The David Knight Show - 4Aug24 Disruptive Superconductor, GMO Tech as Biden Bans Trucks & Cars

Episode Date: August 4, 2023

OUTLINE of today's show with TIMECODES90 year old Diane Feinstein has turned over her legal affairs to her daughter, but she's still writing laws for us — or someone using her as a front is writing ...them (2:29)WATCH Al Sharpton can't imagine Jefferson or Madison would EVER revolt against a government LOL (6:52)Ramaswamy wants a 2nd American Revolution. A closer look at his BigPharma background (9:41) Wikipedia co-founder says CIA, FBI, etc are controlling that site (41:15)Unintended GMO Consequences — CRISPR is NOT a Scalpel As FDA & USDA fight to see who will have "authority" to "regulate" GMO cows and soy plants that glow and signal when in distress, what are the danger signs that we've already seen in unintended chimeras as rush at Warp Speed to make money for biotech companies. (46:13) San Francisco firm pursues test tube babies for homosexual men (1:07:48)Room Temperature Superconductor — How Would It Change Society? Desc: It looks like the buzz for LK-99 was premature, but there are still big advances toward practical superconductors. What will this transformative tech do to society? (1:12:16) Another Week, Another Biden Ban of Something Foundational to Our Way of Life Desc: Will Republicans ever DO anything to even slow down Biden's slow version of Mao's "Cultural Revolution"? This week Biden bans trucks in 9 years (1:31:06)Ark Encounter and Creation Museum in Kentucky — top tourist attractions but also fascinating and thought provoking (1:45:31)Can faith survive in our post-objective, post-Christian culture? How do Christians come to terms with a society that views us as vile and detestable? (1:48:29)INTERVIEW Military Mandates & Readiness as the Military "Transitions" (2:04:37) Jason Barker, TheKnightsOfTheStorm.com, joins now that he's finally separated from the military after the ordeal of mandates. The jabs were mandated for "readiness" but the new LGBT policies are just the kind of military Corporal Klinger (MASH) would've loved. And, what are BlackRock and other big investors doing to the residential housing market, how they're getting preferential treatment, and what this will lead toFind 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.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 FBD doesn't stand for friendly business ducks. Or for the freelance beatbox department. FBD stands for support. We support businesses and communities across Ireland. Visit your local branch to talk to your FBD insurance team and see how we can support your business. FBD Insurance. Support. It's what we do. FBD Insurance Group Ltd. Trading as FBD Insurance. Support. It's what we do. FBD Insurance Group Limited,
Starting point is 00:00:26 trading as FBD Insurance, is regulated by the Central Bank of Ireland. At this year's Cheltenham, glory rests in the lap of the gods. Curses. Alas, our hero hasn't placed. But there are still divine offerings up for grabs, with all NoviBet customers getting a €10 free bet for every day of Cheltenham.
Starting point is 00:00:47 And on top of that, we're paying up to seven places each way on selected races throughout the festival. I declare this a most generous offering. NoviBet. More power to you. Using free speech to free minds. You're listening to The David Knight Show. As the clock strikes 13, it's Friday, the 4th of August, year of our Lord, 2023. Well, today we're going to talk about a wide variety of things. We're going to talk about technology. We've got some GMO cows, and we have a bureaucratic fight as to who gets to get paid off by the genetic modifiers. Is it going to be the USDA, or is it going to be the FDA?
Starting point is 00:02:08 Who gets to have the revolving door and the bribery? And then, of course, we get the GMO meat. Not just the cows, but also plants that glow, LGBT reproduction, without women, of course. Who needs a woman? What is a woman, anyway? We'll talk also about a new superconductor that's there. And we'll talk a little bit about politics. We'll get into Pence and the indictment. Mike Pence has got some splainin' to do. He's got some real contradictory statements. We'll talk about that. As well as a massive increase in myocarditis
Starting point is 00:02:48 and what that implies for the five-year survival rate of people who have myocarditis. We'll be right back. Well, when we look at what is happening with Capitol Hill, just in case you think there's going to be any kind of real changes there, Dianne Feinstein has surrendered decision-making on legal matters to her daughter. Well, that's the headline. It's not exactly true, but that's what New York Times and Business Insider are running with. She's 90 years old.
Starting point is 00:03:40 There's a big question about her mental competency. And now she has signed this power of attorney over to her daughter for all legal affairs. This is a woman who's writing our laws, one of the most powerful legislators there, along with Mitch McConnell, who had perhaps a mini stroke and froze up in front of the cameras while I was gone. Seriously, she's not making the legislative decisions. If you look at this, you know, the hearing that happened the same timecconnell uh she came to her turn and she started making a speech they said no no at this point you just have to vote yes or no or something i had to explain that to her she's not making the decisions here and so the question is really who is who is running her, if you will. Now, again, as I point out, you know, just having a power of attorney agreement there doesn't necessarily mean that she's incompetent. She's making these plans.
Starting point is 00:04:33 She's 90 years old. I mean, a lot of people who are in good health put out a power of attorney agreement just because you never know what's going to happen, right? You don't have to be 90 years old to die. Tomorrow's not promised to any of us. But again, when you look at how much power she has and how little competence she has, it truly is frightening. You look at Biden and Feinstein and Fetterman and McConnell and all these people. But the reality is that they're just front puppets. There are really other people who are controlling them. She's one of nine Democrats and eight Republicans,
Starting point is 00:05:12 a member of the intelligence community. Well, that's convenient for them, isn't it? You've got a 90-year-old lady who doesn't really know where she is some of the time, and she's got her eye on the cia yeah they're being watched all right no they're watching us they're watching us the panel responsible for oversight of the cia the nsa and the rest of the intelligence creeps that are out there much of what the committee does is not publicly known due to the classified natures of the programs that they oversee so you're not allowed to know uh if they told you they'd have to kill you but they're going
Starting point is 00:05:49 to leak out some information about ufos by the way they've changed the like i said it's a big tell isn't it so they changed it from ufo to uap now we got to take it seriously you couldn't say and you can't say ufo without having a bit of a chuckle or skepticism. So let's rebrand it UAP unidentified aerial phenomenon. Now they've changed the A to and I forget what it was that they changed it to, but they changed it so they can include underwater stuff. You know, just in case, you know, the Chinese spy balloons, maybe they have a Chinese spy ship or a spy dolphin or something like that. Anyway, Feinstein once chaired the committee issuing a review of the CIA's use of torture during the war on terror. Well, I guess, you know, she did what the CIA wanted her to do
Starting point is 00:06:43 with that because she didn't shut anything down. The lies that lied us into the Iraq war. She also is on the powerful Senate Appropriations Committee. They get to direct millions of dollars in federal spending back to her home state because that's the reason you get on these committees. It's all about grabbing the money. Meanwhile, as I talked yesterday about the revolution, yes, a revolution is coming. We're in the midst of it, quite frankly. It's already started. It started a few years ago. It started
Starting point is 00:07:10 with the financial crisis in the mid-2000s. We're well on our way. We've only got about another six years before whatever happens, good or bad, is going to be put into place. And we need to have a say in this. And so people need to understand what is at stake in it. Vivek Ramaswamy wants a second American revolution. So I talked about my take on that yesterday. Let's talk a little bit about his take on it. But before we do, I thought it was very interesting in terms of commenting on this Trump indictment and the whole idea that January the 6th was an insurrection,
Starting point is 00:07:48 which it wasn't, and all the rest of this stuff. You had on MSNBC Al Sharpton, and he had a very amazing statement about Thomas Jefferson. Listen to this. You know, I thought about this as I was looking through the indictment last night and I grew up and started my activism in a section of Brooklyn called Brownsville and walking to the subway many mornings, some of the guys in the neighborhood would say, Rev, I caught a case. I have never walked down that block and somebody said I caught three cases. I mean, this is just as low as it gets. I've never heard of three cases on one individual in three jurisdictions. So this is serious. But on the other side of it, one day our children's children will read American history.
Starting point is 00:08:38 And can you imagine our reading that James Madison or Thomas Jefferson tried to overthrow the government so they could stay in power. That's what we're looking at. We're looking at American history and how it will play out is going to be very important. The sad part about this to me is that this is not a man that is facing all this because he believed in a political position or political policy or cause. I've seen people go down the wrong side for a cause. This is all about him. This is narcissism with steroids. And to think that he could get this whole country divided and split and commit these crimes. Well, I agree with him about that last part. This wasn't over principle. This wasn't even about him opposing the deep state. He was trying to suck up to the deep state in every way that last part. This wasn't over principle. This wasn't even about him opposing the deep state.
Starting point is 00:09:25 He was trying to suck up to the deep state in every way that he could. He appointed Gina Haspel, who lied us into the war in Iraq. Lies of weapons of mass destruction obtained by torture. She covered up the torture he promoted. He was trying to do everything he could to join the club. The club didn't like him. This is about his narcissism, his ego. And so I agree with him on that.
Starting point is 00:09:45 But can you imagine that? You know, one day we're going to read history because our kids will read history, he says. Because obviously Al Sharpton never has read any history. Can you imagine Thomas Jefferson and James Madison trying to overthrow the government? Yeah, I can imagine that. Yeah, they did it.
Starting point is 00:10:05 Uh, what does he think the American revolution was about? I have no idea where this guy is coming from. The other thing I thought was funny was he's talking about catching a case. And I thought, are we talking about COVID here? No, I caught a case. Meaning I got an indictment. They've got a nickname for that in the hood i never met anybody that caught three cases well i guess you've never met anybody that's been boosted and vaxxed you
Starting point is 00:10:32 know it's uh they catch cases all the time uh anyway so some of the some before we get into it this article was was pretty good it was from barry weiss there's an interview with uh vive Ramaswamy, if you want to get an insight into where the guy is coming from. I still think the key thing that came out was when he and Elon Musk started getting chummy about an hour and a half into the Musk interview. That's when you really saw his worldview. It's about money. Money for me, not for my employees. Let's bring in some other employees so we can lower the wages and stuff like that from other countries. FBD doesn't stand for friendly business, ducks.
Starting point is 00:11:17 Or for the freelance beatbox department. FBD stands for support. We support businesses and communities across Ireland Visit your local branch to talk to your FBD insurance team and see how we can support your business FBD Insurance Support It's what we do
Starting point is 00:11:36 FBD Insurance Group Limited Trading as FBD Insurance is regulated by the Central Bank of Ireland At this year's Cheltenham glory rests in the lap of the gods. Curses. Alas, our hero hasn't placed. But there are still divine offerings up for grabs,
Starting point is 00:11:54 with all NoviBet customers getting a €10 free bet for every day of Cheltenham. And on top of that, we're paying up to seven places each way on selected races throughout the festival. I declare this a most generous offering. No, we bet. More power to you. T's and C's apply. 18 plus bet responsibly.
Starting point is 00:12:11 Gamblingcare.ie. And, you know, I'm an anti-globalist, but I'm all about the Trans-Pacific Partnership. Seriously? He's a very intelligent person. And there's absolutely no way that he doesn't understand what the Trans-Pacific Partnership is about. He's a full-on open-border, open-trade globalist who is running as a libertarian.
Starting point is 00:12:39 So, yeah, it was Jefferson who said something along the lines of, you know, the blood of patriots and tyrants are necessary from time to time to water the tree of liberty. I'm paraphrasing it there. But yeah, he would never have a revolution. Jefferson wanted revolutions even after the American Revolution. He was supporting the nullification acts and all the rest of this stuff. Anyway, Chris Christie commenting on this is what she begins with. She said, you know, a lot of people, how is, first of all, how is Ramaswamy, how is he handling the indictment?
Starting point is 00:13:18 She said different candidates have different approaches to this. She said Chris Christie came out swinging, calling Trump and his team the Corleones with no experience. We have Fredo Jr. lined up there, you know, to take the Don's place. Pence weighed in. He said today's indictment serves as an important reminder. Anybody who puts himself under the Constitution
Starting point is 00:13:43 should never be president of the United States. And we've got more to say about Mike Pensive. I think that's a good name for him because he does come across as very serious and lecturing. He does have this pensive look always. So we'll talk more about Mike Pensive. But the candidates that many think are likely to wrest the nomination from Trump, Tim Scott or Ron DeSantis, she said, condemned it as politically motivated. And so did Ramaswamy, who is currently polling in third place at 7%.
Starting point is 00:14:14 And what he said about it was he said the corrupt federal police just won't stop until they've achieved their mission, eliminate Trump. This is un-American, and I commit to pardoning him for this indictment. Trump isn't the cause of what happened on January the 6th. Well, really, that's kind of interesting. The real cause, and it's different from what he said before, as a matter of fact, the real cause was systematic and pervasive censorship of citizens in the year leading up to it. If you tell people they can't speak, that's when they scream. If you tell people they can't scream, that's when they tear things down. Now, that's a good quote. I like that. The problem is that to say that Trump wasn't responsible for January the 6th and encouraging people to come,
Starting point is 00:15:03 you know, it wasn't Trump who did it. It was Ray Epps. It was Ray Epps who ran these grifts, you know, of, uh, save America and stop the steal, you know, making tens of millions of dollars for Alex Jones and $250 million for Trump. Uh, you know, those guys didn't do it. It was Ray Epps. It was Ray Epps.
Starting point is 00:15:21 He got everybody to go to Washington on January the sixth. Um, but the problem is it goes back even before that why were people being censored for that entire year and he talks about it in the interview more depth uh why were people being shut down and shut up and locked down uh it was because of the trump lockdown and uh so he doesn't get a pass for that either. You know, the very thing that he's talking about here, saying, well, you got to sit down and shut up. You can't say anything about this.
Starting point is 00:15:52 It wasn't just the election. It was the entire year. And later on in the interview, Ramaswamy says that. He said, you know, he had everybody locked down. Nobody could come out except for BLM, and then they could have riots, and it was okay. But nobody else could come out. Yeah, that was a big problem, wasn't it? And who did that? Trump. So when you look at what he has to say about the American Revolution,
Starting point is 00:16:22 well, first of all, Barry Weiss starts with his backstory, and I thought it was kind of interesting because I'd not really paid any attention to him until uh as i said at the wedding a very close friend said you know what do you think about ramaswamy and i just seen the headlines and read the article from breitbart about the musk interview that was last friday and um and we were talking on saturday about it and uh and i said well you know the problem is that he's, you know, look at what he says about the TPP, look at what he says about H1B visas and things like that. But then as I look at his backstory, uh, and we've talked about the fact that he scrubbed his, um, uh, Wikipedia stuff to try to put a positive spin or eliminate, but just, just to put a positive spin or eliminate, but just to put a positive spin on the Soros scholarship that he got and what he did with the DeWine COVID team in Ohio. But then it goes back beyond that,
Starting point is 00:17:17 you know, Harvard Yale graduate, smart guy, a valedictorian of his class in high school. But then where did he get his money? Well, it turns out that he had connections with Martin Shkreli. Remember that guy? He's very similar to Martin Shkreli in terms of what he didn't commit any fraud, like Shkreli did. But in terms of the two guys, he's not really a scientist. He is an investor in pharmaceuticals. So Ramaswamy is a big pharma guy. And actually he made investments as the corporation that he was
Starting point is 00:17:55 in. He was not doing science work. He was doing, you know, investing in other pharmaceutical companies. He had a company that came up with a drug, but it never worked, but they kept selling it and reselling it in the same way that Moderna did. There's a lot of money, as I've said in the past, selling hopium on Wall Street. You got a story about this new miracle drug that's going to come out and you get people to invest in your company and you make lots of money, tens of millions, hundreds of millions of dollars can be made that way and he did make money that way the drug never worked but he also invested in martin squarelli who if you remember amongst other things that squarelli did he bought a company that had a drug and he it was being used at the time by people who had aids i don't think that it probably did anything for them,
Starting point is 00:18:45 but they thought it was necessary for them to survive and increased the price of it by a factor of 58 times. And he made as a condition of him buying this company, they had this drug and it was no longer patented, but there was only one company that made it. And so he made it a condition of the purchase that they get all the supplies back from everywhere. You know, warehouses, pharmacies, and that type of thing. Get all of them, recall them all, and make sure there's nothing on the market. And then I'm going to, you know, and when he started doing that as part of the purchase agreement, the New York Times was looking at that and they said, well, there's no reason to do that unless you're going to radically raise the price. And he did. He made it 58 times more
Starting point is 00:19:35 than what it was. He had a lot of people who said, well, it's a free market. They can do whatever they want. The same way that people defended corporations who censored us and said, well, it's a free market. They own the internet. They own social media. They own these platforms. They can do whatever they want. I don't like it. And people like John Stossel said, I don't like the censorship. They're censoring me, he said. I don't like it, but they're corporations and corporations can do whatever the blank they want. Okay. Well, no, they don't have superior rights to us. And if they have created a de facto public square, that is a digital public square. And Jack Dorsey said that over and over again, then they don't get to remove public speech and the digital public square, even if it's
Starting point is 00:20:17 privately owned. And we had the Supreme court that made that decision in 1946, and they've never changed it. And all these subsequent decisions about, well, you can't say this, you can't set up your soapbox and a mall and that type of thing. A mall is not the digital, is not the public square. The mall is not a public square. The mall is retail space. And you no more are able to set up a soapbox there than you are to be able to go in and set up a soapbox and Sears if they were still in business. Uh, but, uh, whatever is there now I've gone shopping. Uh, but, um, anyway, you know, when you look at this, one of the companies that he created, uh, going back to Rama Swami now was ROI ROI Vant, Roy Vant. He said, yeah, the ROI stands for return on investment.
Starting point is 00:21:10 It was always about money, money, money. You take somebody who's become a billionaire in the pharmaceutical industry, pursuing more than anything, money, money, money, money, money. Does that raise some kind of spidey sense with you? It sure does raise a lot of red flags with me about Rama Smarmy. You know, when you look at his background, I've gone on to found multi-billion dollar companies that created value by doing valuable things for other people, developed five medicines that are FDA approved today. Made a lot of money.
