on the websites of supranational institutions such as the UN, the European Commission, often using the same exact words. Just translated into the language of the people that they're speaking to. Isn't that amazing? Yeah, it's like people have written up this agenda and everybody's just implementing it on a global level. It doesn't matter if they're conservatives or labor, Republicans or Democrats.
Starting point is 00:35:57 They're all on the same page. He said, my MP dismisses my concerns about, or she rather, about the rollout of digital identity cards as conspiracy theory stuff. I must remind him of the annual World Government Summit, which took place in Dubai just last week, attended by some 25,000 government and NGO staff from all over the globe. In one address, they were told, whoever masters the new technologies
Starting point is 00:36:26 will be masters as avert, right? It's in the brain. But I thought this was interesting. This is also from Off Guardian in the UK. A guy saying the world wants to be deceived. Well, yeah, wants to be deceived, I think, is part of it. I think there's also a blindness, because we're talking about a spiritual war. This is a blindness that is inflicted on people after God has grown tired of our hardened hearts and our way, as Isaiah said. Go on seeing,
Starting point is 00:37:15 but never perceive. Go on hearing, but never understand. And that is actually the world that we seem to be living in right now. That's why I say it's not my job to convince people. My job is to just declare what I understand to be true. And whether that takes any hold or not, I don't know. Jeremiah had to do the same thing. I feel like that some days. Anyway, no matter how obviously absurd the claims about Chinese spy balloons or the shooting down of UFOs or the reports of how Russia is losing the war in Ukraine.
Starting point is 00:37:49 And yet look at how panicked they are at the same time that, yeah, you know, Putin is dying. They're losing the war and all the rest of the stuff. And, uh, and yet we got to get that aid there right away. I mean, this is desperate. It's an emergency. You know, we're losing, you know, they keep telling you both sides of the story one day after the other. All the support for the presidents and the prime ministers
Starting point is 00:38:07 who shill for the war industries. Again, take a look at the FDA. It's EUA, the Emergency Use Authorization, has now just become they don't need the emergency. It's just emerging usurpation of authority. That is what the EUA has become. The FDA, doing it from the inside, gradually, iteratively, just as Fauci said. So he said, and I thought this was interesting, he said maybe a little anecdote would help.
Starting point is 00:38:40 He said a week ago I ran into an old friend at a coffee shop. The article about Seymour Hersh, about the Nord Stream pipelines and so forth. He said, that just come out. I asked him if he'd seen it. He said he hadn't, but didn't know anything about any pipelines being blown up. He didn't even know they'd been blown up. Let alone who did it. Which he called from day one. I called it. yeah we stop and think who's got the motive and the opportunity and the ability to do it well narrows it down pretty close
Starting point is 00:39:14 doesn't it nato or us or anyway um he said i was stunned a devout consumer of mainstream media, yet he somehow missed the major September 2022 event in the U.S. war against Russia, reported widely by the media that he relies on. Those media went on to suggest that Russia had blown up its own pipeline, a claim beyond ridicule, but one that was part of its war propaganda narrative. My friend, he says, is a guy who has strong opinions about everything. And he finds NPR, The Guardian, The New York Times, CNN, etc.
Starting point is 00:39:52 to be credible news sources. How could he have missed one of the major stories of 2022? One that The New York Times and others were reporting on into December and still suggesting that Russia had done the deed. How could he have missed the pipeline story whose reverberations spread through all aspects of the U.S. war against Russia via Ukraine, when it was referenced in so many reports of gas and oil prices,
Starting point is 00:40:29 a cold winter for Europe, so many other issues, its ramifications are manifold and have been reported as such. But he said this guy didn't know anything about it. How do we get the information out there? Well, you know, we have the vice president for Pfizer, who was one of the first people to expose what this was, and Dr. Yadin, and he talks about getting the information out. He, like Robert Malone, are now looking past the medical stuff to try to see the bigger picture behind it.
Starting point is 00:41:16 And Yadin was the one who first began talking about the sterilization aspect of this. He brought that up immediately. Former vice president for Pfizer. Here's what he has to say about spreading the information. You're controversial, but we need to speak to you because if you're onto something when we're going wrong, they didn't do that. They smeared me, censored me, same as Paul.
Starting point is 00:41:40 Everyone who's trying to speak out and tell the public, we are under, so basically humanity is under attack. and tell the public we are under so basically humanity is under attack all parts of the world are under attack there's no way you can go that's safe so if you've heard a word of this and you think there might be something in it now is the time now is the time i can't reach beyond you whoever's listening out there i can't reach the 10 people in your family the 20 people people in your community. I will never reach them. The main media will never tell them the truth. It's you.
Starting point is 00:42:09 If you don't go and tell them this very day, and then tomorrow, and the next day, we will lose human freedoms forever, and we will be subject to digital tyranny. That's what vaccine passports were leading to. Cashless digital money, totally regulated by whoever controls the database,
Starting point is 00:42:30 and it's not going to be your government or local council. It'll be a supranational control whether you can spend your slave tokens, because that's what they'll be. There will be no more politics, because if they don't like what you're saying and you don't like them, you won't be able to buy a rail ticket and a bottle of water so if you don't i don't know how to stop this but i tell you what i sincerely believe the more people who know this the less likely they are yes to succeed to succeed and that's coming from vigilant fonts fox who put that together so going back to this guy he said said, you know, I talked to my friend.
Starting point is 00:43:06 How do we really understand this? He says, as I've been trying to comprehend these matters, the Super Bowl, with its mesmeric halftime spectacle, replete with crotch-grabbing, has come and gone. I read an interesting article by Ethan Strauss, a sports journalist, who said why America needs football and even needs its brutality. He says it raises important questions. He notes that many arguments calling for the banning of football, the war game, because of its violence. He notes it's very true that football is very
Starting point is 00:43:37 violent, but that's part of its appeal. He says in the NFL gives Americans that war, that spectacle, week after week, where we channel those ancient animal spirits into a highly commercialized event that ends with fireworks and a shiny trophy. And the sports writer says we should celebrate that. You know, it was interesting. I used to enjoy watching professional football when I was in high school. And, you know, we had the high school pep rallies and all this other kind of stuff that, you know, went on with every game. Every week we had a new enemy. Yeah, we're going to rip them apart and all the rest. I was we used to, I was in a pet band.
Starting point is 00:44:26 We used to, uh, we used to shout when they're talking about how they're going, what the other team would yell up, make them bleed. Cause you know, we knew what they were referring to with that stuff. But as time went on and I grew tired of it and I had other things that I had to do that were more important. Um, it got very repetitive as far as I was concerned. And I had other things to do, and I didn't get involved in all the stats and all the rest of that stuff. But it was before I got involved in politics. But as I got involved in politics, I started to realize what a useful metaphor it was
Starting point is 00:45:01 and how the training in school, you know, new enemy each week and this tribalism and warfare training is very effective, really very important for the establishment. And he points out in this article, he says in 2022, 82 of the top 100 TV shows were football games, NFL game. And the top 50 most viewed sporting events were also football games or events. He says in 2016, that was only 33 of the top 50 were football related. And he said the country has lost interest in pretty much everything else. But football is increasing in interest.
Starting point is 00:45:47 Because, again, it's kind of a gladiatorial game, if you will. The bread and circuses type of aspect. Strauss goes on to show how over 90% of former NFL players, even if they're suffering daily, lifelong pain from injuries, say that they would do it again. He says the violence is intoxicating and Americans can get drunk on it. It is the American way. So that is part of it.
Starting point is 00:46:15 How they control us with bread and circuses. How they control us with no information. What the mainstream media does not want you to see. But let's talk a little bit more about the context of this, because I think information without context is really not that useful. Here's the context. This is from the Daily Skeptic, Dr. James Alexander. Four hypotheses about the secular corpor corporatist, global elite.
Starting point is 00:46:48 And he says it began by talking about the idea of a philosopher from the 1930s, French philosopher René Guénot. He said his idea was that all civilizations possess spiritual and temporal powers, and so somehow incorporate a tension between the two. But that for the first time in history, our modernity, from any time after 1500, the Enlightenment, we began moving in this secular direction, placed the temporal above the eternal, the material above the spiritual. In short, that eventually became the state above the spiritual. In short, it eventually became the state above the church.
Starting point is 00:47:27 Even in Jefferson's time, even as a child of the Enlightenment in so many different ways, Jefferson assured the Danbury Baptists that the First Amendment was a wall of separation to protect them. It was essentially a wall of separation to protect them. It was essentially a wall around the government interfering with their religion or their established religion in many cases. They still had established state churches in Massachusetts, and it was one other New England state, maybe Connecticut,
Starting point is 00:48:02 that lasted into the 1840s. So Jefferson said, no, there's a wall protecting you from us. We're walled in with that amendment, that prohibition. But now, you know, we saw in the middle of the 20th century, especially they turned it around the other way. They put the wall around the churches. They put the wall around individuals and said, you can't express your religion in these
Starting point is 00:48:26 public places. You can't express your religion if you're a public employee. That's not what establishment was about. Establishment was about requiring people to go to a state-supported church. You were required in many cases to actually attend church or get fined. But you had to, in all cases, give them money, as we have to give money to the seminary of Satan, the government schools now, whether you attend them or not. We've reached the point where the attendance is voluntary for now, but the support is mandatory and it's far more than anybody had ever had to pay for a state supported state established church in the colonies. When you look at the property tax bill for your house. Anyway, he goes on to say, um, you had, uh, intellectuals who shifted their concern. Uh, so the immense value that always attributed to unworldly matters was now attributed to worldly matters.
Starting point is 00:49:30 That is to say, intellectuals were now corrupt and coming after filthy lucre. That is kind of there, but it doesn't get the full gist of this. In other words, we are operating in a sphere where we've denied God and denied his presence, and we don't understand really what is happening. Again, Robert Malone says this is fifth-generation warfare or whatever. He's still looking at this coming from governments, even coming from men.
Starting point is 00:49:58 He doesn't understand the spiritual dimension that is above and over this, the unseen world that is directing this through generations as these people come and go. Yeah, there was just a video that surfaced this morning I saw on Twitter. George Soros starting to read some tripe about climate change or something, and he goes on about a one-minute blow. People say, is he having a mini stroke or something. I mean,
Starting point is 00:50:25 it certainly seemed like it. And then it passes and he gets back together and he starts speaking in his halting tones because he is elderly. Uh, but, um, yeah, it's,
Starting point is 00:50:37 this is an agenda that began before him. It's an agenda that's going to continue after him without him. Uh, it's not, you know, these people are just who you interact with. Robert Malone is starting to get an idea that this seems to be, you know, a leaderless thing, and yet they're all on the same page. How is this working?
Starting point is 00:50:58 Well, this is how it works. Anyway, he says, an American friend of mine recently drew my attention to some of the recent writings of a novelist and an essayist, Paul Kingsnorth. He said his hypothesis is that the decline of Christianity in our civilization, the decline of the eternal and the spiritual, coincides and was probably ultimately caused by the rise of what he calls the myth of progress. Progress is a conviction that the world, this world, is getting better always. This is something that we frequently associate with Francis Bacon or John Stuart Mill, Voltaire, Marx, Karl Marx. King's North builds a very effective vision of history on this hypothesis, which enables him to explain why leftists and corporatists are so agreed nowadays.
Starting point is 00:51:44 He says they all want progress. Well, again, I think that we can look at philosophers and we can look at the events that are happening. But my context for understanding everything comes from the Bible. And I understand when I look at this and compare it to what I've seen in recent history, we see this pattern going over and over again throughout the Old Testament with the nation of Israel. They return to God. Things get better.
Starting point is 00:52:13 They deny God. God brings judgment on them. Take a look, though, in our time at the Weimar Republic. Look at the degeneracy of the German society in between the wars. And even though it was famous for its moral decadence, it can't hold a candle to what our society has become, and especially to the global influence that our society has become. Our society has become a cesspool, and it is a cesspool that's just like the Mexican sewers dumping into San Diego,
Starting point is 00:52:49 or I think it's San Diego. Raw sewage is being dumped in there by Mexico. We've got raw sewage that's coming out of California, out of Hollywood, just in general. I know Hollywood is decentralizing, I think, but coming out of the film industry, coming out of the entertainment news industry, that raw sewerage is being pumped into every house on the globe. And is God going to judge us for that? What happened to the Weimar Republic?
Starting point is 00:53:20 Well, they had economic ruin, hyperinflation, you know, the proverbial wheelbarrow full of paper money to go buy a loaf of bread, and war. Total devastation. Unless we turn from this. Many of you will have the opportunity to become a 21st century Corrie ten Boom. So, perhaps the globalists and the localists, like Kingsnorth, because Kingsnorth talks as of an opinion as I do, that we need to come together locally to try to do what we can to resist this.
