The David Knight Show - 27Jan23 David Knight Show
Episode Date: January 27, 2023OUTLINE of today's show with TIMECODES(Beginning) FDIC Says Public Would Panic If Truth Were Known: FDIC caught talking bank runs, bail-in, financial crash(11:24) Davos: You Have No RIGHT To Own A Car...: They said the quiet part aloud.(19:22) mRNA Jabs for EVERY Disease, Nanobots to Kill Disease: At least 16 companies are developing nanobots to physically attack or implant chemicals into what they identify as pathogens — what could possibly go wrong?(25:58) What's Turning the Frogs Clear?: They have special "superpowers" say "scientists" with blood(32:18) Zelensky: Lifestyles of the Rich & Corrupt: Mr. Z's wife spent $42,000 per hour shopping in Paris. It's just the latest in corruption red flags like luxury villas highlighted in the Pandora Papers.(53:20) USMA West Point Captured by CRT Marxists: Even Lincoln is being purged.(01:04:34) SpayVac: Smoking Gun for Vax as Human Depopulation?: The company says it's for "humane population control" but if you look at this company, its vaccine and its connection to Pfizer, maybe they mean "human population control".(01:22:29) Forget SSRI "Murder/Suicide Pills" — Here's How to Handle Depression: We were designed for companionship, family, society. But that's only part of what we're missing. New study shows the simple thing we're missing.(01:33:30) Farmer Gives You The Truth About Egg Shortage: A British farmer took to TikTok to expose the real reason egg shortages are hitting England and it's not because of avian flu.(01:43:25) Soaring Eggs Prices Are NOT About Avian Flu: Like the "baby food crisis", it's a tale of consolidation, monopoly and government collusion. As we've seen the FDA is useless. Farmers call upon the FTC to do something. Will they?- (02:01:22) De-Digitizing Your Car (and Life): Eric Peters, EPautos.com, joins. Simplifying your life for independence and REAL sustainability and durability.Find 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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Come on, come on, yes, yes, come on.
At this year's Cheltenham, glory rests in the lap of the gods.
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Yes, at the beginning of the program, I think 2023 is going to be the year of CBDC.
And some very troubling things have come out about the financial system in general.
But I want to begin with this article from Zero Hedge.
These are the security features of American money.
In 1739, Benjamin Franklin sought to tackle the issue of counterfeit money in America.
And a visual capitalist site has broken down a graphic talking about all the different security measures that are on a $100 bill.
And so they've got all kinds of stuff.
They've got watermarks.
Oh, maybe Steve Pachinik was right, huh?
Maybe they're quantum as well.
Who knows?
They've got a security thread.
They've got 3D ribbons.
Hey, you know, 3D chess, 3D ribbons.
No, it's not.
These are all things to stop counterfeiting.
Of course, the simplest thing that they've had for the longest time is a serial number.
But they also have something that's called a Euryon constellation.
It's a star-like grouping of yellow rings near the serial number,
only detectable by imaging software.
Then they also have ink that changes color if you look at it from different angles
because it's got little metallic flakes in it.
They also have on the $100 bill a Liberty Bell image using that ink.
They have micro-printing that allows, again, for them to verify whether
this bill is genuine or not, but you can't tell. It can't be seen by the naked eye. It can't be
scanned by photocopiers, but it has USA 100 written invisibly in multiple places, only viewable by special equipment.
They have something called intaglio printing.
Rather than regular ink that is pressed onto a paper,
intaglio printing uses magnetic ink,
and every different bill value has a unique magnetic signature.
They've woven security threads and 3D ribbons throughout the paper. The paper itself
is special. They have all these different things. Have you noticed something that is
central about all this stuff? Does it protect you? Does it validate that this is a genuine bill,
that it has real purchasing power? Of course not. This is all to protect the government from counterfeiters.
But the biggest counterfeiter of all is the government.
The government is creating fiat currency out of nothing.
And yet they're moving people away from cash very rapidly.
A Pew Research Center found that while it is dwindling in its share of use among the population, 58% of people still use cash for some or all of their weekly purchases.
That's down from 70% just four years ago.
It's dropped from 70% to 58%.
Or if you go back seven years ago, it was at 75% of people used cash, some on a weekly basis.
Now it's down to 58%.
So when we talk about security from our standpoint, we would typically think about, I don't know, the FDIC, for example.
You know, we put this money in the bank and it's supposed to be insured. And yet we've had some very troubling statements made by the FDIC in meetings.
Very, very long meeting, over three hours long.
And again, this is the way they get away with stuff.
I would go back and I would look at asymmetric warfare meetings from the military brass and
stuff and you just, you put to sleep before you get to anything of any value.
But it was difficult.
If you got through it, you could find some nuggets.
And so Wall Street, silver, I guess, suffered through this and pulled out a couple of cuts.
And listen to what they say about not alarming the public about how shaky our financial system is.
It should be accessible when people need to know,
but I don't think you have much hope of reaching a public that doesn't have a professional need to know.
I completely agree with that.
I almost think you'd scare the public if you put this out.
Like, why are they telling me this?
Should I be concerned about my bank?
Like, my insurance company doesn't tell me what they're doing with my assets
if they just assume they're going to pay my claim.
I think you've got to think of the unintended consequences
of taking a public that has more full faith and confidence
in the banking system than maybe people in this room do.
We want them to have full faith and confidence in the banking system. They people in this room do, that we want them to have full faith
and confidence in the banking system.
They know the FDIC insurance is there.
They know it works.
They put their money in.
They're going to get their money out.
So there's a select crowd of people that are in the institutional side.
And if they want to understand this, they're going to find a way to understand this.
There's a bunch of law firms representing this room.
There's a bunch of people that will charge them by the hour a lot of money to explain this all
to them. And it's fine.
I don't have a problem with that.
And they all have huge staffs. But I
would be careful about the unintended
consequences of starting to blast too
much of this out in the general public.
Okay.
Now, that was a meeting that happened in November.
And you heard him say,
the general public has more confidence in the banking system than the people in this room do. Who are the people in that room? Now that was a meeting that happened in November and you heard him say, uh,
general public has more confidence in the banking system than the people in
this room.
Who are the people in that room?
Those are the people who are insuring the banks.
We don't want the,
if they knew what we know,
uh,
they'd be,
we might start a panic.
As a matter of fact,
they talk about bank runs next.
I wondered whether there are some market tests of whether you're being heard.
And I think about TLAC.
So TLAC should spread, should respond to good and bad news about the institutions.
And it's really important.
I mean, it's a little bit conflicted, right?
I mean, it's important that people understand they can be bailed in, but you don't want a huge run on the institution.
I mean, they're going to be.
And it could be an early warning signal to the FDIC
and the primary regulators when these things happen. And there may be
some other prices, this is similar to what Jay was saying,
in the market that you can tell whether people understand
who's going to be protected, who isn't going to be protected.
It would be, I think, an interesting study to look at the evolution of market prices
in a situation like March of 2020, for example, and see whether people
understood what might happen
so you understand he says um yeah we um you don't want a big run on the institutions
and there's going to be you heard him say that and talking about uh people need to understand
they might be bailed in you understand a bailout is when you get in trouble and they get you out of it.
Bail-in is when they create the problem and they suck you into it, right?
They suck the money out of your account.
That's what they're talking about.
Zero Hedge has an article from Alistair MacLeod about gold in 2023.
He said gold should be viewed from a monetary and an economic perspective.
It is gold whose purchasing power is stable.
That of fiat currencies is not stable.
Analysts who see gold as an investment producing a return in national currencies have made
a fundamental error.
And that's what I've talked about over and over again.
You know, we look at the fluctuating price of gold.
Well, gold is, you know, pretty much standard.
And he makes this case.
He says, if you go back and you price commodities or you price oil or you price some other things,
you price them in gold, it, you know, hasn't really changed that much.
But with the dollar amounts, it's gone all over the place.
He said, not only that, but when you look at what the central banks have,
and you look at what the bank, the money that is there, just like you heard the FDIC talking about
that. Well, you know, we may have to, we may lose that. People don't realize that, you know,
we may not be able to bail all that stuff out. He says, well, you know, a central bank's balance
sheet, not just your retail account at a bank that is supposed to be insured,
but the central bank's account is a liability.
Under any definition, these are the characteristics of credit
and having to match debt obligations.
Macro economists, the people who tell you that, you know, you got to balance things
if you're talking about your own personal family's checkbook, but you know, when you
got something that's really big, you don't have to worry about it.
Right.
Yeah.
Just Keynesians and all the rest of the people.
It's just, this is kind of idea, you know, from, uh, Looney Tunes that, you know, it's
only the small rocks that are going to crush you.
You know, the really big ones, they float.
Uh,
but macro economists have an explanation for why it is that they don't have an explanation for why it is that central banks continue to hoard massive
quantities of gold and their reserves.
Well,
it's because they know there's nothing backing up any of this stuff.
And at some point,
uh,
you know, people are, uh, you know,
people are going to,
you know,
the Looney Tunes character is going to realize he's been running on thin air
for a long time.
He's going to look down and see the ground and go straight down.
Uh,
as illustrated this year,
when the Western Alliance led by America,
emasculated the Russian central bank of its currency reserves with a little
more than a stroke of a pen.
This is the other side of proof that the legal distinction
between money and credit remains,
despite any statist attempts to redefine currency as money.
That can be reneged upon, further confirms that it's a credit status.
And again, if they can do this to an entire nation,
would Biden do it to you?
Of course he would. At this year's Cheltenham, glory rests in the lap of the gods.
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We were all going to starve, so we had to prepare for that.
No, nobody believed Paul Ehrlich then.
Nobody.
Well, I had a good friend who did.
I got to say that.
That was something I always went back and forth with.
But where are we today?
You know, 1970, they were imposing their first Earth Day.
We've got to save the planet.
We've got to ban all the cars.
Well, we now have the World Economic Forum and Klaus Schwab saying,
people have no right to own their own cars.
Quote, you can walk or you can share, but we'll own everything.
You'll have nothing, especially a car.
You have no right to anything, says this guy, Klaus Schwab.
When's he going to get a punch in the nose?
He's got a plan to enslave all of us, to impoverish all of us.
Somebody needs to reset that plan.
So, yeah, forget about the price of gas.
This little man has demands And says you have no rights
Who elected you?
It is a vast conspiracy
And he is at the center of it
He is the front man right now
I would say even more so than Bill Gates
Klaus Schwab has declared that people have no right to own their own car.
Instead, you can walk or share.
That's what he said.
Far too many people own their own vehicles,
and this situation must be corrected by pricing us out of the market.
That is what this is all about.
And by making things extremely rare, right?
Not only are electric vehicles going to be more expensive, because you, why?
Because you got too many people chasing too few goods.
They don't have the raw materials to make all of these cars.
That's the bottleneck.
There are automobile manufacturing plants to make electric vehicles and battery manufacturing plants that are springing up all over the place.
But where are you going to get the cobalt?
The cobalt is controlled by the Democratic Republic of Congo, which is not too democratic, actually.
It's more like our Democrat Party.
And they control cobalt.
And they're looking at ways to extend their control.
Who's number two in cobalt, and they're looking at ways to extend their control. Who's number two in cobalt?
Russia.
Where are we going to get the minerals for all this stuff?
Even if we didn't have issues with the political issues, there's not sufficient known resources
to do all of this stuff.
It's not just cobalt.
It's other things like nickel and other things like that.
We can build all the factories that we want, but we can't build these batteries and electric cars without the minerals that
they don't know where they are.
Lithium,
same story with lithium for the lithium batteries.
And so that's going to price us out of the market.
They're going to starve us for resources by their centrally controlled electric
grid.
And Biden is doing everything he can to make this happen as quickly as he can.
Well, this next week or so, you're going to have thousands of private jets flying into
Davos, Switzerland for the World Economic Forum, annual forum that happens in January.
They're out there telling you that you have no right to a car.
They will have everything.
You'll have nothing.
Are we really going to stand still for this?
Are we really going to quietly go into this dark age?
I just find it hard to believe.
Where do we find the will and the public awareness to stand up to this?
Yes, people are going to eventually realize what is happening
as they're starting to wake up about the vaccines,
but we could wait too long for this.
Communal sharing of cars must become a part of the, quote, circular approach, unquote,
in order to reduce global demand for precious metals and for fossil fuels.
So now Davos is instructing their young global leaders that are embedded everywhere around
the world. And again, that may include people like this guy, you know, Kevin McCarthy.
Yeah, he's on their website.
That's his picture.
They're on the World Economic Forum website.
But far too many people own private vehicles,
and they've got to be priced out of the market.
To quote the World Economic Forum,
the average car or van in England is driven just 4% of the market. To quote the World Economic Forum, the average car or van in England is driven just 4% of the time.
This means that people in developed countries,
including the United States,
should not have the right to own their own car,
comments News Punch.
But going back to the World Economic Forum,
they said car sharing platforms such as Get Around and Blue SG,
these would be car sharing platforms in the UK.
Have already seized the opportunity to offer vehicles where you pay per hour used.
That's what Eric Peters and I have been saying for the longest time.
The automobile companies are fine with this because they like to, you know,
it's more profitable for them to lease you a car than it is for them to sell you a car.
And it's more profitable for them to sell you a car.
And it's more profitable for them to rent it to you by the hour than it is for them to lease it to you.
They just want to make sure that they're one or two,
that the either one or two or three companies that are going to be allowed
to have cars to lease out there.
This is the way the government takes over individual automobiles
because if they own all public transportation they control you they control your every movement
you're in prison that's why mobility is so fundamental to all of this but the most
fundamental thing is speech the end of private ownership is essential they say according to the
world economic forum uh quote a design process that focuses on fulfilling the underlying
need instead of designing for product purchasing is fundamental to this transition.
This is the mindset needed to redesign cities, to reduce
private vehicles. Klaus Schwab is claiming current prices
are severely underpriced. He said, first,
leading democracies should agree to end the underpricing of fossil fuels,
except exactly the opposite is happening.
They're adding all kinds of penalties and taxes and carbon taxes and all the rest of
this stuff.
He says the leading democracies of the G20 should collectively commit to phasing out
the cost and tax breaks for the production and consumption of fossil fuels.
That's exactly the opposite.
They're giving tax breaks and incentives for the competing products,
and they're adding penalties and fees to the fossil fuels.
But he presents it exactly the opposite.
It's a total lie.
It's a total inversion of reality.
He says, and so we need to phase out these subsidies for fossil fuels.
And we need to cover, so we can cover the cost of local air pollution and global warming.
And so that we can help sustainable economies.
We need to subsidize the green stuff.
Oh wait, you're already doing that.
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 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.
No, we bet.
More power to you.
Tees and Seas apply.
18 plus.
Bet responsibly.
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As I mentioned at the top of the show, there are some very disturbing trends that are happening now in pharmaceutical that goes beyond the mRNA vaccines, the warp speed vaccines, because they've got more mRNA shots.
They're not stopping with a COVID shot.
That was just the introduction.
They're looking at setting up mRNA vaccines for all kinds of conditions. BioNTech has now dosed their first patient with a herpes vaccine that is mRNA.
And do they really need to have more than one patient to get this approved?
I'm sure they don't.
They only need to have one patient, right?
We don't need to run any tests.
We don't need to take 10 or 12 years to do that anymore, right?
As Fauci said, we're just going to do it from the inside with disruption and chaos,
and we'll do it iteratively.
Well, here we are.
University of Pennsylvania and BioNTech established in 2018 a research collaboration
aimed at developing novel mRNA vaccine candidates for the prevention and treatment
of various infectious diseases.
So they're advancing two mRNA vaccine candidates now for malaria and tuberculosis.
They're already testing.
And I'm sure, you know, after giving it to one patient, they'll wait a month or two and say, we're done.
No more tests need to be done, right?
But you're going to start seeing mRNA vaccines popping up for everything.
Herpes, malaria, tuberculosis already.
And we'll have to see what else they do.
Now you have nanotech being brought into the mix as well.
Not just genetic modification, but nanotechnology.
Israelis are bringing miraculous cancer-killing tech
to the marketplace. This is a story from WND.
It's based on nanomachine breakthroughs
of world-renowned scientist James Tour,
who works at Rice University in Houston,
but he is bringing this to market using an Israeli company.