Starting point is 00:21:46 R-O-I. R-O-I. Yeah, you remember Wall Street and the Gordon Gekko guy. Greed is good. Had a lot of people defending Martin Shkreli saying that type of thing. I've heard that from a lot of libertarians. This is one of the reasons why I say I'm a libertarian. I support liberty.
Starting point is 00:22:09 I don't support this Ayn Rand, Gordon Gekko brand of libertarianism. FBD doesn't stand for friendly business ducks. Or for the freelance beatbox department. FBD stands for support. We support businesses and communities across Ireland. Visit your local branch to talk to your FBD insurance team and see how we can support your business. FBD Insurance. Support. It's what we do.
Starting point is 00:22:42 FBD Insurance Group Limited, trading trading as fbd insurance is regulated by the central bank of ireland at this year's cheltenham glory rests in the lap of the gods curses alas our hero hasn't placed but there are still divine offerings up for grabs with all novibet customers getting a 10 euro free bet for every day of Cheltenham. And on top of that, we're paying up to seven places each way on selected races throughout the festival. I declare this a most generous offering. NoviBet. More power to you. T's and C's apply. 18 plus. Bet responsibly. Gamblingcare.ie.
Starting point is 00:23:23 Where, you know, may the best person win and we don't have any obligation to our fellow man. And there is no God and all the rest is that kind of godless atheism from Ayn Rand, I reject. I used to have people, I'd always talk about Liberty, my friends, one of them who was in, he went to West Point, we'd meet up occasionally, but you know, it got less and less over the years, but we'd get together and we'd talk. And he says, you know, he kept telling me, you sound just like Ayn Rand. I said, I'm not Ayn Rand. I reject that. I hate those novels.
Starting point is 00:23:54 I hate that view of mankind. You know, that is the epitome of godless atheism. And so, yeah, I agree with liberty, but not with that godless atheism and uh so yeah i agree with liberty but not with that godless atheism anyway uh so barry weiss says you say america needs a second revolution many people hear revolution and they think bloodshed and violence what do you mean by that what does revolution look like to you well he said to me that does not mean bloodshed and violence, but it means a revival of the ideals that set this nation into motion in 1776. And I do think that we live in a 1776 moment. Also, far so good.
Starting point is 00:24:35 He's hitting the right notes on this. Like I said, he's that the American ideals are very fundamentally radical ideas. Self-governance, free speech, like absolute free speech, he said. The idea that you get ahead through unbridled meritocracy, the unbridled pursuit of excellence, the steadfast commitment to the rule of law, rather than to the whims of men. And so it is very much like Ayn Rand libertarianism, because do you see anything in there about morality? Do you understand that the purpose of the American, what is different about the American government?
Starting point is 00:25:17 You know, the guys who were the founders, they, some of them were very wealthy. John Hancock was the wealthiest person probably in the northeast maybe in america at the time uh and so they risked their reputations their honor that was something that they used to think about we don't think about that anymore so they risked their honor their fortunes and their lives in terms of doing this it was different in the sense that they did not enrich themselves after the revolution. They identified more with the principles of liberty, and that's the key thing.
Starting point is 00:25:56 It's not that we have a commitment to the rule of law. Where would that commitment come from? Well, that commitment would have to come from a moral understanding of things, a kind of moral understanding like James Madison had when he said, men are not angels, so we need government. But because men are going to run the government, we've got to have some way to check this, right? That came out of a fundamental view of humanity that was Christian,
Starting point is 00:26:25 that people are fundamentally flawed. And, you know, we have a basic sin nature. It came out of that. But your commitment to the rule of law is only going to come when you're morally accountable. Morally accountable to people. Morally accountable to God. That's why I've said for the longest time, in our society, our godless society that has set itself against God,
Starting point is 00:26:51 it's a real red flag if you start talking about God and religion to most people in politics. They hate that. Oh, get that out of politics. Don't talk about that at all. I said, no, what you should be concerned about is not the person who thinks that they're going to answer to God someday. You need to be concerned about the person who thinks that they're going to answer to God someday. You need to be concerned about the person who thinks that they are God or want to be God. They want to be some kind of God-like dictator. And we got a lot of people like that. As a matter of fact, most people are like that.
Starting point is 00:27:19 Most people, well, I would be a benevolent dictator. Let me have the ring of power, you know. It's straight out of the Lord of the Rings. But most of them are bore mirrors, right? They really, they're not gladioles. We had some gladioles who founded this country, but the people we got right now, for the most part, are a bunch of bore mirrors. Yeah, your commitment to the rule of law needs to be something other than, and here's where Musk and Ramaswamy miss it. It has to be something other than greed is good.
Starting point is 00:27:53 I'm going to come to America. I'm going to go to America and I'm going to make a fortune. And I love that because this place is a free place. Well, that's fine. And, you know, ambition like that can create a lot of good things for people as side effects. Well, it makes that person very rich. I understand that. I support that.
Starting point is 00:28:11 But if that's your only goal, I want to get rich. Guess what? You're not going to have a commitment to law or to morality. Because if that's the thing, if it's the love of money that's motivating you, that's the root of all evil. And that's going to turn you evil eventually. I've got to do this so that I can achieve my number one goal. Your number one goal has to be something else. You have to have moral people and who understand they're accountable to God. And you have to have politicians who understand what the purpose of America is. I've said it before, and I'll say it again. The compass point, the North
Starting point is 00:28:49 Star in America, if you look at the Declaration of Independence and what the founders are trying to set up, the thing that they were aiming for was liberty and protection of our God-given rights. That's the purpose of government. The purpose of government is not to create some kind of a playing field where Musk and Ramaswamy can get rich. That's not the purpose of government. The purpose of government is to protect our God-given rights. And to have people who run that are going to have to think that they are not God. Because if they think they're God, they're going to start giving you privileges instead of your God-given rights.
Starting point is 00:29:29 You're going to have to start asking them permission for everything, which is where we are right now. So Barry Weiss says, okay, so what's your chance here? Because you know Trump is so far out ahead. If I'm an always Trumper, why am I going to vote for you when I could vote for Trump? Why would I go with New Coke when I could just have Coke? And again, Ramaswamy is very clever.
Starting point is 00:29:50 He says, do you want a two-liter bottle that's been in the fridge and doesn't have the fizz that it did when you first popped the cork? Let me stick with your analogy, not mine. He said, that's your analogy. That's the real question here. He says, I've got fresh legs. I'm 37. I'm going further than Trump did. I think the part that's most persuasive is the truth. 37% of this
Starting point is 00:30:10 country becomes psychiatrically ill, maybe deranged when Trump is in office. It's just a fact. It's like a law of nature in the U.S. in the 2020s. Republicans start identifying as Democrats. You have people who disagree with things that they otherwise would have agreed with because the person who's actually articulating the view. You have people agreeing with things they would have never agreed with because a particular person happens to be in the White House. It's psychological derangement for at least 30% or more of the country. And I think our base sees that I'm not having that effect on people, even as I'm saying many of the same things that Trump is saying. That was a good answer. And it's absolutely true. You got Republicans start identifying
Starting point is 00:30:55 as Democrats. Look at how many people who worked for Trump are now hardcore Democrats. Look at how few people who were in his cabinet will endorse him. I mean, it's pretty crazy. But it's also pretty crazy and drives me. This is what drives me nuts. Trump doesn't drive me nuts. His supporters do. And the news media does.
Starting point is 00:31:20 I'll go to these sites like Breitbart and WND and all these other places. Infowars is another one. You see all this stuff. Look at how bad the vaccine is. Look at how bad the lockdowns and the mask war and all the rest of the stuff. Look at what is happening with this, this, and this. And then they say, but Trump, look at what's happening. We've got to save Trump.
Starting point is 00:31:39 We've got to save Trump. The guy who can't save himself is going to save us. The guy who did all these things that they hate and they can't connect the dots and will not connect the dots to him. Oh, it's got to be Fauci. Well, he loved Fauci. He loved Fauci. Never fired him. Gave him a medal on the last day as he's leaving.
Starting point is 00:31:58 So he says, um, uh, Barry Weiss says, well, about a third of Americans still think the 2020 election was stolen. And I want to look at what you said about this issue in the days following january the 6th you said what trump did last week was wrong downright abhorrent plain and simple this is right after it rama swami said this he said the breach of the capital is a stain on american history she said you also said trump victimhood failed the country. He lost the election. He should have admitted it and moved on. As a matter of fact, Wall Street Journal had an editorial that was carried by Drudge,
Starting point is 00:32:33 basically said the same thing. They said, what they're coming after him for with this indictment is not a crime, and it's a very dangerous precedent. That is, though, that we do not support Trump. He should have resigned in disgrace, they said. But now this is taking it in another really bad direction. And that's my feelings exactly. I agree with Wall Street Journal.
Starting point is 00:32:56 I agree with Ramaswamy on this thing, at least what he said at that point in time. He lost the election. He should have moved on. And they lost the election. The election was over, folks, that Monday, December lost the election. He should have moved on. And they lost the election. The election was over folks that Monday, December the 14th, when you had all of the officially recognized electors, the electors had to be officially recognized by the state. They couldn't just appoint themselves.
Starting point is 00:33:18 And when they all turned in their votes on that Monday, December the 14th, I pointed that out. And I kept telling people until Alex fired on that Monday, December the 14th. I pointed that out and I kept telling people until Alex fired me that Thursday. I said, this is done. Looking for reliable IT solutions for your business? At Innovate, we are the IT solutions people for businesses across Ireland. From network security to cloud productivity,
Starting point is 00:33:40 we handle it all. Installing, managing, supporting, and reporting on your entire IT and telecoms environment So you can focus on what really matters growing your business whether it's communications or security innovate has you covered visit innovate today? innovate the IT solutions people There's nothing left but a grift and I also said it's a trap If you go on January the 6th. And I said that up to and including the morning of January the 6th. I told people
Starting point is 00:34:11 it's a trap. It's going to be agent provocateurs there. The people who go are going to be trapped. But this is also a trap for the entire conservative movement to portray us all as dangerous, violent extremists. And of course, they have continued with that. Barry Weiss says, but here's what you're saying now to Ramaswamy. You're saying now, quote, it's a mistake to blame January the 6th on Trump. It's Ray Epps' fault. You know that, right? It's Ray Epps who did it.
Starting point is 00:34:43 You claim that pervasive censorship is what led to January the 6th and that the 2020 election was stolen in a limited sense. It would have been different if Hunter Biden laptop story had not been suppressed. And so he goes on to say, yeah, well, I think that was election interference to suppress that. But again, it was Trump's Department of Justice and we knew for years what was going on in Burisma.
Starting point is 00:35:04 For years we talked about that. And I think that the Republicans tried to play it too clever by half. They decided they would release all that stuff as an October surprise. And it was too late. I've also said, said Ramaswamy, that I have seen no evidence of systematic ballot fraud that would have overturned the result of the 2020 election. And so it is a mistake for us to conflate a bad decision with illegal behavior. It is also different from saying that we're going to pin what happened on that day, which was a deep issue and deep suffering in our country that boiled over on that day,
Starting point is 00:35:43 at the feet of one man, you know, Ray Epps. That's Tucker and all the rest rest it was ray epps who did this you know that right uh we're making a mistake if we miss the real thing which is a year of telling people that you have to stay locked down in your basement you have to shut up or sit down and you have to do as you're told unless you're an if i'm blm in which case you can burn down the streets of Portland. But it was Trump who did that too, right? I wish somebody would ask Ramaswamy what he did on the COVID team. I wish somebody would ask him, you know, just forget about this election and forget about Trump for once and just ask him, do you believe that this was a pandemic? You know, forget about this stuff about the Wuhan lab. Do you believe there was was a pandemic? You know, forget about this stuff about the Wuhan lab. Do you believe there was even a pandemic?
Starting point is 00:36:29 What do you think about the vaccine as a big pharma guy? What do you think about the FDA? What should we do about that kind of stuff? Is any of this stuff real? And so, um, uh, you, you know, he went on to say, I think, um, that they have set an awful precedent for our country. That's right. That in the absence of extraordinary leadership from a Republican, who comes next is going to set a very dangerous precedent for the party in power,
Starting point is 00:37:00 using police force to indict and to arrest their political opponents. I'm deeply worried about this, and I am as well. Because, you know, it's not just that 30% of the people go absolutely nuts hating Trump. You got 30% of the people go absolutely nuts loving Trump. The Trump derangement syndrome cuts both ways. And Trump has already said, wait until after 2024 when it's my turn. You're going to see what I'm going to do. I mean, these people want a war.
Starting point is 00:37:30 Both sides want a war because we're in the middle of a fourth turning. All of society is going nuts. It's a season. It's a season of life for our society. And all of this stuff, this weaponized prosecution of Trump, and it is weaponized prosecution. I don't like the guy. I don't agree with him. I don't ever want to see
Starting point is 00:37:49 him. I don't want to see him as dog catcher. But this is very dangerous what they're doing here. And I think it's deliberate. Both of them are playing to their bases. Both of them are manipulating stuff. And I would not be surprised. I know that they know about the fourth turning. Everybody uses the term millennials. And where did that come from? Well, it came from the same guy, Strauss and Howe, who wrote the fourth turning. They all know that. They understand the season that we're in. The vast majority of the public doesn't.
Starting point is 00:38:18 They understand exactly what's going on. That's one of the reasons why they picked 2030. They know. But that's the time frame for this to happen. That's one of the reasons why they picked 2030. They know that that's the time frame for this to happen. That's when it'll be over. We're in the midst of it right now, and it's really going to accelerate, and it could accelerate in a very bad way because of this back and forth retribution and political Machiavellian prosecutions and persecutions. He said, I look at the campaign of Ron DeSantis,
Starting point is 00:38:48 and I look at his falling poll numbers, and I look at the fact that he's chosen to die on the hill of library books and Disney. And I think even if you think the culture war matters, well, does Ramaswamy think that it matters? Even if you think that, even if you think that library books and Disney matter, what a trivialization of that. I think that characterization of the issues that DeSantis is right on, I think that kind of trivialization
Starting point is 00:39:19 is just as despicable as what Trump did, calling him sanctimonious, saying that the protection of babies was too harsh. He says, I think even if you think the culture war matters, does it actually matter to ordinary voters? Oh, so we should not be leaders, but we should be followers of what the mob wants? Is that correct? We don't have moral standards of protecting children from mutilation, from vivisection, from sexualization and grooming. We don't have any standards about that, Ramaswami.
Starting point is 00:39:56 And so he says, I wrote ink, woke ink, he says, at a time when everyone advised me not to even use that word in the title because nobody knew what it meant. And so, you know, actually, that, I'm sorry, that characterization was very wise, even if you think that matters. He didn't say that. She said that. Let me clarify that. But he said, you know, I talked about this other stuff. I talked about things relating to identity. He does not say that it matters, by the way. And, of course, he's not going to defend his opponent, DeSantis. But he doesn't talk in this interview, as soon as she brings up those issues of Disney and LGBT grooming
Starting point is 00:40:38 and what's going on in the schools and the books and the rest of this stuff. She does not respond to that. He just leaves that there. And he starts talking about racial identity, gender identity, he said, identity in relation even to the climate. He said, these are important issues because they give us a lens into what is going on in our country. We're starved for purpose, and we're starved for meaning and for identity.
Starting point is 00:40:59 I don't call it the culture war. He said, the real cancer that I'm talking about is the void, the black hole of purpose and meaning and identity. He said, a lot of poison is going to fill that void. And yes, that poison could be wokeism, transgenderism, climateism, COVIDism, globalism. Barry Weiss says, could it be Trumpism? He says, anyism.
Starting point is 00:41:23 He's not going to go there. But it also might be depression, anxiety, fentanyl, suicide, all of these things, he said. So Barry Weiss comes back and she puts a point on it. She says, so you think people are desperately trying to fill an existential, maybe a God-shaped hole inside of them? Is that right? He lays this out there, but he doesn't go there, really. He says, well, that's the premise of my candidacy. He says, that is my diagnosis of our country, and that is a void that we must fill. I don't see any single other candidate stepping up to fill that void. Now, see, he doesn't talk about God filling that void. It's Barry Weiss who does. How are we going to fill that void? We're going to go gung-ho America? Is that going to fill your void? Isn't that just another ism?
Starting point is 00:42:18 Yeah. What do we do about that? Do politicians have the answer for that? Do we want to go to a kind of patriotic, secular humanism? Greed is good. Let's all make a lot of money. That's what America is about, right? Is that really going to fill that void? Is that going to give people purpose? I've said that many times about Hillary Clinton. She talks about the politics of meaning because politics gives meaning to her life. That's what her life is about. I said, what a desperate, sad person she is.
Starting point is 00:42:46 If Hillary Clinton gets meaning out of politics, just as science cannot give us eternal life, as it continues to promise with all these pharmaceuticals and health advances and everything, science cannot give us eternal life. Transhumanism is not going to work for these people. And you know, politics cannot give us eternal life. Transhumanism is not going to work for these people. And you know, politics cannot give meaning to life without God. It is that God-shaped hole.
Starting point is 00:43:14 Barry Weiss nailed it. He didn't seem to respond to that. He said, we need to embrace the radicalism of the American Revolution, the radicalism of those ideals of putting our nation first. Yeah, again, is it putting our nation first. Yeah, again, is it putting your nation first to do a TPP? Is it putting your nation first to open up more H-1B visas so you can lower the pay of other people? But of course, at the same time, Ramaswamy and Musk want their intellectual property and their corporations protected
Starting point is 00:43:41 from competition abroad. They want protectionism for their companies, but no protection for the people who work for them. No, the purpose of the nation is to protect our liberties. The purpose of the nation is to protect our God-given rights. And guess what? When you remove God from the equation, you won't have any rights. That's the pragmatic result of removing God. He goes on to say, our diversity is not our strength.
Starting point is 00:44:14 Our strength is what unites us across our diversity. Now, forget about diversity. It doesn't help us one way or the other. He's right about that. But you need to have politicians who focus not on some kind of make America great deal. We need to not be focused on safety, on money. The purpose of government is to defend our God-given rights. End of story. CIA is moderating Wikipedia, says former editor. On money, the purpose of government is to defend our God-given rights. End of story.
