The David Knight Show - Thu Episode #2133: The Comrade Mayor
Episode Date: November 6, 2025[00:03:45] – Socialist Shockwave in New York CityKnight analyzes the election of socialist candidate Zoran Mamdani as New York City’s mayor, describing it as a defining moment signaling America’...s growing embrace of Marxist-style governance. [00:17:50] – Free Speech on Trial: The BDS BacklashKnight explores how Mamdani’s support for the BDS movement reignited debate over Israel, anti-Semitism, and whether political boycotts are being criminalized in the U.S. [00:25:03] – Omid Malik and MAGA’s Globalist NetworkKnight exposes Trump ally Omid Malik’s connections to global finance, arguing that figures like him represent the merging of populist branding with technocratic control. [01:03:10] – AI and the Death of Human CreativityArtist Anthony Freda discusses how artificial intelligence is erasing human imagination and reducing art to algorithmic imitation, highlighting the broader cultural decline of authenticity. [01:11:09] – Inside the New York Times Propaganda MachineFreda recounts his time freelancing for The New York Times, revealing how editorial content had to align with State Department messaging—showing how corporate media functions as state propaganda. [01:20:19] – Faith Through Suffering and RenewalFreda describes how personal tragedy and his fiancée’s near-death experience rekindled his faith, shaping his transition from political to spiritually inspired art. [01:26:13] – The Decline of Beauty and the Rise of DarknessKnight and Freda discuss how modern architecture and art have abandoned the sacred, contrasting contemporary sterility with the reverence and craftsmanship of past centuries. [01:56:04] – Alexander Dugin & The Fourth Political TheoryKnight revisits Russian philosopher Alexander Dugin’s vision of a multipolar world rejecting Western liberal dominance, exploring how his ideas influence global nationalist movements. [02:23:18] – The EV Collapse & China’s AdvantageGuest Eric Peters explains how Western automakers’ retreat from electric vehicles exposes the failure of government-mandated markets and China’s growing industrial dominance. [03:02:58] – Insurance, Inflation & The Two-Tier SystemPeters and Knight conclude by examining the punitive costs of car ownership, using insurance and regulation as examples of a two-tier system that punishes ordinary citizens while protecting elites. Follow the show on Kick and watch live every weekday 9:00am EST – 12:00pm EST https://kick.com/davidknightshow Money should have intrinsic value AND transactional privacy: Go to https://davidknight.gold/ for great deals on physical gold/silverFor 10% off Gerald Celente's prescient Trends Journal, go to https://trendsjournal.com/ and enter the code KNIGHTFind out more about the show and where you can watch it at TheDavidKnightShow.com If you would like to support the show and our family please consider subscribing monthly here: SubscribeStar https://www.subscribestar.com/the-david-knight-showOr you can send a donation throughMail: David Knight POB 994 Kodak, TN 37764Zelle: @DavidKnightShow@protonmail.comCash App at: $davidknightshowBTC to: bc1qkuec29hkuye4xse9unh7nptvu3y9qmv24vanh7Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-david-knight-show--2653468/support.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Thank you.
In a world,
In a world of deceit.
Telling the truth is a revolutionary act.
It's the David Knight Show.
As the clock strikes 13, it is Thursday, the 6th of November, year of our Lord 2025.
And it's official.
Zohram Amdani is mayor of New York now.
What comes next for the Big Apple?
And we have Cash Patel in hot water.
People pointing out that an FBI director has all.
already been fired for the same kind of behavior. So why isn't cash? Good question.
We're going to take a look at that and more on today's show. So stay with us. We'll be right
back with some even bigger news.
You know,
I'm going to be able to do.
I'm going to
I'm going to
I'm
Thank you.
Hello and welcome to the show today.
As I said, I've got bigger news.
And the big news is it's little man's birthday.
He is one year old.
He is one year old today.
So say happy birthday.
Everyone, if you would, he is a handful.
As you can tell, he's gotten a lot bigger and a lot more fun.
But I just want to say thank you all for all the kind words over the years.
We really do appreciate it.
And he appreciates it too, I'm sure.
So that is the big news.
I will now pass him off so we can get on to the real news.
So thank you all for joining us today.
As I said, we're going to start with Zoron, Mom, Donnie.
I can't, it's hard to tell if this is just the logical progression for the politics of New York.
And I want to apologize if I offended.
anyone the other day. I don't actually have any real dislike for New York. I just have
simple beliefs. Not that I actually hate anyone from New York. I just like to be a little bit
inflammatory. I find it more fun to be bombastic. So I apologize if you're from New York. I don't
hate your city. I don't hate you. I'm sorry if that was a problem. But here we are. Socialist
Zohan Mamdani becomes first Muslim mayor of New York.
And they're focusing on the fact he's Muslim instead of the fact he's socialist, it seems, in this article.
But they're both problems, aren't they?
It's not simply a one or the other thing.
Both of these are issues.
Both of these are things you look at and you go, I don't think this is right for America.
Socialist Zohran Mamdani has been elected the first Muslim mayor of New York in a political earthquake that puts the far left
in charge of America's largest, wealthiest city.
So he's the first Muslim mayor.
As though the far left hasn't been in charge of New York for a long, long time.
Yeah, the conservative people of New York have been suffering.
I know you have a friend that lives in New York State, not New York City,
and he has long been apoplectic, well, maybe not apoplectic, but unhappy with the governance of the state.
Mom Donnie, who becomes the Big Apple's first Muslim mayor, defeated former New York State Governor Andrew Cuomo,
a Republican Curtis Sliwa in a race that became a massive flashpoint in national politics, taking over 50% of the vote.
And people are not happy with Curtis Slewa.
They're very unhappy, in fact.
People are railing at him on Twitter.
Of course, some of this is to do with Israel's point.
policies, in fact. A lot of people have become aware of what's going on in the Middle East
over the last year or so. And they're looking at the subservience that a lot of politicians
show to the state of Israel and going, why? Why in the world would you actually do that? What do
they do for us? And this led to some actual backlash in the New York City race. We actually
have that clip, I believe, of, yeah, here. Let's take a look at this. This is a good, a good
indicator. The first foreign visit by a mayor of New York is always considered significant. Where
would you go first? Where would you go? Left right, Ms. Adams. First visit. I would visit
the Holy Land. The Holy Land.
Mr. Cuomo? Given the hostility and the anti-Semitism that has been shown in New York,
I would go to Israel. Mr. Tilsen, where would you go? Yeah, I'd make my fourth trip to Israel.
My fourth trip to Ukraine, two of our greatest allies. That's right. Fighting on the front lines
of the global war on terror. Mr. Mamdani. I would stay in New York City. My plans are to address
New Yorkers across the five boroughs and focus on that. Mr. Mamdani, can I just jump in? Would you
visit Israel as mayor? I will be doing as the mayor. I'll be standing up for Jewish New Yorkers and I'll
be meeting them wherever they are across the five boroughs, whether that's in their synagogues and temples
or at their homes or at the subway platform, because ultimately we need to focus on delivering on their
concerns. And just yes or no, do you believe in it? Yeah, well, look at how easy he had it. Look at how easy
they made it for him. Where are you going to go? Oh, I'm going to the Holy Land. I'll be taking my fourth
trip to the Holy Land. Then I'm going to Ukraine. He simply says, I'm going to speak to New Yorkers.
