The David Knight Show - 7Sep23 War OF Drugs: Afghanistan & the US Empire
Episode Date: September 7, 2023The "Drug War" is a war against the American people. Nearly all the world's opioids came from Afghanistan during US occupation but the Taliban ended it in one year. But the domestic War OF Drugs agai...nst the American people by its own government is even more despicablLiberty Safes — Not Safe, Not About LibertyDid you know Liberty Safes has a BACKDOOR to the safes? They opened a gun safe based on FBI request as the FBI continues to arrest even more J6 protestors. And, ATF's new "rule" can send you jail for selling ONE gunFeds Shutdown Even Phony, Failed TX Border ProtectionNeither political party is serious about the border. GOP is playing games while the solution is in plain sight.It's official — BootyGay & his Marxist committee for Transportation Equity" say "cars are racist" and ALL CARS MUST BE BANNED — including EVsDon't Tread on KidsThe Gadsden Flag kid and the high school silently praying coach both stood by their principles and won — and then were ostracized. Is it better to declare victory and move on to better things or stay where you are. Is the answer different for kids than it is for adults? Eco-Death/Suicide of the West — Germany FirstINTERVIEW Rediscovering the Spirit of Meyers ManxEric Peters, EPautos.com, from face diapers to facade environmentalism — about halfway through we talk about the simplicity, fun, and entrepreneurship of Meyers Manx that is essential for the survival of We the PeopleFind out more about the show and where you can watch it at TheDavidKnightShow.comIf you would like to support the show and our family please consider subscribing monthly here: SubscribeStar https://www.subscribestar.com/the-david-knight-showOr you can send a donation throughMail: David Knight POB 994 Kodak, TN 37764Zelle: @DavidKnightShow@protonmail.comCash App at: $davidknightshowBTC to: bc1qkuec29hkuye4xse9unh7nptvu3y9qmv24vanh7Money is only what YOU hold: Go to DavidKnight.gold for great deals on physical gold/silverFor 10% off Gerald Celente's prescient Trends Journal, go to TrendsJournal.com and enter the code KNIGHTBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-david-knight-show--2653468/support.
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You're listening to The David Knight Show.
As the clock strikes 13, it's Thursday, the 8th of September, Year of Our Lord 2023.
Well, today we're going to take a deep look at what is happening with electric vehicles.
We have a company that is trying to bring to market, actually they have sold some, large electric semis
has now had four fires,
counting a re-ignition
in less than four months
at their facility,
not counting the other ones.
And we see that the German economy
is being burned down by green mania.
We're also going to take a look
at what has happened to the supply of opioids now
the u.s has left afghanistan very interesting to see who the biggest drug pusher in the world is
yes that would be the u.s government we'll take a look at the pardons and the case to be made for pardons. And we're going
to also take a look at what happened with Liberty Safe, turning in a customer. Absolutely amazing,
the betrayal. We'll be right back. Well, today, let's begin with what is happening with the American Empire.
You know, what is it about our unending wars?
And, of course, the war in Afghanistan was not supposed to end for another 20 years.
You know, they had all these people say, I don't ever see it ending.
You had people at the Pentagon during the Trump administration another 20 years and so.
And as they were thrown out, because Trump never took the forces out of there,
as they were thrown out, it took the Taliban only a year to essentially end the drug trade there.
So now people are concerned about what is going to happen in the United States
as the U S government and the CIA have created these,
uh,
this,
this war of drugs on the American people.
You understand what is going on with this.
They're the ones who are running the drugs and then they create the drug war
to destroy the rule of law, to corrupt our police, to militarize our police, and to destroy our rights.
It's a pretty clever scheme, quite frankly.
Demonically clever.
And so the reality of the U.S. occupation of Afghanistan is that while the American government was there, and I reported on this on a regular
basis, it used to be that the Taliban had just about stamped it out.
And then when the U.S. government came in, they were between 90 and 95 percent of the
world's supply coming out of Afghanistan.
We had Geraldo Rivera in the early days there in the field showing U.S. soldiers
guarding the poppy fields. It's like, what's going on here? Oh, well, we have to do that because
that's the way they make their living. Well, you know, there's other things that they could do.
It might be more advantageous to even put them on welfare if you can't get them involved in
something constructive.
But what the Taliban is doing, which I guess the American government never thought of,
they're actually shutting down the poppy fields and they're planting wheat because with U.S.-led sanctions, the people there are starving.
That's the American government policy.
It is amazing how demonic this government has become.
We have become the Babylon of the world.
We pump out our sex, our drugs, our war to everybody on earth.
And so Western sources estimate up to a 99% reduction in some provinces.
Global heroin supplies are drying up.
And they fear that this is now going to cause people who they have addicted
by the easy access of this stuff, it's going to cause them to turn to fentanyl.
So there you go.
I guess we're just playing 4d chess all the time right it's already been called the most
successful counter-narcotics effort in human history armed with little more than sticks
teams of counter-narcotics brigades travel the country cutting down afghanistan's poppy fields
why didn't we think of that when we were occupying afghan No, we did the opposite. We guarded them.
Because, you know, they had a lot of the people there didn't like that.
And so we guarded it from the people like this who would have cut down the poppy fields
with sticks.
In April of last year, the ruling Taliban government announced the prohibition of poppy
farming, citing both strong religious beliefs and the extremely harmful social costs
that heroin and other opioids derived from that have wrought across Afghanistan,
let alone America and the rest of the world.
But again, why did we have this going?
Well, for the same reason that the British Empire
pushed opioids on the chinese
people and to subdue them and that's why they have these drugs that's why our government pushes the
drugs they're at war with us first they push the drugs on us in a spiritual, medical, psychological war.
And then they want to actually go to war.
And it's amazing to me to watch these politicians who will not admit what is really happening.
The CIA war on drugs.
They won't admit to it.
Instead, you got politicians like DeSantis and Pence and all the rest of these, Nikki Haley, they all want to start a hot war with Mexico now.
The drug cartels that they created with their prohibition,
in the same way that alcohol prohibition created Al Capone,
they created these, except that now it's been going on for over 50 years,
far longer than alcohol prohibition farmers are now planting
wheat helping stave off the worst famine that has been created by u.s sanctions six million people
are close to starvation in afghanistan so they're going to grow food instead of drugs. And it's kind of interesting the way they did this as well.
They waited until 2022 if they would have knocked these fields down as they took power,
they said.
It would have caused a backlash.
People had already put the effort into this.
They would have been eradicating a crop that the farmers had spent months growing and so um they waited they bided their time they told people uh if you plant it
we're going to destroy it so they didn't plant it kind of the same way that trump and biden
banned economic activity same thing that trump and biden want to do with, well, actually it's Biden who wants to do it with the electric vehicles.
Don't build that.
We're going to ban it.
You're going to lose your investment.
Don't have any power plants.
China can have power plants.
You can't have power plants.
We'll destroy them.
Same type of thing and so while the taliban is destroying opioids uh opium plants we're
destroying our power generation our power plants uh what's that going to do to our society
well we're going to be out there growing wheat by hand before too much longer and we'll be lucky
if the federal goons with their army of irs agents and
whatever else they can probably come up with an army of epa agents to come out and whack the stuff
down so between 2022 and late 20 between 2020 and late 2022 the price of opium in local markets rose by as much as 700%.
Yet, given the Taliban's insistence that they were going to eradicate, few attempted to plant poppies.
It's kind of the same thing that's happening right now in the automobile industry.
Germany is on the ropes.
The green policies are killing them. And they know from the recent auto show that China is going to eat their lunch on electric vehicles.
Everybody knows it.
There's no way that European or American manufacturers can compete with them
because of their access to lithium and other minerals necessary for this.
So they're always going to have a cost advantage.
This whole thing about electric vehicles is to shut down our industry.
And, of course, at the same time, they're shutting down power plants.
That's something that has been brought on for the first time by Biden,
the Energy Department.
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Granholm, who is running that,
wants to shut down the power plants.
But getting back to this
uh this undermines one of the most fundamental premises behind wars uh the alleged association
between the taliban and the drug trade this is the idea that there was a narco terror nexus right
and that idea that was sold to the American public to justify the Afghanistan war was just as phony as the domino theory that was sold to justify the Vietnam War.
People are very clever at coming up with MacGuffins, both lies, to get you to do what they want to do. And so this was not terror funded by narcotics.
And oh, by the way, these guys who are out there in caves
did not fly these planes into the buildings to take them down either.
All of this is based on a lie.
Amazing.
The reality was that Afghanistan was responsible
for a staggering 80 to 90% of the world's illicit opiate supply
while the American government was in charge.
That's it.
Zero when it wasn't there,
goes up to 90% while we are there.
It's kind of like the correlation that you see
with the deaths from the vaccines, isn't it?
Gee, I don't know what to make of it.
Just a coincidence, I guess.
The U.S. has never really been focused on reducing drug trade in Afghanistan,
writes Mint Press, or elsewhere for that matter.
All the lofty rhetoric aside, the U.S. has been happy to work with drug traffickers
if the move would advance certain geopolitical interests and of course you know
the cia and it's dark uh it's dark alliance gary webb exposed you know the whole thing with the
iran-contra stuff they're happy to work with people that they consider to be terrorists
if it can further their geopolitical interests somewhere else. And you know, all of that stuff was set up by bill Casey, uh, and the Reagan,
we became a leading official in the Reagan administration, somebody who
had been around, um, with the CIA, even before it was the CIA going back to
world war II, when it was the OSS, They called him Wild Bill Casey. And as the Iranians took the hostages in Tehran,
the American embassy took them hostage.
Bill Casey went there during the election and said,
don't release these prisoners until after the election,
and we'll make it worth your while.
And so they sold them the parts that they needed for the us jets that had
been sold to the shop around, uh, that whole regime collapsed, even though
the CIA had trained, uh, the Shah's goons, the Savak to be a ruthless,
repressive regime, torturing, uh, and killing and prisoning anybody who opposed him that was that
was we were the ones who were behind him we were the ones who trained the savak the cia
and so even as that fell then you have um bill casey former CIA says, uh, keep them prisoners, keep them prisoners.
So we make Reagan look good.
And then the deal they struck was to sell them the spare parts that
they needed for their jets, take that money and pour it into their
wars in central America needed more money.
So they created crack cocaine, sold that into the black communities in California.
When Gary Webb exposed it with his investigation Dark Alliance.
He won all kinds of journalistic awards and then they hired the LA Times to focus on Gary Webb and ad hominem attack destroyed his reputation destroyed his career.
And then he started putting everything back together and
said he was not not despondent things were looking very good and next thing
you know he dies that's the way our government operates professor all
alfred mccoy has written a book the politics Politics of Heroin, CIA Complicity, and the Global Drug Trade.
He said approximately 75% of the planet's illegal opium output
was sourced from Afghanistan while we were there.
The opioid crisis is the worst addiction epidemic in U.S. history.
That's, you know, the weapons of defense abroad
will become tools of tyranny at home,
to paraphrase Madison.
But of course,
they will terrorize us with drug addiction
that they push on us as well,
whether it's opioids or whether it's crack cocaine.
Now, the crack cocaine,
they push that into the black communities in L.A.
The opioid epidemic has really been pushed into white rural communities
where people are in economic despair.
Rural America has been particularly hard hit.
Seventy-four percent of farmers have been directly impacted by the opioid epidemic.
West Virginia and Tennessee are the states most badly hit.
White Americans are more likely to misuse these types of drugs than other races.
As Chris Hedges said,
this has risen from a decayed world
where opportunity, which confers status, self-esteem, and dignity,
has dried up for most Americans.
They are expressions of acute desperation and morbidity.
What they are is expressions of the futility of materialism and secularism.
White Americans have bought into the American dream of materialism.
They have forgotten God.
And so they value themselves by what they're able to achieve.
And of course, our government has been focused my entire life on shutting down avenues of success for ordinary people.
Sawing off the lower rungs of success.
Forget about trying to start a manufacturing business.
Forget about trying to continue to run a manufacturing business.
They continue to add more and more obstacles and regulations and fines for people
and every aspect of that.
And, of course, the final straw that made me want to throw up
was to watch Trump finally take away the last thing left to Americans
during his lockdown,
telling people they were not essential because they had a service business.
The only thing that was left to Americans,
well,
open up a restaurant or open up a barbershop or even a nail salon,
something,
you know,
no,
can't have that,
you know,
lemonade stand.
Can I do that?
No,
no,
you're not essential.
No.
And, uh, so yeah, so yeah just uh take some drugs because if you don't have something to hold on to some foundation in your life that is above and outside of this meager existence this temporary existence that we have. There is really nothing left for you.
In the Soviet Union, when Solzhenitsyn was writing, when he said, you know, our problem
is that we've forgotten God. What did they do? They turned to vodka to drown their sorrows.
They were essentially living in a kind of prison as they are setting up and have set up here in America in so many different ways how do you transcend this and it's not just you
know for your own personal benefit they can be for your own personal benefit but
God does actually bless nations he will bless people who are in captivity in a hopelessly corrupt, tyrannical government like the Soviet Union
or the USSA, Soviet
States of America. He will bless individuals,
but he'll actually bless the country as we have seen in our
history, if enough people turn to him.
But you're not going to find that in this article here.
They'll say part of the reason U.S. doctors are much more prone to doling out
exceptionally strong pain medication is that they were subjected to hyper
aggressive marketing campaign from Purdue Pharma, Oxycontin,
and other things like that. And again, the problem where the addiction comes in is if you've got a painkiller,
they found over and over again that if you give people even things like opioids or strong heroin or cocaine or something,
if you are in a great deal of pain, it's not addictive.
The problem is that the physicians, because they're being pushed by Purdue
and by the Sackler family and also by Johnson & Johnson,
they were actually the ones who were making it for the Sackler family.
The Sackler family is just drug pushers.
But when you give somebody something that is way more than they need to cope with the pain,
that's when it becomes a problem.
That's when it becomes addictive.
I remember when Chris Christie was running in 2015,
and he recounted the story of a friend of his, a very successful lawyer,
and married with a family, a very successful,
financially successful practice, and all the rest of this stuff.
He injured his back and then got addicted by the doctors to the opioids.
And it destroyed his practice, destroyed his marriage,
and he eventually committed suicide.
And so Chris Christie says, so we can't legalize marijuana.
It's like, how did he get to that?
He totally skips over that, a total non sequitur to what is going on here.
Anyway, the Sacklers made out like bandits, even after they were able to come in and cut deals,
unlike somebody like El Chapo, where they come in and confiscate everything
that he's got with civil asset and RICO laws.
The Sacklers were able to come to the table with all these different state attorneys general
and negotiate a settlement, and they walked away with a tremendous amount of money,
and everybody said, we were had.
How do we come back at them?
Well, you already set this up.
After they paid $6 billion in cash to victims,
they still remain one of the world's richest families
and have refused to apologize for their role in the addiction,
the empire pain, as they put it here,
and causing hundreds of thousands of deaths.
No, the pharmakia will not repent of their murders, will they?
It was always about money.
They made the cold calculation that they're going to make money
at the expense of people's lives a long time before that,
and they hung to that.
One group disproportionately affected by opioids, interestingly enough, as we have the wars abroad to support our empire, even our drug empire,
the people who fight those wars abroad, the military, have become some of the biggest victims
of the opioid epidemic because they frequently come back in a great deal of pain
and again they were over prescribed and they get addicted to this according to the national institute of health fauci's place veterans are twice as likely to die from overdose than the
general population one reason for this is the bureaucracy the va did a really poor job in the past decades with their pain management, particularly their reliance on opioids.
And so ex-soldiers who have to cope with chronic pain, brain injuries.
They said about a quarter of a million veterans of Afghanistan and Iraq
have traumatic brain injuries,
but added to that are the deep moral injuries that many suffered.
PTSD and other things like that you know
joe biggs that they're going to put in prison essentially for life
and two purple hearts one from iraq one from afghanistan you talk about somebody betrayed by
his government idealistic and then betrayed by his government, by Trump,
all these people that he put his hope in.
So sad.
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Well, we're going to take a quick break and we'll be right back.
The common man.
They created common core to dumb down our children.
They created common past to track and control us.
Their commons project to make sure the commoners own nothing.
And the communist future.
They see the common man as simple, unsophisticated, ordinary. But each of us has worth and dignity created in the image of God.
That is what we have in common.
That is what they want to take away.
Their most powerful weapons are isolation, deception, intimidation.
They desire to know everything about us while they hide everything
from us. It's time to turn that around and expose what they want to hide.
