The David Knight Show - 28Sep23 Fauci/CIA: Chatter About BioLab is Distraction from TrumpJuice Bioweapon & Hospital Death Protocol
Episode Date: September 28, 2023The push about Fauci & the CIA is misdirection from the REAL bioweapon — the TrumpJuice — to make the awakening public think the virus was killing people instead of the hospital death protocol... & the jab. And, of course, blame it on a foreign enemy, ChinaGOP "Debate" at the Reagan Library, FOX pushes amnesty for illegals, a failed Reagan policy.Listener emails: Dictator Dan goes to WEF, what's behind the 4 day workweek NYC Mayor and Chief of Police "risen" in unlisted Masonic ceremony in the Mayor's mansion West Point DIEs — military academy now offers a degree in Diversity, Inclusivity, EquityWill the Soros Chaos by his DA's turning criminals loose be used to push cashless society? It's already is being used for that CVS will close nearly a thousand stores, go mostly online except for CDC-like kiosks to administer "tests and shots"Now Oakland even has PIRATES attacking boats as government avoids any responsibility A look at how the 1934 goals for technocracy can now be (and are being) fully implemented with current technology Trump's Glock — he couldn't take the gun because there'd be due process later. Donald nearly fell into the ATF trap just like Hunter. Should people indicted for felonies be banned from purchasing guns?INTERVIEW Jittery Stocks, Gushing Oil Prices, and GoldTony Arterburn, DavidKnight.gold. With shaky markets and a push to cashless surveillance, gold offers both safety and liberty. INTERVIEW TuttleTwins Creator Tells Us How to Effect Change at State LevelConnor Boyack, creator of the popular TuttleTwins.com books, talks about the books and about making change at the local and state level. His organization, libertas.org, has been able to successfully change over 100 laws in his state to move in the direction of free markets and libertyFind out more about the show and where you can watch it at TheDavidKnightShow.comIf you would like to support the show and our family please consider subscribing monthly here: SubscribeStar https://www.subscribestar.com/the-david-knight-showOr you can send a donation throughMail: David Knight POB 994 Kodak, TN 37764Zelle: @DavidKnightShow@protonmail.comCash App at: $davidknightshowBTC to: bc1qkuec29hkuye4xse9unh7nptvu3y9qmv24vanh7Money is only what YOU hold: Go to DavidKnight.gold for great deals on physical gold/silverFor 10% off Gerald Celente's prescient Trends Journal, go to TrendsJournal.com and enter the code KNIGHTBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-david-knight-show--2653468/support.
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You're listening to The David Knight Show. As the clock strikes 13, it's Thursday, the 28th of September, 2023.
We're going to get our feet under us here, and we're going to talk about the cashless cyber anarchy that is coming our way.
You know, there's a method to their madness as we see the cities being destroyed.
And it's kind of interesting how they're pushing us into this cashless society in very subtle ways.
No, we don't have any cash in the store.
Leave us alone, please.
Because the police won't protect us.
We'll take a look at that.
We'll also take a look at kid porn.
You see, it's important to get porn to kids.
You just don't want to have porn of kids
or you go to jail,
but not nearly as long as you go to jail
if you're January the 6th.
Yeah, we'll talk about what our society has become
when we return.
Stay with us. Well, I want to begin with some general news,
and I'm not really going to talk about the debate.
The debate was such a joke.
Why are we even doing with this?
There's absolutely nothing of any substance there.
The only thing interesting about it was the fact that you had Fox News pushing amnesty. The debate was held at the Reagan
Library. Well, you know, Reagan gave amnesty to these people, and it was an utter failure.
We'll talk about that briefly, get to some of your emails, but I want to begin.
I saw article after article and op-ed after op-ed, even people that I respect their opinion on other issues, focusing on Fauci and the CIA as if this is some new revelation.
Look, folks, as we've said about Dark Winter for the longest time, as a matter of fact, it's what I wanted to interview RFK Jr. on with his book fauci they accepted and then canceled at the last minute
kind of like you know is that where i'm coming from but the uh you know i really wanted to talk
to him i thought it was an excellent chapter the 12th chapter of his book fauci was all about the
cia involvement and not um foreign labs but it was was about CIA involvement in the germ games
that began with Dark Winter two months before 9-11,
then a CIA-run anthrax attack one week after 9-11.
We know that. That's not a question.
And then the model state, uh, health emergency powers act that got put out two months after that anthrax attack.
They've been involved in this from the very beginning.
As a matter of fact, in the first germ game in dark winter, two months before nine 11, you had former CIA director James Woolsey playing the role of president.
And they've been deeply involved in this. And they've been deeply involved in this.
Fauci has been deeply involved in it.
Um,
wouldn't be surprised if his,
his,
uh,
double the salary that he's supposed to have.
Isn't the function of him having two jobs.
Maybe we'll find out,
uh,
you know,
decades from now when I'm long after I'm dead,
that Fauci was also working for the CIA and, uh, getting a salary from them as well. It's just, it's ridiculous. But now
we're seeing because of a book, um, that's come out, that's making these statements.
And a lot of people are talking about Fauci and the CIA.
Maybe we need to rethink his name. Maybe it should be foul CIA cia uh just add an a after it and put a
dash but to separate the two he's always been involved with the cia but i think one of the
reasons that this is happening and it bothers me a great deal is i think that they're using
this narrative now to misdirect people away from the real bioweapon. It didn't come out of a lab in Wuhan.
It came out of DARPA and the CIA and Fauci.
And these people have been working on that a long time before it was dropped on us,
just like they're working on the lockdowns and the masks.
And you got to stay there until we roll this vaccine out to you and all the rest of this stuff.
That's the bioweapon.
And that's what they don't want you to see. It's kind of interesting to me as I look at this, you know, in 2020,
as a matter of fact, going back to 2019, December, 2019, I was actually the first one at Infowars to
talk about the fact that, Hey, this wet market where they said it came from bats, that's right
next to the only biosafety level four lab that they have in China, Wuhan. And, but then when I, like I said before,
I saw what they were doing with the lockdown. It's like, well, I know what this is.
This has never been done before, but this is what they've planned for 20 years and all the fake
people falling in the streets and all the garbage about, well, you know, nobody's died yet. We've
had four people that died or something as Gerald Salenti pointed out
in January, and he's talked about that many times with us, you know, four people
died out of a one and a half billion people, we got a worldwide pandemic now.
Just like that.
You know, there's no evidence of people dying.
Uh, we now know, you know, we look at the flow chart of medical murder, by the way,
this is from the interview that I had the other day with Gracie's dad.
Gracie, the Downs young adult who was murdered while the parents were kept away.
And they witnessed the murder live and were interacting with people live on Zoom.
Could not get them to resuscitate her.
They put a do not resuscitate tag on her in spite of what they said.
And this is his flow chart that he had put up.
He says, well, you know, we had, this is the medical murder flow chart.
And you see three different sections here on the left side in green.
You see the good old days before the Rockefellers, not that long ago,
you'd contact the doctor to set your broken bones and bandage wounds,
and the doctor would visit the patient at home.
Maybe he'd get chickens as a payment or something like that, right?
And your death date was determined by God.
This came from Gracie's dad.
And then today, what does it look like?
Well, today we've got the medical system killing us.
And the old way that they used to kill us was with CMS and insurance companies
who then had standards of care that would hasten death like drugs and radiation and chemo.
You'd have hospitals and doctors who would implement that.
You'd have the nurse as an advocate for us, but it would still hasten death.
And Medicare, Medicaid reimbursement rates would increase for following that plan, which
came from the Rockefellers.
But then the new way, as they began with this pandemic in 2020, the new way that was instituted
by Trump, you know, that was instituted by Trump.
He was the one who was there when it really rolled this out.
Of course, they'd planned it long before him, but he was their guy.
NIH and CDC and FDA will have protocols that directly kill.
Remdesivir, ventilators, the jab.
Then you'll have the hospitals and doctors implemented, and the nurse then becomes an accomplice,
and they actually kill you.
And they get paid for submission to the agenda
very, very handsomely.
The bonuses that were instituted during the Trump administration
for all of these things.
For the ventilators, get a bonus for that.
Get a bonus for identifying them as covid
and all the rest of the stuff and he says so what's the future going to be well the future
is we'll have the who will have an esg score we'll have a birth certificate value we'll have ai
customized standard of care and then the death date of the slaves will be determined by an AI idol.
I think he's spot on, quite frankly.
We didn't show that.
We didn't talk about that during the interview. But I had that.
And I wanted to get to that.
So when we look at Fauci.
Fauci and the CIA.
But let's understand that I started pushing back against that.
And Infowars started leaning heavily into this idea that this was a lab
leak, we saw zero hedge that was kicked off of, uh, Twitter at the time, uh,
said you doxed somebody while they did was they looked at his bio.
Somebody that worked at the Wuhan lab who said that he was specializing
in coronaviruses and bats like, well, that's interesting, isn't it?
And they pushed very hard against anybody who was putting that out.
And of course, it was important to get that out and to make that something that was forbidden
knowledge, wasn't it?
You're not supposed to know that. And because the people who are pushing it,
like Alex, like Mike Adams. At BetMGM, Ontario's best casino action is just a click away.
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They were pushing it to conservatives.
Conservatives who perhaps even with Trump in place might have had the second thought about the masks and the lockdowns and the jabs and all the rest of the stuff. And they eventually did have many of them.
Second thoughts about the jabs. But they went along with the lockdowns. They went rest of the stuff. And they eventually did have many of them. Second thoughts about the jabs.
But they went along with the lockdowns.
They went along with the masks.
Why?
Well, because it was coming from Trump.
And because you had people like Alex telling people that it was coming,
it leaked out of a lab and we're all going to die.
Made record profits doing that.
And so now, why the pivot? Why did they push so hard to stop that from getting out
oh they wanted it out they wanted it out but they were going to discredit that at the same
they wanted it out for the conservatives now they're pushing it back because people caught
on to the jab and now they want you to think that the jab is not the bioweapon, but that it came from Wuhan
and that the enemy is not Trump and Biden and Fauci and the world health
organization and Gates and the CDC and the FDA, they're not the enemy.
China, China is the enemy.
It's another reason for us to go to war with China.
They did this to everybody. The Wu flu, right? And so that's what this is about.
Now it's in their interest to make it look like a lab leak. Now it's in their interest to do the lab leak because nobody believes that it was the virus.
You go back and look at this. What was killing people? It was that hospital protocol. That's
why I began with that. It was Trump and Fauci's hospital protocol. They were paying the hospitals
to kill people. You had a pulmonologist who was saying, I've never seen this as a protocol before.
Where'd this come from?
None of that made any sense.
What they were doing to people with a ventilator made no sense whatsoever.
Just like the magic number six feet apart and all the rest of this stuff.
And the lockdowns and the masks and all.
None of that made any scientific medical sense.
It had never been done before.
Still doesn't make any sense.
But it was important that we not blame Fauci, Trump and Biden And the CIA and the CDC
And the FDA for this stuff
We've got to blame the Chinese for it
And you've got to believe now
As you're starting to get skeptical
That there was ever any virus out there
We've got to tell you that it actually did leak from a lab
So that you believe in the virus
And all the things that you see happening
to people that's long covet it's not vaccine you understand that's what they want everybody to
believe look i disagree these conspiracy theories i like uh you know the people who have um put this
up typically um jeffrey t, even at the Brownstone Institute.
I think he's totally wrong.
I like his work in general.
I think he's totally wrong about this.
Look, the reality is the shot.
Don't fall for this.
And I think he's falling for it.
I think a lot of people are falling for it.
A lot of people who are good, who should know better, I think are falling for it. I think a lot of people are falling for it. A lot of people who are good, who should know better,
I think are falling for this.
And
especially the people
who are supporting Trump.
They hate the vaccine,
but they love Trump. Trump made the vaccine.
If you loved Trump, you would have got the
thing. That was his baby, right?
Warp speed. Excuse me, warp speed.
No. You all have warp speed in you right speed. Excuse me, warp speed. No.
You all have warp speed in you right now.
You have Trump juice inside your body.
Warp speed, so quick, it was supposed to take five years,
but I made it in two days. Warp speed.
You have experimental Trump juice in your body,
floating around.
Warp speed, nobody makes it that quick.
Nobody feels tiny when they get it. So, big, very big.
If I like Trump, I'd be like,
give me that Patriot pinch, give it to me, come on.
I got my NRA tattoo and my mRNA tattoo, come on.
I can vaccine straight again. I don't mind if you small my juice. So magic once I spit it out.
I'm Big Pharma and I'm here for your health.
I need no harm.
I just want to help.
My juice is free for you, my friend.
Cause I know you'll be back again and again and again.
I'm Big Pharma and I'm here for your help
I don't need no help, I just wanna help
My juice is free for you, my friend
Cause I know you'll be back
Again and again and again Do not be ensnared
Do not surrender your bodies
To these walls and sheep's clothing
Pretending to help you
When the exact opposite is true
Do you really think they want you healthy
when they are financially dependent on the ship do not let them deceive you it's an
evidential temper of doom protecting you to death with their ungodly toxic potions
you are not their experiment resist do not comply rise up Yeah.
So we won't be talking about the debate.
That's what they won't talk about.
What you just saw there.
Well, that's a perfect video.
I played that for a while.
The debate, nothing of any substance.
Nothing. Nothing.
Nothing. the debate, nothing of any substance, nothing, nothing,
nothing about the coming smart cities, CBDCs, vaccines,
nothing about any of that stuff.
The usual pablum that they sell for part of the age old, it's been in my entire life, left, right division.
And then this cringy, petty grasping for the spotlight,
fighting for attention that you see going on, you know, between Nikki Haley and Tim Scott.
I mean, just look at me.
Look at me.
Look at me.
Let me grab the spotlight here.
While Fox is using this as an opportunity to push for illegal alien amnesty.
Oh, this is the Reagan library.
And you know, Reagan was just so, we all admire Reagan.
Reagan was just God.
And, uh, he, he gave amnesty.
Don't you think you should be like Reagan?
Everybody, every Republican wants to be like Reagan, right?
Well, he was wrong about that.
You know, when they said, uh, well, all these people come in and we've heard this song and dance over and over again.
Uh,
we're going to give people amnesty,
but now we're going to protect the borders.
Now we're going to get tough.
All right.
We're not going to do anything to the people already here unless they are
homeschool Christians from Germany.
Then we'll throw them to the wolves.
But you know,
anybody else that comes here now,
any other country,
uh,
for any other
reason other than religious persecution will accept them we don't want any
Christians coming here fleeing for their lives so many of the company countries
I've been talking about or fleeing here because they don't want their kids taken
away or because they're being fined more than their total income just for homeschooling
their kids in Germany. No, we don't want people like that. But the people who came here illegally,
we need to give them amnesty. Well, guess what? They didn't want it.
There's about half of the people that Reagan gave amnesty to even bothered to apply for citizenship.
They don't want to be americans they don't want
freedom they don't want our way of life they don't want our culture they don't even want our language
they just want the stuff that's here and so that was what fox was doing pushing that meanwhile
what's the senate doing the senate is wasting time with their shorts legislation.
They got very upset because Fetterman is wearing shorts and a hoodie all the time.
And so Joe Manchin took the lead in all this.
And Joe Manchin, who, by the way, has been to Davos to the World Economic Forum, talking about how social media is a problem.
It has to be controlled. And so, you know, he gets away with that and nobody pays any attention to Joe
Manchin going to Davos and talking about how they've got to, um, um, clamp down
on social media.
We got these extremists on the left and the right, and we got to shut them out.
We got to control that narrative said Manchin at Davos, but you know, nobody
pays any attention to that.
Instead, what they do is they applaud him because he pushes through a bill and says you got to wear pants when you
come to the senate uh for fetterman that's what they're focusing on they're not concerned about
any of our problems that's their problem that's their priority Look at how quickly they were able to run through an amendment to put pants on
federal. Now I understand he's a big problem. He's big. He's a problem.
He's nobody wants to see that, but you know, uh,
it just shows how inwardly focused they are on trivial
details while the country burns and while
tyranny and the digital chains that are being put on us
are multiplying and solidifying so um i got this email it's like a clip from peggy in australia
now here's dan's new job at the world economic forum, the dictator Dan, Dan Andrews, is payoff for being a puppet.
And so he will serve as, and this is a press release put out by the World Economic Forum.
He resigned.
He wasn't thrown out.
He had scandal after scandal after scandal.
And when you look at the clips, like I showed you, you know, the tyranny that he unleashed against his own people
paid no price for that whatsoever he was re-elected last year and then all of a sudden
he just decides that he's going to leave and they've got him covered at davos he will serve
as the as australian delegate to the world economic forum from 27th of September to 2023.
They got a nice job for him.
It's kind of like the people who are running Trump's FDA.
