The David Knight Show - 9May23 E-Verify a TROJAN HORSE for CBDC-type Controls
Episode Date: May 9, 2023OUTLINE of today's show with TIMECODESE-Verify - GOP wants to bring back NO JAB, NO JOB type controls, but this time to control immigration, not a "virus". It will do the same thing as CBDC (which th...ey "say" they oppose) 2:10 NY turns to "congestion pricing" as the next step in the war on private cars. Meanwhile, in CA the number of people living out of their cars skyrockets 25:34 While USDA and FDA attack organic Amish farmers, FDA sets new precedent for GMO pigs. Here's what they will do to the pigs to establish the precedent… 40:32 Peter Thiel: Will Technology Freeze Time? Cheat Death?Trust the "science"? 46:17 WATCH Chelsea Clinton is turning into her mother! But the way she speaks is not nearly as frightening as what she says to support public-private-partnerships with BigPharma to push jabs. Where's Chelsea's medical degree from? 52:32 Both sides (pro-liberty vs pro-jab) declare victory. Both are wrong. The war is not over. But the medical martial law people are worried about the building resistance 1:00:07 Euopean Parliament member nails what this was — a political takeover for what she labels "globaltarianism", a global totalitarianism 1:11:17 Belgian theatre of the absurd about climate change UNINTENTIONALLY points out its absurdity of the fear campaign. 1:25-1:45 Moonshot? CIA Killed JFK? Questions That Won't Go Away The former head of Russia's space program didn't believe it. Couldn't get evidence. RFK Jr says he doesn't believe official stories of assassinations of his family. 1:47:45 INTERVIEW "Proclaim Liberty Throughout All the Land" The rewriting of history, the rumblings about reparations are reverberating throughout the world. Mark David Hall's book, "Proclaim Liberty Throughout All the Land" is a must read for anyone who wants an accurate picture of the past and a positive vision for the future. Mr. Hall's book shows how Christianity has advanced freedom & equality for ALL Americans. 2:03:23Find 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 through Mail: David Knight POB 994 Kodak, TN 37764Zelle: @DavidKnightShow@protonmail.comCash App at: $davidknightshowBTC to: bc1qkuec29hkuye4xse9unh7nptvu3y9qmv24vanh7Money is only what YOU hold: Go to DavidKnight.gold for great deals on physical gold/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 Tuesday, the 9th of May, Year of our Lord, 2023. Today, we're going to take a look
at a federal bill for E-Verify. I talked about this yesterday. I'm going to begin with that
because it is another path to take us into slavery, to put an ear tag on us, to surveil
us everywhere we go. And the conservatives are chomping at the bit, especially Republicans. We're also going to take a look at pharmaceuticals. Both sides are saying
that they've won the COVID war. No, it's not over. Both sides are wrong. And we have a second front
that is coming at us, the climate MacGuffin. That is, they're going to add that as well as
solidify their gains. And we're going to have
in the third hour, we're going to have an author who's written a book that is a very effective
rebuttal of the 1619 Project. True history. True history that you'll be interested in knowing about
as both someone who needs to get involved in the fight,
and we all need to get involved in that, or even if you're homeschooling.
It's going to be a great resource.
We'll be right back.
Well, this morning I checked Twitter,
and I saw a bunch of stuff there about Thomas Massey.
I didn't know that there was an E-Verify bill that was rolling its way through the federal government.
I know that it's already been passed by the Florida Republican House and Senate,
awaiting DeSantis' signature.
I guess they wanted to rush that through so they could claim to be first.
Most of the Republicans are on board with this E-Verify bill, a part of several measures that
are supposed to protect the border. It's not going to protect the border. It's not going to protect
the border any more than a wall. But just like the wall, it is an even more important way to
imprison each and every one of us. And so Thomas Massey was speaking out against
it, speaking out against it for the right reasons. Dan Crenshaw said he's not going to support it.
We find that we're on the same side as Dan Crenshaw, but of course, he's there for different
reasons. He doesn't care about E-Verify as a form of slavery now he was pointing out that's not going to do anything
about the cartels and of course that's the issue but does dan crenshaw want to end the war on drugs
no he doesn't want to end the war on drugs they don't want to they don't want to actually solve
anything they want to lay add layers of control over the problems that they have created and so
washington examiner says the second republican breaks with the party on House GOP border security bill.
Only two.
Only two.
And as I said yesterday, I have fought this a long time.
This has been floating around.
And when I would push back on this and say, this is not only going to be ineffective like the border wall that was never finished.
It isn't a wall if you've got a thousand mile wide door in it okay it's just it's just trump's
imagination and these other people's imagination and um so uh that's not a that's not a wall
uh that was just a vanity project, something to get people excited.
But this is a form of slavery.
And we better be aware of this Trojan horse.
So the article on Washington Examiner said the immigration bill, HR2, would re-implement Trump's Remain in Mexico program.
It would end catch and release policies at the border. It would restart construction
of the border wall, and it would mandate electronic verification of work authorization
through a system called E-Verify. So let's take a look at each and every one of these. Are they
going to make any difference? The only thing that this Title 42 thing has done has been to, um,
as a pandemic measure, the only thing that Trump did to change anything
at the border was based on the COVID war.
I said, well, because, uh, because of COVID we're going to, you know,
send people back to Mexico and, uh, you know, not, uh, uh, let them
catch them and release them here.
And now that's about to end.
So the Republicans have made this front and center fine.
Okay.
Uh, you know, stop that.
That's fine.
That's a stupid way to catch and release is dumb.
Whether it's done by Soros, uh, D D A's in, uh, California and New York city, or whether
it is done at the border, it's a stupid thing to do, uh, catch DAs in, uh, California and New York city, or whether it is done at the border,
it's a stupid thing to do, uh, catch and release. But, uh, again, the wall is, um,
they could have stopped things without the wall, but it's, it's not going to be effective. As long
as you've got this giant magnet of the drug war, as long as you've got this giant magnet
of the welfare system, people will come here've got this giant magnet of the welfare system,
people will come here illegally. And the worst part of it is that by not doing anything about
the welfare aspect, as I said yesterday, that is more dangerous, I should say, than the work
issue. The work issue, when you have people coming in from very poor countries, willing to work for very low wages,
of course, we still would have a minimum wage structure,
but they would come in and work the minimum wage
and push people out who had been there for a long time working at a higher wage.
So that is one issue, but that's not nearly as dangerous as bringing people in
who want to live off the welfare state and
who will become voters and who will stay forever rather than a lot of the
people who come in,
they want to work.
And it's essentially like a guest worker program.
Many of them,
if they're just coming for the money and the job,
they will do the job and go back home.
I've seen this happen many times with Mexican citizens who are there.
Uh,
but this is a different thing.
These are people who want to come for the free stuff, not for freedom.
They don't want to work.
They want money.
It's a very different motivation.
And what they're doing is they're punishing the people who want to work.
And so it's not a solution.
And it's avoiding the real problem.
The big magnet is the welfare state, and the big push is the drug war.
So the pull is the magnet, the push is the drug war,
but they won't do anything about either one of those.
And so Dan Crenshaw was the first one to speak out against it because of the cartels.
He says it doesn't do anything about the cartels.
And he said they're the ones who are controlling the border. Well, who made them so wealthy and
powerful? We did with a war on drugs. And of course the CIA is orchestrating this whole thing.
CIA is creating the crack cocaine program that they pushed into LA and so forth. And we see this over and over again.
Take a look at the opioid fields in Afghanistan.
They're disappearing now that we're gone.
It's the CIA who's running this drug program.
And the drug program is what's creating the cartels.
You want to get rid of the cartels?
The cartels already, when they started legalizing marijuana,
the cartels started looking at other
drugs other industries such as human trafficking and things like that that they could get into
it is war on drugs that makes them powerful just like it was war on drugs that created al capone
now that alcohol prohibition is done do we have people driving through the cities, shooting each other over the alcohol competition?
No, they do it over the drug competition.
Same thing.
It's always a result of prohibition.
By the way, if you want to prohibit guns, that's what you're going to really wind up with.
You're going to wind up with very advanced guns that are going to strictly be in the hands of criminals.
That's really going to destroy our country.
Gun prohibition.
Just take a look at what alcohol and drug prohibition did.
Anyway, so Crenshaw pushes back on it.
And a source close to Dan Newhouse, a Republican from Washington, said that he, the congressman,
also has concerns about the E-Verify provision
and is working with leadership to ensure that those concerns are noted.
Noted?
There isn't any way that you can adjust and tweak E-Verify around the edges.
You want to straddle the fence?
You want to tell people, well, I understand that this is a form of slavery that's coming, digital slavery. And I spoke out against it.
And I want you to put my objections there in a footnote as I vote for it.
And the rest of the Republicans are full on board.
Scalise says the bill has the strongest border security package that Congress has ever taken up.
And so Massey is the one who got it right, as usual.
The only one, as usual, who got it right.
A Massey spokesperson confirmed to the Washington Examiner
that the Kentucky Republican would not be voting for the bill
because of the E-Verify provisions.
In a tweet on Sunday, he compared the E-Verify provisions
to the COVID-19 vaccine mandates.
Exactly.
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he said why don't you just call it V-Verify that's what we've already had no jab no job
that's V-Verify vaccine verify i gotta verify that you
got a vaccine well e-verify what are you gonna have to do i tell you somebody who has just had
to go through all this identity stuff with a move and everything i'm sick and tired of having to
explain to my masters and my overlords who i am and how i am a citizen here when they leave the
border wide open i've told the story before and I'll tell it again.
When my mother got married, let's see, when was it?
It was a late 1930s.
She got married in the late 1930s.
She didn't have a birth certificate even.
She was born at home.
So my grandfather went with her to get the marriage license.
And, uh, you know, and they said, well, you know, so that's why I'm here.
She doesn't have a birth certificate.
And the woman says, well, how do I know that she was born at home?
And he said, I just told you.
Are you calling me a liar?
She backed down and gave her the birth certificate.
But that's not where we are today.
They call us all liars.
They tell us, well, we just went through here for this, you know,
this ID thing, moving to Tennessee.
Oh, I'm sorry, the certified birth certificate,
embossed paper and all the rest of it, that doesn't apply.
You've got to find it in some other kind of way
and all the rest of this stuff. I'm sick of this find it in some other kind of way and all the rest of this stuff.
I'm sick of this.
I don't have to prove to you who I am.
I'm this close to saying you can take your driver's license and put it where the sun
doesn't shine because I'm not going to ask you for permission to live my life.
And I'm not going to ask you for permission to have a job either.
And we got to stop this nonsense.
It's gone too far why can't the MAGA idiot cult see
that the e-verifies the same as a vaccine passport they even called it a passport they put it there
for traveling across borders even right why can't these republicans put two and two together
the republican politicians can they know exactly what they're doing.
So why can't the stupid idiots
who are still following Trump around?
Yeah, because there are stupid idiots
if they're still following Trump around.
If you're following Trump after what he did in 2020,
the beginning and the end of 2020,
you're nothing but a fool.
You're being grifted.
You're being used.
You're being thrown under his bus for traction.
Stop it.
You're going to enslave us all.
Just amazing to see this.
So Massey said, actually, he put out a couple of pictures, too, of the bill.
So look at this.
Verification photo tool.
An employer who uses the photo matching tool used as part of the bill. So look at this verification photo tool. An employer who uses
the photo matching tool used as part of the E-Verify system shall match the photo tool photograph
to both the photograph on the identity or employment eligibility document. I have to
have federal eligibility to work? Hey folks, it's time for us to start the alternative economy right now as i tweeted out
this morning i said you know cbdc takes us there most directly this is another path and this is
the path that is being supported by all these republicans even the republicans who came together
it was scalise and emmer the whip who, we got to stop this CBDC stuff.
And so then they pushed through E-Verify, assuming that you're not going to pay attention
to the implications of this. And this is how they operate. This is why you can't support
these politicians. This is why you look at them issue by issue. Yeah, back up Emmer for the CBDC.
Do you really think that they would be taking that to the forefront if it had a chance of becoming a law?
Because they can pass it in the house.
They've got the votes to pass it in the house,
but Biden wants CBDC.
Even if they were to get it to pass in the Senate,
he can veto it and,
uh,
override.
Um,
they cannot override his veto.
They don't have the votes to do it in the Senate.
So they may not have the votes to do it in the House either.
So they can play with the CBDC and they can virtue signal about CBDC.
While they stab you in the back with you verify.
That's how this works.
You know, they can talk about the thing that will not pass while they pass the thing that will
and, um, do the same thing in a backhanded way. And so, yeah, you, um, you got that photo there
on the, here, let's go to the other one. The, uh, it's got to match the employment eligibility
document provided by the employee and to the face of the employee submitting the
document for employment verification purposes. Your identity papers, please. I see you'd like
a job here. Yeah. Can I have your identity papers? Do you have your employment eligibility document,
please? And that over, right? Nazis, Nazis, Nazi Republicans, Nazi Democrats, both of them. Your eligibility document?
I got to have an eligibility document? What about the eligibility documents of the people coming
across the border? See, this is what gets everybody upset. This is how they create a crisis. Republicans
and the Democrats are creating a crisis. They're using this to push their global
ID agenda. They're not going to do anything about the open border. They're not going to do anything
about the drug cartels or the drug war or the welfare state or the Cloward and Piven plan.
They're going to do anything about that. Instead, they'll use that to get you to demand
that everybody has to have an employment document.
And guess what?
Welfare will be a right.
Work will be a privilege.
I've seen this for a long time.
That was one thing back in the 90s when we started our business.
It really bothered me.
Now, I had to get a privilege license to open a little retail store.
I said, oh, so working is a privilege, but welfare is a right.
I could go on the dole if I wanted to and collect money.
But if I want to start a business, that's a privilege.
And now it'll be a privilege if you want to work.
Because they want everybody on welfare.
They want everybody on universal basic income.
They don't want anybody to have a job.
They don't want anybody to have any mobility. They don't want anybody to have any mobility.
And that doesn't mean just getting in your car and going somewhere.
That means your social mobility, being able to change your station in life.
They want to keep you down at the bottom so they can have everything.
This is big.
This is really big.
It is a big betrayal by the Republicans. Every one of them betraying us,
except for Thomas Massey. As I said before, there is a Ron Paul in the house and he isn't,
it isn't Rand Paul that is in Congress. It is Thomas Massey who has inherited the mantle and the backbone of Ron Paul and the discernment, I should say, too.
So no later than 24 months after the date of the enactment of the Secretary of Homeland Security and so forth,
they're going to have Homeland Security enforcing all this stuff, right?
They won't do anything about the border.
They want that border open. That gets all these idiot MAGA cult members begging for an E-Verify,
a work passport.
You got a work passport?
And then he shows this, highlighted.
The director of the National Institute of Standards and Technology
shall establish by regulation not less than two identity authentication
employment eligibility verification pilot programs. established by regulation, not less than two identity authentication,
employment eligibility verification pilot programs.
Well, that's a mouthful.
They're going to have the National Institute of Standards and Technology, NIST.
These are the people who told us that Building 7 and Buildings 1 and 2 fell down their own footprint.
NIST, those people.
Now they're going to come up with two pilot programs.
And, you know, for technology to track us.
Oh, but you know, hey, it's not, it's not CBDC.
So let's be happy about the Republicans not pushing CBDC on us.
This is a surveillance state.
It's identification and it's financial.
It accomplishes all the same purposes as CBDC.
I am furious about this stuff.
What an amazing betrayal.
What an amazing betrayal.
And so some people contacted Massey.
What do we do about this?
He says, call your congressman.
Call your congressman, folks. They are going to do this on thursday you know stab us in the back with a cbdc by any
other name just amazing oh because the border the border that the republicans never did anything
about the border that trump never did anything about the only thing that he did was to was
pandemic related of course that's why they're
freaking out about this you know in a week from now biden is going to declare well it's not a
week now let's see today is the ninth two days from now right it was a week before um it was it
was last week that the world health organization came out and said the pandemic's over even the who so the pandemic is over biden is really trying
to hang on to that thing another two days the day's the ninth so it's going to be on the 11th
and uh so they're going to push this thing through on the 11th right at the last minute
they're going to push this thing on and uh so call them and say if you leave that e-verify thing in there
and you vote for this you're voting for cbdc and we know what you're doing and there'll be a penalty
to pay for that because we're not going to support you in any way shape or form
these people the republicans and trump are there to lead you into the same kind of, the Democrats
want this badly.
They want to be slaves.
They want to control and lord it over other people.
The Republicans will lie to your face.
Oh, we're about freedom.
Oh, we're not going to put on a vaccine mandate.
Oh, we'll put on a work mandate.
We'll have a work passport for you. So, um, anyway, the, um, before I move in, let me just contact the, uh, say to,
uh, Matt who contacted me. Um, and he was talking about, uh, supporting us and, um, as well as, um,
what's going on with subscribe, start some ads and things like that. And he says, two things. I'm having some technical difficulties with my Subscribestar account
because I can't sync it to this email, he said.