Starting point is 00:44:49 CIA is moderating Wikipedia, says former editor. Wikipedia is one of many tools used by the U.S. liberal establishment and the intelligence community to wage information warfare, says the co-founder Larry Sanger, as he was being interviewed by Glenn Greenwald. He said, I founded this in 2001, but it has now become an instrument of control in the hands of the left liberal establishment, amongst which he counts the CIA, the FBI, and other intelligence agencies. He said, we do have evidence that as early as 2008, the CIA and the FBI were being used to edit Wikipedia. Do you think they stopped doing that after we found out about it? No. You know, it's always been said, and I've said it, you know, when you look at the internet,
Starting point is 00:45:33 if it's free, you are the product, right? But it's worse than that. If it's free, you are the target. You may be the target of advertising, or you may be the target of the FBI, but you are the target. And they are doing geospatial intelligence. They're doing anticipatory intelligence, trying to predict whether or not you are going to oppose them in some way or the other. You see, you are not the product. You are the target. You are the suspect. And the Internet, and especially sites like Wikipedia and social media sites, these were designed and created to make you the target, to make you the suspect,
Starting point is 00:46:17 to watch everything that you're doing and to grab everything, the lifelog idea. Activity by the CIA and the FBI on Wikipedia was first made public by a programming student, Virgil Griffith, in 2007. He developed a program called Wikiscanner that could trace the location of computers used to edit Wikipedia articles. And he found out that the CIA and the FBI and a host of large corporations and government agencies were scrubbing the online encyclopedia of any incriminating information that they didn't want.
Starting point is 00:46:52 CIA computers were used, for example, to remove casualty counts from the Iraq War, while an FBI machine was being used to remove aerial and satellite images of Guantanamo Bay Prison in Cuba. CIA computers were used to edit hundreds of articles, including entries on then-Iranian President Ahmadinejad, China's nuclear program, and the Argentine Navy. Why is that in there? I didn't know they had a navy.
Starting point is 00:47:20 I thought it was sunk during the Falklands War. I thought they sunk both of the ships during the Falklands War with Argentine Navy. I thought it was sunk during the Falklands War. I thought they sunk both of the ships during the Falklands War with Argentine Navy. Anyway, some edits were more petty. CIA former Chief William Colby apparently edited his own entry to expand his list of accomplishments. But Singer told Greenwall he said the intelligence agencies pay off the most influential people to push their agendas, which they're already mostly aligned with, or they just develop their own talent within the intelligence community. They learn the Wikipedia game. Then they push what they want to say with their own people. A greater part of intelligence and information warfare is conducted online,
Starting point is 00:48:00 on websites like Wikipedia. Well, great. I'm glad that they understand that. And of course, you know, as we see this information and what happened with Facebook, which they go on to talk about, the result of all this is that our, the people who were going to protect us, the Republicans like Jim Jordan, he's going to have a hearing. He's going to have a hearing. They've known all this stuff. They've known it for years, but they're going to have a grandstand hearing on Facebook, and then they will do absolutely nothing about it. All they're doing is feathering their nest for a follow-up career.
Starting point is 00:48:36 Looking for reliable IT solutions for your business? At Innovate, we are the IT solutions people for businesses across Ireland. From network security to cloud productivity, we handle it all. Installing, managing, supporting, and reporting on your entire IT and telecoms environment so you can focus on what really matters, growing your business. Whether it's communications or security, Innovate has you covered. Visit Innovate today. Innovate, the IT Solutions People. On Fox News. We're going're gonna take a quick break we'll be right back the common man
Starting point is 00:49:22 they created common core dumb down our children. They created Common Past to track and control us. Their Commons Project to make sure the commoners own nothing. And the Communist future. They see the common man as simple, unsophisticated, ordinary. But each of us has worth and dignity created in the image of God. That is what we have in common. That is what they want to take away.
Starting point is 00:49:51 Their most powerful weapons are isolation, deception, intimidation. They desire to know everything about us while they hide everything from us. It's time to turn that around and expose what they want to hide. Please share the information and links you'll find at thedavidknightshow.com. Thank you for listening. Thank you for sharing. If you can't support us financially, please keep us in your prayers. TheDavidKnightShow.com The End Yeah, let's talk a little bit about genetic modification. You hear the theme from Jurassic Park, you know, they start out so heroic with such noble ideals. And then the unexpected happens.
Starting point is 00:51:20 And they're not trying to bring back dinosaurs yet. I mean, you've got some people out there trying to bring back the woolly mammoth and some other things like that. But they're trying to do a lot to our food supply, constantly looking at genetic modification. And it's going to be a very big issue. There is a political turf battle right now over cows. As the Wall Street Journal put it in this headline,
Starting point is 00:51:46 the political turf battle over the future of your prime rib. These people are fighting, the FDA and the U.S. Department of Agriculture are fighting over who gets to get the bribes from the companies. That's what we're really talking about here. Yeah, the future of genetically modified bacon, steak, and fish is at the center of a Washington food fight, says Wall Street Journal. You see, the question is not whether or not it should be done, which is the question that Michael Crichton talked about with Jurassic Park. He said, you never stopped asking, you know, whether it should be done. You talked about what you could
Starting point is 00:52:22 do and how you could do it, but you never talked about whether or not it should be done. You talked about what you could do and how you could do it, but you never talked about whether or not it should be done. These people don't care. Neither the FDA nor the USDA are questioning whether or not this should be done. And you need to understand that this genetic modification, CRISPR, is not a scalpel. It is not at all the way it was portrayed in Jurassic Park. And we got some super microscope, and you go in, and you slice it here, and you slice it there, and you slice something else in there. They're piggybacking a sequence onto a bacteria with CRISPR-Cas9. And somehow, because the mechanisms that God has put in place
Starting point is 00:53:04 with this unbelievable design of information that is there, somehow it just kind of rubs off and it puts itself in there, but it's not exact. And you get things that happen downstream from that. The way it was characterized by some people who were doing it in Texas, they said, well, you know, we've always in the past, we've used selective breeding and we can, you can get an amazing variation with selective breeding. Just take a look at domestic dogs,
Starting point is 00:53:30 for example, everything from Chihuahuas to Irish Wolfhounds and all different types of characteristics and, and, uh, intelligence and specialized things, you know, very radical difference in appearance and all the rest of this stuff. That was all selective breeding. But you can make it go very, very fast if you do genetic modification. You can think of it as selective breeding on warp speed and with similar results as to what we got from Operation Warp Speed. A lot of unintended consequences, assuming that their intentions were good. And so it not only allows you to speed up the process, but it also allows you to bring in things that are completely foreign. You know, when the Bible in Genesis talks about kinds of animals, you know, it's talking about
Starting point is 00:54:19 a kind of animal. You would think about all the different types of cats, from domestic house cats to lions and tigers and leopards and cheetahs and all the rest types of cats, from domestic house cats to lions and tigers and leopards and cheetahs and all the rest. Those are all cats. We all look at that. That's cats, right? You can look at the same thing. You know, you've got domestic dogs and wolves and coyotes and, you know, all these different types of things. They're all dog types. Well, this isn't even crossing a dog with a cat. This, you can cross an animal with something from the plant kingdom. And we'll talk about that. You know, they've got to take some genes from some bacteria or some bugs and make plants glow in the dark when certain things happen, that type of thing.
Starting point is 00:55:06 So you're crossing over between different kingdoms, if you will. You know, we have the plant kingdom, we have the animal kingdom. They all have DNA. They all have a common designer. Isn't it amazing? You know, they pushed it so hard when I was in school to say, well, look at this. You know, we're going to make these different classifications. We've got vertebrates and we have invertebrates.
Starting point is 00:55:25 And we can prove that evolution is true because, look, the skeletons are similar. And it's like, well, that doesn't prove anything. That doesn't prove that it came from one another. It proves, perhaps, that there's a common designer that has a similarity in design. And it gets far more than that. I mean, they were trying to make a case for evolution by looking at comparative anatomy of skeletons and things like that. Take a look at DNA. DNA is all animals.
Starting point is 00:55:52 Forget the skeleton. The core is the DNA, not the skeleton. And so it's all animals have DNA. And all plants have DNA. Did we evolve from a Venus flytrap or something? Maybe some of the politicians did. I don't know. But gene-edited cattle have a major screw-up in their DNA. This is from MIT Technology Review.
Starting point is 00:56:18 As I said, one of the guys who was doing this said, don't think of CRISPR as a scalpel. Think of it as a chainsaw. We're getting a lot of garbage and unintended consequences in other areas. And here's an example out of this. A company called Recombinetics out of St. Paul, Minnesota, a gene editing company that made hornless cattle. The animals were messengers of a new era of better, faster, molecular farming. Da-da-da, da-da-da. Cue the Jurassic Park music.
Starting point is 00:56:59 This same outcome could be achieved by breeding in the farmyard, they said, but this is faster, and it's precision breeding. And so these cows were on the cover of magazines and everything, you know, posing for magazines, just, just like a pop star or something. They were poster animals, a regime editing revolution, story after story about the success of modifying these dairy cattle. So they had no horns. And again, that's something that you could easily do with selective breeding. It has been done for some breeds, but it takes a long time.
Starting point is 00:57:32 But they also got some unintended consequences. FDA scientists eventually had a closer look at the genome sequence of the edited animals. A bull named Burry. They discovered that his genome contained a stretch of bacterial DNA, including a gene that conferred antibiotic resistance. Now, does this transfer if you eat? Well, they don't think so, but who knows, right? And perhaps this would be a big issue even for the cattle industry.
Starting point is 00:58:11 It might mess up their herd immunity, which, by the way, was never about vaccines. The term herd immunity was essentially another way of restating Farr's law about the bell-shaped curve. Anyway, I've covered that before. But that's the two issues here. When you talk about genetic modification versus selective breeding, you're doing it so that you can go at warp speed. But the downside of this is you may get, and of course, for some of them, it's deliberate that they have some chimera types of things brought in.
Starting point is 00:58:50 You know, this is not going to be strictly, you know, cattle to cattle. We're going to bring in some other things, you know, from plants, animals, or bugs. And they got the bug DNA in there by mistake. I guess you could say they had a bug in their editing software. And that bug got right into the DNA. The unintended addition of DNA from a different species occurred during the gene editing process itself, the government says. It went undetected by the company, even as it touted the animals as 100% bovine, and it assailed
Starting point is 00:59:23 the FDA for saying that the animals needed to be regulated at all. Now you see, in this particular case, the FBI was doing very, very due diligence. They were very careful about this. They wanted to find a problem with this as badly as they do not want to find a problem with the mRNA vaccines. And so they were looking at this stuff literally under the microscope. Not that you can see the DNA, but, you know, they were examining it very, very carefully because they wanted to make a case about how we can't have a Wild West in this stuff.
Starting point is 00:59:59 And I agree with that. It was very concerning to see how the news came out of this chinese lab in a garage where they're doing genetic editing and all the rest of the stuff that is a real concern because one of the things is that crisper allowed people to do genetic modification even if they don't do it well even if there are unintended consequences it allowed them to do it uh in a way and at a cost that had previously never been there before and so it's opened this up to garage operations if you will people who have malevolent intentions you don't have to have a wuhan lab to create something that is very dangerous with genetic modification it was not
Starting point is 01:00:42 something that was expected and so we didn't look for it, said the company that owns the animals. Gene editing isn't yet as predictable or as reliable as promoters say, says the MIT Technology Review. And of course, as I pointed out, cattle industry said this as well. Instead, the procedure meant to make pinpoint changes to DNA can introduce significant unexpected changes without anybody noticing it. And let me say this, that once the FDA has established, they wanted to prove that they're going to do a better job of monitoring this stuff than the USDA. The USDA has always been in charge of meat, for example.
Starting point is 01:01:20 That's why there's the turf war. You know, they're talking about animals, you know, eating animals. And that's where that's, that's the, you know, the domain of the U S department of agriculture, the USDA, USDA approved and that type of thing. Even though the FDA has food in the title, uh, they've not been involved with meat. They get involved with other aspects of food and doing inspection, which by the way, could and should be done locally at the state or local level. We don't need an FDA for anything, nothing, but they're trying to show how, how necessary their position is and how they do a better job of policing this than the corporation did or that the U.S.
Starting point is 01:02:04 Department of Agriculture did. And so that's what this story is about. But at least they found this problem. Let me tell you, if the FDA is successful, or whichever agency gets it, whether it's the FDA or the USDA, they're not going to go through this kind of due diligence to find any of this stuff. It'll be pale, just like it is right now with the pharmaceutical companies. A Syrian girl says on Rockfin,
Starting point is 01:02:27 I wouldn't want to see Trump as a dog catcher either. I like dogs too much. That's right. Free the dogs. Free the January the Six people. I'm all for it. On Rumble, Narrow Way, Narrogate Ministry. Dewey, Cheatham, and How and how the new lawyers for trump yeah and the
Starting point is 01:02:47 marx brothers yeah i don't like that um anyway um the risk of haphazard engineering isn't just the barnyard animals of course genome editing treatments to cure rare diseases are being tested on people and it is possible that patients will end up with unexplained genetic mutations. This is why I will not be taking any genetically modified medicines. And, you know, there's not just a pragmatic aspect to that, but there's also a religious aspect to that. You know, we are supposed to do diligence to take care of our bodies. I don't do a good job of that but it's also a religious aspect of that you know we are supposed to do diligence
Starting point is 01:03:25 to take care of our bodies I don't do a good job of that in most circumstances but I can at least stay away from genetic modification that's one that's easy to do I could exercise more I could sleep more but I'm not going to do the genetic modification that's where I draw the line uh unintended consequences are a particular concern in connection with attempts to modify human children before birth with gene editing, as occurred for the first time in China. That is called seed editing. You know, I've had situations where they've gone in and given certain characteristics to adult animals, and those characteristics will be temporary with a genetic modification. But if you do it while the child is young, developing, right, before the child is born, if you do it, you know, in the embryo stage,
Starting point is 01:04:12 then any changes that you make are permanent for that child. And not only that, but they will be passed along to subsequent generations. That's why I recommend that you read it. You don't read the entire book. The book is good. Daniel Suarez's Change Agent, the very opening scene, I think is one of the most classic scenes to lay out the issue of sea change, of the pressure that we all see in terms of an arms race or technology race between different countries, how they get drawn into this dangerous stuff like this. But he does it on a basis of a husband and wife in the future going to an underground black market genetic modification thing, and the guy is trying to sell them different characteristics that they can add to their child.
Starting point is 01:05:04 And the way he sets this thing up in the novel is trying to sell them different characteristics that they can add to their child. And the way he sets this thing up in the novel is one parent is for it, the other one is against it, and he's kind of, you know, answering their objections or feeding their desires. And he tells them, you know, well, yeah, this is really expensive. I know, I hear you, it's really expensive, but you know, other people are going to be doing it. And he says, so you got a choice. Your child can either be enhanced in these different ways, longevity, physical ability, mental ability, you know, all these different things. Or they can be a disadvantage and a slave to all the rest of these people who are doing it. And not only that, but if you do this, if you spend this money to make these modifications to your developing child here, that'll be passed on to your grandchildren and your great-grandchildren, and they will bless you for it, right?
Starting point is 01:05:53 It doesn't go to that, but yeah. It's an interesting, very interesting back and forth there. But that is the fundamental issue that all these people are looking at. And that's what's pushing this forward. The fear of missing out. The fear of being left behind. So it's not clear if the bacterial DNA poses a larger risk, says MIT Technology Review. And we don't know, right? And we don't know there might be some other stuff that they haven't seen yet. It's unlikely to affect the cow or the person who eats it, but instead the concern is that the antibiotic-resistant gene
Starting point is 01:06:29 could be taken up by any of the billions of bacteria present in the cow's gut or the body. John Heritage, a retired microbiologist from Leeds University, says that he doesn't see a large chance of the gene jumping further, but he says its presence in the cow could create unpredictable opportunities for it to spread. We just don't know, right? And we can't wait to find out, just like the Trump shots. Got to have it now.
Starting point is 01:06:55 Just like even the new technology to replace the technology for our energy infrastructure, our transportation infrastructure. We can't wait to get it right. We've got to just shut down what we've got right now. And that's the key thing. The genetic modification that is being done to plants and animals to our food supply, it could have negative effects for us as we consume those foods, but it could also have a negative effect in the sense that it could destroy the food supply. It could make it very vulnerable to something that is unforeseen. The discovery that some of the harmless, I'm sorry, hornless,
Starting point is 01:07:36 not harmless, but hornless animals have unwanted DNA from another species has now sealed their fate. No one is going to win any regulatory approval for them now. Already regulatory agencies in Brazil have rejected a revised petition by Recombinetics in response to these animals. And of course, again, it is not just that. We've got the U.S. Department of Agriculture has approved a GMO soybean plant that, listen to this, emits radio frequency to monitor conditions and is also fluorescent. You see, this is a kind of strange Frankenstein mixture of different things, the chimera aspect of it. This is not just mixing, you know, different strains of soybean to get different characteristics as we've always done with selective breeding. No, this is a soybean
Starting point is 01:08:22 plant that emits radio frequency so that you can monitor its condition. If it starts getting too dry or it's under distress or something, it sends out a radio frequency, the stress signal, and it glows in the dark too. The company is called Interplant. The proteins emit an optical signals that are detectable as far away as space. And it shows farmers exactly what kind of help the plants need within 48 hours of a stress onset. Two weeks before you can see the stress in the field. So, you know, when a plant is under stress,
Starting point is 01:09:04 drought or something like that, or, you know, it's going to show up eventually, it's going to start withering. But before that ever happens, these people can see it optically with a signal. And our plant's new category of seed technology delivers traits that tap directly into the plant's physiology and provide farmers with actionable data that is both early and specific to particular stresses in a scalable and economical way. Oh, there you go. What about our physiology when we eat these things?