You know, he had two FDA commissioners.
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Can artificial intelligence be a force for good?
At the University of British Columbia, we believe it can.
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He had the first guy, Scott Gottlieb,
who came from Pfizer and then returned
from whence he came after he had done his work.
He came from Pfizer, he went to Pfizer.
And then you also had Hahn, who went to Moderna,
after all the warp speed stuff.
But of course, we know that Klaus Schwab has got his puppets.
He brags about it.
But what we are very proud of now is the young generation,
like Prime Minister Trudeau, President of Argentina and so on,
that we penetrate the cabinets.
So yesterday I was at a reception for Prime Minister Trudeau, and I know that half of this cabinet, or even more, half of this cabinet,
are actually young Nobel leaders of the world at the very least.
Yeah, they're actually young leaders of the world.
Yeah, that's how they're operating this thing.
So Jay and Jessica asked me a question about a four-day work week.
One day I'd be interested in your thoughts about the push toward a four-day work week.
I know this is on the table with the ongoing UAW negotiations,
United Auto Workers, and news stories are increasingly common.
This concept, like remote work work is also pushed heavily by
the world economic forum i know that the borderless employee quote-unquote was used to move jobs to
countries like india we know they are restructuring every bit of society i can't help but see this as
another strategy perhaps i'm wrong maybe this is a viral idea that is actually to our benefit
may not be of importance since it deals with labor and corporate business model. I'm interested in what benefits or consequences be attached, if any.
And so here's what I think.
You're spot on, in my opinion.
I think this is really about pushing several things.
I think ultimately this is about pushing remote work, which means that they can, they don't
have to bring employees here.
They can have them, as long as they can push your job more and more onto the internet and make your presence more and more virtual.
That makes it very easy for them to shift to employees from India or other places to do the work.
And we saw this during the lockdown.
They're very proud of that.
Yeah.
They said, well, look, we got these convenience stores here and it's just, there's cooties everywhere.
We can't have anybody go in and actually stock the shelves.
So we've got this guy who's controlling a robot arm, and he's hooked up with this VR set,
and he's controlling the robot arm to stock the shelves remotely.
Oh, okay, well, that could be done from somebody in any country.
And you just send them the hardware and give them a little bit of training and they
can do that but um the thing that's going to really be and so that pushes us more and more
in that direction and it pushes us more and more towards universal basic income after they take our
job and we therefore then own nothing and we are dependent on the little scraps that they give us.
That was another thing that Trump set a precedent for.
That was a test, and we failed that test big time, bigly.
Let's give people a stimulus check and see how they respond to that.
Well, just one or two stimulus checks.
People didn't want to go back to work.
And that told them everything that they needed to that. Well, just one or two stimulus checks. People didn't want to go back to work. And that told them everything that they needed to know. They will be moving in this direction a lot more. And so moving us to a four-day work week, making things more virtual
and all the rest of this, it is something that makes our jobs more vulnerable to their schemes, but it also makes our jobs more vulnerable to artificial intelligence, not just exporting it to other countries.
And one of the ways that we know that this is an agenda that they're moving on very rapidly is if you just go back and look, especially it's accelerated.
They've been talking about four-day work weeks since even before the lockdown, but it's
accelerated since then. And in just the last couple of months, there's been a
tremendous number of articles about a push for a four-day school
week. A four-day school week. And as some
jurisdictions are pushing for it and have already implemented it, the parents
of course,
you know, school for most parents is daycare. And so if you don't have them covered one day,
what do you do? Well, you're either going to have to work from home yourself, uh, or you're going to have to go to a four day work week because the costs are prohibitive,
uh, for them. And that's what they're saying. People who have low-paying jobs cannot afford health care costs even for one day.
Now, this might be something that might break to our benefit.
But, you know, it's going to require that we somehow escape this top-down slavery they're imposing on everybody. I mean, if we could go back to a situation where the kids are home one day a week
and you're doing something with that, you might actually get more attached to your family.
They might start turning the hearts of the parents to their children.
And that could have some interesting consequences.
Of course, the other thing that you would have to do then is you'd have to find some way to work away from the giant multinational corporations, the deputized state.
So it remains to be seen whether or not that would happen.
By the way, let me thank Truck Driver Ron.
Thank you for the tip on Rockfin.
And thank you to Roger on Subscribestar.
Thank you for that tip there.
And for the compliment.
I saw this. This is something very strange that came out on Monday and I just saw it yesterday.
And it was put out by the New York Post. And it was
the fact that the mayor of New York City and
the police commissioner of New York City had
a secret meeting in the governor's mansion
and the Gracie mansion. Sorry, not the governor's mansion, the mayor's mansion.
Gracie mansion. It was on Saturday and they didn't
have it anywhere on his schedule, but somebody posted it up on Facebook
and so on Monday, the New York Post saw it and wrote an article.
It was a Master Mason secret ceremony at Gracie Mansion, the place where the mayor is, for
the mayor and for the city police chief.
The Prince Hall Masonic Temple, also known as African-American Freemasonry.
See, that makes it okay. You know, Freemasonry, but hey, African-American Masonry, well, that's
another thing, right? Brothers and sisters, today we hold an occasional Grand Lodge with
the Grand Line officers and brothers for the first time in history at the Gracie Mansion. And New York Police Department Chief of Department,
Jeffrey Madry, was also raised as a Master Mason during the ceremony.
The head of the New York Police Department's Office of Intergovernmental Affairs
as one of the lodge's officers is a Grand Junior Warden.
The New York Police Department Square Club is also a recognized masonic organization
adams himself is a retired new york police department captain and so you know when uh
again it was not anywhere on his schedule they didn't want to talk put it on his official schedule
but it got posted uh by the masons on. And now a lot of people noticed it.
Well, you know, are they just a harmless club?
First of all, it's a club and you ain't in it.
I hope.
I hope you're not in it.
This is what New York Post says.
Known for its secret handshakes and symbols, admission to become a Freemason.
It's quite simple.
You've got to be 18 years old and believe in a supreme being, though not in any religious
denomination.
Well, actually, it is its own little religion.
A lot of people focus on, there's a bunch of Freemasons that started this country and
run this country and all the rest of this stuff, but it is also a religion.
I got introduced to it in an interesting way i
had just sold uh the business we had video stores and i just sold the business and i
had a little bit of down time and i thought we'd sold it it turned into a real mess but anyway um
i had somebody that you know we used to it was an interesting business because
you know we would kind of hang out and we'd talk to people and i kind of liken it to cheers you
know the bar where people come and you know everybody in the neighborhood and and you talk
because you get to know people you know at the very beginning k Karen and I worked at a lot and, you know, people come in, you know, what's new, what kind of movie?
Well, what kind of stuff?
Tell me a movie you like and everything.
So then I, you know, make them some recommendations for something and got pretty good at that.
You know, scoping out the types of things that people wanted.
But, you know, you kind of get to know people.
You talk to them about movies and you'd kind of get to know people. You talk to them about
movies and you'd start to get to know who they were. So this guy got to know me. And when we
sold the business, there was a book that was currently at the time being sold at Barnes & Noble.
And I don't know if he just picked this thing up and he thought it was interesting or if he was a
Mason and he's trying to recruit me, but he sends me this book.
And the book was just, it's like, what?
The whole book was about how the Shroud of Turin was actually,
Demolay that they look at, you know, it was him and not Jesus.
It's like, what is this about?
And how he was tortured and suffered and all this other kind of stuff.
They made him into this Christ figure.
And I thought,
you know,
that's really strange.
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Happiness.
We all know what it feels like. but sometimes it doesn't come easy. I'm Garvey Bailey,
the host of Happy Enough, a new podcast from the Globe and Mail about our pursuit of happiness.
We know people want to live more fulfilling and positive lives, but how do we actually do that? Is there a happiness code to crack?
From our relationship with technology to whether money can really buy you happiness,
we'll hear from both real people and experts to demystify this thing we're all searching for
and hopefully find ways to be happy enough.
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It's so important for them to substitute their organization for Christ, for Christianity,
that they go to these absurd links.
And so he said, here, here's this book.
I'd like for you to read this.
Let me know what you think of it.
Well, I had time at that point in time and, um, I read it and I wrote him about a 20 page, uh, essay about what I
thought about it. And he was really surprised, but, uh, you know, it just, that was the first
time it really hit home with me, not the political stuff, but you know, just how much of an occultic religion this thing is and
what links they will go to to try to elevate this institution speaking of how our society is being
transformed uh west point after you know they went to a great deal to trouble to purge anything about
robert lee just a few months ago.
Because, you know, Robert E. Lee, when he went through West Point,
they called him the marble man.
They said, oh, they're going to make statues about this guy.
He went through without a single demerit in a system where they're constantly trying to give you demerits.
He eventually became the superintendent of West Point.
One of the reasons why he was so successful as a general
was because he had taught reasons why he was so successful as a general was because
he had taught these people he was opposing and he knew them personally. But he was a man of honor,
so he had to be purged. As West Point has now got a new degree, they are now going to offer
a degree in equity and diversity. And this is the way our institutions die.
And that's the way you ought to put those diversity, inclusivity, and equity.
That's the way they should die.
Just reorder that instead of DEI, it's D-I-E.
And part of the curriculum, this has gone through campus reform,
has looked at this.
Western Journal has looked at this.
You've got a five-course minor.
You take two out of three of these classes, social religions, sex and civilizations, race, ethnicity, nation,
or society and culture in American history.
What do you think is going to happen when we have a war?
We're going to reap the fruit of all of this insanity.
U S military Academy says campus reform at West point also offers a diversity
inclusion studies minor,
which requires classes in power and difference in social inequality.
In response to campus reforms,
requests for comment West point clarified that the program was started in 2018
to balance faculty and student interest with the superintendent's strategic goal
of leveraging diversity and fostering inclusion. Western Journal says that when we saw this
recent decision shutting down diversity, you know, reverse discrimination by the Supreme Court, they gave an exception to the military academies.
They said the decision that nixed racial admission policies at Harvard
and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
determined that because no military academy was party to the suit,
the opinion did not include admissions issues at these schools,
quote, in light of the potentially distinct interests that military academies may present.
Well, yeah, they do have a distinct interest, don't they?
But they are not focused on that.
This makes about as much sense as Sam Britton being put in charge of nuclear waste.
This is what is happening to the military. and it's going to be held to pay.
Uh, and then after this is from information liberation after, uh, the
black lives matter protests in 2020 and the shutdown is corporate big corporate
America comes back roaring back.
They added 300,000 jobs in 2021. 94% of them went to non-whites.
6% went to white people.
94% to non-whites.
I don't know what the breakdown of male versus female, but I imagine you'd see a similar thing like that.
And Information Liberation comments, the only way to achieve these numbers is through proactive discrimination.
Nike in particular showed a very dramatic shift.
They are 40% Hispanic, 23% black, 22% Asian.
Other races are 8% and white are 6%.
Not really representative of our society, is it?
Isn't that what we were told?
You've got to have a percentage of people that represents male and female.
It should reflect our society demographics.
The skin color things should reflect that, but they don't.
It is a proactive system of discrimination against people.
As a matter of fact, we just had the Department of Justice suing Elon Musk because he was not putting illegal aliens into jobs where they would be involved with things like
launching satellites and have to do with military security. And of course, this is where these
people have been directing us for quite some time. When we come back, we're going to talk about the cashless cyberarchy.
Because I don't call it, you know, maybe we should call it that.
Because it's going to be exercising their technocracy through cyber methods,
through the internet, through cyberspace.
But it also heavily involves anarchy.
We call it cyberarchy.
But finally, before we take a break,
we have Rand Paul talking about the fact that if the government shuts down,
of course, they're going to not pay U.S. government workers,
but Ukrainian workers will be paid by the U.S. taxpayer, even in a lockdown.
And so Rand Paul says there's nothing in the Constitution that allows for spending like this on another country.
It violates every precept of the Constitution.
Well, that's true.
Pretty much everything the federal government does, Rand violates every precept and letter
of the law of the constitution.
Where were you when they did that with lockdown with warp speed with everything else like
that?
I agree with him.
You know, this is an outrage.
They'll continue to pay Ukraine.
Of course, uh, it's always Ukraine first or any other country, um, and, uh, never do anything
for United States. So that never do anything for the United States.
So that's par for the course, but so is Violet.
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ontario only please play responsibly if you have questions or concerns about your gambling or
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charge but mgm operates pursuant to an operating agreement with iGaming Ontario hitting the
constitution we'll be right back. Thank you. you're listening to the david knight show
well uh uh audi modern retro radio.
Thank you very much for that tip.
I appreciate that.
That's very kind.
Um,
he says,
thank you,
David,
for not only bringing us informed commentary,
but uniting several of us who probably wouldn't be friends otherwise,
uh,
because he has,
uh,
been on with Jason talking about ghost guns.
I think it was last week,
but he said he's going to be on,
uh,
Jason Barker's podcast tonight
discussing music the foxhole and um that should be an interesting discussion i know that audi
has got a lot of experience in that as he said before he plays himself and um there's radio he's
uh he knows a great deal about music so that should be a very interesting show i had somebody i was
going to read it but um i went past it somebody sent me an email and uh asked to actually send
an email to travis and asked travis um if my music was available anywhere out he has put it
on modern retro radio on a on an indie weekend where he had a lot of stuff he put a couple of
songs up there i don't have it anywhere. I tried putting Christmas songs up on,
I finally gave, it's like,
I'm not even going to try to put any political stuff up on YouTube.
If I say anything of any substance about any issues
that are really important, it'll get shut down.
So why even bother?
But I thought, well, let me just create a new persona.
Got a different email and
all the rest of the stuff. And I put up Christmas songs that I used during the season here as bumper
music. And that lasted for about six months. And they terminated the channel without explanation.
I can't even put Christmas music up on YouTube. So I don't put it anywhere. It's just here.
I'm working on putting together, I'm doing a lot more.
Got an earlier start this year.
I've done several new Christmas songs.
I thought, you know, I might just put this out as an album.
You know, if people would like to get mugs and stuff like that, maybe they'd like to buy the album.
But even more importantly, the reason I started doing all that stuff, the reason I got the virtual instruments to do orchestral stuff or even the music like you just heard there, you know, some more guitars and fiddles and mandolins and things like that.
The reason I got all that stuff and started putting it together was to do some Christian songs that I've written over several decades.
And we used to do some of them when we used to meet in our home back in North Carolina with people.
So I wanted to get some of those things out.
And so I started putting that together when I was still working at InfoWars.
At InfoWars, I didn't need to do my own music.
Alex was on radio stations, and he would just use their
licenses to to play whatever we wanted but since i had been heavily censored for copyright issues
i wanted to make sure that i was playing the music that was there um and uh so i started doing that
and that's become kind of the primary focus for some of these other things,
but I need to switch it over to that. I just don't have much time. Um, I, you know, doing this much
content and, and things before and after the show, I just don't have much time for it, but I'm going
to try to, to do, uh, do more of that. I'm getting a little bit faster the more I do it. And so
it's gradually accelerating. And, uh, that's what I would really like to get out.
Anyway, let's talk about what is going on with the cashless society and the push to do this.
In Oakland, of course, California, San Francisco Bay Area, crime is rampant because of the Soros
District Attorneys. And because if they bother to catch anybody, they just turn them loose again.
And after a while, the police or the Border patrol say, what's the point of this?
Why take the risk and go to the trouble and get in a fight or whatever with somebody to arrest them, get them off the streets when they're just going to be turned right out again with a district attorney by Soros. And when I saw this sign at one of the,
first of all,
we got some Oakland stores are trying to get the attention of the local
government to do something about this.
So I said,
we're going to go on a two hour strike.
All the stores in Oakland are going to shut for two hours to try to get the
attention of the government there.
Well,
good luck with that.
As a matter of fact, you just had the Oakland mayor fire the police government there. Well, good luck with that. As a matter of fact,
you just had the Oakland mayor fire the police chief there,
even as murder rates are going up.
So that's not going to make much of a difference.
Their politics are going to be entrenched there,
but they also put up signs saying we're cashless.
We have no cash.
Our restaurant has been robbed three times this
year. There's nothing valuable. There's no money inside anymore. Please don't break in again.
And this is one of the ways that I think, you know, you look at the chaos by design,
it's been put out there by Soros. It is to burn down our society, but with a very
definite direction that they want to push us.
And I think this is part of it, the no punishment stuff and the, you know, no punishment for crime.
We're not going to do anything about these people that all pushes people towards a cashless society
where, you know, you can't rob somebody with a gun. you're going to have to have a computer to rob us and that's
what i think even for the remaining small businesses trying to push them into a cashless
society with this rampant crime we don't have any cash in the store right and i think that's
how they get them to buy into it so oakland california um the, they're trying to send a message to city hall.
