The David Knight Show - Interview: War in Iran, Propaganda War in the United States
Episode Date: March 13, 2026Journalist Eric Peters warns that the biggest weapon in the war with Iran may not be missiles—it’s information control. As images flood the media from Tehran while almost nothing emerges from Isra...el or U.S. bases, Peters argues the public is being fed a carefully managed narrative designed to manufacture support for what he calls an “evil, unnecessary war.” Money should have intrinsic value AND transactional privacy: Go to https://davidknight.gold/ for great deals on physical gold/silver For 10% off Gerald Celente's prescient Trends Journal, go to https://trendsjournal.com/ and enter the code KNIGHT Find out more about the show and where you can watch it at TheDavidKnightShow.com If you would like to support the show and our family please consider subscribing monthly here: SubscribeStar https://www.subscribestar.com/the-david-knight-showOr you can send a donation throughMail: David Knight POB 994 Kodak, TN 37764Zelle: @DavidKnightShow@protonmail.comCash App at: $davidknightshowBTC to: bc1qkuec29hkuye4xse9unh7nptvu3y9qmv24vanh7Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-david-knight-show--2653468/support.
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Discussion (0)
All right, joining us now is Eric Peters, a friend of the show.
We've had on many times, always interesting to talk to Eric.
And Eric Petersotos.com is where you'll find a lot of articles about liberty and mobility,
because you can't separate the two.
It's kind of like what Jefferson said about life and liberty.
The handle force can destroy but cannot destroy them.
Well, that's true of mobility as well as liberty as well.
So thank you for joining us, Eric.
Oh, thank you, Dave.
I always have a good time coming on your show.
I always enjoy it. Yes, let's talk about the, you've got several articles about what's going
on with this war. And I think when the key ones was the news blackout, that you talk about.
And I'm having that same problem as well. I'm looking at all this stuff. There's so much
disinformation and very little real information, and there is a point to all of that.
Yeah, doesn't it kind of feel to you sort of like Groundhog Day in that it's kind of back to 2020
where we weren't allowed to have access to real information about what actually was
going on and instead a steady stream of regime propaganda was was foisted upon us to try to
persuade us of things that were not true. Now it's even more egregious. It's startling how
effectively they have managed to suppress any news about what is happening within Israel, for
example, or what has happened to our bases in the region. They've got plenty of images about
things going on in Tehran and it's clear they're trying to manage the perception of the war.
And this is outrageous because Americans have a right to know what's happening to their sons and daughters in that part of the world, as well as, you know, what the consequences of this.
I'm just frustrated about it, this evil, idiotic, unnecessary, gratuitous war.
It is evil.
It is evil. Everything about it is evil.
And their lies are not even plausible.
You know, the lies that they tell us in terms of the cruise missile hitting the school and all the rest of this stuff are as implausible as a lot of this AI slop.
another aspect of it that's out there. We didn't have that six years ago. So not only do you have
these people actively suppressing information about what's going on, but they're also putting
out a lot of fake stuff. You've got people splicing together real clips from previous incidents
that happened in other areas and putting those out as if it was something that just happened.
And then there's clearly AI clips. Those are easier to spot. So it's kind of interesting when I look
at it on X. A lot of people are saying, hey, Grock, is this real? And I know that that's
mocked in and of itself. And yet, it is pretty good in terms of between community notes,
as well as Grock, it's pretty good at filtering out the lies that people are deliberately
putting up there to promote one side or the other, because they'll say, well, this particular
clip is a mixture of this clip from back here and that clip from back there. And they'll give you
links to those things, as well as sussing out when you can see the artifacts from artificial
intelligence. And of course, sometimes people will put up stuff that still have got the Gemini
logo on it. And then they'll argue with people who call BS on that. That aspect of it is new.
I hadn't seen that before. None of us had seen that before. It's frustrating and fruitless.
And I like to hang my hat on things that can be ascertained to be absolutely true, such as how
much the cost of fuel has increased in this country. That's an obvious consequence.
gasoline on average is 50 to 60 cents higher now than it was just 10 days ago. And I think the more
relevant, the more important aspect of this is really not being talked about that much is the
effect upon diesel fuel prices. Yes. Yeah. Even more so. Yeah, it's now up over $5 a gallon in most
parts of the country. And a lot of people don't make the connection between what they are paying
at the supermarket and Walmart and everywhere else for things and the cost of diesel fuel. Because
of course, things are moved from A to B, generally speaking, by heavy trucks that burn diesel and
diesel electric locomotives. So if the cost of diesel fuel goes up 25 or 30 percent, who do you
suppose is going to pay for that? We are. That's right. And we have all these hidden costs.
Going back to the OPEC embargo, which I know you remember as well as I do, and who could forget it.
And, you know, when you have a shock to the system at the energy price level, it percolates through
everything, just like a value-added tax. Every stage it gets added there, especially because of the
transportation of goods and services. And diesel is a big part of that. And diesel has gone up more
than the gasoline at the pump. And I think there might be a reason for that. It might be some
kind of manipulation that we're seeing there. But you point out that it's so hard to find out
what is happening in Iran. We have some people like Colonel McGregor. We have Scott Ritter.
We're talking about the damage that's been done to radar systems that control the fad and
Patriot missiles. But, you know, they have sources. And, you know, we can't.
verify that. Of course, that's the part of that is the fog of war that you're always going to see.
But a big part of it is that they're always blowing smoke at us as well. You know, they do that.
Yeah, left and right. The right is particularly egregious, but predictably so. The thing that's
astonishing is the so-called left, you know, which at one time at least posed as being anti-war.
You know, it was the left that aggressively reported about what was going on in Vietnam, for example.
Dan Rather, on the ground, you know, looking at what was happening over there and and help to generate
public outrage about what was going on over there. Now the left is as bad as the right.
They're both captive poodles of the same interests that are keeping us from knowing what's going
on so as to try to render us powerless to really intelligently come to any conclusion about what's
happening and then to do something about it. And then the absurd lies. I mentioned this every time I
talked to somebody about Mike Johnson saying, well, they attacked us. They shot at three of our embassies.
And it's like, well, you know, when that happened, that happened after you attacked their entire country.
It's incredible the lies that they push out there.
But you were talking about the fact you can't assess how much damage is being done to Iran or especially to Israel.
They have put out a complete news blackout in Israel to see what is happening with the missiles coming in.
Yeah.
And it's being respected by the U.S. media, which tells you something.
After all, now, don't we have a right?