But I'm going to start sending you money via Zelle as a subscription,
which I did the other day.
Well, I really do appreciate that.
Thank you.
And again, some people have problems with, you know,
some people have been saying they have problems with Cash cash app we still get contributions occasionally from cash app same thing with zelle
it works for some people some people it doesn't work uh same thing with subscribe sorry you have
to check the thing there but this is the reason i wanted to bring it up because i knew also probably
know this but your ads on the show often interrupt you in mid-sentence. Not sure if you can do anything about that.
Well, here's the way this works.
And I just want to use this as an opportunity to say, you know, thank you to the people who support us on Subscribestar.
And you do post up, Travis Lee.
Yeah.
So we have a commercial free version of the podcast that we have a link to for subscribers
and we really do appreciate that i don't want them paying twice for that um it is um you know
if you subscribe at the lowest level of five dollars a month that is many times more than if um you listen to all the commercials and all of the you know 20
episodes we do a month uh that helps us more than that but you know for the people who it's kind of
the model that you see from pandora and a lot of other places where you know you can get a uh you
pay you know five dollars a month for Pandora and you get no commercials.
Otherwise they interrupt it with commercials from time to time.
Uh, they don't interrupt it in the middle of a song.
Unfortunately they do on subscribe star.
So I try to get around that.
My problem is I don't take enough breaks.
And so they have a certain number of commercials that get put in there automatically.
And I can move some of those around and try to do that at the places where i do a break
but um since i don't take enough breaks because i you know i it always that's one thing about
doing the podcast is uh i don't have to stop when i'm in the middle of with um and and you know i
have a commercial break and then after five minutes, come back in and it's like, okay, so are people now
just joining the show live and I have to go back and do a recap of where we were.
That was the thing that always bothered me.
I can just kind of talk through the issues here.
So, uh, that's where we are.
I need to do more breaks.
There are some automatic ones that are there.
So, uh, if you are not a subscribe star subscriber and you got the podcast,
uh, there will be some, some breaks on that. Now, of course, there's no ads that are put into
any of the videos that we put up the full show, uh, or the, um, interview. So in the video
situation, there's no ads. Uh, there's no way that we have to monetize that. Uh, but, um,
it is on the podcast. And if you are a Subscribestar subscriber,
we give you the link
so that you don't have to listen to that.
So I appreciate that.
I'm going to take a break
before I get into another subject here.
And because I was just saying
I need to take more breaks.
We're going to talk about
some of what is happening
with the green agenda.
The Biden administration
has now greenlighted
the nation's first congestion
pricing plan in New York, and it won't be the last. This is going to roll around just like
toll roads do. At this year's Cheltenham, glory rests in the lap of the gods.
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So we'll be right back.
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What? Who
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selling at the David Knight show dot com
right? So basically
a mug is something that
holds liquid, right?
Because basically you can't hold
coffee with your hands, right?
I'm a scat in the...
But anyone tries to mug me, I'm be ready for it.
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Come on.
These people, I tell you, will anyway.
You're listening to The David Knight Show.
Okay, congestion pricing plan.
I thought that was in New York where they all have signs that say, you
know, $300 fine if you honk the horn, everybody's like in the morning,
nobody got the, uh, the phone toll roads are all over the place in the
Northeast and they have gone up to astronomical prices, Tennessee is one
of only 14 states that didn't have toll roads.
And now we have this governor who is out there trying to bring together a special session
and pass some kind of virtue signaling gun control to his friends in Nashville, the celebrities
and the rest of these people.
He wants to push through toll roads.
They'll be owned by foreign companies.
There'll be a harassment.
It'll be another level of tax, but congestion pricing is something that has been done in
Europe and it's now coming to New York city.
MTA officials, that's a metropolitan transit, uh, transportation authority have said they
would need almost a year to set up the new tolling infrastructure.
That's what it is.
It's another toll on top of another toll.
Charge you to take a particular road.
Charge you to enter a certain area and so forth.
So, you know, this is essentially a tax on the government failing to do its job.
Why do we have congestion?
We have congestion because you built
the city vertically and you didn't add any roads vertically and i've said this a long time one of
the things that elon musk got right and i was saying it before elon musk even going back and
looking at all the science fiction movies going back to fritz lang's metropolis, uh, you, you see the giant cities and
you see vertical levels of transportation, flying cars, typically.
Some of them, they had roads that were built multiple levels, but
typically it's done with flying cars.
That's become something of a standard thing in science fiction films that you've
got flying cars, different levels happening like that.
And, uh, so that is something
we talked about for the longest time so look you know they grow the cities vertically and they can't
you know widen the roads anymore so they gotta white they gotta vertically uh take take the
roads up and everybody knew that you know going back to the 1920s and yet the politicians who knew that as well decided not to do that.
And it's not even in the congested urban areas.
It's also in the suburban areas as well,
where they still could widen the road, but they don't. Instead, what they do is they approve more and more construction.
And yeah, another neighborhood, great.
Another giant apartment complex, great.
More roads, no no we're not
going to bother with that not at all they may at the most tell the people who are setting up another
neighborhood or another apartment complex well you gotta widen the road right there as people
turn in so we got a turn lane but other than that they don't do anything at all so we've got a
government that no longer wants to build roads. They spend money to tear them down, calling them racist.
That's what the federal government does.
And the roads that are there, they want to put them on a diet.
So they constrict them by putting bike lanes on the side.
And then they say, well, we don't want you driving too fast,
so we're going to calm the roads with speed bumps
that drag the bottom of my car uh so
it is a drag literally um so
the uh that's if i'm just trying to crawl over them
i get i'd probably take out my front bumper if I wasn't going at speed, this is why we're talking about
the Ukrainian guy, you know, souping up a Porsche and other cars, um, you know,
it's already been done by people in LA.
They said, look, they're not going to fix the roads in LA.
It's potholes and everything else.
And so I need some kind of an urban assault vehicle.
So, you know, lift my Porsche so so that i can i've got the road clearance and still keep the
handling uh but uh anyway you know they the bottom line is the the congestion is because the government
is not doing its job and so because the government's not doing his job instead of doing
his job just like at the border right oh well we got something else a lot here, you know?
We won't do the job at the border.
What we'll do is we'll give you an ID, an E-Verify to get a job.
And so we're not going to do the work of building infrastructure.
So what we'll do is we'll tax you on the congestion that we caused because we don't expand the infrastructure as we expand the city.
They all brag and love the fact that people are moving into their city. I saw it in Austin. Oh,
look at how many people are moving in. I said, yeah, you know, and I don't see any more roads
being worked on. I don't see any roads being added. I don't see any roads being widened. I
see the lines getting longer and longer and longer. Their response is, well, you just need
to get out of your car and we're going to add taxes to push you out of your car.
Governor Hochul is committed to implementing congestion pricing
to reduce traffic, to improve air quality,
and to support our public transit system.
They want to tax you, and then put it in the transit system.
This is a regressive tax, as the Democrats like to call it, right?
What is a regressive tax, according to them?
Well, that's a tax that is, you know, same fee that's paid, not based on your income.
They like what they call progressive income tax.
I like proportional income tax, I think would be better.
But, you know, they don't charge every, if they charge people proportionately say 10 that's
all god ever asked for but of course they think they're better than god um but you know if you
ask for 10 tax on everybody well that'd be fair yeah billionaire uh pays 100 million dollars
and uh you know somebody who makes you know fifty thousand dollars pays five thousand dollars in
taxes but no they create a complicated income tax structure so the billionaires pay nothing
and then they tell everybody but look we've got a higher tax rate for them theoretically but you've
got all these breaks in there so they don't pay anything so they want to escalate the percentage
based on income that's what they talk about. Progressive.
They really have a problem with everybody paying the same.
And we're not talking about when we talk about a proportional tax,
we're not talking about,
uh,
everybody pays a thousand dollars or something.
No,
it's just a percentage of what you make,
but this truly is a regressive tax.
It is. Everybody's, you know, Elon Musk would pay the same thing to drive his car into New York as somebody who's got a car that's barely working
and trying to scrape together to pay their rent and their food in that expensive town.
That is a regressive thing. This is what the Democrats are doing. Oh, they're all about poor people, right? Yeah, they're all about making everybody poor and making sure you don't have any
upward mobility. They're all about sawing off the ladders, the rungs of the ladder to success.
And that's what the Democrat governor is saying in New Jersey, Phil Murphy. He condemned this.
He said, it's unfair. It's ill-advised.
He said his office is closely assessing all legal options
because the current plan burdens commuters, state agencies,
and the environment.
I don't know how it burdens the environment.
Who cares?
I mean, we're all advocates for the environment, right?
We can do anything and claim that we're protecting the environment.
He says it's an unjustified financial burden on the backs of hardworking New Jersey commuters,
and it's wrong. And he's right about that. Simply put, he said it is a money grab.
It's a money grab coming after the working class, the middle class that is commuting to work.
And so, again, massive regressive tax. I think it's interesting that they had to get the
permission of the biden administration to do this why is that is it because it's on some federal
highways that they're going to be doing this uh it should be the decision of the state it is the
responsibility of the state not of the federal government to build infrastructure but of course
we don't pay attention to the Constitution or the wisdom of the founders.
In California, there is a two-mile-long vehicle encampment just north of San Francisco.
A two-mile stretch of road in Marin County, California,
overrun by cars, tents, RVs, and trailers
parked on the side of the road.
Show some of the pictures of that, Travis.
It is truly amazing. It's just kind of an ad hoc trailer park why because people cannot afford the housing look at that it goes on forever well i don't have anywhere to live here i can't
afford a house so i'll just get a trailer or park my car and live in that while I try to work in San Francisco.
And of course, some of the people are just are homeless living there.
Of course, you know, if you're living out of your car, you're technically homeless as well.
But I mean, some of the people don't even have jobs that are there.
Many of the residents living in their vehicles are said to be from the surrounding area.
Many of them were kicked out of their homes because of the cost of shelter and food that
have spiked in recent years in San Francisco.
So why do California leaders deliberately choose to leave the homeless unsheltered and allow open air drug markets as well that have transformed some parts of states such as the two-mile strip
into what appears to be a third world like country well this is why they want us to live
you'll own nothing.
And you'll take that car.
That'll be your only, you know, you can't get any gas for you.
You can't fix it.
We're going to outlaw these things.
It'd be too expensive to drive them.
We'll have tolls.
We'll have congestion pricing.
Oh, forget about buying gas.
Just park it on the road and live out of it.
Because you can't afford a house anymore.
Who do you think you are all right do you work for davos we're a family of six and we've been living in an underground
bunker for three years this is one like family's approach to this they bought a bunker a six
thousand square foot nuclear resistant former communications bunker They bought it three years ago, June of 2020. Probably looked like a much
better investment then, the way things were going. I'm telling you, if I'd had the opportunity to
buy a bunker at that point in time, I would have bought a bunker at that point in time.
But they got up for $300,000. They got a 13-acre plot of land land included with it but it is a fixer-upper if ever
there was one this goes back to the 1960s they had these at&t telecommunication bunkers all over the
place and as part of this you know he's um he puts this up i think on um on youtube talking about
the renovations and things like that and And the plumbing is all on springs.
The toilets are on springs and things like that
because it was built to take a nuclear hit, essentially,
just a couple of miles away.
And they didn't want to burst all the plumbing,
so the plumbing is very complicated in all of this.
We had one of these places.
It was not too far from where we lived in North Carolina.
It was called Big Hole. And I was really astounded about six years ago, I guess it was,
I got a book called Raven Rock, subtitle, The U.S. Government's Secret Plan to Save Itself
While the Rest of Us Die, that got my attention.
And it was a very good book.
And it talks about all the phony civil defense plans that we had in the 1960s, all the advice
to duck and cover.
And if you are trying to get out of the city because they told you there's incoming nuclear
weapons and, you know, and you are in your car and you're stuck in traffic because that's
what's going to happen.
And you see a flash in the city. Get out of your car and you're stuck in traffic because that's what's going to happen. And you see a flash in the city.
Get out of your car and get into the ditch.
What kind of advice is that?
I mean, it's just crazy.
But while that was happening, these people were building their massive underground bunkers.
And, of course, AT&T was a big part of that.
They had a monopoly on telephone conversations and so at&t was a preferred vendor with all this and they built themselves nuclear bunkers that's
what this family um bought into our experience with it was after we heard about it we thought
that's really interesting and everybody says yeah it's been closed for years and the mayor of the
town used to work there they said no it's just a communication saying it's been closed for years and the mayor of the town used to work there
they said no it's just a communication saying it's not anything any big deal it doesn't have
anything to do with the cold war any of this stuff so one day karen has the boys in the car
when they're little let's go see big hole and they drive over there and um they're driving down the
road you remember that they're driving down the
road and it's this abandoned it seems like it's an abandoned area but all of a sudden the loud
speakers come on and say stop the car and turn around okay hands up don't shoot uh so it's still
going at the beginning of that book they talked about the transfer of the nuclear football with um richard nixon as he
resigned and was heading home to california and how that happened uh you know the transition of
power happened while he was on the plane he had already left the nuclear football which talks
about what rumors that they'd already taken it away from him and so forth
so anyway when they began talking about it at the very beginning of the book is talking about
big hole there in north carolina and a lot of these other ones and of course they have some
of them in the city there is a a building an at&t building in new york city that is a brutalist architecture. Um, it looks like what it is, uh, but a lot of these were done underground
and that's what this family is, uh, is working on there.
And they, again, it is a major fixer upper, uh, not anything that
I would want to tackle at all.
Uh, and, um, No, they had to put in a different plumbing system they had to they still don't have
a kitchen uh there were no lights everything is as dark in there but you know the good news is
that a nuclear bomb can land four or five miles away from them and they should theoretically be
able to survive that blast then what it's not a blast from the movie. If you've ever seen that another unusual feature, uh,
is it's unusual nuclear, uh, blast proof doors.
So, you know, it's just a few miles away, five, 10 miles away.
No problem.
They said we'll be okay.
Well, uh, be okay from the blast.
I don't know what happens after that.
Meanwhile, the FDA, as I told you yesterday,
they're working as hard as they can to shut down this Amish organic farm
because organic traditional farming must not be allowed.
But the FDA, at the same time, they're trying to shut down Amish organic farms.
They are green lighting GMO pigs. and this is another example of this this is something
of a precedent that they have done green lighting this for human consumption and doing it with the
university so this article was written uh to talk about why this is an important precedent
but just to explain to you so that
you understand, because a lot of people ask, you know, so what's the big deal about GMO?
You know, haven't we been doing a lot of, you know, selective breeding and everything?
Just look at the genetic verification, uh, variation and dogs, for example, you know,
from teeny tiny little dogs to giant dogs and everything in between,
all different types of characteristics and everything, well, that's selective breeding.
Genetic modification is very different because when you talk about breeding, you know, you can
breed, I think a better way to think of it instead of the classifications that we typically see in
biology is kinds. That's really kind of what the Bible refers to in, you know,
early part of Genesis, different kinds of animals.
You know, you have a cat kind, you have a dog kind,
if you will, a canine kind, felines and canines.
You know, and you can see that a lion, tiger,
or just bigger versions of a house cat and things like that same thing with dogs
theoretically you can breed them together one of the things that they say is you know if you've got
species one of their definitions of a species would be birds that are other animals that would
not breed with each other and i said birds because one of the things that first comes to mind
is the Grand Canyon.
They had identical finches.
I mean, identical, physically identical.
But they were on the north and south side of the Grand Canyon,
and they had been geographically separated from each other long enough
that their mating songs had changed.
And so these two different groups of finches, otherwise identical, would not mate with each
other because they had different mating songs.
But they were physically identical.
They could have.
And so that's their definition of specie.
Now, you could also have hybrids, things like horses and jackasses to get donkeys and things
like that, or vice versa.
I don't know.
I'm not an expert on that.
But here's the thing about genetic modification.
You know, you have kingdoms at the top.
You have the animal kingdom and you have the plant kingdom and so forth, right?
You have kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, species, all the way down.
All these different classifications.
Well, guess what?
GMO lets you mix plants with animals if you want.
You can take something from the plant kingdom and the animal kingdom,
and you can mix them together.
That's the difference.
Creating not just hybrids but chimeras,
things that God had never intended to exist.
And the implications of that are, well, what is it going to do in terms of food?
They said it's important for university to set the precedent by working with
federal regulators to get these animals introduced into the food supply.
Well, I guess, you know, if the university sets the precedent, then the
big corporations can come in and say, yeah, we've got the precedent.
Let's go for it.
Let's cash in on this thing.
Now, in this particular case, what are they doing to the pigs?