Starting point is 01:09:37 Moreover, the plant is bioluminescent and can glow in the dark. You've seen the types of things that, you know, the beaches where people disturb the sand or the water and you seen the types of things that, you know, the beaches where people disturb the sand or the water and you see the bacteria that glow bright blue, that type of thing. I don't know what color the soybean things are going to do, but they're setting this up for commercial release in 2025. Even though the trials are scheduled for 2024, they will then release it
Starting point is 01:10:04 commercially within a year. Because this is going to be done in the same way that we've seen these other things. They're going to just rubber stamp it and let it go through. We already know that. That's how this is going to work. And then one more genetic issue before we take a break. We have a company that is making lab-grown human eggs so they can make synthetic babies so that homosexual men can have kids. Who needs a woman? What is a woman anyway? We don't know, right? You don't need those people with a womb.
Starting point is 01:10:41 A new pill for the morning after, Uh, is another one that they're talking about. Um, a morning after pill, that's not about an abortion, but they also have a new morning after pill to stop sexually transmitted disease. And that's the other pill that they're talking about putting out there. Uh, I've got, you know, there is an old-fashioned way to make sure you don't get sexually transmitted disease. That is abstinence outside of marriage. But we can't do that, so let's get a pill from pharmaceutical companies. But going back to the egg thing, where else but San Francisco? Would you expect to see this coming out?
Starting point is 01:11:20 A San Francisco-based biotech company wants to revolutionize the birthing process by artificially creating babies and a Petri dish and then incubating them. Uh, now they still at this point, they still do need a woman. They need to rent a womb and, uh, for the baby to develop. But you've got other people who are working on artificial wounds so we can go full brave new world. So the government can control reproduction. for the baby to develop. But you've got other people who are working on artificial wombs, so we can go full Brave New World, so the government can control reproduction. You see, there's a real...
Starting point is 01:11:54 All this stuff fits very well. All this LGBT agenda fits very well. It fits well within their depopulation agenda. It also fits very well within their Brave New World agenda, where they control how many people, what kind of people, the conditions of the people. The in vitro gametogenesis would give women the opportunity to have children well into their 40s and 50s, I said, but primarily this is a critical platform for male-to-male couples to have biological children.
Starting point is 01:12:28 So even having children late in your life, I can tell you from experience, it's a lot tougher the longer you wait. Well, we can tell you about that if you want to know about it. It gets really tough as you get older. It's not just a sleep deprivation, but it's all the other issues as well. So they said it would allow widespread genetic screening of embryos. Well, there you go.
Starting point is 01:12:51 Eugenics. Or the movie, if you saw the science fiction film, Gattaca, I think it was. Yeah. We can go full Brave New World, all the rest of this stuff. We can eliminate and reduce the risk of devastating diseases for future generations, they say.
Starting point is 01:13:09 But you know how they would use it. Assuming that the technology works. The co-founder told NPR, of course, you know, NPR loves this kind of stuff. I personally think that what we're doing will probably change many aspects of society as we know it. Yeah, they're already changing many aspects of society as we know it. Yeah, they're already changing many aspects of society as we know it in San Francisco without doing any kind of genetic modification. They're doing cultural and spiritual modification of America. It's really exciting to be working on a technology
Starting point is 01:13:36 that can change the lives of millions of humans, he said. There's something intrinsic about sharing a life that is half me and half my husband, he said. I don't have that capacity right now. I'm devoting my life to trying to change that, as in the days of Noah. Matt Kristoloff, another co-founder, said my personal biggest interest in it is that it can allow same-sex couples to be able to have biological children together. So there you go. We're going to go into the brave new world hatcheries. We're
Starting point is 01:14:11 going to go into genetic engineering and eugenics and population control. And the justification for all of it is homosexual men. There you go. It really is crazy how homosexuality feeds into every insane deviancy that these people are into. It's at the root of so many of these things. Oh, Brave New World hatcheries for the gay guys. Yeah. Sounds good. It's good. Pedophilia, that's bad.
Starting point is 01:14:39 But hey, if they do it for transgenderism and if it's being done with drag queens, it's good. It's good. Kids can't go into a strip bar and they shouldn't but now we're going to wave all those rules because we've got some gay guys that are doing all this stuff i don't want them seeing women doing that but gay guys you know that that's just perfect uh rockfin uh thank you very much for the tip doug i appreciate that, trickle down. Duganomics. Okay.
Starting point is 01:15:09 Uh, and I'm rock fan, Jason Parker. Jason's going to be joining us in the third hour. Hey, Jason. Uh, so Gates is our largest owner of farmland. Now. I wonder if he's tied into all of this. Yeah. You better believe that he's got some irons in that fire.
Starting point is 01:15:36 We're going to take a quick break and we'll be right back music is not working for some reason now we take a look at the stream deck and find out what is happening with us let's talk a little bit about what i was going to do when we came back we'll just go ahead into it right now um Let's talk a little bit about what is happening with superconductors, if I can find that on here. Oh, I can't. So let's talk about cars. We will, right now, they are making some big moves in terms of cars. Yeah, actually, I know where it is now. I'm going to go over to this other folder here. Hang on. This is the problem with going paperless and having your machine fail on you. So let's talk a little bit about what is happening with the superconductors.
Starting point is 01:16:16 There's been a lot of talk on social media about this. It's a new substance called LK99. A lot of hype about it okay if possible maybe even more hype than with artificial intelligence but it hasn't caught on uh much bigger than that um so uh the uh the claim that a new superconductor works at room temperature and at ambient pressure. Now, this is a big deal because, of course, always superconductors have only worked at near absolute zero. And they have some amazing capabilities because the part about superconductor means that it's essentially zero resistance.
Starting point is 01:16:58 If you put a current into something that is like this as a superconductor, it's just going to stay there. You can store that electricity there without any losses. Or you could use superconductors for very long transmission lines. It is truly a revolutionary thing. And as one person who talked about different applications of it said it's insanely bullish for humanity. If the claims are true, the world could be nearing the type of superconductor
Starting point is 01:17:23 that some experts liken to the invention of the transistor. I think it would be even bigger. Now, this was a breakthrough that came from some South Korean researchers. Just to put it in perspective, they have been getting some incremental improvements with superconductors by doing them at super high temperatures, very, very high temperatures. And again, that still is not something that is practical for most devices, but they've been able to, they're extending this into more and more areas that are still not a practical range for people to use, but they're bringing that down. But last month you had a couple of South Korean researchers publish papers, had two new papers on what they say is a
Starting point is 01:18:09 groundbreaking achievement saying that it was at room temperature and ambient pressure and so what had happened we had not heard anything about that really but then you had a chinese group uh try to reproduce this and um and did to some degree and so that's why people started talking about it because that's the way science is done you have somebody who makes a claim about something and you have other people okay uh let me see if i can reproduce what you said you did and if they can then okay it's for real and if they can, then okay, it's for real. And if they can't, then okay, forget about it. These people made a mistake. So they said that in this particular case, the Chinese company said, well, we were able to get certain aspects of it, but not at ambient temperature.
Starting point is 01:19:04 It was at a temperature that was very far removed from absolute zero, but certainly not at room temperature. One person who is an analyst for a securities group that was looking at this said, while there is no timetable for commercialization of room temperature ambient pressure superconductor, if it can be successfully commercialized in the future, it will have a revolutionary impact on product design in the field of computers, consumer electronics,
Starting point is 01:19:32 technological and material innovations of computers and consumer electronics are aimed at achieving high-speed computing, high-frequency, high-speed transmission, and miniaturization. And all of these are characteristics of the superconducting state, which means that electrical resistance disappears, miniaturization, and all of these are characteristics of the superconducting state, which means that electrical resistance disappears, and it will revolutionize the existing product design and material technology adoption. Things such as thermal system that is no longer needed, optical fiber high-end would be replaced, the entry barrier of an advanced node is lower, even mobile devices
Starting point is 01:20:05 as small as an iPhone could have the computing power comparable to a quantum computer. So there's a lot of excitement about this. But then the claims that this is going to happen at room temperature again did not come true when they tried to reproduce this uh they were able to get it to operate at minus 163 degrees centigrade not at room temperature touted by the original paper but still you're starting to get into the area there where they said you know some ambient temperatures there minus 163 degrees you're still starting to get into the area where you've got um you know dry ice and that type of stuff uh but it is still so cold that it's not practical for all purposes but it is a huge breakthrough they looked in the materials
Starting point is 01:20:58 conductor properties they said a very interesting electronic properties on this um it is called lk99 it's a combination of something called lanarkite lanarkite and copper phosphide they bake it for four days it's a multi-step small batch solid state synthesis process that somebody was able to reproduce over a kitchen counter in russia so again this is another one of these deals kind of like crisprPR, you know, where people can, if they're careful what they're doing, they don't need to have special laboratory facilities to do this. And that may be part of the issue as they, you know, followed this. Maybe they didn't do it exactly the same way as the South Koreans did. It also shows not just superconductivity, but also has what they call the Meissner effect, which results in the levitation of
Starting point is 01:21:46 materials oh there you go because like a maglev field you talk about maglev super rail trains where they can push these things along with alternating currents of electricity creating a magnetic levitating effect so you can accelerate things incredibly fast as a matter of fact if you go back and look at uh the book that um jeff bezos loved that gave him his ideas and you know how he wanted to set up space stations and all the stuff uh high frontiers by gerard k o'neill um i also liked that book quite a bit when I was in engineering. Uh, that was when we still believe that people had gone to the moon. Um, but, uh, we can't get back there for some reason. I don't know if it'll last 50, 60 years. Um, but, uh, but what he talked
Starting point is 01:22:43 about was setting up a moon base where they could get materials and that type of thing. Setting up a processing center, because there's five Lagrange Libration Points, which are gravitational and neutral points between the moon and the Earth. And there's two of them that are on either side of the moon. And so they put stuff there in those gravitationally neutral areas. They're not going to have a decaying orbit. And they're not going to fall to either the moon or to the earth. And so they could set up manufacturing facilities there.
Starting point is 01:23:13 They could paint them black if they wanted to make them really hot, just to get the sunlight there. They could paint them white if they wanted to make them super cold. And you get that temperature differential. And you can do a lot of things with manufacturing. You'd be able to go through and strip mine the moon, because so far Greta Thunberg hasn't been there yet. And you could take the material, and you could use maglev. This is why I'm talking about this.
Starting point is 01:23:34 You could use maglev to accelerate this stuff really fast and get so much energy into it that you could hurl this material up to the Lagrange vibration points where you have the manufacturing happening. You make whatever into it that you could hurl this material up to the Lagrange Libration Points where you have the manufacturing happening. You make whatever it is that you want, manufacture it in space. You don't have to worry about the EPA. They'll find a way to get there eventually, but have a few years of freedom before they find justification to do anything.
Starting point is 01:23:58 And then after you get finished, you just drop ship it. You just push it off to the Earth. And gravity will bring it to the Earth. So I guess that's where Jeff Bezos got the idea of drop shipping stuff for Amazon. But anyway, the maglev stuff is really pretty amazing and could be used for humans. They slow it down quite a bit so we don't turn into jelly when they shoot us out. And, okay, so the drive that we record to holds all the clips had an issue and broke the connection.
Starting point is 01:24:32 So these things should be working again, says Travis. We'll see when I get finished with this. But there's still caveats, they said. It's strange that two teams verified different parts of the superconducting requirements, but no team has successfully verified both of them at this time, which is what South Koreans said. And they also have not been able to do it at room temperature. They said, one of the professors himself said that while this is promising, it looks like this is not the breakthrough that we're looking for. It's
Starting point is 01:25:03 still going to be a few years out. But it is, you know, we have these types of things happening all the time. And I guess one of the things that really caught my imagination was to think, well, what if this were practical? What if this was at room temperature? And they were able to do this. And there was a long stream that was put out by a person named Andrew Coate. And he said, understand this. Think of electrons normally bouncing off of everything as they fall,
Starting point is 01:25:31 Plinko style. In a superconductor, they glide smoothly. To make electrons glide, either you cool them down a lot or you squeeze them together. Therefore, you can sort of trade off pressure for temperature. And so the idea behind this thing was you didn't have to have pressure or temperature. They just somehow miraculously worked with these materials, these quantum materials. And so, you know, again, they were able to, normally they would have to cool the stuff
Starting point is 01:25:55 down to minus 454 degrees Fahrenheit. This worked at just 273 degrees Fahrenheit when the other teams tried to reproduce it. It wasn't certainly a long way from room temperature, but they went a long way for that. And I guess the thing, as I said, that really struck me was when he started talking about in this long thread on Twitter about the different applications for it. He said, for example, if you think about transformation and distribution of energy, originally when they came up with electricity, you had a competition between Tesla and between Edison,
Starting point is 01:26:37 and one of them wanted to do, Tesla had the bright idea, and it was a bright idea, to use alternating current. That's why they stepped the voltage up so much, because for the same amount of power, if you step the voltage up, then the current is going to go down for the same amount of power. And your line losses are based on the current. So they were able to, by using step-up transformers, which is a system that we still use today,
Starting point is 01:27:03 Tesla came up with that. Not Elon Musk, but the real Tesla. And so, you know, that was a system that he came up with. And Edison did everything he could to vilify it. It's dangerous. You'll get electrocuted with alternating current and that type of thing. But it's still a lot of losses there. And he says, well, you'd be able to eliminate these transmission line losses, but he said the big thing is not even the transmission line losses. The even bigger thing would be that with the superconductors, you'd be able to eliminate the 35% to 40% losses that you have with generation,
Starting point is 01:27:38 generating the power. And he also pointed out that, again, you know know when we talk about batteries and we talk about the issues of being able to store massive amounts of power for the grid which is essential and they don't have this capability for the renewable energy things like solar and wind but with this if you had a superconductor i think you could just put the energy in there and let it circulate around. So it might solve the problems that they have in terms of energy storage for that. It would solve the problems for energy storage for a lot of different devices, not just the grid. He said also you would have advanced MRI capability because it would be able to produce a much stronger magnetic field and other things. Of course, we don't know what the health implications of that would be.
Starting point is 01:28:32 But he says they'd estimate that something like this would increase MRI by about a factor of 12. You'd also have the high-speed maglev trains. We mentioned that before. And then you would have electronic sensors that would be incredibly sensitive. You would have quantum computing, maybe even brought down to a small computer or maybe even to your handheld computer. And so we start looking at these things that might even affect nuclear fusion. Who knows? We might even get a Mr. Fusion, you know, Mr. Fusion and be able to magnetically levitate just like Back to the Future. We should look at most of these things as I started looking at them.
Starting point is 01:29:16 It's gotten to the point now, as I've said before, we were warned about the military industrial complex and the academic complex by Eisenhower. And he warned us that the government was going to take over all research and they were going to turn it to their purposes, not to our purposes, as we see being done over and over again. It seems like everything that comes out, most of it is research that's being targeted by the government. Just take a look at the brain-computer interfaces
Starting point is 01:29:43 that are being done by Elon Musk and by Bill Gates. These people have all bought into the brain computer interfaces. And is that really something that we want or is that something that they want? They're able to go back in the latest article I saw about that. They said, well, look at this. We can scan your brain from a distance here, and we can tell what music you're listening to. Now, they don't take it down to a particular tune, but they said we can look at this and rumble. Thank you, McKee, for the tip.
Starting point is 01:30:21 He says, the moon comment is definitely worth $5. I don't know what I said about the moon, but thank you. I appreciate that. Get a cup of coffee. Thank you, McKee, for the tip. He says, the moon comment is definitely worth $5. I don't know what I said about the moon, but thank you. I appreciate that. Get a cup of coffee. Thank you so much. But they're looking at, by looking at your brain waves and measuring them, and of course, they'll be able to do that much more sensitively with superconductors that operate at room temperature, or at least at a temperature where it would be feasible for them to do this.
Starting point is 01:30:50 But they're able to look at the rhythm. They're able to look and to tell what genre you're listening to, and a whole bunch of even instruments that you're listening to, by looking at your brain and how your brain is responding to it. Haven't been able to take it down to a particular song yet but you know that kind of invasion of your mind that kind of deep surveillance i find that to be very concerning and you know when you go down through all these different things and you look at okay well we can make everything electrical have battery storage and we could transmit electricity more efficiently
Starting point is 01:31:25 and maybe even have storage for the renewables. Everything that I look at with this stuff, I understand how they're going to use this technology to control us and to make themselves more powerful. And that is a very concerning thing. Now, what do we do about this? You see, the problem is it always comes back to ethics and to morality. And we've pushed God out of our society. The really smart people become dangerous. And the really good technology becomes a threat. Because we push God out of our lives.