Irrespective of what the state of Israel and the government of Israel say, I think we have a right to know what's happening in the,
this situation and yet, you know, we're being prevented from having that knowledge. It's,
it's infuriating. The whole thing is infuriating on so many levels. It's hard. Yeah, but look at how
this has been shaking out over a period of time. I mean, we went through this, as everybody was
pushing back against the atrocities in Gaza, you had the Zionist lobby pushed very actively
to get any of that protest against what that foreign government was doing to call that racism.
anti-Semitism and to censor it as hate speech. And of course, this is where the Republicans
who always said they hate these hate speech regulations, they hate censorship, they were eager to
jump in and do it for their masters. And so we have seen legislation after legislation,
proposed some of it enacted by the Republican Party. I still am astounded that Ron DeSantis
went to Israel to sign a speech censorship bill on behalf of Israel. Why would a government
of a state go to a foreign country and sign a censorship bill?
Of course, that's a rhetorical question.
Either he's owned or he's scared.
I'm not sure which it is.
It doesn't really matter ultimately.
There's another aspect of this, though, that I think bears discussing.
I think Colonel McGregor has touched on this, and it's the despicability inherent in the
Kabuki theater of the negotiations.
I put it in Airfinger's quotes before Trump decided to launch the war.
You know, they had the Iranians believing.
They sent these two arch-Zionists.
the president's son-in-law Kushner and Whitkoff, I mean, ridiculous to send these two guys who clearly are partisan agents to supposedly sit down with the Iranians to try to hammer out some sort of a deal when there was no deal.
It was a foregone conclusion that the attack was going to happen.
You know, that's the sort of a specific thing that, you know, Americans of another generation got up in arms about when the, you know, pardon the language, the dirty Japs sneak attack this on Pearl Harbor.
That was considered bad form.
That was considered contrary to the way civilized nations behave.
And also being the aggressor, you know, attacking when you've not been attacked,
attacking on the behalf of Israel, who had not been attacked at that point either.
And so all of that, the treachery, the lies, the snake attacks, is just disgusting.
And in the back and forth, it came out that Benjamin Netanyahu called Donald Trump on the carpet
because he said, I hear the Iranians contacted you secretly.
You're not talking to them without my permission.
Oh, no, no, we wouldn't do it.
And so to cover themselves, they said, we're not anti-Netanyahuism, right?
Because that's really what we're talking about here.
And so it said, we're not against him.
As a matter of fact, we got Kushner and Wikoff talk to him and the Mossad chief on a daily basis.
And it's like, well, that's kind of traitorous right there, isn't it?
Well, the thing that worries me most is that these lunatic ignoramus, I kind of regard them as such, have now painted us into a corner.
in the sense that they put American and Israeli prestige, so to speak, on the line behind this.
And apparently they thought that by assassinating a foreign head of state, the Ayatollah Khomeini,
that they would cause the regime to topple, and it would be another cakewalk,
kind of like the Venezuela operation.
And then they could strut around and show everybody how tough and big and bold they were.
Well, Iranians aren't folding.
And any thinking person understands why, because from the Iranian point of view, this is an existential
thing. That's right. They know that if they lose this, they lose their nationhood completely.
They become a vassal state. And therefore, they are going to fight hard to the very bitter end.
They're not going to give in. And you can't just bomb these people into submission. It's not going to
happen. It isn't happening very evidently. And so what's next? Are we going to commit half a million
ground troops? Where are they going to come from? And that would take months. And are the American people going to
put up with a draft? I hope you know, with those dollars being.
dragooned to be sent over to Iran.
And what then?
You know, if that doesn't work, what's the next step?
In other words, they've now placed particularly Israel in this position.
You know, Israel likes to be perceived as sort of the invincible hegemon in the area.
If the Iranians win by simply not losing, that's all they have to do.
I think it's not out of the bounds of possibility that the maniacs that run that state might
resort to nuclear weapons to try to end this, you know, in a win as they see.
As a matter of fact, there's some.
clips that I've seen people talking back and forth. I'm not sure myself what the status is of it,
but it certainly looks like a nuclear bomb. And if they don't use a nuclear bomb, they could use
out of their arsenal things that are as destructive, if not more destructive, than many
nuclear bombs that are conventional weapons. But, you know, that is the magic word going nuclear.
And yet, when you look at the massive destruction that they're unleashing, and I think the most
sickening thing of all this is Pete Hegsteth and how he revels in all this carnage.
It just disgusting.
He's a maniac.
He's out of hand.
He's working people who thinks that by blowing up the Middle East, he's going to hasten
the return of Jesus.
He's lecturing the soldiers over there, apparently, that, you know, this is the end times.
It's this eschatological apocalyptic view based upon the Schofield Bible that some of
these people have.
Huckabee is of the same mind.
That's right.
People should be in a mental hospital, not having their,
lovers, hands on any levers of power. Yeah, and I keep telling everybody, this is not Christianity.
You know, Jesus said, blessed are the peacemakers, because they'll be called children of God.
Not somebody who has physically traced their genealogy and claims that they got a connection.
And, of course, there's questions about that as well. But that's the reality. And so he's out there
quoting things like, you know, God who prepares my hands for warfare, my fingers for battle.
that's not what that's about either because as a Christian he should know that is metaphorical
for a spiritual battle. God doesn't equip our hands for warfare so he can go out and do preemptive
strikes against civilians and murder hundreds of schoolgirls. That's not following God. And it disgust me
to see this. And his tattoos or is just as phony and his crusader ideas are just as nonsensical
as his Christian ideas. He does not represent Christianity in any way, shape, or form. He is
anti-Christian. There's some other aspects of this. You know, the state of Israel, people like Netanyahu,
he's at best a secular Zionist. He's not even a, you know, a religious observant Jewish person.
And there is antipathy and worse toward Christians in Israel. They get attacked in the streets.
Spent on.
Yeah, they get spun on. Now the state of Israel is bombing, as you know,
the Christian enclaves in Lebanon, killing Christian people.
And you've got, nonetheless, apparently it doesn't bother Hegzeff or any of these other
crazed, demented Zionists, whatever you want to call them.
It's really something to worry about.
Yeah, they don't care about fellow Christians.
They don't only care about people who say that they're Jewish.
And this is really a sad thing.
But, you know, when we look at this, Eric, I'm looking at the gas tank for the
the U.S., the Strategic Petroleum Reserve that we've got there, right?
What kind of idiot clowns go to war without filling up their gas tank, and they didn't?
It's still less than 60%.
It's at 58%.
I started looking this up.
The stupidity of this, it almost beggars articulation.
You'll hear Trump talk about, well, we have Venezuela.
There is a lot of oil in Venezuela.
Yeah, it's in the ground.
And it's quite a different matter to get that oil out of the ground and get it refined and get it shipped
and get it into the supply chain.
That's something that's going to take years to happen.
And it's not going to happen without resistance either.
As we're seeing in the Gulf states,
it's very easy to do a terrorist attack,
if that's what you're inclined to do,
to attack the infrastructure of your enemy.
If they regard the United States as a bully
and as an enemy, there's a lot of people
that could take it out on the infrastructure that's there.
And you may not be able to get any of that stuff out.
But you also had Lindsey Graham prattling around
talking about how we're going to get rich,
We're going to control over a third of the world's oil between Venezuela and Iran.