Well, in this particular case, you know, they're not making, they're not
a grafting and firefly genes to make the pigs glow at night so you can find them
out in the fields, although they could do something like that anyway, the, uh, what,
what they're doing with this is really kind of like a selective breeding.
They have hogs that they want to replicate.
You know, these are our prized animals and we want more like them.
And so what they're doing is they're gene editing male animals to be sterile by knocking out a gene specific to male fertility.
These animals can then be implanted with another male's stem cells
to create sperm with that male's desired traits
to be passed on to the next generation.
So in this particular incident, again, this is how they start their precedence.
You know, it's something that's just kind of minor.
I mean, do you really care about that?
Well, technically I don't because it's really just another form of selective breeding.
They're not creating chimera or anything like that.
But the bottom line is if you sign off on this new form of selective breeding,
now you've signed off on chimera in principle by setting that precedent.
The original intent of making these animals was to try to improve the way that we feed people. Have they not gotten the memo from Klaus and Bill about how they want to shut all
the farms down? What's that about? I mean, we should be selectively breeding insects and bugs.
That's what they want us to breed. Oh, I wonder if they could, um, I think it, uh, cross a grasshopper with a
cow and we could have a cow that jumps over the moon.
How about that?
That's a, that would be or over the fence, whichever way.
Yeah.
But haven't they, haven't they gotten the memo that all the traditional farms
is supposed to be shuttered anyway.
So this is about something else.
Most likely as we look at other misapplications and fantasies of technology
we have peter teal came out last a couple of days i think came out on the weekend saying that he is
pursuing immortality he is planning cryo preservation after death he wants somebody to
freeze him and then he imagines that somebody is a going to be able to
thaw him out and revive him at some point in the future. And B, why would they do that?
He imagines that there's going to be somebody there who really wants to bring him back.
His money would have long been, you know, passed out to other people. Why would they need to bring
Peter Thiel back? Does he think he's that special? That's always the question I have. You know, it's,
uh, uh, who's going to bring you back? Why would they bring you back?
Uh, but again, he's opted to be cryogenically frozen. Well, what happens if he dies in a fiery
crash of his private jet? Well, I guess that doesn't work then.
And then they asked, they said, so are you doing this for your loved ones?
Well, no, I don't think that's necessary.
Barry Weiss was the one who interviewed him.
He said, have you made plans for your loved ones to be frozen too?
He said, well, I'm not convinced that this works as well as it should.
I'm not going to invest in that for them, but I'll do it for myself. Oh yeah. Lovers of self.
I'm the only one who matters there. He doesn't have any loved ones. He loves money. That's what
he loves. Is it true that you signed up to be cryogenically preserved when you die so that
you might be brought back to life in the future? Well, yes, but I think of it more as an ideological
statement. I don't necessarily expect it to work, but I think of it more as an ideological statement.
I don't necessarily expect it to work, but I think it's the sort of thing that we're supposed
to try to do. Are we? Are we supposed to try to do that? So, I don't know. I guess my following
Christ is an ideological statement, but I expect it to work. I have confident expectation that it is going to work.
So I do expect to be brought back to life.
And I know who's going to bring me back to life.
As Job said, he said, I know my Redeemer lives and that he will stand on the earth.
And after my skin has been destroyed, yet in my flesh, I will see God. I myself will see him with my own eyes,
not another. And Job says, how my heart yearns within me. That is the hope and the expectation.
Peter Thiel thinks he's going to buy his way into immortality. And unfortunately,
a lot of people who say they follow Christ believe that as well. No, it's a free gift.
It's a gift of those who are true followers of him. But that's an indication of him being our
Lord, that we follow him. Why do you call me Lord and don't do what I say?
So we've got a lot of easy believism out there.
We all have people who say, hey, just marry whoever you want.
It doesn't matter.
We can embrace all the LGBT people because we want to be nice.
Everybody want everybody to like us and so forth.
No, that's not what it is about.
But it is a free gift. And, you know, know the wages if you want to work for it well you're not
going to be able to do that perfectly and so wages of sin or death but the gift of eternal life is
free for those who follow christ peter teal however has put aside three and a half million dollars.
That'll take care of it. Just like Bloomberg. He says, if there is heaven, am I going there? Oh,
absolutely. Look at all the money that I've given to good causes like taking guns and all the rest of this stuff. These guys, you know, we really should pity them. Uh, you know, they are like these wealthy people like this they are like cattle that has been
fattened up for the slaughter uh and we should pity them to pray for you know who knows what
happened if um if uh you know what he could do for good for real good if he were converted anyway
teal pledged three and a half million dollars in funding for this
uh cryogenic thing alcor the complete scientific research he says i keep thinking that i'm not
doing enough on biotech and on radical life extension or even just trying to invest in
curing a lot of these very big chronic diseases that we have he said and so he's looking for
life extension he said and you know he's looking for life extension.
He said, and you know, what they want to do is they want to freeze their bodies, take
it down to 321 degrees below Fahrenheit and really freeze it hard.
And then hope that when medical science has advanced sufficiently to treat the cause of
their death, then the God of medical science will bring them back to life.
What has he been for the last couple of years?
You got any faith left in medical science after the last three years?
Are you kidding me?
Okay, we're going to take a break.
We'll be right back Thank you. you're listening to the david knight show
all right welcome back let's take a look at what is going on with pharmaceutical stuff
and we have chelsea clinton now sounding when you listen to her talk with the upspeak and the creaking and the other stuff,
I,
you know,
aside from that,
and that's starting to fade and she's picking up more of her mother's speech patterns.
Now,
really kind of creepy.
Uh,
I think that there's a second generation of Hillary coming at us.
Uh,
uh,
world health organization,
as I said before,
officially ended the COVID- 19 emergency last week a week before biden ted dross the marxist politician who is the head of the
world health organization that should tell you something about the organization how it operates
its goals he's not a doctor just like bill gates is not a doctor he's a marxist
politician tedros is he said pandemic fatigue threatens us all we are all sick and tired of
this pandemic and we want to put it behind us but this virus is here to stay and all countries
will need to learn to manage it alongside other infectious diseases.
And so Hillary Clinton, Hillary Clinton, again, I call her Hillary Clinton
because she sounds so much like her.
Chelsea Clinton is out there lecturing us about the importance
of big pharmaceutical companies and getting our vaccines
because, you know, hey, this isn't over,
and we've got to learn to manage all these infectious diseases,
and the only way to manage them is with vaccine.
I do think, though, you know, when you ask about the role of public private partnerships kind of after the last few years,
I think we spend so much time, understandably, focused on the mRNA vaccines and technologies.
I spend a lot of time thinking about the really unfortunate, to try to use a not too judgmental word,
kind of rise in not only kind of vaccine hesitancy and questioning,
but outright kind of rejection of vaccines and-
Rejection of your mother.
The scientific kind of process, and also too often on our scientists,
our epidemiologists, our frontline healthcare workers.
And so I do
think we need to have a much more robust conversation and sense of urgency, because I
think we are less prepared today than we were arguably in January of 2020, partly because of
the kind of lack of trust and confidence in not only our scientists, but in science itself.
We know more about you now.
The public health professionals. And so I think we need kind of the public sector to hopefully
stop doing things like stripping away public health emergency powers from state public health
agencies. We also need the private sector to help candid candidly, do a better job of helping explain the science
that you are already commercializing and bringing to market, but also what you're working on.
And help us, in the broader conversation, not be uncomfortable with the discomfort of
uncertainty.
And so I do think we need really good ideas for how best to do that.
Because we all deserve to hopefully not be as unprepared as I worry we are
at the moment.
And the last thing I'll say is a new effort that we're a part of is the new
initiative launched by the World Health Organization last week to try to catch
kids up on their routine immunizations.
In 2021 alone, more than 25 million kids under the age of one
missed at least one routine immunization.
And so we're working with WHO and the Gates Foundation
and others to hopefully have the largest kind of childhood
immunization effort ever over the next 18 months
to catch as many kids up as possible,
because no one should die of polio.
Well, we've caught up to you.
We've caught up to your lies.
And we've seen through them, and we understand what's going on.
And everything that she was saying there.
People just don't trust the public health experts like me.
Who is she to talk to us about any of this stuff?
What does she know about any of this stuff?
It's all political.
It's not about health at all it's not about
medicine it's not about science it's about politics the only science is behavioral science
as i've said over and over again and so she begins by talking about these public private
partnerships ppp isn't it interesting i don't think it was a coincidence that trump and his
goldman sachs banker mnuchin came up with their PPP plan to pretend that they were going to help the businesses
that they'd called non-essential,
all the middle class and small mom-and-pop businesses
that they shut down.
Oh, we're going to help you.
PPP, the Payroll Protection Plan.
And then they took more than half of it,
5% of the companies,
as they redefined what a small business was.
And so she's talking about the traditional PPP.
PPP is what the UN, all the globalist organizations like Davos are always talking about.
The public-private partnership.
That is fascism, folks.
The economic definition of fascism is a merger of corporations and business.
That's what a private-public partnership is.
That's why I oppose toll roads and other things like that it's nothing but fascism and it is corporate governance global corporate government uh that's what we're looking at here so she might as well just put on her
little tag you know hillary clinton had her little tag when she was running i'm with her. Well, Chelsea's got one. I'm with her and with pharma.
That's what she's pushing out there.
And so she regrets that we're stripping away power from the public health authorities who usurped it.
No, we have to strip that power away from them.
And we've got to do a lot more stripping.
There's they've still got too much.
As a matter of fact, as I've said many times, this is the second shoe to drop from dark winter.
I would,
I think we ought to start calling this instead of the pandemic and the
pandemic, we need to call it dark winter too,
because just after they did nine 11 and the false flag anthrax attack,
and they pushed out the model state health emergency powers act,
all the different model legislation to them.
And then they practiced it for 20 years. And it's that legislation that needs to be stripped away anything that was part of that model state health emergency powers act folks is
a trap and yet while that is staying in place just like they did after 9-11 and dark winter
and the anthrax attack in 2001 they're now working on the next level of this, and that's what's coming out of the WHO.
The new rules and regulations, even before you get to the pandemic treaty, the new rules and regulations to put them in charge of everybody and to give themselves new powers.
That's what they did after 9-11.
They gave themselves health emergency powers. Now, after Dark Winter 2, the World Health Organization is giving themselves new health
emergency powers at the global level.
They did it the first time at the state level here in America because they knew they didn't
have constitutional authority to do these types of things.
And of course, they did a lot of things that they don't have constitutional authority for,
but they wanted to put the vast majority of it through the state levels.
And that's why he had all these MAGA cult members who are jumping onto this E-Verify passport for work.
These people were saying, well, it's not Trump.
It's not the Republicans.
It's those awful Democrat governors.
It's like they just are so blinded by their partisanship.
It's absolutely amazing.
They couldn't see what the Republican governors were doing.
They couldn't see that Trump was the producer, funding it and all the rest of this.
And so that's where they are right now.
They're extending it.
That's why I said at the beginning of the program, you've got people who are looking at this and saying, hey, that's great.
We won. You got people like Scott Adams who opposed this all along,
who called people who were concerned about the encroachment on liberty
at the very beginning.
Scott Adams was calling us sociopaths.
It's really getting hard to tell these freedom lovers, quote unquote,
from sociopaths.
So Scott Adams comes out and says, all right, they won.
They got lucky.
There was no reason to think that, uh, they were lying to us. There was no reason to think
that these things were unsafe. There was no reason to think that they were unethical. You know,
you just got lucky and, and you didn't have to take it and you won. No, don't believe the Scott
Adams. Scott Adams is a control guy. And this is why I talk about this.
It's not to say, well, I was right.
Scott Adams is wrong.
You need to understand who the liars and the controllers are in the alternative media, especially.
It isn't that I've got some personal axe to grind with Scott Adams.
I've interviewed him several times in the past.
And it was always a fun interview.
But he's been a control agent and you need to mark those
people you need to mark the people like alex you need to mark the people like trump you need to
understand where these guys are coming from mike adams the rest of them you need to understand and
tucker i'll put tucker in there as well tucker was going along with all this stuff he'd do
occasional eye roll and things like that.
Would he tell you the truth about it?
No.
No.
I don't understand why people trust anyone, frankly, when it comes to politics.
Trust no one.
You bind them down with the chains of the Constitution.
And you look at what they're actually saying.
And you look at it issue by issue.
Don't become a sycophant to any person or to any party.
You look at it issue by issue.
Look, people can be honestly wrong about something.
But I mention this and I keep going back to it because you need to understand what the tells were,
how it was obvious what they were doing because it is still obvious what they are doing.
The worst thing any country could do now is to use this news as a reason to let down its guard, said Tedros, to dismantle the system that it has built.
You see?
That's what I said.
This is dark winter, too.
Let's lock everybody down.
We'll do this psychological thing on them.
You still got people who are trembling in the corner out of obsessive compulsive disorder.
Where's my mask?
What do I do about it?
And they have put this system in.
They built a system.
You hear that?
We don't want to dismantle the system we built.
We better dismantle that system that Tedros built because he's working to extend it with new rules, a new treaty, all the rest of the stuff at the World Health Organization.
He said, I will not hesitate to convene another emergency committee.
Should COVID-19 once again put our world in peril?
Our world was never in peril from COVID-19.
It was in peril from people like him and the politicians in every country,
regardless of what they said their political affiliation or ideology was,
politicians in every country who fell in line with this.
He said, I've decided to use a provision in the international health regulations.
And that's the thing, the IHR.
That is what is dangerous right now.
That is what they're trying to use to accumulate power even before the pandemic treaty so I've decided to use a
provision in the international health regulations that's never been used before to establish a
review committee to develop long-term standing recommendations for countries on how to manage
COVID-19 on an ongoing basis
hear that recommendations that's the same kind of stuff that fauci said i didn't shut down any
schools i just uh i just gave these people you know uh recommendations i just made them uh offers
they couldn't refuse right yeah drug father the drug So again, it is not over.
It is a pause and they are consolidating their gains and they are quietly
extending them.
As a matter of fact, I had this sent to me from, and this was sent to me last
week.
I didn't get to it before.
This is someone who is a flight attendant for Delta.
And he wrote me a lot over the years about what they were doing in terms
of mask and how they were lording it over people, uh, how he's getting
in trouble with his peers because he wasn't punishing, uh, you know, people
who would take the mass down enough and saying, you know, well, here's what you
can do, you know, you can say, well, I got to eat and, you know, so there, you know, certain things like that, we'd see
these little loopholes and how they would close them.
Uh, but he sent this to me.
Rumor is that new hires are no longer required to get the COVID jab at Delta.
So hopefully that is true.
Again, they're taking this thing off little by little.
And that was the real mandate that was going to run through if the
republicans were in charge they would do it through the corporations and that's pretty close to what
happened anyway you know biden's mandates um you know put in financial penalties for corporations
just like they withheld money from uh through cms to medicare medicaid they withheld money from the
hospitals if the hospitals didn't lean on people.
You see?
So they had two different ways that they could put these mandates through.
They could use the laws that were pushed out after 9-11 and the anthrax attack in 2001,
December 2001, the Model State Health Emergency Powers Act.
So if the states had the regulations, they would do that.
But they would financially incentivize people,
and then they would also punish them financially.
The companies, you've got a federal contract,
or you're going to have everybody in your company vaccinated,
or you lose the federal contract, that type of thing.
And that's how the federal government has always increased his power.
That's why it was so obvious.
Every time you look at what the federal government is doing,
it's always about the money and the strings.
And how do they bribe us?
Well, they just create fiat currency out of nowhere and they don't have to
ever pay it back. This is why when we look at this, when we lose the dollar as a reserve currency,
it is going to be really tough for us economically. But from a freedom standpoint,
it'd be the best thing that could ever happen to us because the government
won't be able to spend money without limit and spending money without limit.
The three and a half trillion dollars that Trump did to bribe and cajole
people.
And then Biden following on with that as well.
All of that,
just like,
you know,
we're going to pull your money if you don't put a boy in a girl's shower bathroom and that type of thing. All of that, just like, you know, we're going to pull your money
if you don't put a boy in a girl's shower,
bathroom, and that type of thing.
That kind of, that game would be over.
That's the game they always use.
If they don't have political authority
to do something,
they say, well, I'm not telling them
that they have to do it.
I'm just saying that I'm not going to give them money
if they don't do it.
You know, DeSantis is doing the same thing.
And that's how they
all do it you can use that for good or for evil uh but i think it is a a corrupt practice and we
need to understand uh what is uh what is behind that and so now on our side we see many people
who say it's over and we won but on their side this is the new spin. Now, this is from CNN. This is a guy who is a
physician and infectious disease expert at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center in New York.
He says, why I'm not reassured by our victory over COVID-19. Oh, is it really? He's had a
victory over this? Tedros has had a victory
and the establishment has had a victory. No, that's not true. They didn't defeat
COVID-19, but this is their new narrative. The slow, steady data-based rollback,
data-based rollback of these previously necessary interventions surely is the right thing to do as is
assuring that masks and vaccines and test kits and the entire apparatus of
pandemic control remain available for those who still feel uneasy.