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If you can't support us financially, please keep us in your prayers. TheDavidKnightShow.com Let's talk a little bit about what happened with Liberty Safe.
It also is a part of the January the 6th story.
They are still arresting people.
Here we are two and a half years later.
Yesterday I was on a program and they asked me about,
well, what do you think about these guys?
Enrique Terrio, I mean, he'd been a Fed informant.
There wasn't any question about it.
He'd been a Fed informant, and I thought it was reasonable
that he certainly looked like it might have been the case
as they made sure that he wasn't even going to be in D.C.,
but they gave him the stiffest sentence of anybody, even though he wasn't physically there.
I thought they were removing him because he was an informant, because he had a history of that.
And, you know, it's interesting that I've not seen Darren Beattie recant any of this stuff.
Darren Beattie has been this person's effect.
That person's effect.
Look at that.
They said this thing up.
And, of course, it was a given that the place was going to be crawling with informants.
I said that for months.
I said it that morning, the morning of, on this program.
It was a matter of record.
And it's not some kind of a crystal ball.
It's just, what do they always do?
Every organization that they want to infiltrate,
they typically have people who have, you know,
some kind of personality or mental issue,
and the rest of the organization is the FBI
as agent provocateurs,
using these people to create something
so they can then look like heroes as they bust this up.
And so that was a given. And so I've said, you know, I thought it was possible that he was,
but clearly that doesn't look like the case. We still have people who are saying, well,
let's see if he actually serves the time. You know, Darren Beatty was pointing the finger at
Stuart Rhodes and Enrico Terrio,
at Ray Epps, for example, all these different people.
And Ray Epps has not been charged, but this is a new person
that was just charged in this story.
And why is he doing that?
Well, because he doesn't want you to see the people who actually made
tens to hundreds of millions of dollars running stop the steel
uh alex and company and and trump uh pushing his save america making 250 million dollars
uh yeah they're there because of ray epps that's why they went on january the 6th
and so um darren beattie has still not uh uh, said, well, I was wrong.
I was wrong about Stuart Rhodes.
I was wrong about Enrico Terrio.
He's still looking out there for, for new scapegoats to point the finger at.
As a matter of fact, when these guys were charged with seditious conspiracy, he said,
see, it proves that I was right.
They are federal informants.
They will never find them guilty of seditious
conspiracy. That's a ridiculous charge. It's such an overcharge. They'll never find them.
Well, they did find them guilty. It was ridiculous. And the sentence that they have been given
is ridiculous. But let's take a look at this latest one because this has a couple of different
aspects to it. This is a person who for two and a half years was not charged.
The FBI then comes to his house and to arrest him.
This is put out by the Hodge twins.
They said last week,
a friend of ours was raided by the feds over January the 6th.
His name is Nathan Hughes and he's from fayetteville arkansas nate
was raided by the fbi and arrested at gunpoint his girlfriend who had just miscarried had held
at gunpoint was held at gunpoint and put in handcuffs the fbi turned off his security cameras
they unplugged his internet they flipped his house upside down in a search. The feds then called the manufacturer of his Liberty gun safe, and they gave them the passcode to it.
Whoa, isn't that interesting?
I was very surprised that there would be a backdoor pass.
I mean, we expect this kind of stuff out of computer things, don't we?
Did you ever suspect that Liberty safe on the big safe companies? I mean, we expect this kind of stuff out of computer things, don't we?
Did you ever suspect that Liberty Safe, one of the big safe companies, would have a backdoor passcode to the safe?
I wonder how many other companies do.
And they're quite willing to give it to the FBI.
They did.
And he says this is all for protesting at the Capitol over two and a half years ago.
He's being now charged with crimes related to January the 6th.
He didn't assault anyone.
He didn't vandalize anything.
He's now being labeled a domestic terrorist and a traitor to his country by woke leftists and the media.
Nate is just like us.
He is an outspoken American patriot.
He loves freedom, loves his country,
and would do anything to preserve our rights.
And he's been fighting to save our country for years now.
And so then what about the safe aspect of this?
I mean, that's one thing that's very troubling, isn't it?
You know, the fact that here we are two and a half years later,
they're going to get somebody, he wasn't involved in any altercation.
You know, this is not an insurrection.
What the feds are doing is an insurrection against the Constitution, against our Bill of Rights.
The Department of Justice, the Biden administration, is an insurrection against the rule of law.
Uh,
but,
uh, at worst,
this was a riot and somebody who is simply there tangentially doesn't harm
anybody.
Again,
the story of these people,
one of them in his fifties,
two of them in their seventies asked if they could go into the restroom after
everything was opened up and the police are standing there.
They go in and now they're looking at what is essentially a life sentence for these men
in their 70s for being let in by the police.
How do you even trespass when the police let you in?
It is absolutely, this is an insurrection, folks.
It's just not the one that they're telling you.
And when you look at what Liberty Safe did,
remember that even Apple with their iPhones,
going back to 2016 with the San Bernardino shooting,
the FBI wanted them to open up the phone.
They said, well, we're not going to do it.
They hung tough.
And they did it again in 2020. And Bill Barr
was very upset about that.
So at least two times that I know of, Apple refused to turn this
into them. They all figured that they had some kind of a backdoor into it.
The FBI was able to crack into the San Bernardino killer's iPhone anyway.
They just want to make it easy for them.
And we've got to not make things easy for the government.
It needs to follow the procedures.
If you don't make it hard for them.
And, you know, Rudy Giuliani is experiencing this the hard way.
He went after organized crime.
He used RICO. It was his favorite tactic.
But the problem is, is that when you use, when you get rid of the rule of law and due process
as RICO statutes did to go after the big guys, guess what, Rudy? They come after you when you
haven't for something that really wasn't a crime. You set these precedents.
You get rid of the rule of law so that you can lock up the bad guys.
Well, guess what?
They're going to then lock up good guys as well.
And so Liberty Safe claimed that they had no knowledge of any of the details surrounding the investigation at the time,
that the FBI requested a code to get into the safe.
Now, the FBI had a warrant to get into the safe.
Now, the FBI had a warrant to search this guy's house, but they didn't have a warrant to force Liberty Safe to do it.
You understand?
That's the same situation that Apple was in.
There was no warrant for Liberty Safe.
What they did was unwarranted.
And so some of the comments about this.
Enjoy bankruptcy, traders.
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Happiness. We all know what it feels like, but sometimes it doesn't come easy.
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find ways to be happy enough. You can find Happy Enough wherever you listen to podcasts.
Is to provide access codes to law enforcement if a warrant grants them access to property.
There you go. none of your stuff
the safe is going to be turned over for any pretense for um by liberty safe if you have that
as one person uh writing about this said um a western journal Did consumers even know that Liberty has backdoor access to their safes?
Again, this is something that I would say, you know, now that we know that about Liberty, you don't do business with them.
And then you would also want to see in writing that any other safe company doesn't have back doors into your safe as well. Speaking of back doors into things,
the Biden administration has made it very clear.
They do not want to have a border just in case you didn't catch on when they
welded open the metal gates at the few places where they have a fence,
where they have a barrier there.
They're now doing this in texas
they're having them remove the floating buoys that they put in the middle of the rio grande river
and um they took the state of texas to court and the judge says no you have to get our permission
before you can protect the border and we don't want you to protect the border
but the other part of this is that they didn't work anyway you know they they put up it was all symbolic just like trump's wall you know greg abbott was doing the same thing i remember a
couple of years ago when he you know everything was uh breaking down very rapidly uh he sent a bunch of um state troopers down and they lined their
cars up but it was only about a block long what what was that about and they took pictures of
that like look you know we're barricading the area here and as you saw zoomed out picture of it you
realize okay you know we got about a a block worth of cars at the border.
The same thing with this floating barrier.
But the people who, it was at an area where it was kind of deep and it was a pretty formidable barrier.
However, they just went around it.
They went to an area where it was shallow and just
walked across i've been to the border rio grande you just a lot of places you just walk across
as a matter of fact when karen i went down to the big bend state park we walked around there
and um there was uh it was strange there are these places where there's a whole bunch of little knickknacks and stuff and uh what is this it's like an honor system you know if you want to buy some of this
stuff you leave the money there but of course they're watching you across the border as well
make sure you're not going to steal stuff and then as you go further down they've got some guys that
are on the other side of this little river there on the Mexican side, and they're serenading you with their Mexican music,
and they've got a tip jar there.
There's not much of a border there.
But the real problem is the welfare magnet, right?
That's the problem.
And the fact that Republicans in Florida, as I've said before,
want to make it illegal for us to work,
Americans to work, without getting E-Verify.
They want mandatory E-Verify.
We've got to get the permission of Washington to have a job.
I've got to have Washington verify that I'm a citizen.
Quite frankly, I think people ought to be able to do work.
I would not be opposed to a guest working thing.
I don't think people ought to have citizens' rights.
I don't think they ought to be able to vote.
And I certainly don't think they ought to get welfare.
I don't think Americans ought to get welfare.
But Biden is giving, I think the figure was $2,200 to foreigners who come here.
And people on Social Security get $1,400.
So what's going on with that?
It's a massive welfare magnet.
You come into our country, and you're going to get,
you know, going to California,
they're going to put you on unemployment immediately.
And you start collecting, what was it,
like $300 a week or something like that,
which is more than they are going to be able to make in the country that they're coming from.
We're bribing people to come to America,
and then we're putting up these little barriers and pretending that we don't want them to come in.
And the worst part about it is then they tell Americans,
you're going to have to get government permission from Washington, no less, to have a job.
Yeah, work will be a privilege.
Welfare is a right, you see.
And it's a bigger right for people
who are not American citizens
than it is for American citizens.
Drive safe and obey the rules of the road.
Vehicle owners who receive a red light
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can pay or dispute online at toronto.ca.aps.
Happiness.
We all know what it feels like.
But sometimes it doesn't come easy.
I'm Garvey Bailey, the host of Happy Enough,
a new podcast from The Globe and Mail about our pursuit of happiness.
We know people want to live more fulfilling and positive lives, but how do we actually do that? Is there a happiness
code to crack? From our relationship with technology to whether money can really buy you
happiness, we'll hear from both real people and experts to demystify this thing we're all searching for
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You can find Happy Enough wherever you listen to podcasts.
And I don't even see Social Security as welfare.
When they force you to pay into this all of your life,
it's very rare that you're going to get back what you paid into it so i don't even consider that to be welfare
the order came as part of a lawsuit filed by the biden administration against texas arguing that a
large part of the state had no right to install structures in federal navigable waterways governor
abbott announced that he was not asking for permission.
The anti-immigration program under which Texas constructed the floating barrier,
said the district judge.
Unfortunately for Texas,
permission is exactly what federal law requires before installing obstructions
in the nation's navigable waters.
Texas has ordered to remove the buoys by September the 15th,
but Abbott indicated just minutes after the ruling that the state plans to appeal the decision and will continue to use other strategic barriers.
The floating buoys cover 1,000 feet in the Rio Grande.
This is such a staged little fight here.
Well, I'm going to protect those 1,000 feet,
and I'm going to show those people in Washington, you know,
what this is all about.
The buoys were put in place around July 10th, installed just days after four migrants, including an infant, drowned trying to cross the river.
Well, again, you know, they're welding the gates open.
The ruling is incorrect said abbott
it'll be overturned on appeal we will continue to utilize every strategy to secure the border
including deploying texas national guard soldiers and public safety troopers you know line up their
cars and a couple for some photo ops and strategic barriers it's the magnet it's the magnet yeah you offer these people way more
than they make in their country to just have unemployment all these benefits you can't stop
them with any barriers and i've said this from the very beginning i said trump's wall even if it
he had the ability and the tenacity to get it built.
It was a fool's errand.
You go around it, over it, under it, everywhere that a mouse could go.
These people, that's why we taught prepositions to the kids when we did it in homeschool.
You know, it's everywhere a mouse can go.
People will figure out how to get here if there's enough money pulling them in.
Stop the welfare program.
That's the whole basis of this thing anyway.
The cloward and pivot strategy was let's take this country down with welfare.
And it's not happening enough with American citizens, so let's bring in everybody in the world and we'll promise them a free ride.
And that will bring down the system.
And then we can establish our communism.
The Texas floating border wall failed to deter migrants more asylum seekers are wading across the shallow waters of
the rio grande and skirting the 1 000 foot long chain of buoys what a ridiculous piece of showmanship it is it truly is um but anyway uh we got an interesting piece
of showmanship happening here in tennessee if you remember the tennessee three right
took over the state capitol and they actually had something that was far closer to an insurrection
there you know these you had three representatives who took over the floor of the capitol you had people who got violent and got in contact with the state legislators pushing and shoving them
even as they were being guarded by state troopers who did not have armor who did not have body armor
and they didn't start attacking the um um, uh, the protesters, but protesters
are pushing and shoving the state troopers, pushing and shoving the state legislators.
And then you had the Tennessee three who took over the floor and refused to leave and had a
bullhorn and they had their people up in the balcony and they just shut the whole thing down.
Well, uh, two of them were kicked out then immediately reinstated and uh the one that
was not kicked out was the white woman's two black guys named justin and then a white woman from
knoxville she missed being kicked out by one vote and um she's now going to run for senate
and she's made gun control in texas in tennessee she's made gun control in Texas, in Tennessee.
She's made gun control what her campaign is all about.
I think what she's trying to do is set a new record for the least number of votes of anybody
ever in the Senate you're going to run after this Tennessee insurrection.
And after this failed special session that was called by Rhino Lee so you got
the Tennessee Three and Rhino Lee and they failed to get gun control passed in this special session
and so she's going to try to fail up and she's going to run against Marsha Blackburn for Senate
an announcement in a video posted her twitter account she referred to those who opposed gun And she's going to run against Marsha Blackburn for Senate.
An announcement in a video posted her Twitter account.
She referred to those who oppose gun control as bullies and cowards.
Well, that would be the people that she's trying to get their votes from.
Because most of the people in Tennessee aren't going with any of her gun controls.
I guess that makes us all bullies and cowards.
And she claims that she's not a politician in the video even though she's part of the tennessee general assembly uh she says those
politicians they don't like me very much and when it's bs i call it bs but of course she spells it
out because she's a tough girl you know she can she shows you just how tough she is by using
profanity you know just like megan kelly you know me tough she is by using profanity. You know, just like Megyn Kelly.
You know, Megyn Kelly does that now.
Yeah, swearing like a sailor.
Look at me, I'm tough.
You know, I can do a man's job and I can swear like a man right there.
That means I got my street credentials.
So this is her look at me.
So she does this announcement, two paragraphs.
It's all about guns.
Nothing else.
Yeah, it's going to be an interesting campaign to see.
Meanwhile, as I pointed out, the special session in Tennessee adjourned,
and it was a resounding defeat for the Tennessee three and Rhino Lee.
I don't know what, you know, what Lee is going to do after that.
He just got reelected in 2022.
You know, he's got a four-year term, but he can't do, he can't run for a third term.
So, you know, if he thinks he's going to run for Senate, good luck with that.
After coming out for gun control on toll roads, I think we've got you pegged, Governor Lee.
I think we know what you're all about now.
And the special session, even as it ended, it erupted into chaos again.
A lot of people were very concerned because the Marxists left or had put out a call for all the Marxists to come to Nashville
for the special session.
And it was called at a time when no other state legislator legislatures are going to be meeting
and so if they had shown up they could have had a big riot there that's what a lot of people were
concerned about pushing uh against uh rhino lee to not do that but they did it anyway so at the
end of the session um you had um uh a brief physical altercation between one of the two guys
that was kicked out for um what they did and taking over the floor justin pearson after
adjourning the session uh the uh speaker of the house uh cameronxton, left the podium, at which time Justin Pearson approached him while
holding a protest sign.
Pearson appeared to be bumped by Sexton's shoulder as the speaker attempted to pass
him, and Pearson was blocked from getting too close to the speaker by a representative
who is a former football and baseball player.
And then they reportedly engaged in a shouting match before they were physically separated.
So this is, yeah,
interesting. But while we're talking about guns, one more thing about guns,
not just the gun safes and the wacko left
who think they're going to base a campaign on
gun control in tennessee uh even one firearm cell could land you in jail under biden's new atf rule
this is very serious stuff this is from gun owners of america they said we hate to say that we told
you so but it's official the justice department announced a new rule to amend ATF regulations
and expand the definition of a firearms dealer to include those who sell even a single firearm.
