The David Knight Show - Mon 25Mar24 David Knight Show UNABRIDGED

Episode Date: March 25, 2024

(2:00) Measles are the apparent narrative to rehabilitate vaccines in the public image after the mRNA failure.  Let's look at a cost-benefit analysis of measles v autism (10:19) Kate & CancerDeat...h comes to everyone including princesses and transhumanistsKate's husband William, got jabbed at the same time despite his claim to have had COVID already.   Using their definitions, it's a logical absurdity to think that someone who's recovered from a disease needs a vaccine. Here's why…Flurry of media promoting stats that show increase in cancer in young people, including abdominal cancer — with an ending date of 2019Did the government let the absurd theories about her run wild so they could censor any questions of a vaccine connection?Chemotherapy — dangerous, expensive, and less effective for breast cancer than quitting diary consumption and taking aspirin(51:15) Pfizer Pfraud PforeverHPV was the first vaccine mandated — now linked to 4 different autoimmune diseasesJapanese study calls for mRNA jabs to be suspended over  blood bank contaminationFDA settle Ivermectin lawsuit from physicians. "Seriously, y'all" can we just get rid of the FDA?FDA's absurd frozen cherry pie rule from 1971 will finally endChick-fil-A will allow Chicks Filled with Antibiotics(1:08:29) "Nailing Jello to the Wall"Can Trump pay the bond?What does he believe about abortion or any other issue?(1:25:32) Thanks to Zelle contributors (1:27:00) Character.  Integrity.  None of the candidates have it but NO organization can function if leaders don't have character and integrity — especially governmentA couple of checklists that define character and integrity — do Biden or Trump measure up?What do we do when no presidential candidate has integrity?How do we get our children to value integrity?(2:04:41) WATCH Mega-church doesn't want to mention "Resurrection", "Calvary", or "blood" as a marketing ploy to get people to attend.  Evidently the pastor in a bunny-suit (literally) isn't enough (2:16:20) DeSantis is out of the running for president, now caves on Parental Rights.  And, "free EXERCISE" of religion confused again with "ESTABLISHMENT of religion" as teacher banned from praying but porn is pushed as part of a so-called "Decency Act" (2:30:17) Squatters aren't the only problemMontage fraud can steal a person's home since government is no longer protecting title integrityThe dangers of Private Equity firms monopolizing home ownership for themselvesOne man found a novel solution to get rid of squatters when the government would do nothing(2:51:17) Thanks to Zelle contributors, part two(2:54:12) Biden makes bold escalation in Red Flag laws.  Where did he get THAT idea?(2:54:57) Major Australian bank to go cashless in a couple of months from now.  If we don't use cash, we lose the option.  Congress passed $1.2 TRILLION boondoggle AFTER REMOVING anti-CBDC and anti-FreeSpeech itemsFind out more about the show and where you can watch it at TheDavidKnightShow.comIf you would like to support the show and our family please consider subscribing monthly here: SubscribeStar https://www.subscribestar.com/the-david-knight-showOr you can send a donation throughMail: David Knight POB 994 Kodak, TN 37764Zelle: @DavidKnightShow@protonmail.comCash App at: $davidknightshowBTC to: bc1qkuec29hkuye4xse9unh7nptvu3y9qmv24vanh7Money is only what YOU hold: Go to DavidKnight.gold for great deals on physical gold/silverFor 10% off Gerald Celente's prescient Trends Journal, go to TrendsJournal.com and enter the code KNIGHTBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-david-knight-show--2653468/support.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Happiness. We all know what it feels like, but sometimes it doesn't come easy. I'm Garvey Bailey, the host of Happy Enough, a new podcast from The Globe and Mail about our pursuit of happiness. We know people want to live more fulfilling and positive lives, but how do we actually do that? Is there a happiness code to crack? From our relationship with technology to whether money can really buy you happiness, we'll hear from both real people and experts to demystify this thing we're all searching for and hopefully find ways to be happy enough.
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Starting point is 00:01:05 If you have questions or concerns about your gambling or someone close to you, please contact Connex Ontario at 1-866-531-2600 to speak to an advisor. Free of charge. BetMGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with iGaming Ontario. Using free speech to free minds. You're listening to The David Knight Show. As the clock strikes 13, it's Monday, the 25th of March, Year of Our Lord 2024. Well, ask not for whom the bell tolls, it tolls for thee. We see, even being a young, pretty rich and, you know, big future ahead of her,
Starting point is 00:02:23 small, has a start over the family. Kate Middleton now comes down with cancer. This is the end of all mankind. Doesn't matter whether you're a king or a pauper. But is there something else involved? Does this also tell us about what is happening with the jab? It's very interesting to see how the media is reporting this and what they're afraid to say, given the fact that the ground had already been polluted with a lot of nonsense
Starting point is 00:02:50 conspiracy theories about her disappearance. We'll talk about that first. We also have a solution to squatters. From somebody who's been there, done that. And it was quite simple, actually. So stay tuned. We'll tell you how to protect your home we'll be right back is that a listener robert write me write me talking about autism and measles. He says, you know, you're one of the few people who talks about autism anymore. It used to be something we talked about a great deal because there was a tremendous correlation between that and the increase in vaccines. You know, 70-some-odd vaccines. I think it's 72 that kids have to get
Starting point is 00:03:46 at an early age. No other country comes close to that. And there's been an explosion that has corresponded to that explosion in autism. And so Robert writes, he says, the thought occurred to me as I was listening to your show, where you talked about one out of 10,000 deaths, their numbers, their suspicious numbers, as we said, uh we said, they claimed that prior to their measles vaccine, this is a dangerous thing because one out of 10,000 people are dying. Well, that is not that high for most diseases, quite frankly. And were they dying with measles or from measles? What were the other complications?
Starting point is 00:04:22 What was the situation of the people who died, who got measles or from measles? What were the other complications? What was the situation of the, of the people who died, uh, who, who got, um, measles? Uh, we don't have any information about that.
Starting point is 00:04:31 In addition to it, um, those are, are, are going to be people who have had, um, you know, the,
Starting point is 00:04:38 the hospital is going to, uh, uh, know about them or have had something to do with it. So all, all of these numbers are suspicious. The same thing he points out that we saw with COVID. We don't know if people died with a PCR test that was positive or if they died from any
Starting point is 00:04:54 particular disease, that one in particular, or was it just flu? Was it a respiratory illness? Was it neglect from the hospitals? Did the hospitals actually cause this with their ventilator treatment and remdesivir and neglect and do not resuscitate orders and all the rest of this stuff? They were paid to kill people. They were paid to give them novel treatments that had never been done for respiratory illnesses before. And they had the expected result quite frankly but again even if it is a PCR test that is positive I spent a lot of time last several years talking about the PCR test and how suspect
Starting point is 00:05:34 they were when they were magnified with the number of cycles that they've got here 1.1 trillion times magnification as the as Kerry Mullis who invented it and got the uh nobel peace prize uh nobel uh prize in science uh as he said you can't prove that um aids is caused by a virus not with my pcr test you can't he said and he wanted to debate Fauci. Now he took Fauci on and they purged him because Fauci was pushing the AIDS and HIV connection at the time. And he was using the PCR test to do it. And Kerry Mullis was pushing back real hard. And some other scientists were, and they were canceled, just like we saw with the people who got in the way of the vaccination agenda this time. And so the PCR test was suspect.
Starting point is 00:06:27 The way it was used was suspect. All of this was suspect. But nevertheless, when you look at, let's just take it at their word, one out of 10,000 deaths, as he pointed out. Well, where are we with autism? He said the numbers for autism range from one out of 100 to 1 out of 30. Okay, so let's just go with their numbers. Let's say that you really do have a chance of 1 in 10,000 of dying from measles.
Starting point is 00:06:58 But you've got a 1 in 30 chance of getting autism. Which one would you choose? Oh, sorry, we don't care about your informed consent. We're not going to talk about those numbers. And even if you know those oh sorry we don't care about your informed consent we're not going to talk about those numbers and even if you know those numbers we don't care you're just a conspiracy theorist no consent i don't care what you think you're going to give the mmr jab to your kids or you know as trump said it was really going around they got to get it you know no religious exemptions no medical exemptions for anyone got it got to get that thing right uh no exemptions whatsoever well the um he says i remember says robert when i first heard trump's own son was autistic where'd you hear that i bet you heard
Starting point is 00:07:39 that from alex jones didn't you he got trump really annoyed with him by saying that Baron was autistic. I don't know if he is or not. Uh, I'm not interested in spreading rumors like that. Uh, I don't know. Um, you know, I, I think, uh, to me, you know, the same people would say stuff like that. Like Alex would say that. Well, rage when somebody says, makes a diagnosis of, you know, Trump's psychological conditions from a distance or something like that. They'll also embrace the diagnosis of Biden as being senile, although that's pretty obvious. That's really out there.
Starting point is 00:08:23 He's wearing a sleeve. But nevertheless, when you start doing clinical diagnosis of things, they had people who were accusing Barry Goldwater of all people. The way they smeared Goldwater was to say that he was unstable. What would they say about Trump? But they said he was unstable and other things. And afterwards they came out and they say, you know, the, the American psychiatry association or whatever their official name is said, we're not going to do that anymore. Uh, you don't make any, it's unethical to make these diagnoses unless you
Starting point is 00:08:57 have examined that person specifically. So whether or not Trump's son has autism, it was sold by Alex. Oh, yeah, Trump knows about. And Trump was selling his vaccine skepticism. He sold his vaccine skepticism to big pharmaceutical companies by bringing an RFK Jr. to Trump Tower. That's how he bid his price up. He got a million dollars from Pfizer alone. And then he put in, as the head of hhs
Starting point is 00:09:25 alex azar the ceo of eli lilly uh alex azar was the one who spearheaded all this pandemic and lockdown stuff so yeah he says um he said i i remember in 2016 the talk about Trump's son being autistic. He said, surely, I hoped, something will be addressed. Perhaps he'll assign a team. Perhaps he'll have an investigation. Maybe they'll reverse course. But he says nothing. In fact, just the opposite.
Starting point is 00:10:02 Shoot up the entire population with another vaccine that's never been tested, another novel way to do this. And if you think that these people are going to change anything because one of their family members dies, you really don't understand the mentality of the elite. Do you think the royal family is going to come out in opposition to the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines? She had one or the other. They know it was one of those two, but they don't know which.
Starting point is 00:10:20 When you go back and you look at her original vaccination that she made a big display out of, do you think they're really going to attack the system with that? No, no. They are trying to preserve something that is far more important to them than their own family members even. This is the problem that we have when we try to put ourselves in the mindset of these people who are pulling this stuff.
Starting point is 00:10:44 We're running this global depopulation game. You really can't understand the mentality any more than you can understand the mentality of a mass murder, a serial killer, somebody like that. You can't put yourself into their mind frame as a sane person. This is one of the reasons why someone like Ted Bundy was so successful in deceiving people. He seemed like such a nice man. So intelligent, so attractive. And yet, murdering and raping one woman after the other. And that was part of it.
Starting point is 00:11:18 His ability to trade on our projection. Happiness. We all know what it feels like, but sometimes it doesn't come easy. I'm Garvey Bailey, the host of Happy Enough, a new podcast from The Globe and Mail about our pursuit of happiness. We know people want to live more fulfilling
Starting point is 00:11:38 and positive lives, but how do we actually do that? Is there a happiness code to crack? From our relationship with technology to whether money can really buy you happiness, we'll hear from both real people and experts to demystify this thing we're all searching for and hopefully find ways to be happy enough. You can find Happy Enough wherever you listen to podcasts. Of normalcy onto these people. They're not normal.
Starting point is 00:12:15 They don't think like you think. They have a completely different frame of reference. And so let's talk about kate with cancer and and you know i gotta say the first thing i thought when i saw this was not about the vaccine honestly first thing i thought was and so it goes with everyone it doesn't matter what your station in life is it doesn't matter how much money you got you know bill clinton um will die he was president president. He's Bill Gates, Jeff Bezos, Elon Musk. They think they're going to, some of these technocrats really do think they're going to live forever. But they all really kind of think they're going to live forever, even if they're not doing anything about it.
Starting point is 00:13:00 You know, you got some of these people like Ray Kurzweil. He's out there. I'm going to make a robot. I'm going to go inside the robot. It's like, okay, fine. What are you? How are you going to get in that robot? You're going to make a copy of the electrical signals in your brain.
Starting point is 00:13:13 Is that you? Or is that a copy of you? What is that? That's not even you. These people are so foolish. They don't understand there's a God. They certainly don't understand the difference between body, soul, and spirit. They had that conversation with Sultan Isfahan,
Starting point is 00:13:31 who was running for president as this thing he created called the Transhumanist Party. It was really a publicity tour for his idea of transhumanism and the book that he wrote. But, you know, I obliged and talked to him about what he thinks human nature is because the villains in his book were um the villains were christians they were terrorists you're kind of like american carol uh we have the nun getting on the on the bus and and pulling the cross out of a uh out of a grenade and blowing up everybody on the bus and pulling the cross out of a grenade and blowing up everybody on the bus, that kind of absurdity. You know, that was Sultan Isfahan's take on Christianity. He actually had one of the key characters.
Starting point is 00:14:15 I can't remember if it was the protagonist or the antagonist. It was named Knight. So anyway, it was an interesting interview, but that was years ago. But what I'm saying is that these people who are transhumanists, they think they're going to live forever, but they don't even know what they are. What is it going? What am I going to pass on? I don't know what it is. No, the, the, the reality is, is that we're all going to die.
Starting point is 00:14:49 And it's tragic for those who are left behind. But for those who die, if they die in the Lord, it is the best thing that can happen to them. It's just a transition. It's a difficult transition. It's a difficult transition, no doubt about it. And we all dread that transition, even if we have a confident expectation that uh to to die is to be present with the lord we still dread that and rightfully so death is not
Starting point is 00:15:14 a good thing death is a punishment death is bad that's why christ came to destroy death and we'll talk more about that even though we've got some churches who are trying to run the other way from the resurrection on easter uh resurrection sunday is what we call it they don't want to use that term it's just too off-putting to uh talk to people about the blood yeah you know that's that's the thing um uh from the very beginning in genesis god gives adam and eve animal skins it's based on the death of an animal it's based on blood because sin is a serious thing you know what they did was we look at it it's like well what's the big deal nobody got hurt what's the big deal they ate some fruit, it was a cosmic rebellion against God.
Starting point is 00:16:05 And so the punishment for that is death. And so, you know, it is when you look at an animal that has died, doesn't matter what it is. You don't have to be PETA. You still feel something for the animal that has died. You don't think anything about cutting down a plant, right, and eating a plant. It's very different. And the life is in the blood, as Leviticus tells us. It's an emblem of life and death. And so this is the end that we all come to, regardless of our station in life,
Starting point is 00:16:43 regardless of how rich we are, how pretty we are, how young we are. Even if we got come to, regardless of our station in life, regardless of how rich we are, how pretty we are, how young we are, even if we got young children. This type of thing can happen to any of us. That was my first thought of it. But then, of course, the vaccine. She said, yesterday I received my first dose of COVID-19 vaccine at London's Science Museum. This is back in May of 2021.
Starting point is 00:17:07 Here we are just under three years later. I'm hugely grateful to everyone who is playing a part in the rollout. Thank you for everything that you are doing. Did they forget to give her the sugar water that Alex was talking about? You know, just sugar water. Come on. You can take sugar water. You can do it for the team, right?
Starting point is 00:17:25 Do it for, do it for Trump. Do it for the crown. Do it for this. Do it for that. Don't worry about the fact that hasn't been tested. Don't worry about the fact that this is brand new. As a matter of fact, I'm not going to cover it today, but there's a whistleblower from Pfizer.