Starting point is 00:54:03 I mean, we always, we never give up, right? We're not fatalists. We don't know for sure if this is the end of the world as predicted. It certainly is lining up that way in a lot of different events, but you never know when that's going to happen. Nobody does. And as I've quoted many times, Martin Luther said, if I knew the world was going to end tomorrow, I would still plant a tree today. Because that is the way we are to live our life. And we are to resist evil, regardless of whether or not it looks hopeless. That is the way we live our life.
Starting point is 00:54:40 And we do that because we know we have already won. I'm not one of these people that believes once prayed, always saved. But you have promises from God if you have a real relationship with him. You don't have to worry about the ultimate consequences of this. What you need to be concerned about and what you will regret eternally, even if you're saved, is your missed opportunities to do things. to resist evil. That will weigh on all of us if we didn't do enough to resist it. So he said, they disagree on so many things. He said COVID-19, for instance,
Starting point is 00:55:17 but he said they all agree, they agree on sustainability. The myth of sustainability is that by retreating to local life and with some form of luddism, you know, living life as the Amish or something like that, or by advancing to either technological repurposing, transhumanism, whether you go backwards to a simpler existence that excludes a lot of these controlling technologies, or whether you fully embrace them and join the machines,
Starting point is 00:55:46 as Elon Musk wants to tell you you can do, we can somehow settle on a mode of existence which will enable us to survive in a less frenetic, destructive, and galloping manner. They've set their sights too low. You know, it was just last week I talked about Burt Baccarat passing.
Starting point is 00:56:07 And that was always one of my favorite songs that he wrote. Of course, he didn't write the lyrics. It's how David wrote lyrics. But Alfie, you know, what's it all about, Alfie? Is it just for the moment we live? Well, if that's the way you live your life that's not a very fulfilling way so he says perhaps as these two polar opposites see gyno and king's north glimpse he said you've also got delling pole a conservative um opinion guy in the uk um pitchens. He says, the truth is that we need to actually work our way back through the whole age of
Starting point is 00:56:47 sustainability and the age of progress back to the age of faith. Certainly, someone or something needs to focus these elites to submit to a higher vision. He says, I think the only way we can make sense of this at the moment is to imagine that a church or prophet or philosopher could strike down their state corporate secularity and show them that their faith is just an ideology serving their interests, that they should submit in a genuinely graceful doctrine that can admit fault, admit error, even admit sin. This would not be done by public apology or by a hypocritical political display, but by interrogating their own souls. And this, you know, we're told to pray for our leaders. This is what you should be praying for them. If God converts our leaders, in other words, turns them with him,
Starting point is 00:57:49 that will make a big difference in our lives. They have the power to make our lives better or worse. You know, God told his people in Babylonian captivity, he said, go ahead and plant your gardens and have your families and all the rest of this stuff. Pray and work for the peace of the community that you live in. But I've got another plan for you. But, you know, meanwhile, do the best that you can there. And that's what we should be praying for these people. We're told to pray for them. I always think, every time I hear that,
Starting point is 00:58:21 I always think of the line from Fiddler on the Roof. It said, Rabbi, is there a prayer for the czar? And he says, yes, God, bless and keep the czar far away from us. But of course, you could also pray for his being turned toward God. And as he points out here, if we go back to a nature of faith, what is he really getting at here? The idea that they have a higher vision. The idea that they are a higher vision the idea that they are not god you see all of these people and it has never been more clear with transhumanism now they have a belief and a trust in
Starting point is 00:58:56 quote-unquote science the scientism is selling these people have really bought into this that's why they can so convincingly sell it to the public. I am science, right? They bought into this idea that science has all the answers, that science can give them eternal life, that science can augment their bodies and make them supermen and all the rest of this stuff, and even continue their mind and their consciousness in a different body that can always be repaired. They're looking at eternal life. They think they're gods. They seek to be gods. They don't understand that they're going to answer to the only God. And so they have shut themselves off. The government, the secular people are always saying, you need to be afraid of anybody who
Starting point is 00:59:41 talks about religion and God. Oh, those people are crazy. Let me tell you who the crazy people are. The crazy people are the people who think they're God, and that's our entire political class, and it doesn't matter which country, which party, which political ideology they profess. They all think they're God. It doesn't take them long to get to that point. So they need to understand that they're accountable. There's only so much that we can do, right?
Starting point is 01:00:09 That turning of their hearts is in God's hand, but we can declare and we must declare what the truth is. He says, that's the type of thing that happens. That's the type of thing that we ought to imagine happening. Well, don't just imagine it, pray for it. He says, when it will happen, will either be more of the same old white swannery or perhaps some unexpected black swan event.
Starting point is 01:00:36 And this was addressed at the World Economic Forum. How is this transition going to happen? I mean, I totally agree that the world order, the way it is built today, doesn't make any sense. That is, it's not in line with the economic powers like India, Brazil or Germany, you know, that they don't have a massive role in the international order. But to me, the big question is,
Starting point is 01:01:03 so how we are going to go through this transform? It has to be, it cannot be gradual. It has to be driven by a certain shock that will happen. So now we will reconsider this entire... So if your question is... Disruption from the inside. This period could be turbulent, could have violence, could have conflicts.
Starting point is 01:01:21 We are already living it. I think the last five or six years tell us that we are going through a rather turbulent phase. We have lost a large part of humankind to the pandemic because we were all selfish. We were not willing to share.
Starting point is 01:01:36 We were not willing to use the global institutions to deliver responses to different parts of the world. We have lost people. Now, how much more bloodshed do we need to understand that you killed people is upon us you killed people yeah uh so he says let's just
Starting point is 01:01:52 recap he said you got four things he says that through all the ages there's been a balance of spirituality and secularity by the way you know we talk about the secular world? Where's that come from? Same root as second. Our life is but a second in the scope of eternity, not even that much. And so we talk about a secular approach, we're talking about something that just lasts for a moment. You know, in the same way you talk about fads. What's that short? That's short for four a day, right? Yeah, this comes and goes.
Starting point is 01:02:27 Our life comes and goes. Our societies come and go. So he says, always there's been a balance of spirituality and secularity in our modernity. Secularity is dominant. We think that there's only this world and this moment. For three or so centuries, we believed that this world is getting better and should get better. This is the myth of progress. There has always been disagreement about progress.
Starting point is 01:02:51 Some supposed it was happening as a result of accident, of individual interest. Others supposed that it can only happen as a result of deliberate design. Number four, but we should not ignore that there's been a very clever fusion of the two positions. A fusion which has not faded away with the fading of the myth of progress, but which survives to support the strange and the novel politics of what we would call the myth of sustainability. It's not a coincidence that the UN's 2030 agenda, you know, they had agenda 21. And then when they gave it a specific date, 2030,
Starting point is 01:03:29 they called it the UN 2030 agenda for sustainable development, sustainability, right? And all of these must-dos, their commandments, were all sustainable development goals. So as you look at their vision that was given to us by the people at Davos, they put out a document that I've not talked about yet. It is a document, Government in 2071. And so they talk about the change in global governance that they see happening over the next few decades.
Starting point is 01:04:07 They break it into three eras, and I would spell that E-R-R-O-R, errors. But in this, the World Government Summit that just happened last week in Dubai, they came out with this initiative. And the slogan for this most recent meeting was shaping future governments. And that was where Klaus Schwab said, you know, those of us who master the technologies, let me master as a bird, right? And so that was his vision.
Starting point is 01:04:43 And the World Government Summit issued a set of dystopian predictions to the future. And it's government in 2071 guidebook. This is an article from childrenshealthdefense.org. The guidebook predicts the catastrophic climate change, mass migration, mass layoffs due to automation, ensuing social unrest, the merging of humans and technology. And they say that's going to define the next 50 years. And they say that's their best case scenario. This is what they've been telling us for over 15 years, really.
Starting point is 01:05:20 If you look at all of this stuff, it's the same stuff they keep telling us over and over again. How many times, you know, we talk about the World Government Summit. Oh, world government, that's a conspiracy theory. No, it's a conference, and they have their plan and their agenda, and you can read it, and they've been saying this for a very long time. Their best case scenario is, again, catastrophic climate change, mass unemployment, social unrest, humans as cyborgs.
Starting point is 01:05:46 They originally created this back in 2018. They waited five years to put it out, but it echoes exactly what the World Economic Forfeiture People have been putting together, Davos. These findings were compiled to form a guidebook intended to direct governments towards a better prepared future, they say. And so the three eras, or I would say the errors, that they come up with is 2018 to 2030, the digital connectivity era, the new exploration era, which would run from 2030 to 2050, and then the really bad one, the techno-humanitarian era, 2050 to 2071. They say, here's some samples of what they say about specific things.
Starting point is 01:06:38 Laws and industry regulations have to be adapted to artificial intelligence. We will have mixed profit, public, private corporations that will emerge. Leading corporations will create smart cities. You understand how tightly interwoven these multinational corporations are in their vision. They become government. That's why I say it's appropriate to talk about global governance. The corporations are going to be driving this thing. They are the money behind this. This is why, you know, Klaus Schwab brings them in. Again, it's important for the UN to come up with a general agenda. Davos has the more specifics about it, you know, so it's kind of like the executive branch, if you will. But the corporations
Starting point is 01:07:20 are the funding, because as of now, they don't have a global tax. That's how they're going to get there. These people, as they're working on this, they're divvying this up to become stakeholders. So they're investing in this to be the only stakeholders. You own nothing, but they will be the stakeholders who own everything. So they're investing in this dystopian future to do this to you. As a result of these types of corporate partnerships, coalitions of non-state players will become more important in shaping policy outcomes. A singular ministry of the future.
Starting point is 01:07:59 That's amazing. You know, it really does have an Orwellian ring to it, doesn't it? And just like the Orwellian ministries, you know, ministry of truth, well, that was about propaganda. Ministry of Love, that was about their police state. So this is the ministry of the future. And there's nothing that harkens back to the past more than their vision of the future. Their vision that they will live forever
Starting point is 01:08:18 and become like gods, that harkens back to the Garden of Eden. It's a ministry of the past. It is a satanic ministry. But they say the ministry of Eden. It's a ministry of the past. It is a satanic ministry. But they say the mystery of the future will exist to ensure that decisions and directions are based on long-term planning to avoid short-termism pressures
Starting point is 01:08:34 of newly elected leaders. I assume that, you know, in their vision, Davos, Bilderberg, these other clubs that they meet on a regular basis, they will comprise the Ministry of the Future. It mirrors rhetoric of UN Secretary General Guterres, who said at this World Government Summit this last week, we must avoid short-term policymaking that delays the big tests that we face.
Starting point is 01:09:01 They're ready for these tests. They are you. They know where they want to go. Do you, do you have a vision for your life? I'm not talking about your society. I'm not talking about America. I'm talking about your life, your family. Do you have a vision for it? Because these people have plans for you. You may not be interested in politics, but politics is interested in you. You better get something powerful on your side. You better get right with God. You better, you know, not get him on your side, but you better powerful on your side. You better get right with God.
Starting point is 01:09:28 You better not get him on your side, but you better get on his side. Anyway, universal income will be a key where the government will have to provide support. It will become a safety net. Guess what? They trap birds in nets, don't they? They trap us in the internet, don't they? Advanced preventative health care will become a greater priority. That means vaccinations.
Starting point is 01:09:54 Advanced preventative healthcare, vaccinations. As medical implants and faster detection methods prevail. Tests. We're talking about testing everybody preemptively. Putting you in prison, taking things away. Oh, you tested positive for this thing that we magnified by 1.1 trillion times. They're not doing that kind of magnification for polyvinyl chloride in Palestine. I have to check myself every time now. Palestine, Palestine, Frankenstein, Frankenstein.
Starting point is 01:10:23 Young Frankenstein. Anyway, aging population necessitates closer management of health care costs. Palestine, Frankenstein, Frankenstein, young Frankenstein, anyway. Aging population necessitates closer management of health care costs. Euthanasia. AI robotics will be incorporated in health care practices, while health-related metrics may include the percentage of population with augmented reality tools and implants. All of this will occur, says a report from the World Governance Summit. All this will occur against a backdrop of severe climate change.
Starting point is 01:10:51 No, it'll occur against a fear and paranoia about climate change. That illusion. Let me tell you, you know, the more I look at this, I had somebody send me statements from Ben Gertzel, who is, I'll get to that in a minute. Artificial intelligence. And he was a friend of Hugo de Garis who works in the field. And you go to Garis, um, recommended that I talked to Ben Gertzel. I never did talk to Ben.
Starting point is 01:11:20 I was, um, it'd be interesting to talk to him, I guess. Uh, but you know, Ben is, is really pushing I guess. But, you know, Ben is really pushing this. And just like, you know, I like Hugo. We agree on some things. We disagree on the fact that artificial intelligence can be made real because we disagree on the fundamental nature of man and what it is to be created in God's image. So we disagree that that's a possibility, but it is interesting to talk to him.