Guess what?
City hall.
It's deaf to that.
They want better protection.
They want support so that they can safely operate their business and make a living.
You understand that government as envisioned by Soros and the Democrats, we see in these,
uh, Democrat cities and states, government provides nothing there, nothing that people want or need.
There's nothing there for your safety. And of course, they come after your liberty.
They don't provide law. They don't provide order. They don't provide infrastructure. They don't
provide education. They don't provide anything that you want. They're merely another class of predators, another criminal class to loot you in a different way.
So participating members say they're losing customers even and foot traffic because the customers are being robbed.
It's not just the businesses, but the customers are being robbed.
So again, trying to train the individuals not to carry any cash or valuables because you will be robbed
better just you know have that phone and make sure that your phone operates off of your biometrics
so these people can't take it well you know what they'll do is you'll just cut your fingers off
and do it anyway um also in that area target announced that it was closing nine stores in four states because of crime and retail theft.
Three of those stores in the San Francisco Bay and Oakland area.
So one third of those stores that are closing are right there in that area.
Earlier this year, the newly elected progressive mayor, Xing Tao, fired Oakland police chief
after he criticized the Oakland City Council
for cutting the police funding
as murders were rising.
His firing was recently found
to have been improper
after an investigation by a retired judge.
So, in Philadelphia,
there was massive rioting because the Soros district attorney there had the same people that let all the criminals go.
There was a shooting of a man who was carrying a knife by a police officer.
And the Soros district attorney came after that police officer.
And the judge dismissed it and even said charges should never have been filed in this situation.
This is a dangerous individual on the attack.
The police officer stopped him with a gun.
What he's supposed to do.
And so the people in Philadelphia saw this as an excuse to go looting.
And there were a lot of things that were put up on social media.
They're not only, it's an excuse to go looting,
but they're proud of the fact that they're looting.
They're filming themselves looting.
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with iGaming Ontario and guess what you're not going to see the Soros district attorney
charge any of them here's one of them this woman is shouting everybody must eat to justify this
oh
there they are busting through one store after the other.
She looks like she's been eating quite a bit.
And you see the comments going up there all laughing emojis line after line of them
let's go yeah grab me something there they said yeah and you see the comments there um
where are we going next and some of these other ones, people that are rioting there? It's just started.
We ain't finished yet.
That was their excuse to go rioting, the fact that a police officer had actually stopped a violent criminal.
And again, it's the same thing we're seeing from the Biden administration that we see from these district attorneys, the source district attorneys. Soros District Attorneys, and that was a priority for Obama as he was leaving office
in the transition period between Trump getting elected in 2016 and taking office in January 2017.
In that transition period, Obama and Eric Holder got together. They're talking about how they're
going to get district attorneys put in all these different jurisdictions as well as state attorney
generals.
And that's, you know, the person who funded that effort was Soros.
But that is the push.
Retailers have lost more than $112 billion in 2022 to crime,
and it's going up again this year.
In L.A., San Francisco, Oakland, Houston, New York, Seattle,
listed by the National Retail Federation as the city's most affected by organized retail crime.
I thought it was interesting that Dick's Sporting's Good is having a lot of losses. the ones out there saying we're actually the CEO at target. I'm sorry. Dicks actually hired a lobbyist to push,
to take guns away from people,
uh,
to be able to defend themselves.
And then target,
which has been pushing the LGBT stuff and drag for as long as we can
remember.
I mean,
way before this was normal,
they were putting,
uh,
guys dressed up like women and their customer service stuff in
conservative north carolina where we lived uh so target is now being dragged into losses as well
uh 500 million dollars in losses for target uh so um what goes around comes around i guess
uh they're going to close nine stores, as I said, in four different states.
Uh, one in East Harlem, New York, three in San Francisco, three stores each, uh, and
one each in Portland, Oregon, and, uh, sorry, one in Portland, Oregon, and two in Seattle.
So you notice it's going to Portland, Seattle, New York, San Francisco.
Uh, you see a pattern here.
The Democrat mobocracy, this there.
Target said it has invested heavily in strategies to prevent and stop theft,
such as adding more security team workers, using third-party guard services,
installing theft tools like locking up merchandise, but none of that has worked.
It continues to escalate.
And so they said,
in some of these areas, it's unsustainable for us to stay in business. Well, you know what's
going to happen? These mobs are being trained in these areas, and they're now organized.
In the same way that alcohol prohibition organized and trained Al Capone and other people,
in the same way that 50 years of drug prohibition
has trained and organized these cartels, these dangerous cartels in Mexico. You've now got these
mobs who are practicing and learning how to do this. They're not going to stop doing it just
because the stores shut down in their town. They're going to go elsewhere. They're going to
come to your town, your neighborhood.
And that's part of this plan, I believe, to spread this out. Late last year, Congress passed a bill called the INFORM Act that seeks to combat sales of counterfeit goods and dangerous products
by compelling online marketplaces to verify different types of information, including
your bank account, your tax ID, your contact details, for sellers who make at least 200 unique sales and earn
a minimum of $5,000 in a given year.
You see, whenever the government creates a problem, as the government has created these
problems everywhere, then they come up with a solution that seems to always be another
excuse to get more information about you and have you have an ID and all the rest of this stuff.
Well, you know, the crime is everywhere, so I guess we're going to have to go to a cashless society.
Well, you know, crime is everywhere, so I guess if you're going to sell anything online or sell anything to anybody, you're going to have to prove who you are with an ID.
You see how this works?
Crisis, solution. Crisis, solution.
Government-created crisis or problem,
all ways to push us to their solution of looking at everything that we do.
Now, here's another example of this.
CVS, the big drugstore chain.
The big drugstore chain that I was talking about was one of a couple of different places
that was charging excessive amounts of money for generic drugs.
CVS charging $6,000 for $55 generic drugs.
$55 from other people normally, Normally 6,000 from them.
And you know, the, the ridiculous thing is that probably the $55 price is
probably tens of thousand percent markup probably cost them nothing
to make those generic drugs.
Anyway, um, they are now going to close 900 stores by the end of next year.
As they battle, they said, rampant retail theft.
So you're telling me that when other people are making thousands of percent profit,
charging 55 bucks for this stuff, you charge $6,000 for it,
and you still can't stay in business because there's so much theft,
I'm not buying it, number one.
There's something else going on here, and I'll tell you what it is.
You know, there is just a, you know,
these people themselves are stealing from you.
The CVS is stealing from you.
They're a bunch of thieves, and now they're saying they can't do this
because there's too many thieves stealing from you. They're a bunch of thieves. And now they're saying they can't do this because there's too many thieves
stealing from the retail store.
So they said, we're going to have to reduce our, our retail footprint.
And so they said, we're going to go to online sales of pretty much everything.
We will keep retail stores open, but we will use them to offer shots and to do testing.
You see?
So this is the way they will use the chaos and the theft.
They'll use it to essentially go from CVC to CDC.
They're going to be the arms and legs of testing and shots.
And of course, they make absurd profits off of doing the shots, but they're going to be the arms and legs of testing and shots. And of course, they make absurd profits off of doing the shots.
But they're going to convert their stores into quote-unquote health care destinations.
Health care destinations.
Shots and testing are as much health care as these genital mutilations that they do to kids or the abortions.
It's not about health care at all.
But keep that in mind.
When you see a CBC, drive past them and go to somebody else,
anybody else.
Boycott those people.
And going back to the San Francisco Bay Area,
San Francisco and Oakland, it's gotten so bad there,
they actually now have pirates.
Pirates.
Shiver me timbers.
They're not even just going from store to store.
They're actually robbing people in the water.
They're stealing boats and then using those stolen boats to take over other boats
and steal everything from them and then sink the boats.
That's actually happening in Oakland.
Pirates are.
They steal anything of value.
They sink the ships or dump the remnants of plundered boats miles away in the
Oakland Harbor or along the shorelines.
And here's the problem.
They just can't figure out what to do about it.
Because, you know, you talk to all these different law enforcement agencies and
go, well, I'm not sure who's got jurisdiction about this. I guess I don't have to do anything about it because, you know, you talk to all these different law enforcement agencies and go, well, I'm not sure who's got jurisdiction about this.
I guess I don't have to do anything about it.
So everybody's passing this hot potato back and forth.
It's like, well, we're the police.
We're not the shore patrol.
Or is this a Coast Guard?
Who's supposed to do something about this?
Not me.
It's not my job to do any of this stuff.
It's everybody everywhere.
Another example of passing the buck and saying, well, it's not my job.
Colony Ridge.
Somebody asked about just north of Houston.
And this is a development that has been set up.
It has now, you know, they have been investigated nine times and been given massive fines eight of those nine times.
It has now become a hub for illegal immigrants and a strategic center for drug cartels.
It's become such an amazing problem that you got people throughout the state clamoring for something to be done about it. But the problem is, is that Greg Abbott is friends with the guy who is running this scam.
Serious concerns have been raised about what's going on in the Colony Ridge area, said Greg Abbott.
We're trying to put together as much information as possible so I can add this to a special session.
What a joke.
He knows what's going on there. Like I said, What a joke. He knows what's going on there.
Like I said, there's been nine investigations of what's going on there. Everybody in the state is
talking about it. And he pretends like, well, you don't get to find out something about that.
It's like DeSantis and Lidepost saying, well, you know, we need to look into these vaccinations.
I've heard that they're bad. Maybe we should ask the Florida Supreme Court to set up a grand jury to investigate it,
because I'm not going to do anything about it, right?
That same type of thing.
Abbott's response to Colony Ridge has come under scrutiny due to political donations
that he's received from the development's owner, William Trey Harris,
who donated $1.5 million to Governor Abbott's campaign.
Abbott has still yet to address
his relationship with harris and again nine investigations and they have had eight times
they've been fined on this desantis chimed in on this he blamed quote weak spineless leaders for
permitting and facilitating sprawling developments to house thousands of illegal immigrants who have broken our nation's laws.
So,
you know,
Greg Abbott does his virtue signaling by putting some,
a few people on a bus while the guy who gave him one and a half million
dollars as I'm making out like a bandit and setting up a cartel town north of Houston.
Houston, one of the worst places for crime nationally.
And then we look at the cybercrime aspect of this.
It was just recently, of course, that we had multiple hotel chains in Vegas that were hacked.
And then we had Toyota was completely shut down.
Remember that? In Japan.
Their factories were hacked in was completely shut down remember that in japan their factories were hacked in japan and shut down now in germany volkswagen's factories in germany have been
shut down over a hack an it malfunction they said it disruption of network components at the
wolfsburg location nothing is currently working in the offices of the Wolfsburg headquarters.
Newspaper noted an attack from outside is considered to be unlikely.
This is always a story, right?
No, it wasn't a hack.
It wasn't a hack at all.
And let me just say, you know, after they hacked Toyota, after they've hacked Volkswagen,
do you trust the security of their highly
electronic connected cars?
I mean, they're all pushing to make sure these cars are connected, wired up to the internet.
If their factories and their manufacturing facilities are vulnerable, do you trust their
cars?
It's kind of like the Pentagon.
If the Pentagon and the CIA and the cia and the nsa are
constantly being hacked by other people do you trust for example that um the f-35 was not hacked
for you know as an example the only good news is is that the volkswagens and the toyotas do not
have ejector seats unlike the f-35 you know they may put them on autopilot.
Uh, you may wish that they had ejected you, but, uh, they don't have any way to eject
people as of yet.
Yeah.
Like the old Hertz commercials, you know, what hurts put you in the driver's seat.
These people want to take you out of the driver's role, but they don't want to necessarily,
uh, do it that way.
No, we look at what is happening.
The there's a good article at technocracy.news about what was just done at the G20, how they're
pushing the digital public infrastructure, you know, just like I was saying, make the
retail bricks and mortar shops, not only hard to compete against amazon all the rest of
the stuff but just make them too dangerous to even go to we're going to have a cashless society but
even beyond that let's not even have any physical locations let's just do everything online push
everybody uh into cyberspace where we can more easily be controlled. And that was what they were pushing very hard
at the G20 meeting in India.
India, as the host country,
put out a document proposing what needed to be done.
One Earth, one family, one future,
was how they titled it.
And of course, India has been at the forefront of this,
thanks to Bill Gates. And of course, India has been at the forefront of this. Thanks to Bill Gates,
Bill Gates worked with India to institute the Aadhaar system, a mark of the beast system where
you're not going to be able to do anything unless you've got that ID. And of course,
pushing it to the poor people saying, we'll give you welfare. We'll give you healthcare, but you're going to have to take the number.
And that's the, uh, what they're pushing us into as they burn down our society.
Um, you've got to, first, they got to take away your ability to earn a living.
They got to take away the middle class and that type.
They got to make everybody poor and dependent on them.
And then they will say, and we'll give you some food, but you're going to have to do class and that type they got to make everybody poor and dependent on them and then they will say and we'll give you some food but you're going to have to do this and that
that's how they enslave us and they practiced it on the poor people in india bill gates world
economic forum and the indian government and so as they were meeting in um in India, as the technocracy news says, you know, you go back to 1934, uh, course,
they planned all this stuff out in the 1930s.
I said this many times, Elon Musk, grandfather, Joshua Haldane, you know, at the same time
he had HG Wells putting out things to come shape of things to come.
It was a book and they made it into a movie right away.
They loved it.
Had, uh, Raymond Massey in it. I've shown that many times, but you know, it was, um, they made it into a movie right away they loved it had uh raymond massey
in it i've shown that many times but you know it was um they made that as a you know did the
book immediately made the movie and in the 1930s joshua haldane elon musk's maternal grandfather
tried to overthrow the the government in canada and institute a technocracy.
They charged him, but they were unable to convict him,
so he got out of town and he went to South Africa.
But again, going back to this 1934 document at the same time,
and this is sweeping through everywhere,
the intelligentsia loved eugenics.
They loved the idea of a technocracy.
You had these movers and shakers like H.G. Wells.
You had Julian Huxley, brother of Aldous Huxley.
Aldous Huxley's writing books like Brave New World.
His brother Julian is working in eugenics and transhumanism.
It was Julian Huxley who coined the term transhumanism.
But here's this document from 1934.
And see if it doesn't read like something.
It had seven points and see if this doesn't exactly fit into what we have now.
They didn't have the technology to pull this off.
In the same way that when you had a DARPA psychologist in the 1960s, J.C.R. Licklider, came up with the idea of the Internet.
And he called it the Intergalactic Computer Network, and then they shortened it up to the internet.
When he came up with that idea of psychological control, it had to wait for another 30 or
so years before technology caught up and allowed them to implement it.
So when you go back and look at this 90 years ago, they wanted to, number one, register
on a continuous 24 hour per day basis
the total net conversion of energy well you know smart meters uh number two by means of the
registration of energy converted and consumed make possible a balanced load well you know
balance this stuff off if people use too much energy, carbon taxes, things like that.
Number three and four sounded to me like artificial intelligence.
Provide a continuous inventory of all production and consumption.
Provide a specific registration of the type and kind of all goods and services,
where they're produced and where they're used.
And of course, this is something that even with computers would be too burdensome for
people to do the data mining and the collation.
The computer has to be able to mine that data and collate and organize and present that
data.
That's where we need artificial intelligence.
So that takes care of three and four.
Provide specific registration of the consumption of each individual, plus a record and a description
of that individual. Well, there you go there's cbdc
and the digital ids allow the citizen the widest latitude of choice and consuming his individual
share of the continental physical wealth gonna everybody's nobody going to own anything.
It'll be collectively owned.
There's your collectivist, communist, neo-Marxism of the Silicon Valley technical elites.
And then finally, distribute goods and services to every member of the population.
Universal basic income.
We will decide what your share is going to be, and we will distribute it to you accordingly.
But technology news um
technocracy news edder says uh look this is not socialism communism or fascism it is technocracy
technocracy is a particular type of authoritarianism just like socialism communism and fascism are
uh so the g20 leaders there again it's one earth one family
one future was the motto and what they focus on was a new concept of digital public infrastructure
dpi and as they want to shut down our physical infrastructure and push us into something that
is digital and so um again he goes back and he traces the origins back to um
you know same types of things that were talked about um you know the 1930s but then again in
the 1970s 40 years later buys a big new brzezinski in his book between two ages where he talked about
the coming technocratic age and said things like we're going to monitor and control everything that everybody does and we're going to know before you do what you want to do all of this type of stuff he said
that in the 1970s they liked that so much they put him in charge of the trilateral commission
then they put him in charge of jimmy carter and so uh at the g20 this is some of the statements
that they made about their high level principles principles, quote-unquote, and their lifestyles for sustainable development.
We need to leverage data to support and to enable the last-mile behavior change towards adopting and incentivizing sustainable lifestyles and consumer choices.