They're going to take this to market.
So James Tour led a team that developed next-generation technology
to target and to kill cancer cells with virtually no side effects.
And if you believe that, I'll tell you a story about nuclear power
that's going to be too cheap to meter. No side effects. And if you believe that, I'll tell you a story about nuclear power that's going to be too cheap to meter.
No side effects.
It's perfect. It works perfectly.
Tour, a professor of chemistry, is using the nanomachines,
the marvelous motorized organic molecules,
created in a lab that won three chemists a Nobel Prize in 2016.
He's using that to target cancerous cells.
So here's how this supposedly works.
These nanomachines identify a diseased cell,
and they are equipped with a rotor and a stator.
They are activated by ultraviolet light
to drill through the cell membranes
at a speed of up to 3 million times per second.
The cancer cells then can be killed
either by injecting chemical agents
from the nanobots
or by repeatedly piercing the cell
to blast open tumorous membranes
until the cell dies by necrosis.
I'm sure that there's absolutely nothing that could go wrong with that scheme.
These nanobots will be able to identify with 100% accuracy
the cells that they are to destroy.
And then they will inject poison only into those bad cells
and or repeatedly drill them to death.
And you don't have to worry about them doing that to any healthy cells.
It's now closer to reality with the launch of an Israeli company
called Nano Robotics.
Nano Robotics is one of 16 companies that are working in nanotech.
15 of the 16 are located in Israel.
Nano Robotics is the only one that is based, however,
on TOR's nanomachine technology.
He said,
when the three pioneers in the development of nanomachines
were awarded the Nobel Prize in 2016,
TOR was quoted in the New York Times story saying
that the Nobel Prize would help to convince people that the
nanomachines are not science fiction,
but a gold mine.
Uh,
no,
he didn't say that,
but that's the way he says,
no one is making money on these right now,
but that'll come.
He predicted the first profitable use might be machines that open up cell
membranes in the body to deliver drugs.
He said it's going to be really quite extraordinary.
I'm not sure if he's talking about his technology or the amount of money that he expects to make out of this.
He explained that his nanodrills also can be programmed to target bacteria, not just cancer cells, but bacteria that have become resistant to drugs. You're listening to The David Knight Show. We'll be right back. You'll love the Classic Hits channel at APS Radio. Download our app or listen now at APSradio.com.
They're turning the frogs clear.
That's it.
It's all those chemicals in the water.
It's turning them clear.
Scientists have long known about the glass frog,
but did not understand how it made itself see-through. Uh, so glass frog, did you, uh, know about those? I didn't even know about the glass
frog. The only frog I knew about was, uh, the velvet frog, uh, Mel Torme, the guy who wrote,
uh, chestnuts roasting on an open fire. And that. That was his nickname. Anyway, it is able to pool blood in its body without being negatively affected by clots.
Oh, is that why we're studying these frogs now?
Blood clots?
The findings could advance medical understanding of dangerous blood clotting, a common serious condition that's been made
much more common by the Trump shots.
Perhaps they could use these glass frogs to see what happens.
Maybe they could give them some mRNA injections, and maybe they could actually see the long
strands of blood clots forming in these frogs
and see if they can handle that.
And if they can, maybe we can figure out what God did to counteract these mRNA shots in a glass frog.
Hey, you know how we screwed up your DNA?
Well, if you let us put some frog DNA in you, we think we can fix it.
Yeah, right.
We think.
Well, the added bonus that you could be the invisible man, right?
You might be able to completely disappear from their surveillance cameras.
Oh, look, you can actively see my heart failing right now.
See, my skin is clear now, so you can see it seizing.
That's great.
You actually can see the heart in these things.
You flip them over and look on the underside, and you can see the heart beating.
In order to escape the attention of predators, the creature turns itself up to 61% transparent,
disguising itself on the leaf.
Isn't it amazing how intelligent these frogs are that they could design themselves that way?
These people will never say that this is part of God's amazing design.
This is just something that the frog was able to do.
This is a National Geographic approach to the nature.
If you turn these frogs over, you can watch the heart beating by itself right there.
See, they discovered that the creatures pool blood into their liver.
They somehow, I wonder how they do that.
You know, how did they figure this out?
How did they, how did they figure this out? How did they, how did they evolve this capability? This,
this is the thing that I always loved when we, when we did biology with you guys,
you know, we would look at the unique features of different animals, uh, because it was part
of God's intelligent design. And it sure, surely made biology a lot more interesting
than what they reduced it to when I was in school, which was just a least common denominator of comparative skeletons.
Anyway, they somehow pack most of the red blood cells into their liver
so that they're not in the blood plasma.
They're still circulating plasma,
but they do it somehow without triggering a massive clot.
Up to 89% of the animal's blood cells become packed together,
almost doubling the size of the liver,
and allowing the frog to become transparent.
At night, when the creature wants to become active again to hunt or to mate,
it releases the red blood cells back into circulation,
and the liver shrinks back into place.
The ability to selectively pool and clot blood is the creature's superpower, says this article
from the BBC.
The fool has said in his heart, there is no God, and that includes the people at the BBC.
The most animal and most animals pooling blood together leads to clotting which can be life-threatening for example
leading to heart attacks in humans we noticed that bbc we did but maybe you haven't noticed Has your news been censored, banned, censored, banned over and over again?
Has vital information been held prisoner by mainstream and anti-social media?
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It's another dazzling Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous.
Meet the stars of show business and big business.
Discover how life's winners live, love, and spend their fortunes. Enter their dazzling world of luxury on privileged tours
of the fantasy palaces they call home.
You know, let's talk about the fantasy palaces that the Zielinskis call home
and their fantasy shopping trips, the lifestyles of the rich and famous.
You know, Zielinski's wife was in Paris and she was begging for more money and she got
it over a billion dollars, you know, just to help with the extreme austerity that the
people in Ukraine are suffering.
And they are at the hands of this corrupt dictator.
And so, you know, while you're in Paris, I mean, you got to pick up a few things, right?
Fashion and stuff.
So she goes to a store and she spent 40,000 euros per hour at the store.
The Zelinsky, Mrs. Zelinsky.
And she's in Paris begging for more money.
40,000 euro shopping spree.
That's more than $40,000.
Asking for money to make it through the winter.
You know, she's got to get a new fur coat and stuff.
Ukraine had obtained another $1.1 billion in emergency aid.
Zelensky said Ukraine needed assistance worth around 800 million euros
in the short term for its battered energy sector
his wife joined Ukrainians in asking for money in Paris
for the past few days
then a reliable store clerk
as the media is referring to this anonymous person
working at a very elite store
the Avenue Montaigne this anonymous person working at a very elite store,
the Avenue Montaigne.
I don't know how to pronounce it.
I'm not.
Yeah, it's like French.
They've got like a different word for everything, you know?
And they love to throw in extra letters just to confuse you, you know,
put a P on the end, like,
and we want to say Renault and Pujot or or whatever it's like it's renault and pujo
uh so i'm not gonna guess at the shouldn't have even tried anyway they reported that ms
zelinski went on a christmas shopping spree spending 40 000 euros per hour but But, um, if we go back and we look at when Zelensky was first elected,
there was an interesting kind of quasi investigation,
a report from Reuters at the time.
Let's go back to 2019.
Zelensky is elected on a campaign of peace.
Yeah.
Campaign of peace. Yeah. Campaign of peace.
And he got support all the way across Ukraine because Ukraine had been at war
for five years since the,
since NATO and the Democrats had engineered a coup.
They'd been at war with the people who were trying to assert their right to
self-governance bombing civilians and that type of thing for five years.
And people were sick of it, obviously.
And so people in both Ukraine as well as the areas that were under attack by the Ukrainian
government for daring to secede from them voted for the peace candidate, Zelensky.
And then as he takes office, Reuters has got some questions.
The wife of the Ukrainian president got a penthouse bargain from a tycoon, they said.
She got a great deal on a penthouse.
And this is the way Reuters in 2019 described political newcomer Zelensky.
Zelensky, a comedian and TV star with no political experience,
won the April 21 presidential election after campaigning as someone
who stands apart from the wealthy elite that dominates Ukrainian business and politics.
He was going to be a man of the people.
He was not going to be an elitist.
He was going to bring peace to Ukraine that had been at war with itself for five years.
But the deal over the apartment in the upmarket emperor complex on the Black Sea coast
indicates the Zelensky family has benefited from a transaction with a member of that same wealthy elite.
Reuters was unable to establish why the apartment was sold at below market prices.
Neither Zelensky nor his wife responded to requests for comment
submitted via his campaign team and via companies that he owns.
Zelensky's wife bought the three-room penthouse apartment
in Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula for $163,000 in April, 2013. Uh, now this is a luxury
apartment. I know that this is below what the average price is in the U S but you know, this is
the price of their real estate. And if you look at it, it's a very nice penthouse. It is an
apartment. It's not a full house. Uh, six years earlier, she had this april of 2013 according to the declaration of income and
assets filed this year by her husband and the ukrainian property register now the interesting
thing about it was it so that's a fraction of what the listing prices were reuters went back
and looked at what the price of real estate was at that time.
And they said at that time, the price of an apartment in that emperor complex would range between $3,500 and 4,000 per square meter, not square foot, square meter.
And she paid 1,200.
So normally it would go price per square meter,3,500 to $4,000.
She paid $1,200.
A second listing in that same building, published about the time she bought the house,
had a minimum price as $2,800 per square meter.
She got it for $1,200.
A Crimean real estate agent said these properties sold for between 2,500 and 3,000 per square meter, but could go up to 5,000.
She got it for 1,200.
So the person she bought it from is a former member of the Ukrainian parliament.
His brother, Sergei, was a controlling shareholder in the Ukrainian lender, um, Brock business bank.
It's funny because the way they spelled it, it's like Brock business bank, but they spell
business as B I Z N E S.
I mean, it's people spell like hillbillies, right?
I could laugh at them.
Like the French laugh at us pronouncing their words.
Anyway, the unnamed former Brock business bank executives are under criminal
investigation on suspicion that they embezzled money from the bank.
And so this is the guy,
you know,
the,
the bank that is under investigation for these types of things is the guy
that cut her the deal.
A truck driver,
Ron,
thank you very much for the donation on rock fan merry christmas
i'd like to see you playing the saxophone at the end of your show sometimes you do a bill clinton
i haven't had i haven't played uh sax since i graduated from college um and uh so i don't even
have one and i would hate to think what that would cost today. I mean, the saxes that I had back at that time cost a couple of grand.
So anyway, I don't know what they would cost today.
Her apartment was listed for sale at a price of $790,000,
more than four times what she bought it for,
and higher than any of these other estimates here.
And then of course, last year, do you remember something called the Pandora papers last year,
October, 2021, you had people in UK.
Now, of course, you know, this is before anybody really paid much attention to Zelensky before
he became an international celebrity speaking at every award ceremony everywhere.
And in October of 2021, remember, all this stuff with Russia started, what was it, end of February, beginning of March, if I remember correctly.
I don't remember, but it was.
So this is October, like four or five months earlier. And the Pandora Papers had come out, and it had shown Ukrainian politicians,
featuring very prominently in these papers documenting corruption,
but especially Zelensky.
And so you had a lot of people in the UK, Ukrainian activists who were living in the UK, showed up to protest.
They showed up at one of the places that Zelensky owned.
They said the recent Pandora Papers revealed Zelensky was involved with money laundering
of Kolomoisky's private bank funds that helped to buy him an apartment in London.
This is not the Crimean one. This buy him an apartment in London. This is not the Crimean one.
This is now an apartment in London.
They said, and there can be more of them that are still undeclared, said one of the protesters
who organized the event.
He added that corruption in Ukraine is reaching new heights with Zelensky, showing that he's
not fighting it, but taking part in corrupt schemes. Now, this is a protest.
This is about four to six months before all of this stuff, right?
First, they loot you seven ways to Sunday, and then when you find out about it, you get
angry about it, they take you to war, right?
And then they make even more money while you lose everything, including perhaps your life.
Let Zelensky take responsibility for his actions before the people of Ukraine.
Let him return the money to Ukraine.
He could sell his apartment or a few of them.
He's got apartments all over the world.
He must declare it, they said.
The protesters in the UK, October 2021, held signs,
Zelensky is corrupt, sell your apartment, return the money.
Now his wife is going hat in hand, getting a billion dollars for the country.
And yeah, they could use it because Zelensky's destroyed them,
and that was the plan.
The Arestovich who worked for him, said in 2019.
Yeah.
No, the war is not going to stop.
He told the Ukrainian report.
She's like, what?
Surprise, because they had campaigned on a platform of peace.
No, war is not going to stop.
In three years, we'll be at war with Russia, 2022.
And she goes, that's horrible.
He goes, no, it's good. He says, the entire country will be destroyed, but we'll be at war with Russia in 2022. And she goes, that's horrible. He goes, no, it's good.
He says, the entire country will be destroyed, but we'll get into NATO.
That's how corrupt they are.
Reports reveal Zelensky affiliated businesses used offshore schemes in 2012 to 2019 to dodge paying taxes in Ukraine.
Now they don't have to do that anymore, right?
That was just the buildup period before he became president.
Now that he's president, he doesn't have to put it offshore.
He can hide all of his stolen money there in Ukraine.
Are we going to audit any of the over $100 billion we're going to send to him
in just the first nine months of this disaster?
No.
No.
Pentagon says we can't do that.
State Department says we can't do that. State Department says we can't do that.
We don't know where the weapons went.
We don't know where the money went.
Well, look at the Pandora Papers,
and you can pretty much guess where the money's going.
Into his pockets.
Offshore companies connected to Zelensky and his business partners
now own three properties in London worth $7.5 million,
a $2.1 million apartment in an Edwardian mansion and Regents park, another $3 million flat and
nearby Baker street opposite the Sherlock Holmes museum. I've been there. Um, not to his apartment
to the, to the museum. Uh, anyway, Ukraine features prominently in the Pandora Papers investigation with almost
40 Ukrainians named among politicians and businessmen from dozens of countries who used
offshore companies for questionable deals and property acquisitions. So that was October of
last year. September of this year, just a couple of months ago. You may remember this. There was a big brouhaha in the media because there were accusations that
Zelensky had rented his luxury villa in Italy.
Now we talked about Crimea, London.
Now this is the one in Italy.
Who knows how many he's got, right?
The people, the protesters in Ukraine said he's got them stashed all over the
place.
Well, the one that he had in Italy, a luxury property, 15 rooms in a pool, it rented
for 50,000 euros. Now that wasn't what they had a problem with in the press. You know what they
had a problem with in the press? Not the fact that this guy has, you know, where did he get all this money? I mean, it's like Obama. Obama is a community you know where did he get all this money i mean it's like obama obama
is a community organizer where did he get how did he become somebody's you know nearly a billion
dollars net worth how did zelinski get all this money why is his name all over the pandora papers
no none of that he rented it to the russians and they, well, they weren't Russians. And other people said, but we heard them speaking Russian.
And yeah, that was what it was about.
And oh, by the way, at the time, as I pointed out,
this Zelensky Villa that they were concerned that they'd rented it to Russians,
it was owned by a shell corporation that was based out of another country
that was owned by his wife.
Yeah, why would he do that unless he's trying to hide stuff, right?
Zelensky's, here's another one.
Zelensky's parents have bought an $8 million property in Israel
and were able to obtain Israeli citizenship, evidently for a price, right?
$8 million villa in Israel.
There's another one.
And, and two Lexus bulletproof cars.
I mean, you are going to get a bulletproof car.
You don't want to get an economy model, right?
It's a small town where Jewish rich people from Eastern Europe gather.
Rishpin, Israel.
And so his parents are there.
I think his dad was formerly an actor who didn't have a lot of money,
but they're making sure that the Ukrainians don't have a lot of money.
So these guys, you know, this is the lifestyle of the rich and famous.
Multi-million dollar villas here, there, and everywhere.
You cover it up with offshore corporations, with shell corporations, is, you know, this is the lifestyle of the rich and famous. Multi-million dollar villas here, there, and everywhere.
You cover it up with offshore corporations,
with shell corporations outside the country,
shell corporations that are in the name of your wife.
But there's some things they don't have to cover up.