I'm going to meet them here. I'm going to address their issues. I'm going to talk to them.
And he wins. Not just wins, but wins handily. People are kind of sick of it.
Whether it's the fact that they're mad at the subservience towards Israel, they're just sick of the fact the politicians don't care about them at all.
at all.
They made it too obvious.
Where are you going?
I'm taking my fourth trip to Israel
and then my fifth trip to Ukraine
and if there's any time at all left over
for the people who voted me into office.
Maybe. Maybe I'll do something about it.
But, you know, I've probably got other things on my mind.
In his ferocious speech promising a new dawn for New York,
he quoted late socialist politician Eugene Debs,
bragged about toppling a political dynasty
and launched into a blistering attack against President Donald Trump
who is called Mom Donnie a communist.
And I agree with Trump on this.
He is.
He is a communist.
And if any city can show a nation how to stop Donald Trump,
it is the city that gave rise to him, said Mom Donnie.
He represents a district in the same borough of Queens where the president was raised.
So, from the same stomping grounds as Donald Trump.
They're both communists.
And they're both Democrats from New York.
He then directly addressed the president.
Trump, since I know you're watching, I have four words for you.
Turn the volume up.
And of course, Mom Donnie is nothing but a demagogue.
He's very, very good at being relatable, at getting people to think, oh, man, he's one of us.
But I don't believe it for the second.
I don't believe it at all.
I think being, if you're able to run a race for anything past dog catcher, chances are you have some kind of backing.
I'm sure Mom Donnie does. I don't trust him at all.
But upside from this at least is we get to say goodbye and good riddance to Andrew Cuomo.
You know, it's not all bad.
Andrew Cuomo is out the door.
So, the former governor had a bad record, a worse attitude, and zero vision.
And this is by Christian Britschke.
And over at Cuomo's election night party, independent journalist, Michael Tracy, captured one of the former governor's supporters
engaging in some blunt analysis of the results.
Hey, Curtis Slewa, you're a scumbag, like I said all along, he says in the video.
You split the vote.
That's right.
I told you people were mad at Curtis.
Slewa, they're not happy. They're freaking out.
They're saying that he split the vote, the remainder of the less than 50% that was left
to be split. Yeah. What difference would that make if he wasn't there to take part of the
40-something percent? Yeah, even if Curtis Slewa isn't there, Cuomo still loses to Mom Dani.
There's nothing. No one was excited for Cuomo. No one cared. No one in the world sat there
thinking, I cannot wait to vote for Andrew Cuomo. Oh, boy.
Boy. Cuomo already lost in a direct election where there was no split vote when it was the Democrat primary.
Yes. No one cares. Andrew Cuomo is old news, not just old news, but unliked news. He's bad news.
No one had any interest in voting for him at all. This unnamed quomosexual,
uh, that's a, that's a something. Wasn't alone in expressing me.
Here, for instance, former Republican congressman and pardoned fraudster George Santos saying something similar.
George Santos. What a guy.
And he says, uh, screw you, Curtis Slewa. I hate you, all caps, your dumb wife, that stupid beret of yours, and all your cats.
That's George Santos. Of course, George Santos might be mad about Zoran Mamdani winning because he's so,
Jewish, and he's so pro-Israel, of course.
I don't know if he's either of those things.
He's definitely not Jewish.
To be sure, neither are official campaign spokesmen,
but both the level of their rage and their target for it,
says a lot about the purely negative pitch of the Cuomo's mayoral campaign,
and why that proves so completely unconvincing for voters.
Both the primary and the general election,
Cuom would never seem to be able to get beyond the idea.
That all he had to do to win was point at the other candidates and say,
you're really going to vote for them?
Which, you know, this might be a knock-on effect from the Trump elections.
I don't have to...
I think that video that you played really sums up where most of his support came from.
It's, that was the first thing I ever saw about Mom Donnie.
It went viral because everyone at the end of it, where you cut it before they all start
berating him for not supporting Israel enough.
Yeah.
even though he's just going to be the mayor of a city in America.
As the mayor of New York City, what are you going to do for Israel?
It's important for us to know these things so we can judge whether you're fit to govern an American city.
Because if you're not rabidly pro-Israel, how could we let you govern us Americans?
Isn't that funny how that works?
Huh.
It's almost like we're forced to put another country's interest before ours.
It's almost like, we're not, we're barely a second thought.
But Cuomo couldn't convincingly do this, given that he spent the last year or so
was governorship stumbling from one incompetent scandal after another before eventually
resigning in response to sexual harassment.
Yeah, when you, when you're Andrew Cuomo and you try to just go, you're going to vote for
that guy, it's a lot easier for them to look back at you and go, you're going to vote for
that guy?
That's the guy that you're,
really what is he done look at what happened with covid look at what happened with the allegations
there's more fingers pointing back at him it was quo's administration that forced nursing homes to
accept covid positive patients and then tried to cover up the deaths that resulted from this
deeply mistaken policy it was under his governorship that new york had the worst administered
emergency rental assistance program in the country it's hard to argue that you are a steady
capable alternative to the starry-eyed socialist when your administration can't do something as simple
as not recklessly endanger senior citizens or cut checks to people. Basically, he was no good at
anything. There was not a single bright spot in his administration, and people were excited to see
him go. Mom Donnie had this sewed up for months. It was all but concluded. Anyone that
that looked at the level of excitement there was for Mom Donnie, could kind of tell.
It's a...
Excitment means a lot when it comes to a political campaign.
It bears repeating after Cuomo, repeating that Cuomo also signed the 2019 rent law
that has done so much to damage the financial position of New York City's housing.
With no decent record to run on and no positive visions to pitch,
Como fell back on aristocratic entitlement.
If you don't like Mom Donnie,
You had to vote for him as the only realistic alternative.
Slewa voters weren't worth convincing.
They simply owed loyalty to Cuomo.
But that didn't end up playing out, did it?
And of course, as we pointed out, Curtis Slewa didn't get enough of the vote to matter.
He could have taken, Cuomo could have gotten all Slewa's votes, and Mom Dani still wins.
That's how disinterested people were in these two candidates.
No, I don't think I'll vote for that guy.
We've tried that before.
it's not good to see
trying to play up his socialism
and yes he is a socialist but
is Cuomo really that much better
or better at all
New York is already
pretty close to as bad as it could possibly be
in terms of politics
there's limits to what these governors can do
when they're in power and they're always
pushing those limits already
this guy might push them a little bit harder
but I don't think it's going to make a fundamental difference
Yeah, it'll be interesting to see if him being an avowed, you know, socialist means he pushes harder and faster.
I have to wait and see.
