The David Knight Show - Thr Episode #1972: Trump’s Nuclear Gambit, Fed’s Secret Plan, Fiery Chaos of Tesla Vandals & Suffocating Auto Mandates
Episode Date: March 20, 2025Hour One:Today, guest host Gardner Goldsmith digs into the latest news of Donald Trump floating the idea that the US government "own and run" nuclear plants in Ukraine - seriously. Gard also discusses... the new court verdict against Greenpeace for helping Indians whose tribal lands have been seized try to fight a pipeline in North Dakota that has been subsidized by the US and Canadian governments. Gard expands on yesterday's analysis of federal mistreatment of visitors coming to the US and of Americans who have not had the right "immigration paperwork". We hope to remind politicians and bureaucrats that there is a concept called "DUE PROCESS."Hour Two:Gardner Goldsmith welcomes Jason Sorens, PhD in economics, from the American Institute for Economic Research, in Great Barrington, MA, to discuss tariffs and their dangers, including the new revelations that Fed Chairman Powell might lower interest rates in order to further diminish the buying power of the US Federal Reserve Note (as a way to try to reduce US residents buying foreign goods).Hour Three:Gard is joined by Eric Peters of EricPetersAutosdotCom to discuss privacy, auto mandates, the recent leftist attacks on Teslas, and the rightist pushback that is seeing Donald Trump label as "domestic terrorists" the vandals who are setting Teslas on fire! And Gard concludes with final thoughts from the audience!Thank you for watching! Visit www.TheDavidKnightShow.com for products and the full array of links, and watch Liberty Conspiracy on Rumble, M-F 6 PM, on X as @gardgoldsmith AND get more at the Gardner Goldsmith Substack!If you would like to support the show and our family please consider subscribing monthly here: SubscribeStar https://www.subscribestar.com/the-david-knight-show Or you can send a donation throughMail: David Knight POB 994 Kodak, TN 37764Zelle: @DavidKnightShow@protonmail.comCash App at: $davidknightshowBTC to: bc1qkuec29hkuye4xse9unh7nptvu3y9qmv24vanh7Money should have intrinsic value AND transactional privacy: 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 KNIGHTFor 10% off supplements and books, go to RNCstore.com and enter the code KNIGHTBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-david-knight-show--2653468/support.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
In a world of deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act.
It's The David Knight Show.
It's Thursday, the 20th day of March year of our Lord 2025 as the clock strikes
13 on airstrip one we discuss the issues on the David Knight show. I'm Gardner
Goldsmith filling in for David today and I hope that you are enjoying a
beautiful day or night wherever you are. We'll be going from 9 a.m.
Eastern Time until Noontime joined by Jason Sorens, economist and writer, founder of the Free State
Project, discussing tariffs today and his work with the American Institute for Economic Research
Institute for Economic Research and will be joined by Eric Peters of Eric Peters Autos. What's going on with the Tesla fires? That and a lot more. Join us on
the David Knight Show. The Well, it's quite a morning here and I'm gratified to be here with you.
I'm Gardner Goldsmith filling in for David on the David Knight Show today, on DLive,
on Rumble, on David's X at Liberty Tarion, and of course on Odyssey. Find us live there, drop your
chats inside the Russian team here in our studio in deepest darkest Siberia Hampshire. We'll be able
to put your comments up on the X platform and thank you for spreading the word while we're live or
watching after the fact or listening to the podcast. Great to be here. You might know my work from MRCTV
and you might know my work from Liberty Conspiracy.
We go live every Monday through Friday at 6 p.m.
on Rumble and on MyEx, which is at Gard Goldsmith,
G-A-R-D Goldsmith.
So join us over there and we will expand beyond
what we get to talk about here.
If we run out of time and more issues pop up,
we'll see you tonight.
Thanks for being there everybody.
And remember, while I'm here filling in for David,
I wanna thank David and his entire family
for all of their great help and our guests coming up
on the program for their agreement
to join us on the program.
And I wanna thank you for being here.
Really appreciate it.
I hope your day has been absolutely beautiful
as you start things off
and we're going to make things even better.
As I often say on my program,
we're going to turn their political frowns upside down
and have a great time.
Let's see what's on tap for the David Knight Show
for 3-20-25.
It's going to be a very, very busy day and I want to get your opinions.
What's on tap today, one and all? Well, today on the program, and by the way, we get to check our
audio, often on my program, I have that graphic as tonight and we play Genesis doing tonight,
tonight, tonight. But since it's
daytime, let's do a little something and get a little funky with Humpty Dee.
That's right. Getting into the groove for the day, you let me know if the audio is
coming through loud and clear for you and already the Russians are talking
to me and my Russian propaganda brain chip receiver and they're
telling me that we have comments. Thank you gentlemen
Vladimir just got off of his berries. Put your shirt on
Vladimir you know how it is you can't ride those bears without
your shirt on. We've got this great seeing you G it's always a
pleasure from fellow conspirator I can't believe with the chimp
in the astronaut suit.
And he is saying, repost, repost, repost, DK all day.
I like the way you rhyme it.
And yes, sir.
And hope Karen's doing better.
Absolutely.
We've got so much going on here.
So many good people involved.
We've got Karen Carpenter.
Karen, another Karen.
Five by five, Karen, you rock.
You are our technical expert, one of the many. And Martin Thorn. Good morning, guard. Martin,
thank you for following over at Twitter as slash X. And I just got the opportunity to
do so. Looking forward to more communication. Great to have you along for the ride. And
inside rumble, the whole team is inside rumble. forward to chatting with all of you drop your comments in there.
I almost put a post out today.
I thought it would be a poll.
I thought it'd be interesting to see what people thought
about the possibility that Trump might designate
the people who are trying to burn Tesla cars
as domestic terror threats.
Interesting, interesting.
You let me know what you think about that. I'll drop that in, not as a poll, as well as Reesha M.
The colors inside Rumble are jumping.
So thank you, everybody.
Skip bumps, thank you, and shield your eyes, thank you.
And remember, everyone, if you appreciate
what I'm putting forward on the program,
which I hope to orient sort of like when Walter Williams
fills in for Rush Limbaugh,
that's the way I try to do liberty conspiracy each night.
I try to take a scholarly approach to the stories
by taking the new stories that are breaking and flashing
and then breaking them apart so that we can derive from them
some very, very evergreen intellectual ammunition,
as I often call it, some philosophical information,
historical information, knowledge about economics
that we wouldn't mind passing on to teenagers
who might be learning about some of these principles.
That's what really gratifies me.
And if you're gratified as well
by what I'm doing here in the program,
and of course you're gratified by what David Knight does
and the whole Knight family,
please consider supporting the David Knight show.
It's up to you to consider the donations to David. But you
know, that's the way that his show works. And it works because of your signals of appreciation. So please do so. We're
going to be shooting for that over at Rumble today. They had some problems with Rumble's donations yesterday. You can
also do it on Zelle. Go to TheDavidKnightightshow.com and you can find out all of the areas where
you can donate and his address is there.
And of course, the store is there as well.
What is on tap?
Wow, boy, we've got a lot.
Let me read through this for you if you're just listening in audio.
First we're going to open with the news flash.
Our news flash is going to be Trump's mineral deal with Ukraine failing.
So he proposes US ownership of Ukrainian nuclear plants.
Yes. Then we'll talk another brief conversation about Steve Bannon claiming that Trump will run
for a third term. I know it's not allowed under the rules of the constitution. He was on with
Chris Cuomo and I have to hand it to Chris Cuomo again. He rules of the Constitution. He was on with Chris Cuomo,
and I have to hand it to Chris Cuomo again.
He asked some appropriate questions.
He was very level-headed,
and he really seems to have changed a lot of his approach
for his demeanor overall.
In fact, I have to say that full disclosure,
my nephew is one of his producers,
Cord, Cord Stanley.
And if you watch Wings,
there was a character named Cord who worked in that airport.
That was named after my nephew Cord
who worked in that airport.
So Cord is one of these producers
and he says he's a really, really nice guy.
So that's cool.
We'll talk about immigration and the border
and the TSA crackdowns wildly expanding.
We're talking apprehension of people,
as we mentioned yesterday at Logan Airport.
Now more people at Logan Airport,
a lot of really, really sketchy activity
on the part of the US government,
which has taken it unto itself
and people haven't questioned it,
the guardianship
of the borders and the checking of your documents at the airports.
They've got a lot of power and they shouldn't.
We'll talk tariffs.
Jerome Powell doesn't understand inflation, fiat currency problems, or the poison of tariffs.
We'll discuss that with Jason Sorens of the American Institute for Economic
Research, the man who created the idea of the Free State Project. He will be with us in the 10
o'clock hour, so get ready to ask your questions or post your comments about the tariff threat from
Donald Trump and what it actually might represent to you. We'll discuss war with Federman visiting Netanyahu in
Israel and receiving not a gold pager but a silver pager while in Israel and
while Israel partitions Gaza again and kills more people. Absolutely terrible,
terrible stuff and I highly recommend if you get the opportunity please watch the anti war.com news anti-war news on YouTube because Dave DeKamp read an email from
one of the doctors that he received that described just one of their night one of
the nights that they had trying to take care of the people who had been
devastated by US ordinance that was paid for by our taxes. Unbelievable.
Then we're gonna have, of course,
we'll have our mind meld with Jason Sorens,
and in the 11 o'clock hour,
we will talk with Eric Peters of Eric Peters Autos
about the burning of the Teslas,
and another big story that I'm gonna discuss
right at the start of the show.
So thank you everyone for being with us.
Let's get started, let's get it started. And see that me more has a comment so fun to wake up to the voice of guard
Thank you so much. Me. Wow, is that a boost? I appreciate that very much
Gee, that's wonderful. That's great. I think the cat might think the same thing
We'll see if I'm saying the word fish, she seems to like it.
Let's say the word funky right now and talk about bringing the flashlight. It's time for the news
flash and it's brought to us of course by the PFUNK All Stars and Queen. Well, what can we discuss right off the bat real quick as big news flashes in this start of the David
Knight show. Okay we've got so much to discuss. First let's start discussing
Donald Trump proposing nuclear plant ownership. Yes Donald Trump proposing
nuclear plant ownership. I am quite amazed by this, but he is proposing
instead of the mineral deal, he's going with, I want nuclear plants from Ukraine. I don't
know what you think about that, but it just seems to me that that isn't in the Constitution for the United States
to be owning nuclear plants. Maybe there's a different approach to the Constitution that
I missed. Some portion of the Constitution that is not part of it, but you let me know
what you think of that. I'm going through something here
because I think you'll find it interesting. Oh my goodness, just unbelievable. Trump eyes Ukraine power plants. Here's news week, US news on this one. I had a couple options. I went with
this instead. This I think you'll find quite amazing. All right, here it is.
US could run Ukraine's nuclear plants.
Yeah, if, oh, sorry, we're getting a pop-up there.
We don't need this, so I'll go back.
Okay, so we'll just get this.
Yes, US Energy Secretary Chris Wright said,
the United States could step in
to run Ukrainian nuclear
plants if that was helpful to ensure a ceasefire and bring peace to the war between Ukraine
and Russia.
Yeah, honestly.
Is that serious?
Donald Trump suggested it during a phone call Wednesday that the US could possibly run Ukraine's nuclear plants according to a statement.
I don't, I just, I'm throwing it out there. I just want to let you know that if, if anyone would like to get involved with nuclear plant work. Oh, it looks like we've, something's happened here. Hold on a
second. Okay. Yes, we definitely have run into something. So, hold on a second. We're
gonna go with this. The The The The Liberty, it's your move.
And now, the David Knight Show.
All right, that's a little better.
Quick recovery.
I like that.
It's like the Bon Jovi recovery had to do some quick movements there
Thank you to the production team as the the browser
Got hung up
So thank you also to David for creating that great music and putting that in there with the footage from the Patriot
Wonderful music from John Williams. So just to quickly offer this just briefly
We're gonna go with the UPI one
rather than having the website that hangs up the browser.
Trump floats plan to protect Ukraine's besieged power plants
through US ownership.
So we know that this ceasefire that they've got
is an agreement for a ceasefire
against energy provision sectors of Ukraine and Russia.
That has led to the European Union agreeing to buy $2 billion worth of liquefied natural gas from the Russians because they think maybe it might be
safe to get it and they need it because they've been blocking it for so much. The people who live
in Europe are starving for energy and they've been buying it with a 20% added cost from India coming in directly
from Russia into India. Now Donald Trump, of course, because he swears an oath to the Constitution,
floats a plan to protect Ukraine's besieged power plants through US ownership. Yeah, yeah, that's
right. President Trump said the United States could take over Ukraine's embattled electric power
plants, at least one of which is controlled by Russian forces, saying American ownership
would be the best protection for that infrastructure and support for Ukrainian energy infrastructure.
Okay, thank you for repeating infrastructure a couple times there, Donald.
You know what the infrastructure of the United States government is?
The US Constitution, Donald.
I don't know if you're familiar with it.
Trump made the offer in an hour long call with President Volodymyr
Zelenskyy on Wednesday to brief him on discussions he had with
Russian counterpart Putin, referring to both electrical
supply and nuclear power plants in Ukraine as part of a
discussion on a partial ceasefire covering energy
infrastructure that Ukraine and Russia agreed to.
Trump said the United States could be very helpful in running those plants with its electricity
and utility expertise.
Here's an idea, Donald.
Here's an idea.
If people want to provide electricity to people, then what they can do is start up private
businesses. They can get liability coverage from insurance companies for whatever practice they're doing
in case they damage or threaten to damage the property or lives of people around them.
Then we get an idea of how safe or unsafe that energy source might be.
You don't come up with canards of things like
the climate apocalypse,
and you also don't subsidize through government
things like nuclear plants.
Maybe private initiative actually reflects what people want.
I don't necessarily want to be having to pay
to guard nuclear plants in Ukraine or to run them.
But I guess as they always tell us, it must be for national security, kind of like banning
TikTok.
Oh my goodness.
Well, that is one that he's pushing.
It might be something that they move towards.
Maybe they think it's innocuous or something like that.
But as we know, the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant was hit
numerous times to use the passive voice. The Ukrainians hit the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant
numerous, numerous times. And that has settlements all around it. They also took out the dam for the
reservoir that's typically used for the main water resource for that nuclear plant.
This is the Ukrainians.
So maybe, maybe practically speaking,
it might be better for Americans to run the nuclear plant.
They show such terrible disrespect
to the idea of nuclear power in Ukraine.
Maybe, maybe when the war is all over,
they'll change things.
But there's something else I'd like to discuss,
and that has to do with energy as well.
And for that, I'd like to play you a little theme
from the movie, Cat People.
Here is putting out fire with gasoline.
We're talking pipelines.
["Putting Out Fire With Gasoline"]
And I've been putting out fire
With gasoline
She's these eyes so red
Red like jungle burning bright
Those who feel me near Pull up lines and change their minds
Let's be so long Silver's pulsing night David Boy did produce some great music and that little drummer boy version that he did
with Bing Crosby is really something.
And I got to say, evidently a lot of the material that he put into that song he wrote just before
appearing there.
And Bing Crosby wasn't too pleased to have David Bowie on the show and it turned out
that having David Bowie there was the key.
But let's discuss the latest about Greenpeace and you got it, pipeline protests. Remember back in 2019 as the Standing Rock Sioux and others went to
North Dakota and near actually near the Canadian border they protested the
Canadian government, United States government trying to run the pipeline over Indian land. Well, a court has just spoken, a jury in North
Dakota has found Greenpeace liable for $650 million in damages. And I got to say,
I think Emmy Moore's question,
I'll read this out loud,
does that mean that we would have to have troops
on the ground to protect those nuclear plants?
I think you're probably right, Emmy, absolutely.
And I wanna thank also Save the Truth for being there
with that great picture of Julian Assange from X.
Thank you, first time tuning in, sounding great so far.
And thank you for your support of a good man, Julian Assange from X. Thank you. First time tuning in. Sounded great so far. And thank you for your support of a good man, Julian Assange. Well, let's get to this story for you just real
quick in the news flash. A jury in North Dakota found Greenpeace liable for $650 million in damages
for its role in the protests against the Dakota Access Pipeline. In 2019, Energy Transfer Partners sued the environmental rights
organization for orchestrating a large protest against the pipeline's construction, which
cost the company hundreds of millions of dollars in property damage and lost revenue.
But here's the thing. They didn't buy all that property. They got some of that property through eminent domain.