You may not have any of it.
I mean, Israel started blowing up the oil refineries in Iran.
And at first, Lindsey Graham and Trump said, don't do that.
Don't do that.
We want that oil when we get it.
Now they're joining in with Israel, blowing this stuff up.
And now Iran is apparently looking at, they've already made a couple of preemptive strikes against desolumization plants,
as well as the liquid natural gas plant.
and an oil refinery.
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They could basically, by attacking ports and refineries and factories, they could basically shut down the supply of oil and gas
without even shutting down the strait of Hormoos.
And it could take a very long time to get that back.
Effectively, they're doing it.
My understanding is a couple of ships have already been hit in the straits.
And Trump, in his usual,
platoonish bellicose way, says that, well, they should just grow some guts
and they should drive their tankers.
Said from Mr. Bonespurs, who dodged the draft back in Vietnam,
his son, no offense.
I mean, I mean, Baron Trump is just a kid.
I don't want to see Baron Trump get dragged into this anymore than anybody else.
But the point is, you know, he's not going to suit up.
He's not going to go.
Trump's not going to send him.
Lindsay Graham has no skin in the game.
None of these people do.
It's like his evil gerontocracy, you know,
just has no moral compunction whatever
about putting other people's lives and fortunes
at risk and at peril.
And then just disregarding the havoc that they cause.
It's obscene.
That's right.
And he's more than willing to put the deep water navy
in that tiny straight, which is shallow water.
It's very different the way they're.
operate. You know, it's set up to be operating to hit things at a distance that are there in deep
water. They can't operate in that straight. And if he puts them in there, and yet you still have
his Secretary of Energy come out and lie about the fact that the Navy is escorting tankers
the Strait of Hormuz had a big effect on Tuesday in terms of oil. Even after people realized
that it was a lie, and even after they took the tweet down, even after the White House pullback,
He said, well, no, that's actually not true.
It still had the desired effect on the marketplace, which is really truly crazy.
Yeah, temporarily.
You know, I think maybe Trump's idea is to goad the Iranians into attempting to sink an American aircraft carrier or something,
which would then perhaps give Trump the pretext to nuke the Iranians.
The man literally said something about he's not limited by anything at all except his own view of what is right.
That's right.
Yeah.
He could do anything he wishes.
And when he was talking about the tariffs and his temperament, he's not limited.
temper tantrum after the Supreme Court shut down that illegal move that he had there.
When he was talking about that, he said, I can do anything I want. I can apply any
tariff that I want to to any country. I can destroy any country that I wish. And of course,
he knows it's a tax. He knows that a tax is a power to destroy. But of course, he can destroy
any country he wishes with arms as well. That's what he's trying to do. And back to what we're
talking about in terms of the war and how it's going. Iran has watched what the United States has
done for a very long time because we have been at war with them not for 47 years. A clock didn't
start when they took over the American embassy and they put in the Ayatollahs. That was a response to
what we'd done about 26 years earlier. In 1953, when we overthrew their government. And I know
because I knew some Iranian students in college who were telling me about that. They were protesting
the Shah's horrific regime when I was in college and they were showing up a bala-clava's over their head
and everything. And so what's that all about? And they said, well, let me tell you about the
Savak. You know, this thing that's trained by the CIA and Mossad, secret police that would
kill and torture people if they realize that you're a political opponent. That's why we have
the Ayatollahs is because we did regime change once before. And we don't know what we're doing
when we do regime change. Sometimes we put in something that's even worse. And if they say that the
Ayatollah is worse than the Shah, well, you caused that. Just like Trump caused the pump price
is to go up, he caused the Ayatollah, our American policy by the CIA and the continuing
deep state is what caused us to have an Ayatollah there.
And so these people have been looking at this for the longest time.
They realize that the Achilles heel of the mighty American military is to have a drawn-out
war of attrition and to use asymmetric warfare against our very expensive, complicated, and
centralized systems.
And they have a decentralized system.
And even taking out the Ayatollah.
And again, I got this from Al Jazeera because you have to read, you know, some of these other sources out there and try to figure out that the truth lies maybe somewhere in between these two extremes that we get here, the pro-Zionist media here in America and the anti-Zionist media that's outside of the country.
And so what they were saying was they had what they called the fourth successor.
And they had people four deep to replace the individual leaders that were taken out as well as decentralized commanding.
control. And so they're in it for the long haul. Absolutely. You know, Americans unfortunately
have a very superficial understanding of history, even their own recent history. Iraq is a parallel
for what's going on in Iran. The sort of situational morality for many years, Saddam Hussein was
considered to be a great ally of the United States. You know, there are famous pictures you can
find online of Don Rumsfeld going to Iraq and shaking hands with Saddam Hussein. And we use them as an
ally against Iran. Yes. But then he became inconvenient for one reason or another. And all of a sudden,
at that point, they seem to have recognized, oh, he's a bad guy. He has, you know, he has dungeons and he
has secret police and he drags people off into the night, exactly like the Shah. Yeah.
You know, and for people who live in these countries, it's, it's just, it's beyond contemptible to
hear. It's bad enough what they do. But the way they have this moral unction when they do it,
and preen posture is if they are fighting some sort of.
of great crusade in the name of all that is good and decent,
when they are the most depraved, duplicitous, and evil people that you can possibly imagine.
Yeah, C.S. Lewis had a quote that was similar to that. I can't remember exactly what it was,
but it's like, you know, there's nothing worse than somebody who's on this moral crusade
and think that God is on their side. And they said, yeah, you know, the question is,
are you on God's side, first of all? If somebody tells you that God is on my side,
beware of that person. Because they typically think they're God, right?
Yeah, and Americans in the main, a lot of them, not all,
but a lot of them have difficulty viewing things from the point of view of others.
How do you suppose American Catholics would respond if,
let's say,
Iran had attacked the Vatican and killed the Pope and half the college of Cardinals?
That's right.
What do you suppose the reaction would have been?
Yeah.
You don't have to like the Ayatollah Khomeini.
The point is he was their spiritual leader.
And generally speaking,
most people don't like their leader being taken out by some foreign country.
That's right.
All they succeeded in doing was generating the,
the fury of the Iranian people
and the Piester resistance was the
bombing of that school and killing
170 kids, girls.
That just doesn't wear well.
And they can't even apologize for it.
Senator Kennedy apologized for it.
John Kennedy out of Louisiana.
He apologized for it.
They can't have the decency to say,
I'm sorry we made a mistake.
That's not the type of thing we do.
Instead, you've got Pete Heggseth.
We're going to kill everybody.
We're going to rain death and destruction from the skies.
How more disgusting can you get?
It's just being unbelievable.
We'll probably find out in the next 24 hours.
That's right.
They've scraped the bottom of the barrel.
The barrel turns out to be even deeper.
That's right.