Yeah, choices in the sense that you had a choice about the vaccine.
They're going to behaviorally modify you,
and you will make the correct choice.
They also said we need to unlock the full potential of AI,
equitably share its benefits and mitigate the risk.
We will work together to promote international cooperation
and further
discussion on the international governance for AI.
They're not going to govern AI.
They're going to use AI to govern you and it will be global.
It is,
as we've said many times,
this global government is not really,
you know,
a political government. It's going to be a
technocracy, a corporatocracy. It's going to be a merger of these corporations as well as
the governments. The governments will continue to exist just like we see states continue to exist
as the central government takes over everything,
they left the states there and gradually suck the life and the power out of them
into the federal government.
By the way, we're going to have as our guest coming up in the third hour,
Tony's going to be joining us at the bottom of the hour.
In the third hour, I recorded this interview yesterday.
Connor Boyack, who does the Tuttle Twins, you may know him from that.
They sold five million books of that.
And if you see it, when you see the interview with him, you'll understand why.
This is what I wanted to pull up here.
They've now gone to an animated series.
But he's also got a commercial selling the books with his young kids as well.
But, you know, good books about politics and economics and other things like that,
directed, as he said, for elementary school kids and congresspeople, those age groups.
But one of the key things we talked to him mostly about was his efforts at a state organization to affect public policy at a state level.
And he is very much of the same opinion than I am that the federal government is too far gone.
And people put all of their effort into trying to control the thing that they have the least control over the federal government.
He's been very successful in Utah, where he lives, in terms of getting laws changed.
And so we talk about effective strategies about how to do that.
So that's going to be in that interview coming up in the next hour.
And so anyway, key technologies in the digital economy where all transactions will be monitored
is what they're looking for and uh and we see that uh you know to facilitate vaccine delivery and climate change
this is what they're doing with a cvs and so um again going back to what the g20 themselves said
we welcome discussions on the potential macro financial implications arising from the introduction
and adoption of CBDCs,
central bank digital currencies, notably on cross-border payments,
as well as on the international monetary and financial system.
So they welcome those types of discussions,
but those types of discussions are not welcomed by Fox News
or the people who run the conservative debates.
And again, the Trump administration, just like the Biden administration,
both of them, 100% behind CBDC, 100% behind 5G,
and all the rest of these technologies.
So again, the BRICS are not necessarily,
they're not a counterbalance to this.
Klaus Schwab brags about how putin is one
of his own and of course uh this is the g20 was held in india and it was india who put out this
digital public infrastructure document uh so there is um at least india is a bridge to that but so is
china really the rockefeller and gates Foundation's omnipresent whole agenda largely follows
the lockstep scenario that we've talked about from Rockefeller Foundation back in 2010.
Part of the lockdown, you know, kind of described
the lockdown scenario, says
the writer of Technocracy News.
This part of the global coup d'etat,
which ultimately manifests itself in the UN's Our Common Agenda and the tightly knit alliance that's been formed
between global megacorporations, financial institutions, and the UN,
this is what Paul Raskin of the Great Transition Initiative
and the Club of Rome refers to as the New Earth Order.
And I think that's an important distinction because it shows how it'll be
focused around the climate MacGuffin, the climate change MacGuffin.
And so finally, this article from Daily Skeptic,
the coming tyranny of smart technology is worse than you think,
but there is hope.
I have to say, I take hope in the fact that I see all of these hacks that are being
done out there.
And that's essentially what he is saying here at The Daily Skeptic.
You know, we see people who are able to get into these very sophisticated things, even
into these government facilities, the Pentagon and the CIA and the NSA,
hack and steal there and expose their tools for hacking into other people at the same time.
They are, again, what they seek to do to us is, as he said, worse than you think.
But they have a vulnerability in the sense that these politicians really don't know what they're doing.
He said he likened it to a drunk who doesn't look at the lamppost for illumination,
but for something that he can lean on. And he said, that's really what is happening with these people. They've never done any coding. They don't understand how these things
work. They're leaning on other people. And we just need a few liberty-minded people to pull
this system apart. They're completely dependent on us for this. And if we have a few people who
say they're not going to be their slaves, that will be the key thing. One of the things he talks about is the concept of law 3.0,
where they use these smart technologies, smart technologies, they call them a self-monitoring
and reporting technologies. He said it'd be better understood as surveillance monitoring
and repression technologies. He gives an example of law 3.0.
He said, let's say you got a golf course that is out there,
and they don't want people driving on the grass.
You stay on the paths, the golf court path.
So they could put up signs, and they could try to punish people.
That's the traditional way to do it, right, if you get onto the grass.
Or they could buy golf carts that will not let you get off of the golf course and get onto the grass. So it'll look at it, and as soon as it recognizes that it's grass, it will
refuse to go there. And it'll only stay. It'll let you drive wherever you want as long as you stay on
that path, but you can't get onto the course. That is law 3.0 paradigm.
We're not going to ask you.
We're going to coerce you into doing what we want you to do.
And he said, whenever you've got a device that is reliant on remote updates,
then that is where we are.
Your phone is a perfect example of this. The person who paid for this is not the ultimate authority.
It's like those slides mocking us from the NSA.
Prior to 2013, we had the Ed Snowden leaks that already done the thing, said who would have thought in 1984, they show the Apple 1984 commercial, that this would become Big Brother and they show Steve Jobs holding up a phone.
And the third slide is that the zombies would line up to pay for it. There's your zombie apocalypse. You know, you don't have to, uh, be
concerned about October the 4th and whether somebody is going to, uh, hack your phone.
They're hacking your phone all the time. Uh, you know, I used to be relentlessly trolled by, uh,
Apple to update your phone, update your phone, update your computer.
I've got an Android-based phone now, and they don't even ask.
They just do it.
And so that's where we are with this.
You accept this update.
It cripples your functionality.
And we're going to put in any telemetry that we want to report back on you
for anything that we want. I mean, you know, it doesn't have to keep your phone off on October
the 4th. They can update this stuff at any point in time. What a naive understanding of where we
currently are with these phones. Phones are way beyond anything that they're trying to scare you
about on October 4th. They pass, you know, that cow got out of the barn a long, long, long time ago.
And so he says, if you can't fully control a piece of equipment,
if you cannot repair it because of the Digital Millennial Act,
then you don't really own it, no matter how much you paid them.
Under any previous social system, this would rightly be regarded as wrong,
but under Law 3.0, this bug is now a feature.
Now you can be made to pay forever for things that you should own.
Now your devices will be deactivated by banks.
Now your property will serve as your master, and will serve those masters who want to surveil you and control you.
But the good side of this, as he points out, is that this is technology.
And whoever controls that technology is going to be able to do something about this.
We can look at this, and we understand that this hacking stuff is being done for criminal purposes
or maybe it's being done from government to government and that type of thing.
But I take heart in the fact that the power of the state is not complete, total,
and we don't have an omnipotent state.
And we will never have an omnipotent state. And we will never have an omnipotent state
if people refuse to serve it. We're going to take a quick break, and we'll be right back. Thank you. Making sense common again.
You're listening to The David Knight Show.
Well, before Tony comes on, we've seen the news yesterday just filled with information about the judge's decision about Trump's businesses.
And, you know, they're saying that it was fraudulent.
So we're going to take away his business licenses and all these other punishments.
This is even before the trial begins, as I pointed out yesterday.
And so everybody was pushing back on it saying, well, look at this.
He evaluated Mar-a-Lago at $18 million and so forth.
And everybody said, this is absurdly low.
A lot of people evaluated it.
The Wall Street Journal, I think, talked to evaluate it somewhere,
$300, $380 million or something.
Eric Trump gets on and says, it's worth at least a billion dollars.
And somebody said, well, good luck with your property taxes now,
if you are going to do that.
They were going basically on the tax evaluation of it.
But, you know, it was not just that.
It was his hotels and all these other things that,
um,
uh,
and his apartment buildings that were being evaluated,
but everybody's focused on Mar-a-Lago,
but I want to focus on what happened in a South Carolina trip.
Donald Trump,
uh,
went to a gun show with Marjorie Taylor green in South Carolina.
And as he's walking around,
a guy shows him a Glock that has his face on the grip.
And, uh, this is a gun that goes for $830.
It's expensive because it's all carved with commemorative stuff to Trump.
It's the special Trump edition features his photo on the handle with the words,
Trump 45 on the
chamber.
And Trump says,
well,
I'm going to buy one.
I want to buy one.
And he asked the guy,
he says,
do they sell well?
And the guy says,
yes.
Or what's he going to say?
He says,
well,
they like me.
Yeah.
And I like me as well.
And it was kind of funny to watch the video that was posted up by somebody
who worked for him because he was not really comfortable with a gun.
He didn't really want to take it.
Eventually, you know, he stands there kind of uncomfortably holding it to take a still picture.
He's about as uncomfortable with a gun as he is with a Bible.
He's not one of those bitter clingers that obama called us uh and uh so anyway uh his uh
spokesperson campaign spokesperson wrote that trump did buy the gun and then people started
saying wait a minute he's indicted for felonies he's not allowed to own a gun and so this whole
thing goes back and forth and uh they do a retraction no he didn't buy the gun and uh
you know if trump had bought the glock and says uh daily mail uh there would have been questions
about the legality of him buying it uh yeah take the gun well then there's going to be some due
process later right uh he's not allowed to purchase a gun because you know you're once
you're indicted you they treat you as if you're a convicted felon and the law is really out of
control on this reason had a great article about how out of control these laws are you should be
innocent until you get your due process. But isn't it fitting that the
very guy who said, take the gun and do the due process later, the system would deny him the due
process of being found guilty of a crime and having his gun rights blocked. No, they're going
to take the gun from Trump before he gets his due process.
Fitting, fitting.
Some federal judges, however, have ruled that such a rule is not consistent with the Constitution,
meaning Trump could have challenged the issue in court.
But then in addition, there's more things, right?
He couldn't have bought it in South Carolina. He would have had to have it shipped to Florida.
South Carolina, you're required to have a concealed carry permit or
an instant background check done in order to purchase a firearm. Uh, so, uh, he would have
had to fill out an ATF form. And if he had done that, you know, it asked, uh, not just the, you
know, the questions that Hunter Biden lied about, are you a drug user addicted to drugs or something
like that, but also ask, are you under felony indict, addicted to drugs or something like that, but also
ask, are you under felony indictment?
So if he would have filled out that form to buy the gun, then he would have been in the
same situation as Hunter Biden.
And that's one of the things that Reason Magazine talks about.
They said, you look at this and you say, well, this is a legal trap here.
And it's a bad law, even if you don't like the person.
And it shows just how we are in this country, how we'll excuse any conduct, whether it's rape or
sexual harassment or, you know, you name it, if we like the person. Just like Russell Brand, or
you should call him Russell Brandon, I guess.
And, uh, but they don't care about the actual policy.
They just care about the person.
Well, Tony is ready.
I don't want to get Tony on because we got a lot to talk about today.
And, um, after we talked to Tony, we have, again,
the interview that I had with a Connor Boyk, uh,
of the total twins and of Libertas,
the think tank in Utah, and what we can do at the state level.
So we're going to take a quick break and connect with Tony,
and then we will be right back.
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each of us has worth and dignity created in the image of God. That is what we have in
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while they hide everything from us.
It's time to turn that around
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TheDavidKnightShow.com All right, welcome back.
And joining us now is Tony Arterburn, and he has Wise Wolf Gold.
He also has kindly set up DavidKnight.Gold, which will direct you to Tony.
Let him know that you came through us.
But we always like to talk to Tony about what's going on in the markets,
especially gold and silver.
Tony, earlier I was talking about the move to shut down retail everywhere.
I really think all this crime stuff that is happening.
As I saw the people that you had these stores in Oakland where it's really bad,
they went on a two-hour strike, all these different retailers,
just shut down our stores for two hours.
Maybe we can get the attention of the government.
But the government doesn't want that.
They've also got signs out there saying, we don't have any cash.
There's no cash on board.
Leave us alone.
And they're robbing people of cash.
And I said, you know, all of this chaos that's being pushed by these Soros district attorneys,
I think that's got a purpose to it.
I think that they are trying to get people afraid to carry anything of value like cash.
They want us to shop online.
They want us to be afraid to get out of our houses and go to the store.
I think that's what's happening here.
I think it's part of the agenda to push us into that cyberspace and out of physical space, don't you?
Absolutely.
It's Cloward and piven creative destruction we saw this in the summer of 2020
post george floyd and a lot of those uh coordinated riots in my opinion and he had people flying all
over the country and funded by someone you know a lot of the places that were hit uh you know were
competitors to the sorrows you go back and look at that.
A lot of places that were burned down things or,
or things that could be insured.
Um,
yeah,
but I think that's exactly what's happening.
You've got,
um,
the perception that it's dangerous to shop.
We've got to do everything online.
We've got to get back in our homes and that's what they're pushing in these,
especially Soros controlled Democrat,
uh,
cities.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And CBS is going to shut down 900 stores.
They said they're just having too much theft loss.
And I'd like to know how that happens when they're the biggest thieves out there.
They're selling drugs that cost $55 generic, and they're selling them for $6,000, and they
say they can't keep their stores open, that they're going to only do business online,
except for the people who are going to go now.
They're going to maintain a physical presence so they can give people shots
and do tests on us.
Like, wow.
Just change the V to a D, CDC.
Well, it's also a way to get bailed out in another aspect.
You know, too big to fail, too big to be in a retail space,
and they need to be bailed out because they carry out the wishes and needs of the ruling order, these multinational corporations.
And that's when you talk about 15-minute cities, or as Trump calls them, freedom cities.
There's like, oh, well, you're just a walk away from a pharmacy.
Yeah, it's one, right?
It's one company, one entity,. It's only one by one company,
one,
um,
one entity. And there's only one of the,
anything in there.
So again,
that's just a part,
part of the system,
uh,
is taking away choice and,
uh,
making it look where you,
like you cannot go anywhere.
And again,
it's just all part of the fear.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And that's one of the reasons why these corporations are doing everything they want,
because they want to have that concession. They want to be the one vendor of whatever it is
that they're selling. And that's going to be the idea, as you point out, with a 15 minute city,
there'll be one of this and one of that and one of that. And who are the people going to be that
run that? It's going to be the same store in every one of these 15 minute areas. So why do you need
to go to a different 15 minute? It's just going to have another CVC there. So just go to the one
that's close by to you. There's no difference between these stores uh they're they're all been given
this monopoly uh concession by the government because they do everything that they want them
to do that's really what they're trying to corral us into i've always thought it was interesting that
the demographics researchers for whatever their cvs or walgreens they're pretty lazy they just
wait for the one guy to put up a corner and then they'll go to the other corner on the other side.
That's usually somebody's following somebody,
but I don't know who's actually paying a demographics team or researcher
if they just copy whenever that goes in.
And, you know, I think, again, just trying to vie for who is going to be.
It's kind of like the banks that right now are competing.
And I use the word auditioning last week when I talked to you about who's going to help roll out the central bank digital currency which was was going
to be the the closest to the fed and that's what we're watching right now yeah well you know in
terms of all especially with the city just put out that blockchain token yeah let's talk about that
but you know the thing i talked about yesterday mentioned it was the fact that you had JP Morgan and you had Bank of America tell Intuit that runs QuickBooks, don't do business with any gun retailers or gun manufacturers.
And so JP Morgan, I forget which one.
I think it was.
Well, I can't remember.
JP Morgan went after, let's say, retailers and Bank of America went after wholesalers or the other way around.
JP Morgan admitted it.
They're absolutely unashamed about it.
And that's what Intuit said.
Said, look, we stopped doing business with them, with gun people, retailers and manufacturers,
because they told us they were going to shut us off if we didn't do it.
Bank of America denied it.
We've already seen Bank of America turncoats about January the 6th,
turning in a list of anybody that made any purchases anywhere around the Washington, D.C. area on January the 6th, turning in a list of anybody that made any purchases
anywhere around the Washington, D.C. area on January the 6th, and then also giving lists
of gun purchases to the FBI.
So here, put this together, you know, voluntarily offering that stuff up, according to the FBI.
And so we've seen Bank of America do that type of stuff, but J.P.
Morgan is just completely unashamed about it.
And this is how they can tighten the screws screws down on us even with these subordinate companies like quickbooks it truly is
amazing how broad this is becoming and how the banks and financial systems and whether social
media companies how they're all weaponized to control us well absolutely i mean if you are with a national bank right now you need to cause and
reflect yeah going into the future the extension of the government's going to run through the banks
and again the extension of the government is an extension of the fed and this is the
implementation of cbdc the control system i've had run-ins with these national banks especially being
in the gold and silver business or being in the crypto
business.
They will crush you.
And I've had it even in the convenience store business,
David,
I've had where we had started taking,
we were depositing money orders that were ours that were taken from our
customers and bank of America froze it.