Now, some people can say, well, eminent domain is provided for in the Constitution. Again,
this is a twist on eminent domain based on the Kelo decision from Connecticut,
where the New London government wanted to take people's land like Mrs. Kelo and give it to Pfizer
so that they could build a manufacturing plant there because they said it was for the greater
good, of course, consequentialism. Your individual rights don't matter. They can get crushed for the
greater good of the group that the government will describe and they will give the land to
a big corporation because that will provide the city with more property
tax revenue. So therefore they say it's for the greater good because they'll be able to
spend it for the government ideas that they say are for the greater good. It all washes.
It all washes. It's wonderful. So in Kilo, they changed the already pernicious concept
that the government can take your property through eminent domain and give it to
and keep it for a highway or something like that that generally people often mistakenly think is
acceptable. It's not acceptable. It's theft and it doesn't matter what the government argument is,
whether it's for a highway or anything else. If they are telling you they're going to take your
land, it doesn't matter the rationale. They're engaging in theft. The outcome doesn't matter.
However many people think the outcome is laudable, again, doesn't matter.
It's immoral to take somebody's stuff or harm them or tell them how to run their life.
It's immoral. So they did that in Kelo and thanks to David Souter, a George H.W. Bush appointee
to the Supreme Court who lives in New Hampshire or lived, David Souter, a George H.W. Bush appointee to the Supreme Court who lives in New Hampshire, or lived.
David Souter was the swing vote. They decided, yes, it's perfectly fine for the New London government to take that property.
Some of this property for the Dakota Access Pipeline was taken by the government and given to this Energy Transfer Partners Group in 2019.
Some of that land, in fact, vast portions of North Dakota,
South Dakota, Illinois, and Ohio are actually supposed to,
and parts of Michigan are actually supposed
to be Indian land.
And virtually every treaty that the United States government,
and you can check out videos from Russell Means
where he talks about this, read his book, Where White Man Feared to Tread. Russell Means described it.
Virtually every treaty that the United States government has signed with the Indians, they
have broken. And yes, this is, I think, an example of long-term, centuries-old wrongdoing.
You can see the teepees that were put up in the protest area.
And as they say here, as the energy company tried to build the massive pipeline, it was
met with fierce resistance from the Standing Rock Sioux and other groups.
Why?
Why?
Do they describe that?
Not really.
Who claimed the pipeline would damage sacred tribal grounds and could endanger the Missouri River, which is their primary source of water.
Now, they don't really go into detail here. It's not just sacred tribal grounds. We're talking sacred burial grounds. We're talking property that is supposed to belong to them under numerous treaties. They don't mention the treaties that were broken. They just say they claimed this. Now, I understand that a jury heard this, but the jury comes from that area. So who knows what the jury's stance might be? In 2016 and 2017, thousands of people gathered near the Standing Rock Sew Reservation to protest against the construction.
The protesters set up camps and worked to halt the construction.
While mostly peaceful, the protesters did commit several acts of vandalism, causing
damage to the pipeline.
In September 2016, the protesters were involved in a clash with security forces when they
tried to stop construction on a sacred site. Well, how did they
get the land? Whose land is it? Again, these are long-term problems in American history.
And don't forget, anybody who wonders about this, if you remember hearing about the Indian boarding
schools and how they said that they had found bones near an Indian boarding school in Canada and so on. That does not, the fact that those,
that was a false story.
That does not take away from the validity of the fact
that thousands of Indian children were kidnapped
from their tribes and their families
and brought to these boarding schools
in Northern America and Southern Canada.
They were forbidden from speaking their own language.
You can see a very good movie that Peter Coyote hosts. It's a documentary and it is all about,
I think it's called something like, We Cannot Speak the Names of Our Gods or something like that,
because they came out of those things completely disconnected from their own native cultures.
And you can see these people crying
about what was done to them as kids.
I mean, they were tortured.
It's terrible.
Greenpeace senior legal analyst Deepa Padmanabha
was asked if the nonprofit would appeal a verdict.
And she stated, we know that this fight is not over.
That's the really important message today," she added,
and we're just walking out and we're going to get together and figure out what our next steps are.
Well, we'll discuss that with Eric Peters. Obviously, many Americans want energy, and the
Trump administration seems to be much more inclined to help provide that energy or at least lift many
of the restrictions that the Biden administration
put on in its very first week, closing off oil exploration in Anwar, reversing agreements
that many of the oil exploration and recovery companies had made with the federal government
in places like Anwar.
But the federal control over those places or any government involvement in anything like this already sullies it with
unconstitutional claims of ownership of land in places like Anwar or water regions like the Gulf
that's not in the Constitution. And if you get this sort of thing traveling through multiple states,
someone might say, well, this is a federal purview. The feds ought to be involved with this somehow. This is supposed to be a private company
trying to go through private land.
If I wanted to build a private road,
I shouldn't be able to turn to the government.
And this is unfortunately the way that roads got corrupted.
Originally they were done privately.
And then after a while,
people who built roads started to realize
that if they had friends in government, they
wouldn't have to go privately to the people who own the land and say, I'd like to buy your land
or make a swap. They could go to the government and get the government to take the land with
eminent domain and then give them the work project to build the roads. If I wanted to build a road,
I would have to privately go to every person and ask them and try to incentivize them.
Can I rent a portion of your property? Can I buy a portion of your property?
There's no excuse to say I know what the greater good is and therefore
I don't have to engage in that sort of thing to start up my business. If I wanted any other resource for my business, say
building wooden furniture. I couldn't just go to somebody who had a bunch of
woods and say, I'm going to take your land through eminent domain. I couldn't get the government to take your land
because I think it's for the greater good. I'm going to build furniture for schools or something. It would be my
business. I'd have to engage in that sort of business activity. And if you didn't like it, you have a right to say no.
that sort of business activity. And if you didn't like it, you have a right to say no.
Why do you not have a right to say no? Why do the Indians not have a right on their ancestral land that should be theirs? Why do they not have a right to say, no, thank you, no, thank you? We'd
rather do other things. I don't understand it. It doesn't make any sense to me. But, you know,
the United States encroaches in many areas where they're not supposed to be encroaching.
So let's talk a little bit now about one of the major areas.
As I discussed on our billboard, this is a big one.
And it is very worrisome.
The federal government claim of control over immigration.
As I stated yesterday in the program,
the word does not appear in the US Constitution.
And already we're seeing many people's civil liberties being crushed. We're going to review
a couple of those cases from yesterday, give you some updates on those, and look at even more
egregious examples of wrongdoing by the government regarding people's privacy at airports and even
jailing people for weeks
and not allowing them to go home because they didn't have the right papers.
Let's hear from Walla Voodoo and talk about immigration. I'm sorry, my friend, but come on, because the search has begun to see more of this world. I turn the switch and check the number I leave it on when the bed I slumber
I hear the ribbons of the music I buy the product and never use it
I hear the top beat of the DJ Can't understand just what does he say
I'm on a Mexican radio I'm on a Mexican radio. I'm on a Mexican radio.
I'm on a Mexican radio.
I'm on a Mexican radio.
I'm on a Mexican radio.
I'm on a Mexican radio.
I'm on a Mexican radio.
I'm on a Mexican radio.
I'm on a Mexican radio.
I'm on a Mexican radio.
I'm on a Mexican radio.
I'm on a Mexican radio.
I'm on a Mexican radio.
I'm on a Mexican radio.
I'm on a Mexican radio.
I'm on a Mexican radio.
I'm on a Mexican radio.
I'm on a Mexican radio.
I'm on a Mexican radio. I'm on a Mexican radio. I'm on a Mexican radio.'s not just necessarily Mexican also save the truth has a couple great comments here
He talking about Julian Assange. I assume. Thank you Russians
Love that man truly gave up so much of his life to bring us the truth brother. Absolutely and he mentions
Yeah, what happened to the natives in Canada is beyond belief?
Absolutely, right apps and it wasn't you know with the boarding schools What happened to the natives in Canada is beyond belief. Absolutely right.
And it wasn't, you know, with the boarding schools,
it was both the Northern section of the United States.
We're talking Michigan, Illinois, and Southern Canada.
And again, you know, what they did
to the native Indians in Canada, and are still doing.
I mean, you know, I think a perfect example of that,
my friend, would be the trampling of that
native Canadian woman by Justin Trudeau's gangland thugs when the truckers were protesting. Remember
how she was walking with a walker and they just ran right over her. Just incredible, unbelievable.
So let's discuss this mixture of the deportation sentiment with the anti-Semitism sentiment.
And even now, the federal government is using just an expression of dislike for Donald Trump.
Get this, as dispositive for allowing you to be in the country. Seriously. So first, let's talk about this. This
is a review of a story that actually comes from here in New Hampshire. And this is the new
Congresswoman, Jake Sullivan's wife, actually. She is discussing this one, and she's actually
on the right track. I got to hand it to her.
This is Goodlander, and she's talking about the man we mentioned yesterday,
Fabian Schmidt, a German national from Nashua, New Hampshire,
which literally is where I'm going to be later today.
A member of New Hampshire's congressional delegation is calling on immigration
officials to share information about a German
national from Nashua who was taken into custody by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement
earlier this month. U.S. Representative Maggie Goodlander, Jake Sullivan's wife, I know, said
she is concerned about Fabian Schmidt, 34,
a green card holder who was detained at Boston Logan Airport
on March 7th after returning from Luxembourg.
Remember, this is the man who said
that they shot him with cold water.
They kept him there without any contact to anyone,
an attorney, his family? No one?
Schmidt's family said he has been living
in the United States since he was a teenager.
They said he was violently interrogated
when he was detained by the immigration people
who aren't supposed to be there.
But Tuesday night, customs and border protection officials
pushed back on those claims saying it didn't happen.
The agency said, when an individual is found with drug-related charges and tries to re-enter
the country, officers will take proper action. Well, what does that mean? That
was never part of the story. Well, here's the rest of it. California court records
show several misdemeanor cases for Schmidt, including one in which he was charged with having a controlled substance in 2015.
He was also charged with DUI in 2016. Was he convicted? Did he plead out? We don't know.
Goodlander, who represents Nashua, and why is, again, why is that dispositive? That would mean a lot of Americans couldn't come
back in. Goodlander who represents Nashua said Schmidt is entitled to an immigration hearing
quote I've been very disturbed by the reports that I've read about this case she said we have
been in close communication with his family and we are trying to work to get as much information as we can
and to support in every way and to offer support in every way
that we can in this situation.
It's unclear when or if a hearing will be held for Schmidt.
They might deport this man.
And the news station has tried to contact his lawyers
but they haven't heard back.
That's WMUR, which is the only network news affiliate
that we have.
Unbelievable.
Now, don't forget the Canadian woman
who was held for two weeks talking about Canada.
Canadian detained by ICE for two weeks tells her story.
So now we get to discuss this more
on today's David Knight program.
A Canadian woman's routine visa check turned into a two-week nightmare when immigration and
customs enforcement officers suddenly detained her. And I know this post, as I mentioned,
I know exactly where this is. I passed through it numerous times when I worked in television in
Vancouver. The ICE officer suddenly detained her without explanation,
sending her through multiple detention facilities
in shackles despite having no criminal record
and documented legal status.
As she writes in The Guardian, Jasmine Mooney, a businesswoman
and actress from Vancouver,
was detained at a San Diego border office
while discussing her previously approved work visa.
There was no explanation, no warning, Mooney says.
One minute I was in an immigration office
talking to an officer about my work visa.
The next I was told to put my hands against the wall.
What followed was a harrowing journey through America's immigration detention system. Mooney
was held in freezing cells under constant fluorescent lights given mylar foil for blankets
and transferred between facilities in chains. Despite having lawyers, media attention, and resources
advocating for her release, she remained
detained without clear answers about when she would be freed.
Quote, 30 of us shared one room.
Well, that's a great way to keep people healthy.
We were given one Styrofoam cup of water and one plastic spoon that we had to
reuse for every meal. I eventually had to start trying to eat and sure enough, I got
sick. None of the uniforms fit and everyone had men's shoes on. The towels they gave
us to shower with were hand towels. They wouldn't give us more blankets, the fluorescent lights,
shininess, 24-7. Everything felt like it was meant to break you. Nothing was explained
to us. I wasn't given a phone call. We were locked in a room, no daylight, with no idea
when we would get out. This is zero due process and as I read from Jacob
Hornberger due process is supposed to be provided to anyone, anyone who is
apprehended by any agency of any level of government in the United States. The
experience doped her eyes to a larger systemic issue. The detention centers are run by private companies that profit
from detaining immigrants.
CoreCivic made over $560 million, I wonder who they know,
from ICE contracts in one year, while GeoGroup earned more
than $763 million in 2024. Amazing. Mooney writes, ICE detention isn't just a
bureaucratic nightmare, it's a business. These facilities are privately owned and run for profit.
So in other words, we've got fascism again, because they're really run by the feds,
because they're really run by the feds and the profit goes to the private companies.
Now there's more, there's more.
Another woman hassled at Puerto Rico
because as they said in ICE, you fit the description.
Here we go.
San Juan, Puerto Rico,
what was supposed to be a peaceful return home from
a lover's getaway in Puerto Rico turned into a humiliating encounter with immigration and
customs enforcement for Ileana Pachico, a U.S. citizen and registered nurse from New
Jersey. In a viral Facebook post, Pachco recounted being asked about her citizenship status by an ICE agent
after passing a TSA checkpoint with her boyfriend inside the Louis Munoz Maran International Airport
just after Valentine's Day. He asked to see my ID, which I was confused about because I had just had my photo scanned and ID verified. Pachico wrote, he asked
me what's your status in the US? I said citizen why? He said I need to verify that give me your
passport and you can see here I was detained by ICE at the airport in Puerto Rico. I thought it
was a TSA agent asking me about my bag given the fact that they were right by the TSA.
He asked to see my ID, which I was confused as she said because I had just had my photo scanned and
ID verified. He asked me what's your status? He said I need to verify that. Give me your passport.
I'm looking at him like WTF. What are you detaining me for? He said you fit the description.
What are you detaining me for? He said, you fit the description.
I'm like, what description?
I give him my passport and he said,
always carry your passport.
So I go to the other ICE agent next to him
and asked, what description?
He said, you fit the description of someone
who has not documented papers.
I'm like, so what about the people who look American? They don't get
stopped, right? He said, no, if you look undocumented, you will be detained. So yeah, she says,
criminal or not, they will detain any person of color. This was an awful experience. I'm still in disbelief. LOL."
The back Wall Street Times reached out to ICE's media
office to ask if it was aware of this incident
and whether the agency trains its agents to avoid racially
profiling people.
We must refer you to US Customs and Border Protection.
And don't forget, of course, that it shouldn't matter
whether people are upset about the rationale
that the government is using to stop people.
It's that the government is stopping people.
And it's about something else that often goes unseen.
When we think about what is seen and what is not seen,
whether we're thinking about it from the Bible,
or we're thinking about it from
Fréjic Bastier's great broken window parable,
what is not seen is the force that is applied to you
to pay for those agents' salaries and for that system,
and what is not discussed, again, is the fact that none
of it should exist in a constitutionally functioning United States because it is not a United States
purview. Now, the only way that you could say that it could exist in Puerto Rico is
if you say it's a territory, which technically is very fuzzy regarding Puerto Rico.
So if you were to say it's a territory, then the feds can set up the rules inside the territory.
But for the states, when they enter the union, first, they're not supposed to have to cede
land to the federal government, which David Knight described very well when he visited
Bundy Ranch.
That land was not supposed to be taken over
by the Interior Department of the United States government.
And even if states try to give the land
to the federal government,
there's nothing in the US Constitution
that allows the federal government to run the land.
So national parks, national monuments, nothing.
If the government aggressively tries to take it,
or if it is blessed in a gift to the federal government,
the federal government is only allowed in the Constitution
to run three types of land, territories, military garrisons,
and a 10 square mile area for the capital to exist,
which they chose to be DC.
That's it.
Unless they amend their wonderful rule book,
which is forced on you, by the way,
I'll mention that again,
there is no ethical claim that the Constitution has any authority over anyone who is a civilian.
That is a completely erroneous statement. So, and it's logically provable. So the U.S.
Constitution doesn't allow for all of that, the park stuff, for any of the ANWR stuff,
any of the Gulf stuff. And then we bring it into the possibility that you could put some sort of guards in Puerto Rico.