Original rumors of the rule suggest that anyone who sold five or more firearms would have to
register to get a federal firearms license, an FFL, and that they would have to conduct background checks.
However, the official version says that selling even one firearm without a license would be illegal.
They're trying to shut down all transfers of firearms here.
Those who have sold or even offer to engage in a single transaction could be prosecuted for unlicensed activities.
And of course, as we reported, the Biden administration has been actively taking away federal firearm licenses from people for minor technicalities
that in the past would have at most resulted in a fine.
Now it results in you losing your license to be able to sell federal firearms,
your federal firearms license.
So they said,
this is not all the rule is also full of unclear language that gives the ATF
wiggle room to prosecute gun owners as they please.
Examples of actions that ATF could use to define activity as operating
as unlicensed dealer are listed.
But the ATF notes that the list of examples
is not exhaustive.
So, you know, here's some examples,
but, you know, we're just going to be free
to interpret this as we wish in the future.
So this creates a system where gun owners
must prove they're not dealers
in order to be able to sell a firearm legally.
Well, what a web we weave when first we practice to ignore the words in the Constitution that say infringe.
There is absolutely no authority in the Constitution for the ATF to exist.
As a matter of fact, they're expressly prohibited by the Second Amendment says you will not infringe on the rights of the people to keep or bear arms.
That means that you can't create a bureaucracy to infringe on the rights of people to keep and bear arms.
It's just that simple.
And if we're going to allow the ATF to exist, this is what you're going to get over and over again.
Death by a thousand cuts you know whenever i look at the gadsden flag and they don't tread on me stuff
and i know the snake thing for some reason was a you know favorite of the founding fathers you know
the the snake that was cut into pieces and it was like join or die you know they had the names of
the states labeled on them and everything and um i was like i don't
know that's what i that's how i envision every snake that i see chopped into pieces like that
and uh you know i don't i don't identify with snakes what i think of the government as is a
giant boa constrictor it's just constantly constricting our rights. And every time we take a breath, it tightens up, right?
We can't stress this enough.
The ATF rule says gun owners of America is a direct result of Republican-backed gun control.
Specifically, the bipartisan Safer Communities Act, the Cornyn-Murphy Compromise. That's Senator Cornyn from Texas
with Senator Murphy from New Jersey, Republican
Democrat, coming together in a bipartisan way to violate
the Constitution and your God-given rights.
He and his colleagues, Cornyn and his colleagues, said the act
could be used in, they said we warned him and his colleagues that the act could be used in this exact manner.
Unfortunately, our warnings fell on deaf ears and the gun control bill became law last year.
And of course, the rule itself is not about safety. firearm registry with a massive digital registry of out-of-business records that goa gun owners of
america has covered in depth this rule only expands on who is subject to information collection
on firearm purchases so um it is uh it is truly amazing to watch how this bulk constrictor that we call the federal government continues to constrict us in every way possible.
Our movements, our business activities, our liberties with everything.
On Rockfin, General McGuffin.
Hey, General McGuffin.
Thank you very much for this.
I appreciate that.
Good morning, David.
Thanks for keeping us up to speed.
Liberty Safe sounds like it's a three-letter agency venture capital company.
Gray Key, Celebrite, and Magnet Axiom are what they use to backdoor iPhones since Apple doesn't bend so easily.
I saw it in a local murder trial.
There you go.
Yeah, there's a way to get in.
Of course, there's always going to be a way to get into anything electronic.
It just surprised me that something that's physical like a safe like that would have a backdoor.
Drive safe and obey the rules of the road.
Vehicle owners who receive a red light or speed camera violation can pay or dispute online at toronto.ca.aps.
But I don't know. We'll be right back. can pay or dispute online at toronto.ca.aps.
But I don't know. We'll be right back.
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Yeah, I guess I need to do that commercial because, yeah, even with all those beeps and places that we've been banned and places that we've been debanked from, there's still a couple left in there.
It's yeah, the constrictors operate in a lot of different ways.
But, um, again, if you want to support the show, if you want to see where we are, you
can see that at, uh, the David night show.com.
You can see all the places where the broadcast is available for free.
And, um, if you, uh, watch it, uh, on Spreaker,
there are commercials that are put into that.
We do make a non-commercial version available to people on Subscribestar,
and we do appreciate that. That really helps us with our budget to know what our baseline is there.
So we do appreciate that, but if you would like to support us, a good way to do that is by the PO Box baseline is there. And so we do appreciate that. But if you would like to support us,
a good way to do that is by the PO box that is there.
We still haven't been kicked out of our bank yet.
So we'll,
we'll see what happens with that in the coming years.
But thank you so much.
And key thing,
as we said in that video is to like,
and to share the broadcast.
Now we need to try to get this out
to as many people as possible uh you can also see it um we have added rumble i think we didn't have
that in the in there i think since we did that commercial uh so uh there's a lot of different
places you can see it and there'll be links to everything there at ddavidnightshow.com especially
if you want to go to the podcast, a lot of times,
if you go to the podcast,
like on Apple,
it's very hard to find it.
So,
you know,
get the direct link from the David night show.com.
And,
um,
it is,
um,
you know,
that's one of the reasons that we asked you to like,
and to share the broadcast is because again,
I don't know why it's difficult to find the broadcast,
but it is on a lot of these different platforms. Uh, I think that, um, I don't know why it's difficult to find the broadcast,
but it is on a lot of these different platforms.
I think that, I don't know, we'll just have to see what happens.
We'll just keep doing this as long as we can.
I think with artificial intelligence, like I was talking about yesterday, being able to censor things in real time, and of course, AI is going to allow them to be far more effective
at censoring, and they've been wringing their hands and saying, you know, podcasts are the one thing that we can't censor.
Well, they're going to be able to do that with artificial intelligence.
So we'll just have to see how long it takes them to roll that out.
Spotify always has banned me, but I'm up pretty much everywhere else.
Spotify has talked about putting out their censorship surveillance stuff for other people to use.
But there's a lot of companies now that are creating it.
And so, you know, even though they spend billions of dollars
and, you know, give people on the left
tens of millions of dollars to do their broadcasts,
they won't even allow my broadcast to be on their platform.
So we know what's coming in the long term.
Let's talk a little bit about the
constitution two different approaches we have an article talking about how the top law schools
are now openly promoting ditching the constitution and this is something that was looked at by people who are, they reviewed courses at the top 10 law schools, places like Yale, Stanford, Harvard, Columbia, and so forth.
And these are people who work with the Heritage Foundation.
And so they went through it and they said, you know, they're not making this hidden anymore.
They've come out of the closet for the longest time.
You know, these top law schools are going to graduate.
People are going to make their way into becoming judges.
And we've seen activist judges for the longest time shutting down the Constitution and doing other things like that.
While they pretend that they are, you know, are enacting the Constitution.
And you go back and you look at Roe v. Wade.
I did not read that for the first time.
I went back and read the entire decision.
Everybody talks about Roe v. Wade.
And I would always say, well, it's not the law of the land.
It's just a Supreme Court decision.
And the Supreme Court changes its mind all the time about things.
And even with Andrew Jackson, they changed their mind within one year and said,
you can't relocate the Cherokee.
And that was a reprehensible policy of Andrew Jackson, but he had the authority to do it.
And when they first gave him the authority, then within a year after they saw what it
looked like, they said, you can't do that.
And he said, well, you've issued your opinion.
Let's see you enforce it.
Bottom line, nobody needed to follow Roe v. Wade.
And if you look at Roe v. Wade, the very beginning of it,
the decision says, well, there's all these different things
that we could talk about what happens in other countries,
and we could talk about the science and medicine behind this
and traditions and cultures, all that kind of stuff.
But that doesn't really govern what we decide
the constitution governs what we decide with this and then you read the rest of the that's the last
time they refer to the constitution the rest of the decision is about all the things that they
said well these are things that could influence our opinion but we can't go with them and that's
what they did they talked about medical opinion as to
viability and all the rest of this stuff and they talked about cultural and religious well not
religious stuff but cultural things and what other countries were doing that's what they referenced
they didn't reference the constitution because the constitution gave them no power to define
when life begins and so we've had activist judges who've always said well
we follow the constitution that's what we have to do and then they put out their own personal
opinion but now they're actively teaching this in the top law schools they said they're saying
that they want to get rid of the constitution they're making no secret about it radicalization
of law schools is a threat to freedom, they said, not previously encountered
in the nation's history. Well, actually it has. It's just that now they are openly defiant about
it. For the longest time, it was done by the judges who are typically coming from these top
law schools, but now they're openly defiant about it, and they're openly teaching their kids,
their students, to do this when they get into practice.
In fact, some of them are very direct in teaching kids that they need to be revolutionaries
according to the courses that these law school students are taking.
In 2022, Ryan Dorfler and Samuel Moyne, who teach law at Harvard and Yale Universities
respectively, wrote a New York Times editorial titled, The Constitution is Broken, that's right and should not be reclaimed that's wrong and they wrote that the struggle over the
constitution has proven to be a dead end for liberals so since we're not getting our way
let's come up with a different form of government how about marxism all right that works that lets
us do whatever we want right they call the founding document undemocratic.
Well, they're right about that part of it.
And inadequate.
Well, they're wrong about that.
They say the Constitution is broken.
That's right.
Should not be reclaimed.
Wrong.
They say it is undemocratic.
They're right because it's about a republic.
You've got a republic if you can keep it to the people who are instrumental in putting
it together.
A republic is not a democracy.
But then they say it's inadequate.
No, it is adequate.
And
you know,
these people, they said
we need to have the
power to make a case for
abortion. If liberal legislators had the power to make a case for abortion. If liberal legislators had the power to make a case for abortion,
they wouldn't have to bother with the Constitution and or do that.
In essence, what they're saying is there was never any authority for us to
legalize abortion and to stop states from protecting innocent life.
They're saying, you know, we've got to get rid of the Constitution
because it's a problem.
You know, we want to get rid of guns, and we want to get rid of babies
and stuff like that.
We need to get rid of the Constitution first.
The stuff they're teaching now is straight-up Marxist.
There's a big difference from just 10 years ago.
I've had the people who put this together for Heritage,
Mr. Von Spakowski and Mr. Adams.
And they said, schools often teach the Constitution as a tool of discrimination
and has to be uprooted.
The idea of the Constitution in the U.S. are hopelessly flawed
stems from critical race theory and the concept of promoting social justice.
Look, folks, there is no such thing. real justice doesn't need any adjectives right social justice no just justice is what we're
looking at and you understand that all this stuff for the 1619 project this is essentially a race
war against the founding fathers so we can get rid of them got to accuse them of being racist
racist racist so you can get rid of them as to cancel the founding fathers uh the 1619 project
was just uh best-selling fiction from the new york times that's all it was not true at all
historians laugh at it it's factually incorrect conclusions are incorrect. The motivations that they put out
there are incorrect. The ideology
upholds the thinking that our Constitution is a
patriarchal document.
Well, that's good, frankly.
Used to suppress
minorities and just about everyone else,
they said. So they're teaching
classes of revolution,
right? Decentralized
resistance, they say. Law and inequality. These
are some of the classes that you can take at Yale. Examples of the far left infiltration of law
schools. Decentralized resistance class is about social change that results from everyday resistance.
Accumulating widespread and numerous acts of everyday resistance
can precipitate, quote, quasi-revolutionary change.
Well, again, we can look at what they're doing here,
and we can say this could be true for our side as well, right?
We can have widespread, numerous acts of ordinary, everyday resistance,
you know, like to the mask and things like that,
but also to these other aspects, and it can have revolutionary change.
And that's exactly what we need to do.
We need to have a radical reinstatement of the Constitution
because it has been ripped out by the roots, by these radicals.
So they said they literally equate words with violence.
But look, they don't believe this stuff.
It's just like, you know, playing the game, you know, use my pronouns.
Okay, well, if you do that, then they're going to find something else to try to dominate you over.
They don't believe this stuff.
They're just looking for a rationale to have dictatorial censorship words are violent
so therefore i can do violence to you because of your words that's what they're saying they're just
tyrants and uh so you know um we don't need to be afraid of that. The key thing is, is that they're trying to rule us with fear, right?
But, and, you know, there are things to be afraid of.
What they're doing, though, is they are giving us things to be afraid of that we shouldn't be afraid of.
We shouldn't be afraid of the pandemic, for example, or climate change and all the rest of this stuff.
We should be afraid of these people.
They're the real threat to us.
So they come up with these phony fears, these paper tigers, to get us all tied up in knots so we don't see the real attacks on us that we should be doing something about.
Now, the New American takes it the other way.
They said, here's how we can use nullification
to enforce the Constitution, like I was just saying.
We need to have a radical reinstatement of the Constitution.
Well, how do we do it as people?
Well, we do it by decentralized disobedience
and pushing back on this and nullifying it, nullifying
it with our state officials.
As a new American points out, the federal government, including the legislative executive
and judicial branches, has for decades implemented and enforced unconstitutional, increasingly
socialist policies.
These policies and programs have significantly, of course, increased the size
of government, pulling our republic away from the Constitution and its founding principles
enshrined in the Declaration of Independence. However, the situation is not hopeless,
because the founders also, by their writings and by example, showed that nullification is another way that we can correct these things.
Jury nullification, for example, is one of them.
Nullification is firmly grounded in the text of the U.S. Constitution,
specifically Article 6.
It states,
This Constitution and the laws of the United States shall be made in pursuance thereof
and shall be the supreme law of the land. Well, that phrase, made in pursuance thereof and shall be the supreme law of the land.
Well, that phrase, made in pursuance thereof, implies that laws not in accordance with the
Constitution are null and void.
And that's what the Supreme Court does, saying, but they say that they're the only ones who
can make that determination, and that's not true.
The states, by contrast, retain the vast majority of power,
something that James Madison affirmed in Federalist Paper No. 45,
and of course, in the Tenth Amendment.
In addition to being constitutionally sound,
nullification is the rightful remedy, as Jefferson put it,
for countering federal government overreach. It's been successfully used multiple times throughout U.S. history,
and it's still being used today to push back against federal overreach.
And one of the best examples of this is what the left has done
in terms of nullification of the unconstitutional drug war.
You had to have a constitutional amendment to prohibit alcohol.
You had another one that brought it back, the 18th and the 21st Amendment.
There's no constitutional amendment to prohibit marijuana or anything else that they prohibit today.
They claim to have the power to prohibit these things.
They claim that's based on the Commerce Clause.
The Commerce Clause.
Well, the Commerce Clause was there in the 1920s when they said we need to have the 18th Amendment.
Nobody in the country believed that the Commerce Clause gave them the power to prohibit alcohol.
No one.
That was a lot of trouble for everybody to go through.
That argument was never brought up by either side.
And so it clearly is a lie. And so, you know, when you look at what's happening with the left, where they nullify,
and more than half of the states have, nullify what has been put in as a class one drug,
schedule one drug, saying that it has absolutely no medical use and it is of the most addictive
quality.
And it got more than half of the states have nullified that for marijuana and even a big
drug warrior like jeff sessions who is trump's first attorney general did not dare to challenge
that because he knew he would lose it's pretty clear cut and so he shied away a lot of this stuff
is a bluff a lot of this is a bluff just just like the so-called Johnson Amendment that supposedly stops conservative churches from talking about politics.
It was challenged, and the IRS backed away.
It was never an amendment to anything.
It was Lyndon Johnson who was criticized by some churches, and he went to the IRS, and he says, hey, I want you to put this in the rules that they can't talk about politics.
That's what got amended.
It wasn't a legislative process.
It wasn't an amendment to the Constitution.
He got some bureaucrats to put that in as a law,
and they called it the Johnson Amendment.
And then they bullied people with that.
And then when people stood up and said,
that's not going to stand up, that's just a bluff.
And they backed down because it was a bluff.
In the same way that the war on drugs is a bluff.
And that Jeff Sessions backed down when it was nullified.
The John Birch Society has noted more than 80% of federal government
is unconstitutional.
Interestingly enough, they don't want to talk about uh marijuana laws um look you don't have
to support marijuana use to say that drug prohibition and violating the constitution
is a bad thing and uh and i think it's important for us to understand that uh because whenever you start talking nullifying things, the left says, oh, then we're going to have a civil war.
No, you guys were the ones who have been the most successful at nullifying.