For instance, you can have the war party.
The war party in Washington, D.C.
And what I mean by that is the defense contractors,
the military industrial complex, the war party.
Four major defense contractors sue a party for the Zelenskys.
And the Ukrainians actually put their names on the invitations as the sponsors.
And they posed for pictures with Millie, General Millie,
and Chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Mark Millie, in attendance.
The invitation said the event was supported by Northrop Grumman, Raytheon, the employer of Austin.
Austin had been at Raytheon so long they had to go back and change the rules to bring him back into the government as Secretary of Defense. I mean, are we a collapsing empire or what? there's absolutely no way that you can look at what's happening right now and not see that America is under economic, political, societal collapse in every way.
Moral collapse, financial collapse, collapse of borders, rampant corruption in your face.
So the report that this has happened on Saturdayurday celebration was hosted by the ukrainian embassy
took place in downtown dc at the ronald reagan building less than a mile from the white house
with the chair of the joint chiefs of staff in attendance sponsored by the war party
it's a war christmas party isn't it uh so? So this person who is a think tank expert said,
the explicit sponsorship indicates how intimate
major military contractors have become with Ukraine
and how much they stand to gain from this war.
Why is it that we're surprised when the pharmaceutical industry makes tens of billions of dollars killing people?
You had, I think it was nine new billionaires created out of Trump's warp speed program.
The military industrial complex have been making tens of billions of dollars killing people, starting unnecessary wars.
Not just to defend this country.
Defending this country would be legitimate,
but that's not how they're using the military-industrial complex.
That's not why they've got wars like this one.
It's not to defend us.
It's not to defend the lives of Ukrainians.
They're using the Ukrainians.
The military industrial complex in America,
all these, I saw somebody yesterday
in a car driving along,
had the whole back of the car covered up,
pray for Ukraine.
It's like, yeah, what are you going to pray?
That God removes Zelensky and ends this war?
Is that what you're going to be praying for? You're going to pray for victory or whatever. What are you going to pray? That God removes Zelensky and ends this war? Is that what you're going to be praying for?
Are you going to pray for victory or whatever?
What are you going to pray for?
The invitation is a clear expression of how the war in Ukraine has been good for business.
As Ukraine fights a defensive war, they said, against Russia's brutal invasion,
Ukrainians in Washington have been pushing for the U.S. to send Ukraine more weapons.
So far, Biden's administration has committed a substantial $20 billion of military assistance since February.
And they're going to ramp it up to over $100 billion.
And as I said, if you look, I started to look at that, you know, $100 billion, and we're talking about only nine months, except for 2021. That's a, if you take that, if that's, um, you know,
a hundred billion dollars for three quarters,
you're going to wind up giving them about a little bit more than their,
their gross domestic product.
I don't know what they're going to give them in the next quarter,
but, uh,
their gross domestic product was 150 billion for about five years before 2021.
And then all of a sudden in 2021, it jumped up to 200 billion.
And I said, yeah, that's interesting.
Why didn't we hear about the economic miracle in Ukraine?
I mean, there had to have been some kind of an economic miracle in 2021.
Remember, none of this stuff happened until you know the end of
february or march or whenever it was i mean you're still three months of uh into is the first quarter
of 2022 when this stuff kicked off so why in the year before that happened did you see ukraine's
gross domestic product jumped by a third it's an economic economic miracle, isn't it? Why isn't everybody talking about that?
We all need to be doing what Ukraine was doing.
Jumping by a third.
Well, you know, they were front-loading this,
buying off all the politicians or whatever they need
to betray their people and to use them as cannon fodder.
The Ukrainian embassy was not shy about publicizing the event on their facebook
page they posted photos from the event including one of millie uh what a joke that guy is
using free speech to free minds. It's The David Knight Show. APSradioNews.com features articles and commentary, along with audio from all the top news from around the world.
APSradioNews.com
The Christopher Columbus statues are reported.
They boxed it up a few years ago up in South Philly.
We have a very large Italian population.
And it's now been unboxed.
And there's videos of people going wild and cheering.
A plywood box that covered a statue of Christopher Columbus in South Philadelphia for more than two years has now been removed.
Following a ruling in Commonwealth Court.
The ruling came down late last week and the box was removed late Sunday night.
The court ruling also reversed a previous order
and will allow for a clear structure to be built around the statue.
You now have to protect symbols of our history and heritage and culture.
You now have to protect them from vandalism.
That's the world that we live in.
But the mayor, Jim Kenney, wanted the statue completely removed,
saying it was a matter of public safety.
I think it'd be better if you remove the BLM and Antifa people
and leave the statue there.
I think we're much better off with the
statues than with these radical extremist marxists who are determined to tear down our society
in june of 2020 the statue became the point of contention between groups who wanted to defend
it from vandalism amid ongoing social unrest and other groups who saw the statue as a symbol of hate.
No, it's just a symbol of what they hate.
The confrontation between the opposing sides resulted in violence and arrests.
Well, again, the statue has been there for a very long time.
What has changed is that we give place to BLM and Antifa.
And it appears that they have taken charge of West Point as well.
The West Point superintendent just canceled an offensive Abe Lincoln mural.
This is what is happening in the U.S. Military Academy West Point.
This is written by John Hughes, who is a graduate of West Point.
He's very upset about what the current superintendent, that's the head guy there,
Stephen Galland, what he is doing to alter and remove history.
First, it was Robert E. Lee.
Now it is Abraham Lincoln because it's about erasing heritage.
It's about erasing history, culture.
It is not about racism.
It's about their racism and about their Marxism because that's what Marxists always do.
They erase religion, culture, heritage, history. They must level everything so they can do their reset with themselves in charge.
So I wonder if anybody will ever remember this Stephen Gland,
certainly anything positive.
That's what these people do.
They destroy.
They don't build.
Robert E. Lee probably did more for the code of honor at West Point than anybody else.
He was, as a student, he never got a demerit in a system that was designed to catch people and give them demerits.
His classmates called him the marble man because when it came to things like that, He was a person of such high character.
He became a superintendent at West Point.
It's one of the reasons why he was so successful as a general in the Civil War
because he had taught the people that he was fighting,
and he knew them personally.
So he's playing a game of chess with these guys,
and he understands how they think.
He was able to predict how they were going to
react uh and they have uh there were quotes all over the place about what robert e lee said about
honor uh he was highly sought after north and south you know they wanted him to lead
the union army at the beginning of the war.
But he saw his allegiance, first of all, to his state and not to the federal government.
But even after the war, they were constantly coming after him, wanting him to endorse products and things like that.
He refused to do that.
He was not going to endorse products, uh, uh, grant on the other hand, uh, signing away everything.
Uh, but, uh, Lee would not do that.
So the superintendent at West Point said during the holiday break, we will begin a
multi-phased process in accordance with the department of defense directives to remove,
rename, and modify assets and real property at the U.S.
Military Academy, West Point.
Anything that commemorates or memorializes the Confederacy or those who
voluntarily served in the Confederacy.
And so he says,
we will also be removing the bronze mural at the main entrance of Bartlett
Hall.
This was created by a sculptor.
It's a three-panel bronze mural dedicated in 1965.
In September of this year,
the public affairs spokesperson for the U.S. Military Academy
seemed to defend it,
telling ABC News that the artist, quote,
wanted to create art that depicted historical incidents or persons
that symbolized the principal events of the time,
thereby both documenting both tragedy and triumph in our nation's history.
See, they don't want a nation.
They don't want our history.
It has symbols on it like the tree of life that depict
how our nation has flourished despite its tragedies. The obscure but recently noticed
KKK image on the mural was meant to show racism within the tapestry of history.
So because somebody portrays this big mural and they've got something there that they were fighting against and nobody even noticed it.
That's what this guy who went to West Point, he said most of the people there never noticed that or the names of names or images of some specific Confederate generals such such as Lee, Stewart, Jackson, and Brooke.
But it did not direct that the entire mural be removed
when they talked about that at that point in time. So the Department
of Defense didn't want the entire mural removed, but the superintendent did.
He says the mural was well known to cadets.
The tiny Confederate and KKK references on it were not, however, well known
The central large figure of President Abraham Lincoln, though
Had a well-worn sculpted head
Because cadets like myself used to rub the Lincoln head on the way to classes for luck
West Point has chosen to remove the entire mural
that had references to the Union victory,
to President Lincoln, to World War II, to Korea,
because they're offensive.
The revisionist targeting appears to have already spread
beyond the Confederacy to key white figures
in American history, even Union ones.
And of course, we've already seen seen this when they first started coming after
Confederate statues, as he points out quickly, they started vandalizing, uh,
statues and memorials to grant to Lincoln, to Roosevelt, to Wilson,
to world war one memorials and other non Confederate, because this is.
About memory, holding history.
This is a Marxist tactic.
This is not about the Confederacy. They don't want to have the history of the heritage of the Confederacy. They want to create it in their own image, but they want to destroy all American
history. Superintendent Galland also continues, he says, the recent trend of West Point superintendents to ignore any Freedom of Informationrimand, despite knowing that very soon the mandate
would likely be and was voted to be ended by Congress.
But of course, that also was a symbolic vote.
As Davis Yance pointed out, I replayed both the initial interview that I had with him
and then the one where he came back after the NDAA was passed.
And we talked about that.
It doesn't change anything.
Anybody who is already in process is going to continue in process.
And I think at this point in time, where the mandates having been going on for
what, uh, 15 months now, September of last year, everybody is in one process or the other.
You've taken the vaccine or you're in the appeals process
or you've been kicked out.
They're not doing anything to help the people who have been kicked out.
They're not doing anything to reinstate the benefits
of the people who have been kicked out of the military.
And this NDAA is a virtue signaling head fake by Republicans.
It won't do anything to help anybody.
The guy who wrote this, by the way, is a physician, MD, a West Point graduate, a veteran of Iraq
and Afghanistan.
And he, like a lot of other West Point graduates, are saying, what is going on?
Well, we know what's going on.
It is a completely politicized Pentagon. You're listening to The David Knight Show. I'm going to go. Tell Alexa to add the APS Radio skill
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Get details at APSradio.com a real concern about this stuff and that is depopulation
one of the first medical pushbacks against this stuff was by dr michael yadin who had been a vp
at pfizer and the first thing he said before anybody started talking about myocarditis
and heart attacks and blood clots and all the rest of this stuff,
first thing he said was, this is going to sterilize people.
Why did he say that?
Well, as I said before, this is an article that I had not seen before.
Breaking-news.ca out of Canada.
November of 2021.
And what Breaking News Canada found was a connection
between a veterinarian vaccine called Spavac.
Yeah, when I saw this, I thought, is this a joke?
Spavac. spay vac yeah when i saw this i thought is this a joke spay vac you know i have your i guess they could have um uh one for males they could call it uh a nano neuter or something you know for the
nanoparticles neuter your neuter your pet with nanoparticles or you can uh spay your your pet
with this stuff well this is not for pets yet. This is, they say, for wildlife,
and the subtitle of this company,
and it's a real company.
This is real information.
The subtitle that they have,
they're, you know,
Spavak for Wildlife Incorporated.
It says,
contraceptive vaccines
for humane population control.
Well, you get the real idea
if you just take off the E,
off of humane. Contraceptive vaccines for human population control. Well, you get the real idea if you just take off the E off of humane.
Contraceptive vaccines for human population control. They are doing this under experimental
use. They have an emergency use authorization for animals to do this. Spavac does. But the
interesting thing about this, when you look at their website, and you can look at it yourself, spavac.com,
they talk about the need for this, and they say they immediately start by attacking humans.
This is why I say this is a program for human population control, not humane population control.
Because they immediately start talking about humans.
And you know, when I played Ellen Degenerate, you know, saying,
Mother Earth is in charge and, you know, all this Gaia theory and everything,
humans were a virus.
Considered to be a virus by these people who want to reduce population.
This has been at the heart of the climate change thing.
Paul Ehrlich is still selling that lie to people, the population bomb and all the rest of the stuff.
And so the first thing they say when they talk about the importance of their product,
here's why you need SPAVAC. Humans have had a profound impact on the earth's ecosystem. Well, I thought this was about controlling harmful wildlife.
No.
Humans are bad.
We are the virus.
And so they say,
this is about population control of wildlife.
They go on to say,
the Anthropocene is proposed as the current epoch,
which is viewed as the period during which human activity has been dominant influence on climate and the environment.
Many wildlife species, even if they are considered endangered, are in overabundance and an ever-shrinking habitat and the habitat ranges that they occupy.
Spavak is an effective tool to manage overpopulation. Well, it sounds to me like
the humans are the problem. You know, we're crowding them into these, um, you know, even,
even though they're considered to be endangered species, they're still overcrowded and, uh,
they're shrinking habitat. Who's shrinking their habitat? Those evil anthropoid things, you know, humans, mankind.
They go on to say overabundant species, even native ones,
can reduce biodiversity by monopolizing resources,
spreading infectious diseases, changing species composition,
or relative abundance.
That sounds still like humans.
You know, they will tell you that we're the ones who are spreading diseases.
We're the ones who are changing species composition.
As a matter of fact, we're doing it by genetic engineering in many cases.
So if mankind is the problem and the Anthropocene is the problem,
we've got to change that, right?
I mean, that would be the logical conclusion with all of this stuff.
But they talk about their cases,
and they focus on deer and wild horses,
which don't really seem to be that big of a problem.
You know, they have wild horses that the Bureau of Land Management says that
they can't control.
And so they want to reduce that, but not nearly as much as the, uh, Paul Ehrlich's and the,
uh, Georgia Guidestone people want to reduce the human population.
They only want to reduce the wild horse population by about a third, whereas they want the human
population to be about one-sixteenth of what
it is.
Seems to me like the problem.
It's humans, don't you think, from these people's perspective?
So they say, what is Spavac?
Spavac, according to Spavac, is an immunocontraceptive vaccine that uses the PZP antigen in a patented
liposomal delivery system
to create an immune response.
We'll unpack all that for you.
The immune system of the inoculated animal,
and of course this is focused specifically on mammals.
Mammals, important to understand.
Only on mammals.
The immune system of the inoculated animal or mammal
will produce antibodies to
ZP.
These antibodies competitively bind to the ZP surface matrix, thus blocking sperm from
being able to bind and therefore preventing fertilization.
So they refer to it as ZP, P-ZP, because they get it from pigs, porcine.
And the way this thing operates, there's a glycoprotein,
which is found wrapped around all the eggs of mammals, including humans.
One of these glycoproteins, ZP3, is a critical receptor protein for sperm and therefore key to fertilization of the egg.
The porcine ZP vaccine is derived from pig ovaries.
And therefore, when referring to this antigen used in the vaccine, we call it PZP.
And so the bottom line is that they are going to focus on the eggs.
Where are the eggs located?
You know, the ovaries.
Where does the vaccine accumulate?
In the ovaries.
But there's a lot more coincidence to this than that.
If you, and this is what Breaking News candidate did,
and this is why I think it's important.
As I pointed out, this vaccine from Spavac requires being kept cold at minus 40 degrees centigrade,
like these other Trump shots.
And it also has to be given as two shots a month apart.
Wow.
Just like the Trump shots.
And those are two of the things that I really question.
It's like, we've never seen this before.
And any vaccine that has to be kept at these super cold temperatures
and you get two shots one month apart?
And it was very important for the CDC to keep track of that.
You know, they wanted that reported by all the state health organizations, by all the
individuals who are going to be out there vaccinating people.
You tell us when you give them that first shot.
We want to make sure they get that second one a month later and type of thing.
We'd never seen that before.
And that always was a red flag to me.
This is highly unusual. But we had seen it before. And that always was a red flag to me. This is highly unusual.
But we had seen it before with Spavac, a vaccine designed to sterilize mammals.
In addition, they talk about the fact that this vaccine does not stay at the injection site,
but it accumulates in the ovaries because that's the purpose of it.
It wants to change these proteins and bind with these things.
It's an antigen there that gets the immune system to make sure that it's going to block sperm from getting into the egg.
It gets even deeper.
Pfizer actually partnered with this company
for the delivery mechanism of this thing.
And they use the same technology, the same liposome technology.
And then we find that you recall,
and of course they point this out, and they had a link
in the article at breaking-news.com
Canada.