That would be a downside if Mamdani's avowed socialism means he's not trying to hide anything,
means he doesn't feel the need to try and pretend he's not what he is.
I mean, sure, it could be worse than what it is now, but I also think that they're really just setting him up to succeed
because they're establishing, oh, well, we're going to see New York fall into a communist, you know, regime and people are going to be starving in the streets or whatever.
Yeah.
It's not going to be that bad.
It's not going to turn into, you know, the Warsaw ghetto or something like that overnight.
Yeah.
It's going to continue.
Anything short of escape from New York will be declared a victory.
Look, we didn't burn the entire thing down.
And we're so proud of you, Mom, Donnie.
It's not good to see Mom Dani win, but as a consolation prize, it is good to see Cuomo lose.
And that's about the size of it.
There's no solace and Mom Dani.
There's no hope he's going to make New York City better, but we can at least enjoy the fact that Cuomo got thrown out, that people had enough.
Whatever else one wants to say about them, their choices.
New York voters were right to decide that they don't want a disgrace.
faced politician with a bad record, a worse attitude, and no vision running their city
government.
And I think that's fair.
I think between the two choices, if someone put a gun to my head and said, you are going
to have to vote for Andrew Cuomo or Zoran Mamdani, I think I'd at least have to vote for
Zoran Mamdani because Andrew Cuomo, through his policies, has directly led to deaths during
COVID-19. I hold him responsible for actual deaths. And while I'm sure Zoran might have done the
exact same thing, he hasn't yet. I don't consider him to have blood on his hands at this exact moment,
which means he is someone, in my opinion, at least in this case, the lesser of two evils for now.
Mom Donnie tells MSNBC he supports BDS after claiming he will be mayor for every Jewish
New Yorker
During an appearance on MSNBC's morning
Joe, Mom Donnie was asked about a support for BDS,
the boycott movement against Israel.
Boycott, divest,
whatever the last one is.
Sanctions. That's what it was.
This article is phrasing it as though
that's an absolutely contradictory thing,
but this is sending, this is the nation
of Israel, not Jewish New Yorker.
Yeah, that's the exact thing.
It's just, he's the mayor of the,
New Yorkers. If they're Jewish and they're in New York, he could still support them, you know,
give them the time and attention that they need from the mayor without him ever having to do
anything for Israel. But it's just this continual conflation. If you don't support the political
state of Israel in the Middle East, you hate every single Jew on the planet. You want them all gone,
in fact. You're a Nazi. Mom Donnie was asked about his support for BDS. The boy
boycott movement against Israel, Mom Dani said he supports it as a way to pressure Israel to comply with
international law. That's all he wants. Just to comply with the international law, please.
We'll see if that's all he wants in future, but he's being very, very moderate in his condemnations of Israel.
He's been very mild, at least as far as I've seen. Maybe there's some other videos where he's
ranting and raving and screaming. But I haven't seen a Morning Joe co-host. Willie Geist asked Mom
Donnie how he could square his support for Jewish New Yorkers while promoting the BDS movement,
noting that many in the city's Jewish community worry. He harbors animosity towards them. How can you
support this one thing that's unrelated to this other? I don't get. Again, it's this
utter conflation of the political state of Israel with every single Jewish individual on the planet.
If you have a singular issue with the way Netanyahu runs the government of Israel,
then you are evil. The candidate argued that his criticism of
Israel lies with its government, not the Jewish people.
Same as it is here on the show.
Same as it is with y'all in the audience.
I think critiques of the state of Israel are critiques of a government as opposed to critiques
of a people and of a faith, he said.
And my job, his job, is to be the mayor of New York, not the mayor of Israel.
Zohran Mamdani, boosted by opposition to Israel, wins NYC, mayoral.
race. People have had enough. We've seen enough clips. We've seen the footage. It's hard to get away
from the footage of what's going on in Palestine. People are not simply going to take it. They'll do
what they can. As little as that is, if that means electing a socialist, probably communist,
to be the mayor of New York to stop the bombing of children, stop the horrors they see on their
social media feed. That just might be what they do. Well, let's not forget that the
purpose of socialism is to institute communism yeah that is the ultimate end goal i think it was
Vladimir lennon or one of the guys that said that all right let's read some comments for a bit mr palm
1011 oh my gosh god's blessing yes yes he is little david or you can call him squire whatever
you want he's a blessing he's wonderful he makes our lives so much better
Spetro 626 says he's adorable and Spetro 626 says happy first birthday. Thank you. Thank you. He appreciates it. He's going to be having all kinds of treats today. We're going to make sure that he gets a good day.
Now, Lander, he's got your hair, dude. Yeah, he kind of does. He has the same kind of curls that I used to get when I was a baby when it got long. It's about time for him to get his second haircut. The real Octospoot, cute little boy, wife asks, where is David? David's not feeling too good today. He had to take.
the day off. But I'm still here, at least for the first hour. Second hour, we're playing a
Best of Compilation. It'll be the Anthony Frida interview where they talk about culture and why
it's important, why art is important. And we're also going to play a Eric Peters interview. And one more
surprise, about 15 minutes extra of just solo David. So stick around. The second hour will be
more David Knight show with David Knight. Best of interviews. I want to say that.
it's not his heart that's a problem. He's just feeling sick. It's the usual regular sickness.
Yeah, it's just a regular cold fever sort of thing. He's not in any danger. He's just feeling bad,
like we all do sometimes. We have Pezzan Ovanti 1776 says missed the start. Where is D.K?
So hopefully that answers your question, Pezanovante. So go 68G. The first Muslim mayor of
Lindenistan sure worked out great, didn't it? That's right. It sure did. Lindenistan always makes
me laugh. I've said for years that if we wanted to invade another Muslim country, it might as well be the
UK. Give them a taste to their own medicine for once. Jim 7, he'll do plenty for Israel. The guy will
reveal his true identity soon. I think you have to play politics to some degree in order to get
into positions, high positions as well as mayoral positions if it's a city like New York.
And that typically includes sending some money to Israel.
Yeah.
Apparently, in American politics, you don't get to play unless you at least partially support Israel.
I don't know how much support the city of New York actually sends to them, but I guess we'll see.
Yeah.
I it's truly amazing just the Jewish population of New York is incredibly large
comparatively to you know other place in the country
Jim's seven already read that patty wax it's scary that life has become the latest
greatest bigger and better novelty and that is what Zoron is that is what Trump was
that is what LGBT nutteries
nutteries are nutterie yeah it's all just this
continual push for more, more, more. Well, this didn't satisfy me. What can I do next? This is old news.
I need something else. It's not satisfying like it did. Maybe a bigger dose will help. It's because
society is completely and utterly divorced from Christ. We've thrown him out and as such,
we are desperate for something to take his place, but nothing can. What if I try drugs? What if I
substitute political action. What if I'm gay or trans or something? Surely that will give my life
meaning. It doesn't. What you need is Christ. Without Christ, you have no meaning and no salvation.
So I encourage you to turn to him. Read the gospel, believe it. Omid Malik, the technocrat Muslim
billionaire inside Maga. Oh no, we're infiltrated on all sides.