Starting point is 01:11:51 Anyway, Ben Gertzel says it's hokey. It's all this stuff, AI, the Bing chat, all the rest of the stuff. Same thing I was saying. You know, it is pretty amazing, and it is going to be very powerful delusion and deception. And that's why I read on Friday all of those details at Interaction. It was very, very good. Very good. And if possible, deceive even the elect if that were possible, right?
Starting point is 01:12:18 This is the way artificial intelligence is going to be coming to us. It is based on deception. All of it. Anyway, that will be their justification for these things. Governments will have to create dedicated resources supported by rigid policies. Think draconian policies. You think the stuff we've gone through in the last couple of years is bad? No, just wait for what they're preparing. Fear and paranoia, a problem-solution approach. And then they give you some examples of what it'll be like in their dystopian science fiction future.
Starting point is 01:12:56 You might have a hypothetical couple who might be excited to receive a text saying, my license is automatically renewed as the government checks my identity, my vision, my driving, and my residence records and makes the decision without me having to even go to a physical office and apply. Of course, the flip side of that is you could be denied all of those things without being given any reason, as YouTube does today, as PayPal does today. We're so far down the rabbit hole. We have to argue about this rather than why am I being licensed in the first place? Exactly. Exactly. I don't acknowledge your right to license me.
Starting point is 01:13:30 Exactly. Oh, we'll just be handy. Or you could just leave me alone and not have to deal with any of this bureaucracy. Wouldn't that be nice? We've moved the Overton window. Exactly. Like I said many times, my dad was driving when he was eight years old. He didn't need a license. I didn't need a license to drive a motorboat and pull skiers when I was eight years old. When I took my driving test, I had about an hour of experience behind the wheel. Driving is easy. It's dangerous, but it's easy. You pay attention, you look around, and it's easy.
Starting point is 01:14:00 Yeah, it has nothing to do with your ability. It has nothing to do with your ability. It just has to do with their granting you privilege and and that's the important thing they used to lecture that to us when we had paper maps you know you get paper maps and every time you have a state map it would have a message from the governor at the time and it would always begin driving is a privilege so yeah i've even you, we've come to accept, we've got our driver's license. Isn't that great?
Starting point is 01:14:29 Our privilege to move. And that's where it all begins. If you let them, you know, tell you, you got to have a license to drive a car license, drive a boat. You got to have a license to get onto a plane now, right? You're not even driving it. You got the TSA telling you whether you can or not. Here's another hypothetical. An elderly couple,
Starting point is 01:14:47 their prescription bottles will remind them to take their pills. Smart pills will give their doctor an endless stream of information on how their body responds to treatment. Of course, bragged about by Borla, Pfizer CEO. The report also indicates that self-regulating conscious cities, universal basic income, higher corporate taxes, majority renewables, automation-driven job losses will be common. These job losses might lead to increased social and civic unrest, they said. So they foresee more forced migration, more pressure to urbanize, and a subscription economy where you don't own anything.
Starting point is 01:15:29 People own less and experience more. Again, we've seen all of this stuff, but I just want to point this out. You know, they keep putting this out there. As we have the mainstream media saying at the beginning of the Davos, like, you know, this whole idea that you'll own nothing and you're good. That was not, well, it was. We have the video from 2015 where they said that. It's just a conspiracy theorist.
Starting point is 01:15:49 These people are making this stuff up. And then, you know, the next week you have the World Governance Summit. And they lay it out in an agenda. But the mainstream media will tell you that doesn't exist. Rumble, A. Wootz, thank you for the tip on Rumble. He says, a transhumanist behavior leads me to believe that they indeed believe in God and are doing the utmost to avoid answering to him. George Soros appears to be losing that fight.
Starting point is 01:16:18 Yeah, well, you're right. Look, everybody knows that God is there. They're whistling through the graveyard. They know, They know. They know. And the fool has said in his heart, there is no God. That doesn't mean somebody's stupid. That means they're rebellious.
Starting point is 01:16:35 Fool is somebody who's rebellious, if we translate it properly. One of my favorite lines from the Bible is in Job, just when they're saying, who is the almighty that we should fear him yeah yeah just even in that the people who don't acknowledge him are forced to call him the almighty yeah yeah or psalms you know people have gotten together leaders got together we will break his bonds and god laughs right so uh as you look at this i said and of course they say that ordinary citizens in their future will start to become cyborgs that,
Starting point is 01:17:10 you know, even though we had Elon Musk come back and he pushed back against this vision of world governance. This is what Elon Musk had to say. One thing I should say, I know this is called the world government summit, but I think we should be maybe a little bit concerned about actually becoming too much of a single world government. If I may say that we want to avoid creating a civilizational risk by having, frankly, this may sound a little odd,
Starting point is 01:17:41 too much cooperation between governments. You know, if you look at, say, history and the rise and fall of civilizations, really all throughout history, civilizations have risen and fallen, but it hasn't meant the doom of humanity as a whole, because there have been all these separate civilizations that were separated by great distances. And so, you know, say like while Rome was falling, you know, Islam was rising. And so you had like a, you know, the sort of caliphate doing incredibly well while Rome was doing terribly. And that actually ended up being a source of preservation of knowledge and many scientific advancements.
Starting point is 01:18:31 And so I think we want to be a little bit cautious about being too much of a single civilization, because if we are too much of a single civilization, then the whole the whole thing may collapse okay you understand what he's saying he's making an argument for decentralization it's very dangerous for us to all walk in lockstep because you know if we get it wrong we all we all die and of course that is a pragmatic argument it's what we were talking about before in terms of different philosophies now you have some people who believe in technology
Starting point is 01:19:04 as he does uh saying that you know we need to have decentralization because of that that was the renee guy on uh gyno uh philosopher and then you have the other guy the american writer who said no we want to go to a less technocratic situation but both of them believe that we the primary goal is to have sustainability, and they just differ on how to do it for ourselves. But it is a philosophy that cuts God out of it. It's something that is purely pragmatic, and that's the argument that Elon Musk is making there.
Starting point is 01:19:43 So as I say, ordinary citizens are starting to become cyborgs affording brain implants, which he wants to do. And of course, not just him, but Bill Gates and Jeff Bezos, all three of them, and many other billionaires are investing in this brain computer interface, the brain implants. It's still for the rich or for people who are in high positions. It is still expensive, but it's causing a major education gap in mega intelligence, they say. By this point in time. A couple would be happy to have augmented reality glasses to which our city government regularly sends announcements promoting cross-cultural harmony and connectivity. Isn't that wonderful? Everything that they do is focused on government as God, Godverment.
Starting point is 01:20:31 Government, even at a local level that they would be, of course, centrally controlling. Even at the local level, the government would be omniscient. It would know everything about you. It would be omnipotent. It could do anything to you without any restriction. And it would be omnipresent in your life, everywhere, inescapable. Those are attributes of God. And we put those in the hands of men who have a fallen nature. That truly is dangerous. Robots at this time will have taken over tasks in many sectors, lawyers, nurses, pharmacists. But AI health-based health monitoring, for example, one of them would say, has leveraged
Starting point is 01:21:14 my lifelong health data stream. It's predicted that I'm likely to have a heart attack in the near future. So government health services have sent me a customized diet plan. I think what you need to eat are bugs, right? That type of thing. So when you look at this, I mean, it truly is a horror vision. It's the worst elements of every sci-fi film brought into their vision. That's what they want.
Starting point is 01:21:43 What is it going to take, you know, as Michael Yadin says, what is it going to take for us to pull back against this? You know, we've got to get the information out there. And where the real power is, again, our weapons are mighty if we are on God's side. These people have declared that they're not. I mean, look at Yuval Harari. We will be gods.
Starting point is 01:22:10 They openly state that. So by 2050, this will be, Travis, you'll be about 10 years younger than me by then, probably. Okay, this is what you have to look forward to if we don't stop this. Techno-humanitarian era will be marked by a shift in innovation efforts and global priorities towards redefining and enhancing humanity. Residents of this era could expect to see sentient cities,
Starting point is 01:22:37 universal basic income, AI labor relations, and shared profit corporations. Most jobs that existed in 2018 will be by then replaced with automation. As a result, they said education that we knew it in the past generations needs to be totally transformed if we want to stay relevant. Children and adults need to be trained in how to use their brain implants. By 2071, genomic health will be screened at birth Because they're going to be doing genetic modification One way or the other, they think
Starting point is 01:23:09 One's birth certificate will be part of the global registry It'll be part of the global blockchain They will be giving digital identities to all Including newborns, they said, by 2030 This is one of the UN's sustainable development goals. This is not coming from this projection by the World Government Summit. This is the UN, and one of its sustainable development goals for 2030 is a digital identity for everyone.
Starting point is 01:23:42 They're talking about the United Nations now, global digital identity for everyone, They're talking about the United Nations now, global digital identity for everyone, including newborns by 2030. I've talked about how NCR, Japanese corporation, has run tests in both Mexico and in Africa to identify newborns, and they found that they have to wait until four days to get biometrics on the newborns
Starting point is 01:24:05 that will be 96% accurate as they grow and develop. If they get it before that, it's quite a bit less accurate. So you've got four days to get your kids away from these people after they're born. Owner-aware homes registered by the government that will require annual audit and approval for your home. And if you don't say what they want you to say, you're out. Robots and artificial intelligence will lead community policing. You know the old joke about, you know, the different nationalities and how, you know,
Starting point is 01:24:40 heaven is a place where the police are British. This used to be when they had Bobby's very old joke. It's no longer true now. Uh, and, um, you know, the, um, uh, the Germans do the technology and the French do the cooking and everything. And then they say in hell is where the, uh, the Germans are the police and the British do the cooking and the, and on and on, you know, it's got that. Well, you know, what about the robots?
Starting point is 01:25:02 Yeah. Well, the robots become the police. Again, you can see that in Elysium, that film. I don't like that film. And it's got a very strong leftist sub-current to it. But if you look at what they show, the space residency, Elysium itself, one of these cities from Gerard K. O'Neill's High Frontier. In a Lagrange Libration Point, you look at the way the robots interact with people on Earth, how oppressive they are. Augmentation implants will be registered and renewed with the government.
Starting point is 01:25:41 We give you something that will help you physically, but you're going to have to toe the line, or we won't renew that. Hypothetical 20-year-old might work for a company that produces technology for cooling the planet. Well, what they mean by that is maybe removing the CO2 so that plants won't grow naturally. There'll be no need for toll booths or choice lanes, credit cards or passports anymore, because they'll have CBDC.
Starting point is 01:26:09 And that will be the means of controlling everything. Because you won't have any money and you won't be able to travel. That's right. So let me just say one more thing before I go on to something else because I want to talk about President's Day. I want to get into the news as well. And what is happening in Ukraine. Anyway, this is from Scott Lively. I've interviewed Scott.
Starting point is 01:26:33 He is a pastor as well as writing here. He says, why we need to have natural rights-based sanctuary cities. He said, the right of a man and a woman to marry and to bear children and to love and to nurture is universal, as is the right of all children to be raised by a mother and a dad in a natural family setting. Families have natural rights to guide and protect their children, raising them as they see fit, and to form communities with other families for mutual security and prosperity. Communities have the natural right to control
Starting point is 01:27:05 the policies they deem necessary to thrive, to defend themselves from outside interference, and to form alliances with other communities as states. And so he says to that end, he said, in opposition to that, rather, in opposition to natural rights, especially the collective right to delegate limited power to governing authorities, in opposition to that is the concept that might makes right, that those with wealth and power to enforce their will on others assumes an entitlement to do so. This is the eternal struggle of humanity from Nimrod to the World Economic Forum. The ocean of humanity has always frothed with waves of tyranny and overthrow until the revolution
Starting point is 01:27:54 that birthed the American island, unique in history, blessed with a firm, fertile soil of a constitutional republic undergirded by the solid foundation of the Christian Bible. You know, when I talk about that, again, my vaccinated relative who his opinion is exactly that.
Starting point is 01:28:18 That might makes right. It's always been that way, he says. And I'm fine with it. We just need to have, you need to figure out how to work in that system. Like, no. I'll fight it to my dying breath. I just don't understand that capitulation to evil, to injustice. I don't understand it.