We had 25,000 in the account and they froze it for about eight weeks.
So if you, if you were just, if you
had one store and one, and we hadn't, luckily we had other deposits and we could, we could float
for a while, but that would have bankrupted anybody else. And we had, you know, attorneys
calling them everything. They just held it. They can't, I would all, I much rather deal with a
regional or more local bank. You may not have all the bells and whistles and the technology, but you get a person usually. It used to be that way in Texas, but Texas used to have in their constitution where
you had to have every bank had to have its own charter from the state and had to have its own
president. I watched that change in the 80s. My dad chartered a bank when I was a kid,
and they broke up Texas banking. And again, when they replace it with these national chains,
is lending better, customer service better,
or does the average person have more access to lending?
Absolutely not.
And this is something that's the field gets narrower and narrower
as the years go by on who can get access to anything when it comes to banking.
Yeah. Yeah. I remember when that happened,
it was the merger of nations bank and bank of America, on who can get access to anything when it comes to banking. Yeah, yeah. I remember when that happened,
it was the merger of Nations Bank and Bank of America.
Bank of America was in California.
Nations Bank was in North Carolina.
And they were given that merger, and everybody said,
you can't do that.
That's going to set off a precedent.
It's going to consolidate the banking industry,
and this is making big national banks. But it was the Clinton administration that did it.
And the guy who was pushing it was somebody who was, um, I think he was the chief of staff at
the white house at the time, Erskine Bowles. Uh, but he had always been in the banking industry
there in North Carolina. And, um, so they got this thing rammed through and that's, uh, we,
you know, 10, 10 years later, we had just a handful of banks that were too big to fail.
And, um, we've gone, as you point out, from really state-focused and controlled banks to these
giant international banks, but certainly national banks.
And as we see what was happening with the central bank and the interest rates last week,
it's put a lot of fear into the U.S. stock market.
This is MarketWatch saying extreme fear has returned to the U.S S stock market. Uh, this is a market watch saying extreme fear has returned
to the U S stock market, uh, and the investors in the grip of fear for the first time in six
months, they said, as they looked at the fear and greed index. Uh, so what they're fearing
is, um, and this is coming up right in time for the, uh, you know, the corrections always seem
to come in October, don't they, uh, for the stock market, these big disasters.
And so now there's extreme greed and fear, uh, in, um, and they're all being taught.
This is all being talked about in terms of the volatility index.
Uh, everybody is concerned about that.
And as I look at this stuff bouncing around, as I look at, you know, all these
other fads and stuff like NFfts and things it is interesting
to see gold there you know you see the the value of gold that is changing in terms of the dollar
but is it gold that is volatile or is it the dollar is it gold that's volatile or the stock
market or the nfts and all the rest of stuff i don't think it's gold i think it's those other things well yeah i go in october into the fiscal year uh october 1929 october 1987 for
for crashes uh historically and there's other there's other examples yeah it really comes down
to the psychological aspect of the economy you know you have on one side you've got the mainstream
you know you got robert reich you got pa Krugman, all these poor economists coming out saying this.
Bidenomics is working. It's the strongest economy ever. I've talked about this on your show.
It's Michael Meharry from Shift Gold put out an article on Zero Hedge about, you know, you have the mainstream saying one thing, but Americans aren't buying it.
The economy is not in good shape. You know, the ability to borrow the interest rates, inflation, all baked into that system,
people are not optimistic. But the market, again, it's kind of schizophrenic. If you've got
traders that are fearful of the future, but why isn't gold blowing past 2000? Because gold is
usually where people run to, especially traders, when uh not you know looking at the future with a with
a sense of optimism and so but you also have these other numbers that are saying that everything's
great and it's pushing the price of gold down you know you looked at Reuters had an article it's
like well gold's at a six-month low uh because the the dollar is strong i don't know how you can have a strong dollar when it's not
backed by anything it's and you know all the you know treasury yields are up and and the dollar
looks great in economic output even though rates have been raised at the fastest rate ever um
by jerome powell in the fed they're still looking at a strong economic data so they say so um you know you put that and
juxtapose that to the Chinese demand for gold is is is massive and still climbing uh and I think
in July they they bought 23 tons of of gold and in August it's 29 tons of gold and just keeps adding
and going up and up in these central banks adding gold so the price of gold you know we discussed this too there's a disparity between the shanghai exchange and the exchanges in
the west and i think that's because our economies the western economies the fiat currency economies
um well all current economies mostly are fiat but especially in the west with the dollars of the
world's reserve currency status these are driven by the wall street and other markets in london where it's just so much
fake so it's hard it's hard to know what's real i just know that if you're if you're looking at
the big picture i'm betting against the system the system itself is something that i think
um you ask is it gold that's volatile or is it the dollar i don't know i mean history teaches
me that uh you know if you dig up a coin from the Roman era, it's still worth something.
But the dollar, the paper dollar has lost 98% of its value since 1913.
I don't know. I'm going with gold.
Yeah. And of course, there's other things too, other signs on the horizon, and that is oil.
Oil jumped 3.5% on the West Texas Intermediate Benchmark thing last week.
It's getting close to $100.
But they're also looking at it and saying,
well, we think this might go to $150.
Now, if you see something like that,
Jamie Demon at JP Morgan has been saying,
well, we're going to go into stagflation.
That's the way you get stagflation.
You can shut down the economy with high oil prices
and create massive inflation
at the same time, because we lived through that with the OPEC shock to the system. But now we've
got BOPEC, I guess, the Biden petroleum boycotts that are going out there. That's what I see.
And again, so you're going to have this combination of inflation and also a slow economy. I think because of the inflation, that would be an
important thing for gold. But I still look at gold, Tony, as a way to get outside of their system.
You can't really predict what's going to happen with inflation or these other things and how
that's going to be timed. But you know that gold has got real value and you know that it's going to give you an
opportunity to get outside of this control grid called cbdc and that's what i think is the most
valuable thing about it well i agree with you on that and going back to to energy um the average
consumer is being priced out of having cheap energy affordable affordable energy on purpose. We talked about this before.
Biden, the entire plan is not to add infrastructure.
It's not to add new drilling, new sources of energy,
not energy independence.
And again, they're just going and saying,
well, we're going to release oil from the strategic reserve
and then not replace it.
It's insane.
And again,
but this is on,
this is part of the great reset.
You know,
you have an agent of the great reset in the white house right now,
which is Joe Biden.
And they're carrying that out.
This is the technocracy takeover.
They want to push everything to Evie and Evie just means you're not going to
go anywhere.
That's right.
That's,
that's the start of,
of the great reset is,
is the strangulation of the
u.s economy through energy and that will drive up the price because of the supply that the demand is
is i don't know if the demand is really increasing david but uh the supply is dwindling and there's
not as much exploration there's not as much investment because what's the incentive so
you're seeing that cut off and that's going to that i
think energy energy is what broke the 2008 bubble because i was running a gasoline station at the
time i mean you know we're doing about 250 000 gallons a month and i would watch the price go
up and up and up and up and finally you start seeing these gallons go down the demand goes down
but by that time people have spent their money and they have to choose you know we're going to get to work or am i going to pay this mortgage
payment so you're going to see a lot of defaults uh across the board which is going to i think
going back to ftx and the crypto markets it starts seeing these stress on these regional
banks these smaller banks and lenders that causes that that causes the crash so i think that's what
you're going to be seeing. But going back to gold
right now is a bargain. And I don't mind seeing the prices when they're in the red.
To me, I think it's just an opportunity for you to get in and be able to afford a gold finally.
And I mean, it's only the six month low, but still when you've seen the damage done to the economy it's
it's still it's still a massive bargain and i think having physical gold whether that be silver
or gold itself uh is always a way to be outside of the system i know more and more people just
because i'm in the business that are trading in it you know for for just services just but you know
i have i do this all the time um you know you know, and I, what I know about metals, I'd much rather have, uh, gold
coins in my pocket than cash any day.
Cause I know how liquid gold is.
I mean, I can always convert it.
I know exactly what to do.
Um, and once you have that knowledge, you won't want cash either.
I mean, it's just, to me, I can always get in, get an in and out of silver as
fast as I want, or I can use it directly.
So it's always a good option.
Yeah.
And just like, uh, Menendez believe that as well, you know, except he had a bad
mix, he had too much cash relative to gold, I think, you know, I guess it's
spread out all of his, his, uh, stash of cash and gold and all of that is being
used, of course, you know, look, anybody that has a cash and gold, they're
criminals like Menendez, you know, that's another way that they're trying to use that you know but um yeah he wanted the anonymity of having golden and cash
unfortunately for him he was also texting um these people with foreign governments and using his wife
as an intermediary so that kind of aroused some suspicion and got him looking at that but you're
right about the the housing bubble and, you know,
the fact that they created this housing bubble, they did it, you know,
with low interest rates and with these securitized, you know,
instruments that they came up with, the scams that they invented.
But then the pin that burst that bubble was energy.
And we've seen that over and over again, you know,
and it is go back to the thing that
made such an impression on me because, um, you know, I was still in college, but I was
about to start work when all this OPEC stuff started.
And the thing that was, um, the big issue with that was, you know, it was a power play
on the part of OPEC, just like this is all a power play in terms of energy on the part of
Biden and the UN and the world economic forum, and all these people are trying
to create a one earth government through this global warming nonsense and all the
rest of it.
But it is a deliberate attack on us to try to extend their power.
That's clearly what's going to happen, but it's going to have some big economic
consequences.
And it's been the number one priority of Biden from his first day in office.
First thing he did, you know, start to shut down pipelines and have other things off limit.
But, of course, they don't have any, they're not making any more refineries.
You know, so they're turning everything over to China.
And they're deliberately shutting this down for all of that.
And all of it is targeting to have financial controls over us.
And that's why I think that gold and silver are so important is because it gets out of
that control grid that they're trying to set up for people.
That's a key thing.
Yeah, go ahead.
Well, I was going to say, David, I think another aspect of the rising energy price is it's
kind of like a shadow bailout for the banks. And I say that because there's a hidden cost inside every time you go to the pump that most people never, ever talk about. And that's your credit card bank. And the average gasoline retailer is only going to make about four cents, maybe, on a gallon of gasoline.
So you've got all of these major banks and credit card retailers seeing the lion's share of the increase in energy prices.
And that's, I mean, billions and billions and billions of dollars. And so the more that the gasoline goes up, the more that are going to go
and flood into the coffers of these banks.
And it's hidden.
You don't see it.
So in my opinion, these banks, the larger ones, are going to cheerlead
rising higher energy prices at the pump especially.
I agree.
Yeah, it is interesting as people are looking at this and you look at
the financial news and say well you know uh we're going to have interest rates higher for longer so
that is uh you know something that people say oh let's get in the dollar and we'll get out of gold
that type of thing so it depresses the price of gold for a short period of time but at the same
time as you pointed out china is going uh big into this and it's not just the chinese central bank
but it's also the chinese public because they're seeing this property crisis
that's happening there.
And that is a massive thing looming over the horizon here,
commercial real estate.
That's one of the things that's blowing up the Chinese market,
and it's certainly going to blow up the market here in America.
Salenti has been talking about that for a long time, ever since the lockdown, what it's
going to do and people being reluctant to go back to work.
That commercial real estate bubble bursting, and it's happening in kind of a slow motion
way, but it's going to be coming here as well.
That's a big part of what's happening in China in terms of people turning to it. And, uh, and it always,
it just underscores as usual, I think, Tony, that, uh, you know, people turn to gold when
there's a big crisis and when these things that have been pumped up that don't have any real
intrinsic value are shown for what they are, people run to the real stuff. And that's what's
happening in China right now, isn't it? It's exactly right. And you've got, uh't it it's exactly right and you've got uh
bubbles going on in china and you've got the commercial real estate bubble and i believe
even a housing bubble here in the united states and and people are going to have a harder time
finding a place to park value and that's why gold's important you've got it gold has been
money for for 5 000 years plus throughout pretty much all of recorded history it's never been zero
it's not ever going to be zero so you know you have a a stable money that you can hold and again
is it is that am i telling you to go out and buy gold because you're it's going to go up uh you
know two or three times or whatever percentage is going to make you rich i don't know i just know
where the dollar is going and when you have inflated prices
and assets everywhere that aren't real whether you're talking about like paper stocks you know
the stock market itself is a casino you know uh 80 have to lose so 20 can win that's probably
generous uh i get that from our friend donald jeffries he wrote the book survival of the richest
and you know you look at the that who the rich get richer and they keep their assets and continue to inflate because of their access to the markets and to the Fed and, you know, with ESG and all the rest of that.
So you have these fake markets.
So eventually you're going to have a crash in the housing market, a crash in the commercial real estate market.
China's the people there. I mean, you look at the, you talked about the central bank and the people, the people themselves
buying physical gold. And because we're just going, this, this new era is about a revaluation
of currencies. I mean, it's, it's unsustainable. You know, my, I was talking with my mother
yesterday and she said, well, tell me the difference between, you know, was, was the
economy really good under Trump? And I said, well, it was a it was a better economy because of we you have to
go back in time to because of the amount of money that's been printed or currency's been printed
since then but i told her about the you know you and i were that's when we first started talking
we were talking about the repo markets the first time i ever came on your show we were talking
about the repo markets and even you and i we were talking about well this markets. The first time I ever came on your show, we were talking about the repo markets.
And even you and I, we were talking about, well, this is, you know, the Fed was taking what you would consider like the GDP of a small country every single month and pumping it in to these overnights and the liquidity markets.
But we didn't even you and I didn't know the full extent.
It was six trillion.
Yeah.
Estimated six trillion that was completely made up uh and you know i said so this
was all going on behind the scenes where you have this supposed trump red hot economy but you also
had the largest exodus of ceos in history in the last quarter of 2019 right before covid 1984.
that's right so you know coincidence i don't i don't think any of that's a coincidence so you
know the covet 19 and the the scamdemic was a great cover for all the damage that's been done i can't the cover is
off now so i think we're we're floating past way past the damage that's been done so it to me i
think you're going to see these little lulls happen but these economists are out of their mind. You know, American article on zero edge.
People know.
I see a change in my business.
It's a very fundamental change.
You know, people selling me more.
I'm seeing larger, you know, items coming back into me where I'm buying them
and cashing people out of the market instead of the other way around.
So there's a lot more selling to me than purchases,
because people need to raise cash because the economy is not healthy.
Yeah.
You know, this is a, this is a fact.
That's true.
Yeah.
It's interesting.
I said before, you know, joked about Menendez, but there's actually an article on New York
post.
Here's a headline, Tony Costco sells out of one ounce gold bars as Bob Menendez faces
federal probe over gold stash.
So they tied it together as if that's what's driving demand.
You know,
people,
Oh,
Menendez got gold bars.
So we should go to Costco and get some,
but they're even sold out and their price is not nearly as good as yours is.
And,
you know,
I,
people ought to deal with somebody that,
you know,
that's on our side,
that's local,
but,
um,
or at least,
uh,
you know,
that,
you know,
is on,
or even if Tony is not local,
you can,
you can deal with him by mail. But what I'm saying is, is that, you know, even if Tony is not local, you can deal with him by mail.
But what I'm saying is that people are looking at this,
and if they don't need to pull this out because they're suffering economically,
they understand what is safe.
They just may be going to the big box retailers
rather than looking at people who are on their side who've got a better price.
Tell us a little bit about what's going on at uh wise wolf well uh yeah absolutely and you know costco uh i'd learned that they got in the
gold business a while ago and some of the other major retailers i think walmart has uh some sort
of ties to apmex um you know they just met they just matched some of the big boys they have uh
you know supply chains linked up with some of
these big online retailers. That's one of the first things I do when somebody calls me is I
show them my competitor's page. I was like, I'll take you here. This is what they're retailing for.
I'm never threatened by any of the big box. They'll get into it, but eventually,
you can't buy gold at the at the paper spot price anywhere
i can't as a dealer you know having access to the trading floor and all you're still going to have
to pay a premium somewhere and i honestly over the years i've learned uh to really develop
relationships with people when it comes to precious metals in the future that will matter a great deal
so yeah you might be able to find some deals at costco or some of these online deals and i've paid more power to have
people call me and ask me all the time is that real and i'll look and say yeah that's real you
can go get that but i i really think that in the future a gold dealer will be defined by the uh
ability to get supply and i promise you uh wise wolf's been working on that for the last year and
half because i saw this coming and i'm like, okay, we've got to have several avenues.
They don't have it at Costco.
You know, they can put some stuff up and this is the other game you see people put up.
It's like, uh, well, you know, if we had it, it would be this price.
And it's like, but you haven't got it.
So they, they make it look like they, they've got a great price, but they don't even have it.