Omeid, Malik, a Muslim also got involved with Rockbridge Network, a conservative donor group, started by J.D. Vance and Chris Buskirk, a co-founder of a 1789 capital, how did all these former left-wing billionaires show up on the Trump train? Isn't that the question of the day? How did it happen? How'd they get here?
How did all these left-wing, or they say former left-wing, but really left-wing billionaires get onto the train of the former left-wing?
left-wing billionaire president?
It's truly a question worth asking, Lance.
I, for one, am baffled.
I've got no idea how this could have happened.
Do you perhaps have some insights, Lance?
Could you explain this mystery?
How did he end up here?
If you understand technocracy, you will know the agenda is not political, but economic.
It is also aligned with asset-based Islamic finance,
which is infiltrating all levels in the investment baking world.
Patrick Wood, the editor said that.
Patrick Wood does a lot of good work.
USA, USA, the familiar chant of another Maga Triumph
filled the New York Stock Exchange last month
as Omid Malik and Donald Trump Jr. rang the opening bell
to mark the trading debut of firearms retailer, Grab a Gun.
You could also call the company the culmination of their close personal business relationship,
the Amazon of guns or a middle finger to anyone who's horrified
that grab a gun stock symbol is P-E-W, the sound of a bullet.
You see, I don't think we're going far enough.
What we need is Uber Eats for guns.
I should be able to pull up my phone,
look at a gun, and have somebody deliver it to my house
within the next 25 to 30 minutes.
That is the only future worth having.
I demand to be able to order glocks to my front door non-stop whenever I want.
That is the only thing that will satisfy me.
But they're talking about this pretty cool-sounding gun service, as though that's somehow Trump's creation?
I'm assuming they're trying to imply that Trump is the reason.
He created the economic climate and the political climate where they could be allowed to succeed and thrive, which...
There was no such thing as the Second Amendment before there was Trump.
That's right. Donald Trump was the first, second pro-state.
Second Amendment president. No one else before him has ever been pro Second Amendment, not like
Donnie is going to take the guns and do the due process later. There should be flashing red lights
Steve Bannon on Mom Donnie's win. Steve Bannon is saying, it's time to panic. It's time to freak out.
More than a few Republicans are celebrating Zoroamongani's victory, seeing a 34-year-old Democratic
socialistist political gift, an albatross, the Democratic Party. Steve Bannon is not among them.
that's right. Steve Bannon, despite being a
allegedly drunken criminal,
might have more common sense than all the others
in gravitating towards Trump,
which is a horrifying thought to have.
It is horrifying that Steve Bannon
might be the most politically savvy, the most sagacious,
the most circumspect member of the team.
Not even a member. He's on the outside looking in.
Bannon seemed impressed by Mumdani's companion ability to turn out low propensity voters.
Yeah. He got all these dwebes that have been disenchanted with politics to believe that he's something different.
That's what you get when you're a new fresh face without much history in politics.
You get people that have been burnt out. They look at you and they say, there's a chance.
You know, he's the devil I don't know, so maybe he's not a devil.
Whereas any time you're dealing with known quantities,
you're going to have a certain, at least a portion of the population goes,
I know that guy, I will never vote for him.
He has a history that I can look at, and I'm sick of.
And you'll never win them over.
Well, MAGA icon, an ex-Tucker Carlson favorite,
denounces his old ally in the new,
anti-Semitism.
Oh, it seems like
they're getting a bit nervous
when it comes to
anti-Semitism.
The support for Israel is not
as clamorous and all-consuming as
it used to be among the American people.
With the advent of social media
and the ability to see the outcomes
of Israel's war,
what they're doing, bombing
women and children, some people
are looking at it and going,
why are we supporting this?
how can we support this? They've got to stop. If they want our continued support, they need to stop.
And if you say that, I'm sorry, I've got bad news. You're an anti-Semite. That's just how it happens.
It sneaks up on you. One day you're thinking about how you really wish women and children would stop being murdered.
And the next thing you know, you're wearing an armband with a swastika on it.
That's how it happens. It's that easy. The slide is unnoticeable. All of a sudden,
sudden. You're an anti-Semite. Victor Davis-Hanson denounced his old ally in a long essay about
the new anti-Semitism for the free press. While Anson had submitted the Fox that Fox News
wouldn't be able to replace Tucker Carlson after the network ousted him back in 2023, he did not
mince words about the far-right commentator in his latest essay. Blogger, Daryl Cooper, implausibly
proclaimed by Tucker Carlson as perhaps the best and most honest popular historian in the United
States, claimed on a Carlson podcast that Adolf Hitler's armies in 1941 did not really
intend either to starve or murder hundreds of thousands of Jews, Ukrainians, and Russian
prisoners, excuse me, even though there is a trove of documents that showed premeditated
Nazi assumptions of and plans for precisely such mass death, observed Hansen.
Why would Nick Fuentes, who at times in the past has praised both Hitler and Joseph Stalin,
call for a holy war against Jews, and denied the Holocaust, remained a challenged by Carlson
on the same venue.
Of course, I find the funniest thing about Fuentes
is the fact that he's declared himself Hitler 2, 3, and 4.
So we've got the next,
we've got the next three Hitler's sorted out.
So unless you're planning on being Hitler 5,
don't even bother.
We've already got him.
Hansen argued that right-wing anti-Semitism
manifests itself in the form of America firsters
who fault both America past and present
and much of Trump's America-first movement.
well. Yeah, if you don't put Israel first, you're anti-Semitic. It's simply that. And of course,
you have people like Nick Fuentes who make these absurd inflammatory statements,
I'm going to be Hitler 2, 3, and 4, he says, as he wants to be taken seriously. As he's one of the
main voices that criticize Israel, who point out Apex control, and he links this directly
to that kind of ridiculous absurdism. That,
insanity. Hansen is a longtime supporter President Donald Trump, who Carlson turned too often during his
days at Fox. Well, isn't that wonderful? We're going to take a quick break, and then when we come back,
I think we're going to look at what's going on with Cash Patel. As I said, he is in hot water. People are
not happy, and there's good reason for that. But we'll talk about that when we'll talk about that when
we come back. So stay with us and we will be right back.
I'm going to be able to be.
I'm going to be.
I'm going to be.
I'm going to be able to be.
I'm going to be.
We're going to be able to be.
I'm going to be.
And...
...and...
...their...
...and...
...and...
...the...
...the...
You're listening to the David Knight Show.
Hear news now at APS Radio News.com,
or get the APS Radio app and never miss another story.
Welcome back, folks. Thank you for joining us here on this wonderful Thursday. I see we have Jason Barker in chat. Good to see you. Jason. Hope you're doing well. Yes, David is sick today. I am filling in. It's nothing serious. He's just feeling under the weather. So you've got me for the next 25 minutes. And then we will be turning it over to a rebroadcast. Because who can do the David Knight show better than David Knight? That's the real question.
Not just to read broadcast, but a best of.