That link in the article
to
a report that was set up
to debunk, because a lot of people
were talking about it. Steve Kirsch talked about it.
Michael Yadin was the first one to talk about
it. And the first thing, as I said, that Michael Yadin had a problem
with, he said, I think this is designed to sterilize people. Yeah. And so Steve Kirsch
talked about how it was accumulating in the ovaries. And so they linked to an article
that was supposedly debunking Steve Kirsch. And they said, pay attention to the second table.
And when you look at the tables in this debunk article, they drew big red squares around the
table. This came out of the Pfizer report where the people said, hey, look, this concentrated
in the ovaries. And so in the Pfizer report, they had a list, you know, different rows where all
the different places in the body, all these different organs and locations where this stuff
could accumulate. And then as you go across, they got the column headings as you go across,
talking about concentrations, first of all, and then the percentage of the vaccine that was found in those locations.
So for each location, they would look at it over a period of time.
What happens immediately after injection?
What happens six hours, 12 hours, 24 hours, 48 hours, that type of thing.
And they would show what was happening with the concentration.
Then they had another section that said at those periods of time,
you know, 6 hours, 12 hours, 24 hours, 48 hours, that type of stuff,
what was the percentage of the vaccine that went to these different places?
And so what they did was they drew a square around the concentration thing
in red and said, see, it's not true.
Doesn't, you know, most of the vaccine does not go to the ovaries.
However, if you look at, and what they said was, don't pay attention to that.
Pay attention to the first stuff, which is showing the concentration of where it goes.
And the place that had the highest concentration was the spleen, which is not surprising since
the spleen is going to be filtering the blood, right?
And so it had, forget about the units here,
it had 23.4 in terms of the concentration of the vaccine,
was 23.4 in the spleen.
Number two in terms of concentration was the ovaries, 12.3.
The spleen makes sense because it's filtering the blood.
But then it goes 12.3 to the ovaries.
And you look at all the other categories of locations and organs in the body
where it could go.
And the next one from 12.3 was 1.5, and that was a small intestine.
Every other location of the body was less than one. So spleen, which is filtering the blood, gets 23.5 concentration.
Ovaries gets 12.3. Small intestines gets 1.5 and everything else less than one.
Many of them much less than one. So Pfizer's delivery system was designed by the people who set up a vaccine to sterilize mammals.
You find that interesting? I find that interesting.
Just a coincidence, I'm sure.
So they said, has it been tested? Well, a single dose of Spavac has been demonstrated to have long-lasting contraception.
And here's what they found.
They said that when they did it with a deer, that three single-dose deer trials demonstrated fertility control.
Deer are a problem.
They said,
because,
you know,
cars hit them and they're destructive to vegetation.
They can transmit disease and so forth.
So we had,
we got to control their population.
They said 41 free ranging fallow deer were vaccinated with a single injection.
None of them became pregnant for three years.
They did it with another control group.
Five captive white-tailed deer were given a single injection of Spavac.
None of them became pregnant during the next three years of the study
compared to the control deer population where 100% of them got pregnant.
Well, isn't that interesting?
And yet they have to keep doing this over and over again.
So again, going back to the technology,
the liposome is the nanotechnology that is a part of this.
They call their thing VaxiMax.
It is a patented vaccine delivery formulation
that provides controlled prolonged exposure of antigens plus adjuvant to the immune system.
It has a no-release delivery system utilizing highly engineered liposomes, which mitigates the propensity for antigens to break down, thereby extending the stimulation of the immune response. In other words, what they're doing is they've got a delivery system that means that it's not going to, you know,
the immune system is not going to get to it until it gets to where it wants to go.
And then at that point, it gets released by those membranes
that are around the egg and does its thing.
Spavak.
Maybe that's what we should study.
The Trump shot, the genetic code injection.
Now we got another aspect of it.
The Spavak.
The common man.
They created common core to dumb down our children.
They created common past to track and control us.
Their commons project to make sure the commoners own nothing and the communist future.
They see the common man as simple, unsophisticated, ordinary.
But each of us has worth and dignity created in the image of God.
That is what we have in common.
That is what they want to take away.
Their most powerful weapons are isolation, deception, intimidation.
They desire to know everything about us while they hide everything from us.
It's time to turn that around and expose what they want to hide.
Please share the information and links you'll find at thed, please keep us in your prayers. Thank you. You're listening to The David Knight Show.
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Americans are having less children now than in decades.
Just over half of women under the age of 45 are having babies in the U.S.
And this has fallen dramatically. They said from 2002 to 2019, the share of women aged 15 to 45 with at least one child dropped from 2002 to 2019, dropped from 60% to 52%.
Now, they talk about the fact that, you know, they're delaying kids until they're older.
They're focused more on career.
This is a story coming from the Daily Mail. So they're not going to talk about how the objectives of people in terms of LGBT and how that is distracting people, getting them to focus on themselves to the extent that they don't want to have a heterosexual relationship.
They don't want to have kids.
They just want to, like Sam Brinton, they just want to dress up and wear high heels or whatever.
But a lot of this is part of the career that's been sold to women.
Women have been told that they do not want to have kids because that's not fulfilling to be a mother.
And nothing could really be further from the truth.
One of the funny things is people have gone in and looked at the amount of anti-depression drugs
people utilize.
And in women, they basically track
as the number of pregnancies goes down,
the amount of Zoloft and things
middle-aged women need goes through the roof.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Well, I've got a story about that, actually.
That was where I was going next
before I say that Daily Mail has also got a story about how one out of every four Americans are skipping
to have kids, and they said it's over the fear of climate change. I think that is really virtue
signaling. Oh, I care so much about the planet that I don't want to have kids. They really care
about themselves. Yeah, it has nothing to do that you're a selfish child still yourself.
That's right. Yeah, they care about themselves. But, you know, there's also a study that just came out, Travis, what you were talking about.
The amount, you know, how the use of antidepressants is inversely proportional to the number of kids that you've got type of thing, right?
Your family.
This is a study that says the best medicine for curing depression and anxiety,
kindness to others. I've always depended on the kindness of strangers, right?
Now, this is about really doing nice things for people. If you're worried about the climate and you're freaking out, I mean, you truly are afraid of what is going on. You've got anxiety about a lot of other stuff.
If you're depressed, well, the best thing that you could do is to actually help other people. This is coming out of Ohio State University. And they said a little bit of kindness shown
towards others can help beat feelings of depression and anxiety. Scientists said that performing good deeds leads to notable mental health improvements
not seen in two other therapeutic techniques that are commonly used to treat the condition.
So they have two techniques besides doping people up.
That's what you were talking about.
In this particular one, they were trying non-pharmaceutical means to get people out of
depression. That stuff is, as we've talked about many times, very, very dangerous. The SSRIs and
other things like that, we call them murder-suicide pills. If you vary the dosage of that too much,
it triggers reactions to people of all ages. That's why you see these people who many times will kill others and kill themselves,
even killing friends, families, children, and then killing themselves.
And they don't even know what they're doing.
I talked to a person several years ago.
She had a site, I think it's called SSRIstories.net.
And she just had a long list
of these events that people blame on the gun. No, it's actually the serotonin reuptake inhibitors
that they're putting out there for people. And if you vary that, it does all kinds of crazy stuff
to you. She had one story of a guy who showed up in his classroom with a rifle, and he was pointing
the rifle at the classroom and then pointing the rifle at himself in the back of the classroom.
They eventually were able to get that rifle away from him, take him to a hospital, because he
clearly was not in his right mind. And when he recovered from it, he told them what happened.
Yeah, just, you know,
this medicine was doing crazy stuff to me. I didn't like it. So I just stopped taking it. Well,
you know, boom, that's the type of thing that happened. But in this particular study,
it wasn't, they didn't have anybody that was on pharmaceuticals.
These were non-pharmaceutical treatments for depression and other things. They said kindness towards others was the only one of these three approaches
that they studied that resulted in people,
subjects feeling more connected with other people.
They said social connection is one of the ingredients of life
that is most strongly associated with well-being.
And, of course, this is why we have the satanic agenda
of breaking up families, of not having children, the satanic government and corporation
working together. They want to isolate us. They want to tether us to this digital world,
to this fiat universe. The story also shows that acts of kindness are helpful for fighting depression and anxiety
because when we help others, it takes our minds off of the negative thoughts that otherwise
would be consuming our attention.
They said, we often think that people with depression have enough to deal with, so we
don't want to burden them by asking them to help other people. These results run
counter to that. Doing nice things for people and focusing on the needs of others may actually help
people with depression and anxiety to feel better about themselves. What was that? Yeah, it's better
to give than to receive. You know, and we can all have, if we've done that, we all know that that is true. The project included 122 people that had moderate to severe symptoms of depression, anxiety, and stress.
So they separated them into three groups.
Two of the cohorts were assigned to techniques that are often used for cognitive behavioral therapy for depression.
So one group, they had them planning social activities.
Another group, they had them doing self-appraisal,
cognitive reappraisal.
So the social activities group was told to plan
social get-togethers for two days a week.
Well, let's just mix it up.
Let's have mixers with people and I'll,
you know, just interact with people and I'll feel better, right? The cognitive reappraisal group kept
records for at least two days per week intended to help them identify and change negative thought
patterns in a way that could lower both depression and anxiety. Subjects assigned to the third group, on the other hand, were instructed to perform three acts of kindness
daily for two days out of the week. Okay. So you've got one group that gets together with people,
another group that does a self-assessment and reappraisal. How do I feel this way? Why do I
feel this way? That type of thing. And the third group, you just say, do three acts of kindness daily, two days out of the week, right? About 28% of the time.
The act of kindness was defined as a big or small act that benefits others and makes other people
happy, typically at some cost to you in terms of time or resources. Some reported acts of kindness among participants included baking cookies for friends, offering
to give a friend a ride, leaving sticky notes for roommates with encouraging words.
It could be something that's really simple, right?
And so if you pursue making other people happy, maybe you will find it yourself, right? Maybe the founders were
onto something when they talked about the pursuit of happiness. Of course, they were talking about
a state of virtue and everything. But still, I looked at this and I thought, okay,
we get happy, get over their depression and their fear, their anxiety,
by doing things to make other people happy. And it's kind of like I've said many times, liberty is something that you can't have unless you give it to other people also.
If that is your attitude, and that really is true.
I mean, if you're going to say, well, I think there ought to be a law about this because I don't like it.
But if you try to shut down speech that you don't like, for example, you're going to find that your own speech is going to be censored because you're always going to find somebody who doesn't
like what you're doing.
And so you have to have that attitude that I'm going to allow other people to have this
liberty.
They also found that subjects across all the groups showed an increase in life satisfaction
and a drop in depression and anxiety symptoms after the 10-week study.
So all three of these things happened,
but the difference was that the people who were doing acts of kindness
still showed a big advantage over other social activities
and over cognitive reappraisal.
This is why they want to isolate us.
They know that we are designed by God to help other people.
And that's part of the family dynamic, that they are working so hard to take it away.
It's not just enough to be around other people.
It's not just enough to do self-examination.
Those are good.
Those are helpful.
But it's the human element in
doing things for other people. Decoding the mainstream propaganda.
It's the David Knight Show.
Elvis.
Ladies and gentlemen, the Beatles.
And the sweet sounds of Motown.
Find them on the Oldies Channel at APSradio.com.
Well, the New York Times is asking, can you find eggs here or there?
Can you find them anywhere?
This is Dr. Seuss or something.
Forget about green eggs.
You can't get any kind of eggs.
And so the New York Times goes to Whole Foods in Manhattan to shop, of course.
A grocery staple that for decades has been relatively cheap and reliable has now become elusive, even lavishly priced commodity.
At Whole Foods, they said, the shelves were empty for the cheapest eggs
that were $3.39 for a carton of 12.
What remained were more expensive options like organic, cage-free eggs
for more than $7 a dozen.
Even then, customers were limited to two egg cartons,
according to a sign on the refrigerator door, due to a nationwide shortage of eggs.
And of course, we saw this. I went with Karen earlier in the week to the grocery store,
and where the eggs are, they had signs that said, I think it was HPAI. Due to, you know, HPAI, and I had to look that up.
I think it was HP.
It was something like high-potency avian influenza.
I knew the AI was avian influenza, bird flu, whatever.
But that's all they said.
Well, there's a lot more to it than that, quite frankly.
That is a factor.
It's one of many different factors.
New York Times says since the outbreak was detected last February, more than 57 million birds
and hundreds of commercial and backyard flocks have been affected by it.
Flocks have been culled to prevent the virus from spreading.
And so you've seen depopulation of more than 44 million laying hens in the U.S.
since the outbreak, according
to the Agricultural Department. And the president and chief executive of the American Egg Board
says, while bird flu has played a role, increasing costs of fuel, feed, and packaging have also contributed to pricier and scarcer eggs.
Is avian flu a factor?
Yes, she said.
Is it the only factor?
No, and I would argue that it's not even the biggest factor
of where these prices are right now.
There's an excellent video that came out of the UK.
He's saying the same thing in the UK.
Listen to what a farmer who was involved in the egg business had to say.
Better get this one out there before the supermarkets put their story across and cancel
everyone else out. So when you go into a supermarket now, you might see that there is a bit of an egg
shortage. So not many eggs on the shelf to buy, not free range, not organic, nothing. So you're
struggling to find eggs.
Supermarkets are going to tell you this is because of avian flu, which to be fair, there has been a lot of cases of avian flu. But do you want to know the real reason why there's an egg shortage?
It's because the supermarkets won't pay the farmers for the eggs. So the supermarkets have upped their price
for you the consumer but they haven't filtered that price increase down to us
the farmers so our cost of producing these eggs has skyrocketed. Feed, electric,
the price of new birds that's gone up but our price of eggs has stayed the same so we physically can't
afford to produce these eggs so currently there has been 8 million less
free-range hens ordered for next year's flocks so that's just under 8 million
eggs every day that we're not going to be producing so that's 8 million eggs less
every single day that we don't produce and we're already 3 million eggs short
of being self-sufficient so the UK have to import 3 million eggs every day to
feed the nation and now we're losing another 8 million birds because the
supermarkets
won't pay us and they're gonna blame the farmers they'd be like oh well the farmers just stock them
and produce you great british food but we can't afford to we if the supermarkets paid us a fair
price for our eggs then we would stock our sheds and there would be more sheds going up and the UK could be self-sufficient in great
British eggs but the supermarkets won't pay us so if you can make any sense of that or if you have
any questions I'm happy to answer but yeah the current egg shortage isn't really due to avian
flu it's because the supermarkets are refusing to pay us a fair price
for our produce. You see, once we start kicking in the supply chain, once we throw that wrench
in the machinery, it just starts going in every direction. And of course, there's a lot of
different things that are happening. They're getting squeezed in the middle. They're not the
middleman. They're getting squeezed by the middleman. They're
also getting squeezed by the people who are transporting stuff in many cases. Railroads.
As a matter of fact, you got chickens in California are starving because the farmers can't get the
corn shipments to the chickens because the railroad's like,
we got other things that we'd rather do.
They have to go to the transportation board and force them to deliver this stuff.
And this is the second time this has happened.
So you got rising cost of supplies.
You have shortages of things.
And as he's pointing out, it's going to get much worse next year.
This is why, even though we are now closing in on three years of this insanity, things are still continuing to escalate and they're going to get worse next year because all of the shocks and the back and forth throughout the supply chain. California millions of chickens have gone unfed as rail disruptions are delaying corn shipments
to a California poultry farm, according to documents that provide unique details
of how one shipper has suffered from poor rail service. And of course, we've seen other aspects
of this. This is not the first time we've seen the railroads doing this. They say, well, I'm not
going to carry this stuff. I've got some other things. People are paying me more for that. And it's just a lack of capacity.
The same way we see things happening all the time now with the airline industry.
Personnel shortages kick people out. People have died from this stuff.
And antiquated systems that aren't working, people who are hacking into the system
to mess it up. Foster Farms, which processes about a million chickens and 12,000 turkeys every day,
has said that it's had to pause some operations because of delays from Union Pacific,
the second largest freight railroad in North America. The supply issues also forced the
company to shut down a
plant that processes raw corn into animal feed to sell it, said the federal filings. That meant
cutting off its dairy farm customers from cornmeal and giving priority to its chickens.