Well, I think the people in Puerto Rico, if they discovered, and there were a private
company that were handling security for their airports, if they discovered that a private
security company, which was not taking people's money. If you had private initiative with private tour groups
and businesses that relied, and people whose businesses relied
on tourism for a major portion of their money,
they would treat people a heck of a lot better than ICE does.
That's for darn sure.
They wouldn't be patting people down
contrary to the Fourth Amendment every minute of the day.
They wouldn't be forcing people to answer questions contrary to the Fifth
Amendment every day. They wouldn't do that. The existence of ICE is a giant
insult to you and to anybody else who believes in the integrity of what they
tell you they're going to swear to uphold the U. S. Constitution. And that's
just a basic standard. It stands in ultra-contra distinction to the United States Constitution. It's inarguable.
Immigration's customs enforcement, the border patrol, the people that they put in the TSA,
all of them, none of them are sanctioned by the Constitution, and this is what you get. You get people held for weeks inside ICE detention facilities.
You get people saying you fit the profile, some sort of racial statement, and you get
a Georgetown figure.
And don't forget the Brown University doctor.
We'll talk about her.
Here's the latest insult, new. DHS has confirmed the arrest of
Badaar Khan Suri, an Indian student from Georgetown. You decide America, deport or
keep. Now actually, as Tom Homan writes, Mr. Borders are, it's not you decide
America, it's America should not be somehow measured through the government, and then everybody, regardless
of whether they agree or disagree, will have their money taken to pay your salary, Tom.
U.S. border czar should not be working for the federal government.
If you wanted to get a job with Texas under a constitutional system, you could
work for Texas because they put a Bureau of Immigration in their state constitution in 1869.
There's no such thing in the federal constitution. And I would challenge Tom Holman. This is an open
challenge to Tom Holman. I'll appear anywhere on stage with you, Tom Holman. You tell me where the
word immigration appears in the US Constitution.
And if you can't, I will ask you to send $1,000 to a pro-immigration charity.
How's that?
How's that?
I'll ask you to pay the legal fees of one of the people you're trying to deport, you
personally.
How's that? That's just an open challenge to you,
Tom Homan. We'll have a debate, and if I lose, I'll send $1,000 to the charity of your choice.
How's that? Does that sound good? Maybe I'll get it from Rockfin. Here's more. He has been spreading anti-American propaganda. Well, of course, you must deport.
And he has ties to a known senior advisor to Hamas. You mean the same way the United
States has ties to the Hamas leadership in Qatar because they gave them millions of dollars.
And they started to do that under George W. Bush and Benjamin Netanyahu does too. Are you gonna deport Benjamin Netanyahu?
DHS will deport him the same way as Mahmoud Khalil.
In other words, without any constitutional authority
to do so.
I see.
Mahmoud Khalil, taken away without any due process.
Well, as Marco Rubio says, he has a green card.
Tell me where in the constitution
there's the power for the green card.
Well, it's the Alien Enemies Act.
The Alien Enemies Act only applies
when the United States Congress has declared war
with a capital W.
You're gonna send these people to Guantanamo.
I know why you're gonna send many of them,
not all of them, to Guantanamo, because know why you're going to send many of them, not all of them, to Guantanamo because you think that you don't have to give them habeas corpus hearings at
Guantanamo. Yeah, I wrote about that in 2007. Yeah, I wrote about it. Oh, and by the way,
there's one more. A French student. US deports French scientists after officials find texts
critical of Donald Trump.
A French scientist was denied entry to the US after immigration officials found text
messages that were critical of Donald Trump, that they said could be considered to be terrorism.
Is this a direct threat against an individual?
No.
Again, because they adopt the idea
that government exists to protect you,
they will define what your protection is.
They'll define the word terrorist threat,
and you could become one of those.
The researcher, who has not been named,
was on his way to a conference in Houston, Texas
when officers pulled him aside for a random check
and searched his work computer
and personal phone, the French newspaper Le Monde reported.
A diplomatic source cited by AFP said that the messages related to the Trump administration's
treatment of scientists and scientific research.
Is there any threat that you're going to bring physical harm? What
exactly is terrorism? During the search officers rebuked him for messages quote
which conveyed a hatred toward Trump and could be considered to be terrorism. The
same source claimed that, oh, another source said that the
officers claimed the messages were hateful and conspiratorial. The FBI then opened an investigation
into the researchers, that like the investigation of parents going to schools because they were
concerned about LGBTQ. If you just switch out the names of the presidents and the rationales without any real
direct charges of criminal threatening against a person, these are all just amorphous nonsensical
charges that they use to mess people and then intimidate other people. The incident occurred
on March 9th. The researcher was sent back to Europe the following day after authorities
confiscated his personal and professional equipment. The French government condemned
U.S. authorities decision to deport the researcher. And then of course we have Brown University.
The Brown University doctor, don't forget, who is supposed to be visiting with her patients,
who is supposed to be visiting with her patients, but she's not able to.
Here's WCVB, that same television station
we were describing with the story
about the French Brown University professor.
Yeah, well, the administration is celebrating tonight
because they say she admitted to openly supporting someone
they describe as a brutal terrorist.
But here today, people who know her say t
working to serve 1000s o
Rhode Island and in sout
hands off our doctors. No
in Providence in support
and against your removal was a racist political at in support of Dr Rasha A removal from the country.
attack on her culture, na
shame. The Brown Univers
detained by federal agents
Airport Thursday after vi
in Lebanon. Customs and b
Alawi who admitted she at
Hassan Nasrullah,
a Hezbollah leader the US calls a brutal terrorist.
Agents also found photos of Nasrullah on her phone.
Tonight the White House posting this photo on social media, accompanied with a statement
from Homeland Security saying, quote, Glorifying.
We get a little commercial from Thrift Flux.
Hold on.
Well, it's always expanding. How many? We get a little thrift books. Hold on. We
is grounds for visa issu
in Lebanon and we're not
to get her back in the U
where she should be treat
is a kidney specialist a
director of the organ tr Brown attended the rally her patients. Allowee is at Brown Medicine. The di
transplant division at Br
tonight. Rasha is the swe
never had an issue with h
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horrified by this entire
judge in boston ordered i
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her. They withdrew from t
here in Providence, Rhode WC I'm Peter Leopolis, WCVB News Center. Unbelievable, unbelievable. Again, that's Matt Taibbi's dad worked for WCVB. His father's name is Mike. And
so those are some of the quick takes on some of the news. And I'll give you one
final one when it comes to freedom of speech. Let's
talk about the difference between how contemporary people view the First
Amendment. Not talking about immigration, of course that woman, the professor from
Brown, medical doctor, she has patients, they're waiting to see her, and all she
did was attend a funeral. A
funeral for a man who was assassinated by the Israelis, probably with firearms
provided by the United States government, Nasralli. But let's discuss one final bit.
Oh, and thank you so much, Save the truth says exactly Gardner.
I appreciate that.
Absolutely.
Thank you so much.
Let's talk a little bit about freedom of speech
because I wanna give you one thing.
If these people are speaking,
then they have a right to speak.
They have a right to protest,
regardless of whether they're Americans or they're foreigners.
The first amendment says,
Congress shall make no law
"'abridging the freedom of speech.'"
Congress.
But I wanna give you an example in scholarship
of what's been lost in the United States,
which I often bring up for my MRCTV articles,
just as I say, I might not ever win anything
inside a political legislative arena to change
some policy.
But I feel great satisfaction in thinking that I've been able to express a truth, offer
some scholarship, some history, and some principles to people that they might find valuable too.
And maybe they might want to talk to their kids about those things.
I feel good speaking up for what I think I've derived
to be pretty good information and truth,
fighting against the bad guys.
That's fine with me, that's cool.
Let's talk about a very interesting
and I think very important thing to remember
when it comes to freedom of speech and the First Amendment.
And for that, I wanna turn to a little theme. We're going to go with a theme from
Tears for Fears, because this is about free speech. Here we go. Remember this song? I remember it. Let it all out These are the things I can do without Come on
I'm talking to you
Come on
Let it all out
Let it all out
Let it all out
Let it all out
Let it all out
Let it all out
Let it all out
Let it all out Let it all out Come on
Shout, shout, let it all out
These are the things I can do without Come on
I'm talking to you
Come on
In my heart In fire Through the times
You shouldn't have to sell your soul
As I mentioned beautiful footage shot for that video tears or fears
They were never really my cup of tea when I was younger
But I got to see them open for Hall and Oates and they were phenomenal. Absolutely great. So if you ever get a chance, hats off to
the guys from Tears or Fears, still together, still friends, and really fantastic live. Wonderful with
the crowd. And that song's a terrific one, especially if we're talking about the First
Amendment, free speech. Of course, your rights precede the creation of the state.
And philosophically, I want to mention, of course, that you have a right to speech.
Words don't bring direct harm to someone else unless they are fraudulent. And then through common
law torts from ancient British tradition or other European tradition, you should be able, if you feel
that you've been harmed by someone lying about you, you should be able to bring a tortious claim
against someone for defamation, slander, and to bring a torsious claim against someone for
defamation, slander, and go in front of a jury of your peers and have it heard out to get some sort of remuneration,
to get it fixed by the person who might have wronged you. The United States government is
forbidden. Congress shall make no law abridging the freedom of speech.
And what's interesting here is there's a story that I want to offer to you that actually
allows us to learn a little bit about the difference between what people perceive to
be the First Amendment and what actually is in the First Amendment.
Remember the story about this film, No Other Land, which won an Oscar. It's about
the Palestinian plight and it got a great reviews. Well, there was an attempt to use the passive voice.
The Miami Beach mayor, to use the active voice, attempted to ban the film from being screened
in Florida, in that area.
Well, now he has backed off. The attempt to retaliate against a cinema
for screening a documentary
on the Israeli-Palestine conflict
drew national condemnation
from civil rights groups and filmmakers.
Okay, so Stephen Miner polled a proposed resolution
that he introduced last week,
and that was reported by the Miami Herald.
Great stuff from the Miami Herald.
Fantastic to see that report.
No other land can be shown.
But I wanted to bring this up as a little leverage point
to round off the hour in the David Knight show,
because one of the things I always try to stress to students
when I'm talking political economics or the US Constitution,
if I'm doing a section on that,
is again, the wording of the First Amendment is that Congress shall make no law. It was understood
in the United States that that was clearly only Congress. And states had speech codes right up
until after the Civil War during the reconstruction period. Pennsylvania had religious schools
that were funded by the state.
New Hampshire, again, if you go to the second section
of the New Hampshire constitution,
it still provides the state the power
to give money to seminaries,
in addition to handing money to public schools
or to scientific projects.
Maine has a similar thing in its constitution.
This has been around for a long time.
Speech codes, local speech codes,
they still have a vestigial reference to that in the FCC.
When the FCC finds people,
they ostensibly they call them,
they call them, what do they call them?
Yeah, you have a broken local values or something like that.
They still make a reference to something about local values,
but they're created by the FCC.
And it's, you know, they're the rules created by the FCC.
So the clear distinction that I wanna bring up is,
actually, where to check to find out whether this is
Statutorily, I should say constitutionally acceptable
Sentimentally is one thing, you know the right to be able to show something to other people
Government should not infringe on that in any way. I don't
Philosophically agree with even allowing the states to infringe on freedom of speech.
But the founders left it to the states.
So the key is you have to look at the state constitutions.
Now it just so happens that Florida does have
a protection for free speech there.
So this is one of the things,
if you see any of these cases that are ever brought
against state or local entities,
the governmental entities for free
speech cases, please keep in mind that it actually is not supposed to be leveraged off of the First
Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. The focus there for a little extra scholarship, a couple extra
seconds, is to look at the state constitution and see what the state constitution says. That's a good
reminder to remind oneself about the
Federalist concept, even though I don't like the idea of states maybe having speech codes. They call them community
values or something like that in the FCC. Community standards, that's it. But the FCC makes them up for the communities. You
know, it's totally Orwellian. So that's just something to keep in mind. And if you ever hear, to close it off,
if you ever hear people discuss something called the incorporation doctrine in legal jurisprudence,
to be sort of redundant, constitutional jurisprudence, the incorporation doctrine is
just a judicial tradition amongst judges where they claim that after the Civil War,
the 14th Amendment forced the states to
incorporate the Bill of Rights
into their state constitutions.
I always bring up two points about that when
I'm talking to students or anything like that,
having conversations with them.
First of all, that's not the case.
It didn't necessarily do that. Second of all, even if that were the case, the states didn't adopt them and put them all in. And if the states did, word for word, adopt the First Amendment of the Constitution, it still says Congress shall make no law. So there wouldn't be any change.
They would just be acknowledging in a superfluous manner,
yes, Congress shall make no law.
So I figured I'd bring that up to you just in case,
if this is a good leverage point, a little flash point,
with this story, No Other Land, to remember that lesson,
I'll feel like I've done something worthwhile.
So you know what it's time for everybody?
In just a second, we're gonna be talking about tariffs
and we're gonna be hearing from none other than
Jason Sorens.
Jason Sorens, great man on economics
and a man who understands the value of money and trade.
Here's a little reference to that.
Is a penny earned.
Though that's gotten tougher since they've stopped making them.
Maybe it's time to start saving a different type of coin.
Such as the new David Knight Show supporter Commemorative Coin.
Saving these coins earns support for independent
media. Featuring striking bass relief with bold raised details and premium
painted accents. It's not just a trinket but a statement, a declaration, a way to
show you refuse to be controlled by the establishment. It's a limited run of just 100 coins. So, much like the penny,
when they're gone, they're gone. They silence independent voices. They censor the truth.
But you can stand with real journalism and own a piece of the resistance.
These coins saved is The David Knight Show Sustained. Available now at the David Knight show comm
You're listening to the David Knight show
Well great stuff let's get a little introduction to our topic by turning to
the chairman of the Fed mr
Powell because mr
Powell was asked a question at a news conference that is pretty valuable.
And he didn't exactly answer it the way that would have brought me great satisfaction.
It's about the tariff influence on prices, but they use the word inflation, unfortunately.
We know that inflation is actually the inflation of the money supply that leads to price increases.
Let's hear about the price increases, but they use the term inflation.
How much of the higher inflation forecast for this year is due to tariffs?
And since the policy path remains the same, are you effectively reading this as a one-time price level shock? Okay.
So how much of it is tariff?
So let me say that it is going to be very difficult to have a precise assessment of
how much of inflation is coming from tariffs and from other.
And that's already the case.
You may have seen that goods inflation moved up pretty significantly in the first two months
of the year.
Trying to track that back to actual tariff increases, given what was tariff and what
was not, very, very challenging.
So some of it, the answer is clearly some of it, a good part of it is coming from tariffs.
But we'll be working and so will other forecasters to try to find the best possible way to separate
non-tariff inflation from tariff inflation. Okay, well, alright, so
it contributes because it's a tax. It is a tax that is steering behavior and it
is a tax that is taking away people's opportunity to get more for their
efforts. That's not good. Let's turn now to a person who knows a great deal about that. And he is our guest on the David Knight show. He is Jason Sorens. Jason Sorens, a friend of mine, a friend of New Hampshire, the man who came up with the idea of the Free State Project. And he has been doing great work with the American Institute for Economic Research, AIER,
in Great Barrington, Massachusetts.
Jason, welcome to the David Knight Show,
and thank you for that couple minute wait there
as I sort of queued up this story.
You've been doing a lot of work talking about tariffs.
You've been appearing on television.
I had the opportunity to play a video segment of you
on my Liberty Conspiracy Show. And this tariff issue is a big one. How would you frame it to people as
you look at the immediate layout on some of the things you've been working on over at AIER to
discuss tariffs? Yeah, so tariffs are taxes on trade. So they're taxes on things we buy. You can think of them as sort of like a sales tax
that it's a percentage of the value of a product
that you're paying.
But unlike sales taxes, it applies only
to products that are produced outside the United States.
And so they're tax on imports, essentially.
Now, why is that
important? Well, it distorts the economy more in a way that sales taxes don't do.
I mean, sales taxes have their own distortions. But a tax on imports shifts
consumption from foreign made products to domestic made products. You might
think, well, doesn't that sound like a good thing? People are gonna buy American, isn't
that the whole point? Well, the reason why that's a problem is what
economists call opportunity cost. So what are you giving up when you buy the
domestic-made product versus a foreign-made product? So you're gonna buy
the domestic-made product that's more expensive, right?
That's why you didn't buy it to begin with, right?
You were buying the foreign-made product
because it was more affordable and perhaps higher quality,
right?
So you're going to go for a more expensive, lower quality
product now that you're not buying the foreign product.