Starting point is 01:28:40 And I'll never get used to it. I will never accept it. He goes on to reference America's vision as a shining city on a hill. Remember that was Reagan talking about that, in contrast to the atheism and the Marxism that's now being pushed on us. It was Reagan who referenced that, but he didn't come up with that. That was Jesus' Sermon on the Mount, talking about an individual. He said, you know, you don't want to put your light under a basket, you know, and that type
Starting point is 01:29:07 of thing. But it's also that particular phrase, that America would be a shining city on a hill, that actually that phrase was Puritans in 1630 going back and referencing Jesus' Sermon on the Mount. That was their vision for an America, for a state that was going to be based on Christian principles. That goes back to a Puritan statement in 1630. That was a society that they chose to build based on Christian principles. And that's what we mean when we talk about America being a Christian nation. That doesn't mean that each and every person was a Christian. It doesn't mean all the founding fathers were Christians. It means that they built it on Christian principles,
Starting point is 01:29:52 whether or not they followed them. They knew that was what the majority wanted. Their vision to extinguish the natural order, to replace it with a transhumanist utopia populated by new and improved version of human beings, which they will literally create in the labs through genetics, robotics, and artificial intelligence. What seems like a dystopian science fiction is in fact an emerging scientific reality in its early to mid stages,
Starting point is 01:30:23 backed by the most powerful forces in the world and some powerful forces outside the world. He says, Julio Severo and I were fellow cultural warriors for many years in the battle for defending true marriage and the natural family. He said we met just after he had taken his young family into exile from his native Brazil to escape persecution by the Marxist criminal Lula,
Starting point is 01:30:48 who's now just been, if you believe their elections, re-elected. Lula was infuriated that Julio had helped the Evangelical Caucus and the Brazilian legislature to stop a bill that would have criminalized what they call homophobia, disapproval of the homosexual political agenda. In revenge, Lula attempted to jail Julio for refusing to vaccinate his children, forcing him to leave the country. Lula, now that he's come back, he points out,
Starting point is 01:31:21 has made vaccine tyranny the centerpiece of his administration. He said, May of 2021, Julio died unexpectedly, leaving a widow, several small children who were technically illegals, and their country of exile. When I learned of this, my ministry took a task of providing for his family financially and continuing our shared mission to defend natural rights around the world. He has in this list, in this article rather, and this is on, you'll find it on WND.com. He has a link if you want to donate to this organization. He said out of that commitment, this is what the organization is,
Starting point is 01:32:05 out of that commitment came the decision to establish the Institute for Natural Rights in Julio's name, but with a new approach reflecting the practicalities of his own life exemplified. He said, our list of options for pushback is shrinking, while the tyrants gain increasing power to crush our resistance. And so, at least as a contingency measure, one strategy for believers must be to create sanctuary cities for the righteous to flee to, or as they used to be referred to in the Old Testament, translated as cities of refuge. He said, we have conservatives who are in control of numerous U.S. states. Laws should be passed to formally protect the right to establish such communities and to codify
Starting point is 01:32:46 the natural rights the residents may establish as their community policies. He says there's precedence for this approach. Take a look at the Amish community or even Sharia-based Muslim enclaves, various religious and or hippie communes over the past century. Frankly, he said the pursuit of legal protections for a sanctuary city nature preserve shouldn't be only in the interest of Christians, he said, but a broad coalition of those who embrace natural rights. Transhumanism is a threat to all humanity, and the natural rights that we're trying to preserve truly are universal
Starting point is 01:33:23 outside the tiny minority of secular humanists that are trained to reject them. So he says, Jews, Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists, Sikhs, even nature-loving secular environmentalists should be with us on this. And a working coalition on those terms, in agreement on at least 80% of our social crises, could conceivably go further and could overthrow the entire transhumanist agenda by sheer power of numbers once it has been seasoned in the fight for the natural order against forced artificiality.
Starting point is 01:33:57 For now, we, like the Jerusalem Jews under Nehemiah, need to keep a sword in one hand for fighting those who would enslave us. And in the other, we wield a trowel to build a life-affirming sanctuary behind solid defensive walls while there is still time to do so. Now, I agree in general with that. I don't believe that politics is our savior. And I think that when we go through and we look at America as a shining city on the hill, that respect for individual rights comes out of Christian theology, actually comes out even more so, more specifically, out of the Reformation. And so I think those principles are something that everybody of all types of beliefs could embrace.
Starting point is 01:34:49 Just as I've said before, if our focus politically were on liberty, that should unify people if they really understand the two choices that are there. I mean, who wants to live in a dictatorship? You know, these people, even the people out there who are pushing for censorship, pushing for war, pushing on the left, what they have become, and people on the right, you know, as they push for that, they don't like it when they live underneath it, right? They just imagine a society where they get to call all the shots, where they are the dictator. But that's not the way it works. It never works that way. The dictator may be somebody from your group to start with, but it's not going to stay that way.
Starting point is 01:35:31 And so from a pragmatic standpoint, from just a secular standpoint, yes. But again, this is much bigger than anything people have ever faced. The technology, the global aspect of it, this is, we now have a global language essentially. English is pretty much global, but especially the technology is global. And this ability to communicate has essentially reversed the division of mankind through the Tower of Babel, and it is coming to a head very quickly. So you better keep that in mind. We will take a quick break, and we'll be right back.
Starting point is 01:36:15 Let me tell you, the David Knight Show you can listen to with your ears. You can even watch it by using your eyes in fact if you can hear me that means you're listening to the David Knight show right now yeah good job and you want to know something else? You can find all the links to everywhere to watch or listen to the show at the David night show dot com. That's a Web site. Angus Mustang. Thank you for the tip, Angus. On
Starting point is 01:37:07 Rockfin, he says, every time you play that Fauci clip, my blood pressure skyrockets. I assume that that's the one where he's the real Fauci. He's talking about how he's going to do it from the inside, disruption and chaos, and he's going to do it step by step. Yeah, I understand. But you know, that needs to be ingrained in people. You need to know who your
Starting point is 01:37:23 enemy is. You need to know what their plans are. I hope the one that we put together about Fauci plugging the show, trying to shut it down. I hope that doesn't send your blood pressure skyrocketing. Also on Rockfan Harps, thank you very much for the tip. He said, this may have happened, quote unquote, with a link to a meme of Project Veritas tweeting that they've signed a deal with Pfizer. I don't know. I don't know.
Starting point is 01:37:50 I'll tell you this. You know, O'Keefe's going to get to the bottom of it. This is just the beginning of a very interesting story because it's going to show us a lot about Pfizer. He's already shown us us a lot about Pfizer. He's already shown us, uh, some, some interesting things about Pfizer that we already knew, uh, for the, you know, but, um, to, to have the documentation there to bring the receipts, that's really good. You know, we can infer what's going on with them.
Starting point is 01:38:18 Uh, but that is, that is good to know that let's talk a little bit about president's day and let's begin with education, because that's how they control us. Department of Education, one of the most dangerous departments in the federal government. And we got a lot of dangerous ones there. Chicago has sounded the alarm. 55 schools report no proficiency in math or reading. As a matter of fact, as I pointed out, mentioned these stats the other day, 53 schools in Illinois, zero students in 53 schools who were proficient in math. Zero students out of 55 schools. I don't know how many kids they got in schools.
Starting point is 01:39:03 High school I went to long time ago was smaller, you know, much smaller town than Chicago, but we had 600 students. Um, let's say, you know, between 500 and a thousand students, I'm about 25, 50,000 students, not a single one of them can read at grade level. You know, they're barely able to read, uh another 30 schools, I'm sorry, that was math. That was math. So, yeah, that's why you wind up with things like the modern monetary theory or the magic money tree because you can't check them on this.
Starting point is 01:39:39 And then you have another 30 schools reported zero students who were able to read at grade level. Again, you know, that is a very key thing because if you don't read, you can't lead. I think that is a very important thing. If you don't, well, you can be a demagogue, but I mean, you can't really lead if you don't have a broad understanding of things, if you don't have a philosophy, a worldview for life, and the rest of this stuff. But of course, that's usually referring to people who can read, who can read, but who don't choose to. They're choosing to deliberately dumb down the population so they don't have any leaders
Starting point is 01:40:26 who are going to oppose them. They don't have anybody who can put together an argument to oppose them or who can even read with any comprehension to understand what's being done to them. That's why they don't worry about putting out their plans in a formal way like that. And so when you look at what is happening in our society and how rapidly this is changing, the National Education Association removed a page that was on its website as recently as 2020. That page was about suggested curriculum for President's Day.
Starting point is 01:41:04 So in just three years, they eradicated President's Day. You know, we used to have a separate holiday for George Washington, another one for Abraham Lincoln, and then we just put them together in one day called President's Day. And now the National Education Association, the NEA, the biggest teachers union, has now just flushed President's Day down the memory hole on their website. It was last saved on June 17th, 2020. You can see it in the way back machine.
Starting point is 01:41:35 It included lesson plans to celebrate the lives of George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, and of their contributions to, um, the United States, the lives and the contributions of our 45 presidents and their terms. They've now removed that. Lesson plans at that time, three years ago, were things like George Washington, a national treasure, George Washington, centerpiece of a nation. Students studied the characteristics that made him a great leader. Now the President's Day Resources site says, page not found. But what they do still have at the NEA site, they have Black History Month lessons, Learning for Justice, the education branch of Southern Poverty Law Center is the ones that put that together.
Starting point is 01:42:21 Did you know that? Of course, the Southern Poverty Law Center has an education branch because that's how you control the next course the southern poverty law center has an education branch because that's how you control the next generation it's how you control the future that's why you had um uh the weather underground guys you know bernadine darn and uh her husband you know went into education after they stopped bombing buildings. And so Southern Poverty Law Center is there as well. A report on how teachers can advocate for abortion services. Resources for teaching about indigenous people. An article about implicit racial bias and so forth. You'll find all that stuff there, but you won't find anything about the fundamental values
Starting point is 01:43:04 of our country because this is about eradicating our culture, our history. They're tearing down these statues. That's just about getting rid of history, all the usual Marxist approaches. So the Discarded webpage includes lessons on the Revolutionary War, on constitutional government, on the Bill of Rights, on the Civil War, on the Gettysburg Address, all that down the memory hole by the people who would probably be teaching your kids if you put them in a government school. This article from American Thinker, first they came for the Confederates.
Starting point is 01:43:44 They talk about the Disney cartoon that I played a clip for you last week. The Proud Family. This is animated kids yelling and screaming at children that you pay for this. You subscribe to Disney Plus to hear this. Kids, angry faces on the kids yelling and screaming. Slaves built this country. We, the descendants of slaves, have earned reparations for their suffering.
Starting point is 01:44:13 Continue to earn reparations every moment we spend submerged in systemic prejudice, racism, and white supremacy that America was founded with and still has not atoned for, is the way they say it. What they're pushing here is not only, again, these people are radicals. That's why when we talk about the FBI looking at traditional Catholics and saying they're traditional radical or radical traditionalists, is what they call them. Well, that's an oxymoron.
Starting point is 01:44:44 A radical is somebody who tries to rip something out by the roots. That's the root word of radical. Radics, root, right? And so these people seek to rip out the roots of our civilization, our history, and everything else. They are the radicals. A traditionalist is not going to be that way. A traditionalist is nurturing the roots of whatever it is, whether it's religion or politics
Starting point is 01:45:10 or history or whatever. That is an oxymoron to call these people radical traditionalists. No, these people are true radicals. Disney is radical. Disney is hateful. Disney is Marxist. And they project those values and those labels onto other people. That is what they are. And never forget where this began. The first push to remove symbols, again, was first they came for the Confederates. And who was the first person to come for the Confederates? Nikki Haley.
Starting point is 01:45:42 She was a demagogue who was doing this for demagoguery. And that's where she is. She's an opportunist. She's a political opportunist. She kicked off this ball that is now rolling. One could hardly suggest, this article, that with any seriousness, that the agrarian part of this country where slaves existed was the most substantial driver of America's eventual economic and industrial might,
Starting point is 01:46:11 most of which happened in the late 1800s. We had a... No, no, didn't you understand? The Chrysler Building is made out of cotton. That's right, yeah. So is the White House. It's because of slavery is the white house and you know it's because
Starting point is 01:46:25 of slavery there's a reason why the aviation industry uh everybody regardless of what their native language is everybody speaks english because you know the planes were invented by slaves yeah and built by them as well they taught us as a matter of fact how to fly well you know there probably was fabric covering those wings and and it might have been cotton. Furthermore, if the founders were truly enthusiastic about exploiting slave labor as a profitable means of building their fledgling nation, their first actions might have been to proliferate the practice rather than legislating its limitations from the very beginning. For example, in the Northwest Ordinance of 1787, which created the legal structure for the area that would eventually become states of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin. And that Northwest Ordinance of 1787, it included an absolute prohibition of slavery in the new territories. And there was no objection, north or South, to that prohibition.
Starting point is 01:47:25 In 1808, the importation of slaves was likewise prohibited. Again, the Virginians and the Southern states did not object to this impediment to the slave trade. Far from being a benefit to the states which allowed it, slavery was known to be a dreadful economic burden of which even plantation owners in the antebellum south were keenly aware. As Alexis de Tocqueville observes in Democracy in America, 1836, the southern state's reasons for maintaining slavery was not because it was financially beneficial for them to do so. In fact, he writes, many southern planters would agree, he said, with their northern countrymen and freely admitting that slavery is prejudicial to their interests.