They can't feed the cattle. I guess they can put the cattle out, maybe let them graze a little bit
to give them something. I don't know. But they've got to give priority to the chickens. Why? Because the chickens start killing each other when they go hungry.
After a flurry of correspondence that offers unfiltered insight into shippers' problems with rail service,
the U.S. Surface Transportation Board ordered Union Pacific to deliver more corn-laden trains to foster farms. This is the second time in the past year that foster farms has had to ask the rail regulator
to intervene directly because of Union Pacific's failure to deliver animal feed trains on time.
It is also the latest in a long simmering tussle between shippers and railroads,
which have seen profits rise as carloads are dwindling.
So they're actually doing less but raising the prices.
How did they get away with doing that?
But that's what we're seeing.
That's what the farmer said.
So the people who are delivering feed to the farmers
are doing less, but they're making a lot more.
Their profits are soaring, even though they're shipping less.
And as this farmer in the UK was saying,
he said, look, all of our costs are going up,
but they won't pay us anymore at the supermarkets.
So the supermarkets are getting a shortage,
and it's going to get far worse next year.
These service failures, which began in February 2022, have resulted in numerous
instances where Foster Farms has suspended its production and its distribution of feed for tens
of thousands of dairy cattle, tens of millions of chickens and turkeys. Thank you. ¶¶
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Let's talk about eggs.
This is, I think we're being eggsploited here.
There's a temptation.
Do you remember the old Batman from the 1960s and they had Vincent Price as egghead and it was one egg pun after the other?
Well, it is a very serious situation because this is not about avian bird flu.
It really isn't.
But let's start with this.
There's egg smuggling going on across the Mexican border.
Now, that tells you everything that you need to know, right?
Because when you go back and you look at what happened with baby food, right?
Well, people, if they could get across the Mexican border,
they could find baby food on the shelves,
and they could get it at a decent price, but you couldn't in America. Why was that?
Well, we were told it was because the FDA overreacted to a story about contamination at a facility and they had to shut down that facility. And because our supply chains in the
United States are so heavily concentrated and consolidated and
monopolized that shutting down that one factory put a tremendous hitch in the entire food chain
supply for baby food. And again, of course, if you have a child that doesn't have any health issues,
you can feed that baby a lot of different things. But the baby food formula was pretty critical for some
kids who had certain digestive illnesses, and that was a real concern for them. And so
we had some baby food that was flown in from Germany. We had people who said, well, can we
bring some in from, oh, no, no, no, not going to open up the doors for that. So the FDA would stand
in the way of bringing in baby food that was made in Mexico or even in Germany. They didn't like much of it, but you know, hey, we could do a symbolic gesture
and bring in a little bit on one plane load or two. But the FDA did not want to allow that to
come across the border. And so now we've got a different situation. We've got a big egg shortage,
signs on the shelves saying, hey, you can't get eggs,
and if you can get them, they're super expensive. And what is happening with this? Well, we're told
that this is the flu. Is it? It's avian flu, but you can get it just fine in Mexico. It's, you know,
in Texas, all the birds are dying, I guess, but in Mexico, they're fine. So confiscation of egg products by U.S. border officers.
Because you don't bring those cheap eggs in here.
Why don't you want cheap eggs in?
Why is that?
Increased 108% confiscation did from October the 1st to December the 31st,
according to the border report.
During that time, egg prices climbed to record highs.
Aren't you glad that our border patrol is on the job stopping this dangerous
trafficking and eggs?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Um,
43 million egg laying hens recently died and a bird flu outbreak.
According to the department of agriculture,
that's the narrative, but to the Department of Agriculture. That's the narrative.
But that narrative is not true, according to a group called Farm Action.
It is a farmer-led advocacy group.
And on Thursday, they asked the Federal Trade Commission to, quote,
promptly open an investigation into the egg industry.
I guess they want it to be egg-spodided.
Sorry, I'll try not to do that too often.
To prosecute any violations, I just can't help it,
of the antitrust laws,
and ultimately get the American people their money back.
So big egg producers are behind what they called a collusive scheme,
unquote, to gouge consumers, says this farm group. Just before testifying at an open meeting of the Federal Trade Commission, Farm Action, this is the group of farmers,
sent a letter to the agency chair, Lena Kahn, detailing its, quote, concerns over apparent price coordination, price gouging,
and other unfair or deceptive acts or practices by dominant egg producers,
such as CalMaine Foods, Rose Acre Farms, Versova Holdings, and Hillandale Farms.
Farm Action said, Egg prices have more than doubled for consumers from last year,
going from $1.79 in December 2021 to $4.25 in December 2022
for a dozen large grade A eggs.
Major egg producers and their allies have blamed surging prices on a, quote, supply
disruption, unquote, triggered by the deadliest outbreak of avian influenza in U.S. history,
calling it an act of God type of stuff, said the letter.
However, based on its analysis of publicly available industry data, Farm Action determined
that while the avian flu outbreak killed roughly 43 million
egg-laying hens nationwide in 2022, its actual impact on egg supply was minimal.
This is why when you testify, they say, the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. You see, to say that 43 million egg-laying hens have died,
it is not the whole truth.
That is true, but it's not the issue.
They said after accounting for chicks that were hatched during the year,
the average size of the egg-laying flock in any given month of 2022
was never more than 7 to 8%
lower than it was a year prior.
And in all but two months, it was never more than 6% lower.
There's not a lot of missing birds, frankly.
They said the effect of the loss of egg-laying hens on production was itself blunted by record
high laying rates observed among the remaining hens throughout the year.
So the total number of chickens, even though 43 million of them were put down, the total number of chickens in any given month was never less than six percent below and they made
up that small deficit in the number of birds by productive laying hens more than made up for that
this sounds exactly like what happened with hurricane katrina beforehand they're all hyping
up about how it's going to destroy the refineries it's going to destroy the refineries and the gas
prices spiked and then afterwards like oh none of the refineries. It's going to destroy the refineries and the gas prices spiked. And then afterwards, like, oh, none of the refineries were damaged. They're all fine. And the gas prices
never came back down. Especially diesel, because we had a diesel at the time. And another aspect
of that was to, well, they were putting out that narrative because they wanted to hide the fact
that the federal government was putting in new arbitrary things that are going to increase the
price of diesel fuel so instead of telling
you this is because of new and unnecessary federal regulations they said well it's because
the hurricane and then uh then the hurricane narrative goes away and nobody connects the
dots because mainstream media wants to cover for the feds you're exactly right travis yeah uh so
anyway um so isn't any egg shortage you know it's true they had 43 million chickens
diet but the bottom line is so what and this is what we've been told in the uk as well i played
this is not just the u.s again this is global right isn't it amazing to see the global attack
on our food supply it'd be one one thing. And that's where I
think, you know, the farm action is, is kind of missing. They didn't want to go global with it
because then everybody just is, Oh yeah, you're one of these conspiracy theorists out there.
But it is a global conspiracy. Why? Because these big corporations are multinational.
And so you see the same types of things happening in the UK.
I played that video last week where the farmer said,
now, it's not, yeah, there's birds that are dying with it.
That's not what it is.
You're being squeezed by the grocery stores and you're being squeezed by the egg producers
and they don't want to pay us anymore.
They want to cut down on,
even though all of our costs for fuel and for
feed have skyrocketed they don't want to pay us any more money that's another aspect of it so with
total flock size substantially unaffected from the avian flu and lay rates between one to four percent
higher than the average rate observed between 2017 and 2021.
The industry's quarterly egg production experienced no substantial decline in 2022 compared to 2021.
So why did it double?
Listen to the way that it went up.
So nevertheless, the weekly wholesale price for shell eggs climbed from $1.74 per dozen at the end of February to $1.94 in the middle of March.
By the first week of April, it had reached $2.98 per dozen.
Two months after this point, the wholesale price of eggs appeared to stabilize,
but then it started increasing again.
In July, it broke previous records and reached $3 a dozen.
After dipping briefly in August, the rally in wholesale
egg prices continued, hitting $4 a dozen
in October and $4.50 a dozen the first weeks
of December. According to Farm Action, major egg producers' massive
price hikes are unjustifiable. In addition to the avian
flu outbreak, some have attributed
skyrocketing egg prices to higher feed and fuel costs but the dominant producers course of
business documents suggest these claims have little to merit says a letter from farm action
for example in a presentation to investors just this month Cal Maine noted that the total farm
production and feed costs in 2022 were only
22% higher than they were in 2021. So how did you wind up going several multiples of, you know,
several hundred percent increase? The real culprit behind this 138% hike in the price of a carton of
eggs, says the letter, appears to be a collusive scheme among industry leaders
to turn inflationary conditions and an avian flu outbreak into an opportunity to extract
egregious profits.
That's theirs.
I mean, I didn't spell it with two Gs, but it is egregious, reaching as high as 40%.
The chief financial officer of CalMain,
the nation's largest producer and distributor of eggs,
has admitted as much, saying in a recent statement that, quote, significantly higher selling prices,
our enduring focus on cost control,
and our ability to adapt to inflationary market pressures
has improved profitability overall.
There are going to be people who are going to exploit inflation,
and they're going to be the drivers of inflation.
Oh, well, you know, we've been told that there's going to be a lot of inflation.
You should be expecting inflation.
So we've got avian flu.
Oh, well, the price is going to go up from $2.70 to seventy to uh four fifty five dollars a dozen contrary to
industry narratives the increase in the price of eggs has not been an act of god it has been simple
profiteering said farm actions letter and again we see this is not happening in mexico uh i guess
kind of like sherlock holmes and he had the dog that didn't bark, this would be the chicken that didn't squawk.
This disparity between the food supply here and Mexico.
We're supposed to believe that Mexico is a third world country?
Well, nothing makes you more of a banana republic than to have a corrupt government, which we have.
CalMaine's willingness to increase its prices and profit margins to such unprecedented levels suggests foul play.
Don't spell it.
F-O-W-L.
Fundamentally, this is not a laughing matter, quite frankly.
They're coming after our food supply. Fundamentally, CalMain seems to be engaging in price leadership using the perceived
flu outbreak and the inflationary conditions of the past year's cover to establish a new focal
point for egg prices. This pattern of behavior by the dominant firms in the egg industry raises
significant concerns about monopoly power and potential antitrust violations in this sector.
But do you think anything's going to happen with this administration?
I mean, you know, pharmaceutical companies, the FDA,
I guess they know better than to ask the FDA to do anything about this.
So they're asking the Federal Trade Commission,
with its authority under the Sherman, Clayton, and FTC Acts,
to identify, challenge, and uproot anti-competitive arrangements.
Collusion.
This presents, they said, exactly the kind of monopoly or oligopoly power that is entrenched in a market with highly inelastic demand
and that imposes substantial costs on the public.
You see, when you have a consolidated industry, just like with a baby food thing, you got one gigantic factory and one gigantic, you know, the biggest factory of the biggest producer, and you shut that down.
And how did they get that much?
Well, they got it through collusion with the government. the monopolistic situation with this, the baby food thing,
they were able to establish a monopoly situation
by getting lucrative contracts, monopolistic contracts,
to provide the baby food through the welfare,
various states and federal agencies.
So they worked their way in that way, you know,
by working with the government officials to get a contract
that allowed them to essentially establish themselves as a monopoly.
And then they put all of their eggs in one basket
when it came to baby food into that one factory that then shut down.
Going back to farm action,
what CalMain Foods and the other large egg producers did last year
and seem to be intent on doing again this year
is to extort billions of dollars from the pockets of ordinary Americans
through what amounts to a tax on a staple product that we all need, eggs. One of the questions that the Knights of the Storm had for Travis
when they talked to him, they said, well, what is your family?
Somebody put up a question, what has your family done to prepare?
I'd like to know what you guys have done so that I can learn from you.
And it's like, well, I know what needs to be done.
We haven't done.
Our only, we talked talking about after the show,
I said, yeah, our only preparation has been to move.
I've gotten to know some farmers in the area,
but we have not started our chickens up again.
We lost two flocks when we were back in Texas.
It is, we've spent all of our time just trying to get relocated
away from being adjacent to a very large and potentially very dangerous urban center.
And to get to an area where, you know, we're going to be able to, we've got some things that we can put together, but we haven't put any of this stuff together.
Even to the extent that, you know, we had this massive snowstorm, we weren't even prepared with firewood for this stuff,
let alone a good wood furnace.
And so we are hopelessly behind in this stuff.
So again, do as I say, not as I do type of thing.
But we do have to get back into raising chickens.
And we've been just working around the clock,
trying to get everything
organized after this move has been very complicated, trying to keep the show going, uh, with the
number of hours that we do the show and try to move across country and all the stuff that
we got and, you know, all, all of all the adults and everything, but it's, uh, and then
of course, you know, going back and forth with weddings and other things like that.
But, um, you know, it's, we've been reluctant to start up the chickens again
because we lost two flocks and we're really concerned about
just feeding the hawks around here or other wildlife.
But it's something that everybody needs to do.
And this is just another example of it.
This type of monopolistic manipulation is happening throughout the
food supply chain. And all of these companies and government agencies are about dominating
everything. They said they raised these prices without any legitimate business justification.
They did so because there is no reasonable substitute for a carton of eggs. They did it
because they had the power to do it and they weren't afraid to use it. This kind of organized theft is exactly what Congress and the public that it
supposedly represents empowered and directed the FTC to prevent.
And so they're calling on the FTC to act. Using free speech to free minds.
It's the David Knight Show. hear news now at apsradionews.com or get the aps radio app and never miss another story
joining us now is eric peters epautos.com one of my favorite sites because Eric covers things that are dear to my heart, liberty and freedom of transportation, private cars and things like that.
He's got great reviews, but he also, you can't do anything today without getting involved in politics because politics has intruded itself in every aspect of our life.
And it is overriding our car decisions left and right.
They're redesigning the cars left and right out of these,
um,
out of Congress and other places.
Uh,
but thank you for joining us here.
Oh,
you bet.
I'm standing here by my propane gas heater doing the Davos shuffle.
That might've been a little bit too far for Biden,
you know,
as he,
as he came out and,
and,
and the justification that he had for it was complete nonsense.
This whole thing about childhood asthma. Seriously, come on, you know, As he came out. And the justification that he had for it was complete nonsense.
This whole thing about childhood asthma.
Seriously?
Come on.
You know when the gas is leaking because they put some, you know, stinky gas in there so that it has a smell.
And it's not leaking.
It's being burned.
It's ridiculous.
But it's of a piece, isn't it?
You know, we've talked about how they want to push everything into a single centralized source of energy. That is electricity.
They want you to drive an electric car.
They want you to have an electric heat pump in your house.
And the reason for that is obvious because then they have absolute control over everything that keeps you alive.
You know, your ability to stay warm, your ability to cook, to cool your food, and, of course, to drive.
That's what this is fundamentally all about.
That's right.
And Kathy Hochul in New York was upfront about it,
and so have the regulators and the eco-dictators in the U.K. and other places.
They said, look, we're doing this to satisfy the climate gods.
Biden came up with this bogus nonsense about asthma,
and I think it's because he's trying to navigate as to
how legally he's going to use some bureaucratic organization underneath him to ban this but kathy
hokal said no we're just going to ban space heaters from all the buildings and um you know
they they had this in and put this in a couple of years ago saying you're not going to build any new
construction uh residential is going to start at such and such a point.
We're going to give you another couple of years to phase it out for commercial,
but you're not going to be allowed to have any gas space heating.
And then at the last minute, Kathy Hochul stuck in her thing into that same bill
saying, we're going to cut off gas ranges and the rest of the stuff.
And the chefs at the restaurants are like, no, you're not.
That's going to put us out of business.
And so they jumped the shark on
that. They went a little bit too far with their bands too quickly. And that's a good thing to see
people finally waking up to what is happening with this. It is. I think perhaps a lot of people are
beginning to discern the common thread here, which has nothing to do with climate change.
That's just the excuse to drag us back to a feudal state of the Middle Ages, where you had a
pyramidal society with
the lords and the priests at the very top.
And today's priests, of course, are those who are promulgating this whole climate change
religion.
And everybody else is impoverished and underneath the foot of the lords and the priests.