But he said,
I'm nervous that we may be lightening things up too quickly.
Yeah.
Well,
you know,
that's what we heard
for the longest time,
isn't it?
From Walensky,
and now Walensky
has lightened up and left
because it just isn't any fun.
It's just like
jab send to Arden
in New Zealand.
It's just not any fun
if you can't
boss people around.
So, you know,
Rochelle Walensky
at the CDC's
had, you know,
her run.
She got to tell everybody
what to do,
and she's moving on to greener pastures.
I remember this.
How could we have improved?
Well, you know, I think I can tell you where I was when the CNN feed came that it was 95%
effective with the vaccine.
So many of us wanted to be hopeful.
So many of us wanted to say, okay, this is our ticket out right
now we're done. Um, so I think we had perhaps too little caution and too much optimism, um,
for some good things that came our way. I, I, yeah, I remember where I was when she said that
as well. Kind of like you remember where you were when, uh, JFK was shot or the challenger
disaster blew up.
And it's kind of, I remember where I was when they told everybody it was 95% effective.
I remember where I was when they told us we were going to be mandated for this stuff.
I remember those things.
Yeah.
And I remember the fact that she was lying to us about all that.
In a letter to Joe Biden, Walensky said she took the job at his request, quote, with the goal of leaving behind the dark days.
The dark days.
Oh, yeah.
We went through that dark winter, too, didn't we?
Well, now dark winter, too, is over.
And they've got some new toys to play with as they're making some new toys.
The dark days of the pandemic and moving CDC and public health forward into a much better and more trusted
place.
And so this guy in his
op-ed piece, he said
more ominously
among the anti-vaccine crowd
there is one particularly well-funded group
whose leader, according to NPR,
views the doings of the last
year as a pandemic
driven plot to poison the world for profit. That's a pretty good summary. views the doings of the last year as a pandemic-driven plot
to poison the world for profit.
That's a pretty good summary.
That's why, you know, called Trump the poisoner-in-chief.
The group is organizing itself both to spread its ideology
and also to develop a fleet of lawyers content to turn public health considerations,
considerations, so they're not even recommendations anymore now,
they're considerations,
into another lawsuit, grinding scientific progress to a halt.
There was no science in this.
Its enemy is not the disease, but rather the necessary steps
taken by public health and scientific leaders to save human life.
Well, Christine Anderson and the European Parliament got it exactly right.
This is never about a disease.
This is always about their authority and control.
The goal ultimately is to transform our free and democratic societies into totalitarian societies.
Their goal is to strip each and every one of us of our fundamental rights of freedom,
democracy, the rule of law.
They want to get rid of all of this.
And they're robbing us of our identity, whether it be our national identity, our cultural identity,
they won't even stop to rob us of our sexual identity. The very core of who we are,
they don't even stop there. This whole COVID thing had never anything to do with public health.
It never had anything to do with breaking waves. It never had anything to do with breaking waves.
It always had to do with breaking people
in order to make us a part of a mindless, malleable mass,
which they can totally control,
and we will be completely dependent upon this globalitarian elite.
That's what they have in store for us.
You're sitting in the EU Parliament, but you can take any kind of international governing body or organization.
It is no longer by the people for the people. From now on,
it will be by the globalitarian elites for the globalitarian elites and nothing else.
Well, that's an interesting way to put it. she pronounces it a little bit differently i would pronounce it globatarian instead of authoritarian totalitarian it's a global terrian uh that's an
interesting new word uh but she's absolutely right it was always about the politics it was always
about the control so this guy again who is saying oh we got to watch out these people are going to
be fighting us they They're organizing.
You better hope so.
They're organizing to fight us at the very inception of this with lawsuits to take these powers away from public health people.
That was one of the things that made me feel, quite frankly,
that everything was lost because it took so long for people
to realize what was being done to them.
And this is why I go back and harp about this.
You have to understand how these people operate.
You have to look at their history so that you can predict what they're going to do in the future.
And they've laid it out.
They've even practiced it.
That's how you could know that this was what they were doing from the very beginning.
I just could not get people to see it.
Anyway, which means that at the next public health crisis, he said,
we will need to deal not only with a pathogen,
but also with a well-organized, non-reality-based community.
I don't know.
We are based in reality, absolutely based in reality,
that seems to be tireless in its pursuit of alternative facts.
There is no science if you want to hide your data.
There is no science if it's based on nothing but consensus and some untested
and untestable computer models.
They can't even get the same answer twice with the same input.
It's garbage in, garbage out.
He goes on to say, though, the majority of people in the U.S. are vaccinated.
They seem to believe in science and simply want to go about their business.
The noisy minority will likely make the Trump-organized Operation Warp Speed response
to the COVID-19 pandemic seem like a once-in-a-lifetime moment of amity, a peaceful agreement across
all ideologies and political stripes.
You see that?
This authoritarian writer for CNN in this op-ed piece said, you know, Trump was with
us.
We had a peaceful agreement across all ideologies and all political stripes.
That's what I've been saying all along.
Didn't matter what their ideology or political stripe was.
They all marched in lockstep to the globalist orders, including Trump.
He says that is a situation that should keep a lot of us up at night.
I hope they are worried because we're not going to go through that again from you. We
will fight you. Absolutely. We'll fight you. So let's just take a look at some of these people
who were all about the science, two useful idiots here in Tennessee, one of them, a Republican and
another one, a Democrat. I saw this on Twitter the other day. I said, wow, you know, this is
every state though, though. Two state representatives
telling everybody to get vaccinated a couple years ago. Sam and I have served in the state
legislature for many years now, and I'm a Democrat. And I'm a Republican, and we have
disagreed on many issues over the years. Yeah, I don't understand some of your votes. A lot of
your votes don't make sense to me either. But what does make sense though is to get
the COVID-19 vaccine. I take the COVID-19 vaccine shot to protect myself, my family, and my loved
ones. I've also taken the COVID-19 vaccine in order to protect my family, my friends, and my loved
ones. I'm sure that Sam and I'll continue to disagree on issues in the future. But one thing
we do share though is the importance of getting the COVID-19 vaccine.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah, there you are. There's the state-level
idiots pushing this kind of stuff.
It doesn't matter. All political stripes,
all ideologies, we
follow Fauci and Trump,
and they have buried the hatchet
in our backs.
Yeah, what we don't need are representatives
like that. They represent
big pharma. They're pharmaceutical reps. They don't represent the people. They come at the people.
We need people like Christine Anderson that you just heard. She said the goal is ultimately to
transform our free and democratic societies into totalitarian societies. Their goal is to strip
each and every one of us of our fundamental rights of freedom,
democracy, the rule of law.
They want to get rid of all of this.
The whole COVID thing, she said, had never anything to do with public health.
It never had anything to do with breaking waves.
It always had to do with breaking people in order to make us part of a mindless, malleable mass.
And that's what it was.
And so in the light of all this, as I said before, it's very troubling to see people on both sides of this claiming victory.
There is no victory in this. If there is a victory on our side, it is a pyrrhic victory.
As many people have been killed and injured,
it is a horrific civil war, what this COVID war was.
And they're laying the foundation for more civil wars.
You know, you look at California.
They got this reparations bill, $1.2 million for each black person there.
Give me a break.
And that's not enough for the black activists. They want $200 million each.
They're totally.
You want to talk about people who are detached from reality?
Talk about that.
What are those people who are living in those trailers?
Can't afford a home alongside the road.
Are they going to be able to afford a home if they get that?
No.
No.
Not all of them are going to be black to get the money.
But even the ones who get it, everybody's going to get $1.2 million.
So it's like everybody getting a big raise,
and now everybody's going to be able to spend more
for the limited resources of homes that are there.
It's just going to raise the price of homes and everything else that people buy in California.
It raises taxes, too.
It's not going to do anything to help anybody.
You take a look at people who win the lottery.
How long do they typically hang on to that money?
Very few people who win the lottery actually keep the money.
The elites who are running California are going to support this because they know that money is going to find its way into their pockets
very, very quickly.
Always does.
There's no equitable way, no justifiable way,
no rational or scientific way to make these reparations to anybody.
Everybody has a grievance. If we're going to break us into competing factions, which is what they
want to do, into another civil war, they already had a run at that with the lockdowns, but that's
what they want to do. And this is another step in it.
But Fauci and Biden are now rewriting the history of the COVID-19 restrictions.
This is from Reason Magazine. White House COVID advisor, Ashish Jha. Even his name sounds like a
sneeze. Ashish. Make him the Gesundheit Fuhrer because every time you say his name,
you sneeze and you should have to wear a mask when you say his name.
He said,
while there's no longer needed,
these policies have had a tremendous beneficial impact for them,
for the political class.
It has had a tremendous beneficial impact.
In a recent interview with the New York times,
Fauci tried to pretend that the lockdowns and school closures in particular were not his fault.
Show me a school that I ever shut down.
Show me a factory that I shut down.
Never.
I never did it.
I just made them office.
I couldn't refuse.
Yeah.
His is like I said before, it's kind of strange.
His is the reverse Nuremberg defense.
I just gave recommendations, you know.
It's like they've gotten Hitler on the stand.
I just recommended that they go into Poland, you know.
I didn't think they'd actually take me up on it, you know.
I just recommended it.
I'm not giving the orders, right?
It's the upside-down, inverted version of the Nuremberg defense,
where I was just following orders.
Well, Fauci says, I didn't give any orders.
They just misunderstood what I wanted.
I didn't want any schools to shut down.
No, it's the furthest thing from his mind, wasn't it?
Polish health minister tells Pfizer, we don't want any more vaccines.
They're pointless.
We want our money back.
Well, good luck with that.
This is nothing more than a pause for the next marketing campaign.
That's what this truly is.
And of course, if you look at it,
Pfizer, as they were telling all these different countries,
look, you're either going to have our shot
or your country is going to be sealed off.
Nobody's going in. Nobody's going out. Oh, well, what do we have to do to
please Pfizer? Well, you got to give us legal immunity. You got to give us immunity, not just
from the rapid development that we say happened with this jab, but you have to give us immunity
from any negligence in terms of manufacturing or shipping or anything else like that. Or, you know, if you find out as we did that the active ingredients from lot
to lot varied anywhere from three to 100 units.
If you find out that we don't have any manufacturing controls or maybe that we
were doing manufacturing controls, kept track of the lots so we could see what
dosage was going to be effective to kill people.
Well, you can't sue us for that either.
And they pushed that through in one country after the other.
They were blackmailing countries.
So it came out in the pharmaceutical news that they were blackmailing Brazil and Argentina and a third Latin American country,
which was not named because they succumbed to the blackmail.
Argentina and Brazil at that point in time had not.
And they blew the whistle, and it was reported by Stat News,
which is a pharmaceutical publication, pharmaceutical industry publication.
So, yeah, good luck in terms of getting your money back from Big Pharma.
It was always about robbing everyone with everything.
We'll be right back.
Unlike most revolutions where the people rise against a real economic oppression,
in our case here in Boston, we are fighting for purely an abstract principle.
Hear, hear.
It is, however, not nearly so abstract as the young gentleman supposes.
The issue involved here is one of monopoly.
Today, the British government will monopolize the sale of tea
in our country.
Tomorrow, it will be something else. ¶¶ Liberty. It's your move you're listening to the david knight show
let's talk about the next front that is coming at us it's a cold front or a warming front depending
on which decade you're in the climate mcguffin and i thought this was really interesting story from
the new york times talking about a belgium abstract play a climate change comedy a comedy
of the climate crisis it's not the kind of comedy that i would do uh you know unicorn farts is what
i would call it but uh i could have a lot of fun with that. This is a collaboration
in Belgium of two theater companies. It's called Demanche. If I'm pronouncing that correctly,
is it the man of Demanche? I don't think it's that either. Anyway, absurd and nearly wordless, the 75-minute show is composed of a series of vignettes.
And I want you to think about this because, again, the climate change, just like the pandemic, it's not about science.
It's about fear.
It's about shame.
It's about guilt.
It's about all these different things.
But it's not about science.
It's not about data.
It's not about anything that can be measured, verified.
It's about a visceral, imagined crisis, and we never forget that.
We're not going to argue with them over which approach is going to cut emissions more.
That's like arguing about how many angels fit on the head of a pen.
Not going to go there.
Not going to accept the terms of their debate.
This is science.
The burden of proof, if you've got a theory about climate change, if you've got a theory
about global warming or global cooling or climate change or whatever, and if you think
it, well, you've got to prove it.
Okay.
And if you think it's being done by man, by the things that we're doing, that we are changing
the climate, you got to prove that as well.
You got two things to prove.
First of all, you got to prove that there is a trend of warming or cooling, depending
on which decade we're in.
Again, all that stuff has been proven wrong.
All of the disappearing ice caps, all the disappearing coral reefs, all that stuff has been shown to be an absolute lie, a fantasy.
So why not do a fantastical play about it?
Makes perfectly good sense.
It's nothing more than a story, a fairy tale of unicorn farts
and of total slavery to the global elite.
And so the burden of proof is on them.
And they have two things to prove.
Climate change and then to show if there is,
if they can show there's climate change,
the next step that they have to do is show
that it is being done by our SUVs or whatever.
Good luck with that.
I've been looking for that proof for 50 years.
53 years.
First one was in 1970. First Earth Day. I've been looking for that proof for 50 years, 53 years.
First one was in 1970, first Earth Day.
Each of these vignettes is a devastating, this is New York Times talking,
each of these devastating vignettes is a devastating example of a climate emergency expressed playfully with toys, puppetry, acrobatics, and nifty practical effects.
Demache succeeds in its macabre elliptical way,
bringing the issue home with tornadoes whooshing dinner from the table
and a shark swimming through a flooded living room.
This catastrophe is here, it it's there it's everywhere i think this
is a perfect embody this makes a lot more sense to me than al gore's documentary uh the convenient
lie that he pushed on everybody this is what this is truly about. It's all just their imagination. And these people are as detached from reality as any chat GPT program,
fantasizing about what is going to be happening.
It begins somewhere in the Arctic Circle.
As, quote, 50 Ways to Leave Your Lover is playing in the background,
a three-person camera crew bump along in their van, eager to capture footage of a glacier calving.
The shoot almost immediately goes awry, and the crew shrinks to two.
A similar disaster befalls an expertly puppeteered polar bear and her club.
And then the New York Times adds, although given that polar bears are prodigious swimmers, this sequence seems more melodramatic than likely.
That's what we've been saying about all this, the dying polar bears.
Oh, look, this polar bear, the polar ice caps are melting and they're stuck on an ice flow.
And I think, no, they're just resting.
They swim for hundreds of miles.
So at least the New York Times isn't trying to push that narrative anymore, that the polar bears are drowning because of polar ice gaps are melting.
And the third sequence set in an ordinary home, the problem of warming has traveled South a husband and wife and his mother, another remarkable puppet.
They said swelter in their living room as several fans blow ineffectually.
And this must be New York where Kathy Hochul has shut off all the air
conditioning, right?
The heat then grows so terrible that the very furniture begins to melt like
clocks and dollies, persistence of memory, imagery,
imagery that is as disturbing as it is delightful.
And so then, you know, they talk about some of the lyrics and all the rest of the stuff but that is what this really is you know climate change
is an absurdist play with puppets and fantasy and lies about drowning polar bears
and so the new york times i think it's a pretty accurate way to describe all this stuff,
but New York Times asks the question,
is clowning, however ghastly,
an appropriate response to the climbing crisis?
Why, yes, I think we should laugh at it,
we should mock it, we should satirize it,
because the emperor has no clothes.
People, too few people have taken it seriously, says the New York Times.
So some of the current remedies can feel like a game.
And they mentioned, you know, carbon credits and tax breaks for corporations
and blah, blah, blah.
This feels like a game.
So, because they are are it is a game uh so a playful approach
kind of makes sense says the new york times well there you go that is the reality
so bbc meanwhile is saying that climate change is too important to be left to personal choice
everyone will have to ratchet down their standard of living by over 75%.
No, you'll have to ratchet it down by 100%.
They call it net zero for a reason.
You have to take it down 100%.
A recent piece in BBC's Future World series,
it's like Futurama.
Celebrates someone who chose to live an ultra-low carbon lifestyle.
This is a story from bombthrow.com.
You'll find it also on Zero Hedge.
And so they focus on this person who decided to live green,
to make this decision consciously an individual decision to bring down their own personal carbon footprint down below two metric
tons per year. The article talks about the personal challenges living an ultra low carbon
lifestyle. According to the piece, two tons a year is also about half the output of a single gas-powered car in the U.S.
So the first step is to start by ditching their cars.
Oh, of course.
And that was what we saw on the very first Earth Day, 1970.
You know, people, these hippies, yeah, yelling, get rid of the car.