What that means is that more Americans are now going to have to be employed
in making that substitute for the foreign product and fewer Americans are now going to be employed
in making other things like things that we might sell abroad. So one of the things about tariffs is
that they not only cut down on imports what we buy from abroad, they cut down on imports what we buy from abroad they cut down on exports what we sell to abroad
and so with the US exports it tends to be things like
High tech right a lot of software AI
Custom microchips
my wife works in
High tech lasers right so there is that's the thing that the US exports. We have the world's biggest fiber optic laser companies here.
That's the kind of stuff that the US is selling
because US has the technology to produce those things
at a high quality and at a low price
compared to other countries.
What we import is gonna be stuff like T-shirts
and yes, steel and things like that,
like raw materials where we don't necessarily
have that comparative advantage.
Other countries have that comparative advantage.
So what we're gonna do now with tariffs
is we're gonna shift production from high-tech stuff
at the technological frontier
that we have a comparative advantage in.
We're gonna start now producing steel and t-shirts
and stuff like that that we used to produce, you know, 100 years ago
when our economy was less productive.
Exactly.
And because we have been able to become more productive,
we've been able to leverage that productivity gain
into new types of technologies.
And the savings that people have been able to derive
has been held by them
and then allowed to be invested in new things.
And I'll bring up the great book by James Bovard,
The Fair Trade Fraud,
where he goes through one of the seminal books discussing
the added expenses that cause these opportunity costs.
And really it runs counter to one of the basic axioms
of economics, division of labor.
It's incredible to think that, you know,
cave people divided their labor so that people
who might be pregnant or smaller or weaker
might stay home and make spears.
And then at a certain point,
they reach a point of diminishing returns
for making more spears
while the other people are out on the hunt.
So maybe they'll trade with people who have a comparative advantage because they're very
good at fishing and they'll trade for fish.
And so they all do what they're best at.
And this, the tariff, runs, it punishes people for actually engaging in that sort of activity
in a much broader economy that has been through millennia
perfected and perfected through voluntary interaction.
Yeah, that's right.
When you think about where our standard of living
comes from our wealth, it comes from two things,
production and exchange, right?
So on the production side, we think of new ways to do things,
more efficient ways to do things and make things.
But exchange is critical to that because we can't all do things, more efficient ways to do things and make things. But exchange is
critical to that because we can't all do everything, right? Like I can't, you know, grow all of
my own food. I can't, you know, make my own automobiles, you know, make my own jet airplanes
like I'm calling you right now from New Orleans, right? I can't, I can't get there just by
myself, right? I need exchange. So if we, the more we tax
exchange, the more sand we throw in the gears of exchange, the
poorer we'll be.
Yeah, yeah. And it's fascinating, Jason, because, you
know, you and I have worked together, you know, with
students, and kids pick this up very quickly, you know, they,
when they understand division of labor, when
they understand marginal utility or diminishing marginal returns, trade, you can bring up
examples of different cultures having maybe better advantages physically, or they have
better natural resources for one thing than another thing. And often people get almost
resentful, I think, when they hear this term trade deficit. And,
you know, when I've written for the Mises Institute or for others, I try to explain that oftentimes,
when they discuss trade deficit, you're not really hearing the full story. One of the first people
who explained that to me was David Henderson. And, you know, he gave me his copy of the Fortune
Encyclopedia of Economics.
And inside this, they talk about the balance of trade,
which is actually inherent in the word trade.
You don't have a deficit if you're engaging in a trade.
Both parties or the multiple parties who are involved,
they've all decided.
And so when we look at this, we often
hear about this term called the trade deficit, which tends, as I explained to the audience on my show many times, tends to happen when you have a strong monetary unit in your nation state.
And if, for example, a person is going to travel abroad and they happen to travel while their monetary unit is strong, that means they can trade it for many more of the products
from the foreign country. So of course, if the dollar is relatively stronger than the yen or the yuan
or something else, the peso, our dollar will be able to buy more because it represents more
productivity. But those dollars don't translate into some gestalt of, you know, a waxen figure
that turns into something else. They remain dollars and they come back over here
in liquidity and investments.
And so that's the other side of the ledger
that people don't really discuss.
And that's one of the things that David,
thanks to David Henderson, another economist in that book,
when I was maybe 19 or so, I learned that.
And I said, wow, this is really interesting stuff.
So it actually harms, putting up the tariffs
harms Americans in being able to buy things
and get the best bang for their buck
because now it's adding more expense.
They have less money left over to actually allow
for new businesses in America to start
and new employees who could be employed,
we're never gonna see that now.
And it also, I think it gives people the wrong impression about what trade
actually is when they discuss this trade deficit thing.
Yeah. I mean, tariffs don't help trade deficits.
This has been proven again and again that when you enact tariffs, it hits your
exports just as much as it hits imports.
So it doesn't reduce the trade deficit and the trade deficit isn't bad in and of itself to begin with as you point out
It's a reflection of the strength of the dollar. It's a reflection of people investing in the u.s
So the other way to think about a trade deficit is it's an investment surplus, right? It's
people
Lending money to Americans so that they can buy things.
And you never hear about that surplus.
That's a really key point.
Yeah.
And sometimes a trade deficit can be a symptom
of something else going wrong.
And I think in the US case,
our big budget deficits are a big part of that
because a lot of that investment that's coming here
is actually just foreigners
lending the US government money to spend.
And so in a way that's, you know,
it is kind of more money for us
that the US government is spending on us,
but it's not sustainable as we all know.
And so if you really wanna bring the trade deficit down,
you need to bring the trade deficit down, you need to bring the budget deficit down.
You know, we need to start spending less.
And Jason, I'm curious to get your thoughts
because, you know, I try to offer,
and you know, a soft, peaceful alternative
for people to consider at least,
which is if you want to try to help American business
become more competitive,
then remove the impediments on competitiveness.
Remove the impediments on productivity.
Get rid of the regulations.
Stop assuming for businesses how they can do their business.
And I try to tell conservatives, I say, you railed against, many of you did, railed against
the idea of essential versus non-essential being
applied to businesses by the offices of government, by the bureaucrats. But really a tariff is
actually a manifestation of the same mentality, isn't it?
Yeah. I mean, we do see a lot of people now, unfortunately, trying to defend the tariffs
on the grounds that, well, I'm willing to pay more for, you know, X good,
you know, if it, if my money's going to go to an American instead, or I'm willing to, you know,
I'm willing to consume less and have a lower standard of living if that somehow helps America.
And, you know, while in a sense, I guess, it's good to be concerned about other people and want to help the competitiveness
of the American economy, for example. You know, if we're all doing that, if we're all forced to
consume less, I mean, the other word for that is just we're poor, right? If we're unable to
to maintain our standard of living, that's not helping us in any sense that is us choosing to hurt ourselves
for maybe some spiritual benefit. I don't quite get it. So the arguments you hear out there right
now to defend the tariffs just are not good arguments. And I got to say, over at the American
Institute for Economic Research, I'm going to show this up on the screen, Jason, because I think it's
so valuable. There are so many great articles.
If anyone just goes into the search engine and looks for tariffs, every week you'll see
another excellent article, some by you, some by others, five myths about tariffs.
And these are the types of things that you can give to students, you can give to people
in college and offer them the opportunity to read these things and I think it's very valuable especially and if I if I
might I'd love to get your thoughts especially when you hear people like
this man let's talk about the man who is given credit for being the driver behind Donald Trump's mentality, Bob Leitziger, Bob Leitizer, they say that he's
the mastermind behind the Trump tariff approach. And it appeals to nativists, it appeals to people
who might be say in unions, who know that the union is also a burden on their business, but if
they can eliminate the foreign competition,
that's helpful.
It appeals to politicians like Robert Portman,
who used to be a Senator from Ohio
when Donald Trump was president previously,
and they imposed the washing machine tariffs
and the dishwasher tariffs,
which were to disaster steel tariffs.
If I might, Jason,
I would love to get your thoughts on this comment
Because he buys into so many of the canards that I I so hope to dispel in the way that I
Mentioned earlier Walter Williams would do when he fills in for used to fill in for
Rush Limbaugh to be able to offer these scholarly and I think take away items to remember these things when you hear this rhetoric.
Can I play this for you a little bit?
Yeah.
Great.
We have this giant transfer of wealth
from the United States overseas,
and that is in the form of trade deficits.
And the way the system is supposed to work,
no one should have large trade deficits for long
periods of time.
Things can happen.
You can do it.
You could have trade deficits with one country, surplus with another.
But the notion of a country having hundreds of billions of dollars of trade deficits every
year is not how it's supposed to work.
We now are to the point where our trade deficits, they calculate them at about seven or eight to a hundred
billion dollars. If you did it the way you or I would do in a sensible way, you'd probably
be at a trillion or a trillion and a quarter dollars. So that's a transfer of wealth from
Americans overseas in return for current consumption. And it has nothing to do with economics. It's
entirely the result of industrial policy
of other people and our being defenseless.
Okay, so I'm gonna pause it right there, Jason,
because I think it would be unfair
to play even more of that
because there's so much that needs to be addressed there.
So much mythology.
And I would love to get you,
to offer you the opportunity,
before I even speak on any of this,
as a person who deals with this on a daily basis,
you taught economics, you've taught me a great deal about economics.
What are your thoughts about what he has to say there? And if you'd like me to scroll back, feel free.
Well, first of all, he makes the mistake of identifying
national wealth with money. And economists do not think of money as
wealth. Wealth is the goods and services that you can command. So at an
individual level having more money means you can command more goods and service
right you can buy more stuff but at the national level our wealth is the stuff
that we have right our? Our goods and services.
So if we are getting goods and services,
if we're getting nice cars and things like that
from other countries, that is our wealth, right?
So that's not a transfer of wealth.
We're not losing wealth by getting this stuff.
That is actually part of our wealth.
And so, you know, if you if it
were otherwise, if money were wealth at the national level, we
could just arbitrarily print up a bunch of money, and we'd be so
much wealthier, right? Let's just write up another trillion
dollars. If that's our trade deficit. And that's that's what
that's what wealth is this print another trillion dollars. Well,
what would that do? Obviously, it wouldn't increase our goods
and services, it wouldn't increase our real wealth, it would just cause prices to go up.
And I find it slightly offensive on an intellectual front. I
think it's intellectually dishonest, just dishonest. But
there are so many fallacies that are sort of packaged into this
giant suitcase of protectionism, Jason, because when you hear him say,
and Trump has done the same thing,
and what's his name?
Caroline Levitt has done the same thing,
claiming that we're getting ripped off
when people from another country
happen to sell something for less.
And I said to my audience at Liberty Conspiracies,
like, yeah, you remember that time you went to buy something and it turned out to be 20% less than you thought you were going to spend? And you walked away, man, I hate getting ripped off like that. Remember that? You know, and so they, they, they aggregate all these things. And they say that they're somehow, we're not getting anything from it. And that I would love to go deeper into valuation, as you and I often discuss with students,
is subjective. Every individual who made a decision to buy one of those foreign products
or accompany a group of people who decided to buy that because they thought it would be better for
their bottom line to produce something here or to sell to a consumer here, made that decision of their own accord. And so that man is already undercutting the valuation
right that individuals have to make for themselves.
And now I find that really offensive.
And he uses this sort of nativistic us versus them rhetoric.
And that's a problem for me.
Yeah.
I imagine that, you know, we could get just cars from from
heaven, right? That's like cars would just show up, pop up in the United States,
right? Free, like it's like manna from the Bible, right? Wouldn't that be great?
Like we'd be much better off. We wouldn't even have to make these cars. We
would have to spend any resources or labor trying to make them.
We just have them. Yeah. Okay. Well that'd be great. What if,
what if instead of getting them free and they just pop up like Japan and Germany
just send us cars on boats for free? Right.
That's just as good, right? They just show up. They're free. Okay.
Now what if they charge us a very low price?
Well, that's not as good as free, but it's still very good to get those things at a low price
So yeah for imports are cheap if the stuff we're buying from abroad is cheap. That's good for us
Fantastic, I mean be better if it were free
But unfortunately we have to to work and produce and give them some stuff in exchange for the stuff we're buying from them, but
You know, that's how trade works. Yeah
Yeah, but yeah, but cheap imports are great for our standard of living and you you remind me of the candle makers petition by Frederick Bastier
Where he you know for a while he he has he in in his piece and if viewers aren't familiar with it,
he's just a great 19th century French economist.
He wrote the Broken Window Fallacy
and so on and so forth about opportunity costs
that the government might impose on you,
that sort of thing,
and a lot of assumptions that people have.
And he said, you know,
the candlemakers have this very important petition.
And every day they have to fight an unfair competitor,
the candle makers, these people, your neighbors,
trying to make a living,
putting candles out there in the market.
And every day they have this powerful unfair competitor
coming up in the morning at sunrise
and disappearing later in the day at sunset. you if we could get the government to just put a giant umbrella or
parasol over all of Paris or all of France the candle makers could make much more money, but obviously
Obviously that means they'd be working more so in other words get rid of the blessing of sunlight, work harder, make more candles to get
where you could have been by not having to work that hard, by getting something that is a blessing,
as you say, that coming from the sun. It's a similar sort of thing if people are willing to
offer you something for less. I find it really troubling when they say, we have transferred
about $20 trillion worth of our national wealth. Because again, there's a sort of anthropomorphizing
of it there.
And in addition to that,
there's the collectivist mentality of we have transferred.
Every one of those people made a separate decision
about their own valuation.
And it's not his place to say,
I know better for you for your life.
And that I think is an ethical problem
that many of the people who promote these things
kind of miss sometimes. Yeah, I mean very much these are individual level decisions. So we can't
forget that when the government sets up trade barriers, it's interfering with the freedom of
every individual to trade with other people, right? And to find the best deal.
And yeah, if for whatever reason you wanna buy
domestic made products,
and that's something that you believe in,
you should be free to do that, obviously.
That was always allowed.
But now you're trying to forbid it for everyone else.
And that's the thing I have a problem with.
Right, and we, Yeah, go ahead.
Well, I was just going to say, I don't
know if we want to get into some of the maybe slightly more
sophisticated rationales for the terrorists,
but some of the people out there now
realize that there's no economic case for them.
But they might make a national security case
or a political case for them.
And that's something we can discuss,
but I think when you look at it, even those rationales end up failing because
people are searching around to find some reason to support a policy that obviously is economically
harmful, but I think is politically appealing to certain interest groups. And that's why it exists.
Absolutely. I couldn't agree more, Jason. Jason Sorens is our guest,
the American Institute for Economic Research. Jason, I'll just put this on the screen.
One of the recent pieces from the Daily Economy, a release from the organization, we've got tariff turmoil, the economic risks of a global trade war. And of course, that's always a possibility of reciprocal trade battles. Typically, you see that happen very often where a politician, a nativist politician, oftentimes offering that rhetoric to the people
who are local saying, let's stop that product coming in
from X, Y, or Z nation.
And of course the logic is then, well,
why don't we protect the people in our own state
or our own town, make everybody do their own work
here in this town, everybody in town will have to work
and that'll be wonderful.
No, that wouldn't be wonderful.
What if you had to do it all yourself?
Let's make work harder by tying everybody's right arm
behind their arm, behind their back,
and then everybody will have more people working.
So as Walter Williams said,
the intention of a productive economy
is not to get everybody laboring,
it's to be able to get more with your labor
and have more things that you value for your life
that you think are helpful for your life. And one have more things that you value for your life that
you think are helpful for your life.
And one of the things that I find very problematic, and I'll go back to the video here, Jason,
just to show people from this AIER, dailyeconomy.org.
You can find that at thedailyeconomy.org and I'll shoot if you want to look for it.
But one of the things he brings up and something that I've been hearing myself, Jason, is, you know, I mentioned that when the dollar is relatively stronger compared
to other currencies, you will see Americans buying more of the foreign goods because their
dollar is relatively stronger. And I've noticed that already the Trump administration and other
people who are exporters and this man here in this bit with Tucker Carlson
intimates that the Federal Reserve should enter
into a phase of lower interest rates,
essentially to devalue the dollar.
He wants the buying power of the dollar to go down.
And I saw what Jerome Powell,
as he was talking about the impact of tariffs,
I saw a sentimental indication
with the Federal Reserve Board holding
rates steady that they might be ready to do that, which I think would be it would give people the
false impression of easy money then going out, it would inflate the money supply, and would further
complicate the problems of fiat currency inflation. Yeah, that's right. So the other the other word for
the buying power of the dollar going down is is is inflation,
right? That it can no longer command as much in terms of
other currencies, but also can no longer command as much in
terms of goods and services, right? And I don't think the
American people like that very much. I don't think that's the
reason they voted for President Trump is so that their dollar would buy less.