That is right.
Best of interviews and a segment.
But as I said, we're going to look at what's going on with.
Sorry to interrupt, but on the topic of David Knight, he sent me a comment saying
Trump isn't a populist.
He's a globalist who's just like the Democrats in that debate.
We played the debate of the Democrat New York mayoral candidates.
And they're all talking about how much they support Israel, Ukraine,
et cetera, and these are all Trump's positions.
See, he's jetting around the world while the people can't even jet across the country because
he doesn't care.
Yeah, we, uh, none of our politicians care about us.
And at this point, their disinterest is a large part of what keeps things running.
He also, he also says, uh, Victor David Hansen is a historian, uh, who's loved
by conservatives, yet he supported Trump in spite of what happened in 2020. Why would anyone care
about what a, quote, historian thinks who doesn't even know what happened in his own time
and can't understand the time that he lived through? See, this is why anytime you read history,
you need to question what the book is telling you. Given how biased and uninformed and stupid
most of the current news is and the current historians are and the books that they write,
are, you have to wonder, has it always been like this? Has every historical work been written by
some scumbag hack with an agenda to push? How much of this is simply fabrication to make
somebody of the time look good? There's always revisionists. You just have to look at everything
with a critical eye and compare it to other sources, especially sources from the time.
Unless I'm telling you it, then you can believe it uncritically. Just accept it and move
along. Please don't do that. Sometimes I worry that people are going to take me serious. I like to
be sarcastic. I like to be unsurious and worry people are going to take it seriously and think
I actually mean it. Let's look at what's going on with Cash Patel. As I said, he's in hot water and he's
not used to that. Cash Patel wouldn't be the first FBI boss to go down by turning his official plane
into a private jet. We've got precedent for it. It's already happened. And some people are now
wondering, well, why hasn't happened? Why hasn't happened to Cash Patel? In the early 1990s,
veteran investigative reporter Ronald Kessler cut an unusual deal with the FBI.
When it was blessed at the very top by its then director, William Sessions. Kessler would be
given unfettered access to the J. Edgar Hoover Building for a planned book that would provide
an exclusive behind the scenes, look at how the FBI really
operates. Isn't that fun? Isn't that nifty?
And of course of his reporting, Kessler told me this week he was shocked to learn,
thanks to tips from agents on sessions on security detail, about alleged ethical abuses
by the director himself. On multiple occasions, sessions a former federal judge had used an
FBI jet for personal trips, including Johns to San Francisco to see his daughter,
and flying with his wife to Atlantic City to attend a performance of the Bolshoi ballet at
the stands hotel and casino. Oh, you know, at least, I suppose he's higher class than Cash Patel
flying his girlfriend to a wrestling event. He's at least going to the ballet. The theater.
The theater. What a man of taste. How refined. Which comped him the tickets. So the casino
even comps him the tickets, I guess. That's something. Sure, he's not using the American money
to buy Bolshoi ballet tickets. They're simply being given to him, because
of who he is, because of his position.
Kessler's discoveries produced an uproar.
It was a simpler time.
People actually cared more.
When he wrote a letter to the FBI,
seen a comment for his book,
the Public Affairs Office dutifully turned it over
to the Justice Department Inspector General for review.
Months later, after an IG report documented sessions
misuse of the FBI, jet and other questionable actions,
including the installation of a security fence around his home,
the director got a call from President Bill Clinton,
telling him he was fired,
picking him the first FBI chief
ever to be cashiered.
I'm sure Bill Clinton told him,
I feel your pain.
I'm doing stuff they wouldn't like either.
I just didn't get caught.
Trump's hand-picked director,
Cash Patel, 45, last week,
used an FBI jet to fly to state college
in Pennsylvania to attend a wrestling match
where his girlfriend, country singer Alexis Wilkins,
26, was singing,
the National Anthem.
That's a good use of time and money, isn't it?
Our FBI director has nothing better to do
than to use the private FBI jet to fly up
to spend time with his girlfriend,
who's basically half his age as she sings the National Anthem
at a wrestling event.
Remember, I'm told,
it's alleged to me
it's been revealed in a dream
that we were once a serious country
I've heard tell of it
people used to actually
take their job seriously
there was some kind of pride in them
not anymore
we've got Cash Patel
using his FBI jet
to fly to see his girlfriend
well you gotta do that
how much money are these guys making
and yet they're completely and utterly unwilling
to pay for a plane flight. No, no, no. I'm going to take the FBI private jet. Sure, pass that on to the
taxpayer. That's their job. I'm a big deal. Wherever I want to go, I get to go, and it's the American
people's duty to support that. They should feel honored that their tax dollars are going so that I
can go visit my girlfriend. Patel fired the senior official in charge of planes. Stephen Palmer, a 27-year
FBI veteran when reports about the trip started to surface on social media. That's right.
He threw a bit of a hissy fit. This is, how'd this get out? Did you leak it? You leaked
that I was using the FBI's private plane to go visit my girlfriend. Well, you're fired. You might
actually care about your job. Nor was this the first time that Patel's use of FBI aircraft has been
questioned. In April, Patel, an avid hockey fan used an FBI 757 jet to fly to New York
to attend an NHL game, where he watched Washington Capitol star Alex Ovechkin, break the
league's all-time scoring record. Good for him, I guess. Congratulations, Alex Ovechkin. I hope,
you know, that means something to you. Then in August, Patel, and four or five of his friends,
hopped aboard an FBI jet to fly to Scotland for a golfing trip. Isn't that wonderful for him?
Just getting to hop in the FBI jet.
You know what?
I feel like going to Scotland for golf.
Wouldn't that be fun?
Lifestyles of the rich and corrupt.
Exactly.
Just how disconnected this man is from the average American.
Just, oh, I think I want to play golf, but not just regular golf.
How about we go where it was invented?
This is like getting a craving for pizza,
and instead of going to your local restaurant,
you decide you're going to fly to Italy.
I better not give him any ideas.
This may happen.
In August, Patel and four or five his friends hopped aboard an FBI jet to fly to Scotland
for a golfing trip, according to Chris O'Leary, a former senior FBI counterterrorism official,
who's been tracking the use of the Bureau's aircraft.
Inside the Bureau, there is a cross-the-board outrage over Patel's use of FBI aircraft for fun and pleasure,
said O'Leary. At the end of the day, it's theft of government resources. I mean, people have
been thrown out of the Bureau for this. And he's speaking literally. Do you have any idea how much
fuel these jets consume? It is. Gallons upon gallons, like, in one minute, they'll go through
several gallons. It is quite expensive to fly these things around. These are not regular
planes either. They are generally outfitted with all kinds of different things.
and they are more expensive to fly because of it.
They take more fuel.
They're heavier.
Even more striking, however,
are the parallels with Sessions' misuse of the FBI aircraft.
And as I was pointing out,
he's not speaking at a fort.
He's not speaking in generality.
He's not speaking in, you know,
oh, well, something like this has happened.
Something almost identical has happened.
There's precedent.