Uh, and so, and that's the key thing though, I think is the relationship.
And that's one of the reasons why you set up wise wolf.
Um, you set up the wolf pack, uh, so that people can have a relationship, not even with
just you, but also with other people who are looking to invest in gold.
And, and so I think that's the important thing.
And that's, that is the relationship that is there.
Well, that's true.
And the difference between myself and Costco is that when you call me, if I don't have it in stock, you can lock in the price.
You can lock in the trade.
We can do that.
We're different than just about any other gold company I know.
You call me, I'll lock in that price, and I'll get you your gold.
Even if I don't have it in front of me, I'll source it, and the price is guaranteed.
And thanks for bringing up Wolfpack too, David.
You know, you've got to go here pretty soon.
We've got your interview coming up.
I told your listeners last week I was going to do something for any David Knight listener that upgraded or joined Wolfpack
because we're trying to get as many members as we can before the end of the year because I want to do some bigger buy-ins and this is part of the the power of wolfpack is
everybody who who contributes and joins it makes it makes sure that everybody gets a better price
down the line and we can source that so i'm giving away um and i've talked to kenzie because we have
a big inventory of constitutional silvers that could be uh dimes quarters half dollars even
silver dollars i've got a big supply of that.
So if you join Wolfpack or have joined, you're going to get some constitutional silver.
If you join or upgrade, I'm going to give you free constitutional silver.
We're about to run on the website.
I'll have promo codes.
And if you recommend someone, if you can help me track that, if you recommend Wolfpack to a friend or family member, let me know.
We can give David credit.
And I will also send you constitutional silver.
So we're going to run this most likely through into Veterans Day.
We're going to have a big, big push.
I'm going to put a clock up on the website.
And I'm really I'm talking about a big constitutional silver giveaway.
So that's just that's fractional silver to put in your safe and you can use it for bartering later.
And silver is extremely cheap right now.
So you're going to see an uptick, I think, in prices.
I think one of the things we evaluate.
So a big constitutional silver giveaway at Wolfpack.
Always deals coming through Wolfpack as well.
You're going to get a text or an email when we have flash sales.
We just had a huge flash sale on one 10th ounce American Eagles,
save people about 30 or $40 per unit over what JM bullion was doing.
So go check us out,
go to David not.gold and click join Wolfpack and see what that's all about.
We've got a big giveaway going on.
That's great.
Competitive,
uh,
competitive prices,
being able to lock in the prices,
always having the ability to get stuff.
That's always important,
but also the community and the special deals.
Thank you so much for doing that, Tony, and thank you for supporting the program.
Always a pleasure to have you on.
Thank you.
Sure.
Thank you.
Again, Tony Arterman, you can get there, davidknight.gold.
It'll take you to tonyswisewolf.gold.
All right, we're going to switch over to our interview that we had yesterday with Conor Boyack.
We'll talk about the Tuttle
Twins and also what you can do in the right way, very powerful things that you can do at the state
level to really have more of an effect on government than you can ever have on the federal
government. So here's the Connor Boyack interview. Hey parents, kids like us have a problem and it's
one that you can help solve.
But most parents aren't even aware the problem exists.
Here's the issue.
Most schools today aren't teaching young kids some really important concepts, like
how the economy works, or what our rights are, or the definition of true laws.
Back before you were born, schools often taught the principles of a free society.
But not anymore.
That's why our parents have us read The Tidal Twins. These books teach children about economic and civic truths that we need to learn.
And there's nothing else like them in the world.
Each book covers a different topic, helping us learn how the world really works.
For example, these books teach kids things like how the free market is the key to prosperity the history of the money we use what our
rights are and why we should protect them how kids can be entrepreneurs I
definitely want to be my own boss Sunday and these books will help kids like us
absolutely love these books maybe because they don't treat us like little
children instead they help us learn important ideas and develop critical thinking
skills chances are your kids are missing out on learning these things especially
in a way that's fun and enjoyable for the whole family and even better when
you buy this set you also get the awesome activity workbooks for free now
listen there are a lot of crazy ideas out there and you need to prepare your kids.
Yeah, if you want to raise a free thinker you're gonna need something that teaches about freedom.
So purchase your books now! But be careful, your kids will learn ideas that many adults
don't even understand. It makes for some really interesting dinner conversations. Those kids are cute, but I bet yours are cuter. And imagine how much they'll enjoy the books. So what are you waiting for? Click the link and grab your set! joining us now is connor boyack and i'm really excited to talk to him i've had a lot of people
ask me about tell me i should know who the tuttle twins are we don't have young kids or grandkids so
i didn't know it yet but a great series for homeschoolers and of
course he's also involved with the libertas institute and they've done a lot at the state
level in utah so i want to talk to him about that as well so homeschooling topics and he's got other
books that he's written besides the children's books so joining us now is corner boy connor boy
i thank you for joining us connor thanks for having me it's great to great to have you on
uh those two kids that are there it says in your your bio that you got homeschooled two kids.
Were those your kids that are in that video?
That's correct, yes.
I thought so.
They were very, very cute.
Really enjoyed that.
They're good salespeople.
What's that?
They're good at sales.
They help promote homeschooling.
Well, it's a good example of what you've been able to create with homeschooling.
Tell us a little bit first about the Tuttle Twin books.
So these are children's books that teach the ideas of human flourishing, what healthy societies look like.
We're talking entrepreneurship, sound money, property rights, personal freedom, the dangers of socialism and central planning and so forth.
And so these are story-based books that allow kids to access these often adult-level complex
ideas. People often ask me what age they're for. My go-to answer is our children's series. We have
toddler books, we have books for teens, but we're best known for our children's series we have we have toddler books we have books for teens but we're best known for our our children's series so my answer to them is they're about for age five to ten and
members of congress so um that that's kind of the running gag we sold over five million copies
we have a cartoon now uh all kinds of stuff and it's heavily of interest with homeschoolers. I should also note,
we have a huge contingent of our audience where their kids go to public school, private school,
charter school. And for those families, the homeschool families are using it more as like
curriculum, like, hey, we're going to learn American history or we're going to learn economics.
For the public schoolers private schoolers their parents
are recognizing that their children are not getting these ideas in the school and so it's
a supplement i might almost even say it's a counter agent because they know that not only
are the kids not getting it in school they're getting opposite type of ideas victim mentality
and an entitlement mentality and so forth so so, so they're a broad appeal to families, uh, and, and really trying to fill this void
that's been in the marketplace for resources that can help parents talk to their kids about
real world ideas and, uh, and what that means for them.
Yeah.
And we were, uh, homeschooling our kids, you know, about 15 to 25 years ago or whatever.
And, uh, yeah.
And so we would go down and we would look at, uh, we'd go to a Barnes
and Noble and take a look at what your first grader needs to know.
Your second grader needs to know.
And we would do a lot of counter programming, just like you talked about, you know, they'd
say, well, this is what we're teaching the kids.
They need to understand how the, uh, you know, what this is.
We're not going to just ignore it.
We need to, uh, define this for them and counter it.
But I think that, and then we also, you know,
just kind of kept an eye out for where they needed to be.
But I think that's a real important thing.
But I think the most important thing is to have a positive vision.
You know, we don't want to just be negative,
but we do want to say, now this is reality here.
And have it in mind, uh,
the other stuff that they're being taught. Uh, it's, it's great to see that there's this type
of resource. And you said, um, a cartoon, is that what the Tuttle Twins show is a cartoon?
That's correct. So we partnered with Angel Studios, uh, they're best known for doing the
chosen or sound of freedom. And so we partnered with them. with them we already have a season and a half complete
and out free to watch no cost no sign up you just go to angel studios on your favorite app
platform your apple tv your roku your phone whatever and and it's funny these cartoons the
whole writing team it's me and a bunch of comedians and and so they come up with funny jokes and
really make this an entertaining show
for the whole family where we then kind of sprinkle in these ideas of freedom uh but just
have a lot of fun so that's that's a blast and we hope that it just we turn it into the new simpsons
where there's like 30 seasons but enriching content not this dumbed down stupid stuff but like
really informative enriching content but also super fun for the whole family
that's really good yeah i was just saying uh i noticed somebody say you can't win the culture
wars if you don't have a culture we have to produce content and so that's what's really
important with the total twins with your total twin show and the rest of this stuff uh we need
to we've lost this ability again to define what culture really should look like in a positive vision of politics, economics, and just what society looks like.
That's really, really important.
Let's talk a little bit about Libertas.
Tell us what is going on with the think tank there.
And you've had a lot of effects on laws.
Your bio says that you've had about 100 laws that have been changed
there in Utah. And I think that's important because of the focus on what is happening at
the state level. Because I think that federal government is gone. And I think we need to make
changes at our state and local level. We saw this, especially in the last few years, the things that
really mattered were having good local officials. They could make things much worse or much uh throughout this lockdown and all the rest of this stuff so tell us a little bit
about what is going on at the state level you know i think it's a tragedy of our uh civic
system where everyone's attention is drawn to the level of government that they can impact the least
yes everyone is so focused on the federal issues
national crises congressional stupidity and i'm not saying don't pay attention i'm not saying you
need to completely shut it off but everyone's energy is so focused on talking about and
complaining about what's happening at the national level where the average person has statistically zero influence.
Yes. The, the contrast to that is when you focus on a state and local level, you can have a
disproportionately high impact. I, so I cut my teeth politically, uh, working on Mike Lee's
campaign when he first ran for the U S Senate from Utah in 2009 and 10. So I was one of like five or six people on his early
campaign. There were a dozen other candidates. We got Mike through the primary and he got elected
and we remained good friends and talked often. But here's a guy who has wanted to go support
the constitution and limited government and restrain government largesse and and i love mike but he and everyone who believes like
him have been woefully unsuccessful because you know the system is stacked against you meanwhile
so you know mike's up in congress doing this thing meanwhile i i work here in the state capital level
and as you pointed out we've changed in the same amount of time less time than mike lee's been in
office not to pick on him but just to use that story as an example. We've changed over 100 laws. We've got a ton of amazing
legal reforms passed to protect people's freedoms and so forth. And it's not that hard.
I'm not an attorney by training. I'm not an economist. I used to build websites for a living.
And I launched this nonprofit and pivoted pivoted and kind of changed my career
trajectory. But I have no formal training in this. If I can do it, anybody else can do it.
And it's amazing. Think of your city council. You go to city council meetings.
Who's there? Maybe a couple of Boy Scouts, maybe the Miss whatever pageant queen,
maybe a few developers trying to get you know zoning approvals and stuff
and nobody else more importantly there's no journalists anymore because the whole newspaper
model has been blown up and these guys can't afford to have people sitting in city council
meetings to play the watchdog role which means that no one's paying attention these people are
getting away with a lot and if you just show up if you just ask questions if you just show them that you're watching you can have a big impact and so i spend a lot of my time inviting people pleading with
people you know turn down the national news pay attention a lot less it's it's i think really
designed just to get this class warfare constant you know battle and distraction going on uh i'll
recommend a resource to your audience so you
mentioned Libertas Institute which is our organization in Utah we we work across the
country on a lot of stuff but primarily in Utah there's a group in I believe every single state
from a conservative libertarian perspective uh working on state level policy here's where your
viewers can find out about that the organization I'll point you to is called State Policy Network. And their website very simply is spn.org, State Policy
Network. And they've got a map there, a directory that you can click on, find your map, find the
group working in your state, subscribe to their newsletter, their email, follow them on social
media, go to their events, donate and support them.
These are the people working in the trenches in your state, and it's very easy for people to go get involved and be a part of it. That's so important, and that is really good. The State
Policy Network, SPN.org. Now, you pronounce it differently than I thought it would be, Libertas.
You pronounce it Libertas? So when I started started this organization i went to a linguist and i said how
would how would the romans have pronounced it's latin it's a dead language you said well there's
two schools of thought there's the germanic like libertas which to be fair is what 95 percent of
americans pronounce it as and then there's the think of like the italian the romantic language
is libertas and i was like oh that sounds sexy i want to do that. So we say Libertas and everyone else says Libertas, but I'm a libertarian,
so I don't care how you pronounce it. You do however you want.
That's great. So tell us, you know, when you go to the state level, and I know from the standpoint
of what I've seen when we were homeschooling our kids, we were in North Carolina, and I know there
was a constant battle,
especially at the very beginning,
from the teachers' union to try to shut it down.
And this very powerful union
with a lot of connections to state government
was shut down by a letter-writing campaign
by grassroots organizations.
I know that they look at this stuff by the pound,
and you're not necessarily going to change these
people's minds about with an argument but they're looking at the quantity of responses that they get
and that does have a big impact on them what type of what have you found to be most effective
in terms of working at the state level you said going to the meetings and and that type of thing
but give us an idea of what this looks like when you get involved in this so here's how the average
person any of your viewers can be impactful a little pro tip that few people do and if anyone
wants to get involved make a difference without a lot of time here here are a couple ideas that have a huge leverage in terms of your time
versus your impact number one gather 10 or 15 friends at your home for a little cottage meeting
have some dessert and invite your local state senator or state representative or mayor or
city councilman to come speak to your group super easy these people love to talk about
themselves by the way so they will take you up on the offer um food attracts everybody and more
importantly what's happening here is you are fostering a relationship with that politician
to show them two things number one you're creating value for them by giving them an audience of
people to talk to and get support from.
But number two, you're showing them that you are a connector. You're an organizer, right? The worst
thing that you can do in politics is go up and say, I don't like this tax, or I don't like this
law. You're one person with an opinion. They're not going to pay attention to you. By contrast,
if you start an organ, let's say you have your cottage meeting and you call it con connor's cottage uh meeting on Mondays right and that's the name of your group and I go
up to the Capitol or City Hall and say hey I represent an association a cottage meeting group
where a lot of us get together and blah blah blah we're really concerned about this and this is
something that we're paying attention to and we'd like you to vote against it. You've shifted it from I to we. It's not I think this, it's we think this. They
don't know if there's a thousand people in your group or five, and they don't need to know. The
point is that you're, it's like those animals that when a predator approaches, they like puff up and
get really big. So as to like signal that they're dangerous. That's what you need to do if you're
the average person. You need to puff up a bit and show them that you mean business. So do a cottage
meeting, super simple. Do it once a year. Do it once a quarter and invite different local
politicians or people and rotate them through. Okay, number two, take a politician to lunch.
Don't do it during their busy season. So if the legislature's in session uh then maybe wait a while but uh but you just say because everyone's got to eat and and
you got to think through like how can you create value for them so if i were to do this i would
find my state representative on the website i would see what bills he's been running or what
he's been working on and i would email him or text him and I would say, hey, I really love this bill that
you were working on. Super important. I've been talking with some friends of mine and some
stakeholders. I've got some ideas for how you can actually improve this or something else related
you can do or whatever. Could I take you to lunch? And very often they will say yes. Now they will
say yes even more if you are known as a connector so if you do
step one and then step two if you the cottage meeting the networking and then you start making
those requests you'll be very more successful this doesn't take a ton of time hardly any time
but this all boils down to relationships that is what drives this business this is why lobbyists
are so successful you need to foster relationships
when you just show up to the capitol or to city hall and you raise your fist and say you know
i don't like this they all know that you're just going to speak your mind and go back to sleep
and they don't have like you're not going to be there every week you're not going to be
watchdogging them whatever right but if if you have relationships when I text a legislator like hey
I I got questions about that vote you just made or hey are you going to work on that bill they
know that I'm out there not only watching them but talking to a ton of people because they know
I'm a connector that I'm not going away and that I have a lot of relationships that can be helpful
to them or harmful to them so the average average citizen, you want to get involved, you got to start developing some relationships.
And these are just a few of the very easy, low cost,
low time ways that I think the average citizen could start to do it.
That's really good.
And of course, that is a key thing because you're also making,
you're not just connecting to politicians,
but you're also making connections with the people
that are going to be meeting with you.
And having that community doesn't just magnify you to the politicians, but you're also making connections with the people that are going to be meeting with you. And having that community doesn't just magnify you to the politicians, but that's a real value to
all of us in the future. You know, depending on what is going to come down the pike from Washington,
we really need to have those local communities. That's so important in so many different ways.
Tell us a little bit about what you have focused on these hundred laws that you got changed.