Well, you're talking about killing the Pope or whatever.
They're killing the Islamic Pope.
You was spiritual leader, not just to a lot of people in Iran, but to all these Shiites.
And that's about 500 million people, roughly.
And so that's not limited to Iran.
And so the war is not going to be limited to Iran.
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you might as well publish it. You know, it's so obviously stilted, so obviously malicious.
People see it. And I'll tell you, the thing that worries me the most right now is that,
as vile as Trump is that he has, he's kind of gamed this out.
The only thing I can come up with to explain the gratuitous arrogance of his actions lately
is that he doesn't fear consequences.
He's not worried about the midterms because I think that it's very possible that he's going to
pull a Zelensky and declare an emergency.
And in an emergency, we can't have elections because it's too chaotic.
I wouldn't put anything past that.
Yeah, I wouldn't put anything past that guy.
He absolutely has just like Hegeseth.
They have nothing but contempt for the Constitution, for any law, for any rule, for any morality.
They have contempt for it all.
And Trump's MO, I said, we've got three branches of government now, right?
We've got the legislative, the judicial, and the emergency branch.
Because that's the way he operates.
He declares an emergency, and then he does whatever he wishes.
It's not even the executive branch anymore.
Right.
And now Americans have gotten used to the site of body armored goons marching around on the streets.
So it won't seem that odd to them if all of a sudden the emergency gets declared.
And, you know, they lock down the cities using these American latter-day version of the S-A, you know, back in Germany, you know, back in the 30s.
Like you, I put absolutely nothing past this man anymore.
Or Pete Higgs at, don't you find it amazing, you know, going back to this fight over, you should,
and follow illegal orders. How dare you say that? We're going to punish you. We're going to
take your pension and all the rest of stuff for saying that. Instead of saying, I didn't do any,
I didn't give any illegal orders. He said, how dare you tell people not to follow my illegal
orders? And now we've got the same type of thing happening yet again with Pete Hegseth,
this time with Anthropic and saying, we've got some red lines. We're not going to allow
our stuff to be used for. We're not going to let you do police state domestic surveillance.
And we're not going to let you do autonomous killing machines.
And so then Pete Hanks says, how dare you?
We're going to destroy you as a company.
That's also unprecedented.
We've never seen that that happened to anybody.
Somebody that they're still using their product in this Iran war for targeting and for other
other intelligence, but they're now going to try to destroy that company.
And they're just off the charts in so many different ways.
There's also a matter of historical amnesia here in this.
sense that it was literally considered to be a war crime to claim that you are only following orders.
You know, the Nuremberg Code did not excuse what was done by the individual soldiers and the chain
of command down the line when they claimed, well, you know, the legitimate government of the state
ordered me to load people into box cars. It ordered me to shoot these people. I was only following
orders. That was not considered a legitimate defense, even though the orders were technically legal.
still considered immoral. So, you know, now we're in a situation where, again, the question isn't,
well, are these orders constitutional? Are they immoral? It doesn't matter. They are orders. You must
follow orders. That's right. You know, regardless. And Americans are being conditioned to be good Germans.
These people are so filled with hubris. They know that there's not anybody's going to stop them.
Nobody's going to oppose them except the other tribe. And it's going to be just dismissed as a tribal
opposition, but nobody has the power to arrest them some kind of an international criminal court.
And so it's like, yeah, you and what army is going to bring me up to a Nuremberg trial, which
they should be facing.
You're right.
They should be facing that.
But that's why they're acting this way.
And of course, the GOP as a group is just rolling over for all this stuff.
They're rolling over for the war.
This is the party that wants to tell you that they're pro-life.
This is the party that tells you that they're for particular.
protecting children and yet they're protecting pedophile predators that are there. It's disgusting to see this.
And they want to tell you that they are there to protect the economy. And we've probably never seen
anything as destructive as this particular war for the economy. Yeah, particularly, it couldn't have come
at the worst possible time. At a worst possible time, you know, we've been reeling now for five years
since COVID. You know, people are just barely clinging to their status quo.
That's right. Can you imagine?
what will happen when it costs $100 to fill up a vehicle.
Yeah.
And when $100 buys you,
maybe a small bag of groceries at the store,
if there are any groceries.
That's right.
This is, this is, this is, this is economically, politically,
culturally catastrophic.
You know, people when they are pressed into desperate situations
are going to begin to behave desperately.
And then it's game on.
And who wants that?
Nobody, apparently, only only people who want that are Trump and his sycophantic
apologists. Yeah. He's a one-man tool of chaos. I think that was his purpose of being put in.
I call him a one-man fourth turning, war and depression, right? And he wants to take us back to the
last fourth turning of World War II in the Great Depression. And he's doing everything he can
to take everything down because they need to do that to rebuild their technocracy or whatever
communist authoritarian nightmare system they got planned. They have to first destroy
the system is here. Trump has been doing that throughout his first and his second term,
especially in the second term. He's really accelerated that. They're getting very close to their
timing of 2030 where they want to have this new system in. They've been boasting about that for the
longest time. And so it's got to all happen in this term. And he is doing everything he can to create
chaos and economic depression and war. This episode is brought to you by Spreaker. The platform
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Sprinker, because if you're going to talk to yourself for an hour, you might as well publish it.
Yep.
You know, I apologize.
I voted for the guy again, stupidly.
I'll never do anything like that again.
And I allowed my hope to overcome my judgment.
You know, I should have remembered the way that he behaved during his first term, particularly the last year.
during COVID. When it did not end the emergency, when he had the power to do it and when it was
very obvious by the summer of 2020, that the whole thing was an overblown, overhyped fraud.
He could have at that point ended it. He chose not to. And what did that do? That set the predicate
for the mass absentee balloting and for election months that assured we were going to end up with
Joe Biden. That's right. And now he's out there threatening to shut down the government if they don't
passes Save Act, which basically is to say, you're not going to do any vote by mail.
It's like, you're the guy who put the vote by mail in with your lockdown stuff.
And I said it wouldn't happen.
I said, this is going to be disastrous.
This is going to be the biggest, you know, manipulation of the election that you've seen.
I thought it was going to be manipulated, but I thought it'd be manipulated through
computerized voting machines primarily.
But that offered another entirely new dimension.
And now he's out there, even calling it Save America Act, and Save America.
America was the name of his pack that he used to grift money off of people after the election that he had thrown with his rules and lockdown and vote by mail.
Then he sets up to Save America Pack and raises like $250 million and sends people to January to 6th.
He picked their pockets and put their head in a noose.
It's amazing.
I think it's difficult for most of us who aren't sociopaths and psychopaths to really understand how these people operate and what they think because we've got an internal check.
that you know if a certain thought crosses your mind you go oh my god i could not i can't do that that
that would be horrific i'm not going to do that so we don't think what they do and therefore it was
difficult for me i'll give you know i to to see that that trump was put in there in 2016 to further
a certain purpose come 2020 we get joe biden what did we get with that we got the lgbcc stuff trannies
you got the summer of love and that naturally outraged most normal americans you know they just
and the covid stuff on top of it so it's sort of
set the stage for this, this resurgent populist nationalist movement that Trump is the head of.