That is kind of a snapshot of what these Davos people would like to see happen.
And they made it pretty clear in their last big uh, you know, big confab that was in Egypt
cop 27, they even created these little phony green tablets, like the 10 commandments.
And they had 10 environmentalist commandments and they go up this little mountain and they
look back at where the conference was and they said, that's not good enough.
And they destroy the tablets.
I mean, it's just, the whole thing is just a mockery.
It's an imitation, but it's good
to see them going too far on this. And you got an article about adaptable vehicles, and I want to
talk about that. But before we do, just as we were talking off air when you got on, you said you had
some idea as to what is going on with Biden. It looks like the establishment has turned on him,
doesn't it? It smells like it.
You know, I've got a pretty good detector for this sort of thing. And the same organs that
were vehemently behind him when it came to anything, whatever indefensible thing he did,
they would find a way to defend it. Well, now all of a sudden we've got these documents that
supposedly were being stored in his garage at his Delaware house, and they're actually taking umbrage about that.
There are negative stories about this.
Ooh, how irresponsible. How could this be?
And that suggests to me that maybe they're trying to figure out a way to dump the geriatric kid sniffer,
because they have a real problem on their hands.
What are they going to do?
The next election is only a little bit more than two years away now at this point,
and I think he's a liability.
He's becoming a liability for a variety of factors.
And maybe if they can push him out of the way, then we get Kamala Harris as the new president,
and perhaps she's going to then appoint somebody like Gavin Newsom as her vice president.
And voila, there we go, instant American Trudeau come 2024.
Yeah, I just don't know how they think they're going to do much better with Lala Harris.
I mean, she's not senile, but she can't complete a sentence or a thought.
She says, oh, isn't that something?
But when I look at this, Eric, I talked about this yesterday or the day before.
I said, you look at David, it was yesterday because we're only on Tuesday.
It seems like a week has gone by.
I did a midnight show last night, so I lost track of which day we're on.
But David Gergen, one of the mouthpieces, you know, certainly for CNN, but he's been on both sides of the establishment for many years.
He was working with Republicans, you know, from Nixon and Reagan and everything.
But, you know, he worked with Clinton and the rest of them,
and they've got the knives out for Biden.
And I think one of the things that's key that I talked about,
Sue, what you think about this, I said, you know,
it's come out that they knew about Biden's documents
at least a couple of weeks before the election.
Now, they would keep that quiet because they didn't want to affect the election,
but they also knew about it well before they did the Trump raid.
And I think that's even more significant.
I question as I looked at that, because I don't think there's really anything in terms of the documents with Trump.
They talk about a pardon for Roger Stone or something, but the documents that Biden has could be pretty significant because of the Iran documents and because of Ukraine.
There's the connections that Biden and Hunter had in Ukraine and the corruption, but also the coup that happened there.
And also what happened during the Obama administration with Iran.
You know, they had this bizarre thing where they were sending a plane with all this foreign currency because they were
prohibited from doing that to pay them off and to ransom some people. So there's a lot of stuff
there. So maybe, I looked at this, I thought, well, maybe they made that raid against Trump.
They don't need any more things to come after Trump. They got so many different ones that they
can't close a deal on any of those. This isn't going to help them. But maybe the more significant
thing is of Biden, and maybe this is a two-for-one,
and maybe the attack on Mar-a-Lago really was to come after Biden. I don't know. I'm kind of a
deep conspiracy theorist. I see this as a two-for-one. Given that anything is possible, you know,
anything literally is possible these days. There's nothing that restrains these people. I certainly
think that that's a plausible scenario. And as a legal matter, you know, I'm not a lawyer, but I've been given to understand that in Trump's case, he is the former president, and there's a different
standard there for the president to have hold of certain documents, whereas a lot of these documents
apparently that Biden had date back to when he was the vice president and did not have legal
authority to do what he did. So, you know, we're going to see, I guess, over the next couple of days, weeks, what happens. That's right. Yeah. The Democrats
want to get rid of Trump. Most Republicans do as well. But the Democrats, it looks like now,
want to get rid of Biden because, as you pointed out, this is a lot more serious.
There are more serious documents involved. And he was just the vice president. He wasn't the
president. So this is potentially a lot more serious. I think it is killing two birds with one national security. And here's the other thing, Eric.
Is anybody bringing up the Hillary Clinton, Clintonemails.com? Nobody's still talking
about that. That's a big, you know, the dog that did not bark. You know, why, if we're going to
get ourselves all worked up about Biden and Trump, why are we not talking about Hillary here with all this?
Well, of course, because, again, it's cognitive dissonance.
The apparat, just like in 1984 when the party orator shifts gears in mid-speech.
Eurasia is the enemy one moment, and then it's East Asia the next minute.
And the crowd, like a bunch of trained SEALs, just claps their approbation.
That's what happens these days.
That's right. That's right.
Well, let's talk about what about if Davos gets his way.
Let's talk about adaptable vehicles.
I think it's a great article.
Tell people what you're talking about here.
Yeah, well, we all know what's happening with regard to new cars and this push toward electrification.
And the fact that most late model cars are very, very difficult to do anything other than basic maintenance on because of all the electronics.
And when those parts no longer become available or they're discontinued, you've got a problem.
You know, we were given a kind of preview of this during these supply chain interruptions that have happened over the course of the, air fingers quotes, pandemic.
So when something goes wrong with these electronic systems, you have a car that's useless. It doesn't work and you have no way to fix it because
the parts are specific to that vehicle and you have to have that particular part in order for
it to work. And in some cases, you have to have a dealer program the part in order for the vehicle
to work. Well, with older but not ancient vehicles, I've got an 02 Nissan Frontier pickup.
They have electronic fuel injection, but that's the only really electronic thing that they have.
The rest of the vehicle, remarkably, is still essentially a mechanical device,
very similar to the vehicles that were made 30, 40 years ago.
And it's not too difficult, if you wanted to, to replace the electronic fuel injection.
All the sensors in the computer with a simpler mechanical fuel delivery system,
meaning a straightforward intake manifold and a carburetor.
And then you don't have to worry about any of that.
You know, I've got an old muscle car.
It's almost 50 years old.
It still has its original carburetor.
And it's easy for me to take it down and rebuild it, fix it, whatever.
And even if I had to replace the whole thing, it's only a $500 part, brand new.
And I'll never have to do that, probably.
So that's a growth industry for somebody to offer that service for people.
Well, it is.
And the point is that when we get to a scenario like in Cuba where parts aren't available
but we want to be able to continue to move, it behooves us to figure out a way to keep
our vehicles going.
And this is one way to do that.
If you have a relatively modern vehicle like my O2 Frontier, you can retrofit and adapt these simpler, more DIY-friendly components to it and be able to continue to drive
it. Whereas with the newer stuff, everything is completely electronicized. Everything. You can't
do anything to these vehicles anymore. So it's just a thought that it might be a good thing
to consider doing that or getting a vehicle like that that you could do that with given the way things are rolling yeah and i could see that you know some new technology kind of
coming to the rescue with that remember um we have uh jay leno in his garage he got a lot of
really really old classic cars nobody's making parts for anymore and uh when they would want
to replace it some of these things they wouldD print. I can imagine that you could probably have situations
where people put up 3D printed files and sell them to you
or even offer them for free for various car parts
that are no longer around.
I could definitely see that happening.
But you're right.
You and I talked about this years ago
when they started coming after John Deere.
Farmers are used to fixing their equipment.
That's one of the ways that they survive is by being self-reliant
and being able to do things on their own instead of having to pay everybody
for every service.
But John Deere started shutting that down.
GM was shutting that down, making things inaccessible
under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act or something like that.
We're saying, well, we always own the computer code,
and you better not replace that or modify that.
And if you were even to buy the part, you couldn't install it
without having some John Deere dealer that was going to specifically program it
and enable it for you.
So they wanted to essentially turn you into renters forever, never owning anything.
And you pay for it, but you never really own it.
They retain ownership of that.
And so that's been there in a lot of different ways.
Yeah, and they're actually elaborating the principle more and more, some of the features
that you used to buy when you got a car.
For example, I'd like to have heated seats or a heated steering wheel.
And you paid for that option, and it was yours.
You owned the car, and that was it.
Now they're selling these things on a subscription basis.
So the system is in the vehicle when you buy it,
but it's only enabled if you sign up for a monthly or a yearly subscription.
And if you don't continue to pay them, then the heated seats don't work anymore.
And you never truly own the heated seats.
Isn't it great?
Yeah.
It just keeps metastasizing, doesn't it?
It truly is amazing.
And you know, when you look at the complex, the complexity of these different cars, um,
having a Miata, I was amused to look at what a company called Flying Miata would do.
They would stuff V8 engines and stuff, right?
You know about them.
Well, you know, they did that just fine the first couple of generations,
you know, and they'd do a new Miata about every 10 years or whatever.
But the first couple of generations, they were able to put that in.
There was no problem at all.
Then when they get to the third generation, it got kind of complicated
because now all of a sudden there's a lot of electronic things
that are interconnected, and they had to get a consultant to come in, and it made a bit of an issue.
Even though they had more room under the hood, it became a very complicated thing because of the electronics.
And then when they came out with the fourth generation a few years ago,
and they wanted to drop a V8 engine into that, they said they nearly couldn't do it.
They hired a whole bunch of different consultants because they had on the bus,
they had everything was interconnected, whether you're talking about, you know,
every system, emergency systems and driver assist systems that were there,
as well as the heater and the radio, you know, all these things were interconnected.
It's not just the drivetrain.
Late model vehicles have things called body control modules, which govern the operation of things like the power windows.
And they won't work.
You know, if you take the electronics out for one thing, then nothing else works.
So you essentially would have to gut the entire vehicle and then re-engineer it from the ground up.
And, yeah, it can be done, but it's prohibitively expensive.
And essentially nobody's going to do that
except for perhaps a handful of very affluent people.
So it's alarming to me as an enthusiast,
as somebody who likes to be able to work on my own vehicles,
what they have done now to just make these things
essentially tablets on wheels or cell phones on wheels,
and not just the electric cars.
It's regular cars, too.
They're not serviceable.
They work great.
Usually when you buy them there isn't that you know you just go and you don't really have to do
anything to them in terms of maintenance but then eventually you get to this point where things start
to go wrong and when they do go wrong forget about it you're not going to be able to do anything
about it yourself and nobody else may be able to either because the parts may not be available
yeah they you know this year they went back to the consumer electronics show and we talked about
it a couple years ago before the quote-unquote pandemic and the kind of stuff that you're seeing
there now oh look bmw's got a car that changes colors all the time it's like well how much does
that cost to fix if you get a ding at the supermarket you know i mean none of this stuff
is practical but it is all electronics and you got sony coming out with their car in conjunction
with i think it was honda or something and something, and they're putting together a car.
Because it really has now become kind of a mobile boombox with many other types of things.
It's really a piece of consumer electronics.
That's why they've dominated the show for the last two that they've had over the last four years.
They've only had two shows, but the last two of them they've had that way.
But when we look at getting our independence,
I like what you were talking about in terms of de-electronification of a car,
whatever, if that's a word. Yeah, de-electronization.
I know I come up with these neologisms to try to convey the point.
Maybe they're a little bit awkward sometimes.
Yeah, I think we're going to have to think of how we are going to do our own fuel as well.
I talked about this on the show.
I said, you know, I've seen for years they have micro breweries, right?
And somehow they were able to get out of the clutches of the ATF.
And around here, it's something that's just happened in the last few years.
They would say, well, you can do beer and it can't have a high alcohol content or whatever.
But around here, something happened, and I don't know what the legal basis of it is.
I haven't looked at that.
But there are just tons of what they call moonshine places.
So these are like a microbrewery, except they're doing hard liquor.
And so if you can do something like that, there's got to be some way that we could do micro-refineries,
where we could produce fuel of some sort.
That's basically grain alcohol. Essentially, that's what we're talking about. Ethanol is
alcohol and you can make it from corn and you can make it from a lot of other materials that
people can grow on their own. You may not be able to make massive quantities of it, but in a pinch,
you could probably make enough to, for example, run a generator, run your power equipment,
run your vehicle if need be. Conver converting an older vehicle that doesn't have electronics,
it has a carburetor, to alcohol is a fairly straightforward process. You just have to get
alcohol-compatible gaskets and so on, and then increase the, you know, up-jet it to make to
compensate for the leaner fuel mixture that alcohol will give you. But it's a pretty straightforward
process, and people have done it for decades.
Yeah.
We've talked about greasels, people converting their diesel to run off of animal oil and things like that.
And so that's been around for a while.
But even Porsche came out with an e-fuels.
What was it? They turned CO2 or methane or something like that
into a liquid that could be burned
without any adjustment to the engine.
But they're going to do it in a very, very special way.
This is going to be super expensive,
I guess maybe because it's got to be done
in this little bespoke factory
that is down in the tip of South America
in a place where there's constant wind.
And it's going to be green because they're going to power the plant that makes this stuff from wind power, all this other kind.
But you don't need that.
I mean, you could.
That's just the take-home point.
The reason why we have been continuing to rely on gas and diesel is because it's easy and it's efficient.
It makes it feasible for average
people to drive. And that's exactly why the Davos crowd doesn't like it and is pushing us into these
Rube Goldberg-esque schemes and these expensive alternatives that are really not feasible for
most people. Yeah, that's right. When we talk about, you've got another article, everything
except cars. Talk about how the car companies have reimagined themselves.
Well, you know, there's a phrase that the Marxists have called the long march through the institutions.
And you know that they've marched through the institutions when General Motors,
which at one time was synonymous with American capitalism,
now is more interested in selling this woke woke agenda you go to the main corporate news
page which you'd think would be devoted to hate this is what cars were working
on uh... you know you didn't and things of that nature instead you find things
about diversity equity inclusion
citizenship
all these sorts of things and and i and i i i i took a few snapshots from their
site and i went to a few other things and pointed out that this is probably why General Motors has about a 16% market share today, as opposed to the 28% of the entire North American market that Chevrolet division by itself had in 1968.
Wow.
Well, that's exactly what Klaus Schwab would approve of, though.
This is ESG.
We don't care about manufacturing anything. We don't care about manufacturing
anything. We don't care about making a profit. We want to tow the line for whatever the government
agenda is or whatever the global agenda is. And they are right there towing the line.
They were repurposed during the so-called pandemic. Oh, we're going to make you into
ventilator manufacturers, along with Ford. But this is what Mary Barra has been all about, isn't it?
Yeah.
Keep in mind that for people at her level, and I think her annual compensation package
is something on the order of $20 million annually, you know, she's essentially part of the Davos
crowd.
And these people are essentially possessed of unlimited means, and they know that for
them and their class, none of this matters, because they will be able to afford the ultra-expensive, hand-built, probably,
vehicles that the elites will tootle around in, just like Stalin didn't worry about driving
a car or having a car.
He always had a car.
You know, it's about making sure that the rest of the Soviet people didn't have a car.
That's right.
Yeah, I liked what somebody said about Davos.
They called them the gold-collar workers. That's right. Yeah. I liked what somebody said about Davos. They called them the gold collar workers. They're not blue collar or white collar. They're gold collar because they
are so separated from the rest of us. So elitist. I like what you put in your article here. Nowadays,
companies do these things, but they're secondary and tertiary, the manufacturing things to such
things as people, safety, diversity, equity, inclusion, and wait for it, citizenship.
Is this a seventh grade civics class made with the Boy Scouts?
Whoops, these aren't Boy Scouts.
It's GM today.
That pretty much sums it up, Eric.
Yeah, you know, I learned about citizenship when I was in the Boy Scouts.
I didn't think you'd have to learn about that when you go to work for a car company.
Yeah, but, you know, that's what they want.
And that's part of their transformation of society.
That's why we need to be looking at how we're going to retrofit our cars so they don't take us all the way back into the Middle Ages.
Maybe we just go back to the 1950s, you know.
That'd be good enough.
Yeah, not so bad.
You know, I've written repeatedly and spoken a number of times about the issue of secession,
and I think really probably the best way to think of that is on an individual level,
meaning that we each decide to simply opt out and we secede. We stop doing business with, we stop associating with these people, these organizations, all of that, and we create our own alternative system. is something that is within our grasp and something that is achievable as opposed to the far more difficult thing of politically separating, say, one state from the rest of
the union and so on.