Starting point is 01:32:00 We'll be right back. I'm faster. we'll be right back faster so well anyway let's keep going here and next thing on here is let's talk a little bit about the cars I said I was going to talk about cars so let's talk a little bit about
Starting point is 01:32:18 that so we have again you know the technology may not work. That's going to be our only salvation. Maybe their technology will have issues like our disk drive is having right now. That may be a good or a bad thing. Okay, so this is from a listener, MJ,
Starting point is 01:32:44 and he's talking about how he's pushing back in terms of free speech against the government. He went out and got vanity plates that the government didn't like. Here's what he wanted to put on his car. Defy government. And of course, he has to abbreviate that to GOV. Defy-V. Defy G-O-V. And he said, the special plates unit phoned me and left a voicemail advising me that the plate combination was unavailable. I called them back and I got a functionary who promised that I would get a call from a supervisor within 48 hours but that never came so then i reached out to my state representative and she was accessible and personally called me back and advised that she would investigate coincidentally she sits on the transportation committee last friday i
Starting point is 01:33:35 received a call from a lead at the wisconsin special plates unit advising me that the decision to issue this plate combination was made way above his pay grade. So he said, a special shout out to the Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty. He said, they replied to my contact submission the very next day, and the staff attorney indicated that above my pay grade, quote unquote, was code for one of the DOT's lawyers looking at the file. I was strangely disappointed that they came so quickly, because I think Wisconsin is ripe for a good free speech precedent set in the Supreme Court. So he's ready to take this as far as it needed to go. He says, so at first glance, this is a
Starting point is 01:34:16 trivial victory, but at the same time, it is a stunning admission by the state of their vulnerability to our First Amendment rights if we choose to assert them and he says i've got several provocative license plate combinations he sent that to me besides the defy government he also has uh one that says no who another one that says no 1984 and another one that says aggressive. So, um, kudos to MJ for doing that. Um, we have, um, uh, the Biden administration, however, uh, wants to make sure that they're not going to fight you on just the license tag. Uh, they're going to fight you on having the car itself. Of course, this is all about banning cars. And so they want to ban internal combustion engines, but we already know that they're saying, well, we're not going to have
Starting point is 01:35:08 enough grid power to charge cars all the time. And we're going to have to suck power out of your car, perhaps during some grid crises. So maybe, you know, we will use your car as a grid battery or all these cars as grid batteries. Now, nobody's going to have a car. They don't want to have private cars out there. It's just that they're going to do it incrementally and they're going to, you know, isolate and target and destroy one sector after the other. They're coming after, you know, hybrid cars as well. So the Biden administration wants 58 mile per gallon fuel efficiency standard by 2032. We're talking nine years. And of course, there's a long lead time on designing cars. And there isn't going to be, you know, the car companies see the handwriting
Starting point is 01:35:55 on the wall. The car companies don't want to sell cars anymore. They want to rent cars by the ride. And so this is a way for them to ban cars it just says they're even at the same time that they're banning and shutting down power supplies this is the first time that's happened and the bite administration is doing that based on emissions eric peters replied to this and his take on it is they just outlawed trucks he They said no law was passed, but the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration just decreed that by 2032, new vehicles must average at least 58 miles per gallon.
Starting point is 01:36:36 No law passed. We have regulation without representation. We have banning of entire classes of vehicles, confiscation of our freedoms and our essential transportation, our essential liberties, done without any representation. There's regulation without representation, and regulation without any Republicans having anything to say about it. But it's all going to be fixed if we get Trump in. So don't worry about it.
Starting point is 01:37:06 We're all going to show up at the Capitol at some point in the future, and we're going to shove him into office, and everything will be fine. Because all we need is that one guy who's going to miraculously fix everything. Republicans are just asleep at the wheel. No pun intended. Speaking of being asleep at the wheel remember that situation i think it was in phoenix it was in arizona we had that self-driving uber and the woman was there and you know they had a camera that was forward looking and they had a camera on her she's
Starting point is 01:37:39 sitting there playing with a phone or whatever not paying attention because she's bored to death and you got somebody who walks out of the shadows that's picked up by the forward-looking camera. There's a homeless person pushing a golf cart, jaywalking, walks right out in front of the car and the car runs over her and kills her. And so all these people say, oh, wait a minute, you know, that, uh, well, you can't really blame this, this car because it didn't see it coming. But they blamed the woman who could not see it coming. And then after that was a narrative for a day or so, you had a lot of people who came out and said,
Starting point is 01:38:15 well, the problem is that that car is not using visual spectrum. It's using LiDAR to indicate, so it should have been able to see it even without any lights on at all. The lights are just there to make the person in the car feel comfortable. But the lights were not effective when this person was jaywalking across. Well, that person who was in the car as the backup safety driver has now just pled guilty to manslaughter. Uh, and again, um, uh, that just comes across as a scapegoating to me. Uh, I, I don't think there was anything that she could have done about it. Uh, even as a driver, you know, if, if she was driving, I don't think she would have seen that in time. What was interesting about it. And the reason that the Uber car didn't even slow down and ran over her, was because they had disconnected the emergency braking. They said
Starting point is 01:39:13 it was too sensitive and it was giving all kinds of false sets, so they just disconnected the emergency braking. That's the way they respond to this kind of stuff. And of course, Uber, from the very beginning, said you know we're going we're hiring people right now to be drivers but the reason that you're right is so expensive is because of that other dude in the car and we're going to get rid of that person that's going to be self-driving well they put a real wrinkle in that but they're still moving in that direction and as eric peter says the only car right now that comes close to this new standard of 58 miles per gallon is a toyota prius and it makes 57 57 and of course they don't want to have
Starting point is 01:39:55 any um any hybrid cars they are going to make sure that the hybrid cars are being purged. They want zero emission cars. So, you know, no hybrid cars. You go back and you look at the Chevy Volt. That was driven strictly by electric generators. But you did have a, electric motors I should say, but you did have a electric motors, I should say, but you did have a gasoline generator that was on board. And even though it had insanely low emissions, because that didn't have to run all the time, it would just top up the batteries. Even though it had insanely low emissions, many times if it was a short journey,
Starting point is 01:40:38 be able to make it on the battery, you wouldn't even have to engage that. But it was not a zero emission vehicle, so it can't be had. And to say that you're going to do this with a Prius, I mean, they're just, even a Prius that's a hybrid, 57 miles per gallon. And so why Eric Peters says they just banned trucks, he points out that the Ford F-150, not the electric version, but the regular one, has a curb weight of 4,465 pounds. He says
Starting point is 01:41:06 its body is made out of aluminum, but it's got a steel frame onto which the aluminum body is bolted. That's how trucks are laid out because it is the best layout for the type of work that people expect trucks to be able to do without braking. You've got to have that steel frame there. A small car like a Prius has an integrated body and frame, unibody. This keeps the weight reduced. But even so, the Prius still weighs 3,100 pounds. He says it's a near miracle that something that heavy manages to almost comply with the federal regulatory apparatus decree for what's going to happen to cars. But it requires a hybrid drivetrain and a small car to almost get there. So he points out, it's not going to be there.
Starting point is 01:41:56 Biden is banning things left and right. It's just amazing. Every week we go, Biden is banning something else that we've taken for granted as some kind of tool or utility or convenience in our life. He's just taking everything from us bit by bit. You don't think they're going to get to the point where by 2030 you own nothing and you go nowhere, you do anything? It's happening right now before our eyes. Biden is doing this every week. What are the Republicans doing? Well, Jim Jordan's going to have a hearing about Facebook censoring people. Seriously.
Starting point is 01:42:26 Seriously. Something that we've known about for a decade. And he's going to have hearings about that. Not going to do anything about this stuff. He will do nothing about it. He'll do nothing about it. Just like the rest of these useless Republicans out there. They want you caught up in this stuff. Trump will do nothing about any of this stuff.
Starting point is 01:42:42 He's not even talking about it either. He's talking about himself. The man is incapable of acting except out of his own perceived interest or out of revenge, as his lawyer Ty Cobb pointed out. The battery-operated version of the F-150, the F-150 Lightning, has a supposed 68 electronic miles per gallon rating, but it can only travel 240 miles on a full tank, a fully charged battery, in other words. And so for it to be that efficient, it would have to carry three times as much,
Starting point is 01:43:20 whereas the F-150, it says, can travel more than 600 miles. So in order for the Lightning to be that efficient in terms of your range and your ability to do stuff, and of course, this is just talking about driving it. You know, we've all talked about what happens to the battery charges on these things when you put them under load. They just watch it grow straight down. He said it would need to carry three times as much electricity as its current 1800 pound battery pack can store. The battery pack weighs almost as much as my entire car. It's amazing. That would increase the curb weight of this already 3.5-ton truck
Starting point is 01:43:55 to more than 7,000 pounds, which would not be very efficient. And, of course, it isn't. And they don't really care about this. When you look at overall efficiency, they don't really care about this. When you look at overall efficiency, they don't really care to do that. One of the interesting takes I saw from this, from the Daily Caller,
Starting point is 01:44:13 which I thought was exactly wrong, the Biden administration seeks to raise the price of vehicles to force more people to drive EVs. That was their take on all this stuff. I was like, no? As a matter of fact, if they keep raising the price of everything, we've already gotten to the point where people can't afford it. The purpose is to ban all cars. The purpose is to make them unaffordable, to make them unchargeable by shutting down the grid, or to just outright
Starting point is 01:44:46 ban them. Since we've already got an infrastructure that works really well, you just can't use it. We're going to just ban that. The purpose is not to force people to buy EVs. The purpose is to make sure that nobody has a car. Daily Caller still does not get it. It's amazing to me. Got a lot of people out there who are now talking about the MacGuffin, the climate MacGuffin. They said, hey, look, it looks just like the pandemic MacGuffin. Well, of course, the pandemic MacGuffin looked like the climate MacGuffin before it. So now you've gone and reverted back to a type. Elon Musk, meanwhile, is looking to get a $100 million subsidy from government for charging stations. The king of crony capitalism.
Starting point is 01:45:35 Once again, you're another one of these billionaires that conservatives put their hope in. According to emails reviewed by Bloomberg, Tesla is asking the government for $97 million to build nine electric charging stations for its forthcoming electric semi-trucks. They're currently still in pilot stage. And so, you know, we want to move everything to trucks and we want to have self-driving trucks. Now, what could possibly go wrong with something that doesn't have a driver behind the wheel? We just talked about what happened to the Uber taxi.
Starting point is 01:46:13 Well, now do that with something that weighs 80,000 pounds. And it's traveling at highway speeds. Last year, the California governor, Graben Nuisance, boasted that the Golden State had subsidized Tesla's success. And when the San Francisco Chronicle investigated the claim, it found that it had to the tune of $3.2 billion. Yeah, we're going to brag about that. And of course, Tesla is getting subsidies in Texas. Musk is getting subsidies for all these different businesses that he's moving to Texas now. California bragged about giving him money.
Starting point is 01:46:52 SpaceX has now gotten $15.3 billion in government contracts. See, this is why you can't count on Elon Musk to stand in the gap to protect our free speech. Because he's making too much money from this stuff. And that has been his business model, doing what the governments want. And not just the American government, bowing to the European government, bowing to China, all the rest of these things. I remember the first time we talked, Eric Peters and I, we were talking about Elon Musk being the king of crony capitalism.
Starting point is 01:47:27 At that point in time, the LA Times had also done an article about it, but Eric Peters did a better job than the LA Times. And he was at about $5 billion subsidy. Now just one of his companies is up to $15 billion. Just SpaceX alone with that. Should we try another one of these? You want to hit one or see if it works Thank you. Let's talk a little bit about some place that can go while you've still got a car. And we're going to get back to what we talked about earlier in terms of the problems, fundamental problems of our society and what it takes to fix it.
Starting point is 01:49:38 But I saw this. I thought it was interesting. A couple of different publications had this. The Ark Encounter encounter have you ever heard that in kentucky something put up by answers in genesis and it is a full-scale reproduction of noah's ark in a museum about feasibility studies with it but it's very interesting because it's also about the flood about about the Genesis account and all the rest of that stuff. It's a really fascinating thing to see. My family has been to it. And of course,
Starting point is 01:50:11 there are certain things that are said about it in Genesis and other things that are left open to interpretation. And so when you look at the picture of their Noah's Ark, it's not the typical nursery version of a boat with a giraffe's and elephant's head sticking out of a thing in the center of it. It looks like something that could weather the storm. But it is a life-sized replica. And so it's kind of interesting to see how big this thing is. It's made out of wood. They had Amish people who were expert woodworkers who went there to build it. And it was done by an organization, Answers in Genesis. And of course, they had a creation museum.
Starting point is 01:50:53 And we know that really well. We had some tangential involvement with them when they were building that. You actually see our name on a plaque there at the creation museum if you ever go there and i i loved that because it was they did not do it in a straw man argument you know they put up the interpretation they said here's the physical evidence and here's how it is interpreted by the evolutionist and here's how uh people who believe the bible and believe the genesis account here's how they interpret it. And they did that with a lot of different things. Geology, biology, cosmology, all these different things.
Starting point is 01:51:32 It's very, very interesting, very thought provocative, and always good to have a debate over things. And I like their approach. We don't have to run from this because we've got the truth. I think, what was it, Augustine, who said truth doesn't need to be defended. It needs to be let loose like a lion. And so I would highly recommend that to anybody,
Starting point is 01:51:55 either one of those museums. But I especially liked the newer one, which is the Ark Museum. Truly is amazing what they have done there. They are, USA Today had them in the top 20, both of them, in the top 20 religious museums in the United States. And so, and that one is supposedly the Ark is the top one. I don't know if you've ever heard of a pastor. His name is Vati Bakum.
Starting point is 01:52:29 He spends some time in Africa, but he's also located out of Houston. And he's done a couple of books. He did a book back in 2004 called The Ever-Loving Truth, Can Faith Survive in a Post-Christian Culture? And he said, you know, we look at this, we look at secular humanism, and we look at the fact that we're going into post-modernism, where truth is, you know, we don't believe that there is any such thing as truth. He says, can we survive in that kind of an environment? Well, he's doing an update to that book now, 20 years later. And so he had an interview with a Christian magazine. He said, well, really,
Starting point is 01:53:09 at the end of the day, it's really the same thing that we're facing today, even though it's manifested itself in different ways. It's really moved from secular humanism to a radical Marxist approach. He said, it's still, it's the idea that either there is no truth or that truth is a social construct. And if you start going no truth or that truth is a social construct. And if you start going down that Marxist issue of a social construct, then everything becomes a social construct, right? Your physical body becomes a social construct. So we don't even talk about what is a woman anymore because there is no objective truth.
Starting point is 01:53:41 Sex is no longer biological, binary, and objectively determined. No, there is no objective truth it isn't you know sex is no longer uh biological binary and objectively determined no there is no uh truth there he says um so you know see that truth becomes a social construct knowledge even becomes a social construct it's a way for them to divorce us from all reality so the ultimate deception, really. He said in both instances, Christianity, and really anybody who proclaims that there is any such thing as absolute truth, becomes the enemy of the ideology of the day. He says it's not just about our religious beliefs,
Starting point is 01:54:17 but it's also about, well, wait a minute. What about what you're saying about the pandemic? Or what are you saying about the masks or the lockdowns or the social? Oh no, you can't talk about that. We're not going to have that debate. We are going to just go with the authority figures that are out there because they are science.
Starting point is 01:54:36 And I think it's better for us to refer to this stuff instead of as post modernism, I'd call it post objectivity. And if you challenge their post-objectivity, they're completely subjective constructs about everything. If you challenge their post-objectivity, they get really PO'd with you. So I think it's a perfect way to describe this stuff. In the early church, there was this pressure, he said,
Starting point is 01:54:59 to conform to the religious ideologies of the day. They would say in Rome, oh, okay, well, it's okay for you to practice your Christianity, but it just can't be allowed to interfere with our Roman religion. All gods were accepted, and Caesar was accepted, and you had to make offerings to Caesar under certain places. He's the guy who's the god that you make an offering to,
Starting point is 01:55:23 and the Christians just refused to throw that little bit of incense on there. And for that, they would get executed because they can't tolerate you opting out of their system. And that's what we're seeing now. It's not just a Marxism. It's an authoritarian, totalitarian system. He said, today we see the same things that people say, listen, I don't have a problem with Christianity per se,
Starting point is 01:55:42 so long as Christianity stays within the four walls of the church, doesn't try to impose itself on the broader culture, as long as Christianity doesn't prevent you from bowing to the idols of the day. But the minute your Christianity causes you to oppose same-sex marriage or causes you to oppose abortion or causes you to oppose so-called gender-affirming care and so on and so forth, those things that are really the idols of the culture today, when your Christianity steps into that realm, then that's the minute that you experience the various forms of opposition and potentially persecution. And we saw this with the JAB, people who had a religious objection to the JAB. Oh, well, you know,
Starting point is 01:56:20 you can do whatever you want, but you can't opt out of this. You cannot oppose what we're putting out there. Only certain versions of Christianity, he said, are acceptable, the kind of watered-down gospel, the food bank, or the liberal political activist kind of Christianity. These things have always been okay, as he points out, because they remove the offense of the gospel. Once that's taken out, then we are outside. Once you start talking about that, they put us outside of the camp, he said.
Starting point is 01:56:53 And so with a cultural shift away from Christianity, he said Christians are now unsure how to respond to and navigate in a world where their assumptions are no longer dominant, but instead are perceived as detestable. We don't know how to respond. We don't really know what to do. We don't know how to play the game when it's not in our stadium. We have no idea how to approach people and a culture
Starting point is 01:57:16 when our assumptions are no longer the dominant one, but are perceived as vile and detestable. We have a tendency to recoil and to be caught off guard. And so he said, part of the problem is that our churches have not been gospel-centered. He said, we would get together because people were demographically the same or racially the same, or because we all like the same kind of music or whatever. I think you still see that. You have some of the bigger churches and they'll have different services in the morning.
Starting point is 01:57:48 And this one is a traditional music and this one is contemporary Christian music and other stuff like that. But do these songs actually really connect to anything of any substance or is it just a talent show or something, right? That's the key that you need to look at. So he said, we had those things as a foundation
Starting point is 01:58:08 instead of having the gospel as our foundation. And he said we have to understand about the kind of biases that are present in academia today. An environment that he said not only promotes godless agenda but despises the gospel. And again, what is the gospel? Well, the good news.
Starting point is 01:58:27 The good news that is exclusive, by the way. Good news that says salvation is a free gift, but it's only through Christ. Oh, they hate that. They hate that. You know, Jesus is just one of many ways, or maybe he's not a way at all. They hate that. He said, not only does's not a way at all. They hate that. He said, not only does the academy despise the gospel,
Starting point is 01:58:50 we're talking about academia. These are the people that sell you the scientism. Well, you believe Fauci because he's with this institution that is very prestigious. Or you believe this guy over here because he's from Harvard or whatever. And so we have competing credentials out there, things that were handed out by the Wizard of Oz at the end of the movie. E pluribus unum.
Starting point is 01:59:10 By the power invested in me, I now pronounce you as Mr. Science, and everything that you say will be true. And anybody who opposes you will be anti-science. He says, for example, if you're a person who believes that there's a God who created the world, he said, forget about the young earth stuff even, you know, answers in Genesis stuff. Just a person who believes that there's a God who created the world, he said, forget about the young earth stuff even, you know, the answers in Genesis stuff.