I think that's the opposite of the reason
why they voted for President Trump.
So yeah, it's a little disturbing
that they're thinking in this direction.
But again, if they wanted to do something
that would not hurt prices at all, would actually potentially bring prices down,
would also bring the trade deficit down, it would be cut spending. You could cut federal spending
and you'd achieve the same objective and we wouldn't have to borrow all this money from foreign
central banks, including the central bank of China, which is, you know, what we're doing right now. And so, you know, why not focus on that?
That's a great point. That's a great point. You know, Jason, I know that, you know, you've made
television appearances and discussed this previously, and I got to show that segment
on liberty conspiracy last week.
You've been telling people about some of the things that are going to be hit. And that's, again, one of the major pluses about James Bovard's fair trade fraud, which is now what, 25 years old or
something like that, was Jim went and told people about some of the things they don't even know
they're paying more for. And he noted that in study after study, it shows that in the
aggregate, the particular business that is helped by this, whatever tariff might be,
is helped perhaps, but consumers are harmed generally eight times as much by seeing aggregate
losses in their ability to be able to save their money. And so there are a number of a number of things that Trump is hitting, whether it be from Canada, China, or Mexico. And on April 2, we're going to be seeing even more. Would you like to mention any of those that come to mind that you might want to tell people about?
Steel tariffs in his first term and there was a study of that and and what were the the job gains versus job losses? And I might get the the precise number slightly wrong, but the ratio is is correct here that for
about eight thousand jobs saved about a hundred and seventy thousand jobs were lost so
You know when you think about it, there are a bunch of industries in the u.s. They use steel
You know, when you think about it, there are a bunch of industries in the US that use steel. Export industries, high tech industries, you know, my wife's laser company uses a lot of
steel, buys a lot of steel.
Boeing uses steel to make jets.
Tesla uses it to make cars.
So steel tariffs are particularly stupid because not only do they have the effect I talked about earlier where they're drawing
labor away from the more productive sectors of the economy to a less productive sector of the
economy, but they're also raising the cost of inputs to American exporters. So even if you
wanted to be a mercantilist, this is a really bad way to do it. So the steel tariffs were particularly dumb and unfortunately we're seeing more of them.
Lumber tariffs on Canada are bad for housing,
the cost of housing.
And this is something that Americans are also complaining
about and one of the top issues in our country today
is how expensive housing has gotten,
largely because of government.
That's another topic for another day perhaps,
but lumber tariffs just drive up the cost of building.
So these are things that are directly hurting Americans
and the things that they're concerned about.
Absolutely.
Jason Sorens, thank you so much.
You're great with the students.
You're great at AIER,
and I hope people will go over there.
Why don't you mention how people can find your work,
find you on X, that sort of thing, if they want to follow you on X or find you over at AIER, Jason.
Yeah, so AIER is at AIER.org and I highly recommend our site, The Daily Economy,
at TheDailyEconomy.org. We have several new pieces every single day, thousands of visitors.
It's a great site. We don't just talk about trade, we talk about the whole range of economic issues,
a lot of up-to-date current economic indicators that we're analyzing.
We're analyzing the direction of the economy.
So it's helpful to you if you're in business, I think, if you're an investor.
But also if you're interested in economic policy and
understanding how what politicians are talking about is going to affect the economy.
As for me, you can find me on X at Jason Sorens, so just my name, and yeah, I talk about
economic issues there and I definitely have a little bit of a New Hampshire flavor. You
and I are both from New Hampshire and then the freest state in the country and so it's always
interesting to keep tabs on the legislature and what's going on there. And I do a lot of
kind of data visualizations as well to try to explain economic concepts and the effects of
public policy. Fantastic. Jason, thank you for taking the time
to be with me all the way over here in New Orleans right now.
Is that right?
Yeah, I'm giving a talk at Loyola University.
So get to meet Walter Block.
Oh, well, it has some interesting conversations
with Walter on a number of subjects.
And there are a couple that are gonna be
fairly touchy recently, but he's always fun to listen to. It's always fun to listen to Walter Boyd.
Oh boy, Jason thank you. I wish I were there to watch you both. That would be fantastic but I
admire you greatly. I will text you later on. Oh you're wonderful. A great, great benefit to New Hampshire, to children in New Hampshire and all over, especially with your work with the IER.
You're really offering some great scholarship there, and I admire it wonderfully. Wonderful. I'm so glad you're there. Thanks, Jason. Appreciate it.
Well, we have a mutual admiration society. So thank you, Gardner, for all you do and for having me on.
Thanks, Jason. We'll talk to you again soon. Take care talk to you later
All right. Bye. Bye. Wow, it's terrific to talk to Jason. Just great. Oh boy. He was just what an amazing person
You know really understands economics and if you ever get the chance to take a class with Jason Sorens or have him as an instructor
for a seminar
You'll definitely be happy about that
because his work is phenomenal
and he makes things so understandable.
It's wonderful.
We'll take a break, come back in just a second.
Remember folks, if you have the opportunity,
we'll check in on some of the comments in a moment as well.
You can donate to the David Knight Show
if you think what you're seeing is valuable.
If I'm providing a value that people can take away some good lessons and so on, please consider donating to the David Knight Show if you think what you're seeing is valuable, if I'm providing a value that people can take away some good lessons and so on.
Please consider donating to the David Knight Show and the family.
I'm Gardner Goldsmith, filling in for David Knight on the David Knight Show. The The The Making sense.
Common again.
You're listening to The David Knight Show.
Again, thank you to Jason Stornes for a wonderful conversation.
And if you get the opportunity to go to AIER, and please remember their daily economy. Wonderful articles there. They really help people get an
understanding of economics and there are so many wonderful writers that they offer that every day you can go there many times a day and see terrific pieces of scholarship. I'm Gardner Goldsmith and this is the David Knight Show.
And let's check in with some of the comments
from all the folks out there I see over on X.
Let's see, we've got, oh, hey, thank you.
Thank you so much, Russians.
TreeOne MS reposted the stream.
Thank you, thank you so much.
I appreciate that. I hope I'm
doing a good job filling in for David and I want to thank everybody over at rumble as
well. If you want to donate at rumble rather than rock and that's probably the best idea
of all those angry tigers there a great conversations with tiger in tweeting things. He did a great
show on his on his channel last night on The Economy.
You can watch him.
He's one of the Knights of the Storm.
And check out Anger Tigers.
Again, go to the Knights of the Storm
to find out all the schedules
for what the Knights are doing.
And that's not David Knight,
that's the Knights of the Storm in that case.
So I wanna continue with a couple quick ones.
First, let's get into the war situation. And then
we're going to start talking about this anti-Tesla mentality and Eric Peters is going to join
us. But before we talk to Eric, I want to give you an update about what's been going
on with the Houthis. And as I mentioned, a very disturbing visit from Senator Fenorman with Benjamin Netanyahu.
Unbelievable stuff. Let's talk more. What is it good for? Absolutely nothing!
What is it good for? Absolutely nothing!
What is it good for? Absolutely nothing! Now listen to me. Oh, whoa! I despise
Causing me the destruction of this life
War means tears
To thousands of others I have
When their sons go to fight
And lose their lives
I said, whoa!
Good God, y'all
What is this good for? Absolutely nothing Get shanigan Thank you, Edwin Star. What a remarkable voice that man had. Talk about soulful. Just quickly,
I want to show you the latest and up-to-date as they might say, coming from the Middle East in
a datist as they might say, coming from the Middle East in the Houthi situation. As you know, as we discussed yesterday, the Houthis, after the Israelis attacked the Palestinians
again and again and again and again, year after year after year after year, and then
Hamas responded with their attack October 7th, 2023.
And then Israel embarked on its more intense genocide campaign.
Now they are back into partitioning Gaza.
And they're going to be sweeping people away again.
They have shut down food, shut down water.
The Houthis have said they were threatening to shut down water passage through the Gulf.
And so the United States responded over the weekend by killing almost 60 people.
Donald Trump walked off a golf course and killed civilians.
No declaration of war, nothing.
And so this is the latest.
The USS Gettysburg launches missiles against
Houthi forces. They call them Houthi forces. Really? I didn't see Houthi forces
in those eight year old kids who had been blown to pieces. Did you? Here's some
of the footage as they launched their missiles.
Pretty much the same thing over and over again, you get to pay for it. Now,
I don't want to be too heavily moralistic about this. I could just mention the US Constitution
to them and say, hey, where are you getting the power to do this, to set boats and ships
off the coast of other countries and then start launching missiles into those countries?
Maybe there's a problem there.
How about US government giving missiles to Saudi Arabia
to fight a proxy war that killed over 100,000 people
in Yemen up to about five years ago?
How about that?
Nobody talked about that, but it happened.
And then we've got Fetterman being gifted a beeper.
Let me show you this and you can hear it
because I recorded it and upped the volume but this comes from Election
Wizard and he writes Benjamin Netanyahu gifts Senator Fetterman a silver plated
beeper similar to the gold plated beeper that they gave to Donald Trump, people were like, is that a threat?
So in other words, it's not really cool to give people something that's going to explode
in their hands.
How about that?
Maybe that's an idea.
Well, let's get right over to it because here we go.
This is the footage and it's not pleasant.
That's great.
Can I give a man who has everything, how about giving him a beeper?
This is a silver plated beeper. The real beeper is like one time to wait. It's nothing
Yeah, but it changes history, you know what when when that story with that story broke? Yeah, I was like, oh I love it
I love it. And now it's like thank you for this. Yeah. No, all right. I
Was like I love it. I love it. It's like yeah. No, thank you for this. All right
I love it. It's like, yeah, no, thank you for this.
All right.
It's just, I don't know.
I will remind people, please don't forget
the two young ladies who stood outside the Capitol building,
who had relatives in Palestine months ago,
over a year ago, they asked for a ceasefire.
They asked for the United States
to stop sending weapons to Israel.
Fetterman walking out of the Capitol had one of those little mini Israeli flags waded at them.
Didn't know them, didn't know anything about them, but will certainly pick their pockets
to send weapons of destruction to kill their family members in Palestine,
their family members in Palestine, contrary to the constitution
that that man swore an oath to uphold.
So instead of doing what is constitutional,
he goes and accepts a silver-plated beeper
from a man who in many countries
will be apprehended for genocide,
standing next to his wife who
is up on corruption charges. Maybe Fetterman will take some time to
reconsider, I would hope. That would be great. To round off some of this
information on the warfare stuff, this is gonna be brutal but I mentioned this to
you. I think it's important to offer this to you.
This is Dave DeKamp of antiwar.com antiwar is doing their fundraiser.
Please remember it's antiwar news if you want to find them on YouTube.
He had done an interview with a surgeon, Dr.
Feroz Sidwa, and the interview was terrific.
He doesn't do interviews often
where someone comes on camera and chats.
He's usually editing and writing and text.
And then at the end of the day,
literally he does these half hour videos where he records
talking about what is on the website
and that you can find it if you wanna share the links,
that sort of thing.
But he contacted Dr. Sidwa after they had had contact before.
And here is what Dave has to say about the exchange.
Because Dr. Sidwa went back in.
He's a trauma surgeon.
And he's volunteering.
And he's American.
And he was volunteering in southern Gaza.
Last year, he's in Gaza.
I saw he did an
interview on Sky News. He's in Khan Younis at a hospital. So I
emailed him, you know, I didn't want to bother him. But he's
been doing interviews. He did Sky News, he did. So I saw him on
another interview. You know, with all the work he's doing in
Gaza, he's still doing interviews. But I emailed him
just asking him for if he could give me a statement, you know, if he had the time, and he gave me a very long statement about his experience
on Tuesday morning when Israel resumed its massive, massive bombing campaign on Gaza.
And this is what he told me, so I'm going to read his whole statement here and there is some medical jargon that I hope
I don't butcher too much. So this is the statement from from Dr. Sidwa, trauma surgeon from the US
from California. He said, on the morning of March 18th 2025 I was volunteering at Nasser Medical
Complex in Khan Yunis, Gaza. At about 230 a.m., Israel began bombarding Gaza again
as usual under transparently absurd pretexts.
Apparently, this was coordinated with the White
House in advance, revealing how deeply involved in these
crimes our government is.
I woke up with a start when the door to our bedroom
living quarters was blown open and smashed into the closet behind it
So the bombing was very close to the hospital
I went down to the emergency department to help with the mass casualty event that we knew would follow
I should warn you this gets really graphic. He describes the operations he did
This is what is happening in Gaza.
Now I'm going to pause it there because his volume is a little bit low and I'm going to
go direct to the antiwar website so that I can give you some of this information.
And I'm going to read this myself because my voice will be a little bit louder. So I went down to the emergency department
to help with the mass casualty event
that we knew would follow.
The Palestinian surgeon and nursing leader
who led the mass casualty effort did an incredible job
of controlling the situation and triaging patients.
I went to the red triage area with Dr. Morgan McGonigal,
an Irish trauma and vascular surgeon. The first patient I found was a three to four-year-old girl
with agonal breathing and a weak pulse with multiple shrapnel wounds to the head and face.
I told her father that she was going to die
and there was nothing we could do about it.
Next, Morgan was evaluating a six-year-old boy
with shrapnel injuries to the chest,
abdomen and left leg.
He went to surgery for an exploratory laparotomy, which thankfully revealed no significant abdominal
bleeding. We found his popliteal artery transected and thankfully Dr. McGonigal was able to repair
it primarily. I then moved on to an exploratory laparotomy on a 29-year-old woman.
I later found out that she was the sister
of one of the physicians whom I work with here.
Her sacrum, the bone in your pelvis
that connects the pelvis to the spine
had a tennis ball-sized hole in it,
as did the skin and muscle of her lower back, from which she was bleeding tremendously.
Her rectum was torn in half and her, you know what, and bladder were both injured. We were able to get
her out of the operating room and to the ICU successfully, but she
died over the next 12 hours.
Finally, there's more.
I'll give you this.
We then dealt with a six-year-old boy hit by two pieces of shrapnel in the right ventricle
of his heart, leading to cardiac tamponade.
His heart stopped on the way up to the operating room. Six-year-old
boy. Dr. McGonigal opened his chest, repaired the heart, and was actually able
to get his heart restarted. We then explored the child's abdomen, finding a
massive right-sided liver injury. Three holes in his stomach, two in his colon, and five in his small intestine.
He was certainly the most severely injured child I have ever encountered who was not already dead.
We were able to get him out of the operating room and into the ICU, but he also died 12 hours later.
I wonder if Nikki Haley signed any of that ordinance. but he also died 12 hours later.
I wonder if Nikki Haley signed any of that ordinance.
You think the pieces of shrapnel still have the Sharpie marks on them?
Our names are on all those things.
They're making us pay for those things.
I don't wanna pay for those things.
I think that's enough to say. I shouldn't have to pay for those things, I think that's enough to say. I shouldn't
have to pay for those things. But under the auspices of national defense they'll
define for you what is your defense. So offense is your defense. Killing kids,
it's your defense. It's for your defense because Israel's our greatest friend.
Did you know Israel is your friend? Did you know that? They're our greatest
friends. Everything's collectivist. Until people step away from the collectivist table, they will not be
able to acknowledge true morality. That's just a fact. Collectivist politics destroys individual
will and morality. There is no escaping that because collectivist politics is predicated on force and lies.
And they'll use any rationale.
They will lie to you in any possible way to continue and perpetuate and give the money
to their friends, whether it's in the military industrial complex or it's in the energy field
or it's in Israel with Benjamin
Netanyahu and his silver beepers.
And something that the Russians were telling me they wanted to put up earlier.
Thank you, Russians.
This comes from a while back when we're talking about the economy and the deficit.
Save the Truth said, yeah, and another 18 billion to Israel is not helping.
Absolutely right. And then we have this from
Save the Truth. OMG, another beeper president. And this. Anyone else sick of waking up to find
another four to five hundred children were just bombed? Yeah. And you know, it's tough because
the onus shouldn't be on us to sound like we're
down and dire and unhappy about something or, you know, whatever to talk about this
terrible information because this is happening regardless of whether we talk about it or
not.
And I think many people who have a moral backbone are trying to get out the word about these
things. And we shouldn't have to look like
nuisances in an in a in a realm where an utterly immoral
graft game is going on that is leaving thousands of people killed every week.
It's nuts, it's just crazy.