Starting point is 01:48:08 But they're convinced that the removal of this evil would imperil their own existence. Why? Well, because one-fifth of the population was black. It was a different race. As a matter of fact, Thomas Sowell makes that case. He says, deciding, and Thomas Sowell, in case you don't know, is black, black economist, conservative. He says, deciding that slavery was wrong was much easier than deciding what to do with
Starting point is 01:48:35 millions of people from another continent of another race without any historical preparation for living as free citizens in a society like the United States, where they comprised 20% of the population. De Tocqueville tells his readers that slavery was, quote, a commercial and manufacturing question in the North. For those in the South, it was a question of life and death. So he said that the threat of social upheaval and violent revolution resulting from sudden abolition was a very real concern for the southern states that complicated the slavery question for them as any honest person would understand. But as I said, you know, they began with the Confederates. They began by taking down Confederate generals and they start taking down Grant's statues. And now this year they've come for Lincoln.
Starting point is 01:49:31 You can see the articles about, oh, well, you know, Lincoln was behind a movement to move slaves into an island where they were promised they would come in, essentially as indentured servants, which is the way the settlers, many if not most of the settlers in Jamestown and some other places, not where they were setting up Plymouth. Those people came with their families and the clothes on their back because of religious persecution, and they basically had no other options.
Starting point is 01:50:01 But the many people who were coming to places like Jamestown. A lot of times they came without a family. They came as indentured servants. They would have to work for a number of years and then they would work off. And that would be to pay for their initial travel as well as, you know, getting them set up and that type of thing. So after they worked for a number of years, they would be freed. And so it was a different kind of indentured servitude.
Starting point is 01:50:29 It was a kind of slavery, but a very different kind of slavery than what was going on in the South, where it was based on skin color and perpetual slavery from generation to generation. You could work your way out of it. Well, they offered that deal. This is what they're coming after Lincoln about. slavery from generation to generation. You could work your way out of it. Well, they offered that deal. This is what they're coming after Lincoln about.
Starting point is 01:50:51 Lincoln offered that deal of indentured servitude. I said, well, we can free the slaves. We can give them an indentured servitude thing to pay for the initial setup, and then they can work for a number of years and then get free. And that's what they're coming after Abraham Lincoln for, the Washington Post other this year. Because he understood, how do we incorporate this? This is why they don't mention in this article or in the Washington Post the fact that
Starting point is 01:51:12 several of the founding fathers in the slave states had set up Liberia, right, for that very purpose, and to say, you know, we need to free the slaves, but they're not going to be comfortable here. They're still going to be a minority, but it's going to be a big minority. It's going to be tension, division, and that type of thing. Let's help them to set up in Liberia. That's why they called it Liberia.
Starting point is 01:51:40 And the descendants of those slaves have been controlling that country ever since. They went in. They were better educated. they had more money, they had skills and things like that. They have dominated that. Their families have dominated that area since then. But again, you know, it was what do we do with this? And that was the real concern. But I'm not a big fan of Lincoln because I think they were correct in terms of pointing out in history that the Emancipation Proclamation really wasn't the freeing of the slaves. He only freed slaves, presumably, and states that were not under his authority that he said were in rebellion against it. And he did that as an offer to the Southern states saying that if you come back in, if you reunite with us, we will let you keep slavery forever. And they rejected that offer.
Starting point is 01:52:35 But that's why he did not free the slaves that were in the states under his control, like in Missouri and other places. And so it was kind of a cynical political move. I think the whole Civil War was a cynical political move, and I think it needs to be understood in the context of the Industrial Revolution. Again, at exactly the same time in 1861, there was a revolution in Italy, Civil War there. Slavery was not a factor. The factors were economic.
Starting point is 01:53:02 The factors were change from an agrarian state that was decentralized to a centralized nation state, where the people who were running the industrialized side of it, the mechanized side of it, were getting the power. That was the real context for this. And those types of forces had already shown up in 1831, the nullification crisis. You nearly had South Carolina secede then because there were, it was the issues of tariffs and whether we were going to tax things at the border. That came up at that point in time.
Starting point is 01:53:44 And I think the reason that you didn't have South Carolina secede, the reason that they were able to defuse that as part of that nullification crisis and not have a civil war at that time was, again, because of the fourth turning. Because people at that generation, at that time, they were more amenable to negotiated settlements. By 1861, society had been under its form by 80 years or so, and they were ready to chuck it and start all over again in many different ways. That's why that happened.
Starting point is 01:54:18 So where are we today? Well, we got into Biden, as the New American points out, the new Jim Crow. As a matter of fact, it's not so much the new American that pointed out as it was Tucker Carlson. And this is what has happened. You know, we wound up the great objection, the great concern, I should say, of the founders was that we not have what they call consolidated government, a unified singularity of government,
Starting point is 01:54:43 which is what we have now. That's why they created a separation of powers between the federal government and the states that created the federal government and we the people. And then the federal government, they further divided into three branches because they didn't want to have a consolidated government. That's what has been happening in the wake of the Civil War. But now, as Tucker Carlson said on Friday, Joe Biden institutes a government-wide system of racial discrimination that dwarfs Jim Crow, and nobody seems to notice. He said there was no press conference, there was no signing ceremony, no media coverage,
Starting point is 01:55:24 but it happened on Thursday, he said. There was no press conference. There was no signing ceremony, no media coverage. But it happened on Thursday, he said. Biden restructured the entire executive branch of the U.S. government to discriminate on the basis of immutable characteristics. He made the announcement on the White House website and proclaims that within 30 days, every federal agency, all of, from the Department of Justice to NASA to the Social Security Administration, all of them must ensure that they have an agency equity team within their respective agencies to coordinate the implementation of equity initiatives. And these Maoist equity teams will report to something called the Gender Policy Council and the White House Environmental Justice Officer. And we know that running all of this will be the largest racial tracking bureaucracy
Starting point is 01:56:16 since the fall of Nazi Germany. These are the people who call everybody racists because everything they see is through the term, through the lens of skin color. They're some of the most vile and completely absorbed racists the world has ever known. And so they call everybody they disagree with racist. So running this will be former President Obama doing it through Susan Rice, his cutout, he says. Rice's goal, the goal of the entire initiative, is to place the federal government, all of it, in opposition to a very specific slice of the American population.
Starting point is 01:56:55 Not a foreign population, our own population. Here's how it works. Every single person in the United States will qualify for one of Joe Biden's many protected categories except straight white men. There you go. And if you are one of those, any one of those issues, you will not qualify. So let's talk a little bit about George Washington, the other president that has been flushed down the memory hole. This article in the New American says, Washington was the hero that even King George called the greatest man in the world.
Starting point is 01:57:37 So when Duke writes, even when your arch rival praises you with nothing to gain, you know that it means something. So it's very notable that what the last king of America, George III, said about George Washington's refusal to become the first king of these United States, George III, the British monarch, said, if he does that, upon hearing that Washington would relinquish power and return to his farm, he said, if he does that, upon hearing that Washington would relinquish power and return to his farm,
Starting point is 01:58:07 he said, if he does that, he will be the greatest man in the world. And Washington did that, not once, but twice. He stepped down as the commander of the army when he could have seized power and put himself in power. He stepped down after two terms in office, and that became a voluntarily accepted pattern of all the presidents until he got to FDR, who was another fourth turning, overthrowing many of our traditions, institutions, and overthrowing our Constitution. So from Washington to FDR, they all abided by that voluntarily. And again, they referred to him as Cincinnatus,
Starting point is 01:58:56 the Roman ruler who returned to his farm, returned to the plow. So it was a fitting tribute to a true American hero to have a day in his honor that was taken away. It was combined with Lincoln and now it's being flushed by the NAA. Uh, he was a very large, very strong man. And of course, uh, in this article, they talk about the Indian prophecy, uh, in 1770 when he was fighting in the French and Indian War, it was a recollection of his physician, his personal physician, who said the records don't state the nation of the sachem, which were the Indian nations he was in charge of.
Starting point is 01:59:44 Was it the Shawneenee the mingo the delaware but uh they said and told him they said we'd been trying to kill washington all day they had targeted him i said multiple shots were fired directly at him but nothing touched him and he told his mother he said um a few days after the battle, I luckily escaped that without a wound, though I had four bullets through my coat. How does that happen? And two horses were shot out from under me. Convinced that the Great Spirit had preserved Washington, the chief said he will become
Starting point is 02:00:18 the chief of nations. The people yet unborn will hail him as the father of a mighty empire. You know, I've had the privilege of knowing Mark Collins. He was a pastor at the Sutherland Springs Church that was shot up. He was not pastor there at that time. But I talked to him about that after that event. He said a lot of things straight that Monday after the shooting on Sunday. But I had known and interviewed Mark Collins many times before that and talked to him after that as well. Mark Collins, if it,
Starting point is 02:00:52 well, let me show you this. Sorry, had to show the picture. That's what I thought was on the board. Show the picture of Collins on the horseback. Mark Collins has an uncanny resemblance to George Washington. And when you look at him up close, you say, well, I don't know, it doesn't look too much like that engraving that I see on the dollar bill. However, there is a kind of a life mask statue of Washington's face, not the paintings, but the life mask of him. And on his business card, he's got that on one side. And then on the other side, he's got his face. And it's amazing how much they look like each other.
Starting point is 02:01:40 And so Mark is very tall. And he, for years, would put on the george washington outfit and he would give lessons to school kids i imagine they don't care about that anymore but he did it for a long time interestingly enough uh he now is a pastor in yorktown texas and if you want to see a picture of him uh this is uh he has played Washington in several different productions. This is from a film called Revolution Documentary. And again, he looks not like that painting of Washington, but he looks more like the life mask carving of Washington. They said the battlefield tales are the least of it. They paled in comparison
Starting point is 02:02:25 to Washington's moral stature. And this is one of the things that draws Mark Collins to him, was his moral stature. He wrote Rules of Civility, 110 of those, when he was 16 years old. But of course, it's not simply about, you know, beating your body into submission. But he was 16 years old. But of course, it's not simply about, you know, beating your body into submission, but he was somebody who took that very seriously and tried to live a life like that, very much like Robert E. Lee in those regards. As one person said, hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men.
Starting point is 02:03:11 And weak men create hard times. It's four different cycles there, you know? It's an interesting way to state what Strauss and Howe have seen in four generations. This is a repeating cycle. You have hard times creating strong men, strong men then creating good times and so forth, and it goes through this cycle, these four different stages society does.
Starting point is 02:03:37 And it does it over and over again. They trace this back 500 years. So that's what we see now. We are in the phase of this where weak men are creating hard times that's where we are right now we're in the fourth turning where weak men create hard times and it is our weakness that is going to make this more difficult for us. Time for us to get hard. Time for us to get a spine and a backbone and stand up to this stuff.
Starting point is 02:04:11 So, in 1775, at 43 years old, Washington became the commander-in-chief of the Continental Army. And in 1783, he led America to victory over the British after eight years. And he was, by all accounts, not a lot of people will say, disregard this and say, well, he was a Freemason or whatever. I really don't know, and I don't know what level of that he was. But, and it is, you know, in the vernacular of the day, they would speak in a general way about God, but not specifically about Jesus, even though they claimed they were Christians. So it was like they were trying to straddle a line in many ways. But he is reported to have had regular private prayer sessions. A personal
Starting point is 02:05:01 prayer was a large part of his life. One well-known report stated that Washington's nephew witnessed him doing personal devotions with an open Bible while kneeling in both the morning and the evening. This sounds very much like the type of thing that somebody who would write these rules of civility at 16 would be doing. In the hands of a good providence, religion and life of George Washington, historian said, talking about prayer, she explained how Washington's youngest granddaughter, Nellie, told a biographer it was his custom to retire to his library at nine or ten o'clock, where he remained an hour before he went to his chamber. He always rose before the sun
Starting point is 02:05:43 and remained in his library until called to breakfast. I never witnessed his private devotions. I never inquired about them, said his youngest granddaughter. I should have thought it the greatest heresy to doubt his firm belief in Christianity. His life, his writings prove he was a Christian. He was not one of those who act or pray that they may be seen of men. He communed with his God in secret. And let us not forget that the providence of Almighty God, to obey His will, to be grateful for His benefits,
Starting point is 02:06:50 and humbly to implore His protection and favor. And whereas both houses of Congress have by their joint committee requested me to recommend to the people of the United States a day of public thanksgiving and prayer, to be observed by acknowledging with grateful hearts the many signal favors of Almighty God, especially by affording them an opportunity peaceably to establish a form of government for their safety and happiness. Now, therefore, I do recommend and assign Thursday, the 26th of November, next, to be devoted by the people of these states
Starting point is 02:07:26 to the service of that great and glorious being who is the beneficent author of all good that was, that is, or that will be, that we may then all unite in rendering under him our sincere and humble thanks for his kind care and protection of the people of this country, previous to their becoming a nation,
Starting point is 02:07:49 for the signal and manifold mercies and the favorable interpositions of his providence, which we experienced in the course and the conclusion of the late war, and for the great degree of tranquility, union, and plenty which we have since enjoyed, for the peaceful and rational manner in which we have been enabled to establish constitutions of government for our safety and happiness, and particularly the nation one now lately instituted for the civil and religious liberty with which we are blessed, and the means we have of acquiring and diffusing useful knowledge, and in general for all the great and various favors which he hath been pleased to confer upon us.