Someone was already fired for it.
So why isn't Cash Patel being fired?
Could it be because Donald Trump,
prioritizes loyalty to himself over loyalty to the Constitution,
over ability and willingness to uphold the law,
could it be that Donald Trump simply cares that Cash Patel is a dutiful little toadie?
That does what he's told.
It's a measure of the corruption.
Last time this exact thing happened, the FBI director was fired.
This time, the guy that exposed it was fired.
Let's remember it was Bill Clinton that fired.
FBI director. It's as I've said before, and will not elaborate on, Bill Clinton was the last
Republican president. There won't be another one, and I will not be taking questions. There's more
than parallels between Patel's and Sessions Travels, Gerson told me. It's congruency. It's the same
thing. Under normal circumstances, the IG Inspector General should investigate this. It looks
like on its face, like an emolument. Spy talk, I've got to take a brief aside.
I know I take too many rabbit, I go down too many rabbit holes, but spy talk.
Just the idea that there's a magazine for spies or a newspaper for them where they put all their little spy details.
Do you think there's some...
This substack.
Yes, but just reached out to the FBI Public Affairs Office with a series of questions,
including how often Patel has used FBI aircraft for personal purposes, whether his trips were approved by any FBI lawyer,
or ethics official and how much Patel has compensated the Bureau for his trips.
The office responded with a terse email saying that due to the government, shut down FBI operations
are directed toward national security. But Patel's chief spokesman, Ben Williamson,
posted on X that Patel, like all directors, is required to use FBI aircraft for all travel
because of security issues and for personal travel. The director pays a reimbursement in advance
strictly following OMB rules. He did not, however, specify which trips and how many times
Patel has compensated the government for his trips to see his girlfriend, watch a hockey game,
go golfing, or for other personal purposes.
He also spends a lot of time at a second home in Las Vegas, according to reports.
So he's all over the place.
They're still not sure how many trips he's taken.
Seems like, well, you know, he's just got to fly.
He works far more full weekends than he does otherwise, and maybe most importantly ask
anyone who works for him.
He's on duty 24-7.
I'm really curious as to what the director of the FBI actually does.
He's not out there with a magnifying glass hunting down clues.
He's not Sherlock Holmesing it.
Obviously, he's more of a policy sort of guy.
He's more about what kind of personnel they hire.
What does the FBI director do on a daily basis?
What is Cash Patel devoting all of his time to?
Isn't that something I'd be interested in knowing.
I imagine he's more of a.
bureaucrat than anything else. I imagine he doesn't do all that much at all, actually.
Probably fires off an email every now and then. There's zero time for people who peddle trash
because they have nothing better to do, or even better, because the Russian collusion hoax they
spent years writing about failed in their end goal, a real shame. That's right. This is all
because of Democrats. This is all Democrats trying to smear our
good little boy, Cash Patel. He would never do anything bad.
Yeah, what does this have to do of the Russia hoax?
I don't know. You know, it's just as absurd to blame Russia for everything as to blame the media
that's blaming Russia for everything. It's unrelated.
It seems like any time one of the Trump crew gets in trouble, they trot out the fact,
hey, look, remember, they tried to smear him with this Russian host thing, hoax thing.
They made up a whole bunch of stuff. You can't believe, you can't trust them.
Remember? Remember this? This was a.
absurd to try to make you tie it into that and go, okay, so there's nothing to see here either then, I guess.
Yeah, so I was saying it's the inoculation of Trump by the media with all of their constant going over the top for years.
And now he's immune to criticism.
But Patel himself also responded mainly by praising his girlfriend, the country singer.
You know, that's a bit of an obfuscation, I assume.
I'm not going to address anything.
What if I were to simply just talk about how much I love my girlfriend?
Hate corruption?
Love me, girlfriend, simple ads.
Patel himself also responded, mainly praising his girlfriend, the country singer.
The disgustingly baseless attacks against Alexis,
a true patriot and the woman I'm proud to call my partner in life,
are beyond pathetic, he wrote on X.
She is a rock, sold.
He probably means solid, but it says sold here, conservative.
and a country music sensation
who has done more for this national
he means nation
than most will
in ten lifetimes
I'm so blessed in my life
attacking her isn't just wrong
it's cowardly and jeopardizes our safety
wow the spin that he's putting on this
they aren't criticizing his girlfriend
they are criticizing him
if you're asking about what I'm doing with the FBI jet
you're attacking my girlfriend
you're attacking my girlfriend and making her unsy
how do you feel about that big man you feel big attacking a woman please please don't fire me for
corruption that's what gosh Patel is doing he's obfuscating he's changing what this is about
this is not about his girlfriend who i'm sure is probably a nice lady i'm sure she's fine i don't care to
listen to any of her music and i hope she lives a great life i hope she's safe and sound
But I do, however, think Cash Patel should be fired for misuse of FBI property.
It's that simple.
In fact, none of the main media stories about Patel's trip to watch his girlfriend sing the national anthem in state college included personal attacks on her.
This is, again, this is just changing the narrative.
This isn't about me and my misuse of FBI property.
This isn't about me taking trips to Scotland to play golf.
This is about them hating my girlfriend.
They hate her because she's such a patriot, folks.
She's such a patriot.
The left-wing media are trying to discredit her
by saying, I use the private jet to go golfing in Scotland.
That's how devious these people are.
It's a real roundabout attack, but you're not going to fall for it,
because I'm going to tell you.
You're misusing the private checks.
Wow, these people are coming after my girlfriend with the Russia hoax.
This is truly an insane.
work around. Cash Patel truly does have up to his nickname that I've seen people call him
Crooked Cash. There is nothing that I've seen from this man that is even remotely honest.
By the way, this is actually a spy talk magazine. It just looks exactly like a substack, so I thought
it was one. That's what I'm saying. It's like, just the idea they've got their own little spy talk
where they send in letters to the editor.
Dear Abby, this week I toppled a third world regime for their resources.
Many people died.
Much lithium was secured.
You're welcome.
Another parallel between Patel and his long ago predecessor.
Oof, long ago.
Bill Clinton was apparently long ago.
Back in the ether, the reaches of time.
We all grow old.
When Kessler finally confronted sessions about his findings, he got a half-hour tongue-lashing from the director.
Sessions told a reporter he was offended and disappointed that he had delved into personal matters
rather than the great work the FBI was doing.
Great work the FBI was doing on what?
You guys?
Personal matters like your corruption?
I'm also curious, what are they working on?
Have they given us any new facts about the Charlie Kirk shooting?
Anything?
How about Epstein?
Yeah.
Epstein, Kirk, Las Vegas shooting, really any high-profile crime they've been involved in investigating
over the last, well, forever, as far as I'm concerned, my entire lifetime, have they
actually given us anything? When was the last time the FBI came out with something and said,
we've solved it, and you were confident you could believe them? We have a black screen.