And again, you don't have to be a moralist for this or anything. It's just bizarre
Let's head on over to rumble
Be my Valentine says heartbreaking
Bride be Mac. Thank you all. Thank you all it is an offense to the Lord
12 noon 12 June 1776, true morality stands alone.
Yeah.
Gonzo Johnny, 18 billion.
Isn't that like new cars for all Americans?
And North American House Hippo says,
isn't it funny how this country is falling apart?
Basic infrastructure is downright dangerous, And North American House Hippo says, isn't it funny how this country is falling apart?
Basic infrastructure is downright dangerous,
but there's always seems to be enough money for war.
You know, when we talk about basic infrastructure,
let's talk about our next topic.
In fact, we're gonna take the opportunity now
to bring in our next very, very valuable guest. And as you
know, I did some, spent some time in the script department of Star Trek Voyager. So as the
team gets the production stuff ready here, I like to make reference to Star Trek. Let's talk about things like subsidies,
taking your money, giving it out to people, the reactions people have had to that, whether it's
military industrial contractors, or it's special favors to certain businesses to protect them
against foreign competition, or it's special handouts to say, EV makers or people who work on the battery technology,
that sort of thing.
All of it, steering away from your decision
to run your own life.
That's it.
It's the immoral, ineptitude of the state,
knowing better than you.
Let's go to our mind melt
and bring in our next guest on the David Knight Show,
Eric Peters of Eric Peters Autos.
I must try to mind melt with it. Eternity ends!
Our minds are merging, Doctor. Our minds are one.
I feel what you feel. I know what you know.
Alright, and it's time everybody.
It's time to bring in Eric Peters of EricPetersAutos.com.
Head on over there and you're going to see some amazing information.
Let's welcome him to the stage.
Eric, thank you for waiting and welcome to the David Knight Show.
How are you, my friend?
Well, I'm good, Gar.
Thank you for having me back on.
I'm feeling a little anti-Semitic this morning. Hey, by the way, I came across something very interesting just by
happenstance that bears on this a little bit. I know we want to get into Tesla, but I just wanted
to mention this because it was one of those nuggets that you come across every once in a while. I was
reading a biography of the Reich's marshal, Hermann Göring, and in the beginning parts of the book,
of the Reich's marshal, Hermann Göring, and in the beginning parts of the book,
it talks about the events preceding the takeover
of the government by the Nazis.
And I was struck by something.
Did you know that the Nazis,
or at least the pre-Nazi government,
had what they call the Ministry of Defense?
Now that's the first time I noticed that term used. Of course, at the time, the United
States had the War Department. Right. Now it juxtaposed very interestingly, now we have a
Defense Department that's very preoccupied with war. And it's just this etymological Jiu-Jitsu
that's practiced by these authoritarian collectivists, the way they manipulate language to shift the conversation by getting you to accept a premise.
So, you know, objectively, what we're dealing with here is this aggressive
warmongering, but somehow it's framed as defense.
So it's very difficult to object to defense spending, right?
Because if you object to defense spending, then clearly you're an irresponsible person
who wants to put the safety of the country at risk.
Absolutely.
And it's amazing because people have brought up
that Orwellian change from War Department
to Department of Defense.
And you bring it up perfectly because ever since that time the United States has actually
never officially declared war and they engage in worldwide hegemonic attacks under the auspices
of defense. It's amazing. Great point, Eric. So true. But I wanted also to offer one more
thing before we get into the car stuff and I think think you'll probably agree with me, but you tell me, I think that cat
call of anti-Semitism is beginning to lose its power.
Yeah.
I think it's going down the same road that racism went, you know, the longest
time people were terrified, terrified, uh, you know, people, well-meaning people
to question, uh, these horrible policies that, uh, that, people, well-meaning people to question these horrible policies that gave people advantages
based on their race, because they were afraid of being called a racist for objecting to that.
It's not working very well anymore. People hear the term and they go, oh my God, not again.
And I see that beginning to happen. My spider sense tells me that with this anti-Semitism stuff,
you know, this implication that if you question what's going on in the Middle East or if you
question specifically what nets and Yahoo
Or the government of Israel is doing but somehow that means that you hate Jews and you want to you know
Implicitly you want to launch a pogrom against people who happen to be Jewish
It's it's preposterous and it's tiresome and people I think are beginning to see through it
preposterous and it's tiresome and people I think are beginning to see through it.
Absolutely. And the way you, the way you state these things is so it's, it's just, you frame it in such a way.
You mean say preposterous that just frames it perfectly. Eric, uh, it's,
it's an insult, I think, to the intelligence of so many people to take these
terms and then rephrase them. And as I mentioned, I didn't, I didn't,
didn't get, didn't get to mention this to you, Eric,
but a couple of weeks ago, I was approached
by some people in Washington.
I mentioned this on David's show yesterday.
They asked me if I would like to do maybe one article a week
or two articles a week.
And it wouldn't be much, maybe like $50 more a week
or something like that, to write on free speech things.
And so it's actually inspired me because I said, sure,
you know, that's fine. And they gave me some different links of subjects that they thought
might be good as a little test. And I said, Oh, yeah. And they said, you know, JD Vance
had spoken over in Europe about how they were using losing their traditions of, you know,
the vote and free speech and so on. So I brought up the fact that he was the prime sponsor of the 2023 Anti-Semitism
Awareness Act, which redefines in a classic New Speak way,
the meaning of anti-Semitism and says, if you're critical of a state called Israel,
and you know me, I'm an anarchist philosophically. I don't believe that any state is legitimate when it rules over other people.
No one has a claim to rule over someone else. So I was like, you know, I teach political philosophy and I'm critical of all states.
That means I'm anti-Semitic. Jerry Nadler, of all people, said people in my district are Hasidic, and they don't like the Zionist state of Israel.
They understand the difference between political Zionist
statist Israel and religious Israel,
as David Knight has brought up many times.
I said, are we all anti-Semitic?
And I mentioned on the show yesterday,
I went to Boston University,
they thought my last name was Jewish.
It's not, it's an English name, Goldsmith.
But I would hear some of the people who were Jewish, and they were Ashkenazi Zionist Jewish
people talking about the Palestinians like they were dogs and they should just be exterminated.
They were like insects and should be swept away.
And I was like, what?
And that was 1986.
It was nuts.
Absolutely crazy stuff. And this is, it's? And that was 1986. It was nuts. Absolutely crazy stuff.
And this is, it's an insult to the language.
It's an insult to integrity.
It's an absolute lie.
And what's that great book, Do Not Live by Lies?
I think that was-
Soltz-Nitsyn.
Yeah, Soltz-Nitsyn.
Yeah, exactly.
Soltz-Nitsyn is one of his last speeches.
And there's a man I think was his name, Kengor,
or someone wrote a book based on that. And he used that as the title of the book. And he
goes through a lot of the Soviet people who tried to hold on to their integrity. And this
is the sort of thing they're doing to us now.
Yeah, it's insane. The left in particular likes to argue by questioning your motives,
you know, rather than addressing the facts, because of course they're, they're, they have
a great deal of difficulty dealing with the facts. You of course they have a great deal of difficulty
dealing with the facts.
So obviously you're a bad person
for daring to bring up facts that are difficult to rebut.
That's the nature of it.
And the way to deal with that is just to not be cowed by it,
to correct your own internal thermostat
or at least refer to it and think,
I'm not anti-Jewish people, I'm just anti-mass murder.
I'm anti this state, this other state
having overweening control over this state
that has the power to compel me to hand over money
to finance the stuff that's going on
in this other part of the world
that entails the murder of other people
who've done me no wrong.
Yeah, perfectly stated.
And the amazing thing is the government does us wrong,
forcing us to pay for what they want.
And then they add the insult that it's for our protection,
which of course to me philosophically goes to the root
of the canard of the statist argument entirely. It's just a big protection racket.
But if I can, Eric, and folks, feel free to drop your comments into X.
They can go up on the screen.
The Russians spreading the propaganda.
We'll make sure they get that out there.
I want people to, if you get the opportunity, go to erikpetersautos.com.
Eric petersautos.com.
We'll talk about his X feed in a minute. Put your comments out there. And already we have people here.
Save the truth said Eric is right. That term has lost all meaning at this point. And then
we've got this. Oh, hey, Prashan be okay. Prashan Black. Thank you for being there.
Great to talk to you again. Germany was on the defensive though. In some cases, then
we've got. Oh yes, save the,
thank you so much.
Thank you.
Let's head on over into rumble.
I should actually expand a little bit
on what Prussian Black said.
Gonzo Johnny is in there talking about 18 billion LOL.
Isn't that like new cars for Americans?
Oh yeah, I read that one.
I'm gonna go down a little further.
Most American Jews are atheists, but most are Zionists.
Yeah, that's what I
found at Boston University. Paleo Armory wrote that. That's exactly it. And it was strange,
Paleo, because I didn't want to sort of, because I had just heard about, I didn't know much
about like religious differences or anything. You know, I had no idea. Like I'll give you
a quick example, Eric. The first girl I met at Boston University, her name was Jill Goldstein.
And we were just putting the same
group in our dormitory because we had the G-G-O-L-D in our names. And we got on really well. And so I took her for ice
cream down on Newbury Street. And it was a beautiful, you know, early September day or late August day. It was
wonderful. It was hot. It was great. And I walked back and went, Wow, I met a girl like the first day of college. This is amazing.
This is great.
And so I said good night to her.
And she said, oh, by the way, are you Jewish?
And I said, no.
She goes, well, it was nice meeting you.
And I was like, and I had no idea.
And then the friend of mine, Adam, mentioned to me,
he was next door and he was Jewish, Adam, Adam Dechter. Adam said, Oh, you got to understand, God, you know, that
within Jewish families, they want people to marry in with Jewish families. I had no idea
about differences between Jewish people or Catholic people or Protestant people. Really,
I didn't, I knew that there were differences, but I never explored it because I wasn't really
raised in any sort of a church or anything. And so when I went to BU and I got hit with that, I was blown away. And that's exactly it. They were really more
atheistic and just sort of tied to the state of Israel family and a lot of the money interests
that they had. It was very odd. It was really strange stuff at BU, that's for sure. What blows
me away is that on the one hand they've got this
almost an extreme form of clannishness which you just elaborated on. Yeah. Where within their clan, you know, it's very important for a lot of them that you be part of the tribe, so to speak.
Yeah. It's very important, you know, that Israel be kept homogenous, you know, from a certain point
of view. But any other group that even dares to assert something similar for itself,
naturally that's racist and that's hateful.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
And you can see that the way that they're using the term
terrorist, terrorist threat now, the hatefulness,
anything that they deem, I mean, it's perfectly Orwellian.
It's exactly what Orwell said.
And now you can read 1984, you realize it really was
a satire of things that he already
was seeing that the government was doing within his British circles.
And also based on what he had seen down in the Spanish Civil War and with Trotskyites.
So it's very interesting to see this.
And I'd love to turn now, Eric, to your website, because this might become a trickier issue for some people.
I mentioned and you heard me mention some of these people who are being brought up either
aligned with terrorists like Khalil, Mahmoud Khalil, or others like this woman from Brown
University who just happened to attend a funeral in Lebanon.
And then they got her photographs and said,
you've been at this funeral, we're going to take you aside, we're going to deport you.
She's a doctor with patients at Brown University. It's insane. She's a phlebotomist or something
like that. You know, it's like these people who have blood problems, they need this woman.
It's not. It's authoritarian. And the fact that the regime has changed has changed absolutely nothing.
Look now, and this brings us to segue back to this Tesla thing that we were talking about
earlier, you and I, before we got on the air.
The same people who are decrying what they characterized as the weaponization of the
government are now weaponizing the government in this very same kind of a way.
Trump has said that they want to use these
domestic terrorism, federal charges against people
who go after Tesla charging stations and Tesla dealers.
Now, mind, I do not in any way endorse or support
the destruction of anybody's property,
but there are statutes on the books in every state
against the destruction of property,
charge people who do these things with the crimes that they've committed and leave it at that.
This idea of elevating it to the federal level and creating a whole nother tier of charges,
because the state charges are already there. It's of a piece with these hate crime statutes,
where let's say a white guy gets into it with a black guy and it's no longer just a case of
assault. It's a hate crime at the federal level. Right.
You know, and what Orwell wrote about, which is to punish not the crime per se, but the
supposed motives of the crime.
It's a very, very worrisome thing.
And now it's emanating from, everything's topsy-turvy.
Four years ago, these leftists were hysterical in their devotion to Elon Musk.
Elon Musk was their god.
Now, Elon Musk is their enemy.
And on the other side of that coin,
the people who used to hate Elon Musk
for being a rent-seeking technocrat,
now look at Elon Musk as their god.
It's ramped up.
That's exactly it.
And you've gone exactly where I was hoping to go, Eric,
with you as the guest, as we texted back and forth.
But just the way you phrased it,
it already presages and foreshadows where I wanted to go.
Because when we talk about these things,
we're seeing, I think, the utilization
of the hatred of Donald Trump
and Elon Musk's adoption of Donald Trump and then Tesla out there.
All of a sudden, we've seen the leftists who used to adore him, as you said, now literally engaging
in at least a whisper campaign from people like Jimmy Kimmel, winking and nodding like,
oh, I'd hate to see more Teslas burn, you know, that sort of thing. That is now being utilized as fuel for the fire
for conservatives to ramp up their anti-terrorism rhetoric,
the same way that the Biden administration
went after conservatives.
They're doing the same thing.
So you have fuel for the fire coming from the people
who don't like Trump and they don't like Tesla now because of Musk.
You get the comedians who are out there who are already disliked by the conservative talk
radio hosts and so on.
Now they're noticing what people like Jimmy Kimmel are saying and they're saying, look
audience, look at these terrible people.
We should get terrorism charges against the people committing these crimes.
And maybe, just maybe, AOC and others who are promoting that people should do this,
maybe they should be up on these crimes too, because rhetorically, they're ginning up terrorist
activity. And you brought up, that was exactly the point I wanted to explore, which is this amorphous definition of terrorism
for whomever might be in charge to define and the state difference, where if you've
got somebody who's damaging something, states have statutes against those.
And I thought I was going to bring it up and you brought it up perfectly because I think
people are missing this now
They're missing that there are already statues on the books for people doing who engage in this behavior
Well, we kind of live in this this if you want to call it
She accused era where you know the hysteria seems to just like the the arrow points at this group today
Then that group tomorrow and then this one the next day and and there's nothing about it that is coherent. The
only thing that it has in common is that it's hysterical. It's no longer simply, okay, this guy,
he poured some gas on the Tesla supercharger, lit it on fire, arrest and charge him with the property
crime, punish him according to the law. Now it has to be framed as domestic extremism, terrorism. And the real danger, I think, in that is that it sets this precedent that pretty much anything
that anybody might do could be framed in that manner, particularly if it's something that
the regime that happens to wield the power of the federal government doesn't like.
These people, they're Mr. Magoo in their myopia.
They don't see that the precedents that are being set right now are the ones that are
going to be exploited by whoever the next dear leader is.
Trump's going to be in there for three something years now, right?
And then after him comes who?
It might not be somebody that the Red Hats like very much.
What happens if it winds up being Pete Buttigieg, let's say?
Right, exactly.
It could be, you know, depending on how things go.
And then they're going to wish perhaps that they had been a little bit calmer in their
approach to these things and actually had backed due process, reasonableness, and not
using the federal government, you know, as a kind of chopping block for heresy.
You know, it reminds me,
and you mentioned it I think in your article
about Marie Antoinette,
it reminds me of the demonization
of so many of the people in the French Revolution,
or almost every revolution that you see,
whether it's the Soviets who took over,
and immediately Lenin was bathing in blood,
and then Stalin took over after that.
And then people give all these excuses
about that sort of stuff.
Or it's the French Revolution and the Jacobins
or whatever it might be,
this demonization of the enemy as a precursor
in many cases to gin up the hatred.
And we see this so much in the two minutes of hate
inside Orwell's 1984 in Airstrip One, where they're out there and
all of a sudden they're at war with, we've always been at war with Oceania or East Asia
or Eurasia or whatever. That sort of mentality is what we're seeing now with the two party
blocks switching back and forth, whoever's in charge, and the principles are lost.
The principles of due process,
the principles of, I thought you believed in the Constitution,
the principles of, I have a right
to my Fourth Amendment privacy.
You're not supposed to invade my privacy,
but you set people up between me and my airline
where I want to fly.
You make me have to turn out my pockets.