You know, he's going to ride his white horse in and he's going to save us.
And people voted for that.
And I saw that at Info Wars.
I saw the people that Alex is bringing in that were associated with the intelligence agency.
And people think of the intelligence group as being these people like Clapper and Brennan who are left wing.
There's a big right wing component to it.
And those were the people that Trump was, that Alex is bringing in all the time to put.
Trump. These are the people who were behind him the entire time. So this is basically really a right-wing
coup, and I mean a real right-wing coup, like a chili type of, you know, Pinochet type of coup,
that they're really queuing up here. Well, it was brilliant because let's, you know,
hypothesize that Harris had won. Most of the people who are on the Trump side would have been
outraged and protesting by the things that Trump has done. But because it's Trump and there are members
of the Trump cult, the Red Hat cult, they find ways to bend themselves over backwards to come up
with some 55D chess explanation for it. It's beginning to fall apart. But it's astounding the degree
to which they have snapped into line, just like the people on the left that they derided as NPCs,
you know, robotic sheep, who were just following whatever the narrative was that was being deployed by the
left. Well, it's exactly the same thing now. So, you know, the setup seems to be that if we do
have elections, there's going to be this horrendous backlash against everything that is tainted
by Trump. He's going to have tainted populism and nationalism, perhaps irrecoverably for a
generation. I agree. It's like a Herbert Hoover all over again. And we're going to get an authoritarian
leftist dominated government for the foreseeable future, maybe forever. I agree. He's there to point.
all the perspective of anybody, you know, yeah, it's just like this Christian nationalism thing.
It's like, oh, you're Christian? Oh, you support this Christian nationalism stuff? It's like, no.
But it's this odious thing that they associate you with, and then people start running the other way.
And it's kind of interesting, too, because remember, when Tulsi Gabbard got in, now she has basically discredited herself completely,
opposing the war now, staying silent and staying in the regime. She said,
my position here is to restore trust in government.
RFK Jr. said the same thing.
And they have used that blind trust to betray people in terms of what people
expected them to do.
They expected RFK Jr. to push back against the COVID shots to expose the vaccines and
other things like that. And he hasn't really done that.
He's allowed that stuff to keep going.
I think it's been very effective at demoralizing people.
Yeah.
You realize that nothing ever, ever gets done for the good.
this Epstein thing, the reason it never goes anywhere is because both parties are, they're all
involved in this. That's right. They have a common interest in suppressing what was going on.
They have a common interest in making sure that nobody has ever held accountable, not Bill Gates,
not Dr. Fauci, whatever happened to any of that. You know, these COVID controls, these people who
visited unprecedented harm on the American people, nothing happens to them. You or I, you know, we drive by
a cop not wearing a seatbelt, you know, and we'll feel the full of force and effect of the law, even though
we've harmed absolutely nobody, but you know, you can harm hundreds of millions of people
if you're Albert Burla or Dr. Fauci, and nothing happens. And meanwhile, they co-op people like
RFK Jr. and Gabbard. You know, people think, oh, they're going to, they're going to do something
for good. And maybe they've done a little bit of good here and there. But at the end of the day,
they got played also. And they just look like fools that got bamboozled again, you know, by the
arm's man. It's appalling. Well, you're talking about getting pulled over from my
traffic violations. We just had a, it was exposed that there was, the stay highway patrol had some
quotas evidently. And you had certain officers who were very aggressively charging people with drunk
driving. And yeah, one guy, like 50 some odd people from one trooper. And half of them were, we're not
drinking at all. They were completely sober, but he charged them with drunk driving. So yeah,
this is the kind of stuff that we get. When they put out quote,
with this kind of stuff.
You get what we saw with ICE in Minnesota.
And you also see what Scott Ritterer said was he said,
they go in on this strike against Iran,
and they've got quotas in terms of number of places that they went ahead,
which means that they're not really careful about what they're targeting, right?
And so you wind up with this situation like we did at the girls' school.
That is the way all this stuff is being managed.
But let's talk a little bit about cars.
Absolutely.
You've got an interesting article there,
breaking for a bag. Tell people
we should talk about there. Yeah, an interesting story
surfaced the other day about a guy who was driving his SUV
with something called automated emergency braking, which most new cars have now.
And essentially, the system confused a plastic bag that was tumble-weeting across the highway
with some kind of an object. And the system is designed to slam on the brakes,
you know, in the event that it thinks that the car should break and the driver hasn't
break. Of course, you know, on a highway when that happens for no apparent reason, it tends to result
in somebody rear-ending you. Yeah. That's just the nature of the thing. Yeah. And, you know, this AEB thing,
the really pernicious thing about it is that the federal government has mandated that come 2029,
all new vehicles have to have this technology. Wow. You know, their argument is, their argument is that,
well, you know, we'll save, again, we'll save lives, you know, because inadvertent people who aren't
paying attention to what's going on in front of them, the car will break.
for them. The problem with it is, of course, that you have situations like this, inadvertent
breaking that are in and of themselves a danger. I've had it happen to me. You know, the federal
government has registered thousands of incidents of this. A couple of years ago, I was driving a Toyota
Prius. And I was the only car on the road. Nobody was around me. And all of a sudden, the car
just slammed to a stop. I guess it saw a ghost or something. You know, because they always use
the word smart when they talk about these technologies. They're not smart. It's just programmed.
You and I are smart in the sense that we can, you know, we can perceive things with our eyes.
And that this wonderful biological computer that we have called a brain can then filter and interpret the information.
And we can immediately say, well, that's just a plastic bag.
Yeah.
You know, it's not a child.
It's not a deer.
It's not anything I need to hit the brakes for.
I'm just going to keep on driving.
These dumb systems that rely on a camera find distinction.
Yeah.
So, you know, that's one of the-
It was hallucinating, I guess.
Yeah.
But you remember a few years ago when they had, I think it was an Uber self-driving thing?
And they were, they had a fully autonomous driving because they had somebody behind the wheel.
And it ran over that lady who was homeless who was crossing the street with a shopping cart or something.
And they said, well, it was dark.
She wouldn't have been able to see it.
And, of course, the camera that was watching her, she's sitting there playing with her phone
because she's been lulled into passivity because the saying is doing.
most of what it needs to do, but it doesn't stop when it sees a person coming.
But, you know, they said, well, you can't see her.
She's out there in the dark, and she's not in the headlights.
And said, yeah, but this thing's got LiDAR.
And it can see in the dark.
Why didn't it slam on the emergency breaks?
And they said, well, we disconnected the emergency breaks because they were constantly
kicking on for no reason at all.
So we just disable those.