Starting point is 00:17:40 He, he recorded a statement that was a new hire. They're talking about the vaccine. The lady up front, he's recording it. Talking about, you know, well, this mRNA stuff, it's not new. It's been around for a while. Moderna has been doing this for over 10 years, she said. And I talked about that until I was blue
Starting point is 00:17:59 in the face. Do you realize this has been out there for 10 years? Do you realize that they've never had a product approved because it's so dangerous? Do you realize they've never had anything work? Do you realize that Moderna was a big pump and dump stock scam? They tell everybody we've got a miracle cure for cancer, whatever, you know, pick your disease. We've got a miracle, miracle cure for it's a miracle. And, uh what it doesn't do anything it's like remdesivir or something kills you it doesn't do anything to help and uh that was the game they played for 10 years until trump came along and fauci uh trump and fauci made them gazillionaires. Okay. So, uh, they say at the time, that's just three years ago, they said that, uh, uh, William
Starting point is 00:18:49 or husband contracted COVID-19 last year in 2020. Also got his first dose of vaccine there earlier this month. Wait a minute. Does William not know anything about natural immunity? This is another thing that I talked about till i was blowing the face this whole thing about well you know yes even people who have been sick with this and we say this is you know you had this severe respiratory illness you had a positive pcr test but we're still we're going to say that you had covet but then we're going to say that you don't have immunity to it. Well, that's not the way the immune system works. If the immune system, your immune system is so busted that it can't respond to something
Starting point is 00:19:30 like that, then you die if it overwhelms your immune system. If your immune system is healthy enough to fight it off, your immune system will also remember. That's the way God designed it. Isn't it amazing what God has done? I mean, just stop and think about that. The amazing ability of your body, these single-cell organisms or whatever, I assume they're single-cell, show my ignorance in biology, but the immune system can identify things and then can kill them and remember them and pass on that memory to other cells as they continually replace each other. Isn't that amazing? Don't tell me that intelligence is not inherent in everything in our lives. Everything in our bodies is all intelligent design. That's one of the most amazing things, I think. And that's called natural immunity. And so if William was infected with COVID-19 and he survived,
Starting point is 00:20:30 he has immunity and he has it for life, just like with measles. And it's absurd for him to take a vaccine. What is the purpose of a vaccine? A vaccine is there to train your body to present you with some facsimile of the disease. This is the theory. Presents you with a facsimile of the disease so that your body can mount a defense and then remember it. But he's already had the real thing. And his body has already successfully defended it. And his body will remember it so it was stupidity virtual virtue signaling whatever you want to call it but you know when we look at all of this
Starting point is 00:21:13 uh are we seeing an increase in cancer why yes we are was that predicted yes at the very beginning you had um dr ryan cole a path, who looked at people who had been vaccinated. And he said, it's killing their body's immune system, the killer T-cells. People who have been vaccinated have way fewer killer T-cells than normal. And that's key in your body's defense against cancer. And so he said, in the spring of 2020, over a year before Kate and William got their royal injections, he said,
Starting point is 00:21:53 you're going to see a massive increase in the frequency of cancer and the severity and rapidity of cancer. Well, that was predictable, wasn't it? When you kill the killer T cells. And so the question is, you know, we now have a situation where autism absolutely unheard of, as I've said before, when I first heard of autism in the early two thousands, there was a family that we knew
Starting point is 00:22:20 they had a child who had a bit of it. And it like what is that i've never heard of that never heard of it just like myocarditis and pericarditis and thrombocytopenia all these other things that now become part of our vocabulary why is that why are they so common now what changed the vaccine yeah the vaccines made these conditions ubiquitous whether it's autism or heart attacks for young people, or maybe turbo cancer. Now we're going to see one out of every 30 people getting autism. Now we're going to see maybe one out of every 30 young people getting cancer that advances at a very rapid rate.
Starting point is 00:22:57 Are we going to see one out of every 30 kids die from heart attacks at a very early age? And all this stuff just becomes normalized. The response by the system is to say, well, let's start doing EKGs for kids who are going to participate in sports. It's like, what? That's your response? And you're going to still keep vaccinating the kids? And then we'll give them EKGs. And maybe we'll be able to identify the problem
Starting point is 00:23:25 before they die suddenly. They will never fix the problem because they're owned by the pharmaceutical companies who will never repent of their murders. Never. And so it's at the time that, well, we don't know which one they're going to get. They will be offered either the Pfizer or Moderna vaccine.
Starting point is 00:23:45 That is the royal family, you know, what's his name? William, William and Kate. They'll get one either Pfizer or Moderna, but it's not known which that either of the Cambridges, Cambridges received. And so this was in September of last year, and it was from The Guardian, big cheerleader of the pandemic, big cheerleader of all the MacGuffins,
Starting point is 00:24:14 whether it's a climate MacGuffin or the pandemic and vaccine MacGuffin, The Guardian is always a big cheerleader of this stuff, and they just can't imagine why cancer cases and people under the age of 50 worldwide are up nearly 80%. Now you look at this, this is in three decades. This is one of the things that they're doing. They know that this is exploding. So what did they do? Well, they go back three decades to look at it. Oh, well, so this is something that is not the vaccine. It's been going on for three decades.
Starting point is 00:24:48 Yeah, there's other things that are happening as well, but you notice that they cut this thing off at 2019. They cut it off before the vaccines. Experts are still in the early stages of trying to understand the reasons. Is it poor diet? Does it look to you like the princess Kate is eating Twinkies? No. Alcohol and tobacco use.
Starting point is 00:25:10 I don't see her standing outside smoking a cigarette outside of Buckingham Palace, do you? I don't bogart that. Alcohol. Physical inactivity. She seems to be in pretty good shape obesity definitely not obese uh so are these the problems with her it couldn't possibly be an experimental genetic code injection that kills tiller killer t-cells get it now that's we'll rule that out yeah and we'll we'll go from 1990 to 2019 so we don't want to include the shot we'll, we'll go from 1990 to 2019.
Starting point is 00:25:45 So we don't want to include the shot. We'll tell people this is already happening before we put the shots out. And it may have already been happening. We need to take a look at how it has spiked afterwards. And I've talked about that many times as well. This is the way they cover it up though. You see, well, let's talk about the fact that we had a 30 year trend before this, and then it explodes over two three-year period
Starting point is 00:26:05 and the key thing about the cancer is it doesn't kill you as quickly as some of the people just dropped dead after they got the shot we'd never seen that before that was one of the ways of these poisoners that we call pharmaceutical companies that's one of the ways that these poisoners were able to get away with it killing you gradually you know like arsenic and old lace um so yeah let's not look at the last two or three years uh let's kind of normalize this and get everybody yeah for some reason it's just everything in our environment don't know what it is cancer's increasing so yeah it just exploded last couple years But don't look at the genetic code injection. I'm sure it can't be that.
Starting point is 00:26:51 So that was in September. Now, after this was released, you had the telegraph in the UK. Do this story. Again, move people away from the idea that it could be the vaccine as the princess of Wales reveals diagnosis. Doctors warn of mysterious cancer epidemic of younger people. Yeah. Yeah. It's not the jab.
Starting point is 00:27:16 No, the jab was the pandemic. The jab was the bioweapon. And they don't want you to see that subtitle. Researchers don't want you to see that subtitle researchers don't understand why just can't figure this out got a smoking gun right there in their lap but the makers of the gun don't want them to talk about it a significant increase in under 45s presented with cancer typically seen in older patients and this early onset of cancer and this increase in cancer
Starting point is 00:27:47 is abdominal cancer the same kind of cancer that she presumably has since um you know they haven't been specific about what kind of cancer she had but um you know she was it was just said that she was having an abdominal surgery then they come back and say, well, we found cancer. So let's say abdominal cancer might be a reasonable guess. Many of these people who are getting cancer at an early age are fit, outwardly healthy, prompting a scramble among scientists to establish what could be causing the trend. I just can't imagine. And so they'd had a 20 increase from 1993 to 2019 notice the same
Starting point is 00:28:27 thing they stop it at 2019 and they don't want to talk about what comes after that we've had a lot of people who are not mainstream media who are not the telegraph who are not guardian who are telling us how cancer has exploded in the last three years so what do they do they go back and they look at well yeah there's this baseline thing that's happening out there because we got a lot of things that can give people cancer in our environment. You know, from the things that we're doing to our body, the lack of exercise, the poor food, food that is laced with all kinds of garbage, EMF, all these different types of things could be factors, especially together. But the one thing they don't want you to see is this worldwide depopulation shot by Trump. These cancers include those that come
Starting point is 00:29:16 under the umbrella term abdominal. When I started as a cancer surgeon 20 years ago, you rarely saw any younger patients, but now I see them regularly, he said. When they turn up they're shocked these are people under the age of 45 because often they haven't had any symptoms and because of their age and they're not thinking about cancer it's a huge thing to get your head around at that age and of course many of them have young children they said my thoughts are with kate
Starting point is 00:29:41 and her family they must have hit them like a bus. Oh, that's right. You know, none of us is promised tomorrow. We might be hit with cancer or we might literally be hit with a bus. Yeah. So that was the first thing I thought about with it. Some scientists believe the cause may be partly genetic. Might be a genetic code injection. Who knows?
Starting point is 00:30:07 But we won't talk about that. But someone who will is Dr. Vernon Coleman. He was somebody who is a physician. He's an older commentator in the UK and has some good insights. He's a very calm delivery since he's quite a bit older. But he wrote this. He said, conspiracies, cancer, chemotherapy, and Kate. He said, sadly, Princess Kate got cancer.
Starting point is 00:30:32 We wish her a speedy and complete recovery. Just why they needed to keep the truth secret for so long is a mystery. Though there may be an explanation which I will discuss in a moment, and I think he is spot on as to why they kept this withheld. He says, I was puzzled by the phrase preventative chemotherapy. I think the explanation is that the word preventative is rather superfluous and being used to emphasize the fact that Kate's condition is not terribly serious. In other words, I'm not going to tell you that she's in phase one, two, three, or four, something like that. They're kind of using a preventative to put out whether it's true or not, the idea that they got it at an early stage.
Starting point is 00:31:16 However, he says this doesn't completely explain why she's having chemotherapy because there are risks. In a moment, I'll explain why I'm surprised. So he talks about chemotherapy. Again, he is a physician previously, but he says now about the conspiracy aspect and why it was really strange that they delayed this for so long and allowed so many of these conspiracies to go out. And you've seen the backlash. All these people were saying, oh, well, I think, you know, she's been divorced or abducted or killed or this or that or aliens got or whatever all these wild speculations that have been going on for the last few weeks i didn't cover it because frankly um i don't really care
Starting point is 00:31:54 about celebrities i don't really care about what happens with the royal family or taylor swift or her boyfriend or any of this stuff uh and but i did think that it was rather odd the number and how the intensity of all these conspiracy theories uh was this something that the government was ginning up did they want this to run wild well that's basically what dr cole says um vernon cole he said um was it too sorry coleman coleman is his name vernon coleman um but he says uh the royal family has allowed conspiracy theories to abound kate is dead you know they didn't get a picture of her walking barefoot across the zebra crossing at abbey road kate and william are getting divorced kate has been captured by only all the rest of the stuff aliens could it possibly just possibly be says vernon coleman that the conspirators who control the media allowed this
Starting point is 00:32:50 nonsense to continue and the conspiracy theories to become ever more absurd in order to give themselves an excuse to clamp down on all so-called conspiracy theories. In other words, if you say that she was vaccinated and that's what this is, oh, you're starting with that stuff again. Leave her alone. We've had enough of this stuff. You guys have been making up all kinds of stories about her while she's suffering with a cancer diagnosis, and we remain silent.
Starting point is 00:33:18 We didn't want to shut this thing down. She could have spoken at any point in time. Somebody from the royal family could have spoken, but they let this stuff run wild. Why is that? Again, do you think that even if a family member comes down with cancer because of this vaccine, even if they understood that, do you think that they would go public with it?
Starting point is 00:33:38 I don't think so. And I think he's on to this. Dr. Vernon Coleman, I think he got it exactly right. They let this run for a very long time so they could shut down any talk about a connection between her cancer and not just her cancer, the cancer of so many people around the world in a similar situation, being tied to this heinous poison that Trump created and brags about to this day.
Starting point is 00:34:09 So it lets them crack down on all conspiracy theories, maybe even to arrest anyone promoting anything that could be described as a conspiracy theory, to shut down any criticism of the vaccine. He says it will be easy for the government to make disapproving noises about the conspiracy theories about kate which abounded on the internet uh yeah you know you put out something like if i were to cut this out for example title it trump killed princess kate uh the few remaining places where i am i I guess would, uh, they might even kick me off of rumble because I would be calling Trump a murderer, you know, but he is, he
Starting point is 00:34:49 is a murderer. He is a murderer, by the way. I'll say that again. Trump is a murderer. One of the biggest mass murderers we've ever had. And yet you've got people falling down, literally worshiping this guy at his feet. People who call themselves Christians. Worshiping this guy, people who are People call themselves Christians worshiping this guy.
Starting point is 00:35:05 People who are so-called Christian leaders. And of course, these are Christian leaders who have big organizations where they make a lot of money. They have TV programs and all the rest of this stuff. It's a big business for them. They know which side of the bread they get buttered on. That's why they're worshiping Trump.
Starting point is 00:35:22 They're worshiping the almighty dollar that he represents to them. They're worshiping the almighty dollar that he represents to them the audience of suckers that they can rope in but then he takes on chemotherapy and this is important as well again dr vernon coleman a scary staggering truth about the chemotherapy fraud he said patients who are diagnosed with cancer find themselves in a state of shock. And yet, while in a state of shock, they find themselves needing to make a number of vital decisions very quickly. One of the big questions is often this, should I have chemotherapy? Chemotherapy might improve a patient's chances of survival by 3 to 5 percent, though that
Starting point is 00:36:01 modest figure is usually over generous. For example, the evidence suggests that chemotherapy offers breast cancer patients an uplift in survival of a little more than 2.5%. This is down in the noise, folks. This is like, well, it's almost as bad as what Fauci did with remdesivir. It doesn't make any difference. As a matter of fact, we had more people die with it than didn't get it. But, you know, if you survive, you get better 30% faster.
Starting point is 00:36:31 And that's his new standard of care. Never approved a drug on that kind of basis ever. You always had to show something. Even if it was only 2.5%, you had to show something. So when you consider that chemotherapy can kill, that it does terrible damage to healthy cells and to the immune system, it's difficult to see the value of taking chemotherapy.
Starting point is 00:36:51 As a matter of fact, when he says chemotherapy can kill, it's what killed my father. My dad went in, he had cancer. They gave him his first dose of chemotherapy, went into a coma and died. Never came out of it. It did something to his immune system as well it had a heart valve uh done prior to that heart surgery and they brought in a whole bunch of doctors and
Starting point is 00:37:15 interns anything said this is very rare we've never seen this before this is a very interesting case look at how his um this infection around his heart valve and all the rest of this stuff. It was an intellectual curiosity of them. But they killed my father with chemotherapy. The chances are that the doctors looking after you, especially the specialist oncologists in hospitals, will recommend chemotherapy. They may push hard to get you to accept their recommendation. Dr. Vernon Coleman says it is important to remember
Starting point is 00:37:44 that drug companies exist to make money, and so do hospitals, and so do doctors, for the most part. There's a few, a few doctors that are honest, don't know about the hospitals, not vouching for any of them. They exist to make money, and they will do whatever is necessary to further this aim. They lie. They cheat with scary regularity. Yeah. Like the CIA,
Starting point is 00:38:11 like Pompeo said. Yeah. And to West Point, they told us we don't lie. We don't cheat. We don't steal. We don't tolerate people do. Then I went to the CIA and we lie.
Starting point is 00:38:20 We cheat. We steal. We kill people, assassinate people, and we have classes on all of that stuff. So the pharmaceutical companies lie, cheat with scary regularity. They have no interest in helping patients or saving lives. Remember that the sole purpose of the drug companies is to make money,
Starting point is 00:38:44 whatever the human cost might be. They will happily suppress potentially life-saving information if doing so increases their profits. It is my belief that by allying themselves with drug companies, cancer charities have become corrupt. And so have the doctors and so have the hospitals as well. He's in the UK. The hospitals are run by the government there.
Starting point is 00:39:10 Obviously, they're corrupt. But years before this happened, back in May of 2018, and you can look it up. Look it up. It was reported widely, actually, by a lot of different media outlets, although nobody really kind of focused on it um i thought it was pretty amazing that goldman sachs was lecturing the pharmaceutical industry because gilead the makers of remdesivir had come up with an actual cure
Starting point is 00:39:39 to one form of hepatitis and i said look, look at this. They made $12 billion the first year, but then it dropped off. They made like one or two billion the next year. Yes, that's just not acceptable. And then it went down from there. They said, that's not our business model. Our business model is not curing disease. Our business model is to treat chronic conditions. In other words, we don't want the condition to go away.
Starting point is 00:40:05 We want to treat chronic conditions. In other words, we don't want the condition to go away. We want to treat it. And folks, this is what happens when you look at a lot of the pro-life organizations out there. They don't want abortion to fully go away. And they certainly don't want it to go away as a national issue. That's why they're pushing for this renationalization of abortion laws. And it's why you've got a lot of Republican and Democrat politicians pushing for it as well. They don't want this issue to go away.
Starting point is 00:40:29 And when it comes to guns, same type of thing. And you'll find pro-life organizations. You'll find some organizations like the NRA constantly selling people out on different issues as they sold us out on the Trump bump stock thing. The NRA did. Not gun owners of America. They understood the precedent that was being set.