I have to have a piece of paper in order to work.
I mean, all these things are just incredible police state
tactics.
And people accept these things, especially
when you get into this battle over the government.
And now you've got people engaging
in the burning of the Teslas, which itself is a criminal act.
It's a terrible act.
And I can understand why people might not have liked Tesla if they were getting federal grants.
Of course, Elon Musk always mentions that, you know, we paid back all the federal loans that we got.
Okay, cool. That's cool. And he said, you know, we paid them back in time.
They shouldn't have been able to get them in the first place constitutionally. So my question to you, Eric, is let's take a look at this piece.
You've got this piece that you wrote about the climate
emergency people.
All of a sudden, they were all in favor of Tesla's,
but now they've changed because the man who
was their climate hero is now attached to the frog man, Mr. Trump.
Right. So as you say here,
Tesla designed its devices to appeal to affluent leftists
who like to pretend they believe the climate is changing,
but who are not willing to drive or even be seen driving a minimalist
vehicle designed with maximum efficiency in mind
rather than how quickly it can get to 60 and all the attendant bragging that comes along for that
ride as the main cell. Interestingly, even that isn't selling all of a sudden. Teslas are still
as quick as ever and quicker to 60 than almost anything with an engine.
But that no longer seems to matter to the leftist who bought Tesla's and love to talk about how very quick they were.
It no longer matters, of course, because Elon is no longer selling. It's Elon who's the problem.
So let's talk about that. Final section on that if you're interested, because there's
another part of this that I'll jump to. And feel free if you want to go back, Eric. But
as you mentioned, the left feels betrayed by Elon. Now, let me just ask you this.
You have separate criminals, a person who favors the federal government Maybe the FBI getting involved Eric would say but if these people are coordinating
That term is very slippery if they're coordinating
Then it becomes a federal offense if they're going over state borders
It becomes a federal offense FBI should get involved the FBI should crack down on this now my view is that
federal jurisdiction
is supposed to be very, very rare. And when it comes to incidents or aggressive acts like this,
it's supposed to be handled by the states. And if someone goes over state borders and commits a crime,
then the feds are supposed to get involved only to make sure that extradition happens.
But let me ask you, Eric, what if people are coordinating and we need to define that better because the feds won't,
they'll do anything they want to make it amorphous. They can make it mean anything they want.
What if they are directly contacting each other saying, you burn this place here, I'll help you
do this. I'll send you this money. You go do this, I'll pay you to do this, and it's across
state borders. Would then you think federal statute apply and then is it appropriate to call it
terrorism? Because that's amorphous as well. Yeah, you raise a really interesting and difficult
point. Now, you know, fundamentally, I'm leery about giving the federal government any leeway at
all. I think its powers, if we have to
have any of them at all, should be very strictly limited. Perhaps you could make an argument that
if there is some sort of outside organization, particularly if it's foreign, you know, I've read
that Soros and his organization is pouring money into this thing. That's the case. And if it is
somebody like Soros, then perhaps the federal government could be justified in going after Soros and his minions. But even in that case,
this idea that it can be framed as domestic terrorism is very troubling to me. You know,
we're dealing fundamentally here with property crimes. So let's leave it at that and prosecute
people in that manner. That's the way I personally think that that ought to be handled. Now, what I
think is most interesting about this business with the firebombing of the Teslas
is that clearly these people don't really care too much about the climate change thing, do they?
I mean, we were preached to relentlessly by these Teslarates about how they were saving the
planet and keeping the climate from changing by driving these Teslas. And all of a sudden,
they're willing to literally burn them up.
Now, how many how many genuinely harmful emissions are generated
by torching one of these electric cars?
They don't seem to care at all about that.
You know, it just it gives the lie to their nauseating virtue signaling,
which is as tiresome as the anti-semitic stuff.
That's exactly right.
You know, I hadn't I hadn't really thought about that. That's a great point.
All the carbon that's going up into the atmosphere. And you know, I wrote an article and did a
video for MRCTV about the climate hypocrites going to COP 30. And they're digging and David
talked about this, I believe on Thursday or Friday last week. I was going to talk about
it. I kept getting put off by it. So I finally got the right and shoot a video for MRCTV
on the Amazon forest, an eight mile stretch
that they're cutting away.
They're going to pave.
They're going to have to perpetually take care
of this thing just to give the COP 30 attendees an easier
route to get to their hotel through Brazil.
That's unbelievable.
We'll even recognize it.
It's kind of like Leonardo you know, Leonardo DiCaprio,
lecturing people about their carbon footprint
while he gets on his jet to go to Davos.
Somebody ought to ask him like,
hey, I heard you got a new role.
Are you starring as Bigfoot, right?
It stuns me because I don't get how anybody could have the,
what's the word you could use for
this, this, this, this obtuseness, this lack of introspection, this lack of, I mean, it's literally
that, you know, the pot calling the kettle black and they don't see it. You know, how can you drive
around in a half million dollar V12 powered exotic car, have a jet, live in a 10,000 square foot
mansion, have yacht parties and be prattling on and on about the climate changing.
That's so true. It's amazing. It's again, you know, it's sort of like when you hear, say, Donald Trump is saying that he wants to help the American worker, and worker and he's going to apply a 25% tariff to make it harder to get your stuff.
I'm going to bring or he says you're getting ripped off when you can buy something for
less.
It's that sort of idiocy.
You just.
I'm glad you brought that up because you know, it takes us back to this use of language to
manipulate people.
Right.
You know, what is a tariff?
It's a tax.
Yeah.
And people would understand what's going on if they use that
word tax. Right. They use this word tariff and somehow it's magical almost. You know,
people think that they're not going to pay the tax because they call it a tariff. Yeah,
right. Yeah. Yeah, exactly. This fist is not a fist. I mean, they did it before, you know,
with social security. Oh, you're not you're not being taxed for Social Security
It's a contribution
You know you remind me of the series the British science fiction series one of my favorites red dwarf
Because they've got it
They've got an Android on their name Crichton and the lead actor the lead character is a guy named Dave Lister
and he's like the only human left alive and he's stuck on this ship with a robot a hologram and the
Evolved cat that was the descendant of a cat that he had smuggled aboard the ship like three million years before that
And he's the only human left alive that he knows of he's out in deep space
He's got to deal with all these crazy characters. So he's trying to teach Crichton how to break his programming so he can become more human
He's trying to teach him how to lie and he keeps holding up a banana.
I know he keeps holding up an orange and he says, all right, Crichton, what's this?
He goes, oh, it's an orange, sir.
He goes, no, no, Crichton, Crichton, it's a banana.
And he's like, but sir, it's an orange.
I can see it very plainly. He
goes, no, we're trying to break your program in Crichton. We want you to, you
got to be able to lie sometimes. He goes, but sir, I'm programmed not to lie. I'm
supposed to be honest, as clean as the new driven snow. And he says, Crichton,
it's gonna come in handy sometimes. You got to learn how to lie. So finally he
breaks the programming and Crichton is all excited. He goes,
it's a it's a banana. And then he starts going crazy. He's like,
it's the it's the French fleet doing maneuvers off the coast of
Spain. Yes. He goes, I can do it. I can lie. And I like it think
of was all these politicians and how they they broken their
programming, you know,
as funny as it is, it's also tragic.
The way that we find our way out of this is to be careful with words,
use them judiciously, and with overt understanding of what the meaning is.
Not let ourselves be manipulated by the use of language, by people who are malignant.
You know, I think it's really, it's almost a form of the red pilling cliche.
Once you get into the mental habit of examining the words that are being used,
the thing begins to clear up.
And it's a lot harder for them to bamboozle you when you insist on precision
with regard to words and their meaning.
And, you know, I admirably as well, you know, I mentioned this to Jason offline and to you
as well here.
I admire when people, you know, they have pierced that veil in whatever dimension it
is and on whatever plane it is, and they continue to do their work knowing that maybe they can't
change anything, but they do it with a positivity.
They do it with a spirit that if I can give some truth
to one person or two people, that's good for me.
If I had a conversation with somebody at the corner store
on the dusty floor and we came to an agreement on something,
that's great for me.
So I'm gonna continue doing it.
And I'd like to ask you, Eric,
I know you have a number of articles
at ericpetersautos.com, and I hope people will go there.
See your piece on the Teslas.
And I really appreciate the fact that you also thought through some of these questions
regarding the terrorism charges, because it's all totally jingoistic, patriotic, MAGA.
Go after these people.
Get them, get them, get them. Just like the people who might be asking for peace
on college campuses, where of course the federal money
should not be going in the first place.
But it's the same sort of directed hatred
against people like Jimmy Kimmel,
who's doing something stupid, talking about,
hey, maybe that would be a really bad thing
if we saw more Teslas burn.
But ginning it up to a point
where you're making a federal offense
out of all these things
when really that is really pushing it too far.
I know you've got other articles over there
that are really timely.
I've got this one here from the 19th,
the software defined vehicle.
I'd love to talk to you about this,
but if you've got other ones you'd like to discuss,
feel free, because this one's a terrific one. And I think it goes to the heart of a lot of people who are
familiar with some of the problems with contemporary driving. Yeah, well, I think that's
a good one to talk about, because I think it's important that people become aware of what's going
on. I have, over the years, likened new cars to cell phones, and the description has now become
almost literally true in that these things are devices and they are controlled by software
rather than by you, the owner, the driver. And it's become overtly explicit now with this push to
push electric vehicles on everybody. They are fundamentally large cell phones. What do I mean by that?
Well, your cell phone, you nominally possess it.
You bought it, you hold the thing,
but the apps are not controlled by you.
It's updated at will by whoever it is that,
I guess, originated the device, whoever produced it.
You can't elect to not have it updated.
If it wants to control the way it operates, it will do so.
And the same with regard to these software defined cars.
There's almost nothing mechanical in them any longer.
Even to the extent, for example,
if you get into a modern car
with an automatic transmission and you look down
on the center console and you see
that gear selector handle there,
and you have the illusion that you're moving that selector
from park to reverse to drive.
You're not doing anything of the kind.
What's happening is that a computer
is registering those movements
and then sending a signal to make the transmission go
into whatever gear you selected.
But implicit in that is that the computer could say,
no, I don't want you to be able to move the thing out of park.
I'm not gonna let you do that.
The same with the throttle, the same with the steering.
And when you get to the NA plus ultra
expression of this, the electric car,
where everything is electric, the thing
can just decide on its own to not move anymore,
or to move fast, or to move slowly.
And it will narc out everything that you do.
They're already doing that.
These cars all have telematics embedded in them, meaning that they both send and receive
information. Data is streaming out of your car and they market this as, oh, well
we're trying to make sure that your vehicle runs optimally and
we'll get all this important diagnostic information. Well, they're also collecting
information about where you're going, where you're traveling, how fast you're
driving, whether you're breaking aggressively,
and all of these other things.
And they're in many cases beginning to share these things
with third parties like the insurance mafia.
So even though you've gotten no tickets
and you have had no files, no claims file or anything at all,
you open the letter and find out
that they jacked up your insurance by 20%
because somehow they found out
that you like to drive a little faster than the speed limit.
You know, things of that nature. And I worry also, Eric, because, you know, based on the,
this actually runs parallel, pun intended in a way, to the government running on the roads
and the government control over the infrastructure of telecommunications, the lines that run parallel
to most roads, the fiber optic cables, the power lines and so on, because the government claims the
roads and for a long time, starting with World War I, they gave that monopoly to AT&T that only
got broken up with the end of the Carter administration as Reagan came in. And then they started things like 9X and
Western telephone and so on. Those ended up splitting up the baby bells and then reforming into things like Verizon. And part of the breakup of AT&T gave the AT&T baby bells the monopoly to
control the fiber optic cables and phone lines that run parallel essentially
to most roads, whether they're underground or above ground.
Yeah.
And it would be very, very easy to attach either with cell towers or anywhere along
those lines, monitors along highways, along country roads, within cell towers, with satellites,
any sort of monitor that they want
with a signal that can go to it
that the government would definitely approve.
And then the government, of course, would snoop.
They would get that information
because of course it would be for our safety.
And the cars would have to comply eventually
not even allowing people to go over the speed limit,
that sort of thing.
And we've already seen tests of this sort of thing happening around the United States, right?
Yeah, it's a mechanism for centralized corporate government control. That's what it is.
Just like these smartphones ultimately are about the same thing. They're tracking devices that are
incidentally phones. They are meant as a means of figuring out what you're doing, where you are,
what sorts of things you're talking about, all of that stuff.
And people are they've been gulled into it because, oh, look how convenient it is.
You know, and look how neat it is.
I can take a picture of anything I want to at any time and I can send it to my friends.
I can watch videos on this little gadget.
And I get it. People find that stuff clever and interesting and fun,
but it blinds them to the pernicious side of the technology.
It's the same with regard to these cars.
A car at one point was an autonomous thing.
Again, look at the language.
Autonomous means independent, doesn't it?
Yet these things that are being pushed on us as autonomous cars
are in fact the ones that are controlled
by the centralized apparatus.
The autonomous car doesn't just autonomously drive.
It drives in accordance with the grid programming
and whatever information and data
it's getting from the hive mind and the GPS.
So it's the farthest possible thing from autonomous.
So what they want ultimately is the end goal of all of this is twofold.
They essentially want you to be a passenger in a Johnny cab.
Remember that from, from the Arnold Moody Arnold Schwarzenegger.
What was that?
The Philip K Dick story based on Mars, right?
What was that?
Yeah, I'm having the was it the running man?
Was that the one?
It was, it wasn't that was a Stephen King
one. It was the total recall. Total recall. Exactly. That's the one. Yeah. Either that or they
want you to just use your smartphone to tap an app and you'll get what they call transportation
as a service. They are doing everything that they can to window down and restrict and ultimately get rid of the autonomous vehicle, meaning your ability to own a car freely and
to be the master of that car, to be the one that's in control of
it and to be able to drive it whenever you want to drive it,
wherever you wish to drive it.
And without anybody knowing where you're going or where you've been,
they want to get rid of that.
They have to get rid of that.
You can't have a totalitarian authoritarian society
when people are free to drive.
You have a photograph.
You always pick great photos to be included in your pieces.
Our guest is Eric Peters of ericpetersautos.com.
And Eric will mention in just a second
where people can find you on X and your videos on Rumble.
But I love this picture with the handcuffs
that says one size fits all.
I don't know where you found that, but that's great.
And I love it, you say at the end of this article,
you say there is good news in that it is still feasible
to avoid being driven by a software defined device.
And you do it by not buying one.
The more who don't and you and I spoke about this about a year ago, we said, you know,
where do we think the market's going to go?
It's a battle between collectivist, fascist, mercantilist forces with the United States
government and international forces pushing all this climate, electric vehicle, control
grid stuff and people who want real autonomy with something they could put fluid
fuel into and drive where they want to go. But again, that's still on a grid that governments
claims the control over. So it's a tricky thing, but at least there's that close to autonomy.
So not buying one, that's the way. Let the market reveal it. And now we're seeing this with electric vehicles.
Even Tesla was dropping in sales,
not just because of the Trump Association.
It's been happening to a lot of electric vehicle makers
like Volkswagen and so on, right?
Oh, absolutely.
You know, this is an immense power that we wield
as a society and yet we often choose not to wield it,
which is sad.
Just by saying no, by not buying it, by not buying in, we can go back to the
height of the pandemic, which we've talked about many times before.
If enough people had just said, no, I don't buy this hysteria and I'm not going
to go along with it and I'm not going to wear a mask, even if it means I can't
get into the store to get what I want right this second, I'll figure a way around it.
I'm not going to buy it.
I'm not going to play along with it.
You know, if enough of us had done it at that time, that whole thing would
have been over in two months.
Exactly.
Just like you've gone back to when they, you know, when they first
imposed the TSA in the name of defending the homeland, we live in a homeland now,
not a country, uh, if enough people that said, you know what, I'm gonna forego that trip by air.
I'm not gonna fly.
I'm gonna, it's inconvenient.
I'm gonna have to drive, you know,
nine or 10 hours to get to see my family
or whatever it is, but I'm not gonna put up with it.
If enough people had done that and held fast
for six months, it would have bankrupted the airlines.
The airlines would have squealed like a pig.
They would have gone to the federal government
and said, this can't stand, it has to end.
And we would still be free to fly again without being treated like recently arrested felons
being processed on the way to the clink.
You know, it's interesting because I often think about how I wish my dad were here to
hear you talk because he was such a fan of cars, you know,
working on cars and he was a pro Liberty guy.