It's like, no way. Uh, anyway, all other behaviors which would move the needle include eating a plant based diet for going one transatlantic ground trip per year and so forth.
Yeah.
I've just sworn off of all flying since the other MacGuffin.
Uh, so I guess I'm doing my part, right?
Canada is basically a rounding error to the world's largest emitter china and there's
a chart there so you can pull that up travis uh the top co2 emitting countries and it is very
interesting when you look at this look at that canada is now that they're way down there they're
five from the far right and it really is a rounding error and look at how much co2 is being
emitted by china more than twice the united states which is number two and that is an indication as i
have shown in the past if you look at energy use as well as energy production uh it used to be
the british empire the 1800, then it switched over to the
U.S., U.S. dominated. And then just in the last few years, it switched over to China. Why? Why
are they using so much energy? Because they're manufacturing everything. We used to say this
about the U.S. We use so much energy because we're making everything. Well, not anymore.
And so the U.S. is less than half of what China is doing.
Canada is just a rounding error there.
But here's the thing, he says, everybody has to comply.
You know, they want to talk about this person who's voluntarily virtue signaling about doing all this.
While the overall timber of the piece lauds the story's protagonist,
her decision to make this lifestyle choice, sprinkled throughout this are casual backhanded references about where this was all going.
They say, can these really be achieved, these global goals, can they really be achieved by personal choice alone?
No, for this to work, it means that everybody's going to be forced to do it.
And yet what they say is with the right policies, with the right infrastructure,
with the right technology in place to enable changes to our lifestyle.
No, they're not talking about enabling changes. They're talking about forcing changes, coercing changes, forcing us into austerity of net zero.
And they want to do it to our lifestyles, to our behaviors, to every aspect of our life.
They said, if we do all this, we can reduce overall emissions by 2050.
I'm so sick and tired of hearing that word emissions.
I want it stricken from the dictionary.
The climate cultist dilemma is that they they said, we're hearing from an increasing
number of scientists that there is no crisis. Good, good. Their voices are getting louder,
even as the face of corporate media trying to fact check them is running under these
headwinds of narrative control. So maybe that's why we need RFKJ.
Maybe we need to have a pseudo populist like we did with Donald Trump.
Yeah.
I'm from outside the system.
I'm going to take care of immigration.
I'm going to take care of this problem or that problem that
everybody agrees is a problem.
Something that the globalists are trying to force upon us.
And so we have this populist savior who comes in.
And then RFK Jr. can push this net zero agenda on us.
Oh yeah, we agree with him about CBDC.
We agree with him about censorship that he says.
Although, you know, he's still yet to address what he did before.
Telling the middle class to own nothing and eat bugs while the elite parade through the city
in a lengthy motorcade on their way to the airport to wing it to Davos and their private jets.
Means also telling third world nations to remain mired in poverty.
Y'all can't have air conditioning said by Obama to people in Africa.
Y'all can't have it.ings that buy Obama to people in Africa. Y'all can't have it.
Yeah, the planet would melt down.
It also means forcing, if you want to really get serious about this, you force China to
stop building all those coal-fired plants and to keep the 600 million subjects there
who are still living in extreme poverty keep them poor and yet china followed
by india are the countries of the most coal power plants in pre-construction the change
in terms of the new coal power plants in china has gone up from january 2022 by 42%. And I'm sorry.
Yeah, in percentage.
It is in percentage.
So the bottom line is, just like the pandemic, MacGuffin,
this is based on fear.
It's based on agitprop, propaganda, shame, guilt, the rest of this.
It is a belief, says the author.
The reality of this induces a type of
eco-anxiety and isn't that interesting to think about how they always go back on fear when you
look at hitler what was hitler's fear about is about fear of the foreigner or another ethnic
group right the auslander the foreigner you got to fear them and give power to me i will
protect you and now we have it you the fear of the virus the fear of climate change and all the rest
of stuff fear is always there guilt is always a big part of this as well guilt and shame and
social pressures on people you know know, to join the Hitler
youth or the party or whatever it is. But it fundamentally boils down, folks, to depopulation.
And I'm telling you, when you look at RFK Jr., even though he is right about these issues,
and I hope he does get into a debate, I hope he gets a lot of press coverage and can talk about these issues, but don't buy into it. Because he's in the green
agenda. The green agenda has always been about depopulation. He, as a Democrat, will support
the murder of babies. End of story. That is about depopulation as well. And so when you look at this, just as a reminder,
Scientific American has now come out with an essay
about population decline being good news
because this is what they've always sought.
This is about values.
This is not about science.
This is anti-human peace.
It's not about science.
The opinion piece offered by Stephanie
Feldstein points
to the UN predicting dozens
of countries will have shrinking
populations by 2050.
It says that's, quote, good news.
The premise is further enhanced by the claim
that the planet is suffering from overpopulation
that diminishes wildlife habitats and
ecosystems as human impact
and has a deleterious effect on everything around it.
We're putting other species at risk, you see.
And this is like that story that Handy sent me
about how in Europe they're all upset about the chicken sexers
who take the male chicks and throw them away because they don't lay eggs,
they don't want to raise them, and they get rid of them.
We don't want to have that happen.
Let's kill them before they hatch and not put them through any suffering.
Oh, well, yeah, but at what point can the baby chicks,
if we can determine that it's a male and we want to kill the male before it hatches,
at what point does the male baby chick start to feel pain?
It kicks off this big debate about that.
You know, it's chickens only takes 21 days for them to, uh, you know, incubate to maturity.
So is it seven days?
Is it nine days?
Is it 11?
In terms of the kind of debate that we're having over the number of weeks, except that
the left doesn't care a whit about whether human babies feel any pain.
They don't care about when that begins.
They don't care about when life begins.
And they don't value life either.
And they especially don't value human life.
Here is another person talking about it's good because humans are bad.
Humans are a virus.
Humans are going to kill planet Earth.
They've got to be eradicated.
We want to protect all the other species, but not humans.
When even a single thread is pulled from the tapestry,
this person writing for Scientific American says this
about a disappearing species or something.
You're pulling a thread out of the tapestry.
The entire system begins to unravel.
Well, I think we could say that about a single human being.
When you start to pull out these little threads of children,
we start ripping them apart.
When you desire to kill them, even if they survive your attempted murder,
and that's what the Democrats routinely vote for en masse,
when you take that approach, well, the entire system is going to unravel, not in some kind
of butterfly effect, oh, you just killed Beethoven, or you just killed Albert Einstein,
or something like that. No, it will unravel because once you accept that precedent,
that human life doesn't matter,
that you can snuff it out as you see fit, nobody is safe.
Nobody is safe in any condition.
Nobody is safe at any age.
So this person says humans must therefore choose between population growth and survival of the planet.
That's the choice that they want to give us.
It is a false dichotomy.
It is a lie.
It's all based on a lie.
And that's the problem, the fundamental problem.
With all of the climate MacGuffin,
but in her essay she says,
we also need to bring together the reproductive rights, abortion,
the gender equity movements, LGBT,
and the environmental movement, abortion, the gender equity movements, LGBT,
and the environmental movement, the green, right?
And I pointed this out last week when I was talking about Yogyakarta, where they put together a legal framework where they piggybacked on top of civil rights violations.
They piggybacked on sexual preferences. And then the purpose of Yogi Akarta in 2006 was to piggy,
piggyback the,
um,
uh,
transgender stuff on top of sexual preferences and that type of thing.
And when they went back and talked about it,
the people were celebrating it.
It was this German green institution talking about it.
So you see,
they're always together.
The abortionist, the depopulationist, the LGBT agenda, German green institution talking about. So you see, they're always together.
The abortionist, the depopulationist, the LGBT agenda,
the radical environmentalists, they're all,
those are just different facets of the same thing.
It is a satanic agenda that seeks to kill humans in every aspect of it, every aspect of it.
The environmentalists seek to kill humans.
The LGBT and the abortionists
seek to kill humans, to sterilize
the human race.
That is the central purpose of it.
You don't have to bring them together.
They already are together
because of the philosophies
that they've embraced.
And so
this is what we are faced with and uh
it is in my opinion a populist distraction to think that rfk jr is going to do anything about
that i want to get to some of the election news before our guest joins us we're going to have a
really interesting guest today important information whether you're homeschooling
or whether you just want to defend what is true and right
and defend our culture and start to take it back.
We have to have a positive image of what we want to create.
We have to understand our true history,
and we have to have that picture of what we want our country to be like.
It's not enough to be against the green LGBT wackos and weirdos, and quite frankly, I'm sick of their antics.
I'm sick of seeing them on Tik TOK and the rest of this stuff.
We need to focus on what is true.
What is right.
What is a, an appropriate foundation for our society and for our families.
We'll be right back. In a world of deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act.
You're listening to The David Knight Show.
Well, I got this email from Harry Hound, and he spells that H-A-I-R-Y,
as opposed to the man formerly known as Prince.
He does have a beard and a full head of hair.
I guess we could call him Prince Harry, H-A-I-R-Y.
But he said, going back to 2020, when Trump was president, he did a kind of town hall.
They called it Town Hall Back to Work at Fox News.
He did it with Brett Baer and Martha McCollum.
He said, Trump was asking a question about why he didn't ask sooner.
He said, listen to the date.
I'm not going to play the clip for you,
but he says he States that he first found out that COVID could be a problem.
Uh,
the date that he gave for finding out about that,
his daughter tweeted out that Trump contract contracted with Moderna 10 days
before Trump found out how severe COVID could be.
And of course we know that this has gone back for a couple of years.
Peter Navarro now doing interviews on what happened when he met Fauci.
Navarro is either very naive that Trump didn't have a clue as to what the
government did by releasing COVID or he is protecting Trump.
So again, take your pick, but don but, uh, don't follow these people.
I thought it was kind of interesting as we get into the election is cause I'm going to
talk about, um, you know, we've been talking about the, uh, the vaccine and we had all
these people telling us it was a moon shot.
I thought they gave it to you in your arm.
I don't know, but, uh, they were referring to the technology.
And, uh, so, you know technology and uh so you know you had trump
you had al moeller and other people it's a moonshot it's a moonshot well you have the former
ross cosmos head the former head of the russian space station says he refuses to believe that
nasa landed on the moon oh isn't that interesting? The head of the Russian space program doesn't believe it.
And I talked to, um, a guy who was, you know, just a few months before he died, actually his older
guy, he was there at mission control. He came in, he was brought in for an interview
and he was not certain either. And he was on the front line of mission control. He goes,
well, there were some things that happened that made me think that it was real, but there were some things that happened
that made me think that it was not real. And he said, and my biggest question was, why did they
not only destroy the engines, but why did they destroy all the blueprints? He said,
do you realize that they did that? They destroyed everything, all evidence of the
program that was happening there. Why would they do that? And why would they not go back for decades?
Well, the former head of the Russians to space program said, it was not clear
to me how the United States at that level of technological development of
the 1960s and the last century, how did they do in the night with 1960s
technology, how did they do what they still cannot do today?
Good question, isn't it?
Well, he has just announced as a crazy conspiracy theorist.
They don't answer that question.
I would like to know.
Wouldn't you?
The former head of Russia's space corporation, his name is Dmitry Rogozin. He was fired from his post as director of the
country's space program last year. He's now taking to telegram to cast doubt on the fact that NASA
landed a dozen astronauts on the moon over half a century ago. He asked, he said, the Russian,
you know, Ross Cosmos, the Russian Space Corporation,
while he was head of Ross Cosmos, he asked if they would provide him, quote,
with documentary evidence of the Americans' stay on the moon.
He said despite his best efforts, he found no evidence.
Ross Cosmos had no evidence that it had happened.
And again, he said, it was not clear to me how the U.S.
at that level of technological development in the 1960s and the last century
did what they still cannot do today.
That is the money quote.
So they said his comments are characteristically evocative and brazen
and demonstrate a denialist conspiracy theory.
Well, you know, if I'm denying your, you said that you went prove it.
You said your vaccines work, prove it.
You said that we've got climate change, prove it.
You say that I did it, prove it.
They don't ever want to prove anything.
Instead, they just say, well, you're just nothing but a conspiracy
theorist and a denier, right?
So it demonstrates denialist conspiracy theories surrounding NASA's hollow moon landings that persist to this day. Well, answer the question. No, they don't. Ironically, they say,
the Soviet Union even had a spacecraft of its own in orbit around the moon while NASA astronauts
Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin took their historic
first steps back in 1969, meaning that Russia has plenty of detailed data to corroborate the
moon landings, which are incredibly well documented. Oh, really? Well, if Russia was circling
the moon and they've got all this detailed information. Why is it that the guy who ran the Russian space program couldn't find any evidence?
Hmm.
The mountain of evidence clearly has not made enough of an impression on this particular
member of Putin's inner circle.
Oh, well, that's it.
He's a conspiracy theorist.
He's a denier, and he knows Putin.
He's part of Putin's inner circle.
There you go.
We don't have to answer any questions.
I know who you are.
You know,
you,
you reply to questions about evidence and data.
You reply to ad hominem attacks,
guilt by association,
all the rest of this stuff.
During his tenure,
he also maintained that Russia would soon abandon the space station
international space station despite the fact the country later agreed to cooperate with its
international partners until the station's demise in 2030 again 2030 uh but um you know that's why
he was fired he also butted heads with heads with Elon Musk on a number of occasions.
He's now been deployed to the front lines of Russia's invasion,
to the Russian front.
You know, that's what the Germans used to do with their people who question things, isn't it?
We have RFK Jr. went on a program on Sunday
and said that he's absolutely certain that the CIA murdered his uncle, JFK.
Believes that there's a lot of evidence that they killed his father, RFK Sr.
He alleged the CIA was behind the assassination of his uncle,
likely involved in the murder of his father.
Speaking to an interview with John Katsimatidis,
I guess is how you pronounce his name on Sunday,
Kennedy said there's overwhelming evidence that the CIA was involved in JFK's murder.
Beyond a reasonable doubt at this point, he said.
He cited as his evidence the book JFK and the Unspeakable by James Douglas as the best
compilation of evidence on the subject, though dozens, if not hundreds of works have been
written about the assassination of the CIA's alleged role. The official U.S. government
explanation published by the Warren Commission said that Lee Harvey Oswald acted alone in the
shooting. So I don't, I'm not claiming that I know what happened, just like I don't know what
happened with 9-11, but I do know what did not happen on 9-11. And I do know what did not happen on 9-11.
And I do know what did not happen with the JFK assassination.
The official narrative, the official story did not happen with both of those.
So you can, you know, people can, I had a listener send me a story about that.
Look, I've never believed this.
My parents never believed it.
They were not Kennedy supporters.
From the very beginning,
especially when Lee Harvey Oswald says he's a patsy
and then he's immediately shot by a mafia figure
who's got cancer, Jack Ruby.
As soon as that happened, I remember my entire family,
mom, dad, aunts, uncles,
we're all standing there, you know, it's around Thanksgiving when this stuff was
going through and everybody's like, wow. Yeah. They just assassinated the president, killed,
uh, uh, killed the Patsy that they set up. It isn't based on anything, any books that I've read, any movies that I've watched. It's just looking at the Occam's razor approach.
And then you add to that.
That's before we saw the Zapruder film.
That did help with things as well.
So I don't know what happened.
I know what did not happen.
What did not happen is what the government told us happened.
Kennedy added that there was a very convincing but circumstantial evidence that the CIA was is what the government told us happened. Kennedy added that
there was a very convincing but circumstantial evidence that the CIA was involved in the
assassination of his father. He described the official story of the assassination being done
by Sirhan Sirhan as physically impossible, arguing that Thane Eugene Cesar, a security guard at the
hotel who was concurrently employed by the military contractor Lockheed
had actually fired the shots that killed his father.
You know, I had the opportunity to interview Dr. Pepper, an unfortunate name, Dr. William
Pepper, no relation to the soft drink.
But he did a couple of different mock trials.
He did one about the Martin Luther King assassination, another one about
RFK Jr. assassination.
They were serious looks at the evidence.
And again, they were a mock trial, though it did not have, it was not
tainted with political agendas and political appointees and that type of
thing.
And he made a very effective case that it was not sirhan sirhan he made a very effective case
that the person who is identified for martin luther king was not the assassin with that either
four years after jfk's murder nearly half of the american public did not believe that oswald had
acted alone as i said my family never believed it.
And we were not Kennedy supporters.
You know, my dad was a Goldwater supporter.
You know, he was.
But, you know, they were conservatives.
The CIA was concerned enough about this that it issued a directive in 1967
on how to discredit the so-called conspiracy theorists.
And we've been plagued with that weaponized term ever since.
Oh,
if you don't think that one person could do this accurately from that
position with a bolt action rifle and get several headshots off,
what's the matter with you?
You stupid conspiracy theorist.