Starting point is 01:59:27 Just a person who believes that God created the world, you don't deserve to breathe, let alone call yourself an academic. The academy not only despises the gospel, but the Christian worldview, the Christian cosmology, and Christian morality. I would say, you know, that it's all the institutions. These people have marched through all of the institutions. It's not just academia, but of course it's entertainment. It's the media, the news media as well. It's politics. It's all this stuff.
Starting point is 01:59:56 He said the academy, however, has now become the church of the modern age. The academy is where we go to find the priests of the modern age. Think about Anthony Fascist. The academy is where you go to, in order to experience the sacraments of the modern age. It has now become the church of the secular humanist, post-modern
Starting point is 02:00:17 and neo-Marxist. That's what we're seeing in the schools, those institutions from kindergarten all the way through graduate school. And we see it everywhere. And so we have to recognize that as Christians we've had a great run. We need to praise God for that, and we need to pray that that great run is not just completely over,
Starting point is 02:00:38 but we need to recognize it for what it is. One of the misconceptions that we've experienced with this great run is we think that somehow we are special and remarkable. You know, the exceptional aspects of America. He says we're not. We're no more godly. We're no more special. We're no more remarkable than people who live in places where they're persecuted. Places like under the Indian Prime Minister Modi, you know, who is overseeing the persecution and murder of Christians and Muslims and other people like that, or in Muslim countries where they persecute the Christians and the Hindus and that type of thing. But we're no
Starting point is 02:01:19 different from people who live in areas like that. We've just been providentially placed in this particular setting, and we have to remove this notion that somehow We've just been providentially placed in this particular setting, and we have to remove this notion that somehow we've been great and we've deserved the favor that we have experienced. And I would say that I think, though, that where I would differ with him somewhat on this, I would say certainly it's not anything that we've done. And it's not even anything that our forefathers did to deserve this It's simply that the pilgrims came here to honor God
Starting point is 02:01:50 They wanted to have the religious liberty to honor God in the way that they sincerely believed And when you honor God, God has promised that he will honor you And not only that, but he promises that he will honor generations beyond you. And so we're kind of just coasting on that blessing. And we've coasted too long on it. And I think that is, we've run out of our time. Because there is nothing that we have done in our generation, in our society, to honor God. There's a people who came here who did that type of thing, and God honored that sacrifice and that
Starting point is 02:02:33 desire to search for him. He's got another book that he wrote in between these two called The Family-Driven Faith. He said it highlights the role of parents in the spiritual life of their kids and what he had to say about this was i think very important he said we've got to get our kids out of the government school we got a lot of people who are going to war with the school system because of the things that we see are so outrageous they said they've been outrageous for decades. This is only the tip of the iceberg that we're seeing. And as I said before, we were able to finally see some of this and finally able to get people to realize that this is really going on in their kid's classroom because of the Zoom thing. They would always discount it. Well, that's not happening in my
Starting point is 02:03:19 school. That's not happening in my kid's classroom. The teacher's great. Well, they got the chance to see it. But he says, we need to not only be serious about disciplining our children in terms of teaching them what God says, but also serious about disciplining our children in terms of giving them a full Christian education bathed in a Christian worldview so they can be prepared to face this culture
Starting point is 02:03:42 as opposed to being baptized in it. When we lived in North Carolina, the homeschooling association there had a monthly or quarterly or whatever, I forget how frequently it was published, but their publication was called the Greenhouse Report. And that's the way you ought to view your kids. You put them in an environment, a greenhouse, like a young plant, a greenhouse that is a protected environment, because you know that at some point in time, they're going to have to be out there in the harsh reality of the real world.
Starting point is 02:04:17 But while they're young and tender, that's the point at which you try to work with them. Well, we got our guest, Jason Barker, with Knights of the Storm. I'm anxious to talk to him about his experience. He's now been out of the military long enough that he can talk about what happened. And many of you may remember that Jason was very instrumental in helping a lot of people. He came up with some ideas for people to get their religious exemptions. Here are some of the things that I object to, and here's what you may object to. But he was able to retire from the military and not have to take an early leave.
Starting point is 02:04:54 And I want to talk to him about that experience, what he's doing now, and some other things that are on his mind because, of course, he does a news show as well with Angry Tiger, Knights of the Storm, and they each have one themselves. So we're going to come back in a moment and talk to Jason. But there's also a tip on Rockfin from MJ. Thank you, MJ, for the story about your license plates. He says electric semi-trucks and heavy over-the-road applications are a non-starter.
Starting point is 02:05:21 Pun intended. You're exactly right. As I said before, they're going to have these superchargers or hyperchargers whether it's going to be beyond the current superchargers it's still going to be a very very very long time and so unless you're going to have some kind of a mechanism where you can pull up and take off with another battery that's been charged i just don't see that working. And we also know that as these batteries are charged, the faster you charge them, the less they have a, of a battery life and the more of a fire risk they have. And I'm saying, you know, these battery, uh, semi trucks, I think the first time you get
Starting point is 02:06:01 one of them catches on fire and burns down all of the semis at the truck stop and everything else is there, that's going to be the end of them. But, you know, they're pushing all this stuff. And it's not just the self-driving aspect of it is another thing. And they're doing some of the self-driving stuff on non-electric semis. It's a very dangerous, that's a real danger to everybody on the road. They enroll us in these tests and these experiments without our permission or knowledge. And so that's a separate issue. Elon Musk used, they're tied together in so many people's minds because Elon Musk used the self-driving deception to sell as that was kind of the sizzle on the steak to make the EVs look very futuristic. And so those things are still tied together in many people's minds.
Starting point is 02:06:58 We're going to take a quick break and we'll be right back. The common man. They created common core to dumb down our children. They created common past to track and control us. Their commons project to make sure the commoners own nothing and the communist future. They see the common man as simple, unsophisticated, ordinary. But each of us has worth and dignity created in the image of God. That is what we have in common. That is what they want to take away. Their most powerful weapons are isolation, deception, intimidation. They desire to know everything about us while they hide everything from us. It's time to turn that around and expose what they want to hide. Please share the information and links you'll find at thedavidknightshow.com.
Starting point is 02:08:04 Thank you for listening. Thank you for listening. Thank you for sharing. If you can't support us financially, please keep us in your prayers. The David Knight Show dot com. All right, welcome back. And joining us now is Jason Barker. Jason Barker has been a real friend to this show and to us, my family, and to a lot of people. He came up with a letter, as I mentioned before, had several different points for people who might have religious
Starting point is 02:08:53 objections to this jab. And I've had many people who are not in the military, but some people were in the military, other people were not even in the military, but again, looked at that because the issues are the same and were able to get a religious exemption from this. So, uh, by, uh, you know, you've definitely with Biden pushing this stuff and trying to mandate this, uh, it's amazing to me, Jason, just how many people you were able to help. And so I really do appreciate that. We'd put his letter up on the website as a template for people to refer to. But Jason is now out of the military. We want to talk to him about that experience. And again, the program that he has with Angry Tiger is called the Knights of the Storm.
Starting point is 02:09:30 And you can find the program and schedules for that program and for their individual programs and many other like-minded programs at thenightsofthestorm.com. They've kind of got like a TV guide thing there that shows you all the different times, like, you know, guard goldsmiths, Liberty conspiracy, you know, six o'clock on, on rock fan Monday through Friday. So there's a whole lot of different programs that are there and they have put that up as kind of a community thing, a very valuable resource. So, uh, it's great to talk to you, Jason. Thank you for joining us. Oh, thank you, David. And, uh, first off, I want to congratulate your daughter on her,
Starting point is 02:10:08 on her wedding. And I also wanted to say that Karen is an angel. Um, I ordered another mug. Um, I got my save the world mug and I got my David Knight t-shirt on. So it's a great day, but, uh, she, she threw in a couple of t-shirts in there that i wasn't expecting so i have the mcguffin shirt and and i've got to say that is by far my most favorite shirt right now that i own so it's an opportunity for people to tell you know they see the mcguffin it's like so what is that about yeah and adding the website um because i noticed i think i might have told karen about this but i've noticed that anywhere i go now even the older folks now are just glued to their phone they don't want to have a conversation you know sometimes i'll be sitting like at the pharmacy or whatever and i'll try to talk to somebody next to me and it's like they don't want to talk to you but having the website on the shirt
Starting point is 02:10:58 somebody might glance up because we've become anti-social haven't we yeah after the covid stuff really um but it was a good idea to put the website on there because someone might be curious well what's a mcguffin and uh let me go check out this website so yeah we want to start that conversation you know and get people because now several people are starting to put this together you had the energy industry is starting to say hey this is looking familiar we're seeing the same type of of uh scheme being run over and over again you know so we got to wake up to this play at some point in time and realize start to say hey this is looking familiar we're seeing the same type of of uh scheme being run over and over again you know so we got to wake up to this play at some point in time and realize
Starting point is 02:11:29 that they're just recycling these crises on us and they've got the same end goal at the at the back end of it so i'm glad you like that um talk to us now that you you've you retired from the military but we had spoken briefly before you said it was still at a point where you really couldn't talk openly about it but i think you can talk about it now right kind of oh absolutely david i'll kind of explain what that is so when you get out of the military unless you're getting kicked out um typically you have some saved up vacation time and uh in anticipation of you know getting out i went ahead and just saved all my vacation time i could the maximum i could save so even though i had my walking papers and everything i still was belonged to
Starting point is 02:12:11 the military just on vacation so it's kind of like you stack it up to the end so that gives you time to find a house and get moved and all that good stuff so um as of the first i'm a free man so and i appreciate you holding on. I know you wanted an update and I held off because, you know, uh, I didn't want to get in trouble and have him yank me back in and court martial me or something. Yeah. You never know. I mean, I was just looking at a couple of articles about a couple of proud boys.
Starting point is 02:12:39 Um, uh, Zachary, um, or Ryle was one of the ones, but I remember Joe Biggs, because I know Joe and, you know, they have taken away their honorable discharge. Joe's even got two purple hearts, you know, they're going to take away all this stuff from him. It's just amazing how punitive they can be. And of course, Biden is not getting rid of this. He's still trying to do things with this vaccine mandate, still trying to keep that authority in there.
Starting point is 02:13:05 Tell us a little bit about what happened when you gave them that letter. How did that proceed? Let me back it up just a little bit, David. So I want people to understand that even under your savior, Trump, this vaccine was going to be mandated because they basically said we need to have 75%. That was the magic number at that day for herd immunity. We need 75% of y'all to step up and volunteer to take this so that it won't become mandatory.
Starting point is 02:13:36 So what does that mean? That means it's going to become mandatory unless you take it. Yeah. I mean, go ahead and I need 100 of you to volunteer otherwise we make it mandatory and and that if you look into the regulations you know once you were talking about the mrna i had never heard of it so i started looking into it and found out that this is no vaccine this thing is is putting new software into your hardware that's right and and i was concerned with uh first off with cancer
Starting point is 02:14:05 because um you know and the way it leads up to the mark of the beast with the passports and stuff but but on the medical side of it i was looking at it i said if you take a cell in your body and you inject something into it to make it do something other than its function that by nature is a cancer cell yes and if it divides and becomes two and three and now you have a tumor and we're seeing that now with the turbo cancers and stuff so anyway i was i was looking at um the medical side of it let me interject there for a second and say you know really can you look at this spike you can kind of think of it as a lot of kind of a distributed tumor right it's it's setting your body in a lot of different ways. It's this
Starting point is 02:14:45 unnatural reproducing thing that persists. And I said that from the very beginning. I said, oh, look, they're going to have your body manufacture something that is going to train your immune system instead of injecting something that has been rendered supposedly harmless. So your body can be exposed to it and learn what it is and your immune system can can shut that down instead of that uh they don't have to manufacture anything they turn your body into a manufacturing facility and so i said at the very beginning i said so how are they going to turn this off you know it's a genetic code injection a gci was the other thing i was calling it and and you know how do you ever what's the off switch for this well it turns out
Starting point is 02:15:22 that there isn't really an off switch and And so the thing just keeps replicating. I came to those same conclusions on my own, just from having, you know, a high school biology knowledge, you know, biology and science. It was, it was obvious. And, um, I was looking into all the medical stuff and when they, they changed the definition of what a vaccine is, I realized it was not going to win the medical battle because they define the terms. That's right.
Starting point is 02:15:44 So, um, I was like, wow, I'm going to have to take this stupid shot. And then once they started talking about COVID passports and I started putting the pieces together, I said, this is like a mark of the beast thing. And plus, you know, like I put in, in the template and by the way, for folks, I got a little bit of negative feedback on that saying that that was kind of disingenuous to give someone else the answer to the test and that the intent of sending that up to you. And it was for exposure because of formatting. And,
Starting point is 02:16:12 and, and I wonder how many people got kicked out of the military or something bad, negative in their records because, uh, something was over a half, you know, half a tab over or wasn't formatted properly. And we had 72
Starting point is 02:16:25 hours when they said this is mandatory we had 72 hours to produce an exemption letter wow and these young kids don't know um the only reason i knew about it number one i've been looking into it and i was prepared ahead of time because i knew it was going to be mandatory based off of what trump said and the other thing is that one of my additional duties was to serve as an equal opportunity kind of advisor, not advisor, that's a different role, but like a leader. And I take that stuff very seriously. I don't understand why they could give exemptions for the length of hair based on religion, all kinds of things they give exemptions on food, kosher food and things like that. But when it come to this, it was absolutely no way. But I wanted people to have that format out there specifically for the military
Starting point is 02:17:10 so they could take that and just reword it to how they wanted, but it's formatted properly. Yeah. As you point out, from the mandate standpoint, I remember all the pushback I was getting from people when I said, seriously, you're going to go to the mat? You're going to go to Washington mat you're gonna go to washington dc for this you're gonna give him all this money this guy who locked you down and created this
Starting point is 02:17:30 toxic poison well you better hope that he gets elected because if biden gets elected he's going to mandate it i said no he will coerce it and we saw that didn't we jason you know we saw uh look at uh the republican governor uh dewine who was working with Ramaswamy. And DeWine put out a million-dollar lottery thing. But most of this stuff, other than the military where they just ordered it, most of this stuff was done with financial coercion. They told corporations, well, we want you to do this. And if you want to do business with the government, you're going to do this to your employees. And you're going to tell them that they've got to take it.
Starting point is 02:18:05 It would have been, I think the difference would have been, it would have been more bribery and less blackmail, perhaps. They would have bribed people to do it more with Trump, but it would have been coerced one way or the other by your employer, because your employer is going to be bribed by the Trump administration, and then they will use the blackmail on you to coerce you into doing this. It was always, you're right, it was always there. It was always going to be coerced.
Starting point is 02:18:30 That was why the thing was there, and it was why they had to worship it, like it was going to be our salvation from this phony pandemic. Well, I'll tell you kind of how the stages this rolled out in, and it started out with appealing to a soldier's sense of duty you know you've got to take this uh not not just for you but for your family and the community they like to use that word community and then you know once that that wasn't working because people weren't taking and i know you know i wanted to talk about this today that the vast majority of people i know did not want to take this so-called vaccine.
Starting point is 02:19:06 And they were forced to. You know, they waited to the last possible minute, and then they went and just got it over with. But yeah, they started off with appealing to sense of duty. And my brother, unfortunately, because of that, was one of the first ones to take, I believe, the Pfizer. And fortunately, I don't know of any effects on him yet. So that's good to hear.
Starting point is 02:19:26 But then they started with the once they locked us down and sent us home, they started with the carrots. You know, oh, well, you can you can go to a restaurant now or you don't have to wear a mask. So it was kind of a carrot for those who complied. And it was a stick for those who were holding off because now we have to sit here. I'm the only one in the office that I have to wear a mask. And I talked last time about how my leadership was very supportive and there were not all of them were. I had one person literally had it out for me. It was one of my direct officers above me and they had it out for me. They tried to get, um, uh, nonjudicial punishment put on me because I, someone ran past me out, you know, in the PT field and I was within that
Starting point is 02:20:12 six foot distance, you know, like the guy passed me, you know, I'm not running three and a half miles with a mask on my face. This is not, this is like the games we played in elementary school with cooties and all the rest of this stuff. I mean, it's just so ridiculous ridiculous and and yet they take it very seriously and they will really destroy your life if they get half a chance you know it was very calculating too and i remember in august of 2020 or maybe it was july we had the uh the the yale study it was up on the nih website and they were talking they had about a dozen different ways, arguments that
Starting point is 02:20:46 they would use with people. You talk about the sense of duty, they would put the burden on you. Well, this is something you got to do for your community. And how would you feel if somebody got sick and it was because you didn't get the vaccine as if, uh, you know, uh, again, it's this whole thing that they've always sold the vaccines with about, uh, your vaccine doesn't protect you. Somebody else's vaccine protects you, but they did a lot of these different things, and they put these arguments out there. And I saw these arguments being fed back through a guy, his name was Curtis Yang, if I remember correctly. He was actually funded with a lot of money from the Ad Council to set up a website. Uh, he had studied, um, theology at Yale, uh, not
Starting point is 02:21:28 Yale at Duke university. And so he was bringing pastors in and he had people like Robert Jeffries, who was a big Trump supporter. And the two of them did a video, but he, he did videos about, here's how you're going to, uh, put this on your, the people in your church and tell them that this is their duty to get this, to love other people and all that. It was really insidious, the things that were being done. Yeah, same tactic with this is loving your neighbor. That's the same thing. It's almost like it was, I don't know,
Starting point is 02:21:56 worked out in some kind of a tabletop exercise, lessons learned from an event 201 or something. What's the latest one they that's another thing this is coming again oh yeah fauci even said it he said that prepare for the next one then they just had this what called uh catastrophic contagion another one so it's like the event 201 but the the next one it is coming again they're talking about an annual booster now um i just don't see this going away no you still get 100 universities where they're required as a condition to go to that university that's still being
Starting point is 02:22:30 required with them and i think the only pause the only reason we're seeing a pause here at this moment is because they're trying to uh lay more of a legal foundation so they can run a lot of this stuff or all of it through the who uh that's That's why I think they put a pause on it. They haven't taken anything off that they stole from us. Any of the usurped powers that they've done at the state or the local level or even at the federal level, they haven't taken any of that back. Instead, they're keeping all of that, and they're laying a global foundation to lock us down with the World Health Organization.