Starting point is 00:40:52 And not every pro-life organization is like that either. And of course, they could have a difference of opinion with me as to whether or not they want to try to nationalize this. But I believe that this point of nationalizing it and these other things that they do and the cheerleading of this by some of these organizations, they want to be perceived as having an impact, but they don't want the problem to go away. And that's the way that it is with the pharmaceutical companies. That's the way it is with the banks. It was Goldman Sachs that was talking. It was a Goldman Sachs analyst that was talking about this
Starting point is 00:41:26 to the financial press. And so it was covered by MarketWatch and Bloomberg and all these other places. But it really wasn't picked up by people who were talking about the vaccine stuff that much. I mean, I talked about it, but I didn't know anybody else that was talking about it at the time, which really surprised me because I thought,
Starting point is 00:41:43 this is really a smoking gun. They're acknowledging publicly. Well, we've always said about them and what Dr. Vernon Coleman was saying, the lie they'll cheat, they'll steal. They don't want you to get well, but they're not looking for cures. They want to keep you as an ongoing patient. Uh, they want to manage this, but not cure it. And then hopefully as you're taking this medicine, it'll start to create some new
Starting point is 00:42:11 conditions that they can also give you some more medication for. And I've seen that over and again, over and over again with older people, my parents' generation. I'm seeing it with my generation. Somebody starts taking a drug for a particular condition. Now, all of a sudden, you know, they got so many pills, I got to get a special box to remember when, you know, have I taken this one today?
Starting point is 00:42:29 I can't even remember. Little or no advice is given to patients about how they themselves might reduce the risk of their cancer returning, says Dr. Coleman. The implication is that it's chemotherapy or nothing. So, for example, doctors are unlikely to tell breast cancer patients that they should avoid dairy foods, although the evidence that they should is very strong. And so he says, how many women with breast cancer realize that their survival chances might be better if they took daily aspirin and avoided dairy products than if they accepted chemotherapy.
Starting point is 00:43:08 Well, that would be informed consent. We don't want that. That would get in the way of our profits. Doctors don't tell them that because they have, as a profession, been bought by the pharmaceutical industry. He's absolutely right about that. As a matter of fact let me just um um i didn't write down the name of the thing i'll have to bring it back but it was um you know
Starting point is 00:43:33 just uh just recently um i mentioned it briefly on the program i was having some heart arrhythmia and so they had me wear a monitor for a while and um they said i got afib so uh they said well you know when your heart gets into this you know afib mode and it feels really weird it feels like it's flopping around and everything and um you know it so it they said when that happens it has a propensity to create blood clots so you're at risk for stroke so So we've got a drug here for you. It's like, no, no, I know about these blood thinners. My dad was on Warfarin. I know about that.
Starting point is 00:44:10 I'm like, oh no, this is much better than Warfarin. This is something new. If I remember the name of the drug, it was Eloquist or something like that, but it's made by Pfizer. I saw that and it's like, oh, wait a minute, wait a minute. Let me look this up. And just like this, you know, the best case they can make is maybe one or two percent, you know, and the statistical noise that you get better.
Starting point is 00:44:35 But the and of course, you don't see this when you look up side effects. Unless you look at the comments. And people start telling you what happened to them and what happened to their family horror stories about that stuff it was like no i'm not taking oh and then the other thing about it was the how expensive it was incredibly expensive so um again pfizer pfizer exactly what you would expect a A drug that has no efficacy, that is extremely low in safety and cost of fortune. And they get all the doctors and everything.
Starting point is 00:45:12 That's their new standard of care. And they come out with this after somebody knows about a drug that's been out for a while. And word gets out. Now stay away from warfarin. After word gets out about that, oh no, that's the old stuff. We've got a brand new drug, which may be even worse.
Starting point is 00:45:30 But they don't have the word of mouth has not gotten out about that, of course. And the FDA does not do anything to test anything, of course. So they run that scam over and over again. But I had someone tell me about a natural thing that a lot of people have started to take because they're concerned about the blood issues with these jabs and uh i thought i wrote it down but i don't see it here um and i wanted to give you that name so i'll look it up and i'll give it to you but um that is actually something is based on Eastern medicine, Chinese medicine. They would ground up earthworms.
Starting point is 00:46:08 They didn't know what the active ingredients were, but they could see that was very effective for certain things. And so they had some scientists who analyzed it, and they isolated a particular substance in the earthworms that's unique to them. And that's what they have with this and it's uh it's got a good safety profile and it has a better efficacy than this other stuff so uh that's what i'm taking out of it meant to write it down to give you the name of it but i i forgot so um it is um um there are things that are out there uh but uh it's important to take a look to try to find them on rock fan eric thank you very much for the tip i appreciate that thank you and on rumble fregan says doctors are pure
Starting point is 00:46:52 filth my gp 15 years discontinued service because i refused a jab took me a year to find a new one who says get jabbed or get out doctors are blocking my access to health care coercing me with their poison kill shots scum of the earth yeah that seems to have taken over the profession because they kick the good people out it's kind of like the military as well they're kicking all the good people out of the institutions that's why we need to form our new institutions and um so it is i know that uh you know there are some a lot of good doctors and nurses who refuse to take the jab, who refuse to give it to other people. They're now out of the hospital system as well.
Starting point is 00:47:32 The problem is, is terms of trying to organize them into a system where you can provide health care. So we're going to take a quick break and then we're going to, and we'll be right back. So stay with us. Thank you. Terima kasih telah menonton! You're listening to The David Knight Show. Interested in a curated list of the finest classical music? Find it now at APSradio.com. All right. Stunning admission. Widely used HPV vaccine is linked to four, four different autoimmune disorders.
Starting point is 00:49:46 A study comparing nearly 2 million vaccinated and unvaccinated adolescent girls over a 10-year period found that the girls that were vaccinated with a HPV vaccine, a quadrivalent HPV vaccine, were 4.4 times more likely than unvaccinated counterparts to develop rheumatoid arthritis. Who would have thought? Yet another immune disease. And remember, it was a Republican governor, Texas Governor Rick Perry, who more than a decade ago, it's probably about 15 years now, as Texas governor, he tried to mandate HPV vaccines for Texas school kids, you know, just like Trump got to get the shots really going around and all the rest of this stuff. Yeah. Let's make everybody, make everybody take it. And that was a first we'd never had anybody,
Starting point is 00:50:39 not in any Democrat state even suggests that everyone needs to get, you know, something like that in order to be able to go to school. It was an outrage. And people pushed back on it. Remember, they sold it to you as a Republican. We had the vaccine industry in 1986. Fauci used Reagan to get the immunity for childhood vaccines, legal immunity for the pharmaceutical companies. He pushed to get that through with George W.
Starting point is 00:51:06 Bush is all part of the 9-11 Homeland Security Patriot Act fraud. They did began the simulations actually even two months before 9-11, but he also put out the prep act giving the vaccine companies legal immunity. As we've seen even worse than the 1986 act worse from the standpoint of people who've been injured by these greedy killers and then go to rick perry right after that and try to get him to start the ball rolling and then we had trump who uh supposedly was a vaccine skeptic oh they got to get the mmr shot really going around really bad by the way when he was doing that it was a former
Starting point is 00:51:51 aid of his former aid of rick perry had gone to work for merc who was pushing the hpV vaccine. And they were not the only ones. GSK, GlaxoSmithKline, also had an HPV vaccine. That was developed by Monsef Slaoui. Does that name sound familiar to you? That was the guy that was working right underneath Fauci. Fauci was in charge of Operation Warp Speed. Fauci had always been working with Monsef Slaoui. The two of them were very, very close.
Starting point is 00:52:25 And so before Monsef Slaoui went to Moderna, he was at GlaxoSmithKline, head of vaccinations and vaccines, that type of thing. And he and Fauci were very close. The two of them had come up together with a vaccine for one of these other flu variants that they said was horrendous. That was Pandemrix. They proved in Scandinavian countries after about a year, they said it's causing narcolepsy, catalepsy in kids.
Starting point is 00:52:54 They took it off the market. That was Fauci and Monseth Slaoui. That was when he was at GSK. But he also had an HPV vaccine that was there. So all these people pushing this stuff, same stuff. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, of course, UNICEF, World Bank, they all kicked in nearly $600 million to expand global vaccination screening and treatment in multiple countries, including in Central and South America. You know, it's always the usual suspects doing this kind of stuff. They were also behind all this HPV things.
Starting point is 00:53:29 Japan is waking up to this stuff. Japan already threw away, they had a couple of different batches. The first one was 1.2 million. I think the second batch was a million. They started seeing black stuff in these vials, V-I-L-E-S. And they said it interacted with magnets. And what's that? What is it?
Starting point is 00:53:53 You know, when you got your vaccine there and it, yeah, I guess it wasn't frozen enough or whatever. And they start getting these black particulates to start forming that interact with magnets. And so the Japanese just threw away twice. They threw away over a million of these jabs. Now they're saying, we need to suspend mRNA vaccines. Now, it's not everybody. It's not the government has not made this official yet. But there's a lot of people calling for this in Japan.
Starting point is 00:54:21 Saying, we need to suspend the mRNA vaccines because they're contaminating our blood banks, people who need transfusions and that type of thing. It was also the Japanese who noticed the biodistribution of this mRNA stuff was concentrating in certain areas of the body. Of course, it concentrates in the spleen because that's the job of the spleen is to take stuff out. But after that, it's in reproductive organs the most.
Starting point is 00:54:50 And, uh, so they wrote papers about that. And then when that was reported, uh, by a Canadian doctor, they kicked him out. You know,
Starting point is 00:54:59 that's the, that's where the real corruption is. It's in these organizations that, um, you know, the hospitals, uh, that, uh that are beholden to the government and the world, according to a recent study from Japan. Many nations have reported that mRNA vaccine usage has resulted in, quote, post-vaccination thrombosis and subsequent cardiovascular damage.
Starting point is 00:55:39 In addition, a variety of adverse events resulting from genetic vaccines are now being reported worldwide. This includes a wide range of diseases related to blood and blood vessels. Here's why I wrote that down. Here's the mystery thing that I was talking about before. Secret ingredient from ground earthworms there. Don't worry, they've isolated it and all this rest, so you're not actually taking in the earthworms.
Starting point is 00:56:03 But, you know, it is kind of interesting. When you look at Chinese medicine, they have a different way of doing some things. Our daughter had been diagnosed at birth. She had hydroencephalus, which is water on the brain. It was swollen up really big. They thought that it might have affected her in an adverse way, so they did not put her up for adoption and we were wondering what happened had they put a
Starting point is 00:56:27 stent in because the United States they put a stent in and then that creates another kind of a problem especially when you get to adolescence and the child starts to grow very rapidly that stent becomes a big issue to try to take the water out well in China what they did was to get the water out they gave her a particular drug or substance or something like that. It was an antidiuretic, and it purged out the extra liquid. And so, anyway, but here's the thing they keep talking around. It's lumbrokinase, L-U-M-B-R-O-K-I-N-A-S-E, L-U-M-B-R-O-K-I-N-A-S-E.
Starting point is 00:57:09 L-U-M-B-R-O-K-I-N-A-S-E. I don't trust my pronunciation. But anyway, that's a natural alternative to the blood clot stuff. So you don't have to get the incredibly expensive, dangerous, and ineffective Pfizer equivalent. Speaking of that, the FDA has settled their ivermectin case. Remember, they put the stuff up. Just stop it, y'all. This is horse medication. Well, of course, what they were sending you was horse excrement.
Starting point is 00:57:36 It was what they were selling you, bovine excrement as well. So that's what we need to stop, folks, is the FDA. The FDA is what needs to be stopped. The FDA had already removed a page that said, should I take ivermectin to prevent or to treat COVID-19? No. So they removed that page. But now within 21 days, because of a lawsuit from several doctors,
Starting point is 00:58:01 within 21 days, the FDA will remove another page titled why you should not use ivermectin to treat or to prevent COVID-19 or other respiratory illnesses, frankly. And they also removed their tweet. You are not a horse. You're not a cow. Seriously. Y'all stop it.
Starting point is 00:58:19 Well, here's the thing. The FDA, the FDA is not a regulator. They're not concerned about safety. They're not concerned about safety. They're not concerned about efficacy. Seriously, y'all in Congress, stop the FDA. Stop them.
Starting point is 00:58:31 They don't do anything. They're anti-safety. It's ridiculous. I'll show you one of the ridiculous things that's been in place for about 40 years that they just decided they would get rid of in a moment here. That had absolutely nothing to do with safety. They must have been coming after one particular company. Must have got somebody in the FDA really mad.
Starting point is 00:58:55 Anyway, the FDA loses its war on ivermectin and agrees to remove all social media posts and consumer directives regarding ivermectin and COVID, including its most popular tweet in FDA history. That was put out by Dr. Mary Talley Bowden, one of the doctors who sued them, a doctor who has, an honest doctor who has taken a lot of hits over this stuff, a lot of hits. This landmark case sets an important precedent in limiting FDA overreach into the doctor-patient relationship. And this is what this is all about.
Starting point is 00:59:31 The FDA is not there to tell doctors what they can or cannot do. As a matter of fact, as they point out, you know, this is off-label use, which is very common. The FDA approved this for a particular parasite, but we've had, you know, it's not uncommon. It's very common practice, as a matter of fact, to have something that is FDA approved because part of that approval, that approval has two parts. It has safety and it has efficacy.
Starting point is 01:00:00 And so the safety profile is well understood. It's been used for several decades. The question is whether or not it is effective for what you're using it off-label for. But doctors have always done off-label prescriptions. Because if it's safe, why not try it? You know, if people know what the safety pro, if it's reasonably safe, we'll give it a try and see if it works. And that was all that was happening here. But it showed the MacGuffin.
Starting point is 01:00:30 You have to have one solution. Because that one solution was what this whole political exercise is really about. The FDA interfered in the practice of medicine with their irresponsible language and posts about ivermectin. We will never know how many lives were affected because patients were denied access to a life-saving treatment because their doctor was quote, just following the FDA. An FDA spokesperson said the FDA has not admitted any violation of law or any wrongdoing. The FDA disagrees with the plaintiff's allegations that the agency exceeded
Starting point is 01:01:03 its authority by issuing statements challenged in the lawsuit, and it stands by its authority to communicate with the public regardless of the product that it regulates. But the reason they're doing this, folks, is because they don't want to have trial. A trial with evidence would show that they knew. A trial with evidence would show their emails going back and forth, the fraud that was involved. And a trial would show, as we have shown here on this show for years, what really happened when ivermectin was used versus their jabs. You use their jabs, you kill people. You use ivermectin, people with respiratory diseases got healed. And they don't want that.
Starting point is 01:01:40 That would all come out in a trial. So they can just say, all right, we'll take the stuff down we don't want to have a trial forget about it ivermectin was approved by the fda in 1996 to treat several conditions including a tropical disease caused by a parasitic worm and so they said in the u.s it's very common for doctors to prescribe medicine off labels I just said they didn't want people to know this works better they didn't want to know that it's safer and they certainly didn't want to know that it was much much cheaper because this is all about money this is about killing people for money and it's about intruding into the doctor-patient relationship.
Starting point is 01:02:26 It's not about them actually doing any due diligence about safety or any of the rest of this stuff. They don't do that. But yet, after 20 years, they have finally deregulated frozen cherry pie. This is from Reason Magazine. This is a hoot. They regulated very strictly frozen cherry pie. Not any other kind of pie, not apple pie, and not unfrozen apple, not unfrozen cherry pie,
Starting point is 01:02:59 but frozen cherry pie. That's why I say they must have had some kind of an axe to grind. Somebody in the FDA had an axe to grind with somebody who was making frozen cherry pie so i say they must have had some kind of an axe to grind somebody in the fda had an axe to grind with somebody who was making frozen cherry pie i don't know mrs smith is she still around anywhere uh 20 years of lobbying and they implemented actually the frozen cherry pies regulations are actually uh implemented in 1971. I don't know why they say 20 years. I guess 20 years people have been fighting this, but this stuff has been around for 53 years.
Starting point is 01:03:34 So they mandated how many cherries needed to be in a frozen cherry pie. 25% by weight. And how blemished these cherries were permitted to be. Only 15% of them were allowed to be blemished in order to be in these pies. Reason said what made these regulations even more unusual, even taking into account the reams of FDA regulations that exist, is that these regulations applied only to cherry pies, and specifically only to frozen cherry pies.
Starting point is 01:04:03 Fresh cherry pies did not have to meet these standards. Frozen cherry pies did not have to meet these standards. Frozen apple pies did not have to meet these standards. Only these pies did. And again, like I said, they had a bad day with somebody that made frozen cherry pies. Vindictive, useless, dangerous agency, the FDA. Were they talking about food or about drugs. And of course, the two things are related, right?