That's right.
Yeah.
Nullification was a while I would describe that to just say, well, we're not going to
do that.
You've got a situation, as I was talking about earlier in the show, you're now up to 80 out
of 102 counties in Illinois where the sheriff has said, we're not going to enforce this
new gun control regulation.
That's the appropriate path.
And I've been saying,
and we saw this all through this lockdown pandemic that local officials could
make things a lot better,
or they could make things a lot worse than even what they were trying to do at
the state level.
We've had situations in some States where you had governors fighting,
uh,
aggressive tyrants,
uh,
public health officials and so forth in some locations.
Or you've had situations where they stood for the freedom of the people against an invasive governor like Gretchen Whitmer or Pritzker or something like that.
So it really is at the local level.
And they've understood this all along.
They would always say, the UN would say, think globally,
act locally. Well, we need to understand what their plans are. We need to defeat them locally.
And that's one of the reasons why on their agenda this year, the World Economic Forum, Davos,
has an agenda on how to accomplish these things at the local level. They're going to try to bring in all these different mayors and bureaucrats at the local level to enforce this stuff?
There's a stat, I think, that is on our side. As I understand it, roughly about 1% to 3%, depending on whose numbers you go by, of the population would be diagnosed as psychopathic
or extremely narcissistic sociopath-type personalities. And that's a good thing,
because it means most people are decent people. They might get bamboozled. They might be confused. But most people, after a while,
their conscience starts to work on them. And I'm speaking here to your point about these local
sheriffs and so on saying, you know, I'm not going to I'm not comfortable with this. I'm not going to
enforce these laws. They're wrong. Yes, I think we're beginning to see the wheel turn in that
direction. The people are saying, you know, what happened during the air fingers quote pandemic?
This was despicable and awful.
And I feel, I feel gross that I had anything to do with it and it's time to stop.
And if that continues to happen, and I think that it will, things are going to get better.
You know, we were all impatient for things to get better, but the Titanic doesn't turn
on a dime.
We just have to keep on plugging away and doing what we're doing.
It took the other side 50 years to get us to where we are now. That's right. Yeah. There's a lot of inertia,
but you know, once you wake up the sleeping giant, it's going to, you know, we're going to
stomp them into fine pieces, you know, once it happens. But, uh, I think part of the dynamic
that's there with the local sheriffs, and I saw this in the early days of the pandemic,
as I talked to a local pastor and he said, yeah, uhmer is, not Whitmer, Pritzker in Illinois is threatening to shut us down. But the sheriff has
got the cars protecting our church here because we all know each other. We've lived here for years.
We've gone to school together. He's got deputies that go to this church. That's the issue. When
these people get to the state level or to the federal level, they're so far removed from you that you're nothing more than a statistic.
You're an abstraction.
But when it's at the local level, if you get out, and this is why they want to isolate everybody with social distancing and having us work through their digital portals and their metaverse and all the rest of the stuff.
If they can do that and if they can break the relationship that people have in a community successfully, they've got us.
We have to fight what they're doing.
They're talking about digitalization of everything.
That's a buzzword for Davos this year.
They want to digitize us because they want to isolate us.
We want to have a real world where we are involved with real people who live in our area.
And if we have that kind of connection, then they lose their control over us. They do. There's accountability,
and it's key, and I think that we've lived now for quite some time in what I consider to be an
unnatural environment. This, as you say, this sort of alienating mass society in which you
are just a widget, a one or a zero, and you don't know these forces
that have control over you, they don't care about you, it's a machine.
And I think to the extent that we can get back to a decentralized system, which is what
the founders of the country had in mind, where for the most part, the things that go on,
go on at the community level.
And as you say, with people that you've grown up with, went to school with, that you know,
and vice versa.
And that is how you maintain a healthy society. And to the extent that we can get back to that,
the better things are going to be. Yeah, I think our society's part of the problem is our societies
have gotten too big to be representative and to have that kind of accountability.
You look at what was originally, you know, the original design of the Constitution was to limit the number of people represented by a representative to 30,000 or 50,000.
Well, you know, we got away from that almost immediately.
And then we had them fix the number of representatives.
And so now one congressman is representing maybe 750,000 to 800,000.
I don't know what the latest one is, but it had already been up to 750,000 rather than 50,000.
And so these people, even the congressional level,
they are too far distant from us.
And I've said for the longest time,
if we went back to that approach and limit it to 30 or 50,000 people,
you'd wind up with several thousand congressional representatives,
and we would have a truly representative body.
And people say, well, they couldn't all meet in one place. That's right. They would have to stay at home. And that
would be something that would be a good thing to have on Zoom, right? And you could do that.
And that possibility has been there for quite a while, but everybody has now lived that and is
currently living that. Certainly we should enforce that on them to have that kind of accountability,
but it is that distance from us. You see these people go native,
and that is, I think, the biggest threat to all of us, is that you break that connection
to each other, whether it's your congressional representative or just people in your own
neighborhood. Yeah, anything that tends to diffuse authority is beneficial. That would be the first
response I have. And the second is, I've always kind of been uncomfortable with the word
representative, as it applies in a political context.
If I have somebody represent me, that means they do exactly what I tell them to do.
For example, my lawyer, he's my representative.
He does what I tell him to do.
If he doesn't do it, I can fire him.
It's nonsense to characterize these politicians as representatives because they do whatever they're going to do. And maybe sometimes their interests will jive with what yours are, but they don't represent
you in any etymologically honest way.
Yeah, Congress is a better description because they're cons, right?
Yeah, right.
But I think George Santos is the exhibit of that.
He's a living joke every day.
It's a new thing that's thrown out there
but i always talked about it in terms of uh you know when you when you uh think of congress every
two to four years or whatever you get uh to make a choice maybe for senate it's every six years
right so every two four six years you get to vote and what you get is a basket of things and And it would be as if you went to the grocery store and, you know,
you can call them up and you can give them an order and they'll fill the stuff
up and you just go by and pick it up. You know, some people do that.
But imagine that everything was that way.
You couldn't go through the aisles and pick out what you wanted and get exactly
what you wanted. You would go and you would get,
either you get this basket A and it's got these things
in it, or you get basket B. You know where I'm going with this.
You get a lot of stuff put in your basket that you don't want.
And that's the problem with all these politicians and these political parties.
It's a basket case of stuff and lots of stuff you don't want.
And there's also a moral aspect of it that's kind of,
that makes a person uneasy,
or at least it makes me uneasy,
in that on the one hand,
you might like A, B, and C
of what a given representative
says that he's going to do,
but on the other hand,
there's, you know,
G, E, and F
that you don't like.
But so you have this
uncomfortable balance
of like, and with Trump
is a really good example.
Okay, you know,
some of his policies might have been appealing.
And, yeah, I think I can go for that.
But then there are these other things that he does that, you know,
I really am uncomfortable with and want no part of.
And you're placed in this position of having to vote, as they say,
for the lesser of two evils.
And the result of that is that we end up with something that's evil.
Yeah, that's right.
Speaking of that, you've got an article, Mercenarism,
a picture of Glenn Beckman.
You'll know all about that.
And Sean Hannity right there.
Yeah, talk a little bit about that article.
Well, it was prompted by an explosion of outrage.
I was making my daily trek downtown from where I live.
I'm going to hit the gym, and it's about a half hour away.
And the duration of the trip i'm just
listening to an infomercial on uh you know on i think it was xm serious 125 their political channel
one of the political channels and it's gotten so bad you know you want on the one hand to get some
of this information out there but as the late comedian bill hicks put it you know everything
they say is suspect because they're constantly trying to sell you something and it's not as if
there's a separation you know hey here's a word from our sponsors in the middle of a monologue,
they will start trying to hawk something to you. The actual, the host of the show will start trying
to sell you something. So, you know, it seems to me like that's all they're doing. It's, it's just
about selling, you know, guys like, like, like Hannity and Beck, these guys are multimillionaires.
Why do they have to continue to do that? I, I, I just, I, I'd love to have the question answered if I'm them and I'm in their position
and they come to the, the, the studio or whatever, the radio station comes to me and says, we'd
like you to read this ad.
No, I'm not going to read that ad.
You're welcome to put the ad on my show, you know, and that's fine, but I'm not going to
read the stinking thing.
And if you don't like it, go pound sand.
I've been there.
Yeah, I know. Like some of the, uh, Insta heart or whatever. It's like, I'm not selling. a stinking thing and if you don't like it go pound sand i've been there yeah i know like some
of the uh insta heart or whatever it's like i'm not selling no and to be clear i understand the
necessity of earning a living and i understand that people in the media i'm one of them you
have to have uh sponsors and so on but and there's nothing wrong with that you know back in the print
days we would have you know articles news articles on a page and then maybe on the top right corner there'd be an ad for something,
and that's fine because there was a clear separation between the news or the opinion and the ad.
That was important because it let people realize that what you were saying in the news article
or the opinion piece wasn't trying to sell them something.
That's right.
Yeah, well, the problem I have with it, you know, is when you're selling something that's bogus, or if you start slanting the news
in order to, you know, help your sponsor, as Fox
News has done on these pharmaceuticals and vaccines,
quite obviously, you know, pushing back. Brought to you by Pfizer. Yeah, that's
right. They don't want you to see some of the stuff. Why? Because they are brought to you by Pfizer.
These guys are getting tens of millions of dollars. Why? Because they're sponsored by Pfizer, throwing money at everybody about this kind of stuff.
But yeah, you're right.
Sometimes they will say, well, you know, we have to do this. It's necessary. It's the cost of doing business. No, it's not.
You know, there's the example of Joe Rogan, who's a guy who has a microphone in a studio, and he does his show, and he has a tremendous audience.
And sure, he has sponsors,
but he doesn't try to sell you gold or dog-chewy treats
in the course of his conversations with people.
And it just shows that it can be done.
They just don't want to do it,
and they're really undermining, I think, our cause.
People on our side of the fence,
meaning the pro-liberty movement, generally speaking,
I think has got to be very careful
about not doing anything at all that can be used against us
in the sense of portraying us as in it just to cash in and make money, like the Republican Party.
Send in your $50 now to join the Republican caucus and all that kind of thing.
It's got to stop.
Well, you know, you mentioned Joe Rogan and Spotify that sponsors him and pays him tens of millions of dollars here
is the one podcast that will not carry my program. I have been kicked off of them, uh, when I was at
InfoWars and then, you know, when I started my own thing, I thought, well, maybe they'll do it now.
And, you know, I go to a, um, uh, I upload to one spot, you know, like to Spreaker right now,
and it pushes it out to all the different ones.
And so we did that, and I was there for a couple of months, and then they shut it down.
And then we changed and wouldn't give me an explanation.
And so then we changed to another host, and it started putting the stuff out.
And they pumped it out to Spotify as a default thing. So I thought, well, let's just see what happens with it.
And I actually got a call from a Spotify rep said, we'd like to monetize your podcast and
put some stuff on there.
And I said, great, but are you sure?
Am I okay with you guys?
And while we were still talking about it, uh, that took a couple of weeks, um, they
shut me down again. And so, you know, they have, I found out,
that they have a piece of technology that they want to sell
to all the other podcasts,
which will identify naughty speech like mine and shut it down.
So they have developed the tools to do that.
That's why they're the only ones doing it,
but this may metastasize other people.
They may sell it to other people and shut down your podcast because,
you know,
you know,
I had,
we had another one that contacted us and said,
well,
I would like to carry your show and,
you know,
looking at the downloads and all this other kind of stuff.
And so I said,
okay,
that's fine.
But you know,
they,
they specialize in this diversity, equity, inclusive thing. So I thought they wouldn't find anything. said, okay, that's fine, but they specialize in this diversity, equity, inclusive thing,
so I thought they wouldn't find anything.
Finally, they found somebody that said, well, we think we found a good sponsor for you.
They did like storable food or something like that, and I said, yeah, that would be a good fit for us,
but they said, but there's a caveat here.
They don't want you to say anything about guns.
I said, well, that's not going to happen.
So, I mean, it's that type of thing.
If you go down the list, you know, there's absolutely no way that I'm going to get too
many sponsors. We did find that, you know, we can get some on Spreaker, but that's basically,
we still essentially run the way that you run your operation, which is just by voluntary donations.
Yeah. Yeah. And I think that's actually a really good alternative,
and it gets back to this issue of decentralization that we were talking about.
All of the people who donate are individuals, and they decide on their own.
I don't push or pressure anybody.
If they like what I do, they can throw me a couple of bucks, and that's it.
And that makes it impossible for any one of them to in any way threaten my ability
to say what I want to say, whether it's on the radio or whether it's in my articles.
And I think that's ultimately the way going forward for people in the media on our side of the aisle.
That's right.
Yeah.
People sometimes get really upset with me.
I've listened to you for years, and I really don't like what you had to say about this.
Or you didn't cover this, so I'm not going to listen anymore.
It's like, well, fine, but I'm not going to tailor what I have to say to somebody who's angry with me because I've already been there.
That was my entire job.
And I let that go because I wasn't going to tailor what I was going to say about the election nonsense and the lockdown nonsense and the, you know, you're non-essential and the warp speed stuff.
I wasn't going to tailor it to any of that and tell people that Trump was playing 40 chess.
It's like, forget about it.
I'm not doing it.
Right. And from the standpoint of a listener uh why would you want that why would you want to listen to somebody that you know is going to uh is going to flinch and duck the minute
somebody complains about what he had to say i want to hear what he has to say and i'll make up my own
mind and everybody else should do the same i've told the story many times about when uh in college
uh time and news week you know they were the objective news supported reportedly right but should do the same. I've told the story many times about when I was in college,
Time and Newsweek, they were the objective news reportedly, right? But they weren't. They were owned. They were pushing the party line from the CIA, Operation Mockingbird type of stuff.
They would cover the same topics and they would have the same approach to it. But I preferred to
get my information from opinion journals and they would
be, you know, hardcore about their opinion. So I would go to a conservative one. I would look at
national review and I look at the nation, for example, you know, the nation and national review,
because they sound alike. I talk about that, but I got, I had a lot of them that I looked at
because I wanted them to talk about the issue from their perspective, whether I agreed with it or not,
I would get different. And so I wanted to have that debate. I wanted the differences in opinion them to talk about the issue from their perspective. Whether I agreed with it or not,
I would get different. And so I wanted to have that debate. I wanted the differences in opinion instead of this homogenized establishment pablum that was being fed to everybody,
which I could even see at that age that it was nothing but propaganda.
Sure. How else do you get to the truth other than by sifting through a lot of information?
Yeah, that's right. Which is what they don't want you to do anymore. And they've got the tools to
basically shut it down. You know, the podcasts are one of the few things out there that is still
available because, you know, you've got, even if you go on radio, you got, uh, you got to find
sponsors who are going to be okay with what you have to say, but the podcasts are the one thing
that's out there right now. Uh, and they haven't figured out a way to censor it, but I think
Spotify has got that tool and it just, it's going to be a matter
of time before they run it.
Well, have you been looking into sub stacks?
Yes.
Yes.
And I should be doing more on sub stack.
I, I don't really want to engage with social media, but I think a sub stack
would be a good alternative to that.
Yeah, I've begun to, I don't, by any means, know a whole lot about it.
But from what I gather, it is another decentralized venue,
a way for you to, as they say, get the word out
and not be beholden to anybody.
And, you know, it's fine.
It goes out to Twitter, it goes out to Facebook.
But if they cut it off, so what?
It's going out to other people.
That's the beauty of this.
Unless they really go full authoritarian,
as long as we still have the ability to communicate
and to disseminate, we'll find lateral moves to get around them. And ultimately, I'm confident
that we're going to win if that proves to be the case. Well, you know, the thing about Substack,
they've already been attacked a couple of years ago, and they held firm on that. And so they've
got a commitment to free speech under the current management. That could change at any point in time,
but at the current time, they've got a commitment to free speech. They have, um,
uh, you can, uh,
actually get notification out to people when you do a new article,
it'd be a very good fit for you. But I've also looked at it in terms of,
yeah, I create, we got a three hour program here.
So what I do is I typically will create an outline that gives people an idea of
what I'm talking about every five to 10 minutes.