Starting point is 02:08:36 Also, that we may then unite in most humbly offering our prayers and supplications to the great Lord and ruler of nations, and beseech him to pardon our national and otherlications to the great Lord and ruler of nations and beseech him to pardon our national and other transgressions, to enable us all, whether in public or private stations, to perform our several and relative duties properly and punctually, to render our national government a blessing to all the people by constantly being a government of wise, just, and constitutional laws, discreetly and faithfully executed and obeyed, to protect and guide all sovereigns and nations, especially those that have shown kindness to us, and to bless them with good government,
Starting point is 02:09:20 peace, and concord, to promote the knowledge and practice of true religion and virtue, and the increase of science among them and us, and to generally grant unto all mankind such a degree of temporal prosperity as he alone knows to be best. Given under my hand at the City of New York, the third day of October in the year of our Lord, 1789. George Washington.
Starting point is 02:09:54 Yeah. We have to be careful, however. We don't want to make too big a hero out of anybody. And I think George Washington would agree. And as one person pointed out, he would most likely be appalled to see that we had a day in his honor. Very much like Robert E. Lee refused the honors, refused to prostitute himself to sell merchandise for people after the war. He was very popular north and south, now being purged everywhere. We have purged people, men of character who should be shining examples to us.
Starting point is 02:10:33 For those that don't know, the north actually courted Robert E. Lee to lead the Union Army before the war. That's right. Yeah. And, of course, his understanding of it was, you know, in Virginia, Virginia did not leave until Lincoln decided that he was going to raise an army of 75,000 people to invade the South. And he says, I would be leading an army. They'd be invading my fellow countrymen because they all saw each other.
Starting point is 02:10:55 They all saw themselves, I should say, whether you're talking about North or South. They saw themselves as citizens of the state. They were citizens of Virginia or they were citizens of Pennsylvania or citizens of the state. They were citizens of Virginia, or they were citizens of Pennsylvania, or citizens of Illinois. They fought in those groups. Those were armies that were raised by the states, as they said. It went from the United States are to the United States is. It was that massive consolidation that was the big issue, the driving impetus, really,
Starting point is 02:11:28 of the Civil War, not slavery. And so, yeah, he refused to do that because he'd be leading people against his country. And so, again, the more we depend on one person to lead our nation, the more we slide from democracy into demagoguery. And that's absolutely true. Jim Denison, says presidential historian Alexis Coe, claims the New York Times our first president would hate President's Day. And he's right. They did not want the worship of individuals. He refused all these accolades. He had people who wanted to make him king. That was absolutely true. But he goes on to say, you know, what is happening with this? He goes, this is part of human nature. It's our human nature to seek and to trust those who can
Starting point is 02:12:13 do things for us that we cannot do for ourselves. Here's examples Jim Denison gives. He said, it starts when we're children and we depend on our parents and our older siblings. As we grow older, we come to appreciate soldiers who defend us and police who defend us. We become grateful to doctors whose medical expertise exceeds our own and supports our health. We learn to trust counselors who can advise us in areas of finance and relationships. Mentors, teachers whose wisdom can guide our path. Do you understand where we are? Is there something in you as I'm reading all these different things? We're talking about doctors who help us in ways that we can't with our health.
Starting point is 02:13:01 Is that really the way we think of doctors today? What about the military? Are they defending us? Are the police defending us? And in some cases, yes. But more often than not, what we're looking at is not necessarily the corruption of individuals, but the corruption of these institutions. These institutions are rotting from the top down like a dead fish. And so as we see, you know, our mentors, our teachers who are lying to us and deceiving us, we need to come back and understand that the slogan of the people who were founders of this country as they fought that Revolutionary War.
Starting point is 02:13:49 Their slogan was, no king but Jesus. And we need to look at no savior but Jesus. Don't look to people like Trump or Biden or DeSantis. None of these people are going to be your savior. And understand, many of them seek to be king. And the greatest danger to us is this consolidation of power. And that consolidation has moved
Starting point is 02:14:14 from the state to the national government, from the national government to the global governance. Unlike most revolutions, where the people rise against a real economic oppression, in our case here in Boston, we are fighting for purely an abstract principle. It is however not nearly so abstract as the young gentleman supposes.
Starting point is 02:14:37 The issue involved here is one of monopoly. Today, the British government will monopolize the sale of tea in our country. Tomorrow, it will be something else. ¶¶ Liberty. It's your move. You're listening to the david knight show all right let's talk a little bit about uh politics and the people who are presenting themselves to us as was it king or savior which is it maybe both uh We have Nikki Haley saying, if I was president, China never would have sent a spy balloon. Well, let me tell you what I think would have happened if she had been president. I think she would have gotten things into such a hornet's nest that they wouldn't have sent a balloon. They would have sent nuclear missiles.
Starting point is 02:16:22 That's what you're going to get with Nikki Haley. You're going to get war with war. She's all about one thing, war. This lady is unbelievably dangerous. Meanwhile, you got a large white balloon spotted near Hawaii, and they have been so successful in getting the public worked up about this
Starting point is 02:16:39 that people were freaking out about that in Hawaii. It's absolutely ridiculous. And what else is ridiculous is, as The Guardian points out, we have a gerontocracy, rule by old people, the exceptionally old political class that governs the United States. In the year of the octogenarian, American TV viewers can find Patrick Stewart, 82, boldly going into a new series of Star Trek, Picard. 80-year-old Harrison Ford starring in two shows plus a trailer for a fifth installment
Starting point is 02:17:16 of Indiana Jones. You got Joe Biden at 80, the oldest president in U.S. history. Or you got Mitch McConnell, who is 81 yesterday. So you got Nikki Haley, who, as Don Lemon was saying, was over the hill. Because she's 51. So now she's past her prime. You know, women, 20, 30, 40 years old. What does he know about women?
Starting point is 02:17:41 He didn't know anything about women. He certainly didn't know anything about his female co-hosts who basically tried to get him fired, came really close to it. It's good news because that means that nobody's going to continue. Nobody will be watching CNN as long as he's there and people like him. But he tried to sell the idea that Nikki Haley was too old. Now, that's not her problem. She's got a lot of problems, a lot of problems.
Starting point is 02:18:04 She is a warmonger using identity politics, get elected. And by the way, Nikki Haley came after it. I thought it was interesting that while Don Lemon is saying, you know, well, she's past her prime. She's 51. While he's doing that, Nikki Haley is criticizing Bernie, saying that we need to have a competency test because these people are so old. Bernie Sanders came out against her. Bernie Sanders, the guy they modeled the puppet on the Muppets after the angry old man up in the balcony.
Starting point is 02:18:34 I can't see that puppet without thinking of Bernie Sanders. He's not the model for them, but might as well have been. But yeah, so you've got Trump is 76 years old. And oh, by the way, you know what we're talking about Trump and I've got, um, uh, geesebusters geesebusters. Thank you very much, uh, for the tip on rumble. Uh, thank you. That's generous. I appreciate that. He said, David loved the new commercials. They're great. Can you do a few with Trump? As a matter of fact, we haven't put the visuals together yet, but we do have a commercial for Trump. He has something to say about this show, actually. And so that will
Starting point is 02:19:13 be coming. Not today, but that is in the works. He's already there. But Trump had something to say about education. You know, we just did the segment on education and on President's Day and how they have purged it and all. Well, Trump has a solution to education. You'll never guess what it is. We'll end the leftist takeover of school discipline and juvenile justice. Many of these carjackers and criminals are 13, 14, and 15 years old, I will order the education and justice departments to overhaul federal standards on disciplining minors. So when troubled youth are out and trolled, they're out on the streets and they're going wild, we will stop it. The consequences are swift,
Starting point is 02:20:00 certain, and strong, and they will know that. He's starting to slur his speech a little bit. Did you notice that? And of course, he is really sounding more and more all the time like the angry old man, get off my lawn. Get off my Capitol Hill lawn. You know, but of course, that's exactly what we need, isn't it? It's not enough that we have centralized education, corrupted it, and of course doing that, that the means of corruption was giving money to them, and then using that to control them. Just as I talked about, this is being proposed by Republicans in Florida,
Starting point is 02:20:38 DeSantis and others. DeSantis hasn't said anything about the bill yet. We'll see what he says. But in the name of helping homeschoolers, they want to give them money. But then, of course, on the other side of that money, you're going to have a choice navigator. That's what I say. We got choice lanes, which is what the Tennessee governor calls the toll roads. We're going to have, should have choice IDs, choice navigators, a choice vaccine mandate. All these cynical liars they are. Anyway, no, you know, you do it.
Starting point is 02:21:12 You corrupt these organizations by controlling them. And that's why I said all through 2020, as I was yelling and screaming about what Trump was doing with lockdown. Oh, boy, that had so many people. You don't know what's going on. It's not Trump. It's those governors, those Democrat governors, not even Republican governors who did everything that Trump and Fauci wanted them to do. It's those Democrat governors.
Starting point is 02:21:34 Well, they were all being paid by Trump. And I used to say, well, you know, the buck doesn't just stop with the president. But now the way we operate, it starts with the president. He financially rewards anything that he wants to have happen. And of course, you've seen this over and over again with Biden and everybody else and DeSantis. Everybody knows that if somebody's getting money from you, somebody's getting money from the federal government, somebody's getting money from the state government, and you want to get them to do something and you don't have the authority to order it, you say, well, I'm going to cut something, and you don't have the authority to order it,
Starting point is 02:22:05 you say, well, I'm going to cut your money if you don't do this. That's the way it's done. That's the way they get around all the constitutional prohibitions against what they're doing. They give out money, which they just print, and then say, we're going to take that money away from you. And so when you look at what has happened with education, that's the purpose of the
Starting point is 02:22:25 federal department of education created by Jimmy Carter. And it wasn't even two years old. And Ronald Reagan had a great statement about how it sought to overthrow what parents, the parents role and that type of thing. But it was very concerning. And we all knew it was a concern to to consolidate the financing of education into Washington. We knew that they would create a curriculum. We knew that they would manipulate people with the money,
Starting point is 02:22:52 using it to bribe and to blackmail. And so Ronald Reagan said, that's going to be the number one thing I do is get rid of it. Yet when he left, it was one and a half times the size. So now Trump decides that it's not enough that we consolidate financing of education, that we have the federal government decide the curriculum that's going to be taught to kids, but now we should have the Department of Justice in there, and we should federalize the discipline in the schools.
Starting point is 02:23:33 And just ask yourself what a harebrained, dangerous, authoritarian idea that is. That was never necessary. I don't know what schools, you know, I didn't go to the same type of schools that Trump did. You know, Trump went to private schools, private military school, other things like that. But in the run-of-the-mill government school that I attended, because homeschool was not an option at that time, the only person I knew, actually he's even a little bit older than me, was speechwriter for Barry Goldwater, Carl Hess, one of the founders of the Libertarian Party. His mother, when he was a kid, was always just one step ahead of Child Protective Services and the truancy officer.
Starting point is 02:24:16 She kept moving jurisdictions so she could keep her son out of the government school. He was the one who wrote the extremism and defense of liberty is no vice. Moderation and pursuit of justice is no virtue. He wrote that for Barry Goldwater. Barry Goldwater called him his Shakespeare. Where did he get that idea? Well, he probably wouldn't have written that if he had been run through the education mill it would have taken him a while to get that programming removed but um no the kind of schools that uh we had when i was growing up we didn't have shootings even though we had guns brought and we had target shooting uh but uh by students but we didn't have the kinds of school shootings that you have today
Starting point is 02:25:03 trump knows all that. Trump knows just like when he was saying you've got to get the shots. He knows that in his generation there was no MMR vaccine and people were not dying from measles. It truly was extremely, extremely rare if somebody died with complications from measles. In my generation when I was a child, all the parents were trying to get their kids to get measles at the earliest possible age and get it over with.
Starting point is 02:25:31 And so we all had measles, and we all had natural immunity, and it was the best thing that we could have. We didn't have autism. So now what Trump wants to do is to federalize this. Maybe we could have, kids are really bad, maybe we could have a public execution of them. Who knows? Lala Harris is disappointed to learn that the president in hospice
Starting point is 02:25:53 is Carter and not Joe. This is from Babylon Bee. She reportedly spent $200 on a flower arrangement for Biden's bedside. She says she now has no use for it. President Carter is 98 years old, which means that he's almost dead, she said. She explained upon hearing the news that that is 18 years older than President Biden.