So I said we need to have comprehensive nullification. introduced here in Tennessee to say that the state is going to review, just like people will
send cases up to the Supreme Court and have them review for constitutional purposes,
the state would do the same thing. I fully support that. I think that we have divided powers,
and the reason that we have divided powers is because any of these powers should be able to nullify what the check and a balance if you if you don't have the the possibility
of stopping the action of some of these other branches then how is that a check to what they're
doing we have blank checks and we have a busted bank balance because that but we have blank checks
not just for financial stuff but we have blank checks for their power.
And so comprehensive nullification
at the state level.
Model legislation,
they have links for that at the New American.
Nullify federal gun control.
Nullify federalization of local law enforcement.
Defend the guard legislation.
This has been successful
in a couple of different states
where they have said,
you're not going to take the National Guard
and send them to a foreign war unless you declare war there.
Stop unconstitutional federal spending.
Nullify the unconstitutional and unaccountable federal reserve.
By the way, by stopping unconstitutional federal spending,
they say by passing a State Sovere federal tax funds act, which would require that all federal taxes are first sent to the state.
You see, that was one of the key things that changed in all this.
It used to be that just as the United Nations, a creature of sovereign states, just as the federal government was a creature of sovereign states.
The UN says, well, we'd like to have this amount of money from the US
and from this country and that type of thing.
They have a budget and they want this amount of money from the different states.
Well, that's the way that the federal government operated
until they did the personal income tax.
They did not have direct taxation of people from the federal government.
And so as a result, the money was collected by the states.
Having the states as an intermediary allows them to exercise some financial checks, if you will, counterbalances and that type of thing. And it, you know, we do not want to have the UN, for example,
issuing a tax bill to us.
That, by the way, is really what's going to happen if we go with CBDC.
They're going to put out individual carbon taxes,
and they'll have, with the technology,
that will give them the leverage to make that feasible. and so they will try that at some point in time but again take it back to the way the constitution
was set up so there was no direct taxation of citizens nullify the unconstitutional and
accountable federal reserve nullify the world health organization there's so many things that
we could do in the state legislatures.
Nullify the federal vaccine mandates.
Nullify federal election interference in the states.
Nullify federal agricultural regulations.
The PRIME Act right now that has even if you have grass-fed beef and you've got a co-op where people are um have ownership in these cows just as i was talking
about with the amish farmer uh if you slaughter that cow yourself at the farm the cow that you
own the usda comes in as a bunch of thugs and shuts you down, or the federal
version of it.
You have to send it to a USDA meat processing facility, where they're going to top the cow
up with corn and who knows what else while they're in the feedlots, because you've got
to schedule it way in advance.
And it allows the government to have centralized control of our food.
We've got to stop that.
And so Thomas Massey's Prime Act,
and you ought to write your state representatives
and tell them to support it if you want to be able to eat in the future
because that gives them a choke point where they can shut down,
especially meat, which is on the chopping block, so to speak.
They don't want you having meat.
They want you eating bugs.
And so one way they can do that is through their choke points,
these USDA slaughterhouses.
And so the Prime Act would allow people,
as long as they're growing and butchering the meat in their state,
the federal government should not have any part,
any role in that whatsoever.
And so they go down a couple more things,
nullify the so-called Respect for Marriage Act,
nullify unconstitutional federal court rulings,
nullify unconstitutional presidential executive orders.
Absolutely true.
We'll be right back. Thank you. Making sense common again.
You're listening to the david knight show all right we're going to talk a little bit about masks and about evs before we're joined by our
guest eric peters in the third hour but before we do that i want to talk about schools tony who
normally comes on on thursdays is t Tony Artaban is now on the road.
And so he can't do the show today.
We really do appreciate Tony taking the show last Friday and giving me some
time off Tony and his many guests.
And of course,
if you want to go to the David Knight show,
the David to David Knight dot gold,
that will take you to Tony Artaban's wise Wolf gold. Now is a very good time to buy goldknight.gold. That will take you to Tony Ardaban's Wise Wolf Gold. Now is a very good time
to buy gold. Right now, the fiscal policies that they're pursuing and trying to prop up the dollar
is making gold go on sale. They cannot continue this forever. But again, it's not even trying to
time this from a financial standpoint. It is important to have something that is going to be outside of their system,
just as yesterday we had an interesting interview
with a very popular economist from Latin America, Axel Kaiser,
and a book that he has just translated into English.
It is the most popular book in Latin America,
and it was instrumental in getting Javier
Mawai coming out in first place in the initial primaries and a good place to win there.
Someone who is pushing free market economics against socialism.
And so it's an excellent book, but he was talking about what life was.
I wanted to get a sense of what life was like in a country where they had 150% inflation, where people were having to operate in a black market.
And if you heard that interview, it truly was amazing.
If you haven't heard it, you need to catch that.
Talking about how if you stay, even the nice nice hotels you would have to um you know pay
you would pay in cash and if you want to pay in cash you get on the phone and they have these
people who would show up with this massive box of cash because you had to have tons of it at the
last minute and then they would take it in and they had the big cash counters and i think like
you would have at a casino so many people paying cash we need to make sure uh that we keep that ability alive cash but also the ultimate
cash is gold because it has intrinsic value unlike uh their brazilian pesos and the rest of these
things which have uh you know again it's the literal uh you know wheelbarrow full of money in order to
get something but they've actually uh people entrepreneurs have set up an entire business
to handle these cash transactions uh to to carry this stuff around uh by the way uh guard was one
of the uh people that tony had on on Friday. And I just wanted to pass this on.
Please pray for Gard.
He's having some health challenges with a mold problem in his house that he's trying to get under control.
And it's been going on for a while, really causing him some problems as I talked to him this week.
And so please keep him in your prayers.
Let's talk a little bit about schools.
When we look at this Gadsden County kid, right,
as one headline put it,
this teacher's position was historically illiterate and totally preposterous.
And he was immediately contacted by a couple of different law firms,
and the school backed down in a way.
But in a way, they didn't,
because they did not do anything to the teacher.
And as I pointed out, and I haven't seen anybody else say this,
this was a charter school,
and it was a charter school that portrayed itself as having conservative values.
As a matter of fact, their curriculum is from Hillsdale College.
It's very traditional.
Very, you know, you would expect that somebody that is using the Hillsdale curriculum would understand the history and the reality of what the Gadsden flag was about.
And they wouldn't be pushing this as some kind of a racist agenda, that type of thing.
But it really doesn't matter what the curriculum is.
It really is the teacher that's there.
And when you look at these people pulling back, the people running this charter school,
they fell back and said, oh, no, we really do support American history and all, you know,
our culture and all the rest of the stuff.
But that isn't going to happen if you leave that teacher there.
They have to support it when they hire the teachers.
And if the teachers don't support it, they got to fire the teacher.
But nothing happened to that teacher.
That teacher is still there.
So, again, you know, when you fight these battles at the school board, even if you
win at the school board level, even if you win at the principal level, the administration level,
teachers are going to do what the teachers want to do. And we've seen them brag about this
on TikTok, you know, this is my class and I'm going to subvert whatever the state law is,
whatever the school board, whatever the principal says, we're going, I'm going to do what I want to do with these kids.
And I can turn them into Marxists if I want to.
And so the response of the school board system there was basically, well, nevermind, you know, we'll, we'll let him come back in class and let's just leave it at that.
But the teacher is going to do as she wishes so when you look at what some people are saying about you know
what what is happening with this kid there was an interesting op-ed piece that said let's not tread
on our kids what is it like for him has this been a pyrrhic victory for him and the way that he's being treated in that school now?
I mean, he still sits under this amazingly ignorant politicized teacher.
Why would you want your kid sitting under an ignorant teacher like that?
An ignorant biased teacher like that.
And then in addition to that, he's now ostracized.
On the plus side, he's had an
opportunity to show his character. He wouldn't back down. And that's a big victory. But in my
opinion, in the opinion of the person who wrote this op-ed piece, he needs to take that victory
and move on. You know, that's a lesson learned. Good, you stood up for your values, but you don't have to stay in this institution.
Leave them behind.
You've got more important things to do.
You've got an education to get.
And so this was from The Federalist,
written by P.G. Keenan.
Don't tread on your own children.
So the Vanguard School is the type of place that i'd want to send my kids and yet
you know and see uh ms rodriguez explained the teacher his mother um that the flag and its
iconic drawing of the snake rearing up and the words don't tread on me that's from the revolutionary
war and therefore it symbolizes america's refusal to capitulate to a tyrant.
Wink, wink.
Any tyrants in this room?
Do you not really understand what this is about?
Of course, we're not going to back down for this because you're the tyrant in the room now. But she said, it can be alarming, however, to look around at your K-12 government indoctrination center
and notice that half the kids put little rainbow pins and various pride flare on their
backpacks and all the teachers do as well i just like you look at the back of her that teacher's
car all this bumper stickers on it were like that type of thing classrooms themselves are transformed
into year-round trans safe spaces by their genderless furry teachers it is a small but
mighty act of rebellion therefore to teach your children to value the symbols and the flags that
represent our side the side that likes the weird things like you know free speech and representative
government and freedom over tyranny after the video out, the school decreed that actually Jaden, that's the boy's
first name, that Jaden was right and the teacher was wrong and he was permitted to return to her
class. But she's still permitted. She doesn't say this, but a teacher is still permitted to run that
class. How do you think she's going to run that class? But a friend of the family posted this tweet in the aftermath that said,
quote, Jaden ate lunch alone today, played chess by himself,
but I told his mom that he's got millions of friends across the country now
who are inspired by him.
Leave a comment to Jaden below and I'll share it with him.
So Peachy Keenan says, is this good for him?
Does Jaden's mom want her son to get DMs from millions of adult Twitter random people?
Or does she want him to be a kid?
She says, I don't know if his mother is doing this for clout as rainbow moms do.
I don't know her motives and i have no reason to doubt
that she's simply standing up for her son and defending his right to free expression but this
kind of exposure on social media might feel like the only way that she has to fight back against
a system that would clearly crush her son's spirit if it could and often is not it's the teachers who
are bringing their crazy politics into the classroom and not the kids.
Well, here's how you fight back against the system.
You abandon it.
You abandon it.
As I said before, in North Carolina,
the Homeschool Association's newsletter was called the Greenhouse Report
because the idea is that you take your kids and just like
a tender plant you grow it from a seed up to something that can withstand being transplanted
outside with the weather and the pests and the animals that are going to be out there
that's the way we view raising a child that's my view of it That's the way the homeschoolers viewed it. So one way to fight back against them is to raise strong children,
not to use them in this war when they're still at a tender age.
She says, do we really want to put our kids out there as based right-wing activists
when they may not really understand that this will stay with them for the rest of
their lives. We all agree that 10-year-olds cannot possibly consent to transgender medical
interventions. But isn't 12 also too young to commit to a lifetime of being a doxxed
right-wing activist? I don't want my little kids talking about politics at school
any more than they should absolutely have to.
Doing it at home is fine,
but I don't want my 12-year-old forced to defend a position
that he may not understand that well yet.
Yeah, there's a, you know,
it's the knowledge that you have
and the critical thinking ability that you have
in order to be able to debate this stuff.
Because if you can't debate it, it can be used to destroy their core beliefs.
I've seen it happen many times.
She said, literally, the last thing that I would want is for one of my minor children
to expose himself publicly as based and red-pilled.
I still want my kids to have normal childhoods, the apolitical kind.
Of course, these days, only
hardcore domestic extremists would want to give
a kid a normal childhood.
She said a charter school
staffed with
open and unashamed
far-left lunatics.
But hey, they've got the conservative
Hillsdale curriculum, right?
Yeah, this is Colorado.
You should probably not put your kid out there on the front lines as the sole right winger in the middle school.
And it certainly sounds like that's what's happening.
If he's eating lunch alone, he's being shunned by all the students.
He's being shunned by the teachers as well.
She said, I confess that I
too want to indoctrinate my offspring. I desperately want them to willingly adopt our beliefs, our
religious faith, our values. But at 12 years old, I'm not sure it's appropriate to encourage your
child's activism when he has no allies yet, and then to post it all on Twitter. There is no safe space for Jaden in his world.
The school year has just begun.
Just begun.
Think about that.
He's going to be fighting this stuff all through the year.
His mother is busy booking him on TV shows and podcasts,
handling requests from the media.
Will Jaden appear at the next GOP State of the Union address?
Or maybe he'll be interviewed by Tucker Carlson.
Yeah, just wait for it.
Probably will be.
After Tucker Carlson is finished with all the tabloid reporting on Obama,
I'm sure that he will be looking for Jaden to come on.
Yeah, the whole saga and the incessant posting of the newest Jaden reaction videos on Twitter makes me uneasy.
It's the left that has decided to use children as pawns to advance their causes up to and including surgically mutilating their bodies.
California is now willing to tear apart families that don't support this.
Ms. Rodriguez, on the other hand, is probably just a patriot raising her child to be like her
and just trying to be a good mom.
But she said any good mom should be defending his right
to let his Gadsden flag fly.
But maybe we can do that without turning our 12-year-olds
into social media stars.
I had this discussion.
The reason I want to talk about that is because, you know, we used to
have the standard objections when you did homeschooling 30 years ago.
Uh, what about socialization?
The same people now put masks on kids and make them, you know, uh, stay six
feet apart from all the other kids.
They want to talk about socialization.
I said, yeah, well, you know, socialization that we do is kind of different from the Lord of the Flies socialization
that they get in the school.
And you look at what they're up against.
We also had Christian friends.
Oh, I want to put my kid in school because he needs to be salt and light
to the culture outside.
It's like, well, yeah, definitely when they're older.
But again, can they really stand up against this stuff do you realize that we put them in a classroom situation
you know like jayden is right now you are against the authoritative teacher who has control of the
classroom who says when you can speak and when you cannot speak. And you're also against your peers.
In other words, when you go back and you look at the Milgram experiment,
we know that two-thirds of the people will do what the person in the authority figure role tells them to do, even if it means harming somebody else or killing somebody else.
That's what the Milgram experiment was about, about two thirds.
And that holds true in every culture, but it's especially true in our culture.
And then when you look at the Ash experiment where you're looking at peer pressure, you
know, they rigged a thing there to see if everybody gives the wrong answer in a group,
will you do the same?
They found out about two thirds of people will do that.
So what happens in a classroom situation is you've got both of these dynamics playing.
I wonder what percentage of people will be able to withstand both the authority figure
and the peer pressure at the same time, especially as an immature child.
And she's exactly right.
We talk about the immaturity of children all the time when it comes to this gender war
that's being pushed on them.
Don't we understand that about the political war that's being pushed on them as well?
Yeah, we need to fight that.
But I don't think with our kids, our kids need to be protected while they're tender.
And that is exactly what a kid is going to be faced with.
And we don't necessarily need to do an experiment.
We don't need to repeat the Milgram experiment in conjunction with the Ash experiment because
we've got social media.
And we kind of know what happens because that's what social media has been effectively, is
a combination of those two experiments.
Now, here's another example. This is somebody who won his fight. This is Joe Kennedy, the football coach who went out and played in a parade at the end of the game on the
50 yard line. And for that, he got fired. He fought the system for eight years. He fought them all the
way to the Supreme court and he won. And they put him back in his job
at the beginning of the school year. And he's just resigned.
Because as an adult,
because he fought and because he won, he's getting the same
kind of treatment that Jaden Rodriguez is. I think his Rodriguez is his last name.
That Jaden is getting in his school complete ostracization and so this adult looks at this and
says hey it's time i won this fight i'm glad i stood up for my principles now i'm moving on
you know i had a similar situation with a high schooler who they came after him for having American flags on his pickup truck.
Like, yeah, I'm going to do that.
You're not going to stop me.
But I'm not hanging around your school.
I've got an education to get.
So, you know, he got out of that school and he's homeschooling himself now.
Coach Joe Kennedy resigned from his position as an assistant football coach at the high school on Wednesday.
His resignation was effective immediately and cited multiple reasons for his resignation,
including taking care of an ailing family member out of state.
But he said he felt like an outsider after returning.
He said things were just not the same.
He fought these people for eight years.
He won in the Supreme Court.
They had to put him back
in, but they really didn't want him there. He says, I believe I can best continue to advocate
for constitutional freedom and religious liberty by working from outside the school system.
So that is what I will do. And let me tell you, that's the best thing you can do for your kids
is to work outside the
school system. You can try to fix the school system for the kids whose parents won't take
them out, but I would not suggest you do that to your kid. This guy knows the system. He's a teacher,
he's an adult, and he can see this. He says, I'll continue to work to help people understand and
embrace the historic ruling at the heart of our case. As a result of our case, we have more freedom, not less.
That should be celebrated, not disrespected.