I think one of the best ways to push back on that was Kubrick's film,
full metal jacket,
where Arlie Ermey,
the drill Sergeant was telling them by the time you're finished,
you're going to be able to,
he defines,
you know,
you're gonna be able to take this many shots at this distance and hit a
moving target.
Just like Lee Harvey Oswald,
this ex Marine.
Uh,
that was one of the,
the best and shortest debunks of the lone shooter thing i've ever seen
the german government is looking to subsidize up to 80 percent of energy costs for the industry
how many times have i said you know this is one of the things that concerns me about rfkj
he talks about he says you, pollution and climate change.
This is all just due because we subsidized oil companies.
Really?
Who gets the lion's share of subsidies right now?
It's the green agenda.
They get most of the subsidies.
The German government is going to subsidize up to 80% of energy costs for industry across the board.
They're raising the price of energy artificially with sanctions, with prohibitions, with regulations,
most of them for the green agenda.
Now, Biden is saying, well, you know, I'm doing it because I've got to fight Putin.
But it's going to be great because it's going to get us there faster to our green agenda.
That's why he's doing it.
The German vice chancellor and Green Party politician has proposed a scheme that would
see the government subsidize up to 80% of electricity costs for certain industries.
And the ongoing energy crises induced by decades of failed green agenda policies and over-reliance on all this.
It's all just cronyism.
And it's not limited to the oil companies.
This is why I think it's fundamentally dishonest about RFKJ's approach.
First of all, tell me how you know that there's warming.
Tell me how it's coming from people.
But don't just talk about subsidies and only talk about one industry being subsidized.
That's nonsense. That's like the crypto prohibition where they're coming out there and say, yeah,
crypto is just using too much energy. We're going to have to raise the price by 30%. And that is
another whole can of worms that I don't have time to go into. They're going to be raising the price.
It's going to be a 30% surcharges. They're going to, it's a massive regulatory burden as well as a tax.
First of all, a 30% tax.
And a 30% tax on the energy that they're using.
And they're going to have to create a report talking about what their source of energy is.
And different sources of energy will be taxed in a different way.
So it's going to be a tremendous regulatory burden for the crypto miners.
They're ignoring, just like what RFKJ is ignoring subsidies,
these people are ignoring the fact that the intelligence community,
that the surveillance state, that the artificial intelligence,
massive learning programs are using massive amounts of energy.
No, the only energy that they're concerned about is the crypto stuff.
And that's what RFK Jr. is doing with the climate stuff.
He's camping out on this whole thing being real, number one.
Number two, only the oil company subsidies are the bad thing.
And so in Germany, they propose a plan that would guarantee large swaths of German industry
electricity prices at a subsidized price of six euro pennies per kilowatt hour.
Currently, it is, let's say, 25 cents, and they're going to get it for six cents.
80% subsidy that's going to be there.
Part of the Traffic Light Coalition. I wonder what this traffic light coalition is. Yeah. Traffic lights, red,
yellow, green. I've always talked about the Marxist watermelon environmentalism. You know,
it's thin veneer of green on the outside inside. It's all red, but I guess if you're going to get
the yellow people, I guess those would be the people in the middle. The people have no backbone,
no spine who would just go along with the majority. We're going to get the yellow people, I guess those would be the people in the middle. The people have no backbone, no spine, who would just go along with the majority.
We're going to take a break.
Our guest is on the line.
We're going to be right back to talk about real history, the pushback against the 1619 Project.
I think you're going to find this interview very interesting.
We'll be right back. Thank you. You're listening to The David Knight Show.
Show, we've got a problem.
What? Who are you?
It's the new mug they're selling at thedavidknightshow.com, right?
So, basically, a mug is something that holds liquid, right?
Because basically you can't hold coffee with your hands, right?
I'm with you scatly, but anyone tries to mug me, I'm be ready for it.
You dog-faced pony soldier.
They say the mug can help patriots drink coffee, then save the world.
This could be bad for us.
Save the world? But we owe the world.
These people, they're supporting free speech with every mug they buy.
Come on. These people...
I tell you...
Well, anyway...
Well, anyway... These people, as I tell you, will anyway.
You're listening to The David Knight Show.
Welcome back.
Our guest is Mark David Hall.
I have a filmmaker that we talk to frequently, Mark Hall.
This is Mark David Hall.
His book is Proclaim Liberty Throughout All the Land,
How Christianity Has Advanced Freedom and Equality for All Americans.
I'm really excited to talk to Mark today.
He has an amazing background in academia.
He is a distinguished professor of politics at George Fox University, is a senior fellow at many different universities, Baylor, Princeton, and others.
And he has an extensive background in history,
and we're going to talk today about some of the questions
and the things that have been labeled at Christianity
over the last few years as they were trying to remove
the foundation of our society, quite frankly.
So joining us now is Mark David Hall.
Thank you for joining us, sir.
Thank you so much for having me, David.
Well, it's great to have you on, and it's great to see a book like this.
I think this is a great resource, especially for homeschoolers.
And, you know, it is written at an adult level.
It's not written at a children's level.
But I always think, you know, when we did homeschoolinging that you always, you don't try to dumb things down. You hit them with stuff that's maybe above
their grade level and challenge them. But it's great for adults. And you point out that it is
important for us to be able to defend what we believe. We need to be ready to give an answer
to anybody who asks us about our faith, but we also need to be able to do the same thing about our history and our culture. And so we need to be armed with the facts. We need to be ready to give an answer to anybody who asks us about our faith, but we also need to be able to do the same thing about our history and our culture. And so we need to be
armed with the facts. We need to understand how Christianity has given us the best aspects of
our society that we have now. So let's begin with some of the things that have been thrown
at Christianity. Let's start with the slavery aspect, or if you want to, we could start with
the 1619
project. I think it's pretty interesting that they pushed that out just before the 400th anniversary
of Plymouth Rock, but you could start with either one of those. You could start with the pilgrims,
or you could start with slavery, whatever you like. Yeah, thank you. So in my last book,
Did America Have a Christian Founding?, I made a pretty powerful argument, I think,
that America's founders were influenced by Christian ideas. And in some respects, this book was to be a sequel,
but between the last book and this one, the 1619 Project came out, and it just infuriated me.
Oh, yeah.
We have to recognize, of course, that Americans, some Americans have appealed to the Bible or the
Christian tradition to defend slavery. But to say that all of American history is best characterized by slavery
and racism and Jim Crow legislation that's just horrible history as many left of center historians
have pointed out and so part of what I wanted to do is to respond to the 1619 project the series
of essays in the New York Times and all too many academics who've written serious academic books, but as well as popular
books, arguing that fundamentally America is characterized by slavery to the extent to which
Americans were Christians, they were appealing to their faith to defend slavery or other evil,
sexism, poverty, and that sort of thing. And without denying that some Christians have done
some of that, I tried to argue a pretty powerful thesis that, in fact, Christianity has been a force for progress, for liberty and equality for all, from the Puritans
to the present day. And of course, you know, when we start tearing down statues of anybody that we
find something we don't like about them, you know, that is, we can do that with individuals,
we can do that with society, but that is not the way to progress. What we do
is we want to try to find the best in our history, the best in individuals, and to build on that
rather than looking for anything that we can find that is wrong and then using that as an excuse to
tear it down. But that really goes back, I think, to Marxism. When we look at Pete, I call him Pete
Boudigay because he's very proud of his sexual orientation.
And I have a hard time at the beginning pronouncing his name.
But his father was a Notre Dame professor who had spent his whole life looking at the, his life's work was looking at Antonio Gramsci, who was the founder of the Italian party.
And he saw the attack had to come at the cultural level.
He said the middle class and Christians have been able to establish their society with
cultural hegemony.
And so their goal was to take that away.
And so we see that being done deliberately in a calculated way.
They're not genuinely, I think, offended by some of the things that they're complaining
about.
There are issues that need to be addressed, but it is fundamentally a revolutionary tactic, I believe.
Don't you agree? No, I think so. That's exactly right. And one of the problematic things with the
1619 Project is not only was it published in arguably the nation's most elite newspaper,
it's now being adopted as a curriculum in schools. And so young people who know almost nothing about history
are learning whatever history they know from this. Yeah, I think it's absolutely a tactic of the left.
And unfortunately, the left controls the academy by and large. It controls a major media. And so
it's critical that we get out with programs like yours, with books like mine, arguing for the truth.
Yeah. And your book could be used as a textbook, as I said, especially for
homeschoolers. At the very beginning, you talk about the fact that Puritans were not tyrannical
theocrats. Talk about that. Were they there simply to impose their religious beliefs on other people?
Sure. Let me take a step back to the Protestant Reformation and make a quick little equation.
The Protestants, of course, believed in the doctrine of sola scriptura, the scripture alone. They believed in the doctrine of the priesthood of all believers.
Every individual needs to be able to read the Bible for himself or even herself. And so what
you see in Protestant countries is an absolute explosion of literacy. By the time you get to
Puritan New England, you have almost universal male literacy, female literacy is catching up,
church structures and civic structures are
flattened. So the Puritans in New England are congregationalists, right? They're standing up
and making arguments in their church about who should be the minister, whether or not to build
a new meeting house. In New England, people are voting every six months. And I do mean by people,
I mean males, male property owners, but really any male with any amount of ambition
whatsoever could own property. So you have pretty close to very widespread suffrage. Let's leave it
at that. And so what you see in Puritan New England are some of the freest, most Republican,
smaller Republican institutions the world had ever seen. The Puritans are looking to the Bible to
reform the civil and criminal laws. In England, you could be punished by death for hundreds of crimes, including stealing just a few shillings.
The Puritans got rid of almost all those death penalty offenses.
And looking at the Bible, they said the proper penalty for theft is restitution, not death.
If I steal your cow, I have to give you your cow back plus one of my cows.
A far more humane criminal system than
you have in England. And I could keep going on and on about how these pilgrims and Puritans really
created some of the most progressive, in the best sense of the word, societies that the world had
ever seen. And, you know, that kind of reminds me, we always hear the eye for the eye and a tooth
for a tooth, and it sounds like a very harsh standard. And yet in reality, it was a pullback from what
was the already established, as you talk about so many crimes that could be meted out with a death
penalty, it was actually pulling it back. It was actually to say an eye for an eye and a tooth for
a tooth. It was to pull back the severity of those penalties. And as you also said, it was focused on
restitution. We don't have restitution in our system today. That's one of the big flaws in our justice system.
But they went back to the Bible and to Mosaic Law
and said we need to have restitution for that.
So it was not a tyranny in that regard.
They did want to have religious freedom
because they were under attack in their own country.
But I think it's very important what you said about literacy.
And we look at the rate of literacy today.
It was so high. It was up in the high 90s at the time of the american
revolution wasn't it i think in new england you have pretty well universal male literacy by the
by the time of the revolution in the american south you didn't the aristocrats of course could
not only read but probably read latin and greek and they're very well educated. So, Jefferson and Madison are great examples of this. But unfortunately, your white yeoman farmer and
that sort of thing, to say nothing of enslaved Americans, we're not reading. But yeah, and of
course, New England's intellectual center of America until well into the 19th century, right?
Harvard and Yale and Brown and Princeton. Yeah, a disproportionate impact,
for sure. And they started out as seminaries. And you had pretty much everybody passing around
Thomas Paine's Common Sense in the same way that everybody would see, I don't know,
The Wizard of Oz today. They were reading things like that. That was their cultural touchstone,
that and the Bible. And so you see, even in the late 1800s, you see Abraham Lincoln quoting the Bible because that's how he connected with people.
Just like today we would make movie references.
He knew that everybody knew the Bible.
That's why they had to learn how to read, as you point out.
Let me plug my friend Daniel Dreisbach.
He has a great book, Reading the Bible with the Founding Fathers.
And what he shows is that by far and away,
the founders were reading their Bible, they knew their Bible inside and out, and they were
routinely paraphrasing biblical passages without putting in the little citations. So for instance,
George Washington paraphrases Micah 4.4 more than 40 times, and yet he never puts in the citation,
Micah 4.4, because everyone would have recognized it. And so, yeah, the Bible by far and away was the most influential book in the late 18th century in the founding era, by far and away.
And I think that's what we mean when we say America was a Christian country. dispersed as a cultural touchstone that even people who are not necessarily believing Christians
would refer to it in terms of talking to other people, right?
No, that's absolutely right. In my last book, I actually spell out in some detailed ways in which
I think the founders were influenced by the Bible and Christian theology. One of the most obvious
ones, and one of the key differences between the Americans and what went on over in
France is they were absolutely committed that all humans were sinful, all sinned and fallen short of
the glory of God. Even Christians continued to struggle with the old man within. And so they
designed a constitutional order characterized by federalism, separation of powers, checks and
balances. Enlightenment political thought was going the exact opposite direction. We want a
strong centralized government run by the intellectual elites. And that did not work
out well over in France. Yeah, they believed in the perfection of man, the perfectibility of man,
and that they had already achieved it because they were the elites. So let's talk a little bit about
the American Revolution, because that's another thing that we even see from Christians many times.
And you've got a chapter on the war for American independence.
And a lot of people saying, well, I, you know, I think you've got to, and of course we've heard
this in the last couple of years as a passport, the vaccine passports and mandates were rolling
out. Uh, we've heard people say, well, if the government tells you, you got to put a pinwheel
on your head, you better put a pinwheel on your head. I never interpreted Romans or 1 Peter 3
in that regard. Talk a little bit about the war for American independence and whether or not it
was justified from a Christian standpoint and how Christianity fed into that.
Sure, that was a fun chapter to write, and I'll state up front that most Christian scholars who
have addressed this point, with the exception of me and Eric Patterson, have said, oh, my goodness, a war flies in the face of Romans 13, or if resisting tyrants is biblically permissible, it was unjust.
And I say, no, that's not the case at all.
So for about 1300 years, the church did say if you are living under a tyrant and that tyrant tells you to disobey God, you refuse to obey him, but you take the consequences.
You don't get to resist.
You don't get to overthrow him.
The Protestants went in a very different direction.
John Calvin is very clear.
Inferior magistrates may overthrow a ruler who becomes a tyrant.
But John Knox goes beyond him, even as Calvin was alive, saying, no, the people themselves may do that.
And so the distinction
here is between a ruler and a tyrant. If a ruler becomes a tyrant, he may be overthrown. And so in
1764, 1765, when Parliament started acting in a clearly unconstitutional manner by trying to tax
the American colonists to raise revenue, the American colonists didn't just pick up their
guns. They didn't just pick up their guns they
didn't start shooting redcoats but they resisted in other ways they petitioned they boycotted they
protested and they did that for over 10 years but as Parliament and the king continued to do what
were taken as tyrannical acts as unconstitutional acts threatening basic liberties, religious liberty, trial by jury. Eventually, in 1775, when the Red
Coats came to seize American ammunition, we resisted actively, and the war for American
independence had begun. I think you can make a very good case that the cause was just that we
did everything, war should always be the last resort. And so, of course, no one's going to
pick up guns and start shooting U.S. Army officers because of these vaccine mandates.
But we may properly resist in other ways, right?
We can petition.
We can remonstrate.
We can elect different officials.
But if the government for the next 10 years continues to act in a tyrannical fashion, maybe things would change.
But it does take that long train of abuses as the Declaration describes. I think
you can make an excellent argument that the war for American independence was both biblical and
just. Yeah, and of course, you have other things too, like the Magna Carta. You're talking about
it being unconstitutional. There were limits. The king was not an absolute ruler, according to the
Magna Carta, and there were limits on what he could do, and they overrode those. And so that
was a big part of it as well.
But as you point out, you know, the difference between a tyrant and a ruler, a ruler is there
for your own good.
A ruler is somebody who is aligned with biblical principles, also with things like the Magna
Carta, things like the Constitution.
And of course, in our time, we have the Constitution is the king.
You know, Lex Rex was one of the things that they said that they wanted to set up a system where the law was above individuals and where you would not trust a man, but you'd bind them down with the chains of the Constitution.
Right.
So that's exactly right.
And Parliament even said this in the Declaratory Act 1766.
In effect, I'm paraphrasing.
But Parliament says we have the right to do whatever we want,
which to patriot ears, that's almost by definition tyranny. No, you don't have the right to do
whatever you want. You're limited by law. No taxation without representation is a constitutional
principle. Americans aren't represented in Parliament, so Parliament cannot tax Americans
at all, period. And it doesn't matter if the taxes are heavy or light, there's a constitutional principle at stake. In the same way, if the government of Canada tomorrow
tried to tax each American $1 a year, we should all refuse to pay, right? Because the Parliament
of Canada has absolutely no authority to tax us. And it just simply doesn't matter that the amount
is small. Yeah, absolutely right. They understood the importance of principle.
Let's talk a little bit about slavery because this is something that has really been the center of a lot of our there with the Mayflower,
and they came up with a compact,
which is a voluntary document to govern themselves.
A lot of precedents were set with that.
They wanted to flesh that out,
and then they wanted to change this to a slavery narrative.