Starting point is 02:26:12 That is old. Old people die, yeah. Old die starts with the letter D. Biden is still alive. Ha ha, she said. Well, again, la la, And, um, we'll be hearing from her in a second here. Uh, former white house doctor is equally surprised, uh, that Biden is still alive. He says his medical was a coverup. Uh, but, uh, yeah, we, I don't think they're
Starting point is 02:26:42 doing too good a job of, uh, covering it up. Uh, we all know exactly what is happening. And then finally we got Marjorie Taylor green calling for secession yet again. And I just have to say that she trends in the right direction, but she always winds winds up in the wrong place. As I pointed out yesterday, a long article, and if you didn't hear it yesterday, if you haven't seen it, you can find it at The New American. It's an article about a bill that has been introduced
Starting point is 02:27:13 in both the House and the Senate here in Tennessee calling for nullification. That is the rightful response. If you want to have a war, if you want to have a civil war, follow Marjorie Taylor Greene into secession. That's not the right way to approach this. You need to nullify it. You nullify it, the rule of law is on our side.
Starting point is 02:27:32 And if you start saying, well, we're just going to leave the union and that type of thing, you know what's going to happen at that point. They're going to portray you as the aggressor. Nullification, and even I didn't talk about it yesterday, the anti-commandeering laws that has been supported multiple times by the Supreme court. You cannot have the federal government force any state officials to assist them and doing anything, especially if it's an unconstitutional law that they don't agree with. And so the anti-commandeering aspect of it means that the federal government
Starting point is 02:28:07 cannot rely on the local sheriff to help them if the local sheriff does not want to do so. But beyond that, what Tennessee has done, which is an excellent idea, they went through and they set up a process for review at the state level. And I've said this for the longest time. We should not always send this to the judicial branch to look at the constitutionality of a law. They have the authority. They have brains.
Starting point is 02:28:36 They can read. They've got the constitution. They need to be doing this at the state level. States have powers that have not been delegated to the government. And there are restrictions in the Bill of Rights as to specific restrictions about what the government, the federal government, cannot do. And that means, broadly, everything that they haven't been given specifically. So in this Tennessee bill, they have said, we will review any bureaucratic regulation, any federal court decision, any presidential executive order, any legislation coming from Congress as to whether or not it's
Starting point is 02:29:15 going to be constitutional. And we will stop that at the state level. I really do hope that passes here in Tennessee, but whether it does or not, it is, and there's a similar bill that has been introduced in Texas. These bills are the template that you should be trying to get put into place in every state. We need to resist them in every way that we possibly can, because they're coming after us in every way that they possibly can. And again, state secession is not the way to go. Anti-commandeering, nullification is the rightful remedy. And you need to use your constitutional authority to do that. Yes, this is a country that was founded on the rights of self-government and secession. That's what the Declaration of Independence is about.
Starting point is 02:30:01 But way before you get to that level, you need to try nullification. If you don't have the guts to try nullification, you don't have the guts to succeed, lady. So just understand that about Marjorie Taylor Gray. She is, in my opinion, somebody who is angling for a position as vice president in the same way I think Carrie Lake is in the same way that I think Nikki Haley ultimately is. We'll be right back. holds liquid, right? Because basically you can't hold coffee with your hands, right? I'm a scat in the, but anyone tries to mug me, I'm be ready for it. You dog-faced pony soldier.
Starting point is 02:30:56 They say the mug can help patriots drink coffee, then save the world. This could be bad for us. Save the world? But we own the world. These could be bad for us. Save the world? But we owe the world. These people, they're supporting free speech with every month they buy. Come on. These people, I tell you, will anyway. You're listening to The David Knight Show.
Starting point is 02:31:25 And it is microwavable and dishwasher safe. Not the show, but the coffee mug here. And it will actually hold all kinds of liquids. Coffee is great, but you can put all kinds of things in it. While we were talking about Lala Harris, let's talk about the brain-dead remnant of our society here that has made it its work to try to get rid of everything in our culture society, not just the statues and the markers to honor people that have done honorable things. That doesn't mean that they're absolutely perfect.
Starting point is 02:32:03 It means that they did some things that are worthy of remembering, some good things that moved our society along in a positive way. So it doesn't mean that they're perfect. You can find something bad about anybody, but that's not these people who are pulling down everything. That's not their motivation. Their motivation is to uproot our society. And so you see this happening everywhere.
Starting point is 02:32:26 The large corporations, the institutions have all been taken over by these types of people. Penguin Books is a good example of this. And when I saw that they were changing the kids' stories from, I never read them, quite frankly. I'm familiar vaguely with some of the movies. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, they made Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory or something like that again I never paid much attention to the movie or to the book, never read it, James and the Giant Peach
Starting point is 02:32:51 and Matilda and some things like that and so the company that's publishing his stuff, Penguin Books is going in and editing it because he made some fat jokes or something like that and when I saw that I thought, has Penguin Books been taken over by Oswald Cobblepot from Batman? I mean, it sounds like the type of thing a Batman villain would do, right?
Starting point is 02:33:13 It's kind of stupid and silly, the Batman from the 60s that I remember. Kind of stupid and silly, you know. I've got the perfect thing, perfect crime here. I'll go in and mess with their literature here. And so with that in mind, a national review had some interesting ways of how they could continue this trend with some other classics. Again, the penguin books wants to remove any language related to weight,
Starting point is 02:33:42 mental health, violence, gender, race. All that has been cut and rewritten. The work is being done in conjunction with a group that calls itself Inclusive Minds. Don't you love how these people call themselves inclusive, and yet they seek to exclude everything that they don't like in any way possible?
Starting point is 02:34:01 They say they're all about diversity when they demand conformity. All the rest of this stuff. Anyway, Inclusive Minds describes itself as a collective for people who are passionate about inclusion and accessibility in children's literature. This is why they're coming in with clippers and cutting stuff out and pasting things back in. So National Review had fun with this. They said, well, let's think about how we could apply these same ideas and tactics to other classic literature, like Pride and Prejudice, for example, and how Darcy's impression of Elizabeth would change in chapter 6. And so they say in the original, it says, Mr. Darcy had at first scarcely allowed her to be pretty.
Starting point is 02:34:53 Oh, they would change it to Mr. Darcy scarcely allowed her to be nice. He had looked at her without admiration. Now, you would change that to he looked at her without Respectability at the ball And when they next met he looked at her Only to criticize No you'd have to change that to He looked at her only to With the best of intentions
Starting point is 02:35:15 But no sooner had he made it clear to himself and his friends That she Had hardly a good feature In her face Now you'd have to say he noticed nothing about her face. But he began to find that it was rendered uncommonly intelligent. No, you'd have to just say above average. By the beautiful expression of her dark eyes.
Starting point is 02:35:38 No, nondescript, nondescript. To this discovery succeeded some others equally mortifying, though he had detected with a critical eye more than one failure of perfect symmetry in her form. We don't want to talk about her form. Just say he had detected some things about her. He was, quote, forced to acknowledge her figure. No, he had to acknowledge her personality. We don't want to talk about the lack of perfect symmetry, but he did like her figure. No, he had to acknowledge her personality. We don't want to talk about
Starting point is 02:36:05 the lack of perfect symmetry, but he did like her figure. No, he noticed some things about her. He liked her personality. In spite of his asserting that her manners were not those of a fashionable world, he was caught by their easy playfulness. Of this, she was perfectly unaware. To her, he was the only man, strike that, the only person, who made himself agreeable nowhere, and who had not thought her handsome enough to dance with. Strike that, available to dance with. And then, of course, you would have to go to Moby Dick, which I imagine these people who are going back to edit the classics, that would be number one on their list. I mean, we're talking about the great white male, right?
Starting point is 02:36:54 Moby Dick. And so you would have to get rid of all references to the whiteness of the whale. What the white whale was to Ahab, strike that, make it pale. It even rhymes, the pale whale, had been hinted at. What at times he was to me as yet remains unsaid. Aside from those more obvious considerations
Starting point is 02:37:17 touching Moby Dick, no, the marine mammal, which could not but occasionally awaken in any man. No, change that to woman or person of any gender's soul. No, change the soul to feelings. You get the idea. It can go on and on. They have fun with Moby Dick.
Starting point is 02:37:37 They have fun with Richard III. The royal throne of kings. Strike that, monarchs. That's too sexist, right? This sceptered aisle, this earth of majesty, this seat of Mars. No, you'd have to ask, add Venus, right? As well for equality, um, on and on. But that is not, uh, that is not unusual.
Starting point is 02:38:02 I mean, these people have come after Tolkien and everyone else. And so National Review also says, well, when are they going to come after P.G. Wodehouse? Maybe you don't know who P.G. Wodehouse is, but Jeeves and Wooster, you know, it's been done in many different ways. There was with John Gielgud and Dudley Moore. Arthur was a take on Jeeves and Wooster. But it has been done
Starting point is 02:38:30 in many different ways. And it's one of the audio books that we used to enjoy listening to as family. I had a whole series that we listened to. My sons know it inside and out just like they do
Starting point is 02:38:42 The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. I still listen to it sometimes. Yeah. Tell just something about our. I still listen to it sometimes. Tell just something about our family. Anyway, so to give you an idea of one of the things that was removed from Dahl's work, Roald Dahl, Matilda, she wore heavy makeup and had one of those unfortunate bulging figures where the flesh appears to be strapped in all around the body to prevent it from falling out. That's what he had to say.
Starting point is 02:39:09 They said, well, you know, P.Gg wodehouse does much better insults than that for example he was a tubby little chap who looked as if he'd been poured into his clothes and had forgotten to say when uh another one the lunches of 57 years had caused his chest to slip down to the mezzanine floor. But he also wrote about people who just looked peculiar. His chin gave up the struggle about halfway down, and he didn't appear to have any eyelashes. A mild, furtive, sheepish sort of blighter, in short. He talks about Gussie Finknottle, one of his favorite characters. It says many an experienced undertaker would have been deceived by his appearance and would have started embalming on site. He looked like a vulture dissatisfied with its breakfast corpse.
Starting point is 02:40:04 And another one where he insults somebody's intelligence. He had just about enough intelligence to open his mouth when he wanted to eat, but certainly no more. So when are these Penguin books going to come after that? So, you know, but when you look at their list that they want to go after, Shakespeare, Orwell, Tolkien, of course, Brave New World. And as many people pointed out, these things that they say are key texts for white supremacists, they said, no, actually, these are anti-authoritarian texts, right? You want to purge somebody who is pointing out this science fiction dystopia. Well, maybe if you are anti-totalitarian, those two negatives cancel out and you're just totalitarian. You want to purge the language because you like this kind of society
Starting point is 02:40:56 that's being criticized by Orwell in 1984. They said several of the UK's most respected TV shows, movies, and works of literature have been included in a list of works as potentially encouraging far-right sympathies. Oh, it's a government-led program called PREVENT, a counterterrorism program. You know, one thing I did not see on this list, maybe it just wasn't reported, was Fahrenheit 451.
Starting point is 02:41:30 I mean, Fahrenheit 451 was all about that. We don't want people getting these ideas. We don't want them dissatisfied with our authoritarian society here, our totalitarian society. And so they have put on the list as warning signs that could fuel extremism, the entire works of William Shakespeare, Chaucer.
Starting point is 02:41:52 I can understand why they wouldn't like Chaucer. Chaucer, famous for the Canterbury Tales. That is about people traveling. They don't want anybody traveling. You shouldn't do a pilgrimage even to the other side of your 15-minute city. Milton, well, you know, he talked about Paradise Lost. So I guess we don't want to talk about that because Orwell and Huxley, who's also on the list, show how paradise can be stolen. Edmund Burke, a conservative, Rudyard Kipling, who, you know, Rudyard Kipling,
Starting point is 02:42:29 who wrote stories about the British Empire, the white man's burden, and how even, my favorite example of his stuff was The Man Who Would Be King. Great metaphor for the British Empire. It begins with two rascals and scoundrels who decide they're going to go in and exploit this area and rip these people off seven ways to Sunday. And they get in there, and once they get in power,
Starting point is 02:42:57 they start getting these noble ideas of doing good for the people. And that's when the people turn on them. That was his idea. That's how he saw the British empire. Uh, they also put in there, uh, yes, minister.
Starting point is 02:43:11 Remember that we've watched that. That's really funny. That's a, a political satire. Of course, I can understand that they do not want people laughing at their politicians. And of course, uh,
Starting point is 02:43:21 yes, minister does invite ridicule of politicians. Think of it, which I'm not familiar with, the 1955 epic war film, The Dam Busters. Did you ever see that? Did we ever show that to you? We had that film in our libraries at the video stores. I really enjoyed that film. It was a true story about how the British Army needed to take out this industrial area in World War II,
Starting point is 02:43:46 this industrial area in Germany, the manufacturing base there. And they decided the most effective way to do it would be to bust a dam. It might be providing the hydroelectric power for it, but it would also flood that area. But how to do it? They had tried to bomb it and they did not have bombs. Thanks for pulling that up. They did not have bombs that had the kind of accuracy that they needed. Furthermore, the water pressure and other things like that would kind of shield the dam from a bomb that didn't have a direct hit on the dam. And so what the movie is about is an ingenious idea to blow the dam up.