And I think that's the case.
It's kind of being disrespected at that school.
He says, I've demonstrated we must make a stand for what we believe.
In my case, I made a stand to take a knee.
And I encourage all Americans to make their own stand for freedom and our right to express our faith as we see fit.
But I just think that, you know, it goes unsaid that some of these institutions don't need to be supported by us.
And we do support them.
And we do turn our kids over to them to be supported by us and we do support them and we do turn our kids over to them to be raised
they just had in france a law passed and jonathan turley talked about he said well you know this is
um we're losing all sense of religious freedom and freedom of speech in the west and france
they have been banning one expression of Muslim dress after the other. They just passed
a law saying that Muslim girls could not wear the headdress that they wear in classes.
And he said, so what are you going to do? You're going to tell Christians that they can't wear a
cross? You're going to tell a Jewish student that they can't wear yarmulke or something? Yeah, look,
the Orthodox Jews aren't stupid enough to send their kids to government schools.
They're going to raise them with their values and their cultures.
We're the ones who are the suckers with this.
And let me tell you, this is going to be something that is going to be the case when
the Muslims become the majority, and they will become the majority in France.
I think what is really behind that law yes there is no tolerance for
free speech in the west anymore certainly not in france all these secular marxist governments like
france uh despise these fundamental human rights but there's something else going on
i think they don't want to have a visible sign of this because that's the way they attacked it they
said no visible sign of what your religion is i don't think they want to have pictures of classrooms that are filled with muslim kids
because then that would push back against their great replacement push and so i think that's
what's at the basis of that particular report um that particular law in In Chicago, you have the teachers union president.
Hates private schools, hates charter schools.
I'm sure hates homeschool as well.
But she doesn't put her kid in the government schools.
She talks about how elitist it is.
And yet, she sends her kid to a private school
that costs about $15,000 a year.
She said school choice is the choice of racist.
It is about segregation.
And these school vouchers are about racism.
Maybe what it really is about is that she wants to keep the riffraff out of her private school.
She can afford, as a teacher union present, she can afford to send her kid to a school that costs $15,000 a year.
And she doesn't want anybody getting any money so they can make any kind of choices about how
they want their kid educated. But it doesn't cost anywhere near that to
homeschool your kid. As a matter of fact, it is a priceless experience that you will always cherish.
You don't want your kids to be bonded to an institution or to teachers. You want them to
be bonded to you as parents. And you get that with homeschooling.
And you don't want them to be bonded to their peers in the class
instead of to their siblings.
If you want a family, you've got to stop turning your kids
over to the government to raise.
We'll be right back. Thank you. I'm going to go. You're listening to The David Knight Show.
Good morning, everyone.
Good morning.
And to all the young leaders who are here and the youngish leaders, good morning to all of you.
Good morning, my dear. Good morning. Good morning. I'm here because of you, by the way.
Every day I get in the queue. To get on the bus that takes me to you. Magic bus, magic bus.
I'm so nervous I just sit and smile.
Magic bus.
Can I buy your magic bus?
Magic bus, magic bus.
Who doesn't love a yellow school bus, right?
Can you raise your hand if you love a yellow school bus, right?
Just, there's something about the, and most of us, many of us went to school on the yellow school bus, right? Just there's something about the and most of us, many of us, went to school on the yellow school bus, right?
Our electric school bus program really does represent an intersection of all those points. Investing in domestic manufacturing. New this morning, electric bus and truck maker Proterra says it's seeking Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection from a federal court in Delaware.
The California company is a supplier of buses for transit systems across the nation, including Greenville.
President Biden took a virtual tour of the Greenville factory in 2021 to highlight electric vehicle makers oh yeah yeah the magic bus and i i don't care how much it costs i gotta have that magic bus
and of course we got federal subsidies as well after pouring in all of this money and uh john
listener uh sent this program to me this is uh again again, the EPA. They had the Department of Energy
was subsidizing stuff, putting out grants.
But the EPA, putting out a billion a year
last couple of years.
They've got a $5 billion pot of money
to throw out there.
Of course, we can't help the people in Hawaii.
We don't have any money for that.
Sending our money to Ukraine
and to people creating electric electric buses the clean school bus
program i don't know about you but i haven't been on that many clean school buses
what comes out of the tailpipe that makes them dirty uh but again you know give uh
these electric school buses are about a million a piece and the epa had received requests
of four billion for 12 000 buses 90 of them ev and that's about 333 000 a piece but some of them
were about just under a million a piece but even with that this company pro terra went bankrupt right away right away went bankrupt because you
see this is what happens when we give money to these green uh crony capitalist organizations
just like cylindra and other things like that it's one of the problems that i had with rfk
jr's explanation of his environmentalism he says you know, the reason that we've got fossil fuel stuff out there is because
massive subsidies from the government to them.
You get rid of the subsidies, they'll go away.
Well, I don't think so.
I know that if you get rid of the subsidies, these windmill farms and these electric school
bus boondoggles and all the rest of the stuff, I know that will go away because it's going
away even after they're giving them billions
of dollars of subsidies, they're still disappearing.
Like Solyndra, like Proterra.
It is absolutely insane.
But even more insane is the fact that they just keep doubling down on what they want
to do.
Booty Gay, or perhaps we should call him Booty Marx in this particular situation, he has
an equity team and they said that private car ownership is racist.
You know, everything is racist.
The founding fathers are racist.
Your gas stove is racist.
Your car is racist.
Everything is racist.
When are we going to just say, you know what?
That has no effect on me.
Just let it roll off of your back, like water off the back of a duck.
If everything is racist, then nothing is racist.
Understand?
I mean, there's real racism out there, but these people cried wolf so much,
let's just forget about it anymore.
I don't really care about any claims about racism, quite frankly.
They say all cars are bad.
Boudiguet's been busy allocating tax dollars to a group of, quote, leading experts that he's appointed.
And they're looking at transportation equity.
Equity. of Boudier's Marxist equity team agree, or argue rather, that cars cause climate change and promote racism. You know, just like overpasses promote racism.
It was supposed to be a good thing to not have a lot of traffic
through a poor neighborhood, but now we've got to tear down
the overpasses and we've got to make everybody drive through the poor neighborhood. Why?
So, earlier this month, the overpasses and we got to make everybody drive through the poor neighborhood why um so
earlier this month he appointed 24 new members to his advisory committee on transportation equity
this was a committee that was created by obama and it was shut down by the trump administration
and i gotta say that that was the bright spot of the Trump administration was the energy
policy.
Scott Pruitt was a good guy.
Of course, he was hectored out of Washington, D.C.
They were coming after him with one claim after the other.
None of them had any basis, but he could say it was just going to be a matter of time before
they got something that they in Washington, D.C. that they could railroad him on in a kangaroo court situation and so without any
support from president trump he got out of the administration included on the committee is andrea
mar polaro columbia columa who is a so-called spatial policy scholar.
That's a title that she has.
Spatial policy scholar.
Who says, quote, all cars are bad.
That's her quote.
And she puts it in all uppercase.
All cars are bad.
And that includes the electric cars as well.
Because you see, as the guy who was the CEO of Lyft,
he was a former urban planner, and he said,
the best invention that mankind has ever come up with is a city.
The worst invention is the car.
Why does he say that?
Because he's an urban planner, he loves the cities,
and he wants to make sure that everybody lives within his little fiefdom,
his little bureaucratic fiefdom.
And the cars, even though this guy is renting people cars, he doesn't want you to get out
of the city with that car.
You know, they hate what they call urban sprawl, what we call suburbs.
People don't want to live packed into cities.
And cars gave us that freedom.
It also gave us freedom to travel without the kind of
tyrannical mandates of masks and vaccines and all the rest of stuff that they took over every other
form of transportation with three years ago so they want to shut that down and we need to keep that alive because that is an essential lifeline to our liberty and um uh if uh they do this to us
again we don't have cars it's going to be a lot harder a lot harder that's why they're coming
after them so hard and they don't want you to have all cars are bad the ev cars are bad as well
and that's one of the reasons why they're going to shut down the power grid so you can't charge
your car yeah we don't have enough
for that we got to have uh save the electricity a little bit of electricity that we got left we
got to have that for heating and cooling our homes or this or that we can't let you be driving around
places come on you don't need to be moving another boudier appointee appointee a self-described transportation nerd, Veronica Davis, argued that cars perpetrate systemic racism and are the problem in America's transportation system.
No, they are the solution.
They are the solution.
The far more effective solution than all the rest of this stuff.
My interest in being on the equity committee is to raise the question
and push the Department of Transportation to really think about it.
What are some equitable, environmentally sustainable,
economically beneficial, and feasible alternatives
to a policy that is car-centric, she said.
How can we reimagine the streets to prioritize people instead of cars?
Well, the problem is people like cars.
The bureaucrats don't like the cars.
We have to ask the same question.
What is it that we can do?
What are some economically beneficial and feasible alternatives to these bureaucrats and having our lives micromanaged by people in Washington
being overpaid to destroy our lives.
How can we create streets that are inclusive of modes other than cars?
Well, they have done that.
Bike lanes that nobody uses.
She wrote a book and released in July,
Inclusive Transportation, a manifesto. Marxist. she wrote a book and released in July, inclusive transportation,
a manifesto Marxist addressed the healing and the damage that is done by cars.
She said not to oversimplify the problems of transportation,
but all roads lead back to cars.
Well,
the roads are there for the cars lady.
That's,
that's why they're there.
They're not there for bicycles or for people to walk on.
They're there for cars.
This isn't an anti-car propaganda, but vehicles have wreaked havoc on the environment and on communities.
No.
Best thing that we ever had.
In Boston, they said we need to make it not only possible, but also preferable for residents to leave traffic and pollution inducing fossil fuel powered vehicles behind, says the plan from the city.
As they want to push into this C34 stuff included in the plan is a call to reduce commuting miles through an increase in remote work and virtual engagements.
They want you staying home.
That's what the 15-minute cities are about.
And the way that the solution to the 15-minute cities is to keep your cars
and to keep them with functional fuels, internal combustion.
The COVID pandemic has highlighted the major opportunities for telework.
And again, that's something else that RFK Jr.
said. He said
he seconded the
motion that, I think it was
Forbes or Fortune magazine,
two weeks into the, two weeks to flatten
the curve, and they were concerned that
Fauci really meant what he said, that he's going to
let people go after two weeks.
And they said,
well, if we let people out after two weeks we got to
make sure that we don't ramp this up this has been really good for the environment and rfk junior
said yes i second that that's that we want to keep everything shut down for equity committee member
uh marpillero columnina however electric vehicles are not the silver bullet she said if. If we just replace all the gas-powered cars with EVs,
we're going to have many of the same problems that we have with gas-powered cars.
You see, because this is about your mobility and their ability to control our lives.
We have to come groveling to them for a hall pass to go anywhere,
even within their megacities.
Well, that's outside your 15-minute zone.
You can't ride the bus, citizen,
because we don't like what you said on social media.
Your attitude has been noticed, and you will go nowhere.
Everything will be shut down to you.
This is what they've been doing in China for a long time
with their social credit system.
This is what this is all about.
The EPA has never really been about emissions.
As I've said before, it's about omissions.
It's not the Environmental Protection Agency. It's the Energy Prohibition Agency. It is the Everything
Prohibition Agency. It is the everything prohibition agency it is the escape prohibition agency you won't be able
to escape these people's cities that's what the epa is about and then it's not just the buses that
are failing they're failing in the marketplace who would have thought that this centrally planned
economy that they're trying to build around the transportation industry who would have thought that this centrally planned economy that they're trying
to build around the transportation industry, who would have thought that that would fail?
Well, the car dealerships have a glut. I pointed this out before. These guys are saying, look,
we've got just too much inventory sitting around here. They said, typically, we're looking to turn
the inventory at least 12 times annually, which means that they need about a 30-day
supply of inventory.
But what's happening is things have slowed down.
Instead of a 30-day supply of inventory, they got a 54-day supply of internal combustion
engine cars.
And the EV inventory is more than twice that.
They've got about 120 days of inventory for the EVs.
They need to have 30 days inventory for the stuff that they're selling.
And they said the problem is that you're just running out of consumers
who have enough money to buy the electric vehicles.
It is also that you've got to have a consumer
who not only has a lot of money to buy these cars
that are considerably more expensive, at least $10,000 more expensive than the cars that
we've been using.
And then they have to be risk tolerant and they have to be open to changing their lifestyle
and reorganizing their lifestyle around the range and the charging aspects of these EVs.
And he said, we're just running out of that.
He says, it's grown, but he says, we've really kind of hit the ceiling with this because
we're running out of those types of people.
He said, the only Toyotas that I have that are not pre-sold are the electric ones.
The spectacular growth we've seen over the last few years cannot be sustained.
It's not possible, he said.
The further up this growth curve we go, the harder it's going to be to get to the next level.
And so as you look at this, we've seen the Ford CEO say, you know, I just took a vacation with his Evie and, uh, after, um, with a,
with a Ford F one 50 lightning, uh, he said, um, uh, he had to, I'm sorry.
That was the CEO of Ford who did that.
The other guy, uh, took a different car, but he said that, uh, he took the family
on a vacation and he was, you know, it was, it didn't have much of a range and whenever he'd find a charging station,
he went there, it didn't work.
He goes to another one, it doesn't work.
And they're trying to take a family vacation.
So he just gets it towed to a car dealership, regular car,
internal combustion engine.
And he rented that for the rest of the, for the ride.
And so this person is saying, well, you know, it gets even worse. if you want to take a kind of family vacation where you're towing uh some kind of an
rv or something like that uh he said have you realized that when you go to these charging
stations they're not drive-through like a like you can with a gas pump, the way they're set up, you have to, every time you want to charge,
you've got to decouple your RV and go to that charging station.
And because you're pulling the RV,
you're going to get very, very limited range.
So before your 30 to 45 minute wait to recharge every 88 miles
you're going to enjoy unhitching your trailer to charge your ev each time
so this is the key thing and then of course people are starting to put two and two together
and realizing that it's going to cost them about 15 to 25 000 to replace the battery pack that's
only going to last about 100 000 miles so you can add another 15 to 25 cents per mile on the cost of ownership it's just not making
sense for people but again we don't have a government that cares about that they've got
their agenda that they want to shove down our throats and quite frankly their agenda is to enslave and impoverish us and so these things are perfect for
that the lucid ceo says well you know i know that people got a lot of range anxiety about these evs
but he goes we're coming up with a car that has a range of 516 miles well we've seen that story
before as well where whether it's ford or tesla they overstate the range
but um uh eighty four thousand or eighty two thousand four hundred dollars for this car
how many people uh even if it had a range of 516 miles how many people can afford to do that? And that's their cheap model. The model that they started the car company with at Lucid is $249,000.
And so we're going to pick this up on the other side of the break with Eric Peters.
I just wanted to throw in what is happening with the magic bus ride.
And how, you you know they think
they all want it uh but but we don't want it um and so um we're going to take a quick break
and uh let's see oh okay we still need to um still need to establish okay we're good all right
uh so we're going to take a quick break and we'll be right back. They create a common past to track and control us. Their commons project to make sure the commoners own nothing.
And the communist future.
They see the common man as simple, unsophisticated, ordinary.
But each of us has worth and dignity created in the image of God.
That is what we have in common.
That is what they want to take away.
Their most powerful weapons are isolation, deception, intimidation.
They desire to know everything about us while they hide everything from us.
It's time to turn that around and expose what they want to hide.
Please share the information and links you'll find at thedavidknightshow.com.
Thank you for listening. Thank you for sharing.
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All right.
And joining us now is Eric Peters, epautos.com.
And we had Eric, but we had a little bit of video issues with it,
and so we reestablished contact, and we've got him on with audio.
Thanks for joining us, Eric.
Always great to talk to you.
Oh, likewise, David.
And again, I'm sorry about the technical snafu.
I hope to share with you my quadrajet model.
Next time.
I want to see that next time.
So what's on your mind?
What are you looking at?
Well, I was listening to you just a few minutes ago before the snafu happened,
and you were talking about some of the issues involving the electric cars.
And I have been writing about it.
I haven't published it yet, but I've got an article in the works about something that's just illustrative of the old debacle.
Tesla has a gigantic supercharger facility called Harris Ranch, and it's outside Coalinga,
California.
It's roughly about halfway between L.A. and San Francisco, and they really talk it up because it's got 98 places for EVs to charge.