Starting point is 01:04:31 Let your food be your medicine, but not in this way. Chick-fil-A is going to start allowing antibiotics in its chicken. So you don't want that kind of medicine in your food, right? As a matter of fact, when I when I talked to, um, Senator nicely here in Tennessee, I never knew about the arsenic stuff going into chickens. Um, he's a farmer and he was freaked out when he found out about it, but he can't get it. They, the, the big chicken producing companies own the legislators and, you know, he's put in a couple of bills to try to stop this and they get shut down. And, uh, they try to intimidate him as well. The stop doing, they don't want people to know they're putting arsenic.
Starting point is 01:05:12 Why do they put arsenic in chickens? Well, it makes the chickens gain weight. Uh, they gain weight. If they kept doing it long enough, the arsenic would kill the chickens. Uh, but they kill the chickens before the arsenic does but meanwhile it makes them put on a lot of weight and uh then you eat the chicken and you eat the arsenic and senator nicely said i won't eat chicken from a restaurant anywhere anymore but then there's also the antibiotics and now chick-fil-A says they're going to allow the antibiotics as well.
Starting point is 01:05:52 So on Rockfan, Gregory, thank you very much for the tip. Appreciate it. Says keep on spreading the truth until the sleepers are awake and alert. Well, we'll try. Sometimes I feel like I'm talking to dead men. Just all the stuff that we know about all this. It just keeps coming back around, and people pretend that it doesn't exist. People haven't heard it. They don't listen to it.
Starting point is 01:06:14 I see people hurt by these vaccines, hurt by the lockdowns. I've got a story here of a woman who is still, four years later, still wearing a mask. And she hasn't seen her grandkids in four years. And she said about them, they're little germ monsters. I said at the very beginning of this, when everybody was so paranoid, they're washing their hands everywhere. They're afraid to touch a hose to fill up their car with gasoline or whatever somebody else before me might have touched this and all the rest of the stuff i said we've turned
Starting point is 01:06:50 into an ocd america and it was all over the world that is the power of propaganda but the important thing is how powerful the truth is. Just one little bit of truth. People see the truth even though they're shouting the propaganda on a loop with a megaphone and all these other channels. If you see the truth, for some people, it's going to resonate. We'll be right back. Elvis. Ladies and gentlemen, the Beatles.
Starting point is 01:07:24 And the sweet sounds of Motown. Find them on the Oldies channel at APSradio.com. Thank you. you're listening to the david knight show i mentioned this briefly on friday the very fact that Peter Navarro went to prison, and the same day that he reported prison for not showing up for a subpoena to Congress, Hunter Biden doesn't show up for a subpoena to Congress. He walks. This is what is getting people activated. It isn't over principle. It's over persecution that people are being activated. And as I said, you know, it is when you look at what Peter Navarro is going to prison for, he should be going to jail for life, for ventilators, for killing people with ventilators
Starting point is 01:08:58 and the rest of this stuff that he did as far as this lockdown crew of President Trump. The entire Trump administration from 2020 ought to go to jail for the rest of their lives. And the same thing is true of the Biden people. But we get caught up on these side issues. You're going to send them to jail because they don't obey a subpoena from Congress? I don't care about that. Do you care about that?
Starting point is 01:09:18 And of course, it is this dual system. The fact that they ignore it, it gets everybody so angry. What we should be focused on are things like this. Trump floating a national ban on abortion after 15 weeks of pregnancy. And as one person talked about it, said trying to nail Trump on an issue, trying to figure out where he is on an issue. It's like trying to nail jello to a wall because he'll never give you a straight answer about anything.
Starting point is 01:09:52 And of course, nobody knows if he's got any principles or not, except we kind of do know what his principles are. Cause this lawyer told us, I thought about over the weekend, we don't know what's going to happen today because today is a deadline of, uh, Letitia James supposedly going to move to take some of his property. She made some preparations about that in the past. And you had, um, and I talked about this as his lawyer, Alina Hava had boasted.
Starting point is 01:10:21 I wonder where she'd get this idea. She boasted that Trump had the money. And then Trump told her he didn't have the money. So he sent Alina in to go before the judges and appeal courts and say, it's impossible to get this kind of money. And look, I'm not supporting what this case is. Again, nobody was defrauded. And it's absolute total no crime but
Starting point is 01:10:48 they want a half a billion dollars i get that part of it but look at the other side of it okay so so the republicans will focus on that there's no crime it's all political persecution yes they're right about that the democrats will focus on the aspect that, you know, look at what a boasting fraud Trump is. And they're right about that, of course, as well. And that's a real character issue that we should be concerned about. But after having her go out and boast that, you know, they messed with the wrong guy, he's got plenty of this money. Then he has her going around on appeal to these judges, trying to appeal the judgment saying, I don't have it.
Starting point is 01:11:28 And then over the weekend, he says, thanks to hard work and skill and luck. I happen to have a half a billion dollars in cash. I can pay this stuff. They thought they had me that type of thing. It's like, what? And as people were looking at this, analyst said well uh lucy you're going to have some explaining to do you're going to have to go that she alina haba is going to have to go to the judge who's going to ask her about this so were you lying to me about this i mean somebody
Starting point is 01:11:59 here is lying okay and uh who's who are the lies coming from and they're being told to the court now they're not happy about not going to be happy about that type of thing but then um again the question is does he really have the money who knows and see that comes back to the to the essence of this case which is not something that he ought to be, it shouldn't be a criminal offense, but people should be offended by somebody who has no character or integrity and is going to lie to them one way or the other. I wouldn't want to do business with Donald Trump and I certainly don't want to have him as president because of his lack of integrity. And so the interesting thing about all this is that they brought him up for charges saying that he was a habitual liar and constantly misrepresented uh his financial status and
Starting point is 01:12:51 here he is verifying all that that that is a stupidity that goes beyond what the lawyers were saying because the lawyers were saying wait a minute geez you're gonna have to explain whether he has the money or doesn't because he's but this this now validates the essence of that trial and again i'm not saying it's justified as a to make that a crime he didn't defraud anybody he paid everybody everything that they wanted to be paid but it does define him and define his character doesn't it so we'll see what happens today now some people are saying they don't have a constitutional case. It's going to be very difficult for her to repossess those properties because they're encumbered by loans and by other things like that.
Starting point is 01:13:33 So it isn't just, Oh, well, I'm just going to go in and, and change the locks. Maybe he could do the squatter thing. He's got a big family. He'd go around squatting all these properties.
Starting point is 01:13:45 You can't evict me. Um, I mean, I wouldn't put it past him quite frankly. You put Melania in one and Baron in another one and Eric and anyway, the, uh, uh, but it's not going to be a simple thing. Neither of these things is probably going to happen today, but it'll be interesting to see what happens. And we'll talk about this as it develops. But the key thing is you can't nail them to the wall on any. Political principles either. You can't nail them to the wall on something as objective as his bank account. He'll lie about that.
Starting point is 01:14:18 He gloated. Uh, I was able to kill Roe V Wade a year ago. He said that without me, there would be no six weeks, 10 weeks, 15 weeks, or whatever is finally agreed to without me, the pro-life movement would have just kept losing. Thank you, president Trump. He writes to himself and he puts Trump in all uppercase, the screaming ego of Trump, very much like kanye west was not talking about last week
Starting point is 01:14:49 this satanic ego me me me me me i i i i am the greatest right and um so uh after positioning himself as an anti-abortion champion trump shifted four months later to talk about bringing a national consensus. I think both sides are going to like me. Last month, word leaked that he would seek a national ban. His campaign called the New York Times report fake news. But then Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, an ally to the former president, a politician who, just like Pfizer,
Starting point is 01:15:26 is willing to kill people for, you know, these politicians are willing to kill babies. They're willing to rip them apart for their political good. Lindsey Graham said Trump is warming up to 16 weeks. On Tuesday, Trump mentioned 15 weeks in an interview. His ping-ponging on abortion is just one instance of how the former president hasn't articulated a decisive stance on a critical political issue. He won't even stake a decisive position on his bank balance. But, of course, that's really smart, people say. Oh, that's good.
Starting point is 01:16:01 It's good to be a liar, a schemer, a man of no integrity. That's good. And that's the dangerous thing about this. That's a schemer a man of no integrity that's good and that's the dangerous thing about this that's why i talk about it look we don't have a good choice for president we didn't have a good choice even when the primaries were going we didn't have it with a bigger field we didn't have a good choice and um and you you can't really have any influence as to what happens with the president. They're completely owned by the establishment. We've seen that over and over again, and we saw that in Trump's first term.
Starting point is 01:16:29 So it's not about getting a good president in there to fix it. It's about getting people to wake up to the fact we've got to stop thinking inside that box they put us in. They put us in this presidential election ballot box, and we've got to get out of that box with our thinking and think about how we are going to short-circ which are the same for both the democrats republicans on the key existential issues and we got to think about how we're going to uh work around that work against that instead of thinking well if we could just get a guy in there who would do everything he says and do all the things that i think need to be done, then we could win this thing. Well, how long would that last if that were to even happen? You know, one term, maybe?
Starting point is 01:17:09 Of course, somebody like that would not be allowed to finish a term. They'd be finished by the CIA. But we need to think outside of that. And when you look at what is happening with Trump and this back and forth about whether he has the money or he doesn't have the money and boasting about that and boasting about how he saved abortion and then trying to throw it to the side. It's an albatross around our neck type of thing.
Starting point is 01:17:32 He had a former lawyer who knows him pretty well. Alina Haba is starting to know him by this point in time, I think. And Ty Cobb said he's a deeply wounded narcissist, incapable of acting except out of his own perceived self-interest or out of revenge and so when you see him making these boasting stupid statements in the middle of a legal process subverting the arguments that his lawyers are making at exactly that same time what you're seeing here is somebody who is a deeply wounded narcissist, incapable of acting except out of his own perceived self-interest, and his perceived self-interest can be wrong
Starting point is 01:18:14 because he's blinded by his narcissism to what his real self-interest is. The narcissism is changing what he perceives to be his self-interest. But the revenge is always there. And as I say, what do we say about somebody who is willing to negotiate to which number of weeks or what age we're going to chop babies up, take living babies and rip them to pieces for his own political purposes? You think somebody like that might give us all a poisonous jab? Yeah, yeah. If he'll rip babies apart to please voters or political constituency or the press or to have people say nice things about him, he'll kill you too.
Starting point is 01:19:04 This is not even a projection. We've lived through this, and yet people won't accept that. Even after the presidential primary, voters have little visibility on Trump's specific agenda on abortion, on the Israel-Gaza war, on Ukraine, on Social Security, among other issues. And by the way, if he does take a position on any of these things, he'll immediately hedge his bets with something that's completely different. Oh, it's 4D chess.
Starting point is 01:19:32 No, he's just a lying, pivoting person without any principles. It's not clever. It's not good. It's not leadership. This is a lack of character and integrity. You can't trust him to keep a position even when he nails it down. Build the wall. Okay, right.
Starting point is 01:19:50 We saw this with Trump. I mean, not with Trump, but Bush, George H.W. Bush. Remember, he had run against Ronald Reagan. He said cutting taxes is voodoo economics. As everybody figured when he ran for president after two terms as vice president that he would raise taxes so he wanted to assure everybody he wasn't going to raise taxes read my lips no new taxes everybody that was alive remembers that pledge and then when he became president he was pushing the biggest tax increase we had ever had. And Rush Limbaugh came out against him.
Starting point is 01:20:27 Rush Limbaugh even had a little comedy skit for radio where they have a George H.W. Bush impersonator. And you hear him running with the footsteps and then going up to the top of the White House to see which way the weather vane is turning and coming down. Oh, it was devastating satire and so george h.w bush invited rush limbaugh to the white house met him at the door carried his bags in he slept in the lincoln bedroom he came back the following monday and said this is great and he never criticized him again it was almost like they did a brain transplant on him. But it was a removed his spine, I think, is what they did. Yeah, right there from no longer occasional cortex.
Starting point is 01:21:15 No cortex at all, really. Half of the brain was tied behind the back and they removed his spine as well. But he just became a Republican shill after that point. Prior to that, he had been independent, you know, and he just became a Republican shill after that point, prior to that, he'd been independent, you know, and he would, he would criticize this stuff. Uh, so, um, you're not going to see any real solutions to any of these issues. If he gives you a real solution, he's not going to stick to it. Like I said, about medical stuff.
Starting point is 01:21:35 The first time around Obamacare was a big issue. They had a policy paper that was excellent. It had a dozen different points. It was about giving people, uh, the ability to have choice, giving them the purchasing power to have choice, restructuring our system to make it more accountable, all the rest of the stuff. Trump never mentioned that. It was up on his website. As soon as he won, they took that down. He never said anything about it.
Starting point is 01:21:56 He never did anything about Obamacare. He never did anything about the border either. The only thing he did about the border was when he locked it down with COVID. That's the only thing he did about the border was when he locked it down with covid that's the only thing he ever did uh so trump tells ramaswami no for vp he leaves the cabinet door open this is a medicine cabinet so ramaswami the pharmaceutical guy can get some stuff out or put some stuff in i don't know well ramaswami had already said no to cash for Trump. But Trump does not fund his runs for office either. 2016, 2020, he didn't fund it. He waited for the little guys to do it.
Starting point is 01:22:37 And that's what Ramaswami said in that interview. I played it for you, that clip, when it happened. He said, well, he needs the money of the little people out there all you little people write checks to this guy um so they might put him in his homeland security and you know ramaswami does have some experience with this he was part of the republican uh lockdown committee under governor dewein in ohio And DeWine was one of the worst governors during that period of time. And Ramaswamy got in. He pitched a surveillance and tracking program that he wanted to run. So, yeah, he'd be the guy for Homeland Security, I guess,
Starting point is 01:23:16 because it's all about surveilling and tracking us. Homeland Security is not to keep the homeland secure. We're going to leave the border open. We're going to get involved in foreign wars everywhere. But we want to make sure that everybody that lives here, all Americans, are under constant surveillance.
Starting point is 01:23:33 So yeah, Ramaswamy would be your guy for that. Maybe he even gave the idea of the million dollar lottery to DeWine. I don't know where that came from. That was a pretty insidious thing. And of course, it really was a lottery. Depending on which lot of vaccine you got, it would vary anywhere from three to 100. I think the units were micrograms and I don't recall exactly, but it varied from
Starting point is 01:23:59 three to 100. It varied by a factor of 33. So some people got a dosage that was 33 times more than other people did because see, this is a big experiment and everybody who took it was a lab rat. And one of the things that you would do if you were testing the drug, which they skipped, that's what Trump is so proud of skipping the testing. If you were actually to do a test, you would be testing to see what dosage, assuming that it worked, assuming that it was safe. You would want to know too little dosage and it doesn't work. Too much dosage and anything becomes dangerous.
Starting point is 01:24:40 So anyway, he may not pay the bond. He may just instead let her try to seize it because it's going to be encumbered with all kinds of red tape. There's going to be appeals that they can make on that aspect of it. We're not going to see a resolution of this for quite some time, but we are going to see a lot of back about being a victim and how everybody needs to help him because he's under attack. We'll be right back. If you like the Eagles, the cars, and Huey Lewis and the news,
Starting point is 01:25:18 they say the hot rock and roll is competing. You'll love the Classic Hits channel at APS Radio. Download our app or listen now at APSradio.com. © BF-WATCH TV 2021 ¶¶ LSp4 2.70 you're listening to the david knight show on rumble stealth patriot thank you for the tip all right uh is chick-fil-a the flowers in the attic chicken company i don't i don't know that reference flowers in the attic uh travis doesn't either so uh give us another comment there follow up uh definitely stay away from the cookies he He says, I don't know, uh, but it does remind me of, um, arsenic and old lace. Anyway. Uh, I also want to say thank you to people who have contributed on cell.
Starting point is 01:27:32 I've let this list grow from the beginning of the month. And I just want to, uh, uh, thank people. I won't do all of the list here. Uh, but I will, I'll split it up into a couple of these. So here we are at about the midpoint. Um, and, uh, so I want to thank, um, and a lot of these. So here we are at about the midpoint. And so I want to thank, and a lot of these names we see over and over again,
Starting point is 01:27:52 very faithful contributors and supporters, and I can't tell you how much I appreciate it. Thank you so much. Gretchen C., Michael L., William W., Rogelio J., Aaron G, Kevin H, Mary M, Jeremy M, Jeffrey B, David R, Brandon M, Kimberly M, and Benjamin P. And we'll leave it at that. There's a few more that we'll get to next time we come back in. But thank you so much for your support. And on Rumble, free gun, thank you as well.