There we go. It was just studio mode. Sessions told the reporter, he was offended and disappointed
that he had delved into personal matters rather than the great work the FBI was doing and then
launched into a vigorous defense of his wife, who he had taken on many of his trips aboard the FBI jet,
who he said occupied a special and important place in the bureau. I love my wife more than anything.
I think she is beautiful, amazing, talented, smart, funny. But I wouldn't, if I was the FBI director,
assume that she holds a special place for all the FBI agents. Well, as the director, she is my wife,
and therefore she's like a mom to these guys. I think, perhaps,
First lady of the FBI.
Yeah, just, I don't think you immediately become a special individual because you're married to the FBI director.
You're not immediately inducted into their halls and made one of their own.
That Patel, too, would respond with the defense of his girlfriend was telling, Kessler said.
That's right.
As the FBI director, if you get criticized, if you have a woman in your life, you must immediately claim they're attacking her.
I can't believe these people are attacking my wife, my girlfriend, the country singer, the solid conservative, that Patel would respond with the defense of his wife is telling.
He goes on about what a wonderful person she is, he said, to show of total blindness to the ethical issues involved.
He's not blind, he's just trying to deflect.
No, no, no, no ethical violations to see here.
Have you considered my country singing patriotic American girlfriend?
Yes, Cash.
We're very happy for you.
Please answer the question.
Well, that's what's going on, to Cash Patel.
We're going to see how it plays out.
I'm personally not expecting anything.
He's a good little toadie to Donald Trump.
He really does whatever Trump says, and he does it without question.
So I'm assuming everything will be fine for him.
But let's move on.
We've only got a little bit of time left before I turn it over to the best of.
sandwich thrown by protester exploded and left mustard stain on border agent courtiers that's right
it was an improvised i don't know um edible device i guess iED still works
a u.s immigration agent has testified he could feel through his ballistic best the impact of a sandwich
hurled at him by washing dc protester who has gone on trial for assault you could not pay me
enough money to be this guy to show up and be like
the sandwich will we hook guys
the sandwich hook my few wings
and my body
customs and border patrol agent
Gregory Lairmore told the jury the snack
exploded all over of him
you could smell the onions and the mustard
on his uniform
this poor man
no one has ever suffered like he has
the funny thing is I'm playing the video
it's wrapped in paper
and it doesn't appear to
come unwrapped when he froze it
this video is truly
one of the funniest things I have seen
just the way the guy runs away and they all chase after him
it is like a cartoon moment
I mean I guess it breaks apart a little bit on one end
but it for the most part stays together
not that that should matter
who just whether the sandwich is intact or not
you like you can't see any mustard on the guy's vest
whatever but just look at the way this man is running
he is obviously drunk
he just it is almost
it is cartoon-esque
It is absurdist we have
I don't even know if I have the words
What? How would you describe that? It's something
It's truly something. He could smell the onions and the mustard on his uniform
He could smell them
The improvised edible device
Neither side disputes that Sean Dunn 37 did in fact
Lob obscenities and a deli-style sandwich at officers
deployed by President Donald Trump to patrol the nation's capital in August
But Mr. Dunn's lawyer argues it was not a criminal act
What is the charge
Assaulting an officer with a meal
A succulent sandwich meal
The incident was captured on video
And went viral making Mr. Dunn a symbol of opposition
In Washington, D.C. to Trump
Government prosecutors initially tried to secure
felony charges against Mr. Dunn
But a grand jury declined to indict him
This is the level of absurdity where you are at.
They need to specify this was a club sandwich
That makes it far more dangerous.
It has to be taken seriously.
This was a threat.
What if he had a wheat allergy?
You don't know.
He could be gluten intolerant and you just throw a sandwich at that man.
That's obviously a life-threatening scenario.
We can't have that.
And as such, it's a felony charge, but they said no.
The grand jury said, ah, I don't think so.
According to the charging documents, Mr. Dunn approached a group of officers at about 2300.
on the 10th of August, calling them fascists and shouting,
Why are you here?
I don't want you in my city.
What a waste of a sandwich, though.
I would never.
I would never.
The court witnessed a reenactment from Mr. Laramore on Tuesday
as he took to this day to testify against Mr. Dunn.
That's right.
We're going to reenact the sandwich-throwing debacle.
You're going to have to...
Did they get him another hoagy?
Did he actually get to throw it at somebody else?
Mr. Dunn, I'm going to need you to throw the sandwich in the exact same manner you did.
Please, the bailiff will play the part, hit him as hard as you feel necessary.
Mr. Dunn's lawyer, Julia Gatto, said in her opening statement that hurling the sandwich was a harmless gesture
that did not and could not cause injury, no matter who you are.
You can't just go around throwing stuff at people because you're mad, Mr. Parents said, according
New York Times.
Again, I'm not arguing that he should have thrown the sandwich at the guy.
I'm simply arguing that it's not harmful.
It didn't do anything.
You don't get hit by a sandwich and die.
Unless it's maybe one of those old subway six foot subs.
Maybe then.
Who knows?
But this, you would have had to drag me into court.
If I was the guy that got hit with the sandwich,
you would have had to have the KGB work me over in a black site
before I would agree to testify against somebody
because he hit me with the sandwich.
and it we, we, we hurt.
I would die first.
I would never.
I'm like, no, that didn't hurt.
No, it's that salt.
What?
You think that would hurt me?
No, come on.
I would die before admitting the sandwich hurt me, and I need compensation for it.
This man is a criminal.
He broke my body.
I am bruised and battered.
They're coming after him for a salt and pepper.
All right.
Well, folks.
It has been fun. I hope I wasn't too flippant.
David will be back soon, probably Monday, given how he's feeling.
But I will be here tomorrow to cover the dues and then give you more best of David Knight.
Really do appreciate you guys.
We thank you all for tuning in.
Here is the best of David Knight, and I will see you tomorrow.
You're listening to the David Knight Show.
All right, welcome back.
And joining us now is Anthony Frida.
He's got a new book that's coming out.
We're going to talk to him about that.
The Thought Crimes of Anthony Frida.
And he's got, he's been very successful as an artist, and his art is full of very important
critiques of what we see politically.
He's actually had, and his art put on display at the 9-11 Museum and Memorial in New York City.
And he's on the same page as we are, I think, about 9-11.
His tenure with InfoWords is an illustrator in right.
fully submitted his place in the world of controversial alternative news, and he's been very vocal
about his role in that space, and so that's where I got to know, Anthony, as well as his work
with Charles Slenty and Trends Journal. So thank you for joining us, Anthony. Good to see you again.
Great to see you, David, and thanks for having me. A beautiful set, actually. Well, thank you.
Thank you. Yeah, I always wanted to talk to you about your background here.
And there's a whole other aspect of your background that I wasn't aware of now that you're getting into Christian art.
And you've got a project with that as well and the GoFundMe to help realize that project.
But let's talk about your personal journey here.
You began doing copy stuff for the advertising industry.
And you began helping them to sell Joe Campbell.
Talk a little bit about that and how you got from there to where you are now.
Yeah, so it's quite a journey.
I've been doing it for 40 years, so I'll give you the condensed version.