And as it turns out, they have a diesel power generator to provide the electricity to the things going that's what he did the nurburgring yeah he wanted to stick his uh you
know that porsche had uh the the electric car and he wanted to show them his plaid and so he shipped
it over there and then he put a diesel generator and everybody around the area was furious at him
because you know they're all about uh clean stuff and everything in Germany. So they were furious.
So he's got a diesel generator running this thing.
That's great.
Yeah, it's obnoxious on so many levels because, well, here's one.
Diesel, static diesel generators are not subject to the same ultra-strict emission standards
that diesel-powered passenger vehicles are subjected to.
So here he is touting his supposedly green, zero-emissions electric cars that are feeding off of this relatively free-of-any-emissions-controlled diesel generator.
And he's helping to push diesel cars that are actually very clean and extremely efficient off the market.
It's just, it makes my teeth hurt.
It makes me want to grab a bottle of whiskey and just crawl into a corner somewhere sometimes. It's like some old lawnmower that he's got running out
there, right? Yeah. There's a technical reason for this. And you know, you have an electrical
engineering background, so you know all about this. It takes an immense amount of electricity
to power one of those fast chargers to get that kind of current going into a single electric vehicle.
Now imagine the draw of almost 100 electric vehicles sucking power all at the same time.
It's just not there.
And that's why he's had to have this backup diesel generator system to make his fraud
seem like it works.
Well, and that's the thing.
You and I have talked about this for years before they openly talked about it.
But now they're openly talking about it.
Now we've got the EPA out there shutting down power plants, you know, and these are clean power plants.
They're not like the power plants that China and India is allowed to have with no limitation on the numbers of them.
But it's just like you're talking about the comparison between a clean diesel car and a diesel generator.
You know, that's the comparison between our power plants and china's power plants that accept it's even greater there and and yet we have to shut our clean ones down
so they can run their dirty ones and so um you know they're they're shutting down now the epa
is uh shutting down power plants with emission regulations never been done before for that and
there's not going to be any power on the grid for the electric cars. As I was saying earlier,
booty gaze Marxist committee of equity transportation says,
we want to get rid of all cars.
And you and I have said this from the very beginning,
that's the design.
You know,
this is just a head fake and it's just boiling the frogs to make us think,
well,
okay,
if we have cleaner engines,
okay,
they'll let us survive with this.
How about if we have hybrids?
No, none of that's going to be allowed.
You've got to go to an electric vehicle.
And then when you get to the electric vehicle, guess what?
There's not going to be anything to power it on the grid.
And they're going to say, there's no juice left.
We've got to have it for heating and cooling.
So you can't drive your car.
Well, and they're also going to use the same excuse.
Right now they're telling us that because of carbon dioxide, it's necessary to get rid of all gas and diesel powered vehicles,
to get rid of gas powered stoves and water heaters and things of that nature. Well,
what they're going to do if they succeed in forcing these electric vehicles onto everybody,
all of a sudden it'll be discovered that they generate a great deal of emissions in their own
right in order to produce the electricity
that's necessary to keep these battery packs powered up. And then they'll say, well, now we
can't have those because Mother Earth will die if we allow that to happen. And then they'll have
achieved their goal of making a car something that only a very, very few people at the very apex of
the pyramid will have the ability to own anymore. And the rest of us will get to live in a 15-minute
freedom city and walk or take a bicycle. That's right. And what is now ability to own anymore, and the rest of us will get to live in a 15-minute freedom city and walk or take a bicycle.
That's right.
And what is now starting to come up,
we're seeing this stuff happening in rapid succession.
Not only the EPA putting emission rules on this,
but it came to my attention here in this area in Tennessee,
the TVA wants to have these massive Tesla battery energy storage sites.
They call them BESS, B-E-S-S.
And they have different companies that put this stuff together,
but they're basing it off of the Tesla battery pack.
If you recall a couple of years ago,
Elon Musk said to this location in Australia
where they're having problems
because they had switched over to renewable stuff.
He says, I'll fix that for you, and I'll put in this battery pack and i don't know 30 days 90 days or whatever
i don't get it put in in that amount of time you don't have to pay me well of course he knew he
could get it installed in that amount of time and then they had a massive fire there and there's
been massive fires with these things they have like a little like a million batteries in them
and so if one of them goes bad, the whole thing goes up in flames.
They've had that happen in California a couple of times, in Australia,
in New York several times.
And now the TVA wants to start putting that in, not in desert areas
like they've been doing in California or Australia,
but they want to put it in residential areas that are heavily forested here.
And you can't control these things.
But now they just keep scaling this problem up from the uh the the electric scooters in new york that have killed
a lot of people with a lot of fires this last year has now become a leading uh cause of death by fire
these uh electric scooters but they keep scaling it up all the way to this um power grid battery for renewables. And it truly is amazing.
There seems to be no end to this insanity.
And, of course, the guy who's filling his pockets
at every one of these junctures is Elon Musk.
Yeah, you know, it's interesting to me
that there's an element of recklessness here.
And you see it transcend so many things.
The recklessness with which
these so-called vaccines were pushed, for example, on people who are the ones who bear the cost of that and now with these evs
and the fires which is just one of the many problems that they have people are getting killed
and more people will be killed and of course ultimately we are all going to pay for this
financially in terms of things like increased insurance costs you know i've been getting emails
and calls from people my readers readers, who've told me,
you know, I got my insurance bill the other day and I hadn't had a wreck or anything or a traffic
ticket, but they've increased my premium. And the reason they're doing it, in part, is because of
the anticipation of the increased costs of paying out for things like fires. A couple of weeks ago,
there was an incident up in New Jersey where a Mercedes EQE EV that wasn't plugged in, it was
just parked in this family's garage, it burned down, took the house with it.
And so there's a million-dollar loss.
Who's going to pay for that?
Scale that up and think about how we're all going to end up seeing this reflected in what we pay for insurance and so many other things, including our power bill, as they increase the demand for the electricity that they're not increasing the generating capacity for.
Yeah, I've got a couple of firemen that go to the church that we go to, and they're not increasing the generating capacity for. Yeah, yeah.
There's a couple of firemen that go to the church that we go to,
and they're saying there's no way that we can put these fires out once they get started.
It's like, well, what do you think is going to happen when you've got one of these BESS systems?
You know, you've got a big grid for the battery that is going to be able to charge the grid.
We have a fire with that.
What are you going to do with that?
You can't put this stuff out.
You know, as you were talking about the fires burning down houses and everything, just because
they get a little bit of salt water on them.
You know, don't park your car inside your house because it could burn it down.
But as this is all happening, Eric, there's a Fox News article saying that in Texas, the
battery operators are criticizing ERCOT, which is their joke corporation, the Electric Reliability Corporation of Texas.
So much for reliability when they go to renewables.
But, you know, they're complaining about their regulation of the battery operators.
And Fox is portraying the battery people as the saviors.
Saviors because they have thrown us under the bus by shutting down the functional fuels.
I don't call them fossil fuels.
I call them functional fuels.
They've shut that down and forced us into this other stuff.
And so now we've got to have these guys.
They're going to save us, but you're throwing them under the bus.
And it's like, it's amazing to see how, you know,
well, of course, we now know what Fox is about.
But, you know, all the mainstream media is a cheerleader
in all of this this along with the government
of course sure and all of this is premised on yet another confected overwrought over-exaggerated
hysteria that is this idea that the 0.04 percent of the earth's environment or air atmosphere that's
carbon dioxide if that's increased by a slight fraction of a percent somehow the climate is
going to change and we're all going to die. Yeah. Oh, yeah. Absolutely.
Yeah, they just had the, I don't know if you saw the Munich car show there,
but there's all these articles coming out from the financial press
talking about how it's looking like it's the end of the German automobile industry,
even as the German economy is circling the drain because they're shutting down even nuclear power plants.
They're starving them. They don't have enough energy to run any of their industries that are there and they can't
compete with the chinese because the chinese have got a supply chain advantage with a cheap batteries
and access to materials that they have to buy from the chinese so they said there's no way that
that they can compete with the chinese but you're caught in this kind of murder-suicide loop that all of the Western governments are applying to their economies, isn't it?
I mean, they really don't care.
The automobile industry in Germany is a key part of that economy.
Now the IMF is saying Germany's got the worst economy of any of the countries there, and it's all self-inflicted.
Well, it's not that they don't care.
It's that they don't care about us.
That's right.
It's important, I think, to make that distinction.
People like Buttigieg and Biden and all the people at the apex of the pyramid,
they're not the ones who are going to be freezing in the cold
and worried about what they're going to eat
and whether they've got a car that will allow them to go where they want to go.
They're going to have access to private jets, as we all know about.
It's us.
Socialism is always for us, not for them.
And people have got to understand that.
If they understand that, then everything begins to make sense.
That's right.
Yeah, they're going to have a complete across-the-board ban.
This is really going to kick in in 2030, but by 2035,
it's going to be 100% ban on all internal combustion engines in the EU.
And that's basically going to put them out of business.
They said, we can't compete with the Chinese.
This is by design.
This is a massive transfer of wealth and power and industrial manufacturing to the Chinese.
They are at war with their own economy.
And that's why we saw all this stuff happening under, it didn't matter if it was Trump
or whether it was Trudeau. It didn't matter what their political philosophies were. They were all
at war with us doing exactly what the World Economic Forum and the UN wanted done to shut
us down. And it really is, they went to war with us and they're still at war with us.
Yeah, some people aptly call that the uniparty, and I agree that there isn't really
any meaningful difference between the left and the right and so on and so forth. But it's the
elitist aspect of this that fascinates me because it's being pushed largely by a leftist philosophy
that claims that these things are necessary for the sake of the earth and so on and so forth.
But it favors the wealthy. Elon Musk has made billions.
And the affluent people who can afford to buy a $100,000 Tesla
or even a $50,000 Tesla,
and many of them are people who work for the government
or make their money via the government,
so they have unlimited access to your wallet and mine
to pay for what they want.
So, you know, the average person, the average middle-class guy,
the average working-class person,
is being inserved for the benefit of the rich. It's just the irony of it is astounding to me. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Talk about the diaper report. This is something that you've had
a weekly report that you have at epautos.com about the face masks. And now they're trending again.
Give us your update on the diaper report from
your perspective well yeah i try to keep this alive because i think it's important it hasn't
been beaten back enough it hasn't been rejected enough and it's really important to do that
and you know you see that uh it's been reported that dr jill biden and whoopi goldberg have tested
positive and they're trying to bring back the masks and there was an interview there was a
really a fascinating interview it was on cnn i can't remember which which reporter it was but
he was talking to and i wish i could do the fauci imitation but anyway he was talking to fauci
and he the cnn reporter actually brought forth uh you know credible points about the masks and how
they didn't work and there was no meaningful difference between population a masked up and
population b that wasn't and of course fauci doubled down on it and continued to insist that masks work.
I mean, it's just...
I covered that up.
I played that.
And you know, the amazing thing about it to me, Eric, was the fact that he's so clever
and he switched the narrative.
You know, it was always, when all this was happening, individual health doesn't matter.
We got to look after the public health, right?
And so individual health, forget about it.
And so he's got this study, and that study had, I think it was 78 random control trials.
They had just added another 11.
These things have been done around the world.
And they said, you know, with a, you know, 95% confidence level, we can say these masks
don't do anything.
And of course, we've known that for a long time.
The only thing that had a question there was how much harm are they doing to people yeah and so
fauci's response to all that was well there's other studies you know and of course we're only
worried about the individual health we're not worried about the that may be true maybe it
doesn't help well your whole thing is public health and and so it's he's such a sleazebag
such a slimy character it It's amazing to me.
All of these people are, and they're continuing to push these vaccines,
and it's like the incongruity of it.
You've got people like Dr. Jill Biden, and you've got Whoopi Goldberg,
and the whole panoply of these people.
And you've got Whoopi Koff.
Yeah, again, I mean, who's getting sick?
It seems to me, anecdotally, you know, I mean, I know a lot of people,
and the only people that I know who seem to be getting sick are the people who got vaccinated.
Everybody else is fine.
That's right.
Yeah, I don't, you know, there's two possibilities in my mind.
One of them is that they're faking it because they want to bring back the face diapers or whatever.
If they're really sick or they're really testing positive, you know,
because we've had a lot of people who have always tested positive because they're magnifying the content of this stuff by 1.1
trillion times but uh they might be finding some elements of the spike which is reproducing and
wrecking their body constantly you know i don't know what's happening with this if that's genuine
i think what that's what it is but um well how about we've just we've normalized neurosis
you know hypochondria so the point now where somebody gets the sniffles they don't reach for
a box of kleenex they rush out to get a pcr test and and then they get the positive test and they
flip out because oh my gosh it's covid i've got covid i've tested positive i better put on my
mask i better hide at home you know what i think is interesting is the attempt by the Trump media to try to rehabilitate him.
He's going through a very rapid reinvention, just like Fauci is.
Because up until spring of this year, he was still talking about his vaccine as one of the greatest inventions of mankind.
And nobody else could have done this like I did it because he shut down all the tests right he saved millions of lives yes
i know he's got murder on it he's got blood on his hands quite frankly but um you know he's he
it took him a while and he had all these trump sycophants who actually who absolutely hated the
jab people like wayne allen root and people like a Alex Jones and all the rest of them. You've got to stop talking about this.
Everybody hates this. Stop talking about it. So finally he stopped talking about it. And now
he's come around with this stuff. Now he does a cut this
do not comply video. I can't believe the hypocrisy of
this guy. And he's doing the same thing that Fauci's doing. It's kind of the opposite
of the N of the um
of the nuremberg trial where everybody said i was just taking orders what they're saying was i didn't
give anybody any orders they'll just made this stuff up on their own i don't know where they
came up with this idea doing this stuff yeah we don't know where they came up with this it wasn't
me it wasn't fauci telling them what to do and paying them money to do all this stuff i don't
know how this happened well it doesn't it really just put in stark relief the just astounding, almost unfathomable
narcissism of this guy?
Yeah.
You know, he's obviously doing it because he views it as being politically advantageous
right now, because as you say, his base, a lot of people in his base, I know a lot of
people who are pro-Trump people, were and are a little bit uneasy about how he behaved during the last year of his presidency in the first year of the so-called pandemic.
So, you know, he probably decided, well, I better just say the right things to these boobs so that the boobs will come out and support me.
You know, if he'd come out and apologize and said, look, I was fooled or I made a bad decision. And I am deeply sorry about it.
And I vow that that kind of thing is not going to happen again.
It would have been different.
But the way he did it, it makes it so obvious that it's just another calculated political decision.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
And it's interesting because, you know, he has DeSantis came out and said, yeah, it was a bad decision.
We should not have done that.
And then he attacked DeSantis for pushing his vaccine.
And in that attack, he implied that the vaccine killed the person that DeSantis was featuring as receiving the vaccine.
The guy died four months later.
He was very old, but he died four months later.
And so Trump implied that DeSantis pushed his vaccine
and this guy died from it.
But there's also an interview with Tudor Dixon
who ran for governor in Michigan against Gretchen Whitmer.
And she was saying, well, you know,
Biden's got a new vaccine he wants to put out.
And he says, this one works.
What do you think about that?
Well, it needs to be tested.
And all the rest is like, seriously, you're going to say that?
And she even came after it and even said, you know, well we got all these problems with um myocarditis and blood clots
and all this other kind of stuff do you think well uh oh yeah you know uh yeah we ought to take a
look at that at some point how can you say that at this point in time and then she finishes up
the interview as a sycophant to say well we just got to get you back in the white house to save us
you know i mean it's just yeah makes me want to throw up to see what is happening i am as disgusted with the people on the right as i am with the
people on the left it's just amazing to see this stuff you know i share that and i think it can be
understood in the sense that people are desperate to hear anybody who has uh you know potentially
going to be or even run for for, saying things that even vaguely sound like
they might be somewhat oriented toward freedom and liberty.
And Trump plays on that very effectively.
Hitler played on that very effectively.
He would go from town to town, give a different speech, and he would say what people wanted
to hear.
And they would think they heard something that he didn't actually say.
They think, oh, well, this guy is a German
patriot. He is going to
efface the shame of Versailles.
He's going to help us to
recover our national greatness. And
Trump is really good at doing a similar kind
of shtick. Yeah, he is.
Building a personality cult. I saw that
personality cult with Obama. I remember when that was
there. And it really concerned me. I thought,
wow, the left has really lost its mind. But it is or worse with trump and at the end of the obama administration
uh you had harry belafonte radical leftist all of his life and activist and he said he was
disappointed that um obama hadn't been more radical and he said uh i don't know who this guy
is we just projected what we wanted onto him.