Starting point is 02:23:02 And so, yeah, you're right. It's going to come back. And so we need to think about this. And, um, and the thing that really concerns me as well is, you know, this, this whole MacGuffin thing, when they do it with a climate thing, uh, it'll never come off because there isn't going to be any pill that you can take or vaccine. It's just going to be the only thing that you can do to assuage
Starting point is 02:23:22 their, uh, their desires with a climate lockdown is to just surrender everything to them and to go into some kind of a, you know, pre-industrial revolution society where you own nothing and you're this, this, uh, poor slave of theirs. Well, on top of handing our power, our sovereignty over to the WHO or other unelected organizations out there. Um, we're also shooting ourselves in the foot with the military i wanted to talk a little bit about like the atmosphere and the strength of the military we are down we were down on numbers there they had an incentive right
Starting point is 02:23:56 before i got out so i was working with the national guard that was my last gig in the army was we observe their training we prepare them so that when they deploy that their skills are up to par. So I got to work with all kinds of different MOSs, different jobs, and they had the same problems we did. They had problems meeting numbers and stuff like that because I think a lot of it has to do with the COVID shots. I specifically asked my units, you know, hey it what's the deal with the covid they're like well it's it's only mandatory if we deploy and they were rotating people in and out they're like oh and the numbers were so bad they couldn't just send one unit you got to pull from other units to get enough numbers to to go meet that mission and then once the the once they go title 10 which they belong to the federal
Starting point is 02:24:47 government for the duration of that deployment and that's when they would have to get the shot so you know this was supposedly all done in the name of readiness right okay well what about this new lgbt trans stuff and i wanted to talk about that because they did this on the, on the guise of readiness. You have to have your shot so you can be ready, ready, ready. And they always hammer readiness yet.
Starting point is 02:25:13 You're going to let somebody come into the military. That's going to be non-deployable for the first, I don't know, four or five years of their enlistment. Yeah, that's right. And they're going to be, because they're going to be a postsurgery, pre-surgery.
Starting point is 02:25:25 You know, and I had this, I made this argument when I was going through my equal opportunity course. They were toying around with the idea, and I don't know if they ever implemented it. But they said because of people that like to malinger in the military, you know, every time a deployment comes up, they have a psychological problem. They become non-deployable and they just want the paycheck. Right. There are some people like that. V vast majority in the military are not like that they're they're good people but there are people like that out there and the court i got to argue the corporal clingers from nash right yes the clean and now they're recruiting the clingers you know it's like if you'll come in and be a clinger we'll let you not go to uh korea or
Starting point is 02:26:04 wherever we're going to deploy you you can be a clinger, we'll let you not go to Korea or wherever we're going to deploy you. You can be a clinger forever and you can cling here at home. It's that's a good name for it. A clinger. Yeah. This idea, they, they toyed around with this idea that if you accumulated, um, I want to say it was like one year of non-deployable time over the course of like a couple of years, they were going to kick you out because your job is to be ready. And I made the argument, I said, well, how does that affect, you know, as an equal opportunity person? I said, well, how does that affect females that get pregnant? Because as soon as you're pregnant, you can't deploy. You have your postpartum,
Starting point is 02:26:39 your leave postpartum, you can't deploy. And if, if a woman were to get pregnant and I'll stress a woman were to get pregnant, cause men can't get pregnant. Um, I can say that now, you know, but, but so, um, they're working on that. Yeah. You, you accumulate what almost a year's worth of non-deployable time with one pregnancy. Yeah. And then if you get pregnant again, what are you going to kick them out? So I made the argument against that policy, but they were talking about doing it. And, and why would you try to put that policy in place,
Starting point is 02:27:11 but then turn around and invite people in that are going to be non deployable. It shows what the real agenda is, isn't it? It isn't about fighting a war. It's not a B about readiness. It's not about any of this stuff. They're using this as an instrument of social
Starting point is 02:27:25 change they're using this as a war instrument against our society well and in the meantime the you know patriots like myself i i still consider myself a patriot you know they're they're going to get rid of us through attrition and you know they either kick us out because we didn't take the jab because we stood on religious principle, or they're going to, okay, they didn't kick me out, but I was put on a no travel order. And even once I was lifted, I couldn't convince my command that I was able to travel. They had to send a separate message down from DA saying no, because I guess all the units were doing that, still trying to punish you, even though they're not allowed to punish you anymore. And to me, that's just the leadership trying to play on the safe side so we our leadership um maybe not down at the ground level i think they're still pretty okay they don't want to go against
Starting point is 02:28:14 the grain but our upper leadership is just toxic absolutely toxic and it's like they're trying to gut the military and put in a whole new demographic of folks when i say demographic mindset right um the good people they're trying to get rid of i couldn't travel what's that going to look like on my evaluation report whenever that comes up and i haven't been able to do my job because my entire job was traveling out to these units so and i tried compromising with them i said well my units aren't that far away they did work with me we. We reorganized the units. So the ones that I was in charge of, they were within the driving distance. So as long as I didn't have an overnight stay, it wouldn't be considered travel. I could drive out there, do my stuff during the day, drive back and then go out the next day. And I was willing to do that, but they still wouldn't let me do it wow but yeah so i would end up eventually being gotten rid of through attrition because you know you get a couple of bad evaluation reports that uh you don't compare as well as your peers and then they can do what's called a qmp it's like a quality management program or something uh where they can say hey
Starting point is 02:29:19 you're just not cutting the mustard anymore i know i know you've got two years left on your contract but um we need you out now wow so that that's the reality of it. The military is hurting really bad. Uh, they had incentives for people to go out and help recruiters. And I'm like, wow. So people with no recruiting experience, you want to send them out to a recruiter's office to help them recruit because it's so bad. Wow. Wow. Well, you know, it's what you're seeing in the commercial airline business as well. You got so many people that were kicked out or, and then people who stayed in and got the jab, they got a lot of them have health issues because again, it is really like a lottery system.
Starting point is 02:29:56 Uh, the active ingredient varied by from batch to batch varied by a factor of 33. You can go from three to a hundred. I forget. I think it was micrograms. But, you know, so some of them are like a placebo. Other ones, it was like an instant kill shot, you know? And so it's really the luck of the draw. It really is kind of a Russian roulette type of thing.
Starting point is 02:30:15 And hey, we'll give you a million dollars to play Russian roulette, said the Republican governor. But, you know, with all the problems that they have with the pilots, they still don't want, they're still fighting, letting these people that got kicked out over the vaccine thing, now that it's no longer a requirement, they're still fighting letting them back in. They don't want them to be let back in. This is real bull-nosed about all this stuff. And as you point out, we see all these different things.
Starting point is 02:30:38 We know that it's coming back. Because they're not yielding on anything. They're not apologizing for anything. They're not fixing or repealing anything that they've done. They're laying the foundation to go even further the next time. And that's what's really key about this. You know, I interviewed a couple of weeks ago a Navy SEAL from Poland, Drago. And he was a guy who really loves this country, really hates communism because he lived under communism and um and so you know he joined the military to serve his country for patriotic reasons and i think he was a seal for
Starting point is 02:31:09 about 10 years and he taught uh other seals for about 10 years and when i finished the interview with him because we talked about his history uh growing up in a communist country and that type of thing and about coming to america but uh when we got finished with the interview jason he said i want to come back and talk about what's going on in the military the readiness stuff that you're and about coming to america but uh when we got finished with the interview jason he said i want to come back and talk about what's going on in the military the readiness stuff that you're talking about here because it's a big issue for anybody if you like this country you like the military whatever these people are destroying everything they truly are well and the thing is with the readiness so you know as an eo guy, I don't want to discriminate against anybody, right? I don't.
Starting point is 02:31:46 And I always advocated for folks. But the thing is, you can't have it both ways. You can't say in the sake of readiness, you can't bring in people and you're like incentivizing people to come in that are going to take away from readiness. Yeah. And that's the problem. I don't hate on anybody or anything like that but uh it just shows me looking at that um that the whole readiness argument for the jab was bs it was all bs that's right and i don't know why they wanted us to take this shot so bad uh but i just know the military
Starting point is 02:32:18 is really hurting right now we're hurting on ammunition because of the ukraine war we're hurting on fuel because of our oil reserve or you know our our strategic uh pile of it uh i don't know what would happen david if we went to war right now like really went into a hot war we've got russia china and north korea all talking now hanging out you know these are our real macguffins that we really have to worry about whether that's fabricated as a global conspiracy or not. I don't know, but there's people who are really going to be dying. It truly is amazing when you look at Biden as provocative and as aggressive as they are in
Starting point is 02:32:57 terms of trying to challenge, you know, not a third world countries or something like that. But were you going to have a proxy war with Russia or China? Oh, they want the real thing directly with Russia, directly with China. And so they keep pushing for that. At the same time, they keep, you know, starving the military of resources, including personnel and everything. It really is insidious what is happening with it. And, you know, it is very alarming, but, you know, it is what it is.
Starting point is 02:33:24 Well, it's only going to get it's only going to get worse um i personally know at least three or four people that are you know their 20 plus year was their intent uh and they're already saying as soon as this enlistments up or as soon as i can put my retirement paperwork in i'm doing it i'm getting out of here so we haven't even start if they can't fill those numbers and then the really bad part about that is these are upper ranking folks. So even if we do get the numbers in to fill the lower ranks, they're going to retire and then people are going to start getting pushed up so fast. You have very inexperienced leadership. And that's another problem that's going on with the
Starting point is 02:34:00 military I disagreed with is they have like a move up or move out policy they try to enforce. Preston Pyshko, MD, MPH, that if you don't make a rank by a certain time um they're just going to get rid of you and i i've always said what's wrong i understand i i don't want to have a soldier that hangs out as an e4 for 20 years because he's kind of malingering he's not really uh taking his knowledge and passing it on but some of their timelines are pretty crazy uh on making rank now and all you're doing is you're, you're putting somebody in that's inexperienced. They haven't even mastered their E five rank before they're an E six.
Starting point is 02:34:30 And they haven't even mastered that before they're an E seven. And now they're in charge of a whole platoon full of people. So I, that's kind of been a problem that's been in the making for like 10 years or so. Wow. Wow. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:34:40 There's a lot of, a lot of systemic problems there. I remember, uh, years ago talking to Joel Skousen, and he's always been of the mindset that the elitists in Washington want to invite a first strike. They believe that they can survive that and then move out.
Starting point is 02:34:56 But he said, you know, this is really a blessing for a lot of the people who are getting kicked out of the military because they're weakening the military to such a non-combat-ready status that you'd be glad that you're not in it. You know, it's going to be ultimately a blessing, I think. And we're going to need to have people who understand some of the things about defending this country, perhaps in the future, who knows what kind of unrest and chaos they want to provide. It is truly amazing, isn't it, Jason? I mean, do you ever think that you would see a situation where you just have, um, saw a video, uh, just yesterday of a guy who goes in and he's got a big trash can and he goes into a convenience store and he just starts pulling
Starting point is 02:35:36 stuff off the shelf. And there's a guy who's videotaping it and he goes, and he's telling the store owners, you better leave them alone. Just leave them alone. Wait for the police to come, but you can't don't, you know, don't leave them alone. He's going to, and, uh, they just had as much of it as they could take. And one of the store owners went out and got like a two by four and started beating the guy with it, you know, jumped him and the other ones beating him with a two by four. Uh, but you know, that kind of a situation or the situation where the woman, uh, you know, tried to stop these people were stealing stealing a couple thousand dollars from Lowe's,
Starting point is 02:36:06 and they beat her up, and then she got fired by Lowe's. Do you ever think you would see that kind of deliberate chaos? To me, that's what they're doing at all the institutions now. It's not just that the Marxists have marched through the institutions, taken over the schools and universities with CRT stuff, but it's actual chaos that we're now seeing coming to us at retail level. That's why, you know, we look at this and, and, uh, you know, who knows what is going to be happening in the near future, but we need to start getting together, preparing ourselves,
Starting point is 02:36:35 having a community of people who are going to be able to help each other in mutual defense, I think. Oh, absolutely. And if you look at what's going on here, it's not just here. Um, it's, it's across all Western nations. And we've talked about this a lot, but if, if you look into history,
Starting point is 02:36:52 when we want to see regime change, whether it be Cuba or wherever, I had a laundry list in the show we did, I think last week, but, uh, we always do a destabilization effort first. Yes.
Starting point is 02:37:04 We're both with their money and their philosophy. We try to uprise them and get them to tear themselves apart. That's something that's being done right now to the Western world. That's right. And sanctions. These sanctions that we supposedly had against Russia, they were really directed more at Europe, even more so than the United States.
Starting point is 02:37:25 But it was, it harmed us more than it did, or certainly as much, but I think more so than it, than it harmed Russia because, you know, it started pushing Russia in a direction of being independent of this system. They were still able to, you know, they made massive amounts of money with oil because they were still able to sell it. And the price of oil went skyrocketed because of our sanctions. But the people who got the short end of the stick were the people, especially in Europe, but everywhere, you know, where they were consuming the oil. And so sanctions are always the first act of war. And I've said it many times that these sanctions
Starting point is 02:37:59 are, you know, we have been sanctioned. We started getting sanctioned with all the measures that were being taken under Trump. And then it's continued through with biden and even the supposed sanctions against russia are really more sanctions against us that is an act of war it is like a siege yeah yeah it's it's a precursor to it absolutely to a hot war and and if you look you can tell that this isn't just something that's organically happening that's just happening on its own because it's happening in every western nation that's right and i can't wait to get harps on to talk about this um interesting stuff in in australia you notice you don't see anything about australia in the news anymore that's right yeah it's because they stood up they stood up enough
Starting point is 02:38:40 and the government backed down but they don't want you to see that see yeah so they won't they won't televise that that's right but if you look at who they choose to prosecute look at the summer of love all those riots how many people died got injured those people aren't prosecuted yet the january 6 people um a lot of them had good intentions they're still sitting in a jail cell maybe some of them don't even have charges put on them no no speedy trial no due process no nothing can't even talk to their lawyers some of them so look at who they're choosing to prosecute and who they're choosing not to prosecute and try to tell me that's not by design look at who who's funded these prosecutors a person soros who grew up destabilizing currencies across small nations he's just stepped it up a little bit yeah so the
Starting point is 02:39:24 united states is in their sights because if they could take down the United States, they pretty much can take the world. That's right. Yeah. And of course, Soros broke the bank of England, you know? Uh, yeah. Many people point out, you know, his company quantum, you know, they, they use that in, um, uh, the latest bond films as obvious reference, I think to him, but yeah, it is, it is truly
Starting point is 02:39:43 amazing, uh, to see what is happening with all this stuff. And it doesn't show any signs of getting better. As a matter of fact, they're just doubling down. And it's across all. There's no conspiracy to see here, Jason. It's just that they're all happening to do the same thing at the same time. And we saw this all the way through 2020 and 2021. Yeah, and it's not like
Starting point is 02:40:06 they just don't come out, you know, during their meetings and publicly say it, you know, as well. It's not like they don't do that. Right. I know. Yeah. There was actually a video that somebody sent me and it was talking about one health and the WHO. And so it was, I think it was CBN was the news organization that had it there and so i had somebody who's on she's talking about well you know the uh they're trying to set up a world government you know these types of things and so they're moving these powers and these decisions here and so uh youtube uh puts up a disclaimer there from wikipedia saying there is no such thing as a new world order and they're not trying to set up a totalitarian world government and then there's just comment after
Starting point is 02:40:49 comment after comment it's like so then why do they say it out loud you know what do they give us their plants and you tell us that that they're not doing this even though we've seen them it's just ridiculous nobody's buying that anymore but you know you see this with totalitarian governments nobody believed what the Russian the stalinist uh media was telling them at the time. They were all cynical about it. They said there's no news in Izvestia, there's no truth in Pravda, and that's what they called them. And so nobody believes the Ministry of Truth here anymore in the U.S. They've lost all their credibility, but they just continue to go down that path. Another hall of totalitarianism isn't it oh yeah and and it's going to get worse um you know i wanted to talk a little bit about housing stuff so you
Starting point is 02:41:30 know i recently sold my house and i've been watching the markets um well pretty much for 10 years since my wife and i started to crawl out of debt and save up money to you know get our first house and stuff and um what i'm seeing right now is kind of scary and it kind of ties into the whole, uh, CBDC and mark of the beast stuff and, and the whole you'll own nothing and be happy. You'll be a renter. Right. So I was looking it up in the housing. So during the lockdown, a couple of things happened. So COVID ties into it as well. A couple of things happened. So people's incomes kind of went down. A lot of people, the cost of manufacturing a home went up significantly. So the cost of homes went up and that's because of supply chain disruptions and stuff like that. And then you also had a lot of people at home, kind of weird. A lot of people
Starting point is 02:42:20 at home were engaged in small projects. So you go to Lowe's, you couldn't find any like two by fours and stuff like that. So there was a big demand for product and none coming in. So the price went up exponentially. As a matter of fact, my wife's cousin, she had built about 10, 12 years ago, she had built a cabin that she had sold. And I forget what she said, 80,000, 85,000000 something it cost her to build it. It was a house, but it was kind of a cabin style house. She recently bought a property
Starting point is 02:42:52 and went to build the same exact home because she still had the blueprints on it. It was three times the cost. They ended up getting a manufactured home and throw on there. That's all they could afford. This is kind of like, you know, it caused the COVID caused the price of all this to go up. And then people were going ahead and getting it anyway, because, you know, the interest rates were really, really good.