And it's like one system after the other, right?
Failure.
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There's a dehumanizing aspect of this, in my opinion,
in that it detracts from agency.
What do I mean by that?
Well, when I get behind the wheel of a vehicle,
I'm in charge of the vehicle.
I'm responsible for controlling it.
And if I am neglectful, if I'm pecking at a cell phone, I don't do that.
But let's say I'm pecking away at my cell phone while I'm driving.
And I pile drive into somebody else.
Well, then I'm morally responsible as well as legally responsible because I didn't maintain control of my vehicle.
The accident could have been avoided.
Now what they're done with these technologies is placing people in the position of not being either morally or legally responsible.
You know, after all, the car is responsible.
Well, who's responsible when somebody gets killed?
Who are you going to bring into court or sue for damages and, you know, people get killed and how is that going to be compensated?
You know, it's- And think about that in terms of the autonomous killer robots, right?
Just like we saw with the situation of the school, if that was targeted and directed by artificial intelligence to whatever role it had, but once they go to fully autonomous killer robots, then they can come back and say, well, who's responsible for that?
It's not my job, right?
everybody can pass the buck onto somebody else and nobody has to take responsibility for it.
And that's another huge region not to have these things because it allows people to avoid any
responsibility.
So it allows them to be a lot more reckless and careless with what they're doing.
Yeah.
And there's another aspect of this I think people should be aware of, which I worry about.
It is that once these things are a federally required safety feature, which they will be in
29, which is less than three model years away from now, they,
will probably come up with the argument that a vehicle does not have it, older vehicles,
constitute a threat and a hazard.
They'll say, well, if every vehicle on the road had this automated emergency breaking,
then they all sort of follow each other in a correct conga line.
And, you know, if this car break, then that car would break.
And they would all be in communication through V2V technology.
And we wouldn't have any problems.
And we'd reduce the fatality rate.
You know, it will help improve safety.
And then they'll say the only way that you can continue to operate a vehicle that does not
have that technology on on government roads. They call them public roads. They're the government's
roads. If you retrofit it, the problem is that that's not that's not feasible to do it from a
technological or economic point of view with older vehicles. You just, I suppose could do it if you
had a limitless amounts of money and completely re-engineer the car, but it's not like adding a
third brake light, let's say. It's an extraordinarily complicated piece of technology.
And I see this as a way, another way, there's so many of these pincers that are moving to shut us out of
cars, that this is way for them to effectively outlaw pretty much every vehicle that was made before
roughly 2015 or so when this technology started to come online. That's right. It is very much like
a singularity where you have all these different regulatory threads, as you point out. It's like
some kind of a spider's web. It's all coming together to control every single aspect of our life
and to make everything illegal. I think they're just kind of waiting for the older ones of us to
die out. I saw this when we were in Virginia.
trying to cover an event at one point in time.
And we're having difficulty seeing this thing.
So we thought, well, what we're trying to cover,
so he thought, let's get a boat and we can get a different perspective on it.
So we go to get a boat and you had to have a license in Virginia to drive a boat.
And I said, I've been driving a boat since I was eight years old.
And I said, well, you're old enough that your grandfathered in.
So it's like anybody that was over 50 or something like that,
they didn't require them to have a license.
But if you were under 50, you had to have a license.
And we're starting to see this with smoking cigarettes.
for example, I think it was New Zealand or Australia.
One of them made it illegal for anybody to ever smoke a cigarette if you were born after a certain date.
And so this is a kind of insanity.
They're just gradually ratcheting everything down into a slave state.
They're doing it.
It's kind of like it's an interesting dichotomy to me in that it's sort of the superficial moralizing.
You know, like how dare you smoke a cigarette?
How dare you have a beer?
Those things are outrageous.
and they must be stamped out forever more.
On the other hand, these people are perfectly willing to commit genocidal mass murder,
you know, and do horrible wholesale things to people that are egregiously immoral.
That's okay, but you better buckle up for safety.
That's right.
I saw a funny joke about Trump.
They said, somebody just threw a bear at Trump.
Fortunately, he was able to dodge it.
Dodge the draft.
Yeah, he's always had a lot of experience dodging the draft.
So, yeah, let's talk a little bit about ethanol blues,
because while we're talking about alcohol, I was at a think tank once,
and it was all these conservative think tanks,
Heritage Foundation, of course, the biggest one.
But all these different states have think tanks as well.
And so this is a big convention of them.
And this one organization was hosting an event,
and they set it up as a speakeasy.
And as they handed out the invitation, they said,
if you want to come to the party, you just show up and knock at the door
and say, I'm here for the ethanol subsidy.
So you got ethanol blues again. What's that about?
Well, it's just an ongoing thing that has been in existence now for what, 40 years, at least, maybe 50 years.
Yeah.
When as a SOP to the agribusiness lobby, which is almost as powerful as APAC politically, they created this requirement in federal law that requires the introduction of ethanol into the fuel supply.
So most of the gasoline that's available at the pump is not actually gas.
It's 10% ethanol.
90% gas, that's what you're buying.
So it's adulterated with ethanol.
Why does that matter?
Well, among other things, ethanol has less energy, BTO content than gasoline.
So the unit volume, you know, if you have a gallon of E10 versus a gallon of 100% pure gasoline,
you're going to get lower gas mileage.
You're not going to be able to drive as far on that.
So it costs you more to drive the ethanol-laced.
gas than it does real gas. For older vehicles, it's a, it's a really sneaky way for them to sort
of accelerate the obsolescence of vehicles that were made at a time when the assumption was that
gasoline would be the fuel that would be used. And this was all the way through the 80s. That's when
the RFG thing started, ethanol things started to come online. Well, vehicles that were made before then,
you know, the engineers assumed that the gas tanks, fuel lines, rubber parts, everything that came into
contact with the fuel was going to be coming into contact with gasoline, not alcohol. Alcohol is
chemically different than gasoline. It has different properties. It interacts differently with things
like steel lines and plastics and rubbers. And it deteriorates and degrades them. That's why even though
vehicles have been made to be ethanol compatible now for 40 something years, power equipment isn't.
You know, if you buy a chainsaw, if you buy a lawnmower, you'll probably see a little sticker on it that
says, do not use ethanol fuel in this, this thing. You know, you have to find a station that
sells, they call it now pure gas. It's kind of like pure bloods. It sells pure gasoline. And it's
worth the extra cost, you know, particularly because it doesn't store very well. That's the reason why
they don't want you using the E10 in outdoor power equipment that sometimes will sit for four
months out of the year, you know, during the fall and the wintertime. If you leave that stuff in the
the fuel tank, odds are your equipment isn't going to work come spring when you need to cut
the grass or whack the weeds.
Yeah, when you look at it big ag, you talk about the footprint that they've got.
I remember the back and forth, even people like Al Gore was raging about ethanol.
He says, we don't want this.