Starting point is 02:44:33 And so the idea was that they would drop this round bomb that would skip across the water like a stone until it got to the wall. It would hit the wall and then roll down the wall and right up against the wall. It's rolling down and it explodes after it gets to a certain depth and destroys the dam that way because then it magnified the hydraulic pressure. It was right up against the wall and they had to do it by skipping it across, hitting the wall, it comes down, blows up, takes out the dam, and it actually worked. And so the film is a great idea of the ingenuity
Starting point is 02:45:11 and, of course, the heroism of the people who had to carry this thing out, how they practice it and all the rest of the stuff. Somehow, this 1955 war film, The Dam Busters, is hated by these authoritarian totalitarianists. Shakespeare, possible red flags of extremism, they said. Works of fiction were key texts for white nationalists and supremacists. And of course, they also include Tolkien and The Lord of the Rings. These are the people who identify with Sour Man and Sauron, right?
Starting point is 02:45:41 And the orcs. They want to get rid of Tolkien. A number of books were singled out of the possession or reading of which could point to severe wrong think and therefore potential radicalization. It seems that the organization Prevent has a research information and communications unit. They said, as Spectator in the UK pointed out,
Starting point is 02:46:06 said they're so far off track that it believes that books that identify the problem, as Orwell did, are set up as, are part of the problem. No, it's just that these people are anti-totalitarian. They are totalitarians. One of the ones that they took out was House of Cards, for example. And, of course, we all know that House of Cards is not right-wing politics.
Starting point is 02:46:31 This is what they're saying, right-wing, right? These things could make somebody become a right-winger. Andrew Davies, who was a screenwriter for House of Cards, says this almost seems like a joke. Except these people don't make jokes, and they censor comedians as well. They hate ridicule because, as Saul Alinsky said in one of his rules, it is the most powerful weapon. So they hate sarcasm. They hate ridicule.
Starting point is 02:46:55 They hate jokes. But they are jokes. It seems like a joke. He said House of Cards is actually a satirical view of right wing politics. This includes this list includes more or less the entire classical canon of literature and some of the very best British television programs ever made. This is an organization that's getting paid by the British Conservative government. What do the Conservatives in Britain want to conserve?
Starting point is 02:47:25 They don't even want to conserve Shakespeare. I mean, this is all, again, a move, a radical move to uproot our society in every way possible. And to dumb us down into this Mao type of environment, we're living in micro apartments and all wearing pajamas like they did under Mao. 49 million pounds a year given to this organization by the British conservatives. And they said it applied a double standard. You're focusing too much on the far right, and you're not focusing enough on Islamicists. And so the home office spokesman who you know these people the british conservatives who are paying 49 million pounds for these people the home secretary made
Starting point is 02:48:13 it clear that prevent will now ensure that it focuses on the key threat of islamist terrorists as well so rather than having free speech rather than letting people read what they want to. No, they will equally censor the Islamicists as well. They'll come after their culture as well. Home Secretary Suella Braverman said, Prevent has shown cultural timidity and an institutional hesitancy to tackle Islamism for fear of the charge of Islamophobia. Prevent's focus must be solely on security, not on political correctness.
Starting point is 02:48:52 Yes, equality and slavery. Equality and censorship. This is what the conservatives in the UK are offering you. You know, quite frankly, when we look at some of these schemes coming out, as I mentioned it, you know, I am not in favor of drug prohibition. I'm not in favor of drugs. These are not problems that can be solved with government prohibition and government censorship.
Starting point is 02:49:16 50 years has shown us that. If we didn't learn it in 10 years of alcohol prohibition, we now should have learned it after 50 years of drug prohibition that it doesn't work we need to have some solutions to drug addiction has become a big problem in our society but the solution is spiritual it's not law enforcement they don't have the tools to deal with this we have weapons that are mighty they don't't. They can't deal with it. All it does is corrupt our society. And so when you look at things that are being floated out there by Josh Hawley and by other people to say, we don't like pornography that's rampant on the Internet and we don't like it being shown to kids, take a look at what's being done in your government-funded schools, first of all. Cast out the log that is in your own school before you start coming
Starting point is 02:50:08 after the spec that's on the internet. You're running these institutions. If you can't even clean up your own house, what are you going to do to clean up the internet? Oh, we're going to restrict things now on the internet based on your ID. You're going to have to produce an ID. You know where that leads, don't you? That's not a solution. That's the moving of the Overton window to another area, just as we were talking about earlier, as Travis was saying. This whole idea that they're going to grant us permission to do this or that.
Starting point is 02:50:36 You know, it's like a driver's license. Well, we're going to give you a pornography license, but we have to have your identification before you can use the Internet. It's one of the things I have a problem with Jordan Peterson. He's very angry at his critics who can criticize him anonymously. Look, I get it. I don't like anonymous trolls either. They don't have any skin in the game. And so they can sit over there on the sidelines and throw ad hominem attacks at you. But look, it's not a solution to say we've got to get rid of anonymity on the Internet. And that's not a solution to pornography either.
Starting point is 02:51:14 You know, you can't solve a spiritual issue by putting out a government ID program. How absurd that is. These people offering this stuff ought to be laughed off the stage by fellow conservatives. So again, even the Lord of the Rings is part of a UK counterterrorism. I actually have a quote from J.R.R. Tolkien up if you want to read that. Yeah, good. Okay, so there's J.R.R. Tolkien.
Starting point is 02:51:41 I look east, west, north, south. I do not see Sauron, but I see that Saruman has many descendants. We hobbits have against them no magic weapons. Yet, my gentle hobbits, I give you this toast. To the hobbits, may they outlast the Sarumans and see spring again in the trees. Yeah. That is such a great analogy, the Lord of the Rings. You know, here we are, as I mentioned last week, Eric Schmidt and other people have put together
Starting point is 02:52:13 a company to manipulate us, named it after the class of wizards that J.R.R. Tolkien had. I forget the name of it was, but, you know, there was in his mythology, you know, the wizards like Sauron. There was the Maiar. What's that? Sauron and Gondor from Maiar, I believe. I thought it was a different word. Anyway. Palantir, of course.
Starting point is 02:52:41 Yeah, Palantir is that other data mining company named it after that. But they were basically kind of these angelic beings below and inferior to God who came to Earth to intervene in a positive way in the affairs of man. And, of course, our man goes to the dark side. So that was in his mythology. And that's what Eric Schmidt renamed his organization or named his organization to um bring artificial intelligence and silicon modeling to weapons of mass destruction being controlled by artificial intelligence yeah that's why i spent some time on being chat last week. You really want something like that, uh, running, uh, autonomous killing machines. Uh, but again, you know, uh, Huxley Orwell token, all of them, uh, being attacked in
Starting point is 02:53:36 the UK because this is about taking away the foundations of our society. The ADL, meanwhile, the anti-defamation league, one of the most racist, hateful organizations, uh, thriving on labeling other people as racist and hateful. Uh, they have now come up just like the Southern poverty law center. They now have advocated deep platforming at the website level.
Starting point is 02:54:04 Think about all the many different ways that they've talked about censorship. You know, kick us off of social media, kick us off of the digital public square. Then the next thing is we want to come for people at the website level, take out entire websites. And you've got Microsoft, meanwhile, with their CCPA, the Chinese Communist Party of America. No, actually it stands for the Coalition for Content Provenance and Authentication.
Starting point is 02:54:36 Providence meaning who created this, and then authentication meaning we're going to shut this down if we don't like who created this. And so Microsoft put together a coalition of some of these fake establishment media companies like the BBC, the New York Times, and then they will identify the people that they don't like and the information that they don't like, and then they will hand this off to this tech collaboration that Microsoft has put together of people who create computer hardware, CPUs like Intel, ARM, architecture, and the company, and then the people that you use, the software that you use to create, whether it is a text document, something you've
Starting point is 02:55:22 written, or whether it is a meme, or whether it is audio, or whether it is audio and video. And using these software creation companies and the CPU companies, they will attach an identifier there, identifying David Knight, for example, and then making sure that David Knight can't upload that anywhere. After the ADL gets its wish to shut down the DavidKnightShow.com. This is the way this thing is going to roll out. And in case you don't understand how serious this is, the National Science Foundation has now identified a serious threat. They're going to spend millions of dollars combating, wait for it, misinformation.
Starting point is 02:56:05 They say this is a new phenomenon with a potential for vast harm. Let me tell you what the new phenomenon is. The new phenomenon is that we've got a government that is prohibited from censorship now using these bureaucracies as well as corporations and non-governmental organizations using that to do censorship. They are the threat. They are the serious threat. Nearly $40 million has been granted to misinformation-related projects
Starting point is 02:56:35 since the start of the Biden administration, just like we see this Prevent thing in the UK, 49 million pounds. Here we've got a 40 million, and that's just the tip of the iceberg. And these people are just getting warmed up. They, we got a 40 million. And that's just the tip of the iceberg. And that's these people just getting warmed up. They're just getting started on this. On Rumble, the original Karen says, my David Knight mug just arrived in the mail. Fast shipping.
Starting point is 02:56:57 Love it. Thanks for the stickers and the extra pin too. Well, I'm glad you like it. That's great. I appreciate the support folks and the products that you buy at the place also we do appreciate your voluntary support and i'll just say before i've got more to say here before we run out of time but since i stopped with this um we are now up to just under
Starting point is 02:57:18 75 so i appreciate uh on the gas gauge so i I appreciate the support that everybody's given us. Those donations are really key. And this is a voluntarily supported show. And we really do appreciate how you have stood by us. It truly is amazing to see how this has gone for now two years and a little bit longer than that. So thank you very much for your support. We have more information coming out from Twitter about more senators demanding censorship of people that they don't like. And as Matt Taibbi points out, everybody talked about Trump saying that he wanted to censor one individual. Yes, it was reprehensible. But you've got Angus King, a senator, who would submit had more than 300 Twitter accounts that he wanted to shut down,
Starting point is 02:58:15 including Zero Hedge. He reported the accounts as suspicious for posting content like, quote, I'm being followed by rival Eric Brakey, or mentioning immigration, or saying, Rand Paul visit, excitement. And so because of that, he copies that and sends it to the deputized state at Twitter and says, get rid of this. So as Matt Taibbi says, look, if a president freaking out about one tweet
Starting point is 02:58:44 or one tweeter is news, surely a senator thinking on over 300 of his constituents should be a story. But the mainstream media has completely ignored that, just like they ignored the Adam Schiff stories about censorship and all the rest of this. It truly is amazing to see where we are at this point in time. And it is truly amazing to see how this is all happening publicly and out in the open without anybody pushing back on it. We are almost out of time. But before we go, I think I've got time to play one clip for you.
Starting point is 02:59:24 And that would be this information about what vaccines have been doing to kids. This is Jeffrey Jackson, who has been on this beat for a very long time. Excellent reporter working with Del Bigtree. Listen to what he breaks down. We're getting these milquetoast studies. They're whitewashing the studies. They're excluding kids, less than two well child visits. But as it turns out, other people have independent doctors, independent scientists, pediatricians are doing
Starting point is 02:59:51 the studies. And this is what we found that same year, 2017, we have Anthony Mawson has done this study. It was a pilot comparative study of the health of unvaccinated and unvaccinated six to 12 year old children. So these were about over 600 homeschool kids. They asked their parents to complete an anonymous questionnaire and they looked at the questions, pregnancy related factors, birth history, vaccination, vaccination schedule, physician diagnosis of illnesses and so on and so forth. And this is what they found. This is their results. Vaccinated children were significantly more. Yeah, let's freeze it right there because we're going to run out of time. I want you to hear this. I'll just summarize it. Allergic rhinitis, vaccinated 10.4%, unvaccinated 0.4%. Other allergies, 22.2% for the vaccinated. For the unvaccinated, 6.9, three times.
Starting point is 03:00:48 Eczema, 9.5% versus 3.6, again, about three times. You know, by the way, when you look at allergic rhinitis, that is about 21 times that you're looking at. Learning disabilities, ADHD or ASD, 10% versus 3%. Any chronic illness, 44% versus 25%. This was done in 2017. This is before the COVID-9-11 warp speed vaccines. This is your run-of-the-mill stuff that has been there for a long time, giving kids autism.
Starting point is 03:01:20 This is the stuff that Rand Paul lectured, pointed an angry finger at Fauci and said, you're making these people vaccine hesitant. Well, you better be vaccine hesitant. The David Knight Show is a critical thinking super spreader. If you've been exposed to logic by listening to The David Knight Show, please do your part and try not to spread it. Financial support or simply telling others about the show causes this dangerous information to spread farther.
Starting point is 03:02:09 People have to trust me. I mean, trust the science. Wear your mask. Take your vaccine. Don't ask questions. Using free speech to free minds. It's the David Knight Show.

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