What do you want to say, first of all, about the 1619 Project and whether
or not that is a valid interpretation of history? As you point out, many historians have pointed out
it's really a very poor history. Indeed, how is it poor? You know, my friend Bill McCloy,
the great historian, has said that the 1619 Project was a missed opportunity. It's definitely reasonable to
remember that Americans owned slaves, that African Americans were abused at the hands of slave owners
and others. And yet the 1619 Project errs by just trying to redefine all of American history
as being interpreted through the lens of slavery and racism. And so, we need a much more balanced approach. We must recognize
the evils of slavery and that Christians were complicit in it, but we also need to recognize
that many, many Christians were coming to oppose slavery. We should also recognize, and I know you
know this, but just to emphasize it, slavery is something that has existed throughout human
history, throughout the entire world, existed throughout the world in the 17th and 18th centuries and so that was really not unusual that americans had slaves what was unusual by the time
you get to the founding era is you had significant numbers of civic officials recognizing this is an
evil institution and we must do something about it so franklin john jay john dickinson james
wilson they freed their slaves, voluntarily freed their slaves.
Eight states put slavery on the road to extinction or abolished it immediately between 1776 and 1804.
The Confederation Congress and the First Federal Congress banned the expansion of slavery into the Northwest Territory,
the area that became Ohio and Michigan and in Indiana
Illinois Wisconsin and so they recognized no one had a good thing to say about slavery in the
founding era everyone wanted it to end everyone was assured they they were certain it was going
to end for a variety of reasons that we can talk about in a minute if you want yeah um so no one's
defending slavery is a positive good. Unfortunately, as we know,
I'll just mention briefly, Eli Whitney invents a cotton gin and it creates a whole new dynamic in
the South that allows slavery to become entrenched in the South. And so by the 1820s, you're having
Southerners defending slavery as a positive good. But that's the 1820s and that's specifically
Southerners. It is not the American founders. Almost every founder was highly critical of slavery,
and many were taking concrete steps to end it.
Yeah, I agree.
You talked about how every civilization has had it.
Thomas Sowell has made the same argument, and he says,
where do we get the term slave from?
From Slavic people, who were the ones who were most frequently enslaved.
And so every civilization has had it but
he and others would make the case that this is the first civilization that got rid of it
and um and i think that's the key thing but i think you know there's a couple of issues
i think the real reason that they don't want people that they want people to focus on 1619
uh of course they want to tear down our institutions our culture our society but
they also don't want people to see that we're being pushed into a form of modern slavery with all the surveillance
state and the rest of this stuff.
It'd be very nice if they get us fighting with each other and if they get us focused
on past wrongs so we don't see the future wrongs that they are the chains that they're
laying out for us with their technology.
That's just the way I see it.
But talk a little bit about the other factors and slavery.
Of course, when we talk about the fact that Christians were the ones to pull it back,
I think of William Wilberforce, for example.
I mean, this is a guy who took on the major economic powers of his time.
He took on the military industrial complex, if you will, and beat their plows and their
swords into plowshares.
And so we had leaders like William Wilberforce,
as well as other people in the United States.
Who do we have in the United States that was similar to William Wilberforce
that comes to mind as a leader?
Well, first of all, let me highlight what you said about Wilberforce.
I think he's a great example for those of us who are profoundly concerned
about the sin of abortion.
He just spent his whole lifetime fighting this evil, and he didn't live to see it ended completely.
In the same way, many of us have spent years and years fighting abortion, and praise the Lord, Roe v. Wade was overturned last summer.
But we still have a lot of work to do, and we can't just give up.
We can't say it's too hard or whatever.
So in America, as i've already
suggested you have a lot of americans in the founding era fighting slavery i have a chapter
on the american abolitionists though and we usually think about these folks as these 19th
century christians who sacrifice a great deal to oppose the institution of slavery both its
expansion into new states but also advocating for the end of slavery. And I highlight the work
of some really fascinating people, Sarah and Angelina Grimke, Vinnie. One of my favorite
is Sojourner Truth. I'm sure many of your listeners recognize the title of my book,
Proclaim Liberty Throughout All the Land. It is, of course, inscribed on the Liberty Bill,
but I think an even better story is Sojourner Truth, the African-American evangelist and abolitionist who used to go to revival meetings, string up a banner reading, Proclaim Liberty Throughout All the Land.
And what did she do first?
She preached the gospel of Jesus Christ.
She tried to convert people to the Christian religion, and then she preached to these people about the sins
of God's people in America that is slavery. And so, here's a woman brilliantly advocating for
both the Christian gospel and opposing slavery at the same time, making explicitly biblical
arguments in the public's court to do so. And so, I think these abolitionists really
should be inspirational to those of us today that call ourselves followers of Christ.
I agree.
I've said many times that when we look at how divided and fractionalized and tribal America has become and how politicians are trying to push us into that kind of tribalism, out is to do the types of things that you pointed out or that she did in terms of preaching the
gospel, talking about how we all have the same relationship to Christ, bringing us together
in that kind of brotherhood, sisterhood, if you will. And that is the thing that is going to keep
us from having a civil war. If we understand that in God's eyes, there is no male, female, black, white, slave, free,
any of these, we're all together.
But then that doesn't mean that we justify and leave the systems that are harming people
in place, just like we don't do that in our own personal life.
You know, we turn from the things that are wrong in our life, but that there is a unifying
there.
And that when we look at things like reparations the christian story of
what christ has done that is our reparation he's paid for what we've done wrong he's paid for the
wrongs that have done to us we could heal this country if we focus on the gospel as she did i
think you know i think that's um my number one prayer is that this country would see revival
that men and women boys and girls would turn to Jesus Christ, submit their lives to him.
And I think that would do wonders.
So the American founders were in complete agreement that if Republican government is to work, small or Republican, you must have a moral people.
And if you're going to have a moral people, you must have a Christian people.
And so, yeah, we can advocate for laws and structural changes and this sort of thing
but ultimately probably our number one job as christians is to spread the gospel and pray for
revival i agree you know and when we look at the writings of the people who are alive that time and
struggling with this they realized that it was a moral wrong but what do we do about it and many of
them would uh struggle with it in a kind of paternalism, wouldn't they?
They would say, well, I know it's wrong, but I just can't turn the black people loose here because how would they live?
They would be attacked or whatever.
So you see certain things like the creation of Liberia and trying to repatriate freed slaves back to Africa and things like that.
But I think fundamentally, when we look at the paternalism,
it was whether it was conscious or unconscious, I think they were trying to defend a practice
that made a lot of economic sense to them.
You know, it's kind of more of a love of money
than it was a love of humanity.
What do you think about that in terms of things like Liberia
and other efforts?
Yeah, I think that's exactly right. So, you know, someone like Thomas Jefferson is maybe
instructive here. You know, in his notes on the state of Virginia, he says, I tremble for my
country when I know that God is just. And he's referring to the participation and the practice
of slavery. But then he goes on to say, but what are we to do i'm paraphrasing if we were to let
the slaves go they would rise up and kill us because they're really mad at us and i think he
has just caused to think that he of course is um probably thinking of the of the haitian slave
rebellion where in fact you did have slaves rise up and kill most of the white population maybe all
the white population so jefferson throughout his life he always said what we need to do is free the slaves and send them back to Africa. The American Colonization
Society, which purported to do that, that was their goal, was surprisingly popular, even in
the American South. You had a lot of southern statesmen who joined that, who supported it,
but it was never a realistic possibility. Something like 10,000 slaves were freed and shipped back to Africa.
During that time, I think the slave population increased by maybe 800,000.
And so it just never was a viable alternative.
And we must remember, I think, that we did end slavery peacefully in the Mid-Atlantic
states and the northern states.
Slavery was ended peacefully in Brazil.
It would have been a heavy lift,
but it could have been done in America. We did not have to fight a bloody civil war
to end slavery. And I think what is required then is we have men and women
involved in politics motivated by the Christian faith attempting to bring about a solution to
these grave evils, be it slavery, be it Jim Crow legislation, or be it abortion
today.
That's why we must be politically active as much as we might get tired of contemporary
politics.
And believe me, I get tired of it.
And I'm a political scientist.
It's kind of what I do for a living.
Me too.
And that's what I do for a living as well.
But, you know, we look at the situation you talk about ending it peacefully.
We saw it ended peacefully in the Caribbean because of the work of people like william wilberforce and what the british government did was they compensated the plantation
owners and of course lala harris says that her her father is is very proud of the fact that they
had owned slaves there but they they compensated the the slave owners and um and some uh one
calculated that they uh spent less money than the uS. government spent on ammunition in order to do that.
Sometimes we have to calculate the costs and we have to take a look at every option before we look at the use of force.
I think let's talk a little bit about education because you talk about debates over religious liberty and about church and state
relations, and you made some interesting comments about education and about the purposes of education
to begin with, Protestant versus Catholic. Sure. One of the things I do in my last book is I think
I show definitively that in no way, shape, or form did the American founders
want the strict separation of church and state. And so, this leads to the question, where did
this idea come from in America? And what I show, and I'm borrowing from Philip Hamburger here in
his wonderful book, Separation of Church and State, that really this came about, this idea
that we should have a separation of church and state because of the profound anti-Catholicism
that you saw among
American Protestants in the mid-19th to the mid-20th century. And basically what had happened
by that time is we had public schools. The public schools were, in effect, Protestant schools. You
would have the King James Version of the Bible read. You have Protestant prayers that were said.
Catholics believed they should have Catholic schools. And so they went to the governing
authorities and said, look, we're paying taxes. give us a share of tax dollars so we can have
our own schools and in response the civic officials who are mostly protestants said no no we can't do
that we aren't going to fund sectarian schools and by sectarian they mean roman catholic schools
send your kids to the public schools they're're non-sectarian. But of course, they were very sectarian from the Catholic perspective. And you see this played out in
the great state of Oregon, my home state, where Oregon banned all private schools. And lo and
behold, all private schools with one exception were Roman Catholic schools. And as late as 1948,
you have an organization founded, Protestants and Others United for Separation of Church and
State, today known as Americans United, a profoundly anti-Catholic organization. And so,
what is going on here is these Protestants arguing for the separation of church and state,
but basically, they just mean we don't want to fund Catholic stuff. We're perfectly happy to
have prayer in school and this sort of thing. And so the Supreme Court really pulled a fast one on everyone when in 1962, 1963, they said, surprise, separation of church and
state means more than not funding Catholic schools. It means no teacher-led prayer in public
schools. It means no Bible reading in public schools. And so now all of a sudden Protestants
are like, what? This is not what we signed up for. And you begin to have a movement of Protestants are like, what? This is not what we signed up for. And you begin to have a movement of Protestants and Catholics coming together to oppose a
progressive left that wants to have a naked public square, that wants to drive religion
out of the public square.
Yeah, I agree.
You know, and many times we will do that.
We will set up a precedent and realizing this precedent is going to be used for something
that we like.
And so, as you point out, they set up these Protestant schools.
But then what happened was those schools got taken over and turned into seminaries for
secular humanism.
It's essentially what happened.
You just had a different religion being preached to that.
That was something that was anticipated by R.L.
Dabney back in the end of the Civil War.
He said, there's no way that you can get around the, you know, government should not be involved in education
because education is not fundamentally about simply reading and writing or how to do some
kind of a technical thing.
Education is really about morality and that type of thing.
So it is fundamentally religious.
And so you're always going to have some kind of a conflict in terms of this religious instruction.
That seems to be where we are today,
I think. What do you think? I think that's exactly right. We have to recognize there's no such thing as neutrality, that all schools are teaching some sort of ideology, maybe more overt,
maybe less overt. I think one of the problems, some of us, I used to live in a fairly rural
community in Oklahoma, and so we knew most of the teachers in the public schools, and they were good
people. And so I don't think we should assume that most school teachers are bad people, but then
they're given standards that they have to live up to and CRT curricula, and they aren't permitted to
mention God except for in an academic way. And so an ideology is being inculcated on our children.
Sometimes teachers are wacky progressives, right? Probably in Chicago and New York City, you have a lot of those. But I think a lot of teachers are
well-meaning people, and yet still, public schools are not neutral, which is why I love what we're
seeing in some states like Arizona and elsewhere, where we're having true school choice. So I don't
like I'm Protestant, but I don't think it was appropriate to only have Protestant schools
funded by the state. I love the idea a catholic family could choose to send their kids to a catholic school
protestant to a protestant school a jew to a jewish school um an atheist an atheist school
and of course then you can mix and match all you want but it should be the parents choice
and not the choice of the state or local governments i agree i just feel from a
practical standpoint as long as the government's got a financial purse string,
they're going to be pulling the strings to tell you what to do.
You know,
the opinion that we've got to break that.
And,
you know,
we have an in Tennessee and it's also been done in another state recently
bills to basically wean us off of the,
the government purse.
You know, we're not going to take any federal money on education because we take their money.
They're going to tell us what the curriculum needs to be.
They're going to define what the standards are.
We'll have to teach to those standards.
The tests will be defined to that and so forth.
There's so many different ways that they control us if they've got the money.
So it is a, and I think some of these bills are set up to be a gradual process that will
gradually wean ourselves off of this over many years.
But I imagine a push will come to shove quite a bit earlier than that.
I don't know.
It is a fundamental thing.
And of course, education is where they have pushed all this stuff, isn't it, Mark?
You know, they, whether you look at the 1619 Project or you look at what is happening
with the LGBT movement or the critical race theory, all these different things,
that is where they are pushing out all these ideas. It is of fundamental importance
how we educate and who educates our children, isn't it?
Yeah, no, I think that's absolutely right. So I was involved recently with the Florida Civics
Initiative, and they're doing great work down there.
They came up with an endorsement for teachers. I helped put together a series of lectures and basically a class that they could take.
And believe me, we talked about the points of American history that are uncomfortable.
Slavery and Jim Crow legislation and not permitting women to vote.
Of course, you're going to talk about that stuff,
but you can do that without doing the critical race theory thing.
And then you also want to get kids reading the Declaration of Independence,
the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, and engaging these fundamental documents.
Because ultimately, I contend America is a creedal nation.
The creeds are contained in those documents.
And so we need to engage them, and we need to engage them in a critical way. And we can have an argument, was Thomas Jefferson a hypocrite for
penning these wonderful words of the Declaration of Independence and continuing to hold slaves?
But let's also be aware that Ben Franklin owned slaves, freed them. Roger Sherman never owned a
slave. Robert Livingston owned some slaves and freed them. John Adams never owned, so it's a
mixed bag. And we should expose students to that
and let them discuss it and think about it in a critical way
and hopefully they'll come away with a greater appreciation
for the greatness it is, the United States of America.
I agree, and that's the importance of your book.
Again, the book is Proclaim Liberty Throughout All the Land.
You point out why Christianity has been a force for good
in the United States,
but you also talk to adults and you say,
here's why you need to not be afraid to talk about this.
Why are we afraid to talk about this today?
You know, I think the left and the academy and major media
has just done a good job, a very good job, of painting the American founders as a bunch of hypocrites.
And who wants to stand up for a hypocrite,
especially a slave owning hypocrite, right?
And so, especially if we don't know much about this era,
if we don't know much about these people,
we might just kind of be embarrassed of it
and we don't feel equipped to engage in a
serious debate and that's why i would encourage all of your all of your viewers to read a book
like proclaim liberty throughout all the land read a book like bill mcclay's promise of hope
daniel drysbox reading the bible with the founding fathers all these books are accessible they're
very accessible i don't even think you need a college degree to appreciate them and that
prepares us and to engage our neighbors in a winsome way, right?
It's not about winning a battle, but say, hey, wait, let's think about this.
Did you know that many founders didn't own slaves?
Many who did freed their slaves.
Even those who owned slaves took significant steps to prevent the expansion of slavery.
And then hopefully we can shake up our neighbors that have such a bad view of the American founders.
And if enough of us do that, perhaps we can affect a change.
And if you know history, and that's a key thing too, that's why your book is so important.
You realize that these people have created a straw man, literally created a scarecrow and said, you know, this is what Jefferson was, or this is what Washington was or whatever.
And then they beat up on that thing. And if you know what the truth is about these individuals, yes,
they were like any of us.
They had their contradictions.
They had their faults as well as their virtues.
So if you know the real history of the person,
if you've read their writings and you get a glimpse into their mind and where
they are, and if you understand the time,
that's an also another important thing is the,
how they were influenced by their time.
And many of these people, even though they engaged in things that we would condemn today, they were pushing in the direction that we'd celebrate today.
I think that's one of the key things there.
But it always is about ignorance, fear, shame, and guilt, isn't it?
That's the truth.
I think that's right.