What have you focused on there? I know you're
conservative, libertarian focus. What types of things have you guys been able to get through
there? I'll give you a small and silly example, and then I'll give you a more weighty and
substantive one. So the small and silly example, a few years ago, we saw some headlines across
the country where little kids lemonade stands were getting shut down for not having a business license or a food handlers permit. And, you know,
one of the stories, it was a four-year-old girl selling 50 cent cups of lemonade along the path
of like a 5k near her home. And mom was sitting there, obviously she was only four and the food
safety, whoever, you know, showed know showed up and oh you don't have
a permit it costs 85 that's 170 cups of lemonade just to break even on a permission slip let alone
the rest of your expenses so we saw these headlines were like this is ridiculous uh we go
up to our legislature we came up with a model bill and it passed, I think unanimously or close to
unanimously, which now says that if you are under 18 in Utah, you do not need any license,
any permit. You don't have to collect and remit sales taxes, like a literal free market for
minors to encourage them to be entrepreneurs. Let know, let's, let's let them wait until they're 18
before the crushing weight of the state comes upon them and all its taxes and regulations,
but at least while they're miners, now they're free. We've helped a few other
states pass similar laws, but Utah's remains the gold standards. That's, that's a silly example.
That's great. That's not silly. That's a really fundamental thing. And that's,
that's such a great idea. And what legislator is going to want to go out there and be the
Scrooge that says, no, you gotta have a license from these miners.'s such a great idea. And what legislator is going to want to go out there and be the Scrooge that says, no, you're going to have a license from these miners. That's
a great idea. Yeah, that's exactly. Okay. So here's the other example. Let's say I'm Elon Musk
and I have a car company, Tesla, and I want to do something different where I don't want to have car
dealerships. I want to sell my cars directly to individuals a direct to consumer
model however in a whole bunch of states including my own of utah it was illegal it was literally
against the law to sell cars for a corporation to sell a car directly or a manufacturer to sell a
car directly to a person because the car dealers are very politically connected and over the years
they've gotten all these laws passed saying that you have to go through car
dealers and you have to do it this way.
And you have to pass these inspections.
So I'm Elon Musk and I'm thinking,
well,
what do I do?
Well,
I've got a lot of money so I can hire lobbyists and I can hire lawyers and I
can go sue and I can go lobby to get the laws changed.
That's what Elon and his buddies did,
right?
They were able,
they had the resources to muscle through the political process. Like in Utah, for example,
they had to go to the state Supreme Court and they were battling until they finally got it fixed,
which is ridiculous. Now imagine, by contrast, that I'm poor Connor, middle class tradesman who
has a business idea. I'm sitting at my kitchen table scribbling this
idea on the back of a napkin and i'm like this is awesome i pull up google i start researching
lo and behold my awesome idea is against the law there's some 35 year old arcane law on the books
that prevents me from doing what i want i have have no huge life savings. I don't know
any lobbyists and lawyers. I have no network, no connections, no leverage. I abandon my idea and
move on. My American dream goes poof because of my inability to muscle through the process.
What we innovated, what we got passed in Utah, and we've helped dozens of other states work on this as well, is a concept called a regulatory sandbox.
What this is, let's use this tradesman, we'll call him Bob.
So Bob's got this business idea.
Bob can now apply to the state to come into the regulatory sandbox, and he can pinpoint a law a regular regulation that stands in his way. And
he can say, that's preventing me from launching this business. The regulators will talk, they'll
have an opportunity to review his request to be shielded from that regulation or law for two years
so that he can do R and D or he can go to market, right. And start to prove and collect data like,
Hey, um, there's no consumer harm.
There's no lawsuits.
There's no nothing.
Can we get rid of this regulation?
Because everything's okay.
And so it's a way to develop real-world data like a pilot program almost under a lower regulated environment.
The chief problem that we've seen over the last decade is we'll go up to the Capitol and think of food trucks.
We passed the country's first and only food truck freedom law to knock down all these local regulations and zoning crap and stuff that gets in their way.
And so we go up to the Capitol and we say, hey, guys, the world will be so much better if we allow these micro entrepreneurs to just operate where they want and not have all
these you know city restrictions and so forth and then then the city lobbyists go up there and they
say oh no local control we need to allow our cities to ban food trucks and to say that they
can't operate within half a mile of a restaurant because competition is horrible whatever you're a
legislator you're trapped in the middle of the
free market guys with their talking points and the incumbent industry protectionists with their
talking points. And both sides are claiming the sky will fall or it will be great. Well, with a
regulatory sandbox, now the legislators don't have to say permanent yes or no to either side.
They can say, well well let's give it a
try and see how it works and put these people in a sandbox watch them for a year or two gather some
data and then at the conclusion they can say should we amend that regulation or law should
we fully repeal it and we have some data to inform that process so we led Utah to become the first
state to have a regulatory sandbox any business business, any industry, any size.
And now we've helped a number of other states pass these programs as well to promote entrepreneurship and innovation, level the playing field.
So it's not just the Elon Musks that can muscle their way through.
Now the little guy has a shot to launch their American dream.
Yeah, that's very important. Of course, the people who got there already, they always want to saw off the lower rungs of the ladder of success so that you can't get
started with it. That's a great approach. Let's talk a little bit about what do we do about what
is looming over the horizon. We've got so many things that we see being pushed from the international
level down to the national level in the Biden administration, all of these regulations trying to take away appliances,
just basic conveniences that we have taken for granted for a very long time.
And now since we took them for granted,
the federal government is looking to take them away.
And so, you know, there's this big push.
Most of the stuff is now coming on the basis of climate.
They want to take cars.
They want to take appliances and on and on.
Is there anything that you're working on there in Utah to address that type of, you know,
confiscatory regulations, a lot of it coming from the EPA?
But, you know, anything that's coming from the federal level.
I know here in Tennessee, where I live, they have told the government when it comes
to a lot of the regulations about transgender type of things, they said, well, we're willing
to forego $2 billion worth of bribery in order to do things the way that we think they ought to be
done. And that really is the way that the federal government usually insinuates itself in the
process. Since they don't have the direct legal authority because the 10th Amendment, they will bribe local and state governments to do what they want with money.
So how do we how do we tackle this looming monster that's being pushed down on top of us?
Oh, man, you are hitting all the buttons.
Such such a challenge.
By the way, in Tennessee, I would encourage you to look up the Beacon Center.
They are the think tank there in Tennessee. They do do an awesome job i will thank you they would be
great to connect with now what you're talking about is so tough because um there are so many
disincentives for people to engage in the process i think of the road like there's this meme floating
around the internet right now how often do men think about the roman empire you know and everyone's
kind of joking about it right now uh i think about it quite often and in particular that the aspect of bread and circuses
where they would often uh you know feed the citizenry have you know gladiators and all these
big spectacles designed to distract the populace from what was happening politically a distracted
society is a disengaged Society in particular with the federal
regulations that you're talking about um I I'm a big believer in state interposition and state
nullification what are those things yes state interposition is the state coming in between you
and the federal government to say no we're we're shielding Connor from that you know gun control
law that Connor passed or or people like Connor,
not just a single individual. But the state interposes itself and passes a conflicting law
to say, no, we're not going to enforce this. We're going to protect you. And our attorney general
will go sue the government or the federal government on your behalf. So the state can
interpose itself to be this protecting shield. better than that is state nullification there's a fantastic book written about a decade
or so ago by tom woods called nullification that gets into the american history of what this is
this is basically when a state gives the middle finger to the feds and the feds pass some law
let's say it's an epa thing and imagine and imagine Tennessee the legislature getting together and passing a resolution and saying in this state that EPA regulation is null and void we will not enforce
it we will not tolerate it we will not allow any federal officials to enforce it within our state
and it is the state asserting itself here's our chief problem ever since the Civil War, the union of states has changed from a voluntary union
into this serfdom-like subservient status where state legislatures see themselves as subunits of
the federal government. We now have a national government where it controls and regulates the
states. The states do not assert their own authority. They do not stand up under the
10th Amendment that you pointed out and the 9th Amendment to say that these are our rights.
We did not delegate this to you. There's so many fantastic stories here, especially from the
Kentucky and Virginia resolutions with Jefferson and Madison, when they were basically giving the
middle finger to John Adams and the Federalist Party and trying to undermine what they were
doing by getting state
legislatures to say we are not going to comply there are modern examples think of medical
marijuana federal law still says that cannabis is illegal and most states have given the middle
finger to the feds and the feds have just you know decided to not enforce it and they've had their
attorney general memos and their their things to but it's still on the
books and that's the power of what the states can do by contrast here's another example that i'm
sure your audience well that one before we leave marijuana that was excellent because you know that
i love that one because uh the left are the ones who've been doing the nullification and they're
the first ones to scream racism and this is about slavery or whatever, you know, when you start nullifying. And so that really nullifies the left as well when you use this example, because this is schedule one drug. And they say there's absolutely no use for it. recreational exemption jeff sessions that was a key issue with him but he wouldn't touch it
because he knew that he didn't have the constitutional authority for that uh so that's
an excellent example yeah go ahead next one here's an unfortunate one uh by contrast so medical
marijuana is kind of a winning one in terms of state sovereignty states standing up for themselves
here's a losing one real id when when congress over a decade ago passed the real id act this national driver's
license national id there was a huge uproar massive uproar across the country state legislatures were
passing resolutions were passing laws they were standing up and and and nullifying they were
giving a middle finger to the feds and so the feds retreated and they, okay, we lost the battle. And what did they do? You mentioned it a moment ago. They bribed the
states into compliance over the next decade, not wholesale, but piecemeal. They would attach
financial incentives to particular aspects of the Real ID Act, even though it was no longer being passed or enforced.
And they would bribe the states into compliance and the states eager for money, these politicians
wanting more money for their programs would say, okay, yeah, we'll do that.
Okay, yeah, we'll do that.
You fast forward a decade and now I travel the airport all the time.
My driver's license has this stupid yellow you know, yellow star at the top.
Now that means real ID compliant.
My state over a decade ago stood up and said no.
And now I have a driver's license for my state that is real ID compliant.
Isn't it interesting that they did the yellow star?
It seems like there's some point in history where that was used for some things i should you know
it's a it's a white star inside of a uh a yellow circle i guess so they're off the hook no it's
described to me when i changed that we moved here it was described to me because we did that about
two years ago it's described to me as a yellow star you know they described it the same way and
i thought i don't really want a yellow star watchful these people are persistent they are patient they they have the long view in mind and
so we like think of the tea party right tarp and the bank bailouts and everyone's like ah you know
all these conservatives erupt the tea party is a a huge thing. There's Tea Party patriots, Tea Party nonprofits, Tea Party everything.
And two or three years later, nothing.
They went back to sleep.
They went back to work and family and everything like we, you know, people on the right focus on that actually improves our society.
But they disengage politically.
These elitists, these leftists, everybody knows they just have to wait out the storm.
Let everyone, like, get really in an uproar, pass their resolutions against real ID,
and then we'll just work on this incrementally over time and still get what we want. So we are
playing a losing game by not engaging and being watchful and being persistent when the other side
absolutely is. That's right. Yeah. The price of liberty is eternal vigilance. And of course,
you also have to have a goal. And I think that was always a problem to me for the Tea Party.
Taxed enough already. Okay. So what do you want to do? You want to cut spending or cut taxes? Or
what do you want to do? Which taxes do you want to cut? Which spending do you want to cut? There
was just nothing there. And you had everybody jumping on board with that to make money,
the people who are
organizing it and i think the people also looked at this and you know said well this is you know
there's not really anything here and it kind of fell away but you're right the good example
is the real id thing because people just went to sleep and now we've got the tsa out there doing
facial scans taking it to the next level uh you know, what do we do about the TSA?
Because here's my concern.
You know, a key thing that we saw, especially in the last few years, what was it that helped us to survive this lockdown?
And that was mobility.
And it was cash.
And it was being outside of the system.
They now want to take away our cash.
They want to take away our mobility, if they're able to take away our cars and make us dependent on renting our rides,
renting a vehicle by the ride, not even leasing a vehicle. If they're able to do that, if they're
able to take away our cash, they really have got us. And there's not really anything we can do.
So what do you think we should do about it? And what are you working on in terms of that in Utah?
This is such a challenge, what you're're pointing out because I'll use your last example
just as a direct response. This rent your vehicle, like imagine a world two decades from now,
which I don't think is a far off fantasy. Probably sooner. Yeah, probably sooner where I can have my
car drop me off. It's self-driving car, fully autonomous.
It drops me off at work rather than sitting here.
It's right outside my office window,
right here outside of frame, right?
Rather than sitting there for eight hours,
I can monetize that vehicle
and I can have it go basically play Uber
and earn revenue for other people who will pay it.
And I just say, hey, you just need to be back here
at five o'clock to pick me up.
Well, all of a sudden, you no longer need parking lots. If you have a society where there's
very few people who are just owning their car and sitting there, right, you can conserve a ton,
you can at least substantially reduce the size of parking lots because you don't need just all
these big empty spaces. That can do tremendous things i am i am someone who loves technology and sees a huge
upside uh to improving society when implemented the right way things like ai like i think i think
it can bless humanity in a whole ton of ways but these things like self-driving cars or i'm a big
fan of bitcoin but then you got cdbcs on the other side this kind of you know dark version of what's going on or self
driving cars or tesla robots that they're building right now neuralink i think like all these things
can can do so much good and make our lives so much more convenient enjoyable productive but we have
to have a philosophical base in our society of human freedom and flourishing to inform and guide
and limit all those activities to keep
them constrained otherwise i'm worried that these amazing technologies while they have their
positive side are going to emerge with the dystopian side with these kind of elitists and
control so i'm not one to say well because our philosophical base is not there and we don't have
a society that believes these things let's shut all this technology down and make sure that we don't have this Orwellian future.
I am one to say, look, the toothpaste is out of the tube.
These things are going to happen anyways.
Let's focus on strengthening that philosophical base
so that the innovators and the regulators
and the politicians and everybody else
approach this and handle everything the right way so we
can have the positive outcomes while minimizing the negative ones. And that's where the total
twins comes in because you've got to set up those values, those bases, and it's because we've had
families atrophy and schools and churches have atrophied, and we don't have those types of
values that are being put out there.
As you point out, all of this stuff is tools and, uh, you know, a very powerful tool can be a really
good thing, or it can be a really bad thing depending on who is wielding it. And, uh, so we
have to shape the people who are going to be wielding it, which is going to be our kids and
the future generations. That's why it is so important. Um, uh, you know, taking that approach
and, and I'm glad that you have put that resource out there so important, you know, taking that approach.
And I'm glad that you have put that resource out there.
You know, people need to take a look at that.
More people need to be doing that type of thing as well,
because that's really where the battle is.
The battle is really for the spirit and the soul and the heart.
And the battle for the future is the battle for the soul and the heart of our children.
And so that's the key thing. Talk to me a little bit about your books uh you've got a couple of different books um
mediocrity children of the collective uh maybe there's some other ones here tell us a little
bit about uh mediocrity so uh that was a fun one i'm i uh i'll share the story this way. In April of this year, it was the 40th anniversary of a report that the Reagan administration put out, April 26, 1983.
They titled it A Nation at Risk.
It was the conclusion of an 18-month study that a team that called themselves the National Commission on Excellence in Education their study uh went
across the country they were on a listening tour talking to teachers parents reviewing textbooks
curriculum everything else trying to understand you know what's going on trying to assess education
in America they write this report a nation at risk and in that report they said and i quote that america's educational
foundations are being threatened by a rising tide of mediocrity and that if a foreign government had
attempted to impose upon america the very mediocre educational performance that now exists we might
have viewed it as an act of war as it stands we've allowed this to happen to ourselves 1983 when i share this story
when i'm out speaking i'll ask audiences okay raise of hands who here in this audience believes
that education in america has substantially improved in the last 40 years today maybe i'm
an intimidating person and people are scared of raising their hand in general, but no one has raised their hand ever because we all know that education has gotten worse.
If they said in 1983 that it was mediocre, this rising tide of mediocrity, what words would you use to describe what it is today?
I might choose some four-letter words that might not be too family-friendly.
Consider this data point. I got so much I can share here but but i'll just share this a few weeks ago a couple
months ago now uh nate the nape scores came out these are the kind of statistical assessments
that they all the standardized testing that they do for kids and they do it you know fourth grade
and eighth grade and twelfth grade and they've been doing this for decades to track academic progress.
Not that I'm a fan of standardized tests, but they're at least one useful way to kind of have your finger on the pulse.
Well, the data that came out just a couple months ago, this particular data point is from eighth graders across America. across america and it found that only 13 percent of them are proficient in civics in american
history one three not three zero one three thirteen percent proficiency i mean that's like
way way way worse than a failing grade so so now fast forward 20 years, 40 years, 60 years, these kids who have been educated, so-called, in a system of sub-mediocrity are now voters.
But they're ignorant.
They're historically illiterate.
They're civically disengaged.
They're distracted by the bread and circuses.
They know nothing about their history.
You know the quote, those who don't learn from the past are condemned to repeat it. So they're much more likely to
support the authoritarian thugs and the socialist crazy people who are repeating every doomsday
failed thing from the past, and yet today's electorate doesn't know any better. It's the
whole fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, shame on me. These kids are not learning history.
They're not learning these basics about our society.