Starting point is 01:28:40 For the tip, stay six feet apart. Limit gatherings to six people get jabbed and assume your position six feet under yeah there's your six six six uh that's your yeah if ever there was one right on rumble k-a-f-b thank you very much for the tip and they thank me but thank you for doing that uh let's talk a little bit more about character uh and the importance of that you know i actually got a couple different people's uh take on character i just we can't emphasize how important that is to have character and leadership but again was anybody that we had in the race, Democrat or Republican, would you label any of them as somebody of character? Uh, I wouldn't. And I'm
Starting point is 01:29:33 not saying that somebody has to be perfect, but you know, when, um, they tell you one thing and do another, uh, when they don't care about ripping babies apart and many other yardsticks of character that we could have. I think it's a very concerning thing, but it's also beyond even that with a lot of these people like Trump, like Biden, for example. And I think the real issue is when we have people who hold them up as examples, who idolize them. That is the most dangerous thing to our society. It's one thing to have somebody that's there and you hold your nose and you vote for them as the lesser of two evils, but you acknowledge that they're evil. But when you hold them up as an idol, as a paragon, as a savior, as a messiah, which we're seeing this kind of language being used out there, when you do that, that is
Starting point is 01:30:22 very damaging to our society. Very damaging. Self-patriot clarifies flowers in the attic. And flowers in the attic, the mother was poisoning the children with arsenic and sugar cookies. Okay, there we go. I didn't remember that one. Thank you. That's why I said stay away from the cookies.
Starting point is 01:30:40 But when we look at how Christianity is being perceived right now, I think it's very important for us to understand how we are being perceived. We've got some churches that are a big church in North Carolina that says, well, for Easter, we're not going to use the term Jesus or Calvary or resurrection or blood or anything like that. We don't want to turn people off. You know what turns people off? Cheering for somebody who has obviously got ethical issues, integrity issues, and other things like that. But they will look at anything they can to try to pretend that we are a problem. They're accusing, in Fresno, California, they're accusing an after-school Christian thing
Starting point is 01:31:28 of luring kids in by offering them pizza. Isn't that interesting? We have these full-on groomers and pedophiles. It's not Pizzagate for them to groom kids at school, is it? But if you just offer somebody pizza as a just as a hospitality thing typically you know you you got people together you're going to give them something to eat or drink oh you're bribing them are they that easily bribed but um this is from a listener junk food science and they have a website junkfoodscience.weebly.com. And they have put in a very detailed expose
Starting point is 01:32:09 about what's going on with the abortion pills. Discovering the truth of abortion pills is a comprehensive examination of the scientific evidence that the FDA has used in each of its approval and regulatory actions on the RU486, the abortion pill. Mephistoprone or whatever. I just call it Mephistopheles. The project began after hearing of organized efforts to have research
Starting point is 01:32:33 exposing the harms of abortion retracted and discredited, removed from medical research databases. This comprehensive review of the evidence uncovered that the FDA has never had any science to support its approval of RU486, the abortion pill, or any of its regulatory actions of the abortion pill to protect patient safety for the past quarter century. We're talking about women's health here. We're not talking about the baby. We're talking about protecting the health of women. What does this pill do to the women who take it they don't care if they're lucky i guess they figure they could kill the baby and the mother
Starting point is 01:33:14 i don't have to worry about it in the future stunningly not a single study the fda used has complied with long-standing federal requirements for scientific evidence. This paper uncovered a massive web of heavily funded vested interests, troubling agendas grounded on eugenics and population control. These organized and well-funded interests have concertedly worked to control public information, medical research, education, and public policies. There's a lot of disinformation out there about the Supreme Court case, Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine versus the FDA and Danco Lab,
Starting point is 01:33:57 that is scheduled to be heard on March the 26th. The paper concludes with an overview of what's at stake in this important case, which begins tomorrow. This case won't stop chemical abortions or surgical abortions, but it will step back the most dangerous of the FDA's scientifically unsupported actions from 2016 to date. Actions that removed the safety protections for the young mothers and allows the FDA to hide the adverse events and the risks from the public. This court case will be critical for any state or locality hoping to ban and eradicate abortions from their communities. Texans and other states with anti-abortion statutes
Starting point is 01:34:39 strongly believe that this case doesn't affect them. Since 2021, the FDA has also allowed mail order and telehealth pill mills, many of them foreign, to bypass state regulations. Abortion pills are being mailed to every state in the country with no restrictions and no oversight for the safety of the young mothers, as we've talked about with this. One of the reasons that you would always have to have an exam is because uh this is not to be used beyond a certain stage beyond a certain size and that is going to vary even if the mother knows exactly the
Starting point is 01:35:17 age of the baby which is not certain uh it's the size that matters, and that's why an exam is necessary. That's why it can have severe complications for a mother to abort a baby past a certain point. And that's why these pill mills, many of them foreign, as well as all this mail-order abortion, is so dangerous for women. These people who talk about this, they don't care any more about women's health than they do about choice. These are the same people who told you to wear a mask, stay locked inside, take your jab,
Starting point is 01:35:53 all the rest of the stuff. They didn't care about your choice, your body, your choice. And they don't care about the bodies or the health of these women. They just want to kill babies. And if the mother goes, so be it. All the better, because they don't have to worry about her having any babies in the future.
Starting point is 01:36:09 So I hope everyone will read this comprehensive scientific review. It's an overwhelming amount of information, but abortion is a life-changing, life-ending choice. This is from Sandy. And I'll tell you the website again is junkfoodscience.weebly.com. So you can go there and you can find that PDF. It's very extensive. So I wanted to address those, you know, what people had sent me.
Starting point is 01:36:36 But again, from what we were talking about in the last segment, the characteristics of a good leader. You know, we are so conditioned by the Marxists who want to eradicate our history, eradicate our culture, our values and everything. They're going around tearing down statues, tearing down the reputations of men. And of course, we know that George Washington, all this stuff, I cannot tell a lie, I chopped down the church. We know these are fables that were there. But we also know that everyone talked about George Washington's character. And George Washington wrote a great deal about the importance of virtue to him. Did he practice that perfectly?
Starting point is 01:37:16 I'm sure he didn't. Nobody practices their principles perfectly, but it's what they aspire to, what values they communicate to the people that they lead and other things like that. Those are of paramount importance, even if that person may have some failures, because we all do have failures. Nevertheless, those values, that character, that integrity needs to be there in a leader. And even secular organizations understand this. Even secular organizations understand this about getting a CEO or leader of an organization. Very, very important.
Starting point is 01:37:55 How much more so when you have somebody in a position of power like the presidency, power of life and death, power of war and peace, power of the purse, the power to lock us down and kill us with injections. Do you think you ought to have some character? Should we be concerned about that? Presidential politics is not a solution, but you need to view it as a control tactic. They want you in this presidential ballot box. They want your head in there. They want all your concern about the presidential ballot, because you're not going to do anything
Starting point is 01:38:32 to affect that. Nothing. Nothing. As I've said before, it's one of the reasons why with third party politics, it would always force us to compete in the presidential race to retain ballot access, because they knew we weren't going to be able to get a big, um, uh, big enough, you know, 10% or whatever to retain ballot access. And we'd have to, you know, like Sisyphus, we would have to keep rolling the rock up the hill every four years, you know, to get ballot access. So, uh, it was a, um, it was a way to misdirect people away from races where we could have actually had a chance to get somebody elected.
Starting point is 01:39:07 But all of our resources went into presidential politics. That's why I say when you do this and you understand that they control this presidential race from ballot access to debate access to how the votes are taken, how they're tabulated, how they're reported. There's fraud in every one of these steps. And of course, Trump added a whole new level with the vote-by-mail stuff. That was him. And so, you know, the presidential politics is not going to be a solution. You just need to understand that this is what they're doing to try to control us. And yet people jump into this. We see people out there saying god gave us trump that's a quote from
Starting point is 01:39:50 some of these people who are um you know they identify themselves as evangelicals they're really taking that uh that term and dragging it through the mud uh and it's not just the mainstream media that's doing it. It's the people who are saying this kind of stuff and using that kind of label for themselves. As George Barna said, I asked people, they self-identified as evangelicals. It's like, well, what do you believe?
Starting point is 01:40:18 What do you do in your life? Do you read the Bible? Do you do any of this? No, no, no. Anybody can call themselves anything they want to. But there is a very special reason why they are vilifying that term it used to mean people who were focused on spreading the good news that's what evangelical means right it means uh it was like you've been juggle like a an angel be a messenger whatever it was a good message it was what it originally came from, translated into English,
Starting point is 01:40:46 kind of transliterated, if you will. But this is from Reuters. This is really a battle between good and evil, said evangelical TV preacher Hank Kuhnerman, says of a slew of criminal charges facing Donald Trump. There's something on President Trump that the enemy fears, and it's called the anointing. And then putting out this idea
Starting point is 01:41:13 that he's supernatural, that he's God's chosen. Yeah, God has chosen him, in the sense that anybody that's there, good or bad, has been chosen by God. He doesn't play dice with the universe. Even Albert Einstein understood that. The question is, is he being chosen for blessing or for cursing?
Starting point is 01:41:30 There's no intermediate position. It's either blessing or a curse. So I guess it depends on your perspective, whether you think that being locked down, poison shots sent out everywhere, if you think that's a blessing or is that a curse. He would not be present if God did not want him to be present. I can guarantee you that. But that doesn't really mean anything for these people. And yet to talk about things like this and the phrase of anointing and all the rest of this stuff that these people are doing.
Starting point is 01:41:59 Again, it is a game of thrones. And the game that these people are running is a game of audience. It's a grifting game they're just trying to bankrupt him they're trying to take everything that he's got where are these people when the poor people around them were having their cars and homes stolen with civil asset forfeiture where were they when the irs went in and took everything from somebody and never gave them due process? No presumption of innocence, not even a trial. They just take everything.
Starting point is 01:42:28 Then you got to sue them to try to get your stuff back. Where are they? This has been happening to everybody. Everybody. And they don't care about a single person except for Trump. And nobody's talking about reforming any of those other things either. They care if Trump gets people walking through his house, but they don't care if a SWAT team uses flashbang grenades
Starting point is 01:42:53 and throws them into a kid's crib, do they? They care about that kind of stuff? No-knock SWAT team raids? Nah, we don't care. But you guys came in and arrested uh this uh politician you put him in handcuffs you had the tv people that's reprehensible absolutely is reprehensible but it's nothing compared to what they tolerate and ignore it's been going on for 30 40 50 years of this war on drugs it just keeps getting worse uh they're trying to put him in prison uh said this guy who the the um
Starting point is 01:43:29 let's see this is um somebody who identifies himself as a prophet lance walno where's walno i don't know where's walno where's his prophe Uh, I bet he's another one of these Trump prophets like Julie green. It was told us a stream of one lie after the other. These people are as bad as Al Gore, except Al Gore doesn't claim that God told him. He claims the scientists told him and he treats the scientists as God. But, um,
Starting point is 01:44:02 these people are even worse in my book. Uh, somebody who went on the Jim Baker show to say that. Oh, yeah, you can trust Jim Baker too, right? I don't know. Maybe he's cleaned up his act. I don't know, but it was an act. It was an act.
Starting point is 01:44:19 Maybe he's had a come-to-Jesus moment in prison. I don't know. Scary thing is that God and his sovereignty is looking to give us a leader. And he's going to give us a leader that befits us, I think. That's already in the books because it's going to be Trump or Biden. So yeah, God has already got that taken care of. He's going to give us somebody that's a perfect reflection of us in many different ways. So characteristics of a good leader, 12 characteristics of a good leader. And this is really about just an organization.
Starting point is 01:44:58 How do you get an organization to work well? For example, if you had Trump elected as president, how would he actually go about making the swamp better? How would he reform it? How would he reduce its size? How would he actually manage this stuff? Well, he would have to have character to get this to happen. We need good leaders to help guide us and to make essential decisions, right? And this is important at all levels. But think about what it does to us and to our children when we idolize bad men. Again, you know, we've got all these presidents who, you know,
Starting point is 01:45:38 we find out later on they had these secret assignations or affairs or whatever you want, adultery. But they had the decency to hide it instead of flaunting it shamelessly like this guy and i've said this about trump i said you know the the first person is not part of lgbt that is proud of their sin that parades it in public that's donald trump one of the first pride parades for heterosexuals, I guess. So if we idolize people who have no integrity, that is a big deal. So what are the 12 essential leadership qualities?
Starting point is 01:46:15 Well, listen to these. I'll just run through and I won't elaborate on them, but just listen to this and see if you think that it applies to Trump. A self-awareness. Now we're not talking about narcissism, just, are you aware of your flaws of your humanity? Number two, respect, respect for what? Respect for others.
Starting point is 01:46:37 Respect for the constitution. Yeah. Respect. Yeah. Compassion. Yeah. Vision. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:46:48 Vision. vision yeah vision do you have some idea of what it is that you actually want for example somebody sent me this there's president trump it's a meme says uh if i could save my election without allowing an abortions i would do it and if i could save it by allowing all abortions i would do it and if i could save it by allowing some i would also do that okay so could save it by allowing some i would also do that okay so you know that's that's what we're talking about with trump that's his vision what is his vision i don't know can he communicate it or do we get these mixed messages this flip flopping uh learning agility is he quick to pick up on things well if they slide him he's quick to pick up on things? Well, if they slide him, he's quick to pick on it, pick up on it. Uh, like a Mac and Annie, you know, she didn't report one of his poll numbers.
Starting point is 01:47:32 Remember how he went off on her? Oh boy. Uh, collaboration. Does he work well with others? Influence integrity, courage, gratitude, resilience. Does that describe Donald Trump to you? How many of these does he have? You know, we all know that Biden doesn't have them either, right? I mean, that's not a, that's the key thing is I talk about this not to elevate Biden.
Starting point is 01:48:00 And that's the people who are caught up in this Trump thing. Well, who do you want for president? It's like, I don't want none of the above. But I'm just trying to get them to understand not to put all their hope in the office of presidency, because we have hopeless candidates there. The person said, I've seen so many great leaders ruin their opportunity because of a moral failing. Sometimes it has been a ruinous vice of committing moral indiscretions.
Starting point is 01:48:29 Oh. Sometimes it's embezzling money or committing corrupt political practices. Millions of dollars, if you will. Anyway, more often than not, however, it has been the lesser evils that simply undermine people's confidence in your work. But these guys, both Biden and Trump, pick these big ticket items.
Starting point is 01:48:49 You know, they mark that off millions in terms of payoff from people, whether it's Ukraine or pharmaceutical companies. Years ago, I was a dean working with a man who had an inability to control his temper. He would get angry with himself and his circumstances, and in the midst of anger, he would lash out on his social media network. No, this is somebody else. At those around him. In one telling scene, he completely destroyed his opportunity when he blew up at his board of directors and said derogatory and destructive things about them that forever undermined their ability to trust him.
Starting point is 01:49:27 Is this the perfect description of Trump? Virtually everybody who ever worked for this guy cannot stand him and opposes him. Many of them have even left the Republican Party. Many of them have even jumped in as Democrats to oppose him. These are the people who know him best. Shortly thereafter, he was fired from his position. He never worked again in this line of work. It wasn't a deadly vice that did him in, but it was the inability to exercise emotional intelligence that ruined his opportunity. Has Trump burned down a lot of bridges to a lot of things to actually get anything done?
Starting point is 01:50:05 During this episode, I couldn't help but think about how each of us has an area of vulnerability that often prevents us from realizing our full potential. Don't just project this onto somebody else. Think about it in your own life as well. I've seen issues, you know, personality issues affect all of us, all of us. I've often seen young promising executives derailed by the most pernicious character flaws. These events have had little to do with these executives' competence and everything to do with their lack of character.
Starting point is 01:50:38 And the reason I mention this is not to, you know, it's not this holier-than-thou type of thing. Like I said, we all have these issues. But the question is, why are people elevating somebody who obviously has no integrity, no vision, and no self-control or self-awareness, can't control his temper, does it in public over and over again? His MO, going back to his first wife, was to not just have a divorce, which is very
Starting point is 01:51:09 common in our society, but it was to mock her, ruthlessly mock her, as he cheated on her and divorced her. Peter Drucker amplifies the importance of integrity by noting that the greatest test of our integrity and character is the way that we treat other people. How does Trump treat people? We've never ever, I mean, when he first began and he started throwing smears and slander at people and lies that he would tell about people as well. Everybody's like, whoa, whoa. But now it isn't about that person at all.
Starting point is 01:51:48 It really reflects now on Trump himself. Because everybody sees the pattern of behavior. They know that he's just trying to hurt somebody that used to work for him. He has no loyalty to anyone. No loyalty to any principles. Peter Drucker says management may forgive a man a great deal. He has no loyalty to anyone, no loyalty to any principles. Peter Drucker says management may forgive a man a great deal. Again, we're talking about just running the pragmatic aspects of running an organization.
Starting point is 01:52:19 He says management may forgive a man a great deal. They may forgive incompetence or ignorance, insecurity, or even bad manners, but they will not forgive his lack of integrity. And he goes on to emphasize that one's lack of integrity is so serious that if it is discovered, it should immediately disqualify one from a position of leadership. You see, if Trump wins, his lack of integrity, his personal character flaws we've seen displayed, aren't going to keep him from getting anything accomplished, if he even really cares to get anything accomplished.