I think about, I mentioned to you, he worked at a gas station as a teenager
back when there was cocaine and the Coca-Cola and he said, I used to drink
eight of those a day.
I'm like, you must've been very efficient at your job.
He goes, ah, it went pretty fast.
But you know, it's the kind of thing, you take the new cars,
you do the test drivings and people can find you.
In fact, let's talk a little bit
about how they can find you on accident.
I get one more opportunity to talk about another piece
that you've got.
But over on X, if people wanna find you,
it is at apostate 27832,
or just look up Eric V. Apostate,
Eric V. Apostate, at apostate 27832.
And of course, it is Eric Peters Autos,
and I hope people will check that out on my tabs.
Where did it go?
I'll find it.
And see some of the articles that are so key
because I find what's really fascinating to me,
there we go, what's really fascinating to me is I get to see your videos sometimes as you do your
test driving. Tell us about this article here, a handicapped driver, that was great. Well that
that was prompted by something that happened the other day that seems to happen practically every day I go out for a drive.
I'm driving down the road that leads from my place here in Southwest Virginia to Roanoke
to hit the gym and the speed limit on that road is 55 miles an hour and pretty much everybody
is driving a little bit faster than that, around 60 something, because it's entirely
reasonable to do that.
Anyway, I round a curve and up in front of me
is a car that's going maybe 40 miles an hour,
sometimes going down to about 35,
and it has handicapped tags on it.
And it just popped into my little brain
that handicapped can be read in a couple of different ways.
There are people who have difficulty walking
and that's what most people understand
by the term handicap,
but it also means somebody who just can't drive.
And you don't have to have a disability to not be able to drive.
And I tried to make that funny point, but there's a serious point there
in that it's not about people who, for whatever reason, are driving slowly.
There are many reasons that a person might drive more slowly.
Maybe they're not they're not the most confident driver.
Maybe their car has a mechanical problem or maybe they're just wanting to see the sights. That's not the most confident driver. Maybe their car has a mechanical problem,
or maybe they're just wanting to see the sights.
That's not the problem.
The problem is when you're just oblivious
and indifferent to other people.
You're not looking in the rear view mirror
and looking down at your speedometer
and realizing, you know, I'm going 20 miles an hour
below the speed limit,
and there are these cars stacking up behind me.
Maybe I could just be courteous
and move off to the right a little bit and wave them by.
Right.
That's the thing that gets my back up,
that obnoxious, passive aggressive,
came of the road attitude
where nobody else's concerns matter at all.
The only thing that matters is this guy,
I'm just gonna drive along however I feel.
And it makes me wanna reach for the bottle slowly,
even if it's not quite noon yet. Yeah. I remember that there was a comedian who said that he thought
that everybody's license plate number should be a cell phone number. And that if you get stuck
behind him, you should be able to call him like, get off the road, or that everybody should have some electric charge in their car. So that if you get slow, you know, get slowed down, you can charge
them up. But this is something that I often discuss with students when I talk about the tragedy of the
commons, because the government claim of ownership of the roads doesn't allow for differentiation
between skill sets that really would allow people who are very good
drivers with good peripheral vision and depth perception and good reflexes to be able to
get on Autobahn style roads who have cars that if they were privately owned, the owner
of the Autobahn style road might have certain standards and say, okay, your car is good,
go for it.
Then people who go on that could be highly efficient, get to where they wanna go very, very fast.
Other people, slow them down
because we're all put into the same pool.
It puts everybody from different skill sets
and different abilities and different types of cars
into the same pool.
And we all have different reasons
for being out there oftentimes.
So this is one of the major problems.
It's the existence of government that
doesn't allow us to escape these problems and forces us to pay for it. So just like you have
to pay for the road, the slow driver, the granny on the Sunday out there, she's paying for the road too.
So how can your interest to get to where you want to go fast be balanced with her interest to go on
a Sunday drive 10 miles an hour under the speed limit because she has bad
depth perception. Well this turns up I think a more profound issue it's just a matter
of civility you know we're living at a time when civility is very much on the
wane. You notice it on the roads you notice it in the supermarket have you ever been
in the supermarket where you know you're trying to proceed down the aisle and
there's somebody in front of you with a cart who just doesn't care that they're blocking the whole aisle as they just stand there?
Yes, yes. And you stand there waiting for them. And then they look up at you and they don't understand. And you try to be kind of nice. I often have gotten an inside going frustrated. And then I'm like, no, it's not going to help me. I'll just be positive.
I'll just think, well, maybe their mind is all sore.
Maybe they have a family member who's sick.
But it happens a lot.
So that's-
These common curses, on a small scale level,
they may not mean a lot, but they add up to a lot.
Yes.
When you have a society that either practices
courtesy or doesn't, you end up with a society that's,
that it just needles you constantly. Every time you. You know, you end up with a society that's, that it just needles you, you know,
constantly every time you go out. You have to deal with these people who just have make no effort
whatsoever to make life go a little bit easier for other people. You know, there's a perfect,
a couple of perfect examples of that. When I go to the supermarket, on my way in, I always grab
a couple of carts and bring them inside. I always return my cart.
Was it you or someone else was talking about the cart returners or the last vestige of traditional
American humanity? And people grow up thinking, well, now there are people who work there,
they have to go out to get the carts. Well, if more people returned the carts, they wouldn't
have to have as many people going out to get the carts and paying them they can
do other stuff inside like supplying food for less money.
He didn't why add to their burden. But a perfect example of
it, there was a store in New Hampshire called Bradley's in
Nashville, New Hampshire, actually. And they were closing
up and my niece was a big fan of the Powerpuff Girls. And so I
wanted to get her something.
And this Bradley store over the course of a couple weeks
have been closing down.
They've been selling their stuff off.
And they had been bringing their stock closer to the registers.
And so they had all these like little barriers.
The rest of it was just cleared out.
But they had these barriers up so that you wouldn't go past.
And they had the little toy section.
And I found a, I was looking for a Powerpuff Girls board game so I could be more Jojo, you know?
And I, there was a woman who bent down at the bottom shelf. She pulled out a board game
and she looked at it, didn't put it back, just left it on the floor. Yep.
And I'm standing right next to her and I was like,
oh, don't forget.
She's like, what?
I was like, wasn't that on the shelf?
Like you just left it on the floor.
That's not my problem.
I was like, well, you're the one who left it on the floor.
Then her boyfriend comes over and they're both, you know, like, you know, angry stoners. Like they
should probably smoke more weed, you know? And, and they come up to me and goes, Hey,
you got a problem? And I was like, I was like, you know, you know, I was like, do you have
kids? He goes, yeah. And I was like, do you, do you tell your kids to pick their stuff
up? Or how about if they're at somebody else's house? Do you tell them, do you tell your kids to pick their stuff up?
Or how about if they're at somebody else's house? Do you tell them, Hey, it's okay to make a mess in somebody else's house? It's like, what,
what's the problem? It's like somebody else is going to have to do this now.
That's an employee goes, that's their job. I'm like, why give them more work?
What's wrong with you? I can, it's just, I mean,
it's so brutal and stupid, you know?
It's everywhere.
You know, I encountered this frequently at my gym.
There are guys who will use dumbbells and then just dump them on the floor or leave
plates racked on a bench.
What?
That's so, it's crazy.
It's everywhere.
It really makes me want to just go live in a cave somewhere.
I don't understand it.
You know, I used to think of myself as kind of a coarse man,
but I'm beginning to feel like an old country
English gentleman because I don't know,
I was raised differently.
I've got many flaws.
I'm not trying to portray myself
as some kind of avatar virtue,
but I do pick up after myself and I don't make a mess
and I treat other people's things with respect.
Well, maybe we all exist in the abattoir of virtue now. It's dead. Right. They've destroyed it.
Eric, I want to thank you for being with us. And I know, you know, you got to monitor the show a
little bit earlier and I hope you don't mind that you were backstage like that because it's so great
to talk to you, man. Oh, yeah, it was great to talk to Jason, wasn't it?
He's always doing great work, yeah.
And I know that-
He's been helping me out, by the way, on X.
He and I have been sort of trying to help each other out
because of course we're not paying for our free speech.
And so our free speech doesn't have very much reach,
but there are ways to get around that.
I won't go into them in case Elon is listening.
Well, I hope, let's see, how can we figure that out? Can you write an article about that and then we
can share it on other social media sites or maybe we could, I don't know, do a special separate
podcast? Yeah, well really, it's not any big secret.
If I as an individual post something
and it doesn't get propagated or whatever the term is,
other people who are aware that I post regularly
can manually go look me up and look my feet up
and then they can do me a solid
by propagating something that I posted.
I do that for Jason, he does it for me.
Yeah, yeah, and that's excellent.
And that's excellent.
So you're talking about Jason Barker or Jason Snorrens?
Oh yeah, Jason Barker, right.
Yeah, absolutely right.
That is, and it's just a natural,
you're using one of the key tools
of the original Twitter platform anyway, retweeting.
So reposting 100% and the more people do that, that's great. Do you know, I know, Tiger had angry Tiger and Jason both would tag people for certain things. And that makes us aware in our notifications that to pledge a profit. Yeah, does that that seems to work as well because they can go over and they can retweet your things. It seems to. Yeah. So it's the two-step process. They tag you and then you go over to their feed,
find the things that you want, and you can find multiple and get that out there.
Yep. Yep. Okay. He's not as smart as he thinks he is.
Well, yeah. As they say, he's had both ends burning, unfortunately, as Roxy Music would say.
So, Eric, we're going to talk about again, apostate 27832. That is it. It sounds like a zip code.
Find him at apostate 27832. It's Eric the Apostate and ericpetersautos.com. Eric, you are a gentleman, you are a scholar, and you're a racecar
driver. So that's even better. Thanks, Scott. Appreciate you having me on. You got it, man.
Thank you so much, Eric Peters. Thanks, Eric. Eric Peters Autos, he is a great, great man. And please
head on over to the website. He knows what he's doing. He's on the ball. So let's take the opportunity once more to thank you in the audience and get your comments on the Knights of the Storm.
Jason Barker is there and he says, that's me. And yes, I have a show here. Yep, he's on Rumble. Check out Knights of theidently, we got a short start, an abbreviated start,
with Rockfin earlier today on the show.
So most of the viewers have been over at Rumble and on X.
And thank you for being almost 1,000 folks on X right now.
Keep spreading the word.
And thank you.
The Russians are telling me one of our, I hate Mike.
Oh, Mike, I love that picture, Anthony Fauci.
You think they'll let him wear a mask
if he goes to prison?
I wonder, great job filling in for David today.
Thank you so much.
And remember you can contribute over at Rumble,
I think, I know there was a problem yesterday,
but if you do have any problems,
go to thedavidnightshow.com.
I always feel it's such an honor to fill in for David,
and he's so kind to me and you know
He texts me and says hello and things like that and he appreciates all of you so much and it's a wonderful two-way street
So if you do want to contribute to David, that's really key. If you can't get through it rumble
I know Jason Barker was on top of that yesterday. They were having a problem at rumble
If you can't get through to at rumble to donate
Please feel free to, you know, go on to
the Zelle or something like that. Go to TheDavidNightShow.com. You'll see all the ways that you can donate to the show.
Before I go, I want to leave you just briefly with a quick update on one final item. And again, I want to thank
Jason Sorens for joining us as well. Just fantastic stuff from Jason Sorens.
He's always on the ball.
I want to talk to you a little bit about what's going on
in Montreal and other places right now,
as far as that slaughter in the Middle East.
There are a lot of people who are turning
out and they're starting to protest.
They're protesting in Tel Aviv. They're protesting in a lot of different places. And I want to ask a question
of you if you're in America. So here is what's been happening. This was in Quebec.
Rebel News actually put this out, which is interesting because I think the Rebel News
people, they're very much pro-Zionist.
And I think that they look at this as somehow bad, but RT put this out as well.
And RT is much more in favor of the plight of the Palestinians, you know, trying to help
them.
Pro-Palestine protesters pray in Montreal Park where John A. McDonald's statue bit the
dust.
The landmark of the principal author of the Quebec resolutions stood in the park
for over 120 years before it was forcibly toppled during protests described as anti-racism in 2021.
So again, this brings in the idea of the tragedy of the commons and when it's public land,
everyone argues over how it's going to be utilized. Not everybody can utilize it the way they want to. You got to stretch a field. Is it going to be for football,
soccer, what days, baseball, basketball, flying kites? What is it going to be for?
For homeless people? How do we manage? How do we manage when we're all part of the
forced we? And so for me, philosophically, the less often that happens, the better.
And when they forcibly apply themselves to tell you they're doing it for your protection,
and then you start to see people responding this way, showing that they're supportive,
showing they're supportive of the Palestinians and those poor people getting attacked with
US and British, mostly US,
ordinance. Again, I don't want to leave things too heavy filling in for David today, but
there's a lot of terrible things that are happening. And I think we're going to see more
protests happening outside of college campuses. And I'm wondering how the Trump administration
and local authorities will respond to those things
and how the people who spoke in favor of freedom of speech
and against censorship during the COVID lockdowns,
how they will either conform to their previous standards or stray from them.
This is a problem that I'm going to be watching very closely because already we've seen Tulsi
Gabbard flip. She used to be outspoken about the United States-backed slaughter of the Houthis by Saudi Arabia.
Over 100,000 people killed, mostly with US weapons by the Saudis, killed inside Yemen.
And it seems like it's a perennial problem, this warfare thing.
Ever since I was a kid and the hippies were protesting against Vietnam, I didn't understand it. And now I'm talking about this sort of stuff out
there. And there's so many other things, the technocracy creeping in as we got to discuss
with Courtney Turner yesterday, or the technocracy creeping in as we talk about today with Eric
Peters. But there are other, I think much more satisfying
explorations that we can take as well.
And one of those, again, I wanted to acknowledge
and thank Jason Sorens for joining us
because when I believe when one can get
a really good understanding of never changing principles
of economics and the way division of labor works
and peaceful interaction among people works,
you get to strip away all that government stuff.
And you can see the government influences on these things.
And they're great stop gaps, they're great barriers
to stop the invasion of the rhetoric,
to say, no, I'm going back to those principles.
What is basic human interaction and what's peaceful?
And that's a great example.
If you can pierce the veil of the tariff rhetoric and understand it's just people trading with
each other, going back to ancient Cro-Magnon days, division of labor, relative advantage,
that sort of thing,
then you can start to see all these areas
where government invades our choices.
And when you then see government invading choices,
you realize how immoral and unethical
the government apparatus is.
How it not only leads to pernicious consequences
like lower standards of living
or standards of living that should rise faster, but're not but also to things like this this assumption
that they're going to be protecting you and yet they're gonna be bombing people
in foreign lands again they are protesting in Tel Aviv they want Net
and Yahoo out and as I mentioned yesterday there are people who are folks who had been held by Hamas,
who are saying Israel undercut the peace process there. And I don't think you're going to hear the
readings of doctors, the way you heard readings of, for example, Feroz Sidrois on antiwar.com.
But we have lots of options now, and we don't have to watch the pop media.
We can watch good people like Dave, Dave DeCamp.
We can watch good people like Eric Peters on his Rumble channel, Knights of the Storm
and David Knight.
So thanks everybody for being here and I really appreciate it.
Like I said, we got that weird start.
I think it was the browser glitch at the start of the program, but the production team has
gotten on top of that. And so Rockfin was running for a little while. But again, look for the
podcast and you can sign up for that at most available podcasts. Go to thedavidknightshow.com
for all the links. And I think that everybody who is here, I wanna take my hat off to you.
If I have my, I don't have my Eric Peters hat with me,
but I'll do it on Liberty Conspiracy tonight at six o'clock.
In the meantime, thank you everyone.
Have a terrific lunchtime if it is that lunchtime.
We'll see you again tomorrow.
And Tony Arterburn was gonna join us today.
He texted me before the show and he let me know
he's just super, super busy.
So Tony, I want to
say hello to you and recommend that anybody gets the opportunity, go to Wise Wolf Gold and Silver Exchange. And it's
also available at DavidKnight.Gold. It's DavidKnight.Gold. You can see the link at the David Knight show, and I am going to leave you with, I believe, this one, the Common
Man for David Knight.
Again, great music and great sentiment.
Thank you all.
And I'll say it this way.
Thank you all.
Thanks everybody.
I'm Gardner Goldsmith, signing off till tomorrow for the David Knight Show.
God bless.
Have a great rest of the day. great recent death.
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created in the image of God.
That is what we have in common.
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