13% is abysmal.
It is not mediocre.
It is way, way, way worse.
So one might say in response, well, yeah, COVID, all this learning loss.
It's been a No, no. This has been a down and downward trend for a very long
time, pre-COVID, absolutely. So my plea to parents out there is not necessarily to homeschool,
although I'm a big fan of homeschooling. It's just do something else. It could be a private
school, a micro school. It could be a homeschool. It could be a homeschool co-op. There's so many options today.
But why would you want to send your children not only to an intellectually sub-mediocre system, even if you think, oh, well, I live in a good community.
How many libs of TikTok videos have we seen now from conservative communities where the schools are teaching garbage and parents don't realize it until it's too late?
So do something else. Wake up. Don't think, well, I went to public school and I turned out fine,
right? Like it is a different world and you need to pay attention. You need to be intentional and
take action to save your kids. I'll end with this. The pastor Vati Bakum has this quote I love where
he says, can we as Christians, in his case,
this religious quote, can we as Christians really be surprised when we send our children to Caesar's
schools and then they return home as Romans, right? And so we have to realize if we're
surrendering our children to certain people, then it's those people's values and worldview
and things that are being put into our kids, we need to wake up and be more intentional
and rescue our children from this sub-mediocre system. That's right. Yeah, it was a real blessing,
I think, in disguise as the schools went to Zoom classes. Parents could finally see what was
happening in their child's classroom. They always had this, when I talked to them for decades,
well, it's not happening in my kid's classroom. Even if it's happening in the same school,
same school districts, and all the rest of the stuff but it seems like you know you talk about the reagan
administration i remember that report that you talked about and i remember charlotte isabry you
know goes to uh washington to help to shut down the department of education which was created
during the 1980 campaign as jimmy carter created it and ronald reagan was going to get rid of it
and yet they didn't do that and and so she she got out of it and Ronald Reagan was going to get rid of it. And yet they didn't do that.
And so she got out of it and she wrote the book deliberately dumbing us down. Now, they were able to dumb us down, but now they're going into a kind of a depraved mode.
You know, let's take the kids even deeper.
Let's take them subterranean.
And that's what they're doing with the social engineering that we see. And I
think it's very key that the Obama administration, the Biden administration have been using the power
of the purse to incentivize this. But now it's gotten to the point where we talked about people
getting active locally, you know, showing up and, you know, talking to people, not just criticizing,
you know, but also making relationships with people.
But when you have these school board meetings, you know,
it's kind of interesting how over the last couple of years now,
since the COVID stuff, how the school board meetings have become of national interest.
The Department of Justice is taking an interest in this.
And you've got to look at this and say, why is this so important to them?
And why is it not important enough for us to just at this and say, why is this so important to them? And why is it not important
enough for us to just do this completely differently? You know, it seems like these
people are pushing on this institution that's not going to change, but they keep pushing on it.
And that seems to be really the way that they want to run this through. You know,
what do we do to wake people up to get them to try something different, as you're pointing out?
Well, I think of the Reagan quote, as you point out, you know, he was supposed to repeal the Department of Education.
That didn't happen.
But he himself said that the closest thing to eternal life on Earth is a temporary government program, right?
And here we are with this Department of Education and all the billions of dollars that they've spent.
And can anyone point to a single statistic and a single educational outcome
that has measurably improved as a direct result? I'm not even asking for causation. Let's even
just go to correlation. Do you have any correlated data to suggest that education outcomes in
government schools has improved in the past 40? No, you don't. No one does. These guys have just
been spending all this money while they oversee the decline and the dumbing down, the deliberate dumbing down of the American
education system. I think of a public school teacher. His name is John Taylor Gatto. Passed
away a few years ago. He was a public school teacher in the state of New York for, gosh,
almost 30 years. And he was someone who would work within the system. He in the state of new york for gosh almost 30 years and he was someone who
would work within the system he he hated the system of which he was a part he really struggled
with but he was working from within because he loved kids he wanted to inspire them and connect
with them his classes got rave reviews his students loved him they kept in touch for a long
time he would he would buck the trend he would like take the kids on impromptu field trips and just go to the park and get them outdoors and you know he's he's this
guy that loved kids so then he gets awarded later in his profession new york city teacher of the
year and then the following year he gets awarded new york state teacher of the year keep in mind
these awards these teacher of the year from the establishment, the PTAs, the teachers unions and so forth.
He wins New York State Teacher of the Year.
And in the very same year that he wins this award, he writes an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal titled, I Quit, I Think.
In which he goes on to say, if anyone knows of a profession where I can help kids without also hurting them, please let me know. He quits his profession.
He starts writing books and goes on a speaking tour in his last years of life.
Amazing guy.
But it shows what we're up against.
This system.
I had a teacher, not a teacher, a parent a few months back.
I was speaking to a parent's group.
And this woman in the Q&A after raised raised her hand said look you know critical race theory social emotional learning garbage books in the libraries
all this you know pet litter boxes in the classroom now and like all all these are not not
for pets right for the furries yeah right and so she's rattling off all these problems and she says
the school system's so broken i said whoa whoa hang on hang on i'm gonna
respectfully disagree with you i do not believe the school system is broken i believe it has been
perfected based on a flawed design when you go back to its originators its creators you go back
to like horace man here's a guy who brought over the prussian education system first commissioner
of education in the country in massachusetts he's this this fabian socialist secular humanist guy and and a collectivist he
wanted to take children from their different religions and cultures and values and family
traditions and homogenize them into one single american culture that was his dream behind his
common school so he brings over this Prussian model
to America, this very authoritarian model, which is the model that our government schools are now
based on. He's got this quote where he says, we who are involved in the sacred cause of education
should look to parents as if they have given hostages to our cause, referring to their own
children. He talked in another quote about how men are like
cast iron children are like wax it's very hard to change the mind or the heart of adults like
cast iron very firm but children are like wax this is exactly what you know all all the authoritarian
thugs the the despotic dictators the Hitlers the, the Mao's, the Stalins, they all say similar stuff.
They all go after the kids because they want to propagandize them and brainwash them. So back to
this woman, I say, I don't think it's broken. I think all these manifestations you're seeing
are outgrowths of a particular design that was designed with intentionality. These people did
not want to create a populace of critical thinking,
independent-minded, entrepreneurial individuals. They wanted to create a society of subordinate
soldiers and citizens who would do what they were told and follow orders and learn their station
and support the collective. That was their intent. What we're
seeing today is just an outgrowth of that. We need to discard the design and reboot the system in a
way that will produce the outcomes that we want, rather than kicking against the pricks and getting
frustrated that, why are kids turning out this way? And why are the schools not doing this?
It's because they were designed this way. We need to scrap the blueprints and build something better.
That's right. It's doing exactly what it was designed to do. And when we look at the different
means of control, again, it's the purse, showering people with money, but then they create the
standards out of their regulatory, you know, the Department of Education has been very, very
powerful in terms of providing the money, the bribes to do this kind of stuff, but also the
standards. You know, when they put out those standardized tests,
that's a way for them to control when you do do something different.
Like, you know, if you want to have some kind of an independent school
or set something up, if you want to get it accredited,
then they're going to tell you what you have to teach the kids
and what they have to regurgitate in order to get accredited.
So the standardized tests are going to control the content.
They're going to control the textbooks and all the rest of this stuff. But at the same time, the bread and circus
thing has taken itself to the level for our kids of the furries or whatever. It's gone to not just
a banality, not just to a mediocrity or stupidity, but it's gone to a depravity because again, it's very much
like a brave new world where they want to take them into a world of sex and drugs so
that they're not a threat to them and a way for them to control the kids.
That's what we need to be aware of.
I think that's really what we need to push back against.
And when you talk about your next book, The Children of the Collective. I'm sure that that is what you were referring to when you talked about Horace Mann and his
approaches to that.
But that has always been the issue.
You're right, going back to the middle 1800s, these socialists said, well, we can't change
society the way we want to because we can't get to these kids early enough.
So let's get them at a very early age.
And of course, God tells us you train up a child and the way they go should go. And when they're old, they won't depart from it.
We're being told this by everybody from God to Hitler has told us this stuff. Maybe we ought
to pay attention to it, right? Yeah, no, I think you're, you're onto something here. That, that
book in particular, Children of the Collective was the result of a quote I read years ago from
Michael Novak. I've got the quote pulled up right here.
The entire book is basically an expanded version analyzing why this quote is so true.
Here's what he says.
Between the omnipotent state and the naked individual looms the first line of resistance against totalitarianism,
the economically and politically independent family, protecting the space within
which free and independent individuals may receive the necessary years of nurture.
So he illustrates, on the one hand, you've got this omnipotent state, you've got naked
individuals, socially naked, emotionally naked, spiritually naked, physically naked, in terms
of their insecurity and weakness compared to the authoritarian state. And in the
middle, he's got this first line of resistance. What I find fascinating, which is the politically,
economically independent family. So our families need to be independent. We need to be financially
independent. I mean, think of the founding fathers. Who would have been there had those
particular individuals not had had the financial station in life to just go sit in a
room and debate politics for weeks on end right and so being financially uh free is critical not
just so you can go relax on a beach so they can move up has low's you know uh hierarchy of needs
and you can actually do greater things to bless humanity because you're not hand to mouth you
know working the whole time and so what I find fascinating is, is he says this economically and politically independent family unit is the first
line of resistance. So then you think, well, it doesn't say it's the line of resistance. It's the
first line. What are additional, I mean, like my, my skin, let's say someone in my office sneezes
or something, there's pathogens floating around the air air my skin an organ is my first line of resistance but but if if that pathogen like if I have a cut
on my skin or if I breathe it in or whatever my body has additional mechanisms to still try and
fight that pathogen even if it gets past this this first line of resistance if the family is the
first line of resistance what are additional ones, I think the extended family certainly is a really important one beyond the nuclear family,
having multiple generations under one roof or in one community where you can support one another.
But beyond that, I would say, and you're asking a lot of good questions about like,
what can the average person do or what can people do or what's the message?
Here's a critical one, I think.
When Alexis de Tocqueville was sent to this new nation to kind
of survey what the heck was going on in America, he wrote the books Democracy in America. It was
his survey in the early 1800s of what was going on here. And he talked about with a sense of awe
and wonder what he called mediating institutions. He says it was so remarkable that throughout
Europe, he says, whenever someone would
have a problem, they would raise their hand and ask some minister of government, some public
functionary, some elected or bureaucrat person, they would go to them for help to solve their
problems. That was the common thread behind problem solving in Europe by contrast he said when Americans have a problem
they form a society they form an organization and induce people voluntarily to try to come to the
aid of their fellow man and he was blown away that there was this whole fabric this social fabric of
mediating institutions and and that they were all over place. I'll give you a very particular example. There's
a gentleman named David Beito, B-E-I-T-O. He wrote a book a few years ago called From Mutual Aid to
the Welfare State. It is a phenomenal book highlighting how these mediating institutions
were basically put out of business by the omnipotent state, by the welfare. Yes, yes. That in early America, you had, you know, whether you were Irish or you were Protestant
or you were Mormon or you were, you know, Mexican or whatever, all these communities
fostered mutual aid societies where they would help one another.
We're talking life insurance, death insurance, orphan care, elderly care, and America was littered, littered with these mutual
aid societies, very economical and very, I mean, think of like the Kiwanis and the Rotary and all
these other groups that are kind of legacy holdovers and have really just decayed because
our society no longer values these things. But in early America, they were everywhere until the
welfare state started to be passed. They started passing
these laws. Suddenly people were like, wait a minute, my membership dues for this mutual aid
society are $10 a year. This was back when inflation wasn't nearly as in effect. I'm paying
$10 a year for this mutual aid society, but I'm paying taxes of like, you know, $18 a year, and that's providing all these welfare benefits.
Why am I still in this mutual aid society? So everyone made the rational decision to, I mean,
they went out of business literally, like, I mean, not literally, but figuratively overnight
because of the state. This is why, this is why we need not only strong families, but we need mediating institutions.
We need to rebuild social fabric.
You can have libertarians like me out there saying, shrink the government, stop passing stupid laws, let's vote that person out of office.
But if our society is not strong, then the state will be.
That's right.
If our society is weak, then the state will be that's right if our society is weak then the state will be strong if we want a weak
state if we want to limit government we need a strong society where we're taking care of one
another uh where we're supporting one another when where that when there are problems we bring
solutions rather than turning to the government for help we're not there we're a ways off from
what alexis tokeville saw but i think that has the answer as well to fight the collectivists,
to fight these central planners, to shrink the state. We got to focus on our families. We got
to rebuild social fabric. We got to strengthen our society. And then naturally the state will
go weaker because fewer people will be turning to it to be the source of their comfort and providing
for their needs. They'll turn to these social programs in the true sense
of the word, societal programs, mediating institutions. That's where we need to be as a
country. So well said. And, you know, and I, as you're talking about this, I'm thinking about,
I've talked about this many times, you know, the we've, we've had, you know, Charles Murray talked
about the deliberate talked about you know, the, the effect of the, the welfare state. I started to say deliberate dumbing down of, of America,
but it was losing ground was his book that he did.
Now he's out there pushing universal basic income. You know, it is,
it's amazing to see how this shift has happened and it's been done in a very
subversive way in the sense that,
and it's subverted not just the poor people in the inner city. You know, I've talked to Jack Cashel, who's got a book, Contenable. He was talking about how he
saw this happen in the city where he was. I've talked to people who have, you know, been,
who are my age, and they had vibrant black communities, and it was decimated. You know,
they had businesses that were working, they had had intact families and then the welfare state comes in and everybody just starts you
know taking the free money and it's a very corrupting thing they want to do that with
universal basic income but as you're talking about this i'm thinking you know it hasn't just
taken the poor it's taken the middle class the upper middle class because the government is
always there to hand you money to get you to do whatever they want you to do. And there is so much money that just this
unlimited printing press coming out of Washington, that they can bribe each and every one of us if
we let them. The discussion that we're now seeing in terms of the Department of Education,
well, let's allow people who are homeschooling to get money and to come and
participate in these activities. And I've always opposed that because I realize what a corrupting
thing it is to take the money. We have to start taking responsibility for what we want to do
in our families. And it's even corrupted the churches. The churches used to be a part of
these mediating institutions. The churches would start hospitals. The churches would start schools. They don't do that anymore. The government does
everything for everybody. And so we don't even connect to our fellow man anymore. We're all
connected to the government, as you were talking about earlier in the program. Everybody's like,
well, what's going on in Washington? And who can I vote for in Washington? Why? Because that's where
the money is flowing from. And, uh, and so
that's the thing that I think we've got to get passed and, and, uh, beyond, um, you know, the
standardized tests and, but it's really the, um, the money that is flowing, uh, through all this
stuff. And, um, you know, that, you know, the talkable said that everybody is, is focused on
the, on what's the government going to do to fix the situation. We had voluntary libraries, voluntary fire departments.
We did our own schools, our own hospitals.
Now everything has got to come from Washington.
We've been trained.
We're like wild animals who used to be able to take care of themselves,
and we've been hand-fed for so long by the government
that we're dependent on it, and now the government has turned feral.
And when you go to the national parks, you see the signs that says don't feed the animals for
that precise reason. If we care about their long-term health and strength as a little animal
community, right, they need to be able to survive on their own. You're actually harming them by
supporting them. And so if the government is supporting us, it is harming us.
And just like the education system is being deliberately dumbed down, I think it is also
deliberate that we are being, so many of us are financially supported. Over half of Americans
are directly financially supported by the state. If you talk about government schools as well,
it shoots to like 90%, right? the the schools direct payments it's over 50
no wonder voters are increasingly shifting blue no wonder many of our red states are turning purple
when people are are directly connected to the state they are much more forgiving of it
and they are much more tolerant of its abuses because they don't want the gravy train to end.
That's right.
Yeah, what we have now in the area where I live, the Smoky Mountains,
they're very concerned about people not feeding the bears.
Our federal government has essentially gone through everybody's neighborhoods putting trash cans to give us junk, and we've been so acclimated to this garbage food and the trash cans,
we would never be able to survive without it.
It seems like,
but we've got to break that dependency somehow.
A great way to do it is with the next generation,
with the Tuttle Twins books.
And you got TuttleTwins.com, right?
Where people can go find that as well as,
I'll just pronounce it as Libertas.org.
Okay.
So TuttleTwins.com and Libertas.org. It's really been a So Tuttle twins.com and Libertas.org.
It's really been a pleasure talking to you,
Connor.
Thank you so much.
Appreciate it.
Thank you.
Thank you,
Connor Boyack,
uh,
doing great work there.
Thank you so much.
Well,
folks,
that's it for today's program.
Uh,
thank you for joining us and we'll see you tomorrow. The Common Man.
They created Common Core to dumb down our children.
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