We don't need this.
And so the environmentalists weren't pushing it.
It was big ag that was pushing it.
And we just saw the last week or so, the Trump administration and the Republican Party saying,
we're not only going to not stop glyphosate, a known carcinogen that is permeating our food supply
and poisoning our farmland, but we're going to mandate and compel its production,
and as part of that, we'll give them legal immunity against lawsuits.
And the Republicans applauded that when Trump did that as an executive order.
It's just insane.
Well, they're well paid to do that.
They're also talking about making E15, which is 15 percent ethanol.
the new standard. Because again, there's a lot of money. And, you know, people don't really
understand the sort of tiered effects of this. It's not just the effects in your vehicle or
your outdoor power equipment. It costs a great deal to produce this ethanol. And, and crops that
ordinarily would have gone toward feedstocks, let's say, for cattle, are instead diverted to the
production of ethanol. So it has had a secondary effect of causing an increase in the cost of food.
People don't understand and realize that that's going on.
Who benefits?
It's not, you know, mom and pop, farmer Joe down the road.
It's these gigantic cartels, these combines that are using the government to rob us blind and ruin us at the same time.
Yeah, that's right.
You got an article about EV, the real purpose of the EV push.
But let me just say, you know, one of the things that you're talking about, I think it was the Chevy Bolt, Volt.
Was it a Volt or Bolt?
The one that had the generator, right?
Oh, you're talking about the Volt.
that was technically a hybrid, but it carried its engine chiefly as a generator.
That's right.
Well, now, as Ford is pulling back from this, they're moving towards what they call,
they're now calling those extended range EVs, ER EVs.
And as you pointed out before, that's probably the best use of an EV that you could have
in terms of using the motor as a battery and simplifying it,
so you're going to have this hybrid system and complicate the transmission stuff that's there
and everything. You don't have to use it. The gasoline as an engine, you can just use it as a
generator to charge the EV, and you get a very long range out of it. But what's going on with the
EV push right now besides that? Well, I was thinking about this the other day, and it occurred to me
that one of the effects, and I consider it to be an intentional effect, of the attempt to push
EVs, and they were pushed very hard for a number of years, was to push us out of vehicles,
both directly and indirectly. Here's how. By pushing the EVs, what they did was to,
greatly increased the cost of vehicles generally, not just the EVs.
Reason why, EVs are money losers.
Ford said that it lost about $20,000 on the sale of every one of its F-150
lightnings, probably more than that.
All the manufacturers that were required to manufacture these EVs for the sake of regulatory
compliance, they had to figure out a way to staunch the bleed somewhat.
So what they did was they pushed out some of the costs of the EV thing into the price
they were charging for their other vehicles.
and that's why the cost of vehicles has gone up.
But the other aspect of it that's much more subtle
is that the same regs that pushed the EVs
pushed hybrid dry frames into mass production.
Originally, when the Toyota Prius came out,
that's sort of the arch-typical hybrid,
and it came out, what, about 20-something, 20,
maybe even 25 years ago.
The whole point of it was that, okay,
this is a vehicle that is focused specifically
on very high gas mileage.
It was fundamentally an economy car.
And it made sense in that context.
You know, essentially they were using,
the hybrid drive frame to kind of compensate for and overcome the fact that new cars have gotten
so freaking heavy because of all the government safety candy. You know, it used to be possible
to make a 50 mile per gallon car without a hybrid drive train. That's become impossible. So anyway,
that was the purpose of the Prius and, you know, its competitors, such as the Honda Civic
hybrid. That went on for a number of years. Now, if you look at the new car landscape,
half of the vehicles are more that are on the market of all kinds, have a hybrid drive frame,
including, and I think this is the telling part, a high-end,
luxury vehicles, Mercedes, BMWs, Audi's, Lexus, it's risable. It is ridiculous to believe that a
person who spends $60,000, $70,000 on a premium luxury vehicle is sweating, paying another
$30 a month for gas. They don't care. They're not buying it because it's a hybrid, and yet it is.
Mercedes and BMW, two good examples, have cheapened out some of their formerly premium vehicles.
Used to be that in a vehicle like an E-Class Mercedes or a BMW 5, the minimum you got was a six-cylinder
engine for that money. A nice six-cylinder engine. What do you get now? You get a two-liter turbo
four augmented by a hybrid system. This episode is brought to you by Spreaker, the platform
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It's a compliance drive frame, and at the same time that the hybrid, hyper, hyper,
driver drive trains have come online, the price has gone up. The E-Class Mercedes is now $60,000
without the V6. It's thousands and thousands of dollars more expensive. If you look at the current
Dodge Charger, you know, that was an electric car until they've realized that wasn't going to sell
and they put their new six-cylinder engine in with a hybrid drive frame, much more expensive
than the previous charger with just an engine. You know, any vehicle you choose to pick that has
a hybrid drive frame and compare its costs now versus what it costs, just a
couple of years ago, two or three years ago, without the hybrid. And it's many thousands of
dollars more expensive. I've just been test driving the Toyota Grand Highlander. As recently as
2022, that car came with the V6. Toyota's excellent 3.5-liter V6. It now comes with a 2.4-liter
engine, hybrid augmentation and all of that. And it's $7,000 more than it was just years ago.
And these are these subtle costs that are being imposed on us. And who can afford it? You know, it's
ridiculous to believe that working and middle income people are going to be able to pay 50, 60, 70,000
for a basic family kind of a car. So what can you conclude from that? You can conclude they're
trying to make it so that regular working and middle income people can no longer afford to drive.
That's the agenda. Absolutely. They did everything they could to incentivize the EVs. And now,
as you see, and as you and I talked about this for the longest time, we said, well, we know what's
going to happen. They're giving them preferential treatment. They're subsidizing. They're subsidizing.
them. They're banning other cars from these low emission zones. You can only go in there if you've got
a electric vehicle. Now they're coming out to the electric vehicles. Now they're taxing them by the
mile and doing other things like that. We know that that's the way they want to go because then
that requires that they track you all the time, right? So many aspects of this. But the bottom line
is they don't want you to have mobility because mobility leads to liberty. Just like that was our
lifeline during COVID stuff was the car.
And I won't take that away.
How much more effective the lockdowns would have been if the majority of the cars that
were in circulation, if they could have, you know, thrown the proverbial switch, let's
say, and simply disabled the vehicles remotely.
The lockdowns would have been a whole lot more effective.
I certainly wouldn't have been able to do what I did, which was to jump in my truck
and have a look at what was going on out in the real world.
You know, I would drive by the local regional hospital just to see whether, you know,
the bodies were stacking up and the lines were forming outside.
And then I did videos and reported that.
And of course, I got demonetized on YouTube for doing that.
Oh, yeah.
I was able to do it.
You know, I live out in the country.
If I had been stuck with a connected vehicle, an EV, and they just shut it off, what
am I going to do?