And there's a real arrogance in it, right? I think many of our neighbors think we've somehow arrived at moral
perfection in the 21st century. And to point out as you do, look, the American founders were flawed
humans, but guess what? So are we today. One of the things I enjoy doing with my students is I
push them to say, look, imagine 200 years from now, our people then will look back on us. What kinds of things are we doing that they might say, how could they possibly do that? Because almost certainly we're doing things that are bad for the environment or dangerous or harmful that we don't recognize or we don't really think about. And the call there is just for humility. We aren't greater than the American founders.
We're all humans. We're all flawed. And in fact, I think you can make an argument that the
contributions of the founders were in fact greater than the contributions of almost any other group
of humans that we've seen throughout human history. This constitutional order that they
have set up has done a lot of good. And we've made so much progress even on something like
racial relations, right? We've abolished slavery. We abolished Jim Crow legislation. We've made so much progress even on something like racial relations, right? We've abolished slavery.
We abolished Jim Crow legislation.
We've made virtually every form of formal discrimination on the basis of race illegal.
Now, we know there's still racism out there, and we should be the first, and we have the
best reasons for combating that latent racism.
But to pretend there hasn't been huge progress on those matters is just ridiculous.
And of course, if everything is racist, then nothing is racist, right?
If they're going to cry, if everybody that they don't like, they point at them and scream
racist, then pretty soon you are giving a free pass to the people who really are racist
and to real racism.
I think when we go back and we look at how they've intimidated people, they've kind of
dumbed down our educational system by not letting us, you know, well, by not talking about history, by selecting
what they want to talk about, by giving us a false history. But they've also done, as you pointed out,
in terms of this whole idea of separation of church and state, they kind of imposed a silence
on us as baby boomers. We were trained not to talk about religion.
We were trained not to talk about politics.
And then they pushed their idea of religion and politics on us.
So what would you say to the baby boomers or to different generations
as to how they need to respond to this type of thing?
Well, the first thing I would do with respect to the separation of church and state
is say, read the First Amendment.
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion.
Now, that has been applied to the states through the 14th Amendment.
So let's just say all governments shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion.
What does that mean?
It means what it says.
Nine of the 13 colonies, nine of the 13 states had established churches.
One flavor of Christianity that's favored above all others everyone's taxed to support the favored church
sometimes the state's involved in running the church and saying how it's going to govern itself
and the american founders said we are not going to have this at the national level we are not going
to have a church of the united states of amer, but that doesn't mean that presidents can't issue
calls for prayer and fasting or Thanksgiving Day proclamations. It doesn't mean that Congress can't
appropriate money for religious schools in the territories. It doesn't mean that there can't be
legislative and military chaplains. And we can see this by looking at their actions. Even as
they pass the First Amendment, they're doing all these things. So today, I would say through the 14th Amendment,
Tennessee, Oregon, Virginia cannot have official state churches. That's what the First Amendment
prohibits. But that leaves a lot of freedom to do other things. It certainly doesn't require
tearing down World War I era crosses. It certainly doesn't mean that tax dollars can't flow to
religious schools on the same terms they flow
to other schools. There's a whole lot that's permitted under the Establishment Clause.
And what we need to do is make policy arguments at this point. Does school choice make sense?
What are the benefits of it? What are the weaknesses of it? I happen to be a huge advocate
of it, but I'm happy to hear the counter arguments. But don't pretend there's a wall of separation
between church and state that keeps religious schools from receiving tax dollars, because there isn't. And fortunately, the U.S.
Supreme Court today recognizes that. And of course, like so many things they've turned upside down,
inside out, Jefferson's wall of separation was a wall around the government, not around the churches
when he was writing that letter, right? But, you know, it is a fundamental difference between
establishment and between exercise, right?
That's the reality.
I think we need to focus on that.
And when we look at the establishment, going all the way up into the 1840s, you still had a Massachusetts.
They still had an official state church.
They were worried, as you pointed out, about not having an established federal church that was going to be over everybody. All the original states and colonies and then states had initially had their own separate churches based on the majority that was there.
Some of them would be congregational, some would be Baptist, some would be Catholic.
And so they didn't want to have one choice made for everybody at the federal level.
But technically, although I think it's a very bad
idea, because whenever you mix politics with religion, you get politics, you could have a
state-established church, because it did continue to go on after the Bill of Rights.
But it's all really about the exercise, and that's really what they put the kibosh on with
the Supreme Court decision and all of this talk about separation of church and state, isn't it? It's about the exercise.
Yeah, one of the things I argue in my last book is that the main opponents of established churches
were indisputably orthodox, pious Christians who argued just like you argue, when the government
runs a church, that always is bad for the church. We need to get the government out of
this business, and then the church will flourish. And this is exactly what happened in the early
19th century as the last state got out of the business of having an established church. We saw
the Second Great Awakening. We saw great revivals, and the church was tremendously healthy. Yeah,
I think the First Amendment, the religion clauses, Congress shall make no law respecting
an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof. It's fundamentally about
protecting religious liberty, both of individuals, but also groups. So churches, obviously,
synagogues, mosques by extension, but also religious entities like Catholic charities
or Covenant College. These are clearly protected by the First Amendment and rightly so.
I think it's key that we understand that there is something that is special that we should be Covenant College. These are clearly protected by the First Amendment, and rightly so.
I think it's key that we understand that there is something that is special, that we should be grateful, and that we've been blessed here in America more than many, many other nations,
and we should be looking at what that is and try to reclaim that. That's why I like your book,
Proclaim Liberty Throughout All the Land, because as I said many times, it's not enough just to come
back and say, no, we don't want that.
We need to have a positive vision of what we do want.
We need to have a positive vision of what works, what we want to be, the foundation
of our society.
And it's books like yours that really give us that.
Talk to people about the right way to not be silenced.
How do we bring our faith into the public square, just as individuals?
How do we do that?
Because there's going to be a lot of shame, guilt, intimidation.
People are afraid to do that.
Talk to people about giving their positive version of the Christian faith
and of history to other people as they learn it.
Sure. I'm not sure I have the final word on it, but here's at least a few thoughts that come
immediately to my mind. First of all, we should be characterized by love of neighbor. And so we
should make it crystal clear we love everyone, including people who disagree with us, and we
want the best for them. I think it's why we should be characterized by humility. So we should
recognize that we don't have everything all figured out. And yet we should be bold and we should be encouraged that if we're
faithful in the public square, if we go into the public square and make our arguments, that I'm not
saying we will eventually become successful, but you can certainly show lots of examples.
William Wilberforce being one of the greatest examples of this, someone who just poured his life into the opposition of the
international slave trade and then slavery within British colonies. And he died before he saw the
final fruits of his effort, but eventually he succeeded. The American abolitionists, I'm sure
it seemed like they would never win, and yet they were continuing. They were faithful. They were opposing slavery, explaining why it is an unjust and
unbiblical institution. And unfortunately, we ended slavery through a bloody civil war. But
as I suggested before, I don't think that had to be the case within our lifetimes. Opponents of
abortion, fighting an uphill battle, but consistently faithfully making arguments. I think sometimes
some pro-lifers made them in very inefficient ways back in the late 80s, early 90s, when people
are protesting and blocking abortion clinic doors. I understand the sentiment, but I'm not sure that
was very effective. And yet you have plenty of people like Robbie George and Ryan Anderson and
others who've been out in the public square making arguments against abortion, but in a very winsome way, reaching out to people, building alliances across the aisle.
And so I think that's our responsibility today.
I think all of us in America must be politically active.
It doesn't mean we have to run for office, but we should be informed.
We should vote, maybe write the occasional letter to the editor, maybe support Christians
who are more active and engaged in the public square.
I particularly single out those religious liberty advocacy groups that are fighting in our nation's courtrooms every day for religious liberty,
and not just for Christians, for Muslims and Jews and Sikhs.
I think it's a Christian principle that every individual should be able to worship God according to the dictates of conscience
and act upon those religious convictions wherever possible.
And we should be among the first and foremost in fighting for those rights.
Yeah, we don't want to have people who are converted at the point of a sword.
You know, we want it to be genuine conversion that comes from the inside if it's going to
be that type of situation.
We see in the GOP, and of course, we heard after the last election, a lot of people in
the GOP very upset
when we had Roe v. Wade overturned. We had candidates who were running for office who
went back and scrubbed their website and toned it down. And then we had, after the election,
we had comments that, well, the problem was that these pro-life people are just too extreme and
too radical in their defense of life. What do we do to shore up the GOP on this?
Is it a letter-writing campaign?
What do we do?
Or do we just bypass these politicians and start trying to educate people?
I agree with what you said about the physical interventions in terms of trying to block
clinics and things like that.
But, you know, there's other things.
I think of the excellent animated film, I don't know if you've seen it or not,
The Procedure that was narrated by Kevin Sorbo.
And it was based on a story of a guy who was an ultrasound doctor.
And he was called into a procedure.
He didn't know that it was an abortion.
And he describes an horrific, you know, he described what he saw and they animate it.
What a powerful piece that is.
We don't need to defend life.
We just need to show what it is and let the truth out, don't we?
Yes, I think there's a lot of wisdom in that sort of thing.
I think with these 3D sonograms that we can do nowadays with children, you know, so yeah, making the message again in a winsome way we
aren't judging people who have had abortion through might be having abortion just look
consider this um what do you think human life is let's talk about let's talk about it from
a scientific perspective let's talk about brain waves and heartbeats and dna and this sort of
thing and let's look at what we can see within a mother's womb i think as well we have to recognize politics is the art of the
possible i mean the um you know i think one of the problems something about as pro-life as you can
get i i would say all abortion should be banned period except when it's absolutely necessary to
save the life of the mother and i know some christians argue argue that that's not even
really a real problem but the reality is is, I think, you know,
we might need to compromise and we might need to at least start off by trying to get a 15-week ban,
no abortions after the 15th week. And let's make arguments, let's get something on the table,
and then perhaps work to push that back to six weeks, right? Politics is the art of the possible.
I think one of the problems in 2022 is some of these abortion
bans just seem too draconian that, of course, the extreme pro-lifers like myself are going to vote
for them. You got a lot of people in the middle who are uncomfortable. And then we always know
the extreme pro-choicers will vote against them. So again, politics is the art of the possible.
And we should be wise as serpents and as innocent as doves, right?
We have to be prudential in the public square.
Yeah, when we look at William Wilberforce, again, he did it,
it took his entire life, and he began by putting restrictions
on the transportation of slaves, then ending the transportation of slavery,
then going after ending the perpetuation of slavery,
keeping people in slavery.
So it was a process. Uh,
we know that that is a very important thing. I play all the time,
a quote from Anthony Fauci back in October, 2019,
before all this stuff happened. And, uh,
he was asked by some people at the Milken Institute, how do you, um,
how do you get everybody to take an untested vaccine,
do it around the world and get them to take it right away? And he goes, well,
you do it, uh, from the inside, you do it with disruption. They do it around the world and get them to take it right away. And he goes, well, you do it from the inside, you do it with disruption and you do it
iteratively. And I think that's a key thing is the iterative process.
But I think it's also important that, you know, when,
that was always a part of what William Wilberforce was doing.
He never sacrificed the humanity of the slaves. Right.
And that's really where the fundamental argument is. And I, and so I think,
you know, when you look at it, as you pointed out, you know, some of the more educational things, you know,
coming alongside people and showing them the reality that they've been lied to about when
life begins and what really the condition of the baby. I said from a long time ago when my wife
was involved with the pro-life group, I said, they need to pull all their money and advancing technology to get what we now have with 3D
ultrasound and to get more of it and to continue to improve that. I think that would be the key
thing. If we could get a great picture of that, I think we would end abortion overnight. If people
could really see the truth, I think it's a massive deception that is happening there.
Before we run out of time, just tell us a little bit about your hope for what is happening
in the future. You say it seems like dark days ahead, but we are not without hope as Christians.
What do you see in the road ahead? Do you see a lot of persecution? There certainly is going to
be confrontation from where we are right now if we're going to reclaim some of the light that we've lost.
Yeah, so I tend to be an optimist, and I think there's a lot of good things going on right now.
I see a lot of recognition among Christians that we do need to be involved in politics.
We need to be involved in the public square, and we need to do so in a winsome way.
I think in the 80s, maybe it was real easy to become arrogant and say, okay, we're going to take over America and run it as God would have us run it.
And that didn't work out all that well, right?
And so now perhaps figure out ways in which we can work with each other to, you know, win offices, to be sure.
But then to reach out across the aisle and try to do things that bring about real and meaningful results. I see a lot of great work being done at the more educational work
at some of the more conservative Christian schools,
places like George Fox and Regent and Hillsdale and Arizona Christian and whatnot.
And they're bursting at the seams, right?
It's getting really hard to get in some of those schools because parents are recognizing,
I don't want to send my kid, certainly not to a public university
or even to many private universities. You see this burgeoning homeschool networks and
classical Christian schools and that sort of thing. And so I think over time, these things
will pay dividends. We have an excellent U.S. Supreme Court nowadays. It's very protective of
religious liberty, very unsympathetic to claims that religion must be scrubbed from the public square,
protective of freedom of speech.
And so I think there's a lot of reasons to be optimistic.
We always have to be vigilant.
And as you and I agreed earlier, I think our number one prayer has to be for revival.
Just having Republicans win elections will not bring about salvation, right?
We need revival.
We all need to be praying for that end.
That's right.
What if we save the country and lose our own souls, right?
That's not what we want to have.
And I think it has been a real wake-up time that we've seen in the last couple of years.
I think the Zoom classes that we had during lockdown were kind of like ultrasound for the classroom.
Parents could see what was going on inside, and they didn't like it.
And so they started looking at alternatives, and it really galvanized them.
The book is proclaim liberty throughout all the land by Mark David Hall.
I would highly recommend this.
It is a great for you to read.
And again, uh, for those of you who have older homeschoolers, it's a great
foundation for them and answers a lot of questions, uh, even if you got younger
homeschoolers, read it yourself and you can put it in terms that your young child can understand the book again,
as proclaim liberty throughout all the land. Thank you so much. Uh, thank you so much, uh,
Mr. Hall. Appreciate that. Thank you. Thank you, David. It's been a real pleasure. Great resource.
Uh, before we run out of time, I want to respond to some of the messages that we have here on the
internet on rumble, uh allen becker thank you very much
i appreciate that tip and on rumble uh thank you yj72 appreciate the tip he said thank you dave for
a powerful message well thank you for your support i appreciate that and on rock fan we have general
mcguffin thank you that's very generous i appreciate that he says uh good morning david
whoever's on the switches that's travis uh hope all is well thank you for continuing to keep us
up being the missed information wishing you and your family blessings well thank you that support David, whoever's on the switches, that's Travis. Hope all is well. Thank you for continuing to keep us up to date on the misinformation.
Wishing you and your family blessings.
Well, thank you.
That support is a true blessing to us.
And before we run out of time, I've got this list here, and I didn't get through it earlier.
I just want to thank some of the people who, and I don't think I read these at the end
of the month in April, and we got pretty close on our goal last month in April.
We got up to just above 80% on it and I want to thank some of the people who have contributed through Zelle because
I don't have any way to thank them. And let me just read some of the first names and last initial
of people who have helped us this last month going back to April 24th. Darren M. Maurice G. Thor W.
Madison F.
Lafayette H.
Kyle H.
Matthew S.
Armando M.
Maurice Grant.
I'm sorry.
That means to give you full name.
Sorry, I got it written down here.
Jeremy M.
Benjamin R.
Jeffrey B.
Brian P.
William W. Kenneth C. Jay H., Kevin H., Jose G., Michael L., Kendra R., Gretchen C., Adam D., John G., Ramon G., Justin L., Matthew M., and Manny D.
And that brings us up to date going back to April 24th.
Thank you, all of you, for your support.
We really do appreciate that.
That is what makes this show possible.
We absolutely could not do it without you.
Again, I'll just give you the name of the book again.
It's Proclaim Liberty Throughout All the Land.
It's very important for us to understand what we want to see for this country. We have to have a
positive vision of this. We have to understand where we've been, or we can't understand where
we're going. And that's one of the reasons why I say it's very important to know why we knew
what was going on early 2020, because we knew the history. We knew what these people's plans were.
We know what the plans are with CRT, with the LGBT agenda, with the green agenda. They've made it very
clear their vision for our society. It's not enough just to say we don't want a net zero
surveillance slave state. We have to have a positive vision of freedom. That's what the founders of this country had.
That's what they had at the Mayflower.
And a positive vision can create a nation.
Thank you for listening.
The common man.
They created common core to dumb down our children.
They created common past to track and control us.
Their commons project to make sure the commoners own nothing.
And the communist future.
They see the common man as simple, unsophisticated, ordinary.
But each of us has worth and dignity created in the image of God.
That is what we have in common.
That is what they want to take away.
Their most powerful weapons are isolation, deception, intimidation.
They desire to know everything about us
while they hide everything from us.
It's time to turn that around
and expose what they want to hide.
Please share the information and links you'll find
at thedavidknightshow.com.
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