Starting point is 02:43:17 So they getting into these and they're fitting it within their budget. So what happens at that point is all of a sudden it doesn't fit into your budget because the food costs have gone up. Fuel costs have gone up. Maybe someone didn't get their job back. So now BlackRock and Vanguard are coming in and they're snatching up all these homes at pennies on the dollar. And it's interesting. I looked up what kind of homes they're buying. They're buying mostly like medium to small homes that were built in the seventies, single families, and they're flipping them into rentals. So all those affordable first-time home buyers have nothing on the market, nothing on the market whatsoever, unless you can step into a $500,000
Starting point is 02:43:55 home as a first-time home buyer. And you're willing to pay, you know, eight, 9% interest or whatever you can get, you know, that's, that's really bad. And that's another part of it is the interest rates. You know, people can't afford making cars unaffordable, but especially houses unaffordable as they jack up the interest rates. And as things come down the pike is, as you start to have the loss of the U S dollars reserve currency. And, uh, as, uh, the chickens come home to roost on all this money that we have borrowed, but now, you know, higher interest rates, you know,
Starting point is 02:44:27 they're going to sacrifice the economy to try to preserve their financial hegemony. And so it's going to get really rough for people. And that's really going to be the thing that's going to drive everybody into a rental market. It's very difficult for first-time homeowners to be able to get in. And of course you don't hear anything from Biden about helping people first-time home ownership. I haven't heard any of the Republican candidates talking about it either. Have you? No, no. And BlackRock and Vanguard are their buddies making money. And
Starting point is 02:44:56 it's actually theft. It's theft of equity because, you know, people during the lockdown, I know people that were floating a lot of stuff on their credit cards because you know maybe they they lost one income maybe their their spouse couldn't work or whatever maybe they had to stay at home more with their kids so they had to cut their hours if they did keep their job because you know maybe they were essential uh but yeah so they wound up with this massive credit card debt and uh you know maybe they could afford their home still and they're in it like a three percent 3.5% interest rate or whatever. Well, all of a sudden, you've got maybe credit cards, 17, 18, 19% interest or more,
Starting point is 02:45:32 and you got all this debt. So now they come at you with, hey, let's do a debt consolidation loan. Let's redo your house, put a new mortgage on your house. And then, okay, well now I got a choice. I remortgage my house at like a 6% or 7% interest rate or whatever I can get because interest rates went up. But that's better than paying my 19% on my credit card. So I can go ahead and pay those credit cards off. So, okay, we can squeeze this into our budget. Yeah, mortgage is going to be a little bit more. Now we got basically another 10 years tacked onto our mortgage. You're kind of going from square one again, which is beneficial to the banks because on the front end of your mortgage, they're getting more interest than what goes to principal. So they don't want you on the tail end of
Starting point is 02:46:16 that mortgage. They make more money on the front end. But then all of a sudden my food cost goes up, inflation, you got shrinkflation, you got fuel costs, you got everything going up. All of a sudden I have to choose. Do I make my mortgage payment or feed my children? And this is how they're going to usher in what I believe is going to be the mark of the beast. Once this stuff goes to CBDC, then you're going to have to choose. Again, in the same aspect that you have to choose, Am I going to make my mortgage payment or feed my children? You're going to have to choose.
Starting point is 02:46:48 Do I take this mark, uh, this biometric slash chip or whatever it winds up being because we've gone cashless. Do I take this mark and feed my children or not take the mark? That's how they're going to get, get us with it. And,
Starting point is 02:47:02 uh, and we know that because we look at the way that they push this through. You know, WorldCoin is focused right now on the poor countries. And we saw this happening in India with Bill Gates and the Aadhaar system. They would go first to the poor people and say, well, we'll give you payments of something or we'll give you welfare or we'll give you access to medical care. But only if you take this card, only if you take or will give you access to medical care but only
Starting point is 02:47:25 if you take this card only if you take this number this identity that type of thing so they use it to blackmail people who are in financial straits and so they want to put us in financial straits because that's the way that they can uh they can run this scam on us you know and you're talking about jason credit cards i've said and i haven't talked about this for a while, but I said before these other issues became the focus, the lockdown and the vaccine and all the rest of this stuff. I said, why doesn't somebody running for office? If I was going to run for office today, uh, what I would do is I'd make the center point of my campaign, uh, the usury laws, uh, bringing them back, You know, just as people say, we've got to bring back Glass-Steagall, we've got to stop them speculating and all this stuff.
Starting point is 02:48:09 But even more importantly, from a consumer standpoint, to say, how is it that they could borrow money at essentially 0% interest and charge it out at 20%? And then even make it even worse than that if they come up. I've seen stories about people who got into debt with a medical bill. And once they realize that you've got a big medical bill, even if you haven't fallen behind in your payments, they would jack your interest rate up just to take you down. I mean, it's such vicious, predatory, loan sharking, essentially. You know, the type of stuff that the mafia used to do before they had the drug stuff, you know, that they would run. This is so criminal, and it's amazing, and it shows you how these people are owned by
Starting point is 02:48:49 the banks, that nobody, Republican or Democrat, will ever talk about putting a limit on these credit card interest rates or, you know, keeping stuff within a range. I remember when the interest rates got up to like 5% on homes, they said, well, they haven't been at this point since, you know, the 1960s or whatever it was. And I went back and looked to say, well, I wonder what the interest rates, what they were paying people on savings accounts, you know, when they put, so when the interest rates that loan out for houses was like 5%, they were paying people 4% on a savings account.
Starting point is 02:49:19 Now you get like a tiny fraction of 1% typically, you know, for most of the savings accounts, especially with the savings accounts, especially with the big banks, it really is criminal what they've been able to pull off. And it just shows you the power that these banks have over the politicians and how they own these politicians, not just, uh, you know, our housing, the politicians. Well, I remember those days when it was beneficial to have both a checking and a savings account. Yeah. And, you know, the savings was the interest bearing one. checking and a savings account. And the savings
Starting point is 02:49:45 was the interest bearing one. That's where you keep the majority of your money. And then you just shift enough into the checking because that was the easy money to spend without having to go to the bank to draw cash. And that was the point of why have a checking and a savings? Well, that was the reason for it. But talking about the interest rates, I found out I was reading through this BlackRock and stuff like that, looking back at the last housing crisis we had. And did you know that they get a preferential interest rate? Preston Pyshko, Oh yeah. Trey Lockerbie, So when people are getting 3% to 4% interest rate, they're
Starting point is 02:50:15 getting like 1.4%, 1.5%. So when it comes to competing, let's say I'm trying to get one of those 1970s era small houses and I've come up with my down payment, of course, I've trying to get one of those 1970s era small houses and I've come up with my down payment. Of course, I've got to come up with 20%, right? Otherwise I get stuck with PMI. And so they can actually come in and offer more money because they're getting it if they are borrowing the money and not paying cash because they're saving on that interest. So it's not, they have an unfair advantage. These large companies have a unfair advantage. There's no fair competition between a private buyer and these large companies. And I'm telling you, they're out there snatching these houses up. That's probably
Starting point is 02:50:55 why the housing market looked really good because you got all these houses moving around and stuff like that. No, it was them buying, buying up massive amounts of homes that you're going to rent. You're not going to own it. Some of them, they're turning into multifamily homes so they can maximize their, their profits. And it's just, it's just really criminal what they do. You know, why can't I get that 1.5% interest rate? Yeah. Well, because you know, they are the deputized state that's going to push out the ESG for the government that they want. It's just, the whole thing is so criminal. It just, it always infuriates me, the fact that the banks were basically paying no interest to the Fed to get their money. And then of course they pay no interest to the consumers
Starting point is 02:51:33 who have a checking, who have a savings account. But boy, they get, you know, what would have always been usurious interest rates. I mean, the whole reason when they took off the usury laws in the late 1970s, it was because we had that rampant inflation. And I remember, you know, Karen and I, um, you know, got our first jobs and we were both working. And so, uh, we, we got a, a home and we were paying 13% fixed interest on that home. And, um, it was crazy. It was, it was a stupid move. And, um, but you know, they are, um, they're able now to, uh, they said, well, interest rates are so high. We're going to remove the usury cap. You know, they'd prohibited them from loan sharking people and charging them more
Starting point is 02:52:18 than let's say 10% or something. Uh, but they were even charging on the mortgages like 13%. And it got even worse after we got into the market. It still kept going up after that. But, you know, they took that off. But now that they don't pay anything, they still keep these astronomically high rates out there. It amazes me the stuff that people don't pay any attention to that affects them so directly. It's like the jab and they can't make the connection to Trump. They don't make the connection to their standard of living
Starting point is 02:52:49 and what is happening to how they're being exploited by the banks and how both Republicans and Democrats are just fine with it. They don't understand the core of so much of this misery that is out there because we all get distracted and we all start looking at the games between Trump and Pence and all the rest of this stuff. It's just crazy stuff it's just crazy the theater oh yeah and you know what's even more criminal about it and i know this makes angry tigers blood boil um they they do what's called fractional banking so let's just say you have a hundred thousand in the bank saved up they're not paying you nothing hardly anything for interest on the annual. Your APR is very, very, very low.
Starting point is 02:53:26 But then they'll turn around and loan that same $100,000 out 10 times and charge these exorbitant. They basically made money from thin air. And they're charging people interest, high rates of interest on that made up money based off of your money that they're not paying you for. So that is absolutely criminal. It should be illegal. And, and, uh, you know, we took,
Starting point is 02:53:46 we just watched some couple of banks close down because they weren't solvent. I want people to think about this is any bank in the world solvent right now because they've done this fractional banking system. Oh, that's right. And then take a look at what's happening. You're talking about, uh,
Starting point is 02:54:02 uh, residential real estate, the commercial real estate is Gerald Salenti has been pointing out for a couple of years, he said this is a giant problem coming down the pike. And it's starting to arrive now because now after a couple of years of Gerald talking about it, you've now got mainstream media talking about the commercial real estate thing based on the lockdowns and how they've restructured everything. You know, that is a big thing,
Starting point is 02:54:26 and that's got a big exposure to a lot of corporations. And when that starts happening with them, that's going to definitely be something that's going to trickle down. They won't talk about trickle-down economics. Well, this is going to be trickle-down bankruptcies, trickle-down on all of us. They're going to be trickling on all of us with these bankruptcies. Was it Kamala Harris just within the last week had said,
Starting point is 02:54:48 which is contrary to Bidenomics working. So I don't know what Bidenomics is. I think it's a made-up word. But she made the statement, and I wouldn't doubt it because I know people in this situation. She said that most Americans are $400 unexpected crisis away from bankruptcy. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:55:05 And now think about it in this context with, with what Gerald talks about, you've got, you know, with, with big business and in the cities and stuff like that, commercial real estate also comes all the small satellite businesses, your,
Starting point is 02:55:18 your mom and pop restaurants, your gas stations, things like that. And those are the people right there that work at those places that are $400 away from bankruptcy. So when they're put out of, and it happened during the lockdown, foreclosures. Foreclosures are up, but I had a number here. Just from February to March this year, foreclosures went up 20%. And those are people that worked at those places, and now they can't afford to make their mortgage payment and pay their pay their uh feed their kids and stuff like that or keep their electricity turned on the secondary and tertiary order effects of of even the commercial
Starting point is 02:55:56 market is going to be horrible down the road oh yeah yeah yeah you talk you know you mentioned earlier you know the people that might have been staying at home or had a job that had kids at home because they were essential, and that's the other thing that really sticks in my craw about all this stuff. As I've said many times, Hillary said that we were despicable. Trump said we were nonessential. I mean, it's like, what would you rather be? I'd rather be hated on than be told that I can't have a job and that type of thing. I mean, it's just the contempt that they have for us, both Republican and Democrat. It's just beyond belief that they can continue
Starting point is 02:56:32 to do this and that we continue to think that there's somehow the solution to this. And of course, the solution to this is to try to make sure that you've got something set aside that is going to be stable. Because so many people, and I know certainly we're in this situation, you know, all of our money is essentially tied up in our home. What happens if we lose income? What happens if we lose the home? Uh, you know, you can't sell it. If everybody's having that problem, we've already been through that just in 2008, 2007, 2008, we saw that happen. You know of people got into financial issues, didn't have enough depth, but then they could not sell their home because there weren't any buyers out there that could buy it under those conditions.
Starting point is 02:57:12 And now we're going to see this, and we saw a lot of stuff that was snatched up by these big companies, but nothing at all like what is coming. One other thing I would say too,ason tying it back to uh this chaos that's been engendered by these soros district attorneys and the non-prosecution of looting and that type of stuff because that's really what is happening now it's not even shoplifting it's organized looting think about how they're preparing the urban population for this because once everything happens and people lose everything and they lose it, of course,
Starting point is 02:57:47 they're not going to have any qualms about going out and looting everything. I mean, it is going to be total. This kind of chaos that you're seeing in San Francisco and other places like that is a training exercise. They're trying to, you know, get people acclimated,
Starting point is 02:58:01 uh, to, uh, the fact that it's going to be massive lootingoting once economic downturn comes that everybody's expecting. And you're going to see, hopefully don't see it, but it's going that way, a civil war. Yes. You're going to have those who have saved. And like my wife and I, we don't have any debt for the most part other than our home now.
Starting point is 02:58:22 No credit card debt. We're going to be growing our own food. And people are going to resent that, that they don't have stuff that we do. And so they're going to come. And I mean, we seen it, uh, in, in St. Louis where the BLM folks went into the nicer supposedly white neighborhood or whatever. They just don't like that. You have something that they don't. And that those people, I don't think they would feel that way if they weren't goaded into feeling that way, like people like Maxine Waters and Al Sharpton. That's what all the CRT stuff is about and all the reparations and everything.
Starting point is 02:58:54 It's a sense of entitlement to steal, you know, is what they're building here. You deserve it. These people don't deserve it. They're privileged and they're exploiters. You know, it's this kind of class warfare that we have never seen before in this country. We always saw class warfare in Europe, but they decided that they would inculcate class warfare here by doing it along racial lines. And that's why you had these Marxist revolutionaries back in the 70s like Bill Ayers said, what's going to work for us is we're going to use white skin privilege and we're going to
Starting point is 02:59:25 build this as a racial conflict instead of a class struggle we'll have a race struggle in america and we'll be able to set people up that way i've got a couple of tips here i want to read and thank you people um on rumble super faith thank you very much that's very generous i appreciate that saying enjoying the show this morning with my dad in Talbot, Tennessee. Oh, cool. I drove this time in my 98 4Runner with 316,500 original miles. I doubt we'll see an electric car in 25 years of that kind of mileage. No, you won't.
Starting point is 02:59:59 The battery would long be gone by that time. Thank you so much. And on Rumble, we have BusyB777. So many nuances to the COVID deception. We must never stop discussing it because it is so easy to forget the mind boggling amount of different ways that they attacked us. And again, they've not removed anything, have they? They're consolidating uh, they're consolidating what they took and, um, you know, planning for the next, uh, aggressive push. And, uh, that's, that's, uh, what I think is coming down the line. Tell us a little bit about, we've only got a couple of minutes left. Tell us a little bit about, uh, the programs that, that you've got and,
Starting point is 03:00:37 and, uh, some of the things that you've got on the nights of the storm so that people can see, um, you know, the, the schedule that other people have. I know you've got the foxhole, and Angry Tiger has got his program as well. People can find the links at thenightsofthestorm.com. But basically, you go out on Twitter for the most part, right? Or do you have another platform that you're broadcasting on now? So Twitter and Rumble for the most part. I think we sometimes are on Odyssey, but there's stuff I've got to do after the fact to, to make it stay there. So, but yeah, Twitter, um, at a night. So TS and then rumble nights of the storm. Uh, we're on, uh, what time it's nine. I'm sorry. Nine to 10 Eastern. I, my time zone changed in my head. So I got to do the math. But you can go to the website.
Starting point is 03:01:28 And Tiger actually does two shows. Tiger does his Tiger and Snake financial report on Fridays. And then on Wednesdays, he does the Tiger's Den. And again, the schedule is out on nights of the storm. So tomorrow, we have one of your listeners coming on, Brian Taylor. He's going to be talking about nanotech. He found some interesting articles're going to talk about nanotech and then the following week i'm very excited audi mrr is coming on oh great yeah yeah and he's going to talk about a little bit about the uh the trans agenda and what they're doing to children and stuff like that oh that's good yeah
Starting point is 03:01:57 i had a couple of uh items i didn't get to today really sad there There was a 33-year-old individual in Canada, and I forget how long it's been. It's been over a decade since he had bottom surgery, as they call it. And he is in so much pain and so much misery that he wants to take his life. And you know, in Canada, they're pushing people for euthanasia. But he put in his application to be killed in Canada, which they're more than happy to give that to most people. But because it would reflect on their trans agenda, they will not let him have that. It's absolutely amazing.
Starting point is 03:02:37 And he's writing about that. There was another teen who went through surgery begging his peers not to do that it is just it's so insidious isn't it you know who would have thought we'd see something like this it's evil it's absolutely evil i mean uh murdering children you know i i think abortion is murder yes um you know from the moment conception it's it's has its own DNA. I think you're being too harsh. Really? As Trump would say.
Starting point is 03:03:08 It's really demonic stuff. Yeah, it is demonic. Yeah. When you look at it, how do you destroy the human race? That's always been Satan's objective. Well, come after the children, right? And conversely, what is the sign of a revival and renewal of a society God turning the hearts of the fathers to the children and the children
Starting point is 03:03:32 to the father right but it's we're so far away from that just exactly the opposite it's great talking to you Jason thank you it's been wonderful to know you from a distance we haven't gotten, but all the things that you've done to help people, I really do appreciate that. TheNightsOfTheStorm.com is where you'll find the schedule for their program and for so many others because they really have been great at setting up a community of people whose commentary I think you can really trust. Thank you so much, Jason. Good luck. Thank you so much, Jason. Good luck. The David Knight Show is a critical thinking super spreader. If you've been exposed to logic by listening to the David Knight show,
Starting point is 03:04:29 please do your part and try not to spread it. Financial support or simply telling others about the show causes this dangerous information to spread farther. People have to trust me. I mean, trust the science. Wear your mask. Take your vaccine. Don't ask questions. Using free speech to free minds.
Starting point is 03:05:05 It's the David Knight show.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.