But, yeah, I got out of art school.
I had this dream of becoming this, you know, famous, prosperous, thriving artist.
And I just wasn't prepared.
I mean, I went to Pratt at four years of training in art and painting and drawing.
And I was pretty proficient and I was, you know, pretty confident.
but they really didn't train you
how to make a living as an artist
so I sort of figured it out of my own
now I have to make a living doing this
so crossing that threshold
from academia into the professional world
for any artist is a scary time
I mean I teach seniors now at FIT
and it's my way of giving back
because I know how scared they are
so I try to sort of pivot that
and I think it's a scarier time right now
than ever has been I mean we look at AI
And a lot of people are just content to throw a prompt at AI and take whatever it gives them.
What do you think about that?
How is that going to affect art?
Well, I think it's going to be not just art.
It's going to, I mean, I think it's designed to create a post-human future where the robots do all the work.
And they work 24 hours a day.
And I mean, the transhumanist elevator pitch or elevator to the hell pitch is that the robots do everything for us.
And we have the freedom to do whatever we.
want and they'll give us a basic unit of income. I don't think it's going to work out that way,
but that's their utopian, post-human, transhumanist future. Yeah, I had my class yesterday. The kids
were crying. They were literally crying because they just went to school for four years to learn
how to be an artist, and now anyone who has an AI program can do what they do. Yeah.
So it's very demoralizing to the creatives, but I mean, the same thing goes for the guys
remember they said learn to code like not anymore yeah they're putting themselves out of a job that's
right well the other part of it is though and I think we'll get to this and we get to where you are
right now the machine has no soul it's going to put things together statistically and it can
copy and paste and throw things against the wall and in a sense it's a sophisticated version of a chimpanzee
doing painting right and so there is still going to be a niche there I think for the
human soul communicating truth and beauty i think that's really the issue there and that's what
we have to focus on and i think that that's going to be pretty obvious to people you know there's
a lot of things that a i can do especially i think in the art aspect because it can hallucinate and
it looks like it's uh you know having a drug trip or whatever and that can be useful in art or
even in music to some degree but when you look at the kind when i look at it for music for example
Um, the thing about AI is that you can't precisely get it to do what you want.
You know, it can get like 80% there or 85% there, which is not good enough for art.
As many people have said, art is never finished.
It's simply abandoned at some point you got to stop tweaking it and just go do something
different, the next project or whatever.
And I think that's the problem with AI.
It just throws this stuff out there and people say, yeah, that's good enough.
I think there's going to be a qualitative, uh, qualitative,
difference that people will be able to tell
that last 15 or 20%
that is there.
Yeah, I agree with you.
Yeah, that's my hope.
But I think you're right.
Our advantage moving forward is the robots
don't laugh, they don't cry, they don't love.
That's right.
They're not connected to God.
In fact, I think it's the opposite.
That's right.
I have this idea that
just as the Holy Spirit
is this unifying force
and universal
force of good
and God
the obverse
the yin to that yang
is this unifying
force of darkness
which informs
and which has
basically a cauldron
for this AI to be created
and we're incarnating it
by giving it prompts
and giving it life
but that spirit
is a dark spirit
and I sense that
and I feel that
it's an anti-human spirit
I agree
but so does
Elon Musk agrees with you as well.
He said, we're summoning the demon.
Yeah, maybe we should pay attention to what he's saying about that.
He knows that.
Yeah, no.
Some of these guys who are atheists say there's something here that mathematics doesn't, you know, describe or define.
So it's something beyond mathematics.
So what's going on?
They don't even know.
The guys who created it don't even know how, you know, these systems arrive at the decisions that they make.
That's right.
To a certain point, it's called black box technology, right?
they, it's, it's opaque, but, um, robots understand it.
But, um, but they might not, but they, they understand us, though.
That's the problem.
Like, we don't understand how they do what they do, but they understand us.
I mean, they have so much big data about humanity and what moves us and has influenced us that
it's a lopsided, uh, yeah, relationship.
That's why it's such a good fit for the government, because the government knows everything about us,
but the government itself is by design a black box.
That black box is labeled national security.
We can't tell you.
We would have to kill you, right?
Exactly.
Yeah, so, I mean, I could talk about AI for hours, but.
Yeah.
Yeah, but let's go back to your story.
You were doing, started working at an ad agency as you got out.
I started working at an ad agency.
Yeah, I was a young man, you know, young man.
I listed it after money and woman.
And I was in my 20s.
and I became very successful, working for Fortune 500 companies.
And I was in an advertisement for about 10 years.
And I started to learn and see all the psychological tricks and manipulations,
you know, informed by the ideas of Edward Bernays and his propaganda.
He was a master of mass psychological manipulation, right?
And that was employed.
He was contracted by the government and by age.
agencies. It's a long story, but those ideas work because people respond positively to
certain stimuli negatively to other stimuli. We're pretty predictable animals. And once you break
that code, you're trying to sell something and you're smart and clever, you can figure out a way
to do it. But I got really turned off. I was working on the Joel Campbell ad campaign.
And in those days, they were, you know, paying us a lot of money to do this stuff. And I was just
enamored with the money and I bought a condo in Manhattan and I thought I was like live on top of the
world and then um so I kind of got lost in that that world of money and success and then the FTC
determined that our campaign was illegal because we were using cartoon camels they said we were
marketing cigarette to children so I sort of had a moral crisis and I didn't become
my artist to sell
cigarette
kids, right?
And I said,
you know.
Maybe you can get a job
for Pfizer
because they sell
poison to kids all the time.
Well, well,
that's later on in the story.
Yeah.
So I had this
moral crisis.
It's come to Jesus
moment.
I said, that's it.
I'm done with advertising.
I'm not going to sell
my soul to the devil.
So I was still,
you know,
now I'm a young man
in my 30s.
I was pretty naive
politically at that time.
And I said,
I'm going to work
with the good guys.
right? I'm going to work for New York Times and the New Yorker and I started working for, you know,
all these mainstream publications as an editorial illustrator. And I worked for the outbed page
in New York Times, which is like a premier showcase for thinkers and for, I kind of like where
the elite speak to each other. Sure. Right. And I was, again, I was on top of the world. I'm
working like, you know, the best place for an illustrator to be. And I was doing articles for,
for them on a regular basis and then I got to see how the sausage is made there and the art director
and the editor told me that every single word that goes through here has to be vetted by the
state department and I said I said I thought you know you're the fourth ward you're
they said that's like Pravda what do you mean every word has to be the state department they
said that's that's how it is so my night
Steve Tay started to, you know, unravel at that point. I started to become a little more educated about how the world really works. And I feel silly now saying that, but I thought the New York Times was this like beacon of truth and objectivity. I mean, it couldn't be more wrong. But so I got an assignment to do, it was a not that piece right before the Iraq war penned by the then Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. And it was outlying all.
the lives that we know now that took us that at war, and I illustrated the peace. And then I
had another moral crisis. This guy said to myself, my God, I went from selling cigarettes to kids
to selