The David Knight Show - 6Feb24 The Abomination of "SWAT Teams" Now Celebrated as Sport

Episode Date: February 8, 2024

5G Health HazardsThe obsession with ID never ends. Now even BREATH BIOMETRICS — identifying you by how you breatheFrom Madison Square Gardens to Italian Football League sports stadiums are the new ...test sites for surveillanceThe Abomination of "SWAT Teams" Now Celebrated as SportFollowing on the revelations of Madison Square Garden & Italian Football league spying on fans with biometric face scans, Dubai organizes an international competition of SWAT teams — the epitome of militarized, warrantless, violent policingThe demise of the petrodollar is complete as Saudis join BRICs — now 27 nationsGREAT SCOT! Tucker Carlson just realized that BigPharma ads are all about buying the media. Is he that stupid? No. Here's the clip...Nightshade — the poison pill that allows artists to push back against AI plagiarism Musk — hallucinagenics and DMT — the sorcery version of PharmakeiaFind out more about the show and where you can watch it at TheDavidKnightShow.comIf you would like to support the show and our family please consider subscribing monthly here: SubscribeStar https://www.subscribestar.com/the-david-knight-showOr you can send a donation throughMail: David Knight POB 994 Kodak, TN 37764Zelle: @DavidKnightShow@protonmail.comCash App at: $davidknightshowBTC to: bc1qkuec29hkuye4xse9unh7nptvu3y9qmv24vanh7Money is only what YOU hold: Go to DavidKnight.gold for great deals on physical gold/silverFor 10% off Gerald Celente's prescient Trends Journal, go to TrendsJournal.com and enter the code KNIGHTBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-david-knight-show--2653468/support.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Music Using free speech to free minds. You're listening to The David Knight Show. As the clock strikes 13, it's Tuesday, the 6th of February, Year of Our Lord 2024. Well, today we're going to begin by talking about 5G health hazards. There's an excellent expose that is beginning on this. We'll also talk about the long con. You know, we've got long COVID, don't we?
Starting point is 00:01:12 Well, we've also got a very long con that is being run. And of course, whenever you do a confidence game, a con game, you've got to get people's confidence. And so a lot of these people who were really not there with us are trying to regain your confidence. And we're going to talk about that. We also have joining us today, Davis Yance, the Christian attorney who was involved in the fight of the Navy SEALs. They've now done a documentary about it. It's called SEALs Beat Biden. I'm sure we would all want to see that. But he's also going to be talking to us about the FACE Act. The FACE Act, where they are sending people to jail more than a decade for peacefully protesting abortion at these murder clinics. We'll be right back. Well, I want to begin with 5G health hazards. It's interesting to me that when you talk about the health issues,
Starting point is 00:02:14 when you talk about the surveillance issues, both of those, both of those are dismissed as conspiracy theories. There's nothing to be concerned about with 5G, right? Well, it's harder to prove. It's very obvious what the surveillance issues are with it. I mean, just take a look during the Trump administration, the mania of all of government, including Trump, to say, well, we don't want the Chinese to set up this 5G thing because they'll be spying on us.
Starting point is 00:02:42 Well, they know that because they'll be spying on us with the 5g you know it's a so it's a who gets to spy on us fight spy versus spy and uh it is like man magazine isn't it but you know there's really no question and they even admit it tacitly even though they poo-poo the idea that they would ever use 5G to determine where you are and determine where, you know, geofence and make you a suspect based on where you are, like they did on January the 6th, or to profile people based on their religious and political beliefs and that type of thing. No, they'd never do that.
Starting point is 00:03:21 They'll do that and much, much more. But the health effects are more difficult to prove. So this is an article from State of the Nation. You can also find it on theburningplatform.com. Radio frequency. Microwave and millimeter wave engineer explains the science behind the propagation of 5G into the human body and offers mitigation advice. That's the key thing, too. This is not just about the effects that it has, but it's also about propagation into the body.
Starting point is 00:03:54 And on the Burning Platform, they write a note before this article that said, our readership's been waiting for this conclusive expose since a nationwide 5G rollout was first announced years ago. Truly, it doesn't get any more compelling and authoritative than these revelations about 5G and how it really affects the human body. And so the engineer writes, this scientific breakdown is only the first in a series of highly consequential disclosures made. And I'm sorry sorry they wrote that about the deep insider uh he is a credentialed radio frequency microwave millimeter wave engineer he has 25 plus years of experience and so he talks about what the rf frequencies are about about where they are talks about the difference of wavelengths he talks about how to mitigate
Starting point is 00:04:45 some of this stuff and how sometimes maybe some of your mitigation um uh attempts might actually exacerbate this he says before we again take a look at 5g fifth generation 1g deployed in the 1980s old school phones that only the very wealthy people had and i remember when we had the video stories in 1980s and we had uh uh we were laughing about it because uh some lady pulled up and she didn't you know that we had like a we had a drop box but a lot of them would want to turn it in by hand so sometimes a double park and uh in many instances the police would be there and immediately give them a ticket even though there wasn't anything uh busy about it even if they left their motorized so she pulls up and she uh uses the phone to call us and says i'm parked outside
Starting point is 00:05:36 can you come and get the video it's like well okay you know it's like and uh we were all laughing about it is like she's so rich she can make a phone call to tell us to walk that far. She doesn't want to get out of her car and walk in. Because at that time, it cost a couple of dollars to make that phone call, which is the price of the entire video rental. It was kind of crazy in terms of the economics. But that's the way that it was at the very beginning. It's easy to forget that because these things have become ubiquitous
Starting point is 00:06:04 and very cheap relatively. He says these phones are about six by six by twelve plus or minus a few inches many of the people who use these phones had a lot had a region in their brain the size of a walnut that had been literally cooked he says 2g came after that 3G is the old school flip phones of the early 2000s. Then you had 4G and 4G LTE. 5G is the next generation rolling out worldwide. And to compare the bandwidth, he says, you know, 4G LTE offers tens of megabits per second. Whereas 5G offers hundreds of megabits per second and to the gigabits per second, whereas 5G offers hundreds of megabits per second into the gigabits per second.
Starting point is 00:06:46 So it's going to be 10 to 100 times faster, essentially. There are multiple variants of 5G being deployed around the world. 5G in China has data encoded on the 28 gigahertz microwave carrier. 5G in Europe is supposed to operate at that same carrier frequency. Verizon wants to be like the rest of the world and operate at 28 gigahertz, but the FCC recently auctioned off 37 gigahertz, 39 gigahertz, 47 gigahertz for use in 5G applications. Why would they do that?
Starting point is 00:07:16 Well, they want it to be a different standard. And I think this is, again, an effort to block Chinese technology. So if the Chinese, and even in Europe and other places, if they're going to do 28 gigahertz, we'll do a different carrier frequency. I think that's really what this is about, because they know that 5G is a substrate, the substrate of the 15-minute cities
Starting point is 00:07:40 and the smart cities and all the rest of this stuff. They have to be able, in real time, to have the bandwidth to be able to monitor you. And, um, and that's what these things provide. And so then he talks about,
Starting point is 00:07:53 uh, wavelength. And, and the important thing about this is that, um, when you look at, he mentions this has been used in crowd control, uh,
Starting point is 00:08:03 for anybody that tells you that, uh, it's just a conspiracy theory that electromagnetic frequencies like cell phone frequencies are going to affect you. Of course, we had Alan Fry, who worked for the U.S. Navy, and he did a lot of experiments. As a matter of fact, he identified the Fry effect. You've heard me speak of this many times. In the same way that a microwave oven, which again is electromagnetic frequencies, is just a different spectrum. A microwave oven can heat and cook anything that has water in it. And it was discovered by accident. Some technicians who had their coffee sitting on top of one of these radar units, noticed that the coffee was getting hot.
Starting point is 00:08:46 So they investigated that, and they realized that they could heat it up with the same frequency, EMF, that was used for the radar. And so the very first microwave ovens were called radar ranges, if you remember that from Amana. And then if you look at these other frequencies, what Fry discovered, he and an assistant discovered that at a different frequency, and I don't remember what the frequency was, that they would hear clicks. And it was very distinct. And so what it was doing is it's triggering something in the body, some auditory nerves or something like that. So they heard this clicking sound at certain frequencies and that was the fry effect and so
Starting point is 00:09:29 he started and he got funding from the navy but he's the only person who ever got funding from the navy and they severely limited his or the military the government or anything that to study any of these effects he's the only one and they severely limited it and terminated it. But, um, I mentioned that because when we had these reports of, um, you know, people, the, um, Havana effect, they said we heard clicks and things like that. We think we're under, you know, and then they had all kinds of other symptoms, neurological symptoms and other things like that.
Starting point is 00:10:02 But it began with the clicking stuff. And so I looked at that and i reported at the time i said i think this is probably you know directed energy weapons at them emf of some sort and the continued exposure or maybe it's different frequencies multiple frequencies are hitting with whatever is causing these long-term effects but of course they were very anxious to poo-poo that why well because if you start asking questions about microwave ovens or about the fry effect or about the havana effect you might start asking questions about 5g and you should and so uh another one that he mentions here he says when you get to 90 gigahertz, he says, um, and he talks about
Starting point is 00:10:45 wavelength is the inverse of the frequency. And so as the frequency goes up, the wavelength gets smaller. And so, uh, he says, when you go to really high frequency, like 90 gigahertz, then you get a very small wavelength that doesn't penetrate your body, but all that energy is focused on your skin. And they use that. He doesn't mention it in the body, but all that energy is focused on your skin. And they use that. He doesn't mention it in the article, but they use that for crowd control. Hitting people with 90 gigahertz EMF, it makes it feel like their skin is on fire. And they use that to repel crowds and to control crowds.
Starting point is 00:11:28 And the reason for that is because all of that energy is on your skin where you feel it very sensitively when it's not confined to your skin when it can penetrate deeper and the 5g is anywhere from a quarter to a half of that frequency and so when it penetrates deeper it has different effects and all of these different emfs have different effects and so when it penetrates deeper, it has different effects, and all of these different EMFs have different effects, and so he talks about the longer the wavelength, the more it'll penetrate into your body, and so going to the other extreme, you have the extremely low frequency, the ELF, E-L-F, extremely low frequencies.
Starting point is 00:12:02 This is the way that they communicate with submarines the navy did because the um the wavelength was so long it could penetrate down into the depths of water and the submarines could pick it up in order to put out that extremely low frequency the elf they had to have an antenna it was incredibly large large, and they put it in the Midwest, these big open fields and stuff, you know, stretch this thing out. It was unbelievable. I don't know exactly how big it was, but it had an incredibly long wavelength. Now, one other thing, and then we'll move on to this again,
Starting point is 00:12:38 as just kind of background for it. Do you remember the Navy Yard shooter? You remember how he went nuts and he started shooting people and he had engraved on his gunstock, this is my ELF weapon? And a lot of people were like, what is he playing games or something? This is his elf weapon?
Starting point is 00:12:56 I think it had to do because the Navy is into ELF. And because if you go back and you look at Mind Wars, that book that was written by Michael Aquino in the 1980s, in it, he talked about ELF. And he talked about ELF in terms of modifying people's behavior. He said we can use that to change their behavior. Was that what they were doing? Did this guy catch on to it? I don't know.
Starting point is 00:13:22 But it also has other uh it has physiological effects some people the elf makes them nauseous but it penetrates deeply so he says um the elf is going to penetrate very deeply into your body says everything else is somewhere in between he said human blood is very good at converting radio frequency microwave and millimeter waves into heat this is the basic premise on which many medical devices work he says and then there is also a 7.83 hertz field now this is not gigahertz megahertz kilohertz this is just hertz it just hurts it doesn't hurt um yeah you can hear um typically 20 uh 20 hertz is the lowest sound that you can hear lower than that it just sounds like individual clicks so that's the long the lowest uh it sounds
Starting point is 00:14:14 like a you know continuous um note to you uh but any lower frequencies just sound like a you know a beating that happens so this is down to just under eight hertz he says that field exists everywhere in the universe and if you isolate a person from this field by using a thick steel faraday cage you will die in about three to four weeks please don't try this at home and if you do you are forewarned. I wonder, let's not tell the CIA about this. Anyway, if you must completely isolate yourself, do it in an earth mound house or in a house that's built into the side of a mountain. Much safer. And it's far better to convert the waves to heat than to try to isolate them out completely.
Starting point is 00:15:03 And he says one way to do that, and this is where you might want to pay attention, this is something I had not seen before. So far, I knew all this, but I didn't know this. He said carbon impregnated foam is known to be one of the best and most cost-effective ways to convert radio frequency, microwave, and millimeter waves into heat.
Starting point is 00:15:24 Hey, we got a use for CO2. We don't need to try to stick it into the ground, pump it across the continent and stick it in the ground. We can put it in foam and we can maybe block this stuff out. He says, once converted to heat, there is no wave. Use carbon loaded foam if you can. More is better, but you can eventually run into practical limitations, and make sure you do not build perfect squares and rectangles to avoid cavity resonances.
Starting point is 00:15:54 Alternatively, drywall, wood, fiberglass, insulation, books, furniture, mattresses, common glass, all sorts of other common stuff will convert radio frequency, microwave, and millimeter waves into heat. Remember, lower frequencies penetrate deeper and need more thickness than higher frequencies. So 5G that's operating at 28 gigahertz is stopped dead in its tracks by drywall, especially at a humidity level of 55% or 60%. T-Mobile's 400 megahertz 5G penetrates deep and it blasts right through your house and everything in it.
Starting point is 00:16:32 And this is why, as their slogan says, it travels farther and delivers the strongest signal. So I'm not going to go into any more detail. I'm just giving this to you as a reference and trying to tease this to you because it does go into a great deal of detail in its first part of several of these. But he talks about how 5G propagates into your mouth and your nostrils. It goes down your throat, into your lungs. It will also propagate down your ear canals,
Starting point is 00:17:01 and it will excite your inner ear and the nerves and that entire region of your brain that is in close proximity to your inner ear so he says i'm sure by now you're freaking out and saying how can i stop this and so um he has some um very simple uh ways to stop this again, I'm not going to go into more detail about this. You can find this at theburningplatform.com and you will want to reference this because it is very practical information that we have. And it's important for us to understand
Starting point is 00:17:38 how they really don't care about our health. They don't care, certainly, about our privacy. They want to violate that in every way they can. But this has been around for a very long time. 1986, as you all know, was when Fauci got his vaccine, his childhood vaccine, Legal Immunity Act passed so that you couldn't come after the vaccine companies. That was 1986. In 1996, Bill Clinton ushered through the telecommunications act
Starting point is 00:18:09 that said you're not going to be able to remove any of these antennas because of health concerns so why'd they put that in if there's no health concerns it's an admission that there are health concerns that it is not a conspiracy theory to be concerned about this stuff and of course he's in the part of the article that is here he doesn't even get into uh the um the intensity of the signals and signals are going to dissipate with a square of the distance from the antenna so if you go twice as far it's going to be one quarter uh but um uh you know they don't even talk about that. And that's one of the real issues with 5G, because they're going to have so many antennas.
Starting point is 00:18:52 They will say, well, it's a lower power level than some of these cell phone things, but it is line of sight. And you are not going to be as far from these antennas. So that is a big part of it the other part of it is is that they multiplex and so uh if you're using the 5g signal in a city they might have several line of sight antennas that are going to focus on you for a moment and then they will focus on somebody else for a moment and then on and on but you'll
Starting point is 00:19:25 get several antennas focusing on you but the key thing is that there's so many of them and uh so you know um it's that is actually going to increase the level of exposure to most people but the bottom line is with the telecommunications act they said you're not going to be able to object to these things and get them removed based on health effects we will only do something about it and we'll not remove them but we will cover them if you don't like the way it looks if you object to it on aesthetics we will change it but not for your health isn't that interesting that is both an admission that there's a health issue and an admission that they don't care that there's a health issue and that they're defiant, that their agenda for control is more important than your life and your health. And of course,
Starting point is 00:20:15 we see that all the time with the wars that they push us into. They've got their geopolitical ambitions, the money that they want to make. It it's rich man war and a poor man's fight and they don't really care about you you're expendable as hillary clinton said you're deplorable as trump said you're non-essential and so they really don't care about any of this stuff and they're going to push their 5g agenda through one way or the other but there are some things that you can do and when they tell you that there's nothing you can do about these antennas that's not true either and let me come back to this i harp on this all the time we've got to stop thinking that we can stop this that
Starting point is 00:20:57 we can purify and baptize this uh federal government It hates us. It is our enemy. It is our sworn enemy. It works with the globalists, and that's true of the Republicans and the Democrats. How do you stop this stuff locally? Even though they said you can't get rid of these
Starting point is 00:21:16 with the 1996 Telecommunications Act, you have several jurisdictions where they did. In New York and California and other places like that, typically liberal places because conservative places, the people are more business oriented. And it's like, oh, these are these people. They're worried about health effects. We don't care about health effects. Let's make some money or whatever.
Starting point is 00:21:39 Right. But in places where they're typically leftist and they care about that kind of stuff, or at least say that they do, in some cases they do at the local level. And so they had decided, well, we got all this land that's available to us. So let's put an antenna cluster right here at this elementary school, for example, in New York. And they did that. And they got a cancer cluster of students, of teachers and things like that. And they said, well, you can't remove that. And I said, watch us. And they remove that. And I said, watch this.
Starting point is 00:22:05 And they removed it. And that has happened in several local jurisdictions. I keep hammering this down. Everybody is so focused on the presidency. Would you like Trump or Biden? Who's going to win, Trump or Biden? No, you're going to win. You're going to lose if you focus on Trump and Biden.
Starting point is 00:22:22 You win when you focus locally. Things can get much worse. As a matter of fact, there's an article about one local sheriff and all the different cars that he confiscated and all the rest of the stuff. If you don't pay any attention to local politics, you can get a sheriff like that. If you pay attention to local sheriffs, you might be able to get a good sheriff who will stand in the gap and intervene. And if you pay attention, local sheriffs, you might be able to get a good sheriff who will stand in the gap and intervene. And if you pay attention, you might get a good town council that's going to stop and take down these antenna clusters. That's where you can stand and fight this stuff. You can do it with nullification.
Starting point is 00:23:03 Most of the stuff that is done by the federal government, they have no authority to do. They bribe people, which is what I harp about with all of the Trump's executive order on March the 13th. That was bribing people. If you had good people at the local level, they would not accept that bribe in the same way that if he bribes the hospital, if you got somebody that's good there, it's like, well, I'm not going to put these people in this invasive ventilator. That's crazy. We've never done that before.
Starting point is 00:23:23 That'll kill people. And I'm going to give them health care. I'm going to do it the way I know is right to do it instead of taking the order. Some of these people. But if you got bad people, they'll take the tremendous amount of money. And it was unbelievable. The amount of money, $13,000 to call them COVID patient, another $39,000 to put them on a ventilator and kill them.
Starting point is 00:23:42 And while you're killing them, you can make a 20% bonus on everything that you, that you do there. You more than pay for the ventilator with one patient more than pay for it. Have a fantastic profit, that money, that love of money, the root of all evil. That's how the federal government gets around all of this stuff.
Starting point is 00:24:01 They bluff and they bribe and they blackmail and they typically do it through money. And you've got to have people at the local level who have the character that they're not going to be bribed or bullied or blackmailed. And we're going to talk about that in the fourth hour, uh, some, uh, good Navy seals and that the trailer for that film begins with a vice Admiral who says this was the most important battle we ever had. And it was, we have the most important battle we ever had. And it was.
Starting point is 00:24:30 We have the military is constantly involved in preemptive wars and attacks in places that we've not declared war. This was a time when these Navy SEALs stood for the Constitution and stood for our rights as Americans. And it was their rights as well. But let's talk a little bit about what is happening with war. We have Mika Brzezinski, the spawn of Zbigniew Brzezinski, the guy who essentially created the Trilateral Commission. He was the one they put in place to keep Jimmy Carter. He was Jimmy Carter's control person.
Starting point is 00:25:09 Like Kissinger was Nixon's control person. And he wrote a book, very interesting book prior. I think it was prior to his book about that became the basis for the Trilateral Commission, to create world government by creating three economic common marketplaces. And then as you started to unify everybody through economics, then you could do a political unification. And in order to get that political unification, it had to be about a common currency. Does that sound familiar?
Starting point is 00:25:47 Is that kind of what we're seeing now? We've got the World Economic Forum, right? Economic Forum. You've got the Nazis like Klaus Schwab. Tried to do it by force a couple of times. And now they want to set up a Reich that is going to be economic. And it's working for them. It worked in Europe.
Starting point is 00:26:07 Created a common market. They created the euro, used the euro to pull everything together into a stronger political union. This is what they're trying to do now. Using economic tactics and then a common currency, the worldwide CBDCs, in order to pull us together. But Zbigniew Brzezinski wrote a book. It was called Between Two Ages. And in it, he talked about the coming technocratic age, is what he called it, where he said, we're going to know everything that everybody's doing even before they're going to do it.
Starting point is 00:26:40 Total surveillance. He did that 50 plus years ago and so war is on the agenda and his spawn mika brzezinski on msnbc had chucky schumer on to sell this stuff and she actually asked him if you know they've got the border bill that's come out schumer and mcconnell and lankford put this thing together and uh they um they're pushing this bill out and uh there's resistance and so um uh she asked him asked chuck schumer whether vladimir putin is behind the house republicans opposition to this bill. He's their favorite whipping boy.
Starting point is 00:27:31 What do you say to Speaker Johnson who says this bill is worse than he thought or whatever it was that he said? I mean, how does one not see how these House Republicans are responding to this bill as not the hand of Trump or even Putin at play, she says. And here's how he responded. Well, if we don't aid Ukraine, Putin will be walk all over Ukraine. We will lose the war and we could be fighting in Eastern Europe in a NATO ally in a few years. Americans won't like that. If we don't help Israel defend itself against Hamas, that perpetual war will go on and on and on. Ukraine could be gone. The border will
Starting point is 00:28:12 get much worse. War in the Middle East will get worse, maybe bringing us into it. Since when has our intervention ever helped anything? Since when have we won a war since World War II? Our intervention has always made things worse. It's always drug us in. It's always killed Americans. Will Americans be fighting in Russia if they run out of Ukrainians? Are we going to fight them, you know, as many people said at the beginning of this? Looks like we're going to fight Russia to the last Ukrainian.
Starting point is 00:28:45 Maybe we'll fight them beyond the last Ukrainian. Maybe they can get a world war started. That's what people like Brzezinski and Schumer want. And, um, you know, when you look at this, uh,
Starting point is 00:28:58 you know, he pulls in Trump and I, I agree, you know, it's not in Trump's interest to solve this, just like it wasn't in Reagan's interest to solve the, um, the Iranian hostages that had been captured by the Ayatollah Khomeini when,
Starting point is 00:29:13 when they took over from the Shah of Iran. And so Reagan worked with Iran and he worked with Iran to, um, so that he could beat Carter. And then he worked with Iran after, because part of the agreement with Iran was, you keep these hostages here until Reagan takes office. Not until Reagan wins, but until Reagan takes office. And they kept them there from a couple of months,
Starting point is 00:29:38 two or three months between the election and Reagan being sworn in, released them that day. They prolonged their being hostages for a very long time, not even just to win the presidency, but to make Reagan look better. They kept them there for several more months. And the agreement, of course, was to sell them parts for their state-of-the-art jets. And then they had a big black budget,
Starting point is 00:30:07 and they used that for an illegal war in Central America. And so, yeah, they have many different ways they can run this. All of that was a scheme of Wild Bill Casey, one of the founders of the CIA. But when you look at what Schumer is holding out there, he says, Israel is going to be fighting these people forever. Well, of course they are. Of course they are. I take the Orthodox Jew position. And that is, God has promised this land to Israel, and he will fulfill that promise, but he will do it. And he will do it in a way that brings glory to him.
Starting point is 00:30:48 Not out of the strength of these people. Certainly not out of the corrupt hand of politicians like Biden and Bibi. God is not going to bless that. He doesn't need them. If he's got a plan, he can do it on his own and he will do it on his own. That's one of the reasons why the Orthodox Jews don't sign up for the military. It's why the Orthodox Jews oppose the Israeli government. Oh, we're told anybody who opposes Netanyahu and the political Israeli government is anti-Semitic. No, no, the people who actually
Starting point is 00:31:24 believe in God and believe God's promises, unlike Ben Shapiro, who, well, I'll take the, uh, I'll take the land, but I don't believe any of the rest of the stuff you said. Parting of the Red Sea. That's a myth. Didn't happen. It was a wind or something. That's Ben Shapiro. But I believe that part where God gives us the land. I'll, I'll, I'll stay with that. No, Ben, you're going to see a miracle or you're going to see nothing. It's going to be a constant state of war. God does not bless. We look out through the history of the Old Testament. God does not bless a country that does things in its own strength and rejects God. He doesn't bless us as individuals when we do that type of thing either. To give you an idea, i talked about this yesterday i showed you this micro flyer uh northwestern university developed the first flying microchip look at how small that is compared to an ant teeny tiny smallest ever
Starting point is 00:32:18 human-made flying structure this project has been to add capability for winged flight to electronic circuit chips with the idea that those capabilities would allow us to distribute highly functional with miniaturized electronic devices that could sense the environment for disease tracking population surveillance maybe monitoring of environmental contamination that's a clip pretty uh pretty creepy i population surveillance disease tracking protecting the environment all of the big ticket items and they're doing that for them at northwestern university and bragging about it everything it seems like these universities are working on now everything is about id and surveillance and tracking isn't it and here's
Starting point is 00:33:02 another one i showed you that yesterday. Scientists at Cornell University have created a new way to identify people. You know, they've got so many different ways they can do it. They can do it by looking at your face. They can do it by looking at the way that you walk. They can look at your gait. And here's another one that they're coming up with. Breath biometrics. Breath biometrics. A user authentication system based on human exhaled breath physics. The way they describe it, they said, this is a pioneering approach.
Starting point is 00:33:40 It attempts to build a biometric system that works purely based on the fluid mechanics governing exhaled breath you know we talk about fluid mechanics um water air that's all fluids right just a difference in density it really struck me um i i had a a bit you know because we had to take this as part of our engineering core some fluid uh classes and um and so we were we went to sea world with the kids and they have it set up so that you can uh you're kind of under the water level but you can also see above it so they've got the glass there where you can see the penguins up above walking around and then you can see the penguins when they're swimming underwater and the penguins jump above walking around. And then you can see the penguins when they're swimming underwater.
Starting point is 00:34:27 And the penguins jump in the water and they start swimming. I looked at it and it's like, they're flying. They're flying. That's the difference. That's fluid mechanics. The penguins have not been designed and they're too heavy. And their wings are not sufficient to be able to fly in the the less dense air but they can fly in the water underwater and that's what they were doing and then i thought about it and i thought you know it's kind of interesting how
Starting point is 00:34:54 did moses know when he separated the three days of uh creation right and he you know well the the he had the um all the animals in the sea and in the air were created on day five and then they all the land animals that walked or crawled or creeped or whatever on day six now that how would why would he classify it that way that's an odd way to group things you know birds in the air well of course it's fluid mechanics it's the way that they move and he does reference that in on day six but he doesn't reference it on really on day five and why would this guy this nomadic leader why would he be that wise in the ways of science as monty python would say who made you so wise in ways of science well i don't know i was just god told me i don't know he was was just, God told me, I don't know.
Starting point is 00:35:45 He was the one who created it. I thought that was a real interesting evidence of God's creation. But getting back to this, so fluid mechanics, fluid mechanics, when you breathe out that air, they're looking at the fluid mechanics governing the exhaled breath. We test the hypothesis that the structure of turbulence in exhaled human breath can be exploited to build biometric algorithms. Think about that.
Starting point is 00:36:12 The minute differences in your nasal cavity or your head are going to make imperceptible differences, really, in the way you breathe out. And yet they would use this. They'd be able to identify people with a high degree of accuracy, actually. And the other thing about this is you look at the absolute mania, like these micro flyers, like this, the tremendous amount of money. And I guarantee you, I don't know who funded this research at Cornell University.
Starting point is 00:36:50 It would take me a long time to find that out. But I guarantee you that if you look at it, you're going to find DARPA somewhere in there. You're going to find the military industrial complex, the Pentagon, all this money that they've got. Everything that they do is weaponized to track and surveil us and control us and kill us. Their involvement in the mRNA vaccines. So he tests the hypothesis of the structure of turbulence and exhaled human breath can be exploited to build biometric algorithms. This work relies on the idea that the extra thoracic airway is unique for every individual making the exhaled breath a biomarker and we stop and think about it you know god has made all of us very unique in one way or the other just like snowflakes and i know that term has been abused but we are like snowflakes not in that sense but in just the infinite variety and uniqueness
Starting point is 00:37:50 and so there's going to be all kinds of things that they can key off of to identify us the user confirmation algorithms performed exceedingly well for the given data set, over 97% true confirmation rate. Isn't that amazing? Our academics are now funded by this dystopian government that has unlimited amounts of money because of the Federal Reserve. Got to get rid of the Federal Reserve. Such tools are expected to have future potential in the area of what? Personalized medicine.
Starting point is 00:38:29 You think I'm going to help little old ladies get across the street with those bionic limbs. It's not going to be used to kill you. And the little robot dogs, they're going to be there to help the little old ladies as well. Yeah. You believe that? I don't believe that.
Starting point is 00:38:43 Um, so, uh, the, uh, as, as we look at this, I just talked about the lawsuit that's going on with Madison Square Garden over facial recognition. And, you know, the left and liberal judge in New York was very angry that they would use that because it's being used for their own benefit. Now, if they're to do it for the government instead of a profit motive, well, that's fine. We don't want to get in the way of that, I'm sure the judge would say. But in this particular instance, as I said yesterday, there's a law firm that was involved in a lawsuit against Madison Square Gardens. They were very angry about that.
Starting point is 00:39:22 So they went to the website and they got pictures of all the people all the people who work for that law firm and one lawyer who was not involved in this case with madison square garden at all goes on a field trip with her child and some other adults and she is identified and whisked out of there and she's embarrassed and angry, and she sues them. And now the judge has said, well, you know, this violates New York's rules that don't allow you to do this for profit or whatever. We're going to let this lawsuit go forward. But isn't it interesting? That was in Madison Square Garden.
Starting point is 00:39:58 And isn't it interesting? This is happening all over the world. It's just a coincidence, isn't it, that all of this stuff is happening at the same time everywhere in the world. Just like it was a coincidence with all the lockdowns and the masks and all the social distancing, all of that nonsense, complete and utter nonsense, didn't pass the sniff test, didn't make any logical sense whatsoever, didn't make any medical sense whatsoever. And of course, now we know it didn't make any difference. But everybody was doing the same thing at the same time. It's almost like they were taking orders. And that's Trump as well as Trudeau.
Starting point is 00:40:32 So you've got the Italian Football League is now instilling facial recognition in all their stadiums. And what are they doing it for? To combat racism. The other excuse that they have everywhere is racist is racist. This was the CEO of the Italian football league said that last week, one player was apparently racially abused during an away game. And so,
Starting point is 00:41:02 you know, he goes to, he's not at home. He goes away. And so the other people are taunting him because he's the, uh, you know, he goes to, he's not at home, he goes away. And so the other people are taunting him because he's the, uh, you know, the visiting team and that type of thing. And so, um, because of that, they didn't have any plans to do this before, of course, right? This is nothing on the horizon, but because of that, in just a short period of time in one week, they now have a plan to equip all of the
Starting point is 00:41:25 stadiums that these teams in the italian football league play in they're going to equip them all with biometric facial identification and they will scan your face as you're entering the stadium they will get your information from the ticket and other things like that. They will make a database of everybody there, and they're going to watch you, and if you behave badly, they're going to turn this over to the police. All of that because some guy was apparently taunted somewhere. I wonder if they were the ones who set up the taunting because this whole thing is a plant.
Starting point is 00:42:03 They had this stuff planned. It's like the underwear bomber, right? And the lawyer Haskell, who says, yeah, I saw them put that guy on the plane. You know, there's a guy in a suit really well-dressed, and this guy is just like out of it. And he goes up and he talks to the person taking the tickets. And he said, I thought this was really strange. What is this guy who is dressed in a very expensive suit doing with this bum who doesn't seem to know what he's doing? So he watched him carefully. And Haskell said that he watched him when he got on the plane.
Starting point is 00:42:31 And that was the guy that was the underwear bomber. And he wanted to testify about that. And the defense attorney used that to negotiate a deal for his client. And then they said, no, we don't want you to testify at all so he got out of the country uh but anyway um you know but they already had the scanners built and ready to go they rolled it out right away because of that and so maybe the same thing was done with these with the italian football league they had this solution all set and planned, designed. They'd already done a feasibility study before this in one week, right?
Starting point is 00:43:14 They've done the feasibility study. They've got all the contractors lined up. They're ready to hit go. The approval of the presidents and the approval of the relevant budget are all that's needed. And, of course, it's interesting to see this kind of stuff happening at Madison Square Garden and at the Italian football leagues and other places like that. Why?
Starting point is 00:43:33 Well, you got a lot of people there. You got a lot of fans. So that's one reason they would do it there. And you got a lot of people who pay a lot of attention to sports, but they pay no attention to politics. They're the lab rats in this experiment. They don't know what's being done to them. And quite frankly, they don't care.
Starting point is 00:43:59 They can tell you every statistic about the players in this sport, but they don't know the big game that's being played against them. And then finally, this story. Biology matters. An obstacle course humbles an all-female SWAT team. They're completely missing the story. This story has, this is on Infowars that was picked up here. And of course, it's been on social media. What they're doing is doing is repackaging a social media tweet from several people but um what they're missing here it's no news is it
Starting point is 00:44:32 that men are better at sports than women we understand that now that that used to be a lie that they fed people about 50 years ago virginia slims and and you had Bobby Riggs who rigged the competition with Billie Jean King because he had already beaten another female tennis player badly. And then he threw that game, according to the people who knew him, he was, and he was a middle aged guy, a middle aged guy. She was at her peak and he'd already beaten a high ranking professional at her peak. They had Jimmy Connors do a match and he didn't rig it. He took on one of the top, took on the top female tennis player, skunked her. Now we've seen this all the time because of the trans stuff.
Starting point is 00:45:19 This is not news. The only thing that's news about this,'s not the the male female angle that's what they focused on they missed the point the point is is that this is SWAT team competition I just talked about how you got people who are clueless about what the government is doing they don't know anything about politics they don't know anything about the government's agenda but they know everything about sports now we're going to take SWAT teams and we're going to put them in competition with each other. And that's what they're doing in Dubai. It's hosted by the Dubai police and it's an international competition.
Starting point is 00:45:57 SWAT teams from all over the world. SWAT teams need to be ended. We need to end these things, but they're popularizing them by having SWAT team competitions. So now you get to cheer for your SWAT team that someday may get a call or the wrong address and show up and kill you in the middle of the night with a no-knock raid. The SWAT teams need to be stopped, not celebrated. And it's not about male versus female competition pathetic uh you know you go back I was just uh looking at YouTube that uh there's
Starting point is 00:46:36 some very early films that um exist and uh people have gone back now with the tools that we have they can take the jerky motion and they can make it smooth and look normal and then of course they can also colorize them very well and so you see these from time to time you know here's uh here's paris in 1899 here's new york in 1905 that type of stuff and it's very interesting to watch it because not just because the architecture and modes of transportation but mainly because the attitudes of the people and how they're dressed everybody walked around dressed more formally than anybody dresses today just walking down the street all the time which I find to be very interesting, but it's also, it's an interesting window into the past. And as I was looking at one yesterday, I saw a, you know, they're taking
Starting point is 00:47:33 pictures of people on the sidewalk and as people are walking around, you got the police officer there, the cop on the beat. And again, this is right after the turn of the century, 19-oh-whatever, I don't remember. And everything's horse-drawn. And the cop in New York has those helmets that the Bobbies used to wear. Maybe they still do, but now I see them. They always now look like American cops. You know, at that time, the first police were the ones who were um uh brought in um uh by the guy's name that's why they called him bobby's because his name was uh his name was bobby i'm having a blank here but
Starting point is 00:48:14 anyway they called him bobby's and they would patrol they were not armed and of course that was the way it was when karen and i went um in the 1980s to the uk that's the way it was when Karen and I went in the 1980s to the UK. That's the way it was when I went in 1970s. They'd walk in pairs. They had radio communicators at the time in case they got in trouble. But it was a peaceful enough area, and they could handle even the violent crime of the big city. And they felt that it would escalate things if they started carrying guns but now they act like american police but in the early 1900s the american police were copying the british police they copied the bobby model um robert peeler was his name just came to me it's funny how that's my memory starting to go a little by little slowing down.
Starting point is 00:49:05 So Robert Peeler and there's the Bobby's they called them. And, uh, so, um, they were copying that model. Now the British are copying us and now everybody is copying us. You know,
Starting point is 00:49:17 the SWAT teams were created by Daryl Gates in LA. And he was the one who first began militarizing the police. Uh, isn't it a shame that we've now become the model for this? And we should be ashamed of our government for doing that. But you don't celebrate this. It's just unbelievable that this is being celebrated. It should be banned everywhere. There's absolutely no reason for a SWAT team to exist under any circumstances.
Starting point is 00:49:47 And we have a long trail of innocent people who have died and a long trail of even SWAT members who have been killed in some of these things. This is not the way to proceed. There are better ways to police. And that's what's happened to the police. They've gone from a situation where they're respected. They were part of the community. In that New York video, just like the. You know, they've gone from a situation where they're respected. They were part of the community.
Starting point is 00:50:10 In that New York video, just like the original British police, they're walking a beat. And they know the people in that area. And the people in that area know them by name. And it's like, you know, Bert and Ernie, the taxi driver and the cop. Everybody knew them. Now they don't know anybody. Everybody they're afraid is going to kill them. So you shoot first before they shoot you. That's what they want them to look at us versus them. And nowhere is that kind of separation and that kind of militarization
Starting point is 00:50:39 and shoot first attitude. Nowhere is that stronger than in these SWAT teams. And so here's what they focus on. After about six minutes, the women eventually make it across, but it makes for a very entertaining video. Big deal. We'll be right back. If you like the Eagles, the cars, and Huey Lewis in the news, they say the hot rock and roll is competing. You'll love the Classic Hits channel at APS Radio. Download our app or listen now at APSradio.com. Here's a little song I wrote. You might want to hear it in your pod.
Starting point is 00:51:26 You'll owe nothing, and be happy. Ain't got no cash, ain't got no car, but 24 booster shots in your arm. Owe nothing. Be happy. You can't even buy shit in the store because of your you will own nothing and be happy be happy and eat some bugs i love that song um who said there's no good use for artificial intelligence all right we can laugh as they weaponize it for total control of language of speech of your movement and everything else but hey we can entertain ourselves with videos like that uh yesterday we had a listener who and by the way before i forget um on rockfin amos pool thank you very much that is very generous thank you so much and he comments um he says
Starting point is 00:52:46 there is a theory that people jumping from the towers on 9 11 were reacting to energy weapons yeah i know that's the big the big difference look we all know we all know that these buildings did not fall down on their own especially building 7 which was not hit by a plane. And so now the question is, how did they bring this down? Did they do this with advanced explosives? Did they do it with directed energy weapons? And so that's the big disagreement with the people who are looking at this. And, you know, I don't really have, I think it could have been either one uh quite frankly i think that um just as they kept the um the the autonomous killer drones were suddenly revealed as we went to war
Starting point is 00:53:34 with afghanistan but they had for the longest time been able to remotely control planes and um you could see them crashing with crash test dummies and cameras that could withstand the crash. They would crash commercial airlines to safety test them, just like the safety crash cars and that type of thing. So they could have done that. We know that they talked about doing that type of thing, even going back in the 1960s with the Operation Northwoods, where they were going to start a war with Cuba by crashing airliners into buildings and having terrorist attacks that they blamed on Cubans.
Starting point is 00:54:15 And so there's a long history of that type of thing. And I know there's a lot of people who don't believe that there were planes, that they were some kind of a project, a blue beam thing that flew into the building. So there's a lot of different ways that we could look at this i don't really know that it's possible for us to get to the bottom of whether it was uh uh explosions evidence of both of these things who knows maybe they had both of them uh but um the key thing is that these buildings would not collapse on their own and so i don't get tied up in the details of it that i can't prove or disprove one way or the other but i can tell you
Starting point is 00:54:51 that there's never been a situation where a building as a steel skyscraper has caught on fire and burned for a couple of hours and collapsed its own footprint those are controlled demolitions any fool can see it and don't let anybody fool you about that. So yesterday we talked, I had a question from a listener who said, is there a place where I can listen to, uh, your live audio stream instead of waiting and downloading it later. And,
Starting point is 00:55:17 uh, thank you to Noel, a listener who sent this and said, you got it already. Uh, it's, uh, really a function that you can enable in any of the Android phones
Starting point is 00:55:30 or the Google Chrome browsers. There's a lot of browsers that are built on top of Chrome. The one he talks about here is the Opera web browser. I use Brave, but it's built on top of the google chrome as well and so he's got some step-by-step things i'm not going to read it to you because you wouldn't remember it here but um basically a way that you can just log in to your web browser and then log on to rumble and do a couple of things and a couple of settings there in your browser. And you'll be able to, on your phone or whatever, on your computer, you'll be able to listen to the
Starting point is 00:56:12 audio and on your phone, you can even turn the phone off and it'll look audio will keep going, uh, you know, save battery. So you don't have the display. So we will put that up on a sub stack and let people know how they can listen to a live audio stream. So, uh, to the listener who was, um, asking yesterday and to anybody who would like to do that, we will put those instructions up later today. So thank you very much. No, I'll appreciate that help. Uh, I want to mention, uh, just, uh, for your consideration, uh, some long-term listeners who have very early and strong supporters of this broadcast, and Tom and Nancy, he's grieving for his father who just died, and he's now lost his job. And he transferred across the country so that he could get to a state that was more friendly for homeschooling because he's got a couple of kids
Starting point is 00:57:06 young kids that he wanted to homeschool and so he left a good job in another state because he put his family first and now he has lost his job and so they contacted us and asked for prayer and i would he didn't ask for me to announce this but I want to announce it to you. And just that God would show them his hand of providence. You know, we had a similar situation. Again, it's not, you know, it wasn't exactly like this, but similar in the sense that we thought we were doing the right thing. And we thought we, and we got hammered for it we got rid of our business our video business because we just didn't want to be a part of hollywood anymore just gotten so raunchy we first got into it
Starting point is 00:57:54 i was doing it as a test bed for a point of sale system and then they released the catalog titles and we liked the old catalog titles and things like that but then it you know when that became kind of passe and hollywood really started you know going downhill in the late 90s uh you know every every year as we've seen it's gotten worse we wanted to get out of it and i and then um it was a scam we lost a lot of money in that sale. We basically lost all of that. And I won't go into the details of what happened with it. But it got very difficult for us economically. And so I'm sitting there, I thought I was doing the right thing. Why did this happen to me?
Starting point is 00:58:37 And frequently things like that happen. And as time went by, we realized that we were right on the cusp of being homeless. And sometimes, you know, we would get paid from a contractor that we, a job that we'd done that we'd been trying to get paid several months, didn't come in. And then at the last minute, it comes in, it's just enough, just enough. And we kept seeing things like that over and over again and we saw God's providence in our life. So sometimes when things like this happen, it's a real blessing.
Starting point is 00:59:26 And so we look back at that time, and we see that even though it's a time of hardship, it was a time where we learned to rely on God. So, I pray that that will happen to Tom and Nancy. And of course, pray for their circumstances as well. This is from the UK. As I said yesterday about the petrodollar and how Saudi Arabia has joined BRICS. And by the way, it's more than that.
Starting point is 01:00:10 The BRICS have gone from five countries to ten countries. And they also have 17 other countries that have joined as kind of a limited partnership. Not a limited partnership. It's not a legal structure like that. But it's a partnership. It's not a full-blown membership so 10 countries and then another 17 that are going to be able to settle things in their own currencies uh this is from uh listener uh bill i i think is his name uh looks like william William he says I read confessions of an economic hitman and if Saudi Arabia joined BRICS it's probably because the government wanted them to he said
Starting point is 01:00:54 America owns the house of Saud another prick in the balloon called the American dollar you know and of course this uh you're looking at the well conspiracy theory whatever but look we know that it's not a theory that the bite administration and so many people in washington are doing everything they can to destroy this country's economy it is a controlled takedown so um that may be possible finally I have one more letter here from a listener. And this listener is from the UK. He says, I listen to your show in England on a regular basis in the evenings on BitChute. He says he enjoys the show.
Starting point is 01:01:45 He says, I was listening to your show this evening, Monday, 5th of february yesterday i'd like to mention thank you for speaking to your listeners on your show with respect to the exceptional lady lois bayliss and the excellent article from sally beck that the conservative woman website conservative woman.co.uk the fact that they're hounding this lawyer, Lois Bayliss, who in good conscience could not sit by and do nothing. And so she put her career in jeopardy, and no risk benefit reason to give these jabs to children. And they were overruled. The scientific community was overruled by some political masters that were there, four people who overruled them, four bureaucrats. And she could not believe this and risked everything to do it. And now they're coming after her. And as I said, one of the most important aspects of that was the fact that this organization,
Starting point is 01:02:49 this legal organization of oversight that is now suing her and coming after her. And even if she wins, she'll have 90,000 pound fine. But this organization was given 1 million pounds from the World Economic Forum. What does that tell you? Anyway, he says your show is on Mr. Charles Dodman's Facebook. He is, I believe, hoping to stand as a candidate for the Reform UK Brexit Political Party in the British general election of 2024. Well, go for it, Charles. We need some people to reform this. The conservatives have shown what they are. There's some good people in the Reform Party.
Starting point is 01:03:30 I don't follow the British politics that closely, but I've seen some of the good people there have been with the Reform Party. So I hope he runs. I hope he wins. We're going to take a quick break, and we will be right back. Hear news now at APSradioNews.com or get the APS Radio app and never miss another story. Thank you. You're listening to the david knight show but you're saying that pharma buys tv spots not to convince people to ask for specific drugs from their physicians but to subvert the news business this is a this is an open secret working for pharma i never even thought of that great scott isn't that amazing great scott what a revelation who knew that did you know that i think everybody knew that why does tucker think that his listeners are that stupid that gullible this
Starting point is 01:05:58 is a con man he's playing a confidence game on you he's pretending that he didn't know that uh the 25 million dollar salary whatever it was that he was getting from Fox News, was paid for by these murders and pharmaceutical companies. He didn't realize that they were buying influence with Fox News. He didn't realize when he threw to these reports from this phony doctor that they have there talking about how we got to do this and that and got to get the vaccine. And, you know, he goes down and he interviews Trump. Are you going to get the vaccine first or later? Well, if I do it first, they'll say that I'm going to have the line. If I do it later, they'll say that I don't have any confidence in it.
Starting point is 01:06:36 I don't know. We'll see what happens. Well, we've all got to get the vaccine, right? Got to get the vaccine. Tucker through to him. And, you know, well, there you are. He knows all that stuff. It just annoys me beyond belief to see Tucker and Alex and all these people who think that you don't know.
Starting point is 01:06:58 And even when you do know, you don't want to connect the lies to Trump. And you don't want to connect the lies and the misdirection to Tucker either. Do you? Here's a little bit more of what he had to say as he was talking about the pharmaceutical ads. But you're saying that pharma buys TV spots not to convince people to ask for specific drugs from their physicians, but to subvert the news business? This is an open secret working for pharma. I never even thought about it. Everybody knows it.
Starting point is 01:07:30 This is an open secret. The kind of silly ads you see between the news breaks, the points of that is not, it's marginally to impact the customer, but pharma's already got that. They've already bought off the doctors. They're good on that. No, no, this's already got that. They've already bought off the doctors. They're good on that. No, no, this is an open secret. The news ad spending from Pharma is a public relation lobbying tactic, essentially, to
Starting point is 01:07:54 buy off the news. The news is a reference. They're not investigating Pharma. Oh, I've noticed. The news has become- Oh, isn't that funny? All those people who died, Tucker. Son of a gun.
Starting point is 01:08:06 You son of a gun. Laugh about it. Tucker's laughing all the way to the bank at you suckers who follow him. He made $25 million a year selling this poison. Oh, I've noticed that. They're not investigating. Ha ha ha. Tucker knew it.
Starting point is 01:08:21 This guy is saying over and over again. It's an open secret. Yeah, it's an open secret. We all know this the problem is that people won't connect that knowledge to trump or to tucker or to alex or people like that who lied you through this they get your confidence and then they con you classic con game yeah he says it's an open secret within the pharmaceutical industry it's an open secret everywhere everywhere we all knew including tucker you know i i've played this clip before where he kind of it's the same type of thing that drudge did um and I mentioned before, you know, I had a chance to meet Matt Drudge and we talked for a while and, uh, he said that, um, uh, I said, you know, I really want to thank you for putting up that picture of baby Samuel.
Starting point is 01:09:16 Because that made such a difference to so many people be able to see the truth of that. And I know that Fox news fired you and I knew that you knew that they're going to fire you he goes oh i did and for a moment he stops he says oh that i did that just so i could get out of my contract so whatever the reasons but you know when tucker if you remember and i've played this for you a while back and um i think he was trying to get out of his contract when he gets right up to the point of accusing Fox News of selling a product that they know kills people. He makes the analogy to MyPillow, which is a big sponsor. MyPillow doesn't do anything compared to pharmaceutical companies. And so he makes that analogy and watch him. I'm going to play that clip for you.
Starting point is 01:10:10 Watch how breathlessly nervous he gets because he knows that he's going to get fired eventually for this. Well, here's one measure of their badness. You can try this at home. Ask yourself, is any news organization you know of so corrupt that it's willing to hurt you on behalf of its biggest advertisers? Anyone who do that is obviously Pablo Escobar level corrupt and should not be trusted. What would that look like? That level
Starting point is 01:10:37 of corruption? Well, imagine that the Trump administration had made it mandatory for American citizens to buy MyPillow. That's one of Fox News' biggest advertisers. Imagine the Now he's getting nervous. MyPillow, they told you with a straight face, was the very linchpin of our country's public health system. Now imagine if they told you that, that Fox, as a news organization, endorsed it, amplified the government's message. Imagine if Fox News attacked anyone who refused to buy MyPillow as an ally of Russia, as an enemy of science. And then imagine that Fox kept up those libelous attacks, even as evidence mounted that my pillow caused heart attacks, fertility problems, and death. If Fox News did that, what would you think of Fox News? Would you trust us? Of course you wouldn't. You would know that we were liars. Thank heaven Fox News never did anything like that. But the other channels did. Just can't believe it. I can't believe that the other channels would do this because you know fox news would never do that tucker would never do
Starting point is 01:11:51 that because you'd know that they're liars and you'd never trust them right you know what he's trying to do is distance himself from that he's trying to distance himself with it with this as well but the truth of the matter is is that he was an accessory to this mass murder just as trump was one of the key ringleaders to this mass murder and all these people who excused what trump did all these people like mark levin who said you know vine is trying to take credit for your vaccine. You know, you, does I ever take a tape parade? You know, take credit for this.
Starting point is 01:12:29 And then after about a year, it was so widely known what was happening that all the Trump sucker fish in the media were begging him, begging him, people like Wayne Allen Root, please distance yourself from this vaccine. Right? And so he did as he started his campaign. The news ad spending from pharma is a public relations lobbying tactic, said the guy. Kelly means essentially to buy off the news. They're not investigating pharma.
Starting point is 01:13:03 The news has become basically a referee and you are a terrible anti-science luddite for even asking why the shots that we require our kids to get the fundamentally by their own advertising change the immune system of a child for life this is the very thing that their chosen candidate is so proud of having accomplished. This is the strong delusion that has been sent for these people. You have the liberals who have Trump derangement syndrome. They absolutely hate the man. And then you have the conservative MAGA people who absolutely hate what the man did, but they cannot bring themselves to make the connection to him.
Starting point is 01:13:48 They're deluded into thinking that if they elect him again, he won't do something like that. So he says, when the two largest vaccine makers in the country are literally, he goes on, are literally criminal enterprises. This is Cali means that Tucker was talking to. Well, the two largest vaccine makers in the country are literally criminal enterprises. GlaxoSmithKline and Merck in the past five years have settled two of the largest criminal penalties in American corporate history for bribing doctors and creating misleading research for the two largest vaccine makers.
Starting point is 01:14:27 Well, see, the problem with all that is that if you look at all the vaccine companies, Pfizer is even bigger, Johnson & Johnson at the epicenter of the opioid epidemic, they made the opioid stuff for Purdue Pharmaceutical, the Sackler family that was marketing it in very unethical means. But Johnson & Johnson was selling it as well. And Johnson & Johnson had also done the baby talc powder. They knew what it was doing to women and to babies. And they continued to sell it for decades.
Starting point is 01:15:01 And just said, no, we're making a lot more money in profits than we're losing in lot more money in profits than we're selling, than we're losing in lawsuits when people win. I don't care how many people die. Yeah, it's just the lawsuits. As long as the lawsuits don't get too big, we'll keep making it. Well, Trump set them up. I can imagine the conversation behind closed doors. You know, you've had a lot of problems with this opioid stuff. You should get into a business that doesn't have any liability issues the vaccine business and i can set you up in that if you play along with us we can make you the third supplier along with moderna and pfizer and they did gave them billions of dollars gave them a
Starting point is 01:15:41 a factory and set them up with a company that did do vaccine manufacturing, but they literally gave Trump, gave them billions of dollars and a factory and set this whole thing up to give them liability protection. They're criminal enterprises. And it was that criminal syndicate that Trump used, RFK Jr., and his public vaccine hesitancy. He used that to up his price with this criminal pharmaceutical syndicate. And they gave him money, and he gave HHS, Health and Human Services,
Starting point is 01:16:18 which has the FDA, the NIH, Fauci's NIAID, and all the rest of it. All of that is under HHS. And he put all of that under the most politically connected of the pharmaceutical company's Eli Lilly's CEO, Alex Azar. And so what Tucker is trying to do is to position himself to the outside. Folks, he is the ultimate insider. He and his father, his father worked for the CIA as what? As a propagandist. And Tucker, like Alex, is part of that right-wing CIA group that is pushing Trump to you. The CIA is not monolithic. It's got his left and right-wing groups that are fighting against each other as well.
Starting point is 01:17:06 And that's what these guys are about. And right now, Tucker's in Russia. He wants to build up his creds with the base by saying, oh, look, you know, he's going to talk to Putin. Look, Putin is not a good guy. This is like saying, well, you know, who do you like better for president? You like Stalin or Hitler? Who do you like better? Do you like Biden or Putin or whatever?
Starting point is 01:17:31 Putin has just stopped the vaccine mandates. Just stopped that last week in his country. He's pushing CBDC in his country. He's working on his own 15-minute cities in his country. He jails his political opponents. He confiscates their property. But, of course, he doesn't take their land because that'd be too much like Stalin. That's what this guy is like.
Starting point is 01:17:58 You know, I know that, of course, he did what we do all the time, which is preemptively invade a country. And I understand the 2014 coup and he understands it as well that it was headed for him but he also took the bait and he's not all that smart he took the bait just like the southerners in south carolina did with fort sumter they took the bait they knew that l Lincoln was going to bait them into war. They knew that Lincoln was going to go to war with them. Lincoln had looked at a lot of different forts that he could try to trigger an event at, and he decided he would go to South Carolina because the people there had the hottest heads and were most likely to fire. And when they did, when they took the bait, they appeared as the aggressors.
Starting point is 01:18:45 And that's what's happened to Putin. But he's not a good guy. And he's not even, when you look at this, right? I just talked about vaccine mandates, CBDC, jailing political opponents, shutting down free speech, all the rest of this stuff. These guys are the same. They're a little bit different but they're different mafia families if you think about it it's like the corleones versus the tataglia family
Starting point is 01:19:11 versus um what's the the jewish guy in miami um i can't remember his name but the bottom line is there's a lot of different crime families it's a game of thrones they're different but just like stalin and hitler if you're living in that country you're going to feel like you're in the same place if you're in stalin's russia or hitler's germany and so uh you know but he's going to use putin because now putin because they've linked putin Trump to demonize Trump. This is a way of him to establish his credentials with the MAGA base. So, you know, Tucker's going to play that game. And once they come after Tucker for interviewing Putin,
Starting point is 01:19:59 I've heard it over and over again from Trump supporters who know better. They know about the lockdowns and the vaccines and everything, but there's a, Trump's got to be a good guy because he's hated by the people that we hate so much. No, that doesn't make Trump a good guy. It doesn't make Hitler a good guy because Stalin hated him or vice versa.
Starting point is 01:20:21 It doesn't make Putin a good guy because the people that we fight like him and we make no mistake about it. We do fight them. We are in a war with them right now. We're in a war with them right now. It's already started. This war has already started long ago. It's a war over free speech. It is a cold war. It is a civil war, but it's a cold war at this point. We hope that it doesn't go hot, but it is a war against us. And it was a war that escalated with Trump in place because sanctions are an act of war. And he sanctioned the middle class. He sanctioned main street. He told us we were non-essential and he gave money to the wall street, big guys. So, um, revolver, which is, um, again, the guy who's tried to, uh, distract attention from what Trump and Tucker and Alex did with January the sixth, by giving you a scapegoat, a red herring.
Starting point is 01:21:22 Of Ray Epps. Ray Epps is not the reason that anybody went there. And we all knew that it was a grift. We all knew that it was going to be agent provocateurs. But let's make it all about Ray Epps so that you don't think about what Trump and Alex and Tucker did. And so Darren Beattie, who did that, says, kudos to those of you who've already figured this out.
Starting point is 01:21:41 Truly well done. But the reality is that many Americans haven't caught on yet about the vaccine, about the pharmaceutical companies. Really? You think so? I think probably 90% of the MAGA people have caught on to that. The problem is the MAGA people, although they've caught on to pharmaceutical companies, they haven't caught on to Tucker or to Trump or to Darren Beattie or to Alex. That's what they haven't caught on to Tucker or to Trump or to Darren Beatty or to Alex. That's what they haven't caught on to. So more than half of the U.S. believes that the COVID vaccines have caused an increase in unexplained deaths.
Starting point is 01:22:16 And it's way more than that with the MAGA people. Like I said, I think it's probably like 90%. But they still can't come to grips with Trump's role or Tucker's role in all this. And so, um, what Tucker is doing here, it's kind of like what Trump did when Trump blamed the Santas, he locked down his people and yet what happened? Kemp and DeSantis about two weeks after all the lockdowns, removed the lockdown and Trump excoriated them for doing that. Now Trump says it's all them.
Starting point is 01:22:52 Tucker's doing the same thing. Tucker was part of this vaccine push to everybody. And he was completely owned. He and his company were completely owned. And he's pulling in tens of millions of dollars a year. And now what he's doing is, oh, look at them. They're the bad guys, right? So, again, it's the memory hole campaign. You've got Biden. I played you the clip for him in 2007. He was all about protecting the border then, wasn't he?
Starting point is 01:23:26 So, we're going to look at that and we're going to say, Biden, what a hypocrite. He knows how bad the border is and he didn't do anything to protect it. Trump ran in 2016 about how bad the border was. He did nothing to protect it. Nothing at all. As a matter of fact, pulled up a YouTube video yesterday and and got a commercial for trump and he was on with steven cobert and it was uh some company that was selling trump merchandise and steven cobert was like so you're going to build a wall he goes oh yeah you know china did this great big beautiful wall it
Starting point is 01:24:00 can be done we can build a wall we can make our country safer and all the rest of stuff and and they're playing this clip from 2015 2016 campaign it's like how do these people not realize that he didn't build the war why uh the wall why are why are we talking about this massive wave of immigration constantly coming in if trump built the wall well he didn't in four years and they're going to use the fact that he talked about it eight years ago and did nothing about it when he was president for four years to sell Trump merchandise. What an idiocy we live in. It's amazing. And then you get this. This is from, again, this is on Drudge Report, a study finds Dr. Faith Coleman writes this, says young adults are having heart attacks more often what is
Starting point is 01:24:46 causing it i don't know i can't imagine what's causing it can you it's just something how somehow it just happened and now it's a thing just like autism it just happened and now it's a thing now it's everywhere we never heard of autism uh we had never heard of autism until about the mid-2000s. First family we knew had an autistic kid. Why did that happen? Why is it now, you know, one out of every couple of dozen kids or whatever has got autism to some degree? Why is that happening?
Starting point is 01:25:16 I don't know. It just happened. Let's have foundations where we support them. But let's not look at the cause. And if you look at the cause like dr andrew wakefield they pull they purge you for that and so we don't know why there's all of a sudden you've got a if you're a kid and elementary junior high school or high school you've got to get a a cardiogram before you can play sports that's never been done before why is that now oh i don't
Starting point is 01:25:42 know have no idea why that is happening. Alarmingly, she says, the occurrence of heart attacks and other forms of heart disease among younger adults is increasing from the ages of 20 to 50. And why is it happening to kids in elementary school and junior high school? What about that, Dr. Coleman? The increase in cardiovascular problems in this group was so great, so great, that it contributed to declines in life expectancy. Well, you better believe it.
Starting point is 01:26:11 It's the shot. It's the Trump shot, or as he calls it. Trump himself called it the Trump scene. He said, the vaccine, the Trump scene. I like the Trump shot, because when I talk about the Trump shot, it reminds me of what he said about my people. The people, my people are so smart.
Starting point is 01:26:30 And you know what else they say about my people? The polls. They say I have the most loyal people. Did you ever see that? Where I could stand in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shoot somebody and I wouldn't lose any voters. Okay? It's like incredible. I like to call it the Trump because he's uh shot and killed
Starting point is 01:26:46 millions of people tens of millions of people worldwide so blood clots are now america's number one preventable killer is what we say this is a slay news um article thanks to the trump shots the national blood clot alliance isn't that interesting i would think if i was going to set up the national blood clot alliance i think i would call it the blood clot coagulation or at least a coalition or something we're going to clot together in a club the national blood clot alliance says the number of deaths caused by blood clots skyrocketed after the rollout of the m rna vaccines now they're not making that conclusion that's slay news telling you that well somehow caused by blood clots skyrocketed after the rollout of the mRNA vaccines. Now they're not making that conclusion.
Starting point is 01:27:26 That's slay news telling you that. Well, somehow it just happened and, you know, began 2020 and escalated throughout 2021. The spiking number of fatalities means that blood clots now account for 300,000 annual deaths in the United States. Thank you,
Starting point is 01:27:43 Donald Trump. Thank you for that. Right? Excess deaths. According to the National Blood Clot Association, or what was it? Alliance. It's an alliance. Yeah, an alliance.
Starting point is 01:27:56 I think it's kind of like a coalition coagulation. Blood clots are now killing more Americans than car crashes. Trump's shots are now killing more Americans than car crashes. Trump's shots are now killing more people than breast cancer and AIDS. And it's actually more than car crashes, breast cancer and AIDS combined. And of course, you can also get AIDS from the vaccines that Trump gave the pharmaceutical companies tens of millions, billions of dollars and legal immunity for creating despite the alarming number of deaths. However, Democrat president Joe Biden's administration appears to be downplaying the issue. Partisan blinder alert. Do they say anything about Trump and slay news?
Starting point is 01:28:37 No, they don't. This is all Biden's fault. It's all Klaus Schwab's fault. It's all Biden's fault. It's not Trump's fault. It's notiden's fault it's not trump's fault it's not tucker's fault not fox news's fault it's biden's fault yeah um you know trump is ragging about it cc data shows that one out of every 10 hospital deaths is now attributed to a blood clot in the lungs blood clot in the lungs well that's where we are now isn't it so how do we fake a pandemic in four easy steps this is from shasha latipova
Starting point is 01:29:14 she says you know the data is clear that there was never a pandemic the u.s government and trump and she uses that term so good for sasha saying that. She doesn't shy away from talking about what Trump did. People always say, well, you know, the government or Fauci did this in 2020, but then in 2021, Biden did it. No, she says Trump did it. She's right. The U.S. government and Trump announced public health emergency based on about 40 cases in China. This is what Gerald Salenti and I have talked about for so long. How is that?
Starting point is 01:29:48 You know, 40 cases? Not even those people died. It was just less than five people that died. They called it a worldwide pandemic. It wasn't even an epidemic in China. One and a half billion people. Without any significant evidence of any real illness or economic impact state governors announced public health emergencies based on nothing oh it was
Starting point is 01:30:10 based on the money that trump released to them that's what his executive order of march 13th was about it was to release the money so they could release the kraken that had been created and practiced for the previous 20 years with a model legislation that they'd sent to the states. In Ohio, it was three cases of COVID that became the basis for shutting down the entire state. That was a Republican governor, DeWine, and he was the one who came up with a little twist. Hey, we got a million-dollar lottery here.
Starting point is 01:30:37 Take the vaccine. If you survive, you also have a chance of maybe winning a million dollars. You feeling lucky, punk? This is because declarations of public health emergency by law require no evidence that an emergency exists. Opinion of one unelected bureaucrat is all that's needed, and they're trying to change that to make it the opinion of one unelected bureaucrat at the WHO, World Health Organization.
Starting point is 01:31:02 She says the U.S. government then provided massive funding. Let's say it's the Trump administration. The Trump administration. I got to correct Sasha there. The Trump administration then provided massive funds to fake PCR label COVID cases, to murder people in hospitals with remdesivir and ventilator protocols while denying early effective treatment, as well as fake PCR attributing COVID causes to anything, including motor vehicle deaths and gun homicides. And that's not an exaggeration.
Starting point is 01:31:35 Pandemics, she says, do not exist at all. They're not possible in nature. Had they been possible, we would not be here. At this point, I'm asked, but the plague, the smallpox, the cholera, the answer is these are diseases related to lack of sanitation, crowding, infestation with rats and fleas, human and animal waste polluting the drinking water. And once these problems are addressed, these epidemics go away. Pandemics are also not possible via science, what is called gain-of-function research, which amounts mostly to ridiculous attempts that software enabled sorcery yes toxic chemicals can cause poisoning but this
Starting point is 01:32:11 does not spread by itself and these labs should be shut down as both a waste of money and a local health hazard mostly to those who are working in the lab. But she says, you look at this headline from The Lancet that she includes. The Lancet, this is like the Journal of the American Medical Association here in the U.S., but it's in the U.K. The Lancet said, a new study reports 309 lab-acquired infections and 16 pathogen lab escapes between 2000 and 2021 and several deaths. It's a bulletin of the atomic scientists.
Starting point is 01:32:51 She said, I think the Lancet was trying to make the opposite point than the one that they really made. The paper identified 51 scary pathogen leaks from labs worldwide, mostly in North America and China. Additionally, the CDC collects reports of about 200 of these escapes a year in the U.S. So Lancet paper is a severe undercount of these potentially apocalyptic events.
Starting point is 01:33:17 This many dangerous leaks of dangerous pathogens a year? We should have world-ending catastrophes every week, right? Yeah, see, it's like the tsa um the tsa is failing 90 of the time so how come we're not having terrorist attacks every week well because there's not a threat the threat's the tsa the threat is uh the health organizations here and uh of course it was much worse than this when they stopped the gain of function stuff in 2014. There were so many diseased animals that escaped and so many cases of failure of equipment where people got sick and some of them died in these labs. But, you know, she makes a good point with this.
Starting point is 01:34:03 But her steps were having a pandemic. Real quickly, I'll just go over the, enumerate them very quickly. Step number one, poison a few people in a few geographic locations with a drug, a chemical, a toxin, or some kind of a biotoxin that has highly morbid central nervous system effects. She calls these sentinel cases. Number two, pretend it was a bug, a virus modified with CRISPR-Cas9 or something like that.
Starting point is 01:34:33 Something's bioengineered. Number three, use this real bug, use the real bug, the internet, broadcast on social media that everyone is infected with a highly lethal agent. See, this part of it is being done right now in advance, preparing this disease X. You see that now being sold by Mike Adams and Alex Jones, all these other people,
Starting point is 01:34:56 they're panicking. They're selling you the disease X panic at the same time that Klaus Schwab and company are selling it to you. You see, and you think that they're warning you of what Klaus Schwab is doing, but actually what they're doing is they're preparing the fear response for the fake announcement that Klaus Schwab will do. She said, and finally, step number four,
Starting point is 01:35:22 all the hypochondriacs and the worried people run to their doctor, flood the hospital ERs, and now we can get them with the fake PCR protocols and call it what we want. Yeah, that's exactly right. Exactly the opposite of what is the truth. We're going to take a quick break, and when we come back, I want to talk about Elon Musk and his psychedelic pharmakia. And also about a response to artificial intelligence, which hopefully we're going to see more of.
Starting point is 01:35:56 It's something called nightshade. You know, nightshade is a poison. And this is a poison pill that artists have come up with to stop artificial intelligence from stealing their artwork. So when we come back, we're going to talk about some of the technocrats. We'll be right back. Stay with us. Elvis.
Starting point is 01:36:14 Ladies and gentlemen, the Beatles. And the sweet sounds of Motown. Find them on the Oldies channel at APS radio.com using free speech to free minds it's the Davidid knight show the california sent a millionaire he's not quite a billionaire yet but he's going to get there he's peddling eternal life uh do you want to put your hope in this guy you know what is hope it's his confident expectation is really where that comes from we don't use it that way anymore you know that's the way that's the word that is used in the Bible when we talk about our hope is in Christ. It's our confident expectation. But we typically see that and people say, well, I hope that's going to happen,
Starting point is 01:37:15 meaning that I don't really believe that's going to happen at all. I'm not expecting that to happen. That would be nice if it happens, but I really don't think. So we've made it exactly the opposite of what really is but this guy who is telling people put their hope in his pharmaceutical products his routine all the rest of this stuff this is a guy that they have focused on over and over again he's doing everything that he can to try to prolong his life in this miserable world. You should feel sorry for him.
Starting point is 01:37:53 I mean, he's doing, he's constantly exercising, constantly fretting about what he puts into his body to the point of obsession. And look, we should take care of our bodies. I should take better care of my body than I do. But so, you know, I'm kind of falling off the horse on the other side. But, you know, I'm kind of falling off the horse on the other side. Uh, but you know, he is obsessed about this. And, um, even to the extent that he's getting fresh young blood from his young son transfusions to build himself up, uh, he doesn't realize that's appointed to man wants to die. We don't know if he's going to be able to prolong his
Starting point is 01:38:25 life or not right um he might get into an accident the very next day and die as healthy as he is with all those young organs he brags that he's got the wrinkles of a 10 year old and organs that are several years younger well i've got the belly fat and flaccid arms of a of an infant toddler so i guess i should live forever like a cherub um it's this guy it's it reminds me of like i said disappointed man wants to die and then after that you're gonna meet god judgment you know remember what uh christ said about the rich man he built all these barns and had all this stuff and i'm gonna build even more barns and put even more stuff in it. Then I'm just going to sit back and enjoy this. Eat, drink, and be merry. And Jesus said, and God said, you fool, this very night, your soul will be required of you. Any of us may have that happen to us. None of us have tomorrow or even later today promised to us.
Starting point is 01:39:27 But this is the mindset of the people in Silicon Valley. And I've reported about this guy before. I'm not going to go into that. But there is a concerted effort from all corners now to come after Elon Musk because they don't like X as a free speech platform, or at least a quasi-free speech platform. If you have things to say about Elon Musk, you'll still be in trouble there.
Starting point is 01:39:49 And certain other things, the shadow bans have not been released, and we've seen some people directly banned for criticism of Elon Musk. Larry Ellison, who is the CEO or was the CEO, I guess, I don't know if he still is or not, of Oracle, is part of that inner club that we're not in, of billionaires in Silicon Valley. I used to be a good friend of Steve Jobs. When Steve Jobs died, one of the stories from Larry Ellison was he said he had a custom-built yacht, and it was really nice. And he, as you can imagine, Steve Jobs got on the yacht and he looked at it and he
Starting point is 01:40:27 said oh this is great i'm gonna build one just like it and he said he got the same people started to build it but steve jobs came in he said and changed this and changed that and changed this and changed that and he said uh and when he got finished it wasn't anything at all like my yacht but he goes every one of those changes that he made was better. And Larry Ellison said that to say that, you know, Steve jobs was, um, the ultimate, um, editor or, uh, master of incremental changes. You know, he didn't necessarily, you know, invent the thing, but he made it so much better. Just like people look at the mouse and the graphical user interface from Xerox PARC, and people say, well, he stole that.
Starting point is 01:41:11 Well, he made it a lot better. He took the general idea, and he made it way better. But Larry Ellison was also a director at one point in time for tesla on the board of directors and i guess they maybe have parted company now because he's talking about um elon musk's drug use and he's talking to the wall street journal and so there's all these publications out there now about how elon musk uses drugs and it's true i mean you know as people have said when the devil talks to you about god he lies but when he talks to god about you he tells the truth right and so everybody's got this kind of stuff in their background if you look look closely enough so now the oracle speaks larry
Starting point is 01:42:01 ellison elon musk drug use worries his business associates and his board members reported the Wall Street Journal. The ex-Tesla director Larry Ellison urged Musk to dry out in Hawaii, sources told the Wall Street Journal. He went so far as to urge him to travel to Hawaii during the winter of 2022 to pause his working and to avoid drugs. At a party in the Hollywood Hills neighborhood of L.A. around the time of Ellison's suggestion, the report added, one person who attended the event said that Musk drank ecstasy in liquid form from a water bottle after having his personal security clear the floor for privacy. Now, I don't doubt any of this stuff,
Starting point is 01:42:43 and I'm not talking about this to pour coals on Elon Musk. He has now come out in favor of more carbon taxes and things like that. He's made his fortune off of the green agenda. And he is a technocrat. He is a globalist. He is not on our side. He is not on God's side. When you look at the technocrats and his whole idea of Neuralink and, you know, I'm going to transfer your body into a machine. We're going to merge with machines, the singularity, cyborgs, Elon Musk, Peter Thiel, all these guys. They are antichrists. They're not the antichrist, but they are opposed to Christ and everything that we believe, and they see themselves as gods. And it's not surprising that they do this,
Starting point is 01:43:31 and we've all known this to some degree or the other. The reason I'm talking about this is to talk about the technocracy in general, and the fact that Elon Musk is not really that much different from these other guys for the most part. The Wall Street Journal said the volume of his drug use had contributed to a culture of peer pressure among his friends and his board directors of various companies. They created an expectation for them to use drugs alongside of him to maintain the social status gained by being close to the billionaire. And that's true you know there is a social um social status that you lose if you don't join long and all this you know people get together
Starting point is 01:44:11 for a drink it's like you know i'm kind of the wet blanket i don't drink oh well you know and then what i found when i was in college was the people get together and okay we're gonna have a party okay cool i'll come too they all start doing drugs or drinking or whatever and i don't do drugs or drinking they'll get very uncomfortable the fact that i'm not doing that it's kind of like uh uh frank serpico when he was in the new york police department everybody was on the take right with the war on drugs and he says well that's okay you know i'm not gonna you know just do whatever you want i'm not gonna turn you guys in but they weren't comfortable with that. They had to have him either come in or he's out because they're worried that
Starting point is 01:44:51 something's going to be done. You're sitting there sober and you're looking at this and it's like, oh, but, um, uh, you know, there was always a kind of a peer pressure like that. Um, but it didn't really last very long. You know, it wasn't like people constantly hounding me. And I made a comment about that one time to the engineers I worked with at Data General. I said, you know, I was in bands and all this other kind of stuff. All these people are doing drugs.
Starting point is 01:45:12 And they never offered me any. And they just started laughing at me. They said they probably thought you were a narc. They know you're not going to take these drugs. And so they didn't offer it to you, but there is a certain thing, you know, when you're in a company like, uh, somebody that I worked for, um, who drinks heavily, uh, if you don't, if you don't drink heavily, you're not going to be hanging around with them. So there's a certain, it's exactly the same type of thing going on with Musk.
Starting point is 01:45:39 I say this because you should never be pressured into that. All right. Uh, what a, what a foolish thing for these people to feel like. And the stuff he's taking cocaine, ecstasy, magic mushrooms, LSD. You're going to take that so that you can keep your job. Are you crazy? I mean, do you really want to work in that kind of an environment? Seriously.
Starting point is 01:46:02 Uh, so, uh, after he smoked marijuana on an episode the joe rogan experience you remember that um nasa made his company spacex pledge and writing that they were following federal guidelines on drug use in the workplace and the company spent five million dollars in taxpayer money to properly train its employees on the rules. So I guess you could say that's maybe one of the most expensive joints ever smoked. It cost Elon Musk $5 million for smoking that on Joe Rogan. He also said on X that he had a prescription for ketamine, which researchers suggest it can be used to treat depression. Is it ketamine or ketamine? I think it's ketamine, isn't it can be used to treat depression is it ketamine or ketamine i think it's ketamine isn't it yeah i don't know um but elon musk has also posted on
Starting point is 01:46:51 twitter if you go back to november of 2020 he had a very interesting post he said here's the laws of thermodynamics number one you can't win number two you can't break even number three you can't stop playing that was a joke you know in engineering school these are kind of nerd jokes that engineers tell each other yeah jokes about thermodynamics but again i had professors who would tell those jokes and you know all the students would repeat him and that type of thing so he puts that up the laws of thermodynamics you thermodynamics, you can't win, you can't break even, you can't even stop playing. And then he comments underneath that. And he says, unless you're on DMT.
Starting point is 01:47:37 DMT. I know a person who did that once and he never stops. He gets wide eyed when he talks about his experience with that. And this is one of the most potent of all of these psychedelics. And you've got, um, people who call themselves psycho knots, not nuts, but knots like an astronaut. And it's, it's such a common thing for people who take DMT to believe that they've encountered machine elves. And the machine elves are giving them instructions and telling them things that are going to happen.
Starting point is 01:48:14 And my friend who did it said, I think I went to hell. And these things were demons. At Burning Man, I talked to some, uh, some guys who were Christians who were doing a documentary about some of that stuff. They said when they were burning man, you know,
Starting point is 01:48:30 you have all these, uh, Silicon Valley executives who had come from LA and, um, he said they had a big tent and, you know, everybody was talking about how they were taking DMT and other stuff like that.
Starting point is 01:48:42 And they were, uh, they were getting, they were getting instructions for the next, uh next tech that they were going to build. This is traditional pharmakia. This is why the word pharmakia is typically translated as sorcery. This demonic, cultic use of these psychotic drugs and things like that. And this is what he is a part of.
Starting point is 01:49:11 But, you know, that aspect of it, that may explain a lot of his ideas about singularity and all the rest of this stuff, because that is a satanic agenda. And, you know, we look at this and over and over again you look at uh these people like mark zuckerberg and other ones it's like are they really that smart or have they sold their soul to the devil that's the question you should ask yourself he says um he also said the people should be open to psychedelics. And this is about a year after he talked about DMT. This is, um, he talked about that in November of 2020 on Twitter. And then he says, um, about a year later, September, the end of September, 2021.
Starting point is 01:49:57 He said that, uh, but when you look at what is sorcery in the 21st century, yes, it does include DMT, does include these psychedelics, but the products of it are also things like the cyborgs, transhumanism, artificial intelligence, the technologies that we can remember by using the acronym GRAIN, genetics, robotics, artificial intelligence, nanotechnology.
Starting point is 01:50:24 This is 21st century sorcery. genetics, robotics, artificial intelligence, nanotechnology. This is 21st century sorcery. Even to the extent that Arthur C. Clarke, who wrote 2001 and some other things like that, he said, made the comment, that technology, sufficiently advanced, is indistinguishable from magic or from sorcery or from demonic issues really. And,
Starting point is 01:50:50 um, and that's where we are today. And of course, Arthur C. Clark, a lot of allegations of a pedophile existence in the Pacific Island where he lived during an interview before a live audience at CodeCon 2021 on September the 28th, Musk was asked, what role do psychedelics, what role do you think psychedelics may have
Starting point is 01:51:13 in addressing some of the more destructive tendencies of humanity? Musk said, I think generally people should be open to psychedelics. A lot of people making laws are from a different era. As a new generation gets into political power, I think we will see greater receptivity to the benefits of psychedelics. We're going to see our country move more and more to the occult and to this type of stuff. And if you think that Musk is not all about politics, and some of the reasons why the Wall Street Journal is doing these set pieces on him he's made his political move he understands that
Starting point is 01:51:50 if he shows himself as an opponent of the bad guys who are censoring the conservatives that the conservatives will then give him a free pass on all this demonic transhumanist technocratic garbage that he's so heavily involved in they won't even care if he puts on costumes dressing up as um you know baphomet signs and um satanic signs all over they won't care about any of that stuff and so um what do we do about all of this as a matter of fact one last thing which i thought was kind of funny based on the name of the hotel when he talks about how he put peer pressure on matter of fact, one last thing, which I thought was kind of funny based on the name of the hotel. When he talks about how he put peer pressure
Starting point is 01:52:27 on some of the people who worked for him, they said other directors, and they name them, Antonio Gracia, Kemble Musk, Steve Jurvetson, have reportedly consumed drugs
Starting point is 01:52:38 like ecstasy and LSD with him at several parties, including those held at Hotel El Gonzo, a boutique hotel in Mexico allegedly known for its drug-fueled events. Maybe that should be Gonzo. Hotel El Gonzo, like Hunter S. Thompson.
Starting point is 01:52:56 Some of the directors felt pressured because refraining could upset the billionaire or could result in them, quote, losing social capital of being inside the inner circle yes i've seen that as well um so um that is that is a thing it's a thing in college it's a thing in some companies if you've got a ceo who is addicted to drugs or alcohol or something like that if you want to hang out with them that's expected and um if they know that you're not going to do that you don't hang out with them. But let's take a look at a different kind of poisoning. And that is AI poisoning.
Starting point is 01:53:32 How do we get back at artificial intelligence? Well, there's a new tool. I mentioned this a couple of days ago, and I did not get to it. I mentioned it on a Friday, actually. Nightshade. It got 250,000 downloads in five days. They said it was beyond anything that we'd imagined. It's a new free downloadable tool created by computer science researchers at the University of Chicago.
Starting point is 01:53:54 These are people who, by the way, not being paid by DARPA, but doing it on their own, which was designed to be used by artists in order to disrupt AI models that scraping and training from their artwork without their consent. They said nightshade has hit 250,000 downloads in five days since release said the leader of the project. He said, I expected it to be extremely high enthusiasm, but still I underestimated it.
Starting point is 01:54:18 The response is simply beyond anything we imagined. It's a strong start from the free for the free tool, and it shows a robust appetite among some artists to protect their work from being used to train AI without consent. And it's not just training it, they're copying it, right? Nightshade seeks to poison generative AI image models by altering artwork posted to the web or shading them on a pixel level so that they appear to a machine learning algorithm to contain entirely different content. So it may look like a purse instead of a cow, let's say. Trained on a few shaded images scraped from the web,
Starting point is 01:54:58 an AI algorithm can begin to generate erroneous imagery from what a user prompts or asks. Now, of course, they will make these adjustments and there'll be, you know, this back and forth warfare and counter warfare and that type of thing. But the other part of this, as I've mentioned before, is that AI will also cannibalize itself. And they have found that, and it's kind of interesting that just like mad cow disease where cows get this mental disease that that kills them drives them nuts from eating other cows cannibalizing other cows if they're fed other cows as food uh the cows are not going out there and killing it cows but if you feed them other cows, right? Or humans who feed on other humans can get what's called Jakob Kreutzfeld disease, same thing. But it's a cannibalism disease,
Starting point is 01:55:53 and the cannibalism destroys your mind. And they found the same thing with AI in some of the tests. So if AI becomes too predominant, they need to feed off of humans. The artificial intelligence needs to feed off of us. It's not only being used to track and control and surveil us, but it's necessary for it to feed off of us. Isn't that interesting? And if it gets too prolific and starts to feed on itself, it loses its mind. And I'm not talking about the hallucinations that it's doing,
Starting point is 01:56:31 but I'm talking about just not being able to operate. So shortly after Nightshade's release on January 18, 2023, the demand for concurrent downloads was so overwhelming to the University of Chicago's web servers that they had to add mirror links for people to get it from other locations. Meanwhile, the team's earlier tool called Glaze, which works to prevent AI models from learning an artist's signature style by subtly altering pixels so they appear to be something else to the machine learning algorithms, that has received 2.2 million downloads since it was released in april of last year and so um you know when you um when you look at uh what this stuff is doing the real threat to it of course is also um its ability to be used for censorship that is uh what will
Starting point is 01:57:23 ultimately happen uh with artificial intelligence and i think they're going to direct it at podcasts next bill gates wants to engineer artificial intelligence he said uh well they're already doing that they were engineering artificial intelligence from the very beginning they were not willing to just let this stuff organically go out there and scrape the internet and draw its own you know models and things like that they build in human biases and they've actually been articles about the people that live in other countries that they pay minimum wage to to build those biases into the artificial intelligence models bill gates wants to engineer it so that we can end polarization and save democracy. The technocracy is all about tyranny. He does not want to have everybody just get along together.
Starting point is 01:58:10 He wants to control what you see, what you think. Microsoft founder, Bill Gates, recently interviewed OpenAI CEO, Sam Altman, who may be his successor in all this stuff. Sam Altman at the Center of Artificial Intelligence, Sam altman at the center of artificial intelligence sam altman at the center of pushing world coin and other things like that these are truly megalomaniac evil men here to discuss the future of ai is what the two of them are talking potential for new global controls to maintain peace yeah like, like Mars attacks, Gates attacks.
Starting point is 01:58:46 We come in peace. Whose idea is that the global population submit to in order for there is further to be world peace? Well, we'll submit to their ideas, of course, right? During the interview,
Starting point is 01:59:01 Gates and Altman lamented how the U.S. government failed to rein in polarization across social media over the past four years. Just not enough control. We need more control. We can do that. They believe that AI could solve the problem of polarization, therefore save democracy. To do this, AI would have to be engineered in a way to control speech and impose lies as facts, brainwashing the population with propaganda, as they're doing.
Starting point is 01:59:24 What he wants is a hive mind, a Borg collective. And look, Musk is no different. Musk has openly talked about how he sees the potential of social media X in particular of being a way to create a hive mind that he can. And that was the purpose for social media to create something that they could monitor what we're thinking um on um rockfin jason parker good to see you there jason he said when elon talks tech he tries to sound like a genius but he really doesn't talk about anything that i don't already know so i call bs on him that's the way I feel about it. You know, he and Zuckerberg, I mean, these guys are just sold out. They sold out to our satanic government or they sold out to the big man himself. Satan is running.
Starting point is 02:00:14 I'm not at all that smart. So must be the same. He says, well, I think you get it. I think, um, I think they get it as well, but we understand what they're doing. So again, they're selling this as a way to have peace, but again, peace on their terms, a peace imposed by them, a peace that is their tyranny, their technocracy. So as this person comments here on expose news to prop to properly promote gates style of world peace ai would have to be engineered to rewrite the history of the crimes that gates financed and participated in during the covet 19 scandal it would have to be engineered to exonerate gates and his colleagues for imposing policies that violated human rights and imposed segregation and caused mass
Starting point is 02:01:08 harm. Well, I think that's doable. I mean, they've already been doing that for both Biden and for Trump rewriting history to, you know, erase their culpability and all of this stuff.
Starting point is 02:01:20 And as I said before, when you look at um putin he just took off his vaccine mandates and he's pushing cbdc and here his are his 15 minute cities that are being built in russia and of course trump has his um 15 his his freedom cities right right? And, Russia, it's Dobrograd, a new city in the Vladimir region of Russia. How about it? It's got an area named after him being built according to the concept of what they call a slow city.
Starting point is 02:01:55 See, same thing where everything necessary for a person is within a 15 minute walking distance, just like in the Netherlands where they're doing the same thing. And just like, um, uh, Donald Trump who seems to know somehow, uh, exactly, uh, what these people want and who does it at exactly the same time. You know, when we go back and we look at, uh, uh, what was Trump doing, uh, back in, uh, in Davos, uh, in 2000, was it 18 or in Davos in 2000?
Starting point is 02:02:26 Was it 18 or 19 when he was there? I think it was. I can't remember which one of those years. Here he is with Klaus. There they are. We have a tremendous crowd and a crowd like they've never had before. Klaus has actually told me this is a crowd like they have never had before in Davos, including all of you people like they've never had before. So that's good.
Starting point is 02:02:50 I assume they're here because of Klaus. No, I forgot. Yeah, it's all about the crowd, isn't it? As long as you've got a big crowd, that validates what you're doing. That's about being popular. We have, when we look at uh economics here we've got commercial real estate is busting out all over and collapsing all over 560 billion dollar property warning hits banks from new york to tokyo and that's not including another 300 billion
Starting point is 02:03:18 in evergrande and china this is the type of thing that Daryl Slinty has been talking about for a long time, as this article on Yahoo's Finance says, people are just now beginning to feel the pain. And yet Daryl Slinty was talking about this years ago. If you want to get Trends Journal, be way ahead of the trend, understand what is coming, TrendsJournal.com. You can use the code NIGHT to save 10% there. And as we look at this engineered collapse, as we look at Saudi Arabia moving away from the petrodollar into the BRICS dollar, regardless of who's behind this move, whether it's their decision or whether they're being prodded by this, by some other political entity, you
Starting point is 02:04:01 need to be able to get outside of that system. As a matter of fact, we don't have time for it today, but I've got news here talking about cities going bankrupt, counties going bankrupt, states going bankrupt. It's one of the reasons why Senator Nicely here wants to have a gold depository to be able to weather that type of situation as we've seen happen before during the Great Depression. It's very important for the states to not go bankrupt as well. So you need to protect yourself. One of the ways that you can do that is to go to DavidKnight.gold.
Starting point is 02:04:38 That'll take you to Tony Arterman's WiseWolf.gold. You can provide for yourself gold and silver. That'll help you to weather what may be some very difficult economic times coming up. Do we have our guests yet? Okay. We don't have our guests yet. So let me continue on with this a little bit while we're waiting to establish that
Starting point is 02:04:55 connection. And I'll just remind people, please like the stream. If you're watching us live, that helps a great deal. It even helps if you're not watching live, whenever you see it, if you do like it at the place that you're picking up the um uh the broadcast we would really appreciate that new york community bank corps decision to slash its dividend and stockpile reserves sent its stock down a record 38 last wednesday this is all about commercial real estate collapsing. In Tokyo, a company there, Aozora, plunged more than 20% after it warned about U.S. commercial property losses. And Deutsche Bank more than quadrupled its U.S. real estate loss provisions.
Starting point is 02:05:39 So all this is rolling out across the globe. And again, this is something that was foreseen from the very beginning of the lockdowns as a consequence. Regional bank stocks are now reeling and feeling the bite of the unfurling commercial property crisis. That was the next step that banks who were pushed out of the residential loan stuff by Elizabeth Warren and her takeover to protect consumers. They created a great deal of red tape and paperwork. So these people started making loans, commercial loans that did not have those requirements in it. And so now they are very heavily exposed to this, and it is a way for them to take out those banks. There is $700 billion of a slow-moving train wreck, and they said America's commercial property sector has a $2.2 trillion mountain of debt, and that is what's going to come
Starting point is 02:06:41 crashing down on the commercial banks. They have planned a great deal of financial chaos for us. We have our guest, Davis Yontz, is ready to come on. We're going to talk about the FACE Act. We're also going to talk about the documentary that he's in because he was very heavily involved. We've talked to him several times in the past about helping people in the military push back against these Biden mandates. There's now a documentary out called Seals Beat Biden. And as we connect with Davis, I want to play you a little bit of,
Starting point is 02:07:12 play you that trailer for that documentary, Seals Beat Biden. We'll be right back with Davis Shantz. I don't know that I've ever done anything or been involved in a team effort, because that's what it was, a team effort that had more return on investment than that one in which we engaged in the capital of afghanistan bell to the taliban if you want a better new normal anytime soon americans need to put on a mask he told me that there was no chance that my religious accommodation, or that any religious accommodation, would be granted. And sure enough, within hours, I was terminated. I had no income. I had no health care benefits. I had no job.
Starting point is 02:07:59 They come in handshaking, angry, telling us that they don't want to hear about our rattlesnake religion, saying that we never wanted to be SEALs and that we're not courageous enough to fight war. Anything below 95% capacity in a raid is considered critical. My rating, the rescue swimmers, we were at 89% and the commandant is ready to cut these guys loose over a vaccine mandate for an untested shot. The oath is not for the easy times. The oath is for the hard times and it's whenever you have to make that choice between doing what the constitution says or doing what someone else is telling me to do. Be a patriot. Protect your fellow citizens. I took an oath to support and defend the Constitution of the United States.
Starting point is 02:08:52 Every military member does that. So if a military member's rights are not protected, they're not protected for the rest of society. These are the individuals that are actually willing to risk their lives to fight for the Constitution. Are you willing? Would you be willing to throw your stars on the table over a principle? Would you be willing? And that I will well and faithfully discharge the duties of the office on which I am about to enter. So help me, God. And I meant it. So, SealsBeatBiden., uh, that is a very powerful documentary.
Starting point is 02:09:49 And you saw our guest in that documentary, David Shantz, because he was involved in that fight. And we're going to talk about that. But before we get to that, uh, I want to talk about what is going on with the FACE Act because David Shantz doesn't just, um, he's got military experience as a JAG officer, and he knows how to represent people in the military sphere, legal sphere, but he is also a Christian who gets involved in this. And so we're going to begin by talking about the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances, the FASAC. Thank you for joining us, Davis.
Starting point is 02:10:22 It's always great to have you on, and you're always there at the most vital issues, I think. Thank you for joining us, Davis. It's always great to have you on, and you're always there at the most vital issues, I think. Thank you for joining us today. Hey, it's a pleasure to chat with you again. Well, thank you. I've talked about this briefly this week. The people here, it was in Tennessee, just outside of Nashville or right around that Nashville area. that nashville area uh several people six of them who have um pro-life people who had a peaceful protest at a at a clinic and they're now been convicted they are awaiting sentencing they may get 11 years of prison and up to fines of 250 000 and this is really being weaponized by the
Starting point is 02:11:03 biden administration isn't It's been on the books for a while, hasn't it? Right. So the FACE Act was first passed by Congress and then signed in 1994 by President Clinton. And this really was, this is the kind of legislation that really was a Trojan horse. The idea was it would also protect clinics that provide actual pregnancy care and not simply Planned Parenthood, abortion mills, and other things. Unfortunately, that's not how it's used, and it really has been weaponized by the Department of Justice, particularly under the Biden administration, to go after Christians who do things like prayer and sidewalk counseling outside of abortion clinics. Yeah, and we haven't, 1994, we haven't heard anything at all about it.
Starting point is 02:11:47 Now all of a sudden, we're hearing it over and over and over again. It really is amazing how they're using this. Talk about some of the other cases as well. I mean, we've had situations and we've seen the picture of a guy that they tried to get with a face act and they SWAT teamed his family and all the rest of the stuff, but he wasn't even close to the entrance of it. That was up in Pennsylvania, wasn't it, I think, if I remember correctly? Right, yeah, you're referring to Mark Houck.
Starting point is 02:12:12 So that was a protester who'd done a lot of work, a lot of prayer and counseling outside of abortion clinics, and what happened in his situation, and this is really, really instructive for what we're dealing with on the FACE Act. He dealt with, there was a very angry, violent, vile person who was constantly coming at him, trying to antagonize him and actually was yelling vile things at Mark's son. And so Mark stepped in between this man and his son. The man fell down.
Starting point is 02:12:44 There was some physical contact. The man fell down. There was some physical contact. The man fell down. And what was interesting is the local authorities in Pennsylvania looked at this case, looked at all aspects of this situation, did an investigation and dropped the charges. And then all of a sudden, you know, the DOJ gets involved. They swat Mark and his family, you know, early hours of the morning. That's how they like to do these. And I've spoken to FBI agents that are whistleblowers that are, you know, threatened they'll lose their job if they don't do these SWAT raids to arrest these people, which is completely
Starting point is 02:13:13 unnecessary and unfortunately puts agents at risk when they do this. But I think Mr. Houck's case is a really good example of the problem with the FACE Act. And one of the main issues with the FACE Act is why is the federal government, why is there a federal law that targets behavior that would otherwise be legal behavior except the location where it's at, number one. And number two, there are already laws on the books in every state. There are already city ordinances that would deal with anything inappropriate that's happening at these places. So the reality is if someone is breaking the law, if they're actually obstructing access, if they're trespassing, if they're committing assault, even if they're being disorderly, all there's local ordinances, there's city ordinances, municipal codes, and state law
Starting point is 02:14:00 that would prevent that illegal activity and would address it. But that's not good enough for the Department of Justice. And so again, this was, you know, to me, this FACE Act really is a Trojan horse that once they're inside the walls, now you have a politically motivated Department of Justice that is anti-Christian, anti-faith, doesn't like anyone saying things that are against the narrative on abortion as some sort of medical care. And that's the real issue now. So it is being targeted. And these people are people with no criminal history, no violent past,
Starting point is 02:14:35 that are now facing over a decade in prison for peacefully praying and singing outside the entrance to a clinic. And, you know, it's not just the fact that, as you pointed out, the local law enforcement looked at it and said, there's nothing here. And we all saw they had video that was on outside camera there. Everybody could see that there was nothing, no big deal. And so, you know, the video was there. Everybody could see that. Local law enforcement saw there was nothing there.
Starting point is 02:15:04 And yet the Biden administration comes after them. And at the same time as you pointed out in 1994 when they created the face act it was going to be comprehensive for a lot of different things but they don't do anything on the other side to protect uh crisis pregnancy centers from even arson or bombs that are thrown on them they won won't even investigate that, will they? No, they absolutely will not. And that's a critical issue. No one's advocating any kind of violence or law-breaking when it comes to sidewalk counseling outside of these clinics. But what they are really targeting is that peaceful behavior. They want to end that. They want to scare people into not even doing the kind of counseling that saves lives, that saves these preborn children over and over again. And I think the other interesting issue about the case in Tennessee, as well as just the FACE Act cases, is federal courts and the DOJ are not reacting well to the Dobbs decision.
Starting point is 02:16:00 And here's what's so important. You know, there's an argument to be made that the Dobbs decision is, look, there is no federal right to an abortion. If that is true, then what is it that these individuals are doing and why does the federal government have any role or jurisdiction over this? Because again, what they're alleging is they're doing something that is violating a federal right. That's why the federal government has jurisdiction. But even in the case in Tennessee, the judge refused during motions practice. And as they were, the attorneys were drafting the jury instructions. And I spoke to the attorneys, the judge refused to entertain that and even refused to instruct the jurors on the fact that Dobbs says abortion, there is no federal right to an abortion,
Starting point is 02:16:46 there's no constitutional right to an abortion, refused to instruct the jurors on that. So again, I think that's a significant issue. And that may be the end of the FACE Act if federal courts, if the appeals courts and ultimately the Supreme Court look at this and say, okay, wait a minute, we have ruled there is no federal constitutional right to an abortion, and so where is the jurisdiction for the federal government on the FACE Act? So that may be the undoing of it. Unfortunately, as things happen here, you have individuals with no criminal history, no violent past,
Starting point is 02:17:21 who could be doing significant time in federal penitentiaries waiting for relief from the Supreme Court if it ever comes. Would they have to go to jail if their case is on appeal? Would they still incarcerate them? It's up to the discretion of the judge. Wow. It's up to the discretion of the judge. So often people do sit and wait in confinement while their case is on appeal. Wow.
Starting point is 02:17:39 That's amazing. And, you know, when you look at it, it's the judge's instructions. And when I covered this case the other day, I said I talked about a guy who was a marijuana advocate up in New Jersey, called himself New Jersey Weed Man. I forget what his real name was, but, you know, he was he was that that was the name that he went by. And he had a large amount of marijuana. They were going to try him as a trafficker and he said you know i think there's enough people here that don't like the criminalization of marijuana that i could get hung jury if i argue for jury nullification and he did that he took it is actually in the state constitution the jury should judge the facts of the case but also the law itself and the penalties
Starting point is 02:18:21 that could be imposed and and that goes all the way back to William Penn in England. When they came after him, he helped us establish jury nullification. And so he showed that to the jury and the judge said, take that down. I'm going to lock you up. Well, the jury had already seen it. So they voted seven to five to acquit him. But the prosecutor came back and he went before another judge. The judge let him put up that card, which quoted from the New Jersey State Constitution,
Starting point is 02:18:49 and he let him keep that up, and then he got his acquittal of 12 to nothing. So it really comes down to the judge's instructions. In many cases, judges will tell the jury, you have no right to judge the law. You're just here to judge the case, i will tell you you know these other things like you talked about the fact that the judge would even uh keep them from keep the attorneys from telling them uh talking to them about the implications of the dobbs decision but what about jury nullification let me ask you as a lawyer what do you think about that it is a hail mary thing and he couldn't find any any lawyers who would do it that's why he represented himself and well you know jury nullification is this is this is my frustration with it as a practicing attorney
Starting point is 02:19:34 the reality is that jury nullification was a fundamental part of our constitutional system thomas jefferson himself said that the jury is the only anchor yet imagined in the mind of man by which a government can be held to the principles of its constitution. Now that's a mouthful, but think about what they were saying. All of the founding fathers believed in the concept of jury nullification. In other words, if the federal government or any government is going to put a citizen on trial, ultimately not the judge, ultimately the jury can say factually, this may be accurate, but we do not believe this should be called a crime. Therefore we are going to say not guilty of a criminal act. And, and since our founding, there has been a gradual at first,
Starting point is 02:20:29 and then a much more violently rapid movement to eradicate the concept of jury nullification from our court system, which is truly unfortunate. The end of the day, our system, there are so many checks and balances in our system. But one of the critical ones was this concept of jury nullification, where a jury of your peers, of your fellow citizens, could look at the government and say, no. Yeah, that's true. Not guilty, and not guilty because of the Constitution, not guilty because of morals, ethics, justification, whatever it is, not guilty. That's right. That's right. That's right. Yeah, there was no question that William Penn was defying the rules to not meet as a church if you're not meeting as the official state church.
Starting point is 02:21:14 No question about that at all. They shut that down. And that was such a foundational thing. You know, even into Victorian times, you know, Gilbert and Sullivan, who did all the light operas and stuff, they even had one called trial by jury you know because that was such a fundamental concept and you stop and think about it it is as important if not more important than something like free speech because that really is where they you can stop the tyranny is with a jury nullification it's such an important thing uh but uh and and you know i looked at that and i said now you know if you would have gone for jury nullification i got to believe that there's going to be a couple of people, even in liberal Nashville, because of Tennessee and surrounding areas.
Starting point is 02:21:50 I got to believe they could at least find a couple of people who would say, no, I'm not willing to lock up, you know, these family, these law abiding family oriented people for a decade and give them a quarter of a million dollar fine. I got to believe you'd find at least one or two people like that until the prosecutor got tired of coming back after him, I think. Yeah. And I know, honestly, that's what I was hoping for in those cases is that there were people that were just willing to do the right thing. But again, in federal courts in particular, they've done everything they can to prevent attorneys from arguing for jury nullification. Attorneys can be held in contempt for doing it. There's only a couple states where it's still part of the Constitution.
Starting point is 02:22:33 One of the New England states, I can't remember which one off the top of my head, still has it. It still happens there. That's the only state where it's still there. there, but it is a challenge practicing law to essentially allow a jury to see and understand what you are saying without crossing the lines with regard to jury nullification and trying to empower them to do the right thing. And I've successfully done that without blatantly arguing jury nullification against the instruction of the judge. As an officer of the court, there are limitations that are placed on attorney, but juries can see through to the right thing and they need to be empowered to do that. So there was a subtle reform that needs to happen. And again, it would have to be subtle at first
Starting point is 02:23:13 and then not, but we need to go back to that concept of jury nullification. It's absolutely critical. Yeah. And it's so bad that, you know, as you point out, if a jury's, you've got a juror who openly says that even the jurors have to be careful when they do jury nullification in most cases, because they, if they start talking about jury nullification, you get kicked off. That's right. If you don't want to, if you don't have the time. Absolutely right. Jury duty, just tell them, you know, about jury nullification. They won't see you in the first place. But what you're talking about in terms of the way the Biden administration has really criminally applied
Starting point is 02:23:47 this law that is 30 years old and weaponized it for political purposes and abused this law, it's another example, isn't it, of how things go wrong when we try to centralize it all and we try to federalize everything
Starting point is 02:24:05 instead of these types of things being done by local law enforcement and local laws you're absolutely right and and honestly and people think it's radical when you say it but we should be asking questions in this country on why today um why we even need an fbi why we even need a department of justice when it comes to criminal cases. And I'd submit to you, there's a great argument that we don't. And if we look at the history of the FBI and where it came about, you know, the FBI was really created to deal with a specific problem, which was interstate bank robberies, right? You know, you, you know, Bonnie and Clyde would rob a bank in Kansas and then they would flee to another state and they
Starting point is 02:24:44 would get away with it. But now, you know, states can evolve and develop and we can see the danger of the growing federal government, centralized government, all of it. Every time we move things to DC, we lose freedom and the states lose accountability and responsibility every time that happens. So I agree, but simple things like jury nullification need to come back. We need to be pushing those things so that we can recover freedoms. And it is supposed to be a government, you know, with the consent of the government, a government of the people, by the people, for the people. Those, you know, those words are not idle words when we think about the intent and the meaning of that. And so, yes, we are a nation of laws, but we're also a nation of political will and the people need to understand we need to have that
Starting point is 02:25:45 yes and it even goes into bigger concepts when we talk about things like supreme court uh rulings and orders you know our founders never intended those things to be the final edict that we all had to just stop what we were doing and follow they intended that to be sort of an advisory opinion for a political leader and if if a political leader said, you know, that's very interesting court, but you don't have a way to enforce that. And I disagree. And then the people could vote that leader, that political leader out of office in the next election if they chose not to go by it.
Starting point is 02:26:16 But that's the kind of role that they envisioned for the courts, not what we have now. And again, that's another example when we talk about federal courts and the Supreme Court of this federalization and centralization of power, which is really dangerous to our freedom. Yes, exactly. What does check and balance mean if you can't do that? And that's what you're talking about is it was exactly done by Andrew Jackson, who said, you know, the Supreme Court's issued their opinion. Let's see him enforce it. And he was wrong in terms of his policy, but he was right in terms of the way the Constitution and the authority of all these different things happened.
Starting point is 02:26:47 But, you know, when you talk about how we've centralized everything and the Dobbs decision and the central point that you were making was that the FACE Act may ultimately be overturned when people look at the fact that it was supposedly there to protect what the Supreme Court had decided was a constitutional right. And yet they didn't have the authority to really do that. They didn't have the authority to decide when life began. And that's what the Dobbs decision was about. I said before the Dobbs decision, and it really, really surprised me that it happened. I never thought it would happen. But I'd always said that the appropriate response to Roe v. Wade was for the Texas governor to say, well, you've made your decision. Let's say you enforce it. We will decide what murder is here in Texas. And that's essentially what the Dobbs decision said.
Starting point is 02:27:33 It said this is under the 10th Amendment. These things should be decided at the state level. And everybody understood that and started freaking out because it said wait a minute that means that they could overturn their definition of marriage and they could overturn this and that and all the rest of these things that the supreme court has crossed over the line to do so this is a very important case and this face act is not only a a miscarriage a political persecution but it is also something that could have very far-reaching constitutional implications for the Supreme Court and the judicial system, I think, if this is overturned. Yeah, I couldn't agree more. And again, with the Dobbs decision, fundamentally, I believe that life begins at fertilization.
Starting point is 02:28:17 And so the Dobbs decision was flawed because it didn't go far enough, right? That our fundamental obligation should be to protect life however what the dobbs decision got right is a fundamental understanding of our constitutional republic and our federal system where the states really do have the authority and over these things and really most of the authority was supposed to rest with the states so in that respect we've seen some very good jurisprudence from our Supreme Court pushing back on federal government power. We just need to see more.
Starting point is 02:28:47 I agree. Yeah, I'm concerned. You know, I understand people's concern about protecting life, and I share that. I'm just concerned that if they were to put in a federal law, which is what a lot of people are talking about, and already when you see Pence and other people talking about it, they typically are picking 15 weeks. 15 weeks is way beyond what they've done in Florida and other places. It's way beyond even what they did, what they have in France, where they just relaxed it, and they've extended it to 12 weeks.
Starting point is 02:29:14 It used to be more stringent than that. And so who gets to set that level? Well, it's going to wind up being set politically if we make it a political thing in Washington. And so it might be at 15 weeks with the republicans and when they put that in i don't think new york and california will enforce that and you can't force them to do that but i think when they take it all the way up to 36 weeks or beyond i think that most of the republican states they'll obey that you know and so it's we're gonna get the worst of both things if we make it a federal issue.
Starting point is 02:29:45 I've seen that in the past. The Republicans will say, well, that's a federal law. I've got to obey it. The Democrats will say, no, we're not. Take a look at marijuana legalization, for example. And so I'm concerned about that. Let's talk a little bit about what is happening at the border, because that's another constitutional issue. I've talked about it.
Starting point is 02:30:03 When it first started happening, I said that's a very important constitutional issue, and I'd like to get your take on that. But I said, at the same time, people need to understand that there's a lot of grandstanding that's going on. I mean, we're only talking about a two-and-a-half-mile area. That's the only place where they're really putting anything there. And so the border is still wide open everywhere else. Out of 2,000 miles, you've got 2.5 miles that they're really fighting over. But it's got important constitutional issues on it, doesn't it? It does.
Starting point is 02:30:30 The practical impact of this is minimal. The border is wide open. The policy of our federal government, our Department of Homeland Security, is to just invite as many people in as possible, regardless of who they are, where they're from, or what controls we have over that. That's obvious. What's happening is just beyond absurd. But this issue is critical because it goes to a fundamental question of, does the governor of Texas have the ability to take action to protect the border, the sovereignty of Texas, and ultimately to protect the property and lives
Starting point is 02:31:07 of the citizens of Texas. Does the governor of Texas have the authority to do that? And I would say they have an obligation, both a legal and moral obligation to do that. And so ultimately, you have a lot of interesting issues that rise up from this you have an older case that was um scalia wrote a very famous defense to it it was called the united states versus arizona where essentially the majority of the supreme court said if it has to do with immigration it's the sole province of the federal government that's it right and that's a very overview summary of it and and scalia was talking very eloquently about the issue of state sovereignty. And he used language like the constitution isn't a suicide pact for the states. They have the
Starting point is 02:31:53 ability to protect their citizens, to protect their sovereignty, to protect their borders. And that's really the issue here. Does the state of Texas have the ability, does the governor have the ability to act in an emergency, in a declared emergency, where it is a threat to the property and the lives of the people of Texas to do this? And the answer is, of course, a county sheriff would have that authority, both under a constitutional system, but also under God's law, the doctrine of the lesser magistrate, it's all there. But what's particularly interesting, I think, and critical that we address is the federal government is not simply ignoring the law. They're choosing to circumvent federal law and the sovereignty of our nation to do what
Starting point is 02:32:40 they're doing. And so that's the bigger issue here is can states act do they have sovereignty but also what happens if the federal government the executive is refusing to do their job and protect our nation and protect american citizens what can a state do and so we've had the supreme court uh make an initial decision but they they um that Biden could undo any border barriers and he could open up the border if he wished, but that's not a final decision. Where is it in that Supreme Court process? Right. So all of this was essentially an emergency appeal by Customs and Border Patrol to seek permission to be allowed to cut the razor wire, right? And Texas was trying to prevent them from doing that. So that's it. That's the only
Starting point is 02:33:32 thing the Supreme Court was looking at. And the argument presented by Department of Homeland Security, by the feds, if you will, was, well, they're interfering with our ability to do our job because we need access to these areas so we can process these illegal immigrants. And so the Supreme Court said, Texas, you can't interfere with them doing their job. And so they can cut these down so they can do their job. Of course, nothing about that emergency decision. And there wasn't even really a written opinion. So we don't really understand what all of the logic or rationale was. We just know what the vote was. But ultimately, they don't go into any of the other issues.
Starting point is 02:34:11 They just said, for now, on an emergency basis, Texas, they're going to come in. They're allowed to cut this stuff down so they can do their jobs. That's interesting. Yeah, I guess the first time I covered it, I talked about Occam's razor wire. You know, common sense, it's going to tell you that that doesn't what they're really about. And we all know why they want to get to those areas, because they're going to facilitate the immigration of people who, as I've said in the past, I believe the real issue underlying all this, regardless of what kind of barriers or enforcement you've got at the border, the thing that is the real issue is the welfare magnet. And they're pulling people in. Those welfare magnets have a really strong pull, even if they're all the way up in New York
Starting point is 02:34:55 City. If they start giving free benefits to everybody and make themselves a sanctuary city, these people who are at the border, when they ask them where they're coming from, they're coming from all over the world, but where they want to go to, about 95% of them want to go to New York City. And so that welfare magnet is a big part of pulling people in. But from the legal standpoint, as you said, and I agree with you, I think they have the authority and they have the duty to protect lives and to protect the border from what everybody agrees is an invasion.
Starting point is 02:35:26 And of course, there's broad political support for this. So it's become a real big political football. But I think there's some very, very important legal issues, as you said, because, again, this goes back to the power of the local states. And I think this is an area that we see coming up time and again in many different areas because the federal government has become so politicized, so dysfunctional, so corrupt that people are increasingly looking to the state government to interpose itself. I think that's possibly one of the most important benefits of this grandstanding that's happening at
Starting point is 02:36:04 the border with the governors that are going there. I think that's perhaps one of the most important things. What do you think about that? Yeah, that really is the point here. I think the practical implications of this that could benefit the country for a long time is that a governor is willing to stand up and say, no, states have sovereignty. This is dangerous. And federal government, I think this is important. Federal government, you are not doing your job. You are failing to follow the law. You're failing to enforce the law. So someone has to, we as the lesser magistrates have to step up and do this. And I think it's very powerful, even if it just seems like grandstanding
Starting point is 02:36:42 that other governors are willing to support Texas. They're willing to sign on. They're willing to endorse what they're doing. And there are governors that are willing to send the National Guard to go and support Texas in what they're doing, independent of any sort of federal support to do that. I think the other interesting thing we will see legally in the future is, you know, Florida developed a state guard, right? And people talked about this. Oh, you know, what is DeSantis doing? He used his authority of governors to create a state guard that cannot be federalized, right? It's not, there is no, you know, I served in the Pennsylvania National Guard when I was still in the reserve
Starting point is 02:37:20 component. And in that you have a dual status. You are a member of the state militia and you also have federal recognition. So I had federal recognition as an officer. So normally when you're in the national guard, you have this dual status, those state guard members, you know, we might think of them as like Texas Rangers in Texas, but in Florida, they did that. And they did that for specific reasons where they didn't want to have to wait for or rely upon a federal government that might not help them when they need it because of political implications, right? Because it's a Republican led state. And so I think that's very important. So I think other states are going to be looking into similar things because they're realizing practically they cannot rely on a
Starting point is 02:38:00 federal government and they, and they also can't rely on them, not just because of incompetence, but because of everything is so political, they may not come to their aid yes and if i remember correctly the florida guard part of the reason that he was doing that was to try to protect people from these biden mandates for the uh for the military which is what the next thing we're going to talk about here uh that you've been very heavily involved in that was another aspect of it to even protect the guard from the federal government, from federal overreach. So I think that is a very, you know, again, to have state guards instead of something
Starting point is 02:38:34 that is under the federal government. But this move away in many different ways from this overreaching federal authority that's put its tentacles in every aspect of our lives. Nobody says the joke anymore, but, you know, we used to always say when somebody would overreaching federal authority that's put its tentacles in every aspect of our lives nobody says the joke anymore but you know we used to always say when somebody would uh get over a rot about something well don't make a federal case out of it but everything is now federal case and so i think that's right this pendulum is starting to swing the other way and i think one of the most important things about this even though there's a lot of political grandstanding that's going on
Starting point is 02:39:02 and a lot of political moves because biden did not nationalize them because then he would be nationalizing them in order to open up the border. So I think that's kind of held his hand on that. And so that was a good political maneuver. But I think the best thing that could come out of this would be for conservatives have started, have adopted this mindset that has been the mindset of liberals for a long time, that everything needs to be done by the federal government. And I think it'd be a very healthy thing for people to start looking more to state and local government to intervene and to interpose against an increasingly authoritarian and intrusive federal government. I think that's one of the most important things, don't you? It absolutely is. And practically speaking, you know, we understand it.
Starting point is 02:39:48 It is in our DNA to think that way as a nation, right? We don't get a revolutionary war. We don't split with England as the colonies without the idea and the concept of the doctrine of the lesser magistrate. In other words, local authorities who have the authority by the people that they govern to act and act responsibly taking these steps. But the other practical implication, not just that it's in our DNA as a nation, we can actually have influence over what happens locally. I mean, how much effort does it take? I mean, people can think about the county you live in. Do you know who your elected district attorney is in your county? Do you know?
Starting point is 02:40:29 Do you know if they're a Republican or a Democrat? Are they conservative? Are they a Soros-funded DA? And what do you think it would take? Look at the number. I mean, in so many counties across the nation, it's a few hundred votes, maybe a few thousand votes that would make the difference between who's your district attorney. Why does that matter? That's one of your chief law enforcement people in your county that's
Starting point is 02:40:49 going to decide who's bringing charges or not. That's just one example. Your county sheriff's critically important when we talk about law enforcement and protecting citizens of the county from federal overreach. So you can have an impact. A few churches get together, they rally behind a good, solid candidate, not violating 501c3 status, but actually encouraging people to understand the issues. All of a sudden, you can swing an election at the county level and even at the state level when you act together that way. So practically speaking, we can have so much more influence there than we ever can in the swamp that that has become dc oh you're so
Starting point is 02:41:25 right even elon musk has said i've been saying that for the longest people always well who do you like for president i said you know who do you like for your local sheriff who do you like for your local town council and you look at the fact that for a presidential election you're one of 300 million people voting uh you you may have a million times more effect in your local election than you do. Your vote is a million times better, more powerful than it is in a federal election for president or anything like that. And the closer you get to you, the more effect it has. Even Elon Musk has pointed that out. And he pointed out the brilliance of Soros by focusing on local district attorneys.
Starting point is 02:42:01 We should be that smart. We should learn from these guys. They know what they're doing and they know how to manipulate and get control. And so I agree. I think it is the local issues. But it also then comes down to the individual. And that's what we were showing at the beginning, the trailer for the new documentary that's coming out, talking about this struggle that you've been involved in very heavily from the very beginning.
Starting point is 02:42:22 You're in the trailer there. Seals beat Biden, that documentary. Tell us a little bit about that documentary, and then we'll talk a little bit about what the current status is of these things. So tell us a little bit about the documentary, Davis. Yeah, absolutely. So Seals beat Biden was a concept that was developed. It's a relatively new news media outlet called the Republic Sentinel. And they came to me, they came to former Navy SEALs and others and said, hey, we want to tell this story. We want to tell the story of what happened. We want to do it well. We want to honor these people.
Starting point is 02:42:55 But we also want to do it in a way that we can prevent things like this from happening and also shine a light on the implications of everything that happened with the COVID mandate on the rights of all American citizens. So that was sort of what, what was behind the project. So the Republic Sentinel was fantastic. What's out now currently is, is part one. It's a three part series.
Starting point is 02:43:19 I'm not exactly sure when the second part is going to be released. It should be released very soon. And then there'll be a final third part that's released as well. So you can follow what's going on at SealsBeatBiden.com. It's free. You just have to give them your email address in order to log in there. But you can set up an account and watch it free. It's very, very well done.
Starting point is 02:43:39 And I think some of the most powerful aspects of it are just telling the stories of individuals like Asa Miller, one of the Navy SEALs I represented in this, talks about what it was like for those guys to go through this, talks about people being put in isolation, being essentially in solitary confinement, what it was like for him. And Asa's in a great position to tell that story because he was one of the Navy SEALs from the very, very beginning that said, I don't believe this is right. I don't believe this is constitutional. We need to take a stand, not just for ourselves, but for everyone in the military that's afraid to speak up because they're not a Navy SEAL and for the American public. And he was willing to be court-martialed. He,
Starting point is 02:44:17 he, he and I sat in a room together and I said, if you don't follow this order, you understand what could happen. And he was ready and willing to be court-martialed if that's what it takes. So I'm so glad that he's able to be in it and tell part of his story. And there's other people that were critically involved in sort of rallying people to this cause and creating just a, not just a rally point, but a way for people to get this information out there and have the courage to take a stand within the military. So it went from, you know, isolated individual military members working on this on their own to at one point, I think we've talked about this number before, but even the DOD admitted that there were two over 260,000 military members that were not compliant when the mandate came out. Wow. Right. Over 260,000. That's over 13% of the total military force that were not compliant by the time the mandate
Starting point is 02:45:12 came down. And that's the DOD's numbers. So, you know, how far we trust that, I'm not sure how far we go on that. But Seals v. Biden is an effort to sort of tell the story of what happened. And then as you get into episode three, I'm told the goal of that episode is really to talk about the future and how we take stands against things like this in the future and learn from what happened. That's excellent. And it all begins with the individuals.
Starting point is 02:45:40 And, you know, I've seen some articles. There was one I saw the other day. Somebody said, you know, there are more people involved in all of this than you think. You know, just as they want to make everybody think, well, you're the only one who had a family member die from this shot. Or you're the only one who got paralyzed from this shot. I know it was happening to everybody. They did such a great job of trying to isolate and atomize and, you know, cover this up with everybody. You point out 13 260 000 people even
Starting point is 02:46:07 according to their numbers and of course you look at the things that they're doing with uh the bureau of labor statistics how they rigged those numbers last week it's just amazing but they always rig the numbers they rig the the covet numbers they rig the the protest numbers and all the rest of this but it really did come down to the strong um to the individual you know when you make this stand each and every one of us is going to have to make that stand as an individual and make that individual decision and i like the way the documentary trailer started with that vice admiral i think it was uh who said the most important fight he's been in and it is true because this is a fight for our country or fight for our
Starting point is 02:46:45 constitution and for everyone's individual rights. And I like the way they came back to him and he said, you got to be willing to throw those stars on the table over the principle. And, and the sad thing about it that bothers me Davis is the fact that they have pushed so many good people like that out of the military. I think that's a big part of the agenda. What do you think?
Starting point is 02:47:08 Yeah, you know, and I didn't want to believe that, right? And very early on in this, people started talking about a purge or otherwise, but I was, you know, I was a jag. I was a lawyer in the military. I was a lieutenant colonel. I submitted my religious accommodation request. I trusted the process. And then it was denied, and it was denied improperly. It was denied for the wrong reasons. And so I had great pause, but I'm like, okay, I'm going to appeal my own religious accommodation. I'm going to help everyone else do it. And then it doesn't take very much imagination to start
Starting point is 02:47:45 thinking about, okay, if you have a significant portion, you know, 10, 13, 15, whatever the real number was, percent of the force that is objecting to not just to being vaccinated, but being, but objecting to the way this is being done and the way it's being forced on the American public and on the military for their moral, ethical, and religious reasons, then you have to realize, wow, who's leaving the military then? It's people that are willing to question orders. It's people that are willing to say, no, I took an oath to support and defend the Constitution of the United States. I'm not going to turn my back on that. And people don't fully understand the documentary helped tell this story, but I can just rattle off examples of how this policy was in direct violation of constitutional
Starting point is 02:48:32 rights and in direct violation of federal law. And they knew that and they refused to stop. I mean, the best example, and it's almost humorous if it wasn't so serious for so many people, but the Department of Defense Inspector General, the inspector general's office, supposed to be the watchdog for the Department of Defense. And they work for the man. So you have to wonder how independent they really are. But even they did a cursory review of the religious accommodation process. And they said, Department of Defense, you are not doing this correctly.
Starting point is 02:49:04 It is impossible for you to be doing the individualized review that's required by law. There are not enough hours in the day, days in the week, weeks in a month in order to do this because you're spending, they did a calculation. It's like, even if you were working 10 hour days with no breaks, you're spending minutes at most on each one of these individual accommodation requests that's not what the law requires the dod ig wrote a memo sent it to secretary austin the secretary of defense and said you need to see this because our initial analysis is you're violating the constitutional rights and you may be violating federal law by the way you're doing this and it
Starting point is 02:49:43 was ignored yeah yeah it was ignored by the way you're doing this. And it was ignored. Yeah. Yeah. It was ignored by the secretary of defense. And no one even knew that that memo existed until it came out through a FOIA request almost two months later. In other words, they were kicking people out, ending people's careers, continuing to do this without even like a strategic pause to say, okay, Hey, we need to look into this. They simply didn't care. And so that, you know, if there's no other lesson that we can learn from the documentary, from what happened with the COVID mandate in the military, is that we had an executive branch and military leadership that were willing to ignore federal law and the constitutional rights of military members
Starting point is 02:50:21 to accomplish a goal, which was 100% compliance with an experimental vaccine. Yeah, yeah. And we had a lot of people who were scientists or people in the medical community, and they didn't wake up until they're working on it and said, yeah, we got this other thing over here. Maybe this works, maybe that works. And that happened in many different ways, many different places.
Starting point is 02:50:41 And they were immediately shut down. We have one solution, and you're going to do this. And it's like, wait a minute, there's something wrong here, right? And so you're seeing that everywhere. But fundamentally, what happened to people in the military? It's essentially the same thing that we see in private companies or we see in the hospitals, for example. The government bribes people with money, and then it says, and then you're going to do this, or we're going to take that money away. And so it ultimately comes back to what that vice admiral said, you've got to be willing to throw those stars on the table over your principal.
Starting point is 02:51:12 And that was the same thing that happened to nurses in hospitals. They hold your career, they hold your livelihood and your lifeline up to you, and you have to make that decision. Am I going to stand by the money and the career, or am I going to stand by my principle? And that's why this is a story for everybody, inside the military or outside the military. And a lot of people have gone through this fire, and the good thing about this is they've come out on the other side. And I've talked to so many people who have absolutely no regrets about whether they lost their job.
Starting point is 02:51:44 Many of them found something else to do. They're happier about that. The people who have regrets are the ones who had their arm twisted and went along with the coercion. Those are the people I see over and over again who have regrets. Yeah, absolutely. And there's just been tremendous community built out of what happened. And, you know, this idea you were talking about earlier of isolation, you know, during this whole military fight, there were so many times when someone would call me and they'd be like, I'm the only person on my entire installation. My chain of command is telling me I'm the only one. I'm the last holdout. What do I do? I'm all alone here. And I'm like, nope, you're not alone. I have talked to five other people that are your same installation
Starting point is 02:52:22 that are being told the same thing by their command. They're being lied to about that. But just even the idea, and that was part of the whole idea of what the Navy SEALs like Asa Miller did and were willing to do is they were willing to risk their careers in order to get the word out there. Hey, you're not alone. You're not alone. You're not isolated. There is a whole community of people that are taking a stand. And the idea is courage is contagious. And one of the things I think is a difference, and maybe this is hyperbole, maybe it's not, but people like Asa Miller being willing to take a stand and saying no and not comply is a difference. small businesses, they took these stands. And the fact that they were unwilling to comply churches as well is why we didn't have concentration camps like they had in Australia in the United States, right? Because there was not the political will to do that because there was enough people, even though it was a small percentage saying no and not complying with this government overreach.
Starting point is 02:53:21 And so the government didn't have the political ability to carry out as much as they could or would have without that. That's what we need to learn from this. We need to have communities of people willing to come together, willing to rally at the local level, using the doctrine of lesser magistrates to take these stands. And if nothing else, I think that's a lot of what is hoped to be you know taught and talked about through the documentary yes they're so focused on on speech and controlling our communications with each other because they want to do that isolation thing and you know when you look at the military i think about it how much they they've got to be it's got to be an especially difficult thing for people in the military because they spend so much time trying to create this cohesiveness. You're part of a unit.
Starting point is 02:54:05 You know, you're not just an individual out here. And that was part of what you and others were saying about this, you know, by isolating these people and making them the other, you're really harming that kind of cohesiveness. But I imagine the people who are being ostracized and isolated over all this stuff, they really feel that to a greater degree than somebody who is just working in a civilian job, because in a civilian job, you're not trained to have that kind of a team unit idea. And now you are kind of leaving the team and betraying the team as the way they're portraying it to people, wasn't it? Yeah, absolutely. I mean, that was part of the
Starting point is 02:54:41 pressure that was put on myself and so many military members. And when you get down to people like Navy SEALs, the team, the cohesiveness of that team, that small unit tactics, all of that comes together. And it absolutely was, there was a lot of pressure put on individuals to say, well, everybody else is doing it. Just go along, go along, go along. And not everyone else was doing it, which was part of this. But the other thing is, again, you have to understand these individuals, so many were motivated by the fact that they believed this was wrong. And all they did was start asking questions, right? That's all a lot of us did is just ask some questions. And you weren't even allowed to ask questions.
Starting point is 02:55:19 As soon as you started to ask questions, then you were faced with tremendous pressure. And I've seen it over and over and over again, where just the mere fact that you're asking questions has been met with challenges from the military, isolation from the military, and it went past COVID. I'm still trying to fix people who lost their security clearance, not because the mandate was repealed, so they were in good standing with the military again, but because they had written a detailed memo to their commander explaining why they felt it was unlawful to order military members to receive an experimental
Starting point is 02:55:56 medical procedure, a medical product, under federal law, why they believe that, then they were being challenged as being disloyal or exercising poor judgment, and they're trying to revoke their security clearances. So most of those cases so far, we've won, and we've gotten the security clearance back, but that was sort of like the next level. And again, when you see things like that, you start to say, that really does feel like a purge then. If you're not just saying, oh, you survived the COVID mandate, but now we're coming after your security clearance because you dared say that you think this order might be unlawful. You know, you're not allowed to do that. That's the exact opposite of the way our military was built and designed and just the DNA of our military. We used to have a military that really focused on the small unit, the platoon, the platoon sergeant, and individual freedom of action within
Starting point is 02:56:46 your area of authority, even on the battlefield. We've won battles historically as a nation because it didn't matter if a small unit was cut off from the chain of command or communication, they had the freedom and they were expected to exercise good judgment and carry on the mission, even without a general officer telling them what to do. Right. And that was the difference between, you know, the allied military on D-Day and the German military. No one would wake up Hitler to release the tanks on D-Day. The Germans may have pushed us off the beaches, but again, there was this command structure where they had no freedom of action. That's what we've moved to in our military. So on a very practical level, COVID exposed that punishing commanders and anyone who ask
Starting point is 02:57:32 hard questions, that's a dangerous thing. That's something we need to be working hard on in our military as well. We need to go back to a concept that we want free thinkers who within the structure of the law and the constitution feel comfortable doing their job and doing it well that's what's made our us have the best and most powerful military when we've been successful oh yeah and that's what makes our economy work not having central planning not having total centralized control and yet that is the essence of what they want to do well you've got a lot of different things that you do there. Your website is Yontz Law. That's Y-O-U-N-T-S Law.
Starting point is 02:58:07 You've got a lot of military experience. You help people who are Christians who are being persecuted. People can also follow you on X at Davis Yontz, Y-O-U-N-T-S again. And tell us a little bit about, we've only got about a minute and a half. Give us a little bit of a commercial for what you do at Yonce Law. Yeah, so we are focused primarily on representing military members. So we help military members with all kinds of things, rising from the level of administrative actions to court-martial cases. We have pushed into, since COVID, a lot more religious freedom issues. So
Starting point is 02:58:45 we're able to do that and we use our experience. I've added another attorney to the firm, Caleb Bird, who is a former senior army prosecutor who's outstanding on these issues as well. So that's our goal is really to support military members. We want to be in a position to encourage military members to do the right thing and to help them navigate the process. So that takes us all over the world. And we hope to be able to continue to do that as long as God allows it. And as you pointed out, I mean, there's just no end to this. They're so tenacious. Yesterday, I was talking about how Alvin Bragg, Manhattan DA, he's coming after people over COVID stuff still. And so the military is especially, as you pointed out, taking security clearances of other people.
Starting point is 02:59:28 They are out to get their revenge against anybody that pushed back against their narrative for centralized control. And it just keeps going. So thank you so much for what you do. David Shantz, yantzlaw.com. And you can also find him on Twitter or X at davis yontz thank you so much for what you do sir appreciate it thank you god bless you thank you have a good day and thank you all for listening and we appreciate that have a good day The David Knight Show is a critical thinking super spreader. If you've been exposed to logic by listening to The David Knight Show,
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