Starting point is 01:52:53 His only accomplishment that he cares about is getting himself elected, getting his name up there on those buildings. He doesn't care if they go bankrupt. He doesn't care if he's got to sign a note for $675 million at 14% interest. He wants his name on those casinos that are there. Peter Drucker believed the moral tone for the entire organization starts at the top. And that's one of the things that the president does. These presidents, whether you're talking about Biden or Trump, set the moral tone for the
Starting point is 01:53:24 nation. It's not George Washington's moral tone, is it? He believed that the behavior of your senior executives fundamentally sets the tone for your organization. He said, our people decisions must demonstrate that we will be unwavering and insisting that leaders at all levels of the organization must have basic integrity that can be trusted and relied upon. Moral failings are so catastrophic, they undermine the very trust that is at the heart of leadership.
Starting point is 01:53:57 So we should keep this in mind. And yet, because the system, we're talking about presidential elections, national elections in general, even state elections, especially the big offices like governor, the people are already chosen for you. You don't have a choice. It begins with ballot access. And by keeping that restricted, by putting the political parties in charge of that, they make sure that we don't have a choice that's going to have integrity. The importance of character and leadership when we talk about leadership development,
Starting point is 01:54:28 the focus is often on people skills or communication skills, on vision or intelligence or business acumen, right? What has Trump pushed out? Well, I'm very intelligent. I've got real successful businesses. Look at how much money I've made and all the rest of the stuff. Look at how I can communicate with people. I'm very intelligent. I've got real successful businesses. Look at how much money I've made and all the rest of the stuff. Look at how I can communicate with people. I'm a celebrity.
Starting point is 01:54:48 And I've got this vision of a wall. Even if he doesn't deliver that vision. But he doesn't deliver it because he's not a man of good character. And of course, it goes without saying, Biden and Hunter and Joe are not, there's no character there either. So what makes someone trustworthy? Well, this article has, um, seven points here. Six.
Starting point is 01:55:13 Uh, they do what they say they'll do. Know any politicians like that? Not at the national level. Really? Massey, Thomas Massey, maybe, uh, their behavior is reliable over time, they have shown consistent behavior and responses to similar situations. They are truthful, deeply honest. They make well-considered choices by being open to counsel and perspectives of others. They're brave in what they always do is right, even when it is hard.
Starting point is 01:55:43 They look out for the common good rather than just serving their own desires. This is what we need to be looking for in leaders. You don't have anybody like that running for president. You have probably nobody like that running for Congress in your area either, maybe not as governor. So look elsewhere. Look for people like this at the local level. But always hold this up as a standard. Because if we lose this standard, then this is like Solzhenitsyn talking about living by lies. This is one of the biggest lies we can tell ourselves. That character doesn't matter.
Starting point is 01:56:20 That integrity doesn't matter in our leadership. Oh, it does. That is a road to hell on earth if we reject the idea of integrity and character. And if there is no integrity or character on the ballot, then we have to look elsewhere for our solutions. Look outside of politics, or look locally at politics,
Starting point is 01:56:43 or whatever you need to do, but understand that character and integrity is not on the menu for a president. This is a good example here. LifeSite News. Stories of truly virtuous women are essential to the raising of our daughters. You can't win a culture war if you don't have any culture. You can't win if you don't have a vision, a vision of beauty and of truth and of morality. I often think of this. Travis taught himself how to read by reading G.A. Henty books.
Starting point is 01:57:18 We tried to get them started on phonics at an early age, and he really didn't like that. It was too much, you know, too dry and everything. So I said, well, let's just, I'll read to him a lot.
Starting point is 01:57:29 And so I read to him a lot. He liked, um, like the stories. My other son did too, but he grabbed, uh, started out with Jay Henty books.
Starting point is 01:57:37 This is an author from, um, the Victorian period in England. And he would write historical novels and he would always have uh as the protagonist it'd be a young boy on the cusp of manhood and he would usually have um a a girl that he was interested in as well but he would be there as major historical events were happening you know the first one we did was uh jay hinty's for the temple you'll see that all the homeschooling things because it's about the destruction of
Starting point is 01:58:09 jerusalem in 70 a.d uh the roman emperor who's there the jewish leaders and all this guy and so you got this the character who is kind of there in the middle of all of that and he's going back and forth and he's having interactions with people on both sides and that's the way g.a henty tells the story of history. The story of for the temple was taken mostly from Josephus his writings. And some of it quoted verbatim. No copyright on that, by the way, even AI could go in and scan Josephus is 2000 years old.
Starting point is 01:58:42 So copyright has expired. Uh, unless you get some knock on the door from some Roman, uh, sensor. is about 2,000 years old, so copyright has expired, unless you get some knock on the door from some Roman censor trying to take it down. Anyway, but then there would also be this story. And what struck me as I read these stories to the kids was that even the bad guys in the story had a lot of character and integrity. There were certain things that they would not do.
Starting point is 01:59:07 They had a moral standard that they would not violate. We don't have that anywhere sold to us by Hollywood or the people who give us our stories or give our children the stories. The stories that they feed our children, even the protagonists, are getting progressively more evil and more demented and deranged. And they have no standards except whatever works.
Starting point is 01:59:32 Anything you want to say about Jay Hendy? But it was a great series. And I was surprised because it's pretty high vocabulary level. And Travis taught himself how to read using that because he was really motivated and every one of these stories was the same and and it was truly that was the thing that stuck out to me the most was how everybody even the bad guys the bad guys had more character and integrity than the good guys do in our modern stories the only one I can remember where the bad guys were pretty much just despicably evil
Starting point is 02:00:05 was the one about the reign of terror where it was happening in France at the time. Oh yeah. Yeah. But to be fair, Robespierre doesn't really show up much. He's just kind of off in the wings doing, you know, whatever it was Robespierre did. Yeah. Well, G.A. Hinty, especially the people, you know, in Victorian England, they knew just how evil the french revolution was and they weren't cutting them any slack they weren't you know that that was uh pretty accurate i think i and my point being is that not that these people were not evil but that jay henty would not typically portray them as evil as they were because what he was trying to do was to sell the idea character was the most
Starting point is 02:00:45 important thing for them to see and he wanted them to see it even to some degree uh in the bad guys disney on the other hand has a very effective um way to form the characters of children especially girls says life sight news, uh, through their characters. And now they're even focusing on the villains. And you see that all through Hollywood, you know, we do a Batman's not dark enough. We got to have movies about the Joker. Um, and so they point out little girls are attracted to goodness and beauty,
Starting point is 02:01:18 but you know, the same thing is true of boys as well. Isn't just a girl thing. Uh, as a matter of fact, we should, everybody wants to see that. We should be able to own entertainment because we have truth and beauty on our side. And we want to elevate those things. And people really do like things that are uplifting instead of this negative stuff. You even see it in Hollywood, for example. Hollywood had, and still does to some degree,
Starting point is 02:01:52 they've interjected a lot of evil into their characters and other things like that. But they still, as dark as the movies are, they want to have them have a happy ending. Always want to have them have a happy ending always want to have a hollywood ending and they will focus group test this stuff to see if it's got a happy ending a good example of that was brazil with terry gilliam he did not have a happy ending studios were not happy so they fought with them they wouldn't release it he released it i think it was in la to some film critics and got them to review it,
Starting point is 02:02:26 uh, to, as, as a way of getting around their embargo, they were saying, you're not going to release this unless you make these changes. And then they actually did put together a love conquers all version of Brazil.
Starting point is 02:02:38 And they put that out as well. But, um, you know, they want to have a happy ending. They've got a pacing, they've got a certain, um, you know, they want to have a happy ending. They've got a pacing, they've got a certain, uh, you know, rhythm and a flow and a story arc that they pretty much do in every one of their movies, because they know that people want to have a happy ending.
Starting point is 02:02:55 Even if you've got something like Terminator, you want to have a hero who's going to come in there and save the day. And he's going to get rid of the, uh, AI robots that are destroying the earth. Part of that is predictive programming, but part of that is the fact that people want to have a happy ending. So this news article here from Desiree News says- Can I just say, just slightly off topic, but recently a very famous mangaka died named Akira Toriyama. He's the guy who created Dragon Ball and Dragon Ball Z. And some people deride Dragon Ball as being a little simplistic, but I think one of the reasons it has such staying power and Yama. He's the guy who created Dragon Ball and Dragon Ball Z. And some people deride Dragon Ball
Starting point is 02:03:25 as being a little simplistic, but I think one of the reasons it has such staying power and people love it so much is that the main character, Goku, just wants to do the right thing. He's truly just a hero. He just wants to protect everyone on earth and all of his friends, and he just wants to get stronger to do that. Yeah, it's a simplistic premise, but he's a hero. He's not some questionable morally gray, I don't know if I'm doing, no, he's going to do the right thing. Yeah, yeah, that's right. It's that simplistic kind of stuff. When I was reading comic books in preschool, you know, I mean, it was, it was that, that's the way the comic books of that time were.
Starting point is 02:03:57 Wasn't this complex, psychotic, conflicted person, you know, that is there all the time. We had really clear right and wrong kids want to have that it gives them they want those kinds of guidelines but it's also good for society as well and it's good for us as individuals the deseret news says are religious people happier they said the science is pretty clear they've had a lot of double blind studies on this and it's not just happiness really you know. What we understand, and I've talked about this before, happiness depends on what happens to you. It depends on your circumstances, and you may not be in good circumstances. Hopefully, you are, but good
Starting point is 02:04:37 circumstances don't typically last that long for us in this life. So it's having a joy and a peace when the circumstances are not good that's why we talk about joy instead of happiness but they talk about happiness they ask people you know if they were happy if they were religious or if they were non-religious and are you happy so that's something that is subjective and yet an oxford university press book summarized the research on the subject, for example, comes in at almost 900 pages just listing the different studies on this. And the analysis, the Handbook of Religion and Health, 326 articles on the relationship between health and measures of religiosity and subjective well-being, happiness, or life satisfaction. They found 79% of those studies reported that religious people were happier. Only 1% of the studies showed they were less happy. Heavily skewed to that one direction.
Starting point is 02:05:34 Finding a relationship between happiness and religiosity is so established that many research papers take it as a given starting point. So when you look at this and it's not again um we look at it it's it's more of a relationship than it is uh things that we do i mean even when somebody's got a whole list of things that they need to do to um appease god or whatever, they're still looking at that, in a sense, as a relationship. And so it really is, when we talk about peace, it really is about being contented with what you have,
Starting point is 02:06:19 having a confident expectation about what comes after life, what's next in life, or being grateful for what you have. We've seen studies showing that people who have a great deal of gratitude are happier because they're focusing on what's in the glass rather than what is not in the glass. And so I think what is happening here is they're looking at people um who have religious beliefs they're not focused so much on what they feel like they need you know they're looking at something else but even these mega churches now and many other churches that are being run like a business uh they're selling something they They're not really giving people peace, peace with God, peace of mind, contentment with what they have.
Starting point is 02:07:13 It is really surprising to look at this. Let me pull this up here. This is a megach church in North Carolina. And this person is giving an interview and she is head of digital media for this big church. This is a church that's got more than 25,000 members attending at multiple locations across the state. And so in this interview, the guy asked her, what are you going to do for Easter? I'd love to hear about like, what are you specifically tackling for Easter right now? Like, okay, this is going to be a bigger service for most churches. What are some of the things that you have to get your ducks in a row, as it were, in respect to Easter?
Starting point is 02:07:56 For us, the most important thing on Easter is inviting people to church. Easter and Christmas are the only two Sundays of the year that are actually wrapped around a particular passage in the Bible, right? Most of our other Sundays are whatever the pastor wants to preach on, you know, any particular thing or whatever. But Easter and Christmas are both around particular biblical events. And so this particular biblical event of Easter is tied directly to our mission. And so that's so important to us. And so when I think about how I'm going to talk about Easter, I'm thinking about talking
Starting point is 02:08:26 to people far from God. So because that's the thing that matters most to us. So I'm not going to say the word Calvary. I'm not going to say the word resurrection. I'm not going to say the blood of Jesus, right? I'm not going to say any of these words that make someone feel like an outsider. This is really important, an important guiding principle for how we develop language is anyone can be a part of our church. It might not be for everyone. Everyone might not
Starting point is 02:08:52 like it, but anyone can come. You don't have to understand what we're, you know, any fancy language. There's not any prerequisite to be able to come here. Well, yeah, there is a prerequisite actually uh it is uh calvary uh christ crucifixion the resurrection those are the prerequisites for anything that a church does now if you got a business that you're marketing to people and you don't want to offend them well that's a completely different thing but uh there are some particulars there. How are they going to know any of this stuff unless somebody tells them? How will they believe unless they have been told? You're not going to tell them? You're going to run away from this stuff because you think somebody might be triggered or offended?
Starting point is 02:09:37 This is what has happened. This is a good example. And I think this is really an example of what Meathead, Rob Reiner, is trying to do with his documentary on Christian nationalism. That's why I said, you know, when John MacArthur talks about Christian nationalism, he's thinking about theological arguments he's had with some of these people over eschatology or other things a couple of decades ago. That's not what's happening now. These people are trying to make us ashamed to talk about Jesus. And they're trying to make us ashamed of our religion and ashamed of the idea that there is such a thing as absolute truth.
Starting point is 02:10:16 She's an example of that. And she hasn't even been criticized yet. John MacArthur doesn't have a problem going on Larry King and saying, this is what I believe. End of story. You know? So he, he,
Starting point is 02:10:28 I don't think he really even sees that. It's not anything that whatever phase him, but he's not this digital, uh, communications person like that. And I think all of our beliefs really need to be about that. We need to think about what thing, what about what are the important things in life and what we believe about those things. And we need to be convinced enough that we're willing to stand on that.
Starting point is 02:10:55 And if we don't, our society is headed down the tubes faster than you can imagine. And that's what we see right now. And we see it heading down the tubes because of that very attitude about everything, about everything. So she's there at a church called Elevation Church, pastored by Stephen Furtick, 25,000 people across North Carolina. She said it's vitally important that people feel super chill when they get an invitation to attend the church's Easter services. I mean, those are churches I go to. We don't even use the term Easter.
Starting point is 02:11:29 We talk about Resurrection Sunday. You shouldn't even want to use the term Resurrection. I think everybody pretty much knows what Resurrection is. I mean, they've even used it over and over again in horror films, you know. Going back to the old Frankenstein movies, you know, the people go in and exhume the bodies so that they, you know, the doctors could experiment on them and do autopsies and stuff like that and learn anatomy. They call them resurrectionists. I think everybody knows what that is about. Anyway, she said, how we talk to someone who is not steeped in that tradition. Well,
Starting point is 02:12:07 here's how you talk to people. You declare what is true. The gospel is a declaration. It's not a debate. You say what's true. And if God has opened up somebody's heart and mind and ears and eyes to this, they'll understand that. Or they'll ask some more questions and absolutely answer questions. But any kind of terminology that is there that they don't understand, they can always ask. This person on Protestia says, Elevation Church seems to think the words like resurrection are dirty and offensive. What sort of marketing ploy?
Starting point is 02:12:41 That's it, a marketing ploy. What kind of marketing ploy are they using to get people to attend services? You know, these people who do this kind of stuff think that the people they're communicating with aren't going to see them as condescending. They think that people are not going to see that this is a marketing ploy. But people see through all that. It's pretty transparent. So here's one of the promotions that they put out for Easter. Hop on down to Elevation Church for a wicked Easter egg extravaganza.
Starting point is 02:13:24 Pastor Steve will deliver a three-point sermon on why we shouldn't put all of our eggs in one basket. And he'll be wearing a Bugs Bunny costume. Plus, you'll get your bunny worship on with our Gen Z worship band. Runners up in the 2022 Regional American Idol Audition. Wow. Let's go for some amateur entertainment. You want to see a guy wearing a bunny costume? Okay.