And that's what's happening with Trump as well.
You know, people just projecting that onto him. I was on a program yesterday as a guest, and they pressed me.
Who would you support for president?
I said, look, you know, Reagan said government's not a solution, government's a problem.
I said, let's put a finer point on it.
The presidency is not the solution the presidency is the problem and the idea that we want to have some really good guy
who we're going to give all power to and he's going to fix everything it's like has anybody
read the lord of the rings do you know how that works out when you put that ring our dictator
exactly right we're going to turn into boromir right that power is going to corrupt people we
don't want people to have that kind of power the founders didn't want people having that kind of
power we have to pay attention when people tell me that i and so well who are you going to vote for
and so who is running a sheriff do you know the people who are that are running for sheriff in
your local jurisdiction or mayor or for city council because that's going to make it better
or worse for you those people can stand in the gap, and we need to take back responsibility for our lives,
or we're never going to have freedom.
That's what the founding fathers' generation did.
They took responsibility for their freedom, and they organized on a local level to do it themselves.
They didn't say, well, let's let John Hancock do it all for us.
They didn't say anything.
They didn't look at that, but that's our mentality.
We have adopted the mentality of the left thinking that government is going to be our savior, specifically the presidency.
And that's what we're looking for.
We're looking for government to save us.
That is the antithesis of what we should be looking for. I think that centralization, whether it's on the left or the right,
is anathema to a free society,
to any kind of liberty,
because centralization generally ends up being,
even with the best of intentions,
it's one size fits all.
Centralization, you don't get choice,
you don't have alternatives.
Everybody does whatever the centralizing authority says.
Who wants to live in the company town
where the company tells you,
this is what you're going to get paid, take it or not, and we're going to pay you in
company script, and you're going to go to the company store, and you're only going to be able
to buy the goods that we deign to put into the company store. That's the kind of model that we
have now. That's right. Yeah, and that's what they want to set up with, with these smart cities and
with universal basic income. George Gilder calls the Silicon Valley crowd neo-Marxist, and he's exactly right.
They're buying into this whole idea
that there's infinite capacity
with their new technologies,
with genetics, robotics, artificial intelligence, and nano.
We have infinite capacity.
That's what Karl Marx thought
with the Industrial Revolution.
Now, of course, it wasn't true,
and it's not true of these people either.
They don't have infinite capacity to produce anything that they want.
But just like Karl Marx, these neo-Marxists think, well, the only thing we have to solve is how to distribute this infinite material goods.
And it's this materialistic approach that they have, which takes away our humanity.
That is really the gutting thing about all of this.
But that's where these people are headed headed and that's why they are doing the
types of things that they're doing.
It's why we have to push back at the local level,
at the community level,
at our family and all the rest of these things to get out of this,
instead of putting all of our hope on the present.
So,
you know,
it concerns me because I'm increasingly seeing these people who are,
you know,
kind of elder commentators on regular
press.
We've seen John Voight say it.
Now we've seen Mike Huckabee say, this is, we're getting up close to a civil war for
Trump.
You know, Mike Huckabee said, well, you know, essentially if Trump doesn't win, this will
be the last election that we solve with ballots.
It'll be with bullets next you
know they're talking about Civil War and Trump really is being positioned by both
the left and the right as the Mason-Dixon line for a new Civil War I
think no it's tragic and there's also to get back to this business of the
neo-marxists there's an irony there you know I enjoy reading about history and I
enjoy reading particularly about Soviet communism and particularly the early
years of it under Lenin and Stalin.
And these neo-Marxists think, in their arrogance, that this Marxist economic system,
this top-down centralized system that they want for us isn't going to be also imposed on them.
They think they'll be immune from it, that they'll have all the nice things that they have now,
which they won't.
Ask Kamenev and Zinoviev.
As they were being led down into the cellars of the Ljubljana to get the shot in the back of the head.
They said, if only Comrade Stalin knew.
Well, Comrade Stalin knew.
You know, ultimately, that's what's going to happen to these people, too.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I see that with the January 6th protesters, you know.
It's so sad.
I know Joe, and I see him there, and he says, well, you know, I just hope that Trump wins because he's going to save us.
See, Trump threw you in that position.
Trump didn't do anything to pardon you two weeks after that.
He doesn't even comment on these excessive prison sentences for these people at what was essentially a riot.
And people who are not even at the riot, they're pretending that this is an insurrection.
This is nothing at all like that.
It's absolutely amazing.
But, you know, you talk about how this is going to come around to them.
I've made the same case about Rudy Giuliani, who made his career off of RICO statutes,
and now he may go to jail off of RICO statute. You know, when you have an unjust law like that,
which fed right into civil asset forfeiture and the rest of these things, it's going to come back
and bite you. These people don't realize that,'re going to be subjected, as you pointed out,
to the same type of system that they're putting in place for us eventually.
And in many cases, as the politicians are the first ones up against the wall.
Yep.
They're instinctively authoritarian, and they're instinctively narcissistic and self-absorbed.
They can't step out of themselves and think, well, you know, this might be momentarily convenient for me,
you know, to have a Pinochet in charge, let's say,
and he'll take my enemy for a helicopter ride.
Not understanding that, you know, when things,
the wheel turns and the next time,
the guy who's the jefe in charge of the country
is going to take you for a helicopter ride.
These people are all dangerous people.
They just don't have any sense
of, you know, the interests of the country and of the people. And, you know, let's try to calm
down and be reasonable. Instead, they keep pushing us, as you say, toward, you know, something that
could be really horrible, some kind of a civil war, some kind of martial law type situation.
Well, I began the program by talking about what's happened in Afghanistan since we pulled out and
how the Taliban has now shut down the opium production there.
And now people are freaking out and say, well, if we can't get enough opium, people are going to start using fentanyl.
You know, we've been run by a gang of organized crime running this drug war, pumping the drugs
around worldwide, while then they use that to escalate their drug war.
It's a really brilliant scheme, but it's really devilish in its design.
And this is what
has been happening with the war on drugs and the rest of the stuff for 50 years or more and uh you
know it's it's another example of just this this criminal empire which is a criminal enterprise
and uh it just seems like it never ceases we shouldn't be surprised if we watch 50 years of
the drug war uh to see what they're going to try to pull on us
with these smart cities and 15-minute cities and all the rest of the stuff, should we?
No. The damage that's been wrought is incalculable. The callousness of it,
the way these people play with the lives of millions of people, and they just don't care.
It brings to mind what Stalin said, that the death of an individual is a tragedy.
The death of millions is a statistic.
That's right, yeah. And if it's Fauci, it's a lying statistic.
Yeah.
They put it out there. I mean, they're the ones who are killing people with their hospital protocols or they're bribing the hospitals to do, but yeah, you know, it's a...
He's bad enough, but don't you wish that at some point, like that CNN reporter,
once Fauci began his speech, be able to say, you know, that's it, enough.
If we still had Mike Wallace out there or people like him,
you would have at a certain point said, this is just not going to fly anymore.
You're lying.
We're not going to entertain your lies any longer.
You have no credibility.
Get out of here.
We're not interested in talking to you anymore.
That's what would have happened 34 years ago.
Yeah, yeah. He would have turned Fauci into that character
that Martin Short had,
the sweating, cigarette-smoking guy.
It's funny you say that, you know?
What's his name?
Nathan something or the other?
But yeah, it was Nathan Fromerson.
The interviewers are part of the problem
because they go along with it.
They help to legitimize it.
They don't just call these people out right then and there and just say, that's enough.
This is just lying.
And they won't do it.
And the reason why they won't do it, I think, is pretty obvious.
You've got, what, five or six corporations, I think it is, that control pretty much all of the so-called major media through their advertising. And so these people are beholden to that because they understand that their employment, that
their job depends on them not being too abrasive when it comes to these topics.
That's right.
Yeah.
And that's only going to get worse as time goes by.
The controls are getting more and more stringent as they've got a new wave of artificial intelligence
stasi that's going to be monitoring everything that we say in real time.
And I think that's when they're going to start shutting down uh the podcast uh let's talk about something
happy here you've got an interesting article uh about uh one of my favorite cars when i was
growing up and that was the dune buggy that actually specifically the myers manx uh which
featured in uh the thomas crown affair with uh steve mcqueen of course any any car that steve
mcqueen drove made it cool, you know.
But talk a little bit about that car and why you wrote an article about that.
Well, it called to mind an era because it was so emblematic of that time.
Bruce Meyer was a shipbuilder, a boat builder anyway, back in the 60s,
and he thought it would be fun to take some old VW parts that he had laying around the engine
and suspension and so on
and build a fiberglass dune buggy body and put that on top of it.
And the result is the Meyers-Mex, which pretty much everybody has seen,
even if they don't really know what it is.
And it's the kind of car that you can't build today and offer for sale
because it doesn't meet all of the endless government requirements pertaining to crash worthiness,
safety, this, that, and everything.
But it was a fun, simple car.
And it was possible to do that in the 60s.
And that is a measure of what we've lost in the 50-something years since then.
Everything now has to be essentially the same extruded plastic blob.
You know, it might as well all come out of the same machine,
as opposed to interesting, fun, oddball things like that.
But some guy decided, hey, let's try this and see what happens.
And people would say, hey, that's cool.
I'd like to have one of those too.
Yeah, you know, it has stifled competition, entrepreneurship, and it has stifled, cut
off the lower rungs of the ladder for Americans, essentially, because the only people who are
allowed to make anything are a few big corporations, And now those corporations are moving offshore to China.
I've seen this all my life.
You know, it's my my grandfather during the Depression had like a backyard, you know, patent medicine thing that, you know, they made and they sold it from door to door.
That's how they survived and it grew um with his sons and they made it into a
they grew the product line and then they also started manufacturing for other people as well
but it was pretty clear when i was in high school it was clear that the federal regulations were
just shutting that down it was going to be impossible to do that's why i went into electrical
engineering because they were shutting that down and i've seen that happen to everything the meyer makes and and you know his entrepreneurism about being
able to do that uh you know you can't have any any car company that comes out now that tries to
come up with something new if they're going to try to break in they have to do it as a three-wheel
vehicle to try to escape all these massive regulations about airbags and this and that
that are on it and so they have shut that
kind of stuff down and as i said earlier in the program you know the final step was uh during the
covid lockdowns for trump to tell all of the people that had service businesses the only thing
you're allowed to have anymore you know the people had restaurants or barbershops what you're not
essential shut it down you know that's where we are right now. They don't want us to have anything or be able to build anything or to be able to innovate, but to not build any
capital, not to be able to, you know, to start up a business. That's the key thing.
It's interesting to speculate, to imagine what we might have had if we had a free market. And
today, imagine somebody that decided to build a lightweight vehicle, maybe
with a small diesel engine, maybe paired it with a hybrid, built it for around, you know,
sold it for around $10,000, $12,000, and the thing probably got 70 or 80 miles per gallon.
You know, we have that. The technology is absolutely there, and the ability is certainly
there. There are all kinds of people who have the mechanical know-how to put things together.
The problem is that they don't have the millions of dollars that it takes
to comply with all these regulations.
Only these gigantic rent-seeking corporations can do that.
Yeah, that's right.
So you've got a few of these car companies out there,
like we've talked about in the past, the Elio.
Then you've got, I think it's called Aptera or something.
Aptera.
It's a really weird
looking thing. It's got solar panels on the top of it, but it had to be a three-wheel vehicle,
even with that, even though it's going to be electric and solar, they still got to go with
the three-wheel thing because they're going to shut that down. But they aren't able to really
get these things going. None of them have been able to come through, have they? Or are they still
going? No, because they're caught in a paradox. You know, the three-wheelers in many states are
considered to be motorcycles under the law.
And so if you have a vehicle that's considered a motorcycle, then you have to wear a helmet.
You know, even if you're inside an enclosed thing.
And who wants to do that? Nobody.
So, you know, they're not going to be able to sell that.
On the other hand, in order for it to qualify as a car, then it has to meet all these requirements.
And then you're faced with something that's just really expensive and very difficult to
produce, much less sell at any kind of a competitive price.
And so it just serves to stifle any kind of alternative to these extruded plastic blobs
that are coming out of the handful of major car companies that can do it.
I agree.
Yeah.
I look at it and, you know, for the future, you know, what do you tell kids coming up
in the future? Well, you need to be able to do as much stuff as you can for yourself. you know, for the future, you know, what do you tell kids coming up in the future?
Well, you need to be able to do as much stuff as you can for yourself.
You know, learn some skills.
Those are negotiable, right?
And you need to be able to grow food to some extent.
It's specialized in something that you can then barter with other people, that type of thing.
But even if you look at, you know, even though we don't have the ability to, let's say, start up a car company or something like that.
Yeah, I look at this and it's like, if I was younger, I think what I would want to do is start working on skills to be able to do car repair.
In the same way that Jay Leno has done it with his stuff.
He's got a lot of old vintage cars.
Nobody's making the parts for him anymore.
So for the longest time, he's been manufacturing his own parts. And if you were to set something up like that and start to learn how to manufacture parts for cars,
people are going to want to try to keep these cars going for a long time that they've got.
And it's going to be pretty hard for them to get them out of people's hands.
But you're also going to need not only be able to keep these cars going and not only be able to repair cars,
or you might have maybe you don't do the repair, you just make parts but they're going to have to have fuel as well and so that's going to be
something as well i look at this and you know here in tennessee they've started you've got this
explosion of um you know micro whiskey refineries or whatever moonshine stuff right used to be you
know you had the it was only with beer and now they do it with whiskey and i'm like well you know what they really need to do is
whatever tennessee needs to do whatever they need to do to get the feds off of people's backs so
people can make micro refineries to produce fuel i don't want to drink this stuff i want to stick
it in my gas tank right so i think it would behoove us all to just make provisions for trying
to get through the next period, however long that may be. Hopefully it's not going to be
too long. Hopefully it's not going to be 70 years like it was in the Soviet Union.
Maybe we'll be lucky and it will only be a few years, but in any event, just to do what you can
to maintain a decent standard of living and the ability to feed yourself and feed your family.
Heck, I mean, if you know how to tune a carburetor, your skills might be in high demand in six months from now.
Yeah, yeah.
And, you know, when you talk about it, I think, you know, you're right.
We might be stuck with this for 70 years if we don't do something critically in the next seven years.
The next seven years, I think, are going to determine what the next 70 years are going to look like.
I really do agree with this fourth turning thing of Strauss
and how they came up with the names for the millennials and everything.
But they looked at it and they said,
we see this cycle of history every four generations.
And you know, the people who were pushing this stuff against us,
the UN, the World Economic Forum, the central banks,
they believe that as well.
That's why they keep coming up with 2030 they believe that you know where we are already in the midst of this economic and even perhaps
war cycle that is going to restructure society and that'll be completed by 2030 and they're
going to have their new society completed by then and so that's why these years right now
are very very critical these next seven now are very, very critical.
These next seven years are really going to determine what the next 70 are going to look like, I think.
Yeah, and I think a critical piece of that is helping to unwarp the minds of young people,
to teach them objective reality and to counter-program them, if you will,
from the stuff that's being fed to them, because that's the tip of the spear.
It's young people that are being used to further this Marxist agenda,
because these kids have absolutely no idea what Marxism will mean until it's too late.
That's right. And they're detaching them from reality in so many different ways.
I mean, I really do think that that's a large part of what this transgender stuff is and the furry stuff is.
You know, they want these kids to withdraw into themselves.
They want them to live
in a fantasy world you've even had uh you will harari say um we're going to control people with
drugs and with video games we're going to get them to drop out of society just withdraw into their
little shack and everything and and we will run the world and uh you know just uh you know maybe
they'll just let us uh gradually expire maybe they'll kill let us gradually expire.
Maybe they'll kill us.
Who knows?
But they want people dropped out of society,
and that's the way they're doing it.
That's what they're teaching these kids.
I think that's why they're pushing this detachment from reality,
because they want to put everybody into a virtual reality.
Think about how powerful that's going to be.
I agree.
They've also engendered economic hopelessness in so many of them. You know, I know a number of them because I've got friends who've got kids who were in their
mid-late teens and so on and early twenties. And these kids have just given up any hope of owning
a car, let alone a house. And a lot of them are just staying at home. And what's the point? So,
you know, they feel that they've been gypped and, you know, in a sense they absolutely have been,
but their anger and resentment is focused on the wrong object that's right that's right yeah it is interesting
you know years ago when i started looking at the uh um asymmetric warfare centers where they were
training to fight in american cities and and of course they built models and ap hill had a model
of a city uh that they had built.