So they can kind of jump into the program and, and look at it.
And some of the video, uh, hosts that we have, but I also put it up for the
podcast.
So the video hosts, you can click on the, um, uh, the, the time code that I have
there, and it'll take you to that spot in the video.
But, uh, that would be a good fit for me.
I think to put that on Substack.
I've been thinking about putting that up, putting a link to the video,
as well as that, because that gets to be very long,
and that gets swallowed by some of the podcast places.
So if people were to find that, that might be a good fit for us.
But it'd be a very good fit for you, because it's oriented towards articles.
Yep.
One of the great ironies, I think, of our time is that the left, the old left, and we're
here about the old right, well, now we've got the old left, used to warn about what
would happen when corporations owned the media and corporations were powerful enough to control
the government.
And now it's the left that is championing all of those things.
That's right.
Yeah, just like the left loves the FBI now.
You know, when the FBI used to have their COINTELPRO programs,
and they were shutting down people on the left, left and right,
and not left and right, but they're just shutting down the left.
But now that they have joined the left, the left is cheering them on.
We saw the same thing with the conservatives.
You know, it's just the pendulum party.
It's just swinging from one, you know,
the bureaucrats are going from one political orientation to another one but they've always
been authoritarian you've always had jager hoover i had a had a guy send me a thing he's an fbi agent
and he wanted to um he wrote a book about what has happened to the fbi he thinks it was really
good until just the last couple of years and like are you kidding me you know jager hoover's name is
on the building.
What was J. Edgar Hoover about?
You had Republican and Democrat presidents saying he's got blackmail files on everybody
in Washington, and he did.
When he died, he had his secretary going in and destroying all this stuff.
Yeah, absolutely.
It goes all the way back to the beginning of a lot of these authoritarian things, when
he first came to power in the Palmer raids under Woodrow Wilson. That's where he cut his teeth, and he was a horrible authoritarian propagandist,
blackmailer, criminal his entire life.
This whole organization has been tainted,
but only now do the conservatives see it because they're the target now.
I think part of that has to do with the general American embrace
of the philosophy
of Jeremy Bentham and utilitarianism. And to get away from that and to get back to a principled
outlook where fair play matters, honesty matters, words matter, they have definitions,
all of that sort of a thing, that's how we combat this ultimately. Not say, well,
this suits us now and we can leverage and maneuver this to our benefit. Rather, let's just do what's right.
Let's do what's decent.
Let's behave.
Let's not be tricky.
You know, there is an appeal to that, I think.
And the more that we talk about that, I think the better things will be.
Yeah, I agree.
Let's talk about cars because you do do car reviews.
We always talk about politics.
Oh, yeah.
You got a review of the 2023 Chevy Blazer, a practical car that people can get.
Tell people what you think about that.
Well, what I think, among other things, is it's one of the few vehicles in its class that you can still get with a V6 without a turbo,
and it's only a $500 option, and it's available on all except the base trims.
And that's, you know, it's kind of sad, the commentary, when you think that, you know, that's something to champion.
Because if you went back just a few years, a vehicle of that type, you know, 4,000-pound-ish SUV kind of vehicle, it would have come standard with a V6.
But because of the Davos crowd, that's going away.
And you have these little four-cylinder engines, often turbocharged, often paired with a hybrid electric drivetrain, and so on and so forth.
Would I still like to have the old Blazer?
You remember the old Blazer that had a V8 and was a real 4x4?
Sure, but this is still a good family vehicle, and it's not priced absurdly.
It's about $35,000 to start.
And by the way, I'm working on an article.
Did you know what the average transaction price for a new car was in 2022?
What's that?
$48,000.
No, you're kidding me.
Yeah.
No, I was bored by that.
People can tell you and I haven't found that out, too.
We haven't been in the market for quite a while, have we?
Yeah.
Yeah, well, you know, and then I looked into it a little further because I remembered, you know, I thought, wait, wait, that's not right.
And sure enough, you know, if you go back about two, three years, it was between 32 and 35.
So we've seen this enormous uptick in the cost of vehicles.
And part of that has to do with inflation.
Part of that has to do with this electrification, people buying these electric cars,
almost all of which start around $50,000.
Well, of course, we've also had a big back-and-forth backlash and whiplash and everything in the supply chains.
It's wreaked havoc.
It looks like CarMax and Carvana, is it?
They may be going out of business because, you know, first you had shortages of new cars, even if you could afford them.
And then the price of used cars shot straight up.
And so, you know, CarMax and other companies like that are buying these used cars.
And then the market just fell out.
The price dropped for the used cars and they're're stuck with these cars they paid too much for.
Yeah, they bought high, and now they're selling low.
But to get back to the Blazer, you know, if you're in the market for a family kind of a vehicle,
much as I have issues with General Motors as a company, it's a good vehicle, particularly with the V6.
I would encourage people to avoid these little turbocharged four-cylinder engines
because they're just not that durable.
A V6 without a turbo that has adequate displacement, adequate power, that isn't under a lot of stress all the time.
If you want a long-haul vehicle that's not going to cost you a fortune after the warranty runs out, that's what you ought to be looking for, in my opinion.
Yeah, and I remember a few years ago, you found an electric car that you liked, the Chevy Volt, because it had a generator that was charging things.
I just saw this last Friday that Mazda said, yeah, we're going to bring back the MX-30, which was essentially the same thing.
They had a generator on the car that could charge the batteries.
But they only sold just over 500 of those in the U.S.
And they were all sold in California.
And then they shut the thing down.
And then there was talk that they were going to come back and make the
generator,
uh,
the rotary engine.
And it could be really small and,
and,
you know,
compact and lightweight and that,
and everybody got,
well,
that's going to be cool,
but it looks like they're going to do the same thing again.
It looks like they're not,
maybe not even bring it to the U S what is going on with that?
Cause I don't understand.
Some people are saying,
well,
this looks like this was designed for regulatory compliance
and yet the regulators don't want any emissions that's essentially what killed the vote right
yeah yeah even though these things are immensely practical and eliminate all of the functional
problems with electric cars you don't have to worry about plugging in you don't have to worry
about running out of range you can just get in and drive it because if the battery runs low, the onboard gas generator engine will fire up and it will produce electricity and you just keep on going.
But politically, the problem is that it's not quite a zero emissions vehicle.
And, you know, it emits.00 whatever the percentage is more of whatever the anathema products are, and
we just can't have that.
And so that's why it's difficult for them to invest and commit to producing a vehicle
that has already been outlawed effectively in California, Washington State, Oregon.
A number of these states have said that only zero-emissions vehicles may be sold after,
what is it, 2030, 2035.
And even if this vehicle emits essentially nothing, it's still not technically a zero-emissions vehicle,
and so they are precluded from selling it in those markets.
And that's huge.
What are you going to build a vehicle for that you're not legally able to sell?
Yeah, they went from cheering the Previa, which is a hybrid,
so I don't even allow those now.
But what I don't understand about it is this has been known about the Chevy Volt.
Why would they redesign yet another
car? I mean, I don't understand why they would even come up with a Mazda MX-30 with a rotary
engine in it if they're not going to sell it and if it's going to be banned in various places
because, you know, it's not a zero emission car. Do you have any idea why they're doing that?
Yeah, I do. Actually, I think that Toyota and Mazda, those two in particular, they're hedging their bets. Akio Toyota, who's the head of the company, has publicly, you know,
come out and kind of said that, you know, these electric cars are maybe not really the future.
And I think they're investing in this sort of technology because they know that this thing
is going to face plant. And when it does, they're going to be in a really good position to offer
vehicles that actually meet consumers' needs and which people can to face plant. And when it does, they're going to be in a really good position to offer vehicles
that actually meet consumers' needs and which people can afford to buy.
And I think, yeah, you're right.
Toyota, Mazda, I would include in that Porsche because Porsche is talking about the e-fuels and everything.
They understand it's not going to be practical to charge everybody through the centrally controlled grid.
There's not going to be sufficient capacity.
Everybody can see that as they're struggling to try to heat their homes in Europe.
And so they know that there's no future in that.
But then again, you've got this chicken and egg thing.
As long as they play along with this narrative that we've got to have zero emissions,
they're basically cutting themselves off of the past.
That's the key thing.
You do it. I do off of the past. That's the key thing. You do it.
I do it all the time.
Everybody's got to oppose this fundamental thing that we've got to minimize emissions.
Forget about that.
That's not about emissions.
It's about omissions.
They want to omit all of this stuff out of your life.
It's as phony as that, well, we're going to give kids asthma if they've got gas ranges.
Give me a break.
Yeah, well, and I'm very careful to make the distinction between emissions as most people, when they hear that word, what they think about
are things that result in air pollution that cause smog. That's right. Those emissions are
a non-issue anymore, and they have been since the 90s. New cars emit hardly any of those emissions,
but it's been reframed such that carbon dioxide now is the emission that they mean when they use that word.
And so therefore, the way to address that is to challenge this climate change religion thing that they're trying to create the new narrative around.
It's as specious as the air fingers quote pandemic.
It's the same sort of trickery.
And once we do that, then we win.
That's right.
That's right.
Yeah, I worked with a guy who had spent 30 years
with the epa he started with the epa and um he started with the epa as the epa was being formed
and it was all in the early eight in the early days it was all about air pollution and water
pollution and things like that and he was all on board with that but then it turned into this green
climate agenda and he was not on board with that
he retired and he started opposing them and that's where i got involved uh in an organization uh that
i was doing some videos for them but uh that that is the pivot that they made you know they started
out by saying we're going to have to have a super fund to clean up these polluted rivers and the
dirty air and that was fine but you know they used that to get their
nose under the tent and then you had mission creep which is what the
bureaucracy's always do. They used people's reasonable concerns against them of a peace with the
pandemic you know nobody wanted to see mass death and and so they manipulated
people on that basis but this whole thing with carbon dioxide it's of a
piece with masks work and that you know these drugs that aren't vaccines being pushed down people's throats. It's important to just challenge the fundamental
premise and not argue with them on the accepted premise that, oh, there's a great pandemic afoot.
Oh, grow. We've got to wear masks, got to get vaccines. Same thing with this climate change
shibboleth. That has to be challenged. I point out to people, do you know what the percentage
of the Earth's atmosphere is? It's carbon dioxide. Most of them have no idea. And I point out to people, do you know what the percentage of the Earth's atmosphere is? It's carbon dioxide.
Most of them have no idea.
And I point out it's 0.04%. Yeah, that's right.
And then you're going to tell me that somehow by eliminating motor vehicles, engine vehicles,
you're going to reduce that by a fraction of that fraction of a percent,
and somehow that is going to avert catastrophic climate change?
Yeah, we understand what the agenda is.
It's always been, whether it's going to be global freezing, global warming, or a pandemic,
they always wanted to do the same thing, which tells you that all three of them are phony.
The fact that they hide their data and they won't debate you, they try to censor you,
that has always been the continuing thing.
Oh, you're a climate denier.
Well, you've got to be shut down.
And then we saw it with the pandemic.
People, I think, are starting, hopefully, to understand that this is just a narrative tactic.
It's just tyranny.
But while we're talking about the price of cars, you've got another article, Default Tsunami.
Talk about that.
It's not just the CarMax who are buying high and selling low.
Talk about what happens to individuals.
Yeah, well, another interesting figure that I came up upon the other day was that as of last
year, about 20% of all the new car loans issued were for a record seven years long. And a
significant portion of those were issued for used car loans, if you can imagine that. So somebody
who's bought an already depreciated car for a seven-year car loan. And what's going to happen,
of course, is that these vehicles are not going to be worth
continuing to make payments on.
And a lot of people are either going to just decide they don't want to or that they can't
because they haven't got the means to do it anymore.
And we're already seeing the canaries in the coal mine chirping about this.
There's a lot of evidence out there that defaults on new and used car loans are rising.
And so a lot of these vehicles are going to just be dumped on the market and that is going to depress the price of vehicles, which is good
news for anybody who's in the market or going to be in the market for a vehicle. The prices are
going to come down soon. Yeah. Talk about the canary in the coal mine. The canaries are not
laying any eggs, but the chickens aren't laying too many either for a lot of different reasons.
Right. Supply chain things. Tell us a little bit about how your chickens are coming along because you're working in
that area too, not just getting the electronics out of the car so that you can keep the thing
going, but you're also working on chickens and ducks, I think.
Yeah.
You know, every once in a while I do something right.
And one of those things was to build my coop and to get myself a flock of chicken and ducks.
And I say, I pat myself on the back for it.
I was at the grocery store the other day, and it's probably the same where you are,
and a dozen eggs is now about seven bucks.
Yes, yes, that's right.
If you can find them.
So, yeah, I get a nice discount because all I have to do is go out and pick them up from the birds,
which is wonderful.
And, of course, nutritionally, they're a lot better, and there's all of that argument.
But really, the fundamental point here, I think anybody who's not concerned about the prospect of food either becoming unaffordable or unavailable is living in a fantasy world.
And they really need to face up to the fact that not only do these people want to take away our mobility, they want to take away our ability to eat.
And it's really important to figure out ways to make sure that we don't starve. And this is one of the ways that I'm doing that. You know, I was looking at articles covering Davos and opinion
pieces, and I came across one where the guy says, well, you know, I'm not a conspiracy theorist,
and this isn't a conspiracy. It's out in the open. It's like, well, I don't know that a
conspiracy has to be secret, but what is in the open? And they're telling everybody about it.
They don't want you to have any meat or dairy. You've got an organization called C40 that's got almost 100 cities, large cities involved
in it.
They don't want you to have more than three articles of clothing per year.
You can take a flight once every three years, but not more than 1,000 miles and on and on.
Ban all automobiles and all the rest of this stuff. So it is an amazingly detailed authoritarian
vision of a dystopian medieval society. So we're going to have to do this stuff on our own. And
if we don't get the public to wake up as to what is behind this and realize what a lie is being
sold to us, we're going to be in that basket. And I think one of the key ways that they're going to push this,
and I think it's going to happen pretty soon, maybe this year,
is going to be CBDC.
We're going to see so much stuff like that where they can control
and track everything that you do everywhere.
And they'll limit you to the number of eggs if you don't have chickens.
That's exactly what they're going to do.
Yeah, I'm absolutely terrified of that.
I hope that there is enough awareness of the danger of that percolating out there
that that ends up getting stopped in its tracks,
because that really could be the end of any semblance of freedom of action that we have,
short of going completely amateur or off the grid.
That's right.
Before we run out of time, tell us how you secured your chickens,
because we haven't done that since we moved,
and we lost two flocks in Texas to coyotes and aerial predators and stuff.
So how do you secure them?
Well, nothing's perfect, but what I have is a high-fenced-in run area that I keep them in for whenever I'm not around a supervisor.
Otherwise, I let them out in free range.
Now, at night, they go back in to an enclosed coop that's locked, and it's a heavy-built structure.
So anything short of a big bear would have trouble getting in that.
And I also have an electric fence around the perimeter of my run.
You know, it's not absolutely perfect.
Death can come from above.
There are still hawks and eagles and things of that nature.
So the best that you can do, really, is to reduce the prospect of losing your flock.
You know, this is part of what farm life is like,
and most people have forgotten it.
Me too, you know, and so I'm relearning it.
This is what we're all going to have to relearn.
That's right.
Yeah, we lost our flocks in the middle of the day.
We let them free range during the day.
We lost one flock that way.
But, you know, we've had coyotes attack,
and we've had hawks attack,
and we've got a ton of hawks out here in Tennessee where we are.
So, yeah yeah that is that
is a struggle um trying to keep these things alive but it is going to be a struggle for us to try to
navigate through this continuing we got the supply chain after they threw the wrench in it i mean it's
just bouncing back and forth and breaking in all these different places and part of it a big part
of this uh disappearance of the eggs a lot of people who are egg farmers in the egg industry are saying a lot of it is the supply chain.
Can't get feed to them, can't get the other stuff out there.
There's so many things that they've broken.
Thank you for joining us.
Eric Peters, EP Autos, always a great site to see what is going on politically,
with liberty, and with transportation.
Thank you, Eric. Appreciate it. with transportation. Thank you, Eric.
Appreciate it. You bet. Thank you, David.
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