Starting point is 02:13:58 I wonder if it's that pink bunny costume that they had the kid in a Christmas story wearing, Ralphie. Or you go to the other extreme. This is also from the same church. It's Megadeth Sunday at Elvishan Church. 60 minutes of blood-curdling mayhem. The crucifixion set to heavy metal soundtrack, performed on stage by our in-house thespians. Not that there's anything wrong with that, they said. Guaranteed to scare the hell out of you a nursery is provided
Starting point is 02:14:26 so anyway this uh protestia i'm sorry this is not protestia this is a todd starnes comment he says an invitation at church doesn't have to be a theological dissertation or some sort of bait and switch. It also doesn't have to be sensational entertainment either. It's not what it's about. You know, we just are entertaining ourselves to death, aren't we? Can we not take anything seriously? Why not just be honest and upfront with people? Let them know what Easter is really about, why it's important for them to hear the message. I mean, at some point, says Todd Starnes, Elevation Church does present the gospel message to their unchurched visitors, right? At some point, non-Christians are told about the resurrection
Starting point is 02:15:14 of Christ, right? I mean, we're not sure, actually. We're asking questions here. Does that really happen there? And at some point, the visitors are made aware that the blood of Jesus was the price that was paid for our sins, right? If not, Elevation Church Easter service is nothing more than a self-help sermon accented with snazzy graphics and a so-so cover band. Yeah, it's like Joel Osteen. Worked for him. He's got an even bigger church. He's over 30 000 last i looked maybe we should start calling this so we could have this be a category we could call it austinism or maybe paula whitish um yeah though your sins be as scarlet uh they can be whitish kind of now these people are not about getting rid of sin. They're
Starting point is 02:16:07 not about understanding what it takes to make peace with God and the price that is paid. And that's one of the things that is different about Christianity. In Christianity, it is God who came in the form of man to pay the price so that he could have mercy and justice. He cannot look the other way. There has to be justice, but he took the penalty on himself. And so that's the key thing with all the stuff that they want to run away from, with their fun and games and with their business. But probably quoting Isaiah would be a little bit too offensive for somebody.
Starting point is 02:16:47 Anyway, a person's name is Nikki Scher. She is the digital content director. As one person said, when Christianity came to Rome, it manifested as a government when it came to Europe, became a culture when it came to America, it became a business with people like digital content directors. Importantly, in a disclaimer, the guy who did the interview, he says it's important that elevation absolutely emphasizes the resurrection of Christ in an Easter service. And they use that word while the guy is standing there in a bunny costume, I guess. It's just clownish. The question is, you know, are you in this life, do you really
Starting point is 02:17:35 understand what is happening? As I began talking about Kate Middleton, One guy said, when you preach to people, he says you preach as a dying man talking to other dying people. You think that's what's happening when this guy's putting on a bunny costume? Is that the attitude that he's got there? Is this something they take seriously? Are you playing with your sin
Starting point is 02:18:03 or are you fighting your sin? That's the issue that the people need to look at. And so DeSantis has put in a settlement with the LGBT lobby on the don't say gay law, as they characterize it. See, the election is over. Now we can drop the pretense here. Allowing LGBT influencers within Florida school systems to continue virtually unencumbered in their efforts to indoctrinate public school children there. The state of Florida reached a settlement last week with a pro-LGBT group called Equality Florida. They're not about equality.
Starting point is 02:18:41 They're about superiority. Other plaintiffs in a case challenging the Parental Rights and Education Act enacted in 2022 when he's thinking about running for president. The settlement allows LGBT promoting safe space, stickers, discussions about sexual orientation and gender identity in the, as long as they are not part of formal instruction. Again, this goes back to fight about why are you teaching my kids about any sexual stuff here? I mentioned going back to the late 80s, early 90s. You had a guy who got in trouble. He got arrested, thrown in jail because he went there to take his kid out of a sex education class. She was eight years old.
Starting point is 02:19:28 He said, she doesn't need to be in this. I'll teach her about this when it's age appropriate for her. It's not. I don't want her in it. They said, no, she's going to be in it. So he went to that day to take her out of school. They arrested him for trespassing. They said, when you drop your kid off, you have, this is what the judge said, you've abandoned them to the state.
Starting point is 02:19:47 And loco parentis, we will operate in place of the parent. And so the question is, why is anybody dropping their kid off at a school that determines that they're going to talk to them about sex? Do you want strangers talking to your kid about sex? Would you, if you went to some kind of an entertainment venue, you're going to the movies or you're going to some kind of a ball game or something, and you've got some adult there that wants to start talking to your kid about sex or talking to your kid about what they do sexually, what would you do with that? Well, it's okay, isn't it it if it's done by teachers in a school when you're not around oh it's just fine isn't it this law now this this agreement that desantis has
Starting point is 02:20:34 um he's no longer sanctimonious i guess he is de sanctimonious he's de sanctified it also explicitly permits student cross-dressing same school sex dances reading assignments assignments and school plays with lgbt themes lgbt anti-bullying instruction by the way you know um what about that racial bullying that was going on you know the the fight where that uh white girl was teamed up on and a black girl who was much bigger than her banged her head repeatedly into the concrete the extent she's still in a coma may not survive um her parents the the parents of the person who beat that girl uh maybe in to death uh, uh, her parents said, she's the victim.
Starting point is 02:21:26 She's the victim, uh, can never be a white person. Who's a victim. And all this stuff about bullying, as I've said, many times, bullying has always been there. There's nothing unique about this. I need to get a bunch of kids together. They're like chickens. They'll find the weakest one and they'll just peck on them.
Starting point is 02:21:42 Right. Bullying is always there for any reason um groups like the cfc interpret this as code for lgbt indoctrination and it is on campus extracurricular activities such as the gay straight alliances are notorious for indoctrinating and sexualizing school children as a a matter of fact, you know, the guy Sam Britton, who had the bald head and lipstick and all that, and was going around stealing suitcases from women at the airport. Well, he was also in a group called the Trevor Project, and where he would hang out, they would counsel LGBT kids in high school and junior high school and things like that.
Starting point is 02:22:24 I mean, it's just a way for them, for pedophiles to groom kids. That's all it is. The agreement inverts the purpose of the statute. The settlement draws a false equivalency between destructive LGBT lifestyle choices and traditional heterosexual relationships and families and between transgenderism and biology based understanding of sex. So an organization talking about, um,
Starting point is 02:22:51 the organization is the Christian family coalition of Florida. They said that in a statement to life site news, uh, Rhonda Sanchez's office described the details as a major win after signing the agreement that guts the law that he put into place and then ran for president on so i say we never had any people of integrity from the very beginning but while all that is happening you have a teacher who decides to pray before school begins and all hell breaks loose this is one of these things where meet you at the poll it's not anything i was ever involved with.
Starting point is 02:23:27 It happened long after I was out of school, but they would have Christians pray at the flagpole or something before school starts. And this is in Texas. The American Center for Law and Justice has gone to federal court in Houston on behalf of an employee of the Katy Independent School District. So this is the free exercise of religion by a person who is a school employee. That's not allowed.
Starting point is 02:23:54 But grooming and sexualization of the children is allowed, encouraged, demanded, mandated. The federal court filing explains that the district violated and continues to violate her rights to religious expression by prohibiting her from praying when students might be present, even if that prayer occurs off the clock, off the clock. But porn is good, and we need to get more porn to the kids in school. Every year, millions of people gather at school flagpoles to pray before the school begins, says the ACLJ. They're very proud to stand in support of See You at the Poll, a prayer rally for students and participating adults to lift up their schools in prayer.
Starting point is 02:24:36 Our client has prayed at the poll every year on behalf of her students. This year, she had gathered with two friends and fellow teachers to pray at the school flagpole. The school principal called these teachers into his office, then told them they could not pray at the pole or in the presence of students, because if they did so, students may see and join in. Wouldn't it be interesting if they applied that standard to sexual content? You can't show people pictures of what you do as adults, and you can't talk to them about what you do as adults, because if you're doing that kind of thing, the students might want to join in. That's precisely why these people are doing it. He told them that it was against the
Starting point is 02:25:17 law for them to pray publicly where students could see them, and then pointed to a school policy. Well, school policy is not the law. That prohibited teachers from praying in the presence of students. What would we do if there was a law like that? You know, what if the government said you can't pray in public? Or let's say, what if the government said you can't meet in public because there's this mysterious virus going around that you don't see anybody sick with? What would we do in the case of that?
Starting point is 02:25:45 Or even if it was a virus that was going around that was real, and you see people dropping like flies, and they say, well, everybody is sick. You can't go, you can't have a church service here. Well, what should we do? I said at the time when this was being locked down, I said we should do, what did Daniel do? Well, when they told Daniel he couldn't pray uh what did daniel do well when they told daniel he couldn't pray what he do he um uh went up into his room he opened up the window so that everybody could
Starting point is 02:26:12 see and he prayed there on the balcony or right you know right there at the window so that everybody could see what he was doing he flaunted it to them we need to engage in that kind of civil disobedience that's a good example that Daniel did there. No, you can't tell me anything about this. And yet we had a lot of people who put the pinwheels on their heads, so to speak, and did whatever the government told them to do. This is the free exercise of religion. This is not about establishing a religion.
Starting point is 02:26:44 If you establish a religion, what you're telling people is that they must do this. They must attend. They must pay money to this church or whatever. People who found this country knew exactly what that was about. That's what they had left England for. And that's what they were afraid the federal government was going to do because all these different states at the time had established religions. But even if you didn't attend, you still had to pay. Kind of like the established religion of the government schools, that even if we don't attend, we still got to pay. That needs to be taken down.
Starting point is 02:27:15 For the same reasons you took down the establishment of religion, because the schools are there to establish a religion, whether it's secular humanism, Marxism, racism, whatever it is, sex. It's there for that purpose. The ACLJ explained that the Constitution, quote, protects the rights of religious employees to pray even publicly. They do not somehow lose their constitutional rights just by being a government employee. And this is the whole issue with the military mandates as well. A lot of the people in the military, you know, people would say, well, you signed the military,
Starting point is 02:27:46 so you've got to take orders. I signed up to support the Constitution. And if supporting the Constitution means that I disobey orders, I'm going to support the Constitution. And this, folks, is why they're removing duty, honor, country at West Point. For the same reason they put out these mandates and kick people who put duty, honor, country at West Point. For the same reason they put out these mandates
Starting point is 02:28:06 and kick people who put duty, honor, country, and the Constitution ahead of unlawful, unconstitutional orders. The school was sent a demand letter giving instructions to stop infringing on their First Amendment rights, responded, but then abruptly doubled down on its position. It continues to insist that teachers or other employees can read or pray religious materials during a time when students are not present, but eventually only at that point in time. So finally, like I said before, yeah, but porn is okay, right?
Starting point is 02:28:39 Porn for kids is being labeled as decency. You see, prayer is bad. Porn is good. Now, here's the equation. School is bad. Democrats in one state are pushing their decency agenda so that children will have access to pornographic materials in libraries. This is in Maryland. And this guy that's blowing a whistle on it's with the maryland family institute he said the term orwellian is overused in modern political discourse
Starting point is 02:29:13 that's because the authoritarian regime of george orwell's classic dystopian novel is an easy comparison for whatever thing the speaker wants to argue against in a political debate. But sometimes the comparison is truly deserved, like when politicians seek to quell political discourse by torturing language itself to suit their ends. And he said this is what's happening with their decency agenda. A Democrat with a Maryland legislature and House of Delegates has a decency agenda. Oh, that sounds good, right?
Starting point is 02:29:48 So I'm not asking for Marylanders to believe in what I believe in or compromise their values. We know that we will never agree on everything. We shouldn't, said the person with the family organization. But they said this is about respect, said the Democrat. But the actual contents of the agenda are a little bit different, such as Freedom to Read Act, hidden among other non-discrimination schemes, would simply take away the abilities of libraries to get state funding to regulate or to restrict access to pornographic materials.
Starting point is 02:30:21 I'm not exaggerating. Anyone paying attention to debates about the content of public school libraries over the past several years, including all the allegations of book banning, is familiar with the caliber of smut that the radical progressives are trying to foist on our kids. The new decency plan literally guarantees access to indecent materials. Well, this is what they always do, isn't it? They turn the language inside out, upside down, because it is a perverted society that we've established here.
Starting point is 02:30:54 We'll be right back. Whether you're feeling like the blues or bluegrass, APS Radio has you covered. Check out a wide variety of channels on our app at APSradio.com. oh you're listening to the david knight show let's talk a little bit about squatters because we do have a solution for this, but I've had a lot of readers who have contacted me. This listener says, well, our government mandates citizens to house illegal aliens. It's starting to look that way, as a matter of fact. It's a workforce housing and community land trust
Starting point is 02:32:27 and it's a way to move against private property as i said before we got a pressure from the bottom in terms of people who are acting as squatters uh we also have pressure from the top with these private equity firms that are coming in. Workforce housing, community land trusts, all a means to an end to private property. And so the listener writes, well, our government under the crises, so-called, of illegal immigration for humanitarian manipulative reasoning mandate that citizens of the U.S. open their homes to house illegals. This reminds me of the movie Dr. Zhivago.ago yeah because this is all marxism isn't it talked about that many times you know dr chivago it comes back he is a doctor from wealthy family they have a big
Starting point is 02:33:15 house and there's a whole bunch of people living there and they're just waiting for him to step over the line verbally or with a gesture or something like that so they can throw him in prison and they've relegated his family to a corner of the attic he knows their game he's very obsequious to them i think but it's a lot of pressure they just come in you know no this is for the we've just commandeered this as i said many times before that that as a kid when i saw that i completely missed the love story stuff just went over my head uh the adulterous affair and all the rest of the stuff which uh annoyed my parents but it was a communism that i saw there that's like whoa so you pick up on different things um where the communists took over russia they mandated
Starting point is 02:34:05 private houses be proportioned into smaller living quarters for multiple numbers of people to occupy for you know equity or in the recent past in europe older people kicked out of their long-held places of residence to house newly arrived illegal immigrants also recent houses recently houses that are owned by citizens in the u.s not occupied due to house being empty sale or rent now vulnerable to anyone including illegal aliens to come in that's why i said you know we have to um i think the term squatter is uh probably the best term that we could have they don't you know ap and these language police have different things that they're pushing i think maybe that's the best term we could have. They don't, you know, AP and these language police have different things that they're pushing. I think maybe that's the best term we could have.
Starting point is 02:34:49 This was sent to me by Handy, EMS out of Atlanta. He said, here's another story about the homeowner arrested in their own home. This one, though, is in Atlanta. Remember before we had New York, a lot of people look at it and say, ah, it's just New York. New York is crazy. And it is crazy.
Starting point is 02:35:05 But as I mentioned before, I, you know, Goat Tree, one of his employees had a situation with us in Texas. Here's one in Georgia. It isn't exactly the swatter kind of theft, he says. But notice that in this case, the rightful homeowner was also arrested. Ironically, they say it made us feel like squatters. He said, to my knowledge, squatters are treated far better than this man who actually owned the house. So again, they're elderly.
Starting point is 02:35:34 He said, this is pretty close. I could drive there in a half hour, 45 minutes or so from where he lives. And this story, this is a couple. They're forced out of their home after somebody stole it from them now this is not somebody physically occupying it as a squatter this is something where uh based on their age they're 77 perhaps they had probably paid off this home loan and somebody then took out a loan on it. Because if it was encumbered with another loan, probably somebody would have noticed that when they're filling out the paperwork. But I think he found this old couple who had paid off their mortgage and didn't have a
Starting point is 02:36:17 mortgage on the house, and they filed paperwork there, used that to take out a loan. And so they had a local TV reporter who investigated this. So they'd lived in the house for more than 20 years. But when the reporter got there, all their belongings were outside on the yard. And she said, it made us feel like we were squatters. They just tossed my stuff out like it was trash. A man used fraudulent documents to take over her property and her husband was arrested for refusing to leave she said i don't know how this is possible how does
Starting point is 02:36:52 this happen uh she said she and her husband began getting letters in the mail saying that taken out oh it was wrong it was a second mortgage they did already have a mortgage he was able to do this uh second mortgage because i guess you know first first mortgage company they're already secured in their position uh but they said there was something about a second mortgage which they said they never took out we don't have a mortgage like that by tuesday a man told them that he was the owner and had purchased the home from foreclosure it's too easy to forge a deed and to record it. She said it's a big problem nowadays because of the fact that e-filing and the e-recording of deeds is so easy.
Starting point is 02:37:33 It's very easy to record forged deeds. Again, if you bought a house recently, you know, you do everything. They send you stuff by mail. You don't have to even have a closing in person anymore. They can do it with all e-documents and things like that. Another example of why, you know, you can have, you can have fraud with anything. It's just that when you have the digital world, it makes the fraud so much easier to accomplish. It really does. That's what concerns me about cryptocurrency.
Starting point is 02:38:09 Notaries are not checking identification on these documents, he said, to verify this. And there's no place for them to contest this. I said, there's no people's court for challenging a wrongful foreclosure or for challenging a forged deed. That is the fundamental problem. And her husband was still in jail when they got there. Even if a homeowner can prove that they've been the victim of this type of fraud, a judge can still order them to move out and still order them to pay. Isn't that amazing? Even if you prove fraud, a judge could still do this.
Starting point is 02:38:49 This is why it's so concerning now that we have Wall Street casting such a lustful eye on single-family homes. What is really going to be the result of this? One listener wrote me and says, well, they're going to control the price. That's going to be the bottom line on this. And that is really true. They will control the price. That's what happens when, that's the purpose of them trying to get a consolidation, a monopoly. You know, When you have fewer of them and they're very big, they can control the price. Just take a look at what is happening with usury laws that have long since been removed on the banking services. You know, now that we have fewer banks, do they pay you any interest?