And they're not talking about the typical type of house-to-house fighting where you've already had the Air Force come in and bomb everything out, and then you're going through these burned-out buildings.
No, these were intact cities.
And so they had cities.
They had rural areas.
They had suburban areas at various bases.
And so I was looking at what they were saying, and they said, you know, at the time they're talking about radical islam and they said it's not really motivated by religion they said it's
motivated by people and they said when you look at these people who are leading these terrorist
organizations and fighting back against them as they occupied their country they said um they're
people who have lost all hope they don't have any control of their destiny.
And they are typically well-educated in their 30s,
and they've had that taken away from them.
And that's when they become radicalized, and that's when they start to fight.
And then they may add the religious aspect of it
as they get into the fight.
But they said it's being done by the sense of hopelessness
because of our occupation. And that's really what they're engendering here
at home, I think. No question about it. You know, what's the point of
getting out of bed and working if you feel that you're never going to be able to move out of your parents'
basement? That's right. Yeah. Well, it's, again,
you know, it's developing the skills and not having that hopelessness, I think,
is the key thing.
But I do enjoy when you go back and you look at nostalgic things like the Myers-Miggs thing.
Always wanted to have one of those dune buggies, you know, when I was a kid.
Even if you're not a car guy, I think it's worth remembering these things and thinking about, you know, how different things used to be, literally.
You know, here you had a car that had an air-cooled engine, very simple, you know, that was something
that, you know, if you had to fix a lawnmower, you could fix the Myers-Banks.
And, you know, we don't have anything like that.
The cool, oddball stuff, everything's the same now, irrespective of brand and almost
irrespective of price.
I've got a brand-new Mercedes GLC 300 crossover SUV in the driveway right now, a test
drive, and it's got a two-liter turbocharged engine. What doesn't have a two-liter turbocharged
engine? You know, and sometimes it taxes all my power to come up with, well, what am I going to
write about this thing? You know, the last six cars I had had a turbocharged 2.0 liter engine.
Yeah, that's right. Yeah, and it's going to be even more homogenized when they're all running off an electric skate platform, you know, it really is amazing. But yeah, you mentioned
the turbo stuff. Talk about you've got an article turbo problem. Yeah, well, you know, you may have
noticed that people listening and watching may have noticed that turbochargers have become almost
ubiquitous. You know, they're practically every car on the market now has a turbocharged engine.
That's historically unprecedented.
It was once the case that turbos were largely restricted to high-performance
or at least performance cars, and there was a reason for that.
They were considered to be power adders, to make more power in an already powerful car,
and it was understood that the price that had to be paid for that
was probably going to be an engine that didn't last as long
because turbocharging applies pressure to the engine. Cylinder pressure is increased,
and that in turn applies pressure to critical parts like piston rings, bearings, and so on.
So generally speaking, this turbocharged engine is probably not going to last as long as an engine
that maybe not as powerful but isn't turbocharged. Well, so then why are all these engines being
turbocharged? The reason is they're all too small. Like this Mercedes GLC that I have, which is a pretty big
crossover SUV that weighs more than 4,000 pounds. So it's a big, heavy vehicle. If you just put a
two-liter four-cylinder engine in that thing, it's just not going to be able to even move hardly.
It's going to have terrible performance. So they put the turbo on it to wick up the performance.
But then the question is, well, why are they doing that? Why don't they just put a V6 in the thing,
which is what they used to do? And the reason for that is that a V6 engine will not meet the
latest round of federal regulations having to do with gas mileage and having to do with carbon
dioxide emissions. And that's why engines are getting smaller and smaller and smaller,
to the point that they're not even going to be here anymore. I had a Buick Invista recently, which is also
a crossover SUV, weighs about 3,200 pounds. It comes with a 1.2 liter three-cylinder engine.
Wow. Wow.
Also turbocharged.
Wow.
You're running 20 plus pounds of boost, and you can imagine what that's going to do to
these things, and what kind of shape they're going to be in at about a hundred thousand miles yeah yeah well i guess
that's about enough to get us to 2030 when they ban them right yeah i think that's actually a
calculated decision they understand that this is a stop gap that these things okay we're going to
make these things for now they'll fall apart we won't have a problem i think one of the mopping
up problems they've got is that there's still a lot of vehicles in circulation that were made in the mid-late 90s through the early mid-2000s that can be
kept going for 300,000 and 400,000 miles if you want to with a little bit of work and
not too much money.
That's gone.
These new cars are not going to last that long, and they'll be thrown away, and that's
on purpose because then you're going to be presented with the option of getting an electric
car or getting a bicycle.
Yeah, that's right.
And I think that's a big part of what the Cash for Clunkers program was about.
Not necessarily that these really, you know, the clunkers at the time were necessarily all that great and reliable
because, you know, the reliability had gotten better.
But I think that they wanted to get rid of cars that were not computerized, you know, that were more analog. I think that was really the desire for the cash for clunkers to try to get rid of as many, you know,
thoroughly analog mechanical cars and, you know, get to the things that are going to be more complicated
and difficult for people to keep running.
I think that was the purpose of that.
No question about it.
And I think they're going to do it again, more than likely.
I have to see something like that happening.
They're going to say, we've got to get rid of it.
And they'll use that smear term, clunker, a vehicle that emits too much carbon dioxide.
Or they'll say it's not safe because it hasn't got all of the latest advanced driver assistance technology.
So here, we'll buy it back from you for $4,000.
And you can use that to put a down payment on your $50,000 EV.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It had to do your heart good to see the reaction
to Sadiq Khan's ultra-low emission
zones and the people cutting down
those things. I certainly did
enjoy it, I've got to say. They call them
Blade Runners. I did a report
on it, I think I called it EV for
Vendetta.
The Europeans have got some gumption.
Have you been noticing that there's almost no coverage of what's
going on in France?
I wonder why that is.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah, I know.
It is truly amazing.
And, you know, we don't see that kind of resistance here in America, sadly.
But, you know, they're pushing back on that.
They see what this is about now.
They see what has happened because they push them further faster as well.
You know, they've set up these 15-minute cities, and they're over the the bollards that they put there to block off the roads i mean you know for the longest time
they've been attacking the roads the roads are racist and so forth and cars are racist is what
booty gaze committee is saying now but um you know they they put roads on diets by putting bike lanes
down the sides they calm them they say, by putting on the speed bumps.
And then they just block them off, you know, in the U.K.
They say, no, you can't even go to those places anymore.
And the people are tearing it down.
Well, I think it's because they're just a little bit ahead of us.
You know, we were talking earlier about engendering hopelessness.
The people over there are at that point.
They're having their livelihoods taken away from them.
They've already been herded, most of them, into apartments and condos. They don't get to have single-family homes like we do.
And Americans are still enjoying the fumes of the prosperity that this country has historically
enjoyed. And it hasn't yet really hit home hard enough, I think, as it does. And people are faced
with the prospect of freezing in the wintertime because the electricity has been cut off, or
they're not allowed to have propane or natural gas anymore
or they're told they're not allowed to have the car anymore unless they get an electric car they can't afford.
I think we're going to see something similar to what's happening in Europe happening over here.
At least I hope so.
Yeah, you know, that's the thing.
People react to this stuff on kind of a piecemeal basis.
You know, they come in and they say, well, you can't have gas ranges anymore.
Whatever.
You've got to have electric range.
And then you can't have this and you can't have that.
They're doing it bit by bit.
And people are kind of reacting to that.
And they do it dribs and drabs because they're trying to get us to death by a thousand cuts.
Yeah.
So one week they ban this appliance.
Next week they ban the next appliance.
They go after dishwashers after they go after ranges. And then they go after the heating and cooling and all the rest of the stuff.
And everybody's just, you know, they're not hitting us with all of them at once.
But people don't see where this is going and they don't understand what the overall plan is.
And that's really what our job is, is to try to get people to understand where this is all headed.
I remember years ago I went to, uh i think it's lone star auto show
in austin they had uh it had to be um an american car that was prior to i think 1965 or something
like that 64 i think they cut it off just before the mustang came out and um and so you had all
these rat rods and all these customized cars and everything. And so you had a lot of car nuts.
And it was about a decade ago.
I went around and I talked to people.
And I said, so are they going to ban cars?
And everybody said, oh, yeah, they're going to eventually ban cars.
But it won't happen in my lifetime.
Really?
You don't think it will?
And that was coming from kids who were like 18 or 19 years old, some of them.
I said, you don't think it's going to happen your lifetime really and and they didn't they really didn't and
they thought it's gonna be somebody else's problem and I'm not gonna do
anything about it I mean you know we don't really care what happens to our
kids anymore and we don't care what happens what kind of a society we leave
behind us and people who think like that are gonna have everything taken away
from them right now and that's what we're seeing right now. But there is a silver lining to this very dark cloud, and it has to
do with the mentality of these psychopathic personalities that are behind all of this.
They inevitably overreach. They get so arrogant and believe they're almost omnipotent, that they're
almost a deity of some kind, and that we're such stupid sheep that we'll just submit and obey.
And they ramp things up and they start to make mistakes. I think the incrementalism that had been so successful for them over the past 50 years has
changed. Obviously, we're now seeing almost every week some new piece of insanity comes out, right?
You know, whether they're talking about getting rid of our cars or telling us we can't have a
gas-powered stove or water heater, and then next week it's going to be something else.
And that, I think, is something that people are beginning to notice,
and they're beginning to see patterns.
And once you see, I believe, once a person really sees and begins to connect the dots,
they can't unsee, and they finally understand.
And at that point, I think we're going to have some hope for recovering the situation.
Yeah, that's the key thing.
And people have to see it before it gets so far along that we can't do anything about it. That's the key thing. And people have to see it before it gets so far along that we can't do anything about it.
That's the key thing.
And so there's this race.
You know, are they going to be able to get their controls in before we see that happening?
The thing that concerns me, I've been talking about this week, is the utilization of artificial intelligence as a surveillance and control tool.
And also to weaponize things you
know there's a lot of talk about how a chat gpt and everything you know can do this or that and
and it hallucinates and it does stupid stuff but once but they can very effectively use it
as additional eyes and ears and to collate things you know to to be able to go through databases of biometric data but also to
and use anticipatory intelligence on us they don't have to have an army of
Stasi informants they can use artificial intelligence for that that's the thing
that really concerns me I see that ramping up the most rapidly of all the
artificial intelligence stuff it's not that the idea that Skynet is going to
become self-aware and turn the nuclear weapons on us. It's the idea that, you know, these evil people are already in
charge. They've now got this army of bots that they can use against us in one way or the other,
whether they're not physical or not. Well, our best weapon is just not to use it. You know,
I think as a society, we made a great mistake in buying into the smartphone. You know, I didn't
have one five years ago, and I started to think about it the smartphone. You know, I didn't have one five
years ago. And I started to think about it and think, you know, this is one of the mechanisms
by which they have habituated people to pecking at a screen and not noticing reality and to being
programmed by whatever comes across their screen. We don't have to do this. And I'm not saying you
don't have to, you have to get rid of your cell phone necessarily, but throw it in the drawer
and maybe check it at night or check it in the morning if you have to make a call but don't spend hours every day pecking at it and
going to social media just stop using this stuff if you stop using it it doesn't have the kind of
power over you that it has right now that's right yeah i've gotten to the point where i leave mine
in uh an airplane mode most of the time so i can be pretty late in terms of responding to somebody
if they text me but you know there was a when the snowden leaks came out and
what was that 2013 so a decade ago and um they were kind of releasing the information piecemeal
and this was not reported in american press but it was reported by the german paper the the spiegel
and they had a series of three slides i've shown them to my audience many times eric but it's it's
uh it says who would have thought in 1984, and they show the Apple 1984 commercial,
next slide, that this would be Big Brother, and they show Steve Jobs holding up the iPhone.
And then the third slide is, and that the zombies, this is the NSA
referring to us, the public, as zombies, that the zombies would line up
to pay for it themselves. They show them all in front of an Apple store to get it.
That's their attitude towards us and how they use this.
They see us as zombies.
It's the seductiveness of convenience.
So many people are not willing to exert a little bit more effort
to do something on their own when they can tap an app
and get what they want right there.
Same thing with food.
People are used to going to a supermarket that's controlled by a gigantic corporation
as opposed to having some chickens or maybe having a garden.
The more self-sufficient you are, the more they can't control you.
It's a really simple axiom.
Yeah, yeah.
We're about to run out of time.
Before we do, I wanted to talk to you about an article you had at epautos.com,
the bench seat.
Talk about the bench seat.
Well, you know, those of us of a certain vintage will recall there was a time when many vehicles,
certainly big family cars and pickup trucks, had a bench seat,
which allowed not just three people to sit across, but, you know, if you had your girlfriend with you,
she could sidle up next to you, and it was very nice and very pleasant.
And it also made a vehicle more practical.
For example, a truck that had a regular cab, if you had a bench seat,
you could carry three people in it, driver and two passengers.
Now, because everything has bucket seats, you have to get an extended cab or a crew cab to carry the
same number of people. And it's just one of those things that sort of drifted and went away.
And a lot of people miss it. And you wonder, why isn't it here anymore? And I think it has to do
with marketing. They figured out, well, we'll sell sportiness. And in a sports car, if you've
got a Miata, if you've got a Corvette, sure, bucket seats make sense. but they convince people that somehow you're a boring fuddy-duddy if you've
got a vehicle with bench seats even if it makes more sense that's right yeah it got this bad rap
as being this family vehicle because as you've got pictures there on your article all the kids
piling in you know and karen grew up in a family who had four kids they could stick them all in
the back seat there's no seat belts uh Everybody survived, fortunately. And I remember I had some sisters, but they were a lot older than I was. But I
remember going with my parents, I could just lay across the whole back bench seat and fall asleep.
That was very nice. It was a problem only. And here's part of it, the stick shift,
the thing that we love. I remember I had a friend who had a Chevy, I think it was a Nova,
and he had a pretty big engine in it, and he had a stick shift.
He had four on the floor, but it was this big, ungangly shifting thing
because he had a bench seat there as well.
And so for the sports cars, they wanted to go to the bucket seats.
And when they first came out with them, they really were like buckets.
They were like the bucket seats that I had in boats that we had.
They really were like a bucket.
They weren't really contoured like seats or anything.
They started going to that.
I think a lot of that was ironically driven by the stick shift to fit in with the sportiness.
It really was a very practical thing.
You get a lot of people in there.
Yeah.
I just thought it would be interesting retrospectively to go back and look at that
because a lot of people, particularly people in their 20s today, have never seen one.
It's like, what's that?
That's right.
That's one of the things I enjoy about this area.
They have car groupings and stuff that come in on a regular basis in pigeon forge and people line
this um six lane divided highway with all these different vintage cars and stuff sometimes to
show them sometimes to sell them and and they uh they refurbish these these things and it's a lot
of fun one year they had uh and we didn't even know it was happening uh it was uh maybe about
20 years ago came here that the boys were still kids and um we show up and they had a delorean uh group and i'd never seen a delorean
in real life before and the place was filled with them everywhere and it was the coolest thing you
know to be able to see that so they do that from time to time they had a big jeep convention
uh not too long ago we figured out what all this thing is about the duck you know i was like why do these people have toy ducks all over i didn't realize what that was about
one jeep had this giant duck that was strapped to the top of their roof you know there was the
i guess they win the prize for the biggest duck but uh it is fun to see yeah it is fun to see
the old cars and and and that is uh to some extent you know, alive in some of the areas.
But again, we've got to keep these things going.
And we can't let these people ban our lives.
And that's what this is all about.
It's about banning everything in our life.
And we've just got to say that's enough.
It's about taking the fun out of life.
Yes.
You know, the spontaneity, the individuality.
They want us to be drab masses, NPCs, you know, just sort of marching in lockstep to whatever tune they play.
That's right.
So we've got to reclaim that.
We've got to get back our dune buggies and our rubber duckies, whatever it takes.
Always great talking to you, Eric.
Thank you so much.
Thank you, David.
At epautos.com, a great place to find out about cars, get honest car reviews, real car reviews, and liberty.
That's the key thing.
Thank you so much, Eric.
And thank you for listening, everyone.
Let me tell you, the David Knight Show, you can listen to with your ears.
You can even watch it by using your eyes in fact if you can hear
me that means you're listening all the links to everywhere to watch
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