I'm going to bicycle the 30 miles into the city to, you know, to see what's going on.
Probably not.
Yeah.
With all the electronics in it, they can very easily geo-finch you out of any area that they want
or keep you in the areas that they want to keep you in.
Let's go down in memory lane because it's one of the things I love about Eric Peters Auto.com,
the fact that you go back and look at some of the things that we have grown up with.
And you've got an article talking about the things that are no longer seen.
Talk about a little bit of those, yeah.
Yeah, I think it's fun just generationally.
You know, like guys are age, you know, if you went to a car show when we were kids, let's say.
And you looked at a Model T Ford and you saw all these strange things in the car.
you know, what's this little lever on the steering column do?
What is that?
Yeah.
And the pedal is weird.
You know, and you had to have an old timer come along and explain to you, you know,
what these things did and how the car worked.
Well, you and I are familiar with things like, you know, my old muscle car that I have out in
the garage, my 76 Pontiac Trans Am.
It's got this little, little floor mounted dimmer switch.
Show it to a 20-year, 20-year, 20-old.
And see you know what that is.
You know, that's gone.
You don't see that anymore.
Well, you know, time progresses.
And I kind of thought, well, okay, imagine 30 years from now if we still have car shows.
And, you know, and people are looking at vehicles from this time, 30 years from now.
And they're going to see things like these weird little rectangular things.
You know, what is that for?
What do you do with that?
And we'll have to explain, yeah, there was a time, you know, and we plugged in our devices into these things.
So that was just one example.
You know, there are a number of others, you know, people who are too young to have remember the 90s.
You remember when they had those seatbelts that buckled you in when you opened the door?
Oh, I had a car that had the, uh, the, uh, the Voltifold.
fucking rabbit that I had did that. It had a knee bar to keep you from getting hung, I guess,
you know, if you're submarine under the seatbelt, but the seatbelt was actually plugged
into the door. So when you open it up, it would pull it out and you could just slide out.
And I remember taking Karen's grandmother in it and it would fluster her to know. She didn't
know how to get out of it. She's trying to pull herself up and around it. She'd always wrap herself up
in the seatbelt and I'd have to go around and detach it from the, from the door to get her out.
It was kind of crazy.
Yeah.
Yep.
Those have been out of production now since I think the late 90s, early 2000s.
I can't remember when they were last available new.
So it's been 25 years.
So, you know, somebody who's 25 today will probably have absolutely no memory of those kinds of things.
So, you know, when they see.
One of things you mentioned is opera windows.
Yeah, there's another one.
That was a strange thing when it was done on opera window.
But I guess maybe.
We used to have these things called personal luxury coupes, you know, models like
old Chevy Monte Carlo.
And the infamous, the infamous Chrysler Cordova, you know,
the Ricardo Bonded in those commercials.
And actually, they were neat cars.
They were sort of, they were big cars, but they had two doors.
You don't see that very often anymore.
And they had fine Corinthian leather, whatever that was.
Fine Corinthian leather.
And one of the features that they used back then to signify that you were driving
something luxurious was the opera window, which was this round piece of glass,
fixed glass.
It didn't open that was on the rear sea pillar of the car, you know,
before the area where the rear glass is that supports the roof.
And it was just considered very stylish, very chic.
You never see that sort of thing anymore.
It's gone the way of T-tops, too.
You never see T-tops anymore.
That's right.
And, of course, I think of opera windows.
I think of American graffiti and that Thunderbird that I think it was,
Suzanne Summers was in in that movie.
But the other thing you don't see, which is kind of in your picture here,
and that is the fake vinyl roofs that are there.
And in the picture that you've got here, it's like a one-quarter of vinyl roof.
It was chic to make it look like you had a convertible, even if you didn't have a convertible.
And now when we talk about, you know, in drive around, we have a convertible.
We put the top down.
And when I see another convertible, I look over and invariably, it's some old geyser like me that's driving it.
I know, it's quite something.
Now, you know, the thing I've blown in the most is that, you know, we no longer have genuine luxury cars.
There was once a distinction between a luxury car and a sports car.
And then because everybody decided they had to be BMW.
This began in the 80s and the mid-lighted.
BMW was considered sort of had to be the Eurocache thing.
Everybody wanted to be like BMW.
And instead of having like really comfortable three across bench seats, for example,
and a car on a shirt.
And a ride that was designed to be plush.
You're not in a hurry.
You're wanting a comfortable, smooth riding car.
Now we all have luxury sport cars with these sensuant bucket seats.
And look, I like sporty cars.
The point is everything doesn't have to be sporty.
Now, minibands are sporty.
It's absurd.
You know, they all ride on 18, 19 inch wheels and, you know, they have rough rides.
You know, those who are people who have never had the chance to ride in a big land yacht American car from the 70s are really missing out of something.
There used to be a really profound difference in the way you felt when you were driving something like a Cadillac Sedandaville or an Olds 98.
and something like my Trans-Am.
I mean, there was a big, big difference.
Now, they pretty much all drive the same.
Irrespective of the make-model type of car,
they're all pretty much the same.
Yeah, I remember my dad had a big cat like Sedandoville,
and my car was a little triumph Spitfire.
And to go from one to the other,
literally going to rip your head off.
You know, like you said,
this gigantic, smooth riding, you know, bench seat and everything.
It's like a mobile living room.
And then you go from that,
this little tiny rattling thing that's looking like you can drive underneath the truck
that's right next to you. It truly was amazing. Yeah, those are the days, weren't they? Yeah, they were.
And I think it's a shame that there was this concerted effort, a marketing effort, to kind of make
fun of, you know, the old man's car, the, you know, the sedan deville with the white walls and the
wire up caps. I think we've lost something as a result of that. You know, we've lost the diversity
and difference that used to exist in the marketplace. Everything is just a just homogenously bleak.
the same now. And there's something ridiculous about all these 300 horsepower, 400 horsepower
cars puttering along, you know, at just barely the speed limit. That's right. That's right.
I can deal with it when I, you know, when I roll up behind somebody who's driving, say, an old
Volkswagen Beetle, because I used to have one, I know the car's struggling to keep up. You know,
it's having a tough time. Up at 65 or 70 miles an hour. But it's just obnoxious to have to come up
behind some guy, you know, driving 47 and 55, and he's driving his truck with, you know,
400 horsepower V8. It's just, it's gratuitously stupidly wasteful, in my opinion.
And I see it as an almost, as a temptation that I almost cannot get past when I've got
these big engines and lower speed limits. So I don't like that aspect of it as well. It's like
they're really tempting me to do something here. Well, it's always great talking to you, Eric.
Thank you for joining us. And I love Eric Peter's.
autos.com is much more what he's talking about there as well as we didn't even get to
Corbettes and what's happened to them over the years but always great content thank you eric
always pleasure to have you on oh thank you david i always enjoy our talks thank you
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 is 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.
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