Starting point is 02:39:40 No. Do they charge you extraordinary amounts on credit cards and all the rest of the stuff? This is what is going to happen as these same ruthless companies get the majority, the vast majority, and they're almost at the tipping point right now. 44% of the homes, as I pointed out last week, 44% of the homes that were sold were bought by these private equity firms. And that's more than double what people were pointing. They said, well, you know, right now it's about, you know, 16, 20% or whatever. It's going to be at 60% in a few years.
Starting point is 02:40:15 But it's already double what those people were saying. It's going to go over the 50, 60% thing much, much sooner. So I had a listener who sent this, said since the housing crisis, this has really exploded. And so he said, so here's some pros and cons to think about. He says, first of all, it's going to be increased rental supply.
Starting point is 02:40:36 Well, that's a pro. He says he got three pros and a couple of cons. An increased rental supply. Well, that would be a pro, pro i think if you wanted to rent but not everybody wants to rent and uh most people realize that with renting um you um never get any equity in anything it's not a renting is uh the way that the person who owns the stuff and rents things out that's the way they get really wealthy. That's why the renter economy is what they want to impose on everybody for everything, whether you're talking about a home or you're talking about your car.
Starting point is 02:41:13 Even when you're talking about software, they all want the renter model. They don't even want you to own DVDs. They want you to rent them, streaming them all the time, or CDs, music. Everything is about making sure that you don't own anything. So I don't know that having an increased supply of rental stuff is necessarily a good thing. Professional management. Homes are typically managed by professional property management companies.
Starting point is 02:41:39 But again, even before the Trump lockdown, you were starting to get a concentration of this stuff. And now after the lockdown, it has accelerated it. And if you have a limited number of people owning this property, we know that with lack of competition, what they're going to do, they're not going to be managing it all that well. And then access to capital, he says, is a pro. Private equity firms have significant financial resources to purchase and renovate properties on a large scale. Well, that's assuming that that's what they want to do, but then, of course, they will also set the price.
Starting point is 02:42:17 And if there's a few of them, they're going to set the price pretty high. That's the reason they want to consolidate. That's the reason why you have all these billionaires from david rockefeller up to peter teal saying competition is a sin peter till didn't use that word because he doesn't have any concept of sin david rockefeller you know was a nominal christian or whatever going you know living in america at that point time, people would understand that vocabulary, whether they were Christian or not.
Starting point is 02:42:48 But Peter Thiel doesn't use that exact phrase, but it means the same thing. The greatest evil is competition, they say. So they need to consolidate everything. On the con side, you've got reduced homeownership properties. And that's a big con. Because the truly big con, as we all know, and they've been up front about it, is that you'll own nothing, that you'll rent everything from them, and then they will be able to increase the rental rates. That's a number two negative.
Starting point is 02:43:19 And then the impact on the community. Some critics argue that the prevalence of investor-owned rental homes can change the character and the stability of neighborhoods traditionally dominated by owner-occupied housing. Oh, absolutely. Take a look at housing projects with welfare. And does anybody ever fix those up? No. If they do anything, the kids will destroy it, put graffiti all over it. That's not the case with, you know, growing up in Tampa, you could see the difference there. There were a lot of old neighborhoods that right after I left, graduated and got married and moved away and then came back,
Starting point is 02:44:00 they had a mayor there in Tampa, Sandy Friedman. They called her Sandlot Friedman because she was going in and confiscating single-family detached homes. They were very poor homes. They didn't, you know, they were very small and the people were poor. They'd had them for a long time. But she would come in and say, well, your grass is not mowed properly, so we're going to hit you with fines and let these fines rack up.
Starting point is 02:44:24 Come in and say, well, I see some, you need to repaint that house. And if you don't repaint that house, I'm going to start giving you a $50 a day fine or something like that. And before long, these people couldn't afford it and they would confiscate their house for a very small fine, small compared to the value of the house. But these people, these neighborhoods were much, much nicer than you would see in a government housing project because they would keep it up as well as they could. They might not be able to put a new coat of paint on it, but they would keep it clean.
Starting point is 02:44:55 They'd keep the yard clean. And it was a completely different prospect. But today, all of the governments want to make sure that we don't have a stake in anything, that all the stakeholders are going to be this small group of people out there. It's so bad that Babylon B's even picked up on it. A new squat B&B service to help squatters find the perfect home to take over. Babylon B's take on all this. Far too often, squatters take over a new home
Starting point is 02:45:25 without knowing the quality of amenities provided or the difficulties dealing with the host, said Squat B&B CEO. Our service allows squatters to read reviews from other squatters who have stayed at a property and to see honest feedback about what each home has to offer. We have millions of homes
Starting point is 02:45:41 on our site ready for immediate squatting and the best part is, it's absolutely free. Squat B&B will allow squatters to write reviews and to post photos from any home that they have stayed in, as well as leaving a rating for the owner of a home. Sadly, some homeowners can be difficult to communicate with on issues such as utilities or not wanting to give up their beds for the squatters. Owners can leave reviews about the people squatting on their home that other hosts will be able to read. Squatters who consistently achieve good rankings will be highlighted as super squats, which helps them to get access to luxury properties. Michigan is offering homeowners $500 a month to house newcomers. See, that's what we said.
Starting point is 02:46:31 This is where this is happening. A couple of these articles talking about that. And calling them newcomers. Like I said, don't call them illegal aliens or foreign citizens here illegally or undocumented migrants or migrants or whatever. And certainly not newcomers call them squatters because that is the perfect metaphor for what this is all about.
Starting point is 02:46:53 The program in Michigan is called the newcomer rental subsidy. I mean, it might as well be squat BNB. Um, it will provide shelter, um, outside of state shelters for refugees, quote unquote. These people are not refugees. They're not fighting political persecution. As a matter of fact, the Biden administration, which has opened up the borders for so-called refugees,
Starting point is 02:47:18 tried to deport real refugees. The Christian homeschool family Germans who fled Germany because they're going to arrest the parents and take the kids away because they're homeschooling the kids out of a religious conviction. They've been left alone for 10, 15 years. And the Biden administration just last year tried to deport them. They really were refugees, but they were the wrong kind of refugees. Well, what do we do about this? Turns out that there is a solution to this. You can out squat the squatters and there's a guy and his name is flash Shelton.
Starting point is 02:47:56 That is his real name. And, he has an organization where he helps people. And, um, uh, he was interviewed interviewed by Varney on Fox News. And he has a squatter solution. Listen to what he did at his mother's home to get rid of squatters. Squatters took over my mom's house after my dad passed away.
Starting point is 02:48:22 We were trying to sell the home. I called local law enforcement, and as soon as they saw that there was furniture in the house, they said that I had a squatter situation and they had basically no jurisdiction and they couldn't do anything. So I dissected the laws over a weekend. I basically figured out that until there's civil action, the squatters didn't have any rights. So if I could switch places with them, become the squatter myself, I would assume those squatter rights. And just in case they had a fake lease, like I hear some do, I had my mom device, you know, write me up a lease. We got it notarized. I packed up my Jeep, drove up there
Starting point is 02:49:06 and paced out the joint around 4 a.m. I waited about 8, 830 in the morning. Three cars pulled out of the driveway and I made entrance to the house. I put up cameras, waited for them to come back and they didn't have a lease. So I never that never came into play. But when they came back, I just laid it out for him, told him that it was all locked up cameras. And the only way they would get back in the house is if they broke in on camera and I would prosecute. And I told him they had a day to get their stuff out or the furniture was not theirs anymore. But you couldn't have gotten them out unless they had left in their three cars in the morning. You couldn't bang on the door, walk in and tell them
Starting point is 02:49:52 to get out. You couldn't do that, could you? No, the law would prevent me from physically removing them. However, being that I wasn't the homeowner, I had more rights as a tenant. I would have more rights than them. So if if they were there, then I would have just entered the home with a lease in hand. I would have just shown them the lease. I would have walked past them and said, you know, I don't know what you're doing, but I'm moving in. This is my house now. And I probably would have just done anything and everything I could to make it miserable for them so that they left on their own. Are you running a service now, helping other people get squatters out? Yeah, so more importantly to that is I'm trying to change the laws.
Starting point is 02:50:37 That's my number one focus. So in helping others right now, since I feel bad, I feel bad, I can't help everyone, but if we can change the squatter laws, I feel like that's the way I could help everyone. Yeah. So every time I help someone, whether it's a, uh, um, you know, I do zoom consultations. I ask people to make a donation to the cause and when I can physically, you know, go out and help them. Yes, it is.
Starting point is 02:51:03 It is something I am doing to help people now as many as I personally possibly can yeah United handyman's Association his name is flash Shelton but isn't that interesting he worked it out he says so the so the government hates people who own things right so if I'm a tenant and I've got a lease, oh, that puts me in a superior position to these people and I can get them out of there. Isn't that amazing that we have a government that allows squatters to take your property, but we also have a government that will use SWAT teams without a warrant to break into your home. I mean, you realize how the government has been weaponized against us and against all
Starting point is 02:51:48 principles, don't you? It truly is amazing. Well, again, you know, whether we're talking about squatters or we're talking about swatters, swatters are good. Squatters are good. So just do a no-knock raid or no-knock and just take over the house. Either way, with a swatter or a squatter, our government is setting on us. We're going to take a quick break, and we're going to come right back.
Starting point is 02:52:12 Stay with us. Tell Alexa to add the APS Radio skill and have access to the best channels anywhere, from country to blues, classic hits to news. APS Radio curates incredibly diverse playlists for you to enjoy. Get details at APSRadio.com. In a world of deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act. You're listening to The David Knight Show. Well, welcome back, and I want to thank General McGovern. Thank you very much.
Starting point is 02:53:20 I appreciate that. It's very kind and generous on Rockfan. The tip says, thank you, Dave, for staying in the fight, keeping us informed with missed information. Your sense of humor makes it fun. This only is a drop in the gas tank. Well, thank you very much, though. I appreciate that.
Starting point is 02:53:34 But hopefully it helps. It's been a while since I've contributed. So here's a step towards catching up. God bless you and your family for your active service. Well, thank you very much. And also on Rockfin, thank you very much and also on rock fan thank you gregory walter and i want to thank just finish up with the zell people uh from um march uh this is um let me continue and i read the name before because it's somebody that has contributed twice uh this month two of them as a matter of fact uh gretchen c uh William R, David M, Justin F, Alexander W, Manny D, Jennifer J, Jeffrey C, Kenneth C, Gregory I, Kimberly M, Brian P, Jared U, Scott L, Manny D again, and Kyle H and Raymond G.
Starting point is 02:54:26 Thank you, all of you. I really do appreciate that so much. And all of us do in the family. Thank you. And just want to say it doesn't cost anything. If you like the broadcast, we really would appreciate that and help people to find the broadcast. And I just want to remind people, I know we didn't get into financial issues too much except in a tangential way but again
Starting point is 02:54:49 You know having something that is that it's physical that is private that secures your financial transactional privacy Is gold and silver? People if you want to as Gerald sent he said oninti said on Friday, he says, I use, he's gold and silver. He says, I have a little bit of gambling money that I put into crypto. And that's kind of the way I see it. It's like a stock market or something like that. It's, it's very volatile. Uh, but gold, even though we see the price change, it's very slow moving and progressive.
Starting point is 02:55:20 And it is what you're really seeing is valuation and the value of the dollar. That's what changes. Gold is pretty much keeping its value. So that movement around there that you see really is the fiat currency and the arbitrary feeling about fiat on any given day. So if you want to try to prepare for that, Tony Arterburn is a great way to, his Wise Wolf Gold is a great way to buy gold and silver. He can handle transactions of any size. He can help you with an IRA, with a rollover.
Starting point is 02:55:58 He can also help you to gradually accumulate it in a small amount each month, and you get to take advantage of the group buy there with Wolfpack. So again, DavidKnight.Gold will take you to Tony Arteman's Wise Wolf Gold. We've got just a little bit of time left. And I wanted to talk a little bit about money before we leave. And of course, we've also got the red flag laws, which I did not get to today. But we just had Merrick Garland announce that he wants to have a national red flag law.
Starting point is 02:56:28 And everybody is angry as they can be at the Biden administration. They should be. But you do understand this is another Trump precedent, a precedent Trump. He was the one who said, we're going to take the guns and do the due process later. And I said, well, you know, if you set things up like that, and if you do gun control by executive order with a bump stock, and of course, Trump also did a pistol ban, a pistol brace ban should say, uh, you do that kind of stuff by executive order immediately. Lala Harris picked up on it, said, yeah, I'm going to do that as well.
Starting point is 02:57:00 I become president. I'm going to give them a hundred days to enact my gun control agenda. If they don't do it, I'll do it myself, just as Trump just did. And just as Trump did with the red flag laws, now Biden is doing it as well. It helps if you've got somebody who's got principle. But the way that you defeat these things is at the state level. So that's all I'm going to say about the red flag stuff today. But when we're looking at money, understand that there is a relentless push to go cashless, a relentless push to go into CBDC.
Starting point is 02:57:33 And that more than the value of gold or silver at any given moment relative to the dollar is the thing that motivates me on this. Australia's Bankwest has announced that they will go completely cashless this year. This year. It is a subsidiary of one of the biggest banks in Australia. That is Commonwealth Bank. Bankwest is the subsidiary. They're already making great shifts to accommodate a cashless society. And earlier this month, the bank announced that they would be closing the remainder of
Starting point is 02:58:08 their branches and focusing strictly on digital. They said this transition of Bankwest to a digital bank will result in the closure of 45 Bankwest branches by October of this year. Another 15 branches will be converted to locations of Commonwealth Bank. Bankwest says their decision rests in that, quote, 97% of all Bankwest transactions are now completed digitally, and fewer than 2% of customers visit the branch regularly. They added that the average number of over-the-counter transactions are 30 per day and 15 in regional Western Australia. This is why Catherine Austin Fitz says, we've got to set aside a day, a cash Friday. She said, make sure you use cash.
Starting point is 02:58:59 If you don't use it, you're going to lose it. And we've seen this this is australia we saw it happen and i think it was finland it was one of the scandinavian countries i think it was finland and so look at nobody is using cash anymore so we're just going to shut it down this is extra thing and why do we have atms all the rest of stuff if people are not going to be using cash and so you know the convenience just being able to take out a plastic card and swipe it, if we don't get the cash, uh, and use cash, then they will, it'll make it very easy for them to take it away. And again, cash is, um, anonymous, unlike anything else, cash or gold or something like that. That's physical. Uh, none of these other things are going to have that kind of anonymity.
Starting point is 02:59:47 And so we need to try to force ourselves to do that. Dave Ramsey was always against using credit cards and would have people on to talk about not going into debt, not going into credit cards. They really hated the plastic card stuff. And I remember he had a physician on who said, yeah, I don't struggle with this as much as somebody else with a smaller income would. But he goes, I force myself to use cash even when I get gasoline.
Starting point is 03:00:17 Force myself to go in and hand them cash and then go back and get the change and all the rest of the stuff. Because he said, I don't want to get in the habit of running stuff up on a credit card. And when you have a certain amount of cash and you force yourself with a discipline of just using that cash, that instinctively is going to limit what you can buy. Well, I just don't have the money for it. Whereas if you got the plastic, you can continue to accrue debt.
Starting point is 03:00:44 So it's a smart thing from a budgetary standpoint from a way to control your expenditures to have that. But it's vitally important for us to maintain that anonymity. By the way, this ridiculous bill that was passed by the House, they put it out in the dead of night, like 2.30 in the morning, 1,000 pages, $1.2 trillion in additional spending. And by the way, that's in addition to the $1 trillion that's added every 100 days
Starting point is 03:01:19 because of debt, interest on the debt. I mean, the way that they're going into debt is just unbelievable. But that bill that funded all this stuff and went right through the House, and of course, over the weekend, we had some House members push back against that. That only went through after they removed a censorship, anti-censorship thing, and an anti-CBDC thing. That shows how important those are. That's even more important to them than to be able to spend their $1.2 trillion on all their special projects without any oversight or accountability,
Starting point is 03:01:58 is to make sure they keep censorship there. No anti-censorship, no anti-CBDC. And it's passed in the senate thank you for joining us the david knight show is a critical thinking super spreader. If you've been exposed to logic by listening to the David Knight Show, please do your part and try not to spread it. Financial support or simply telling others about the show
Starting point is 03:02:41 causes this dangerous information to spread farther. People have to trust me. I mean, trust the science. Wear your mask. Take your vaccine. Don't ask questions. Using free speech to free minds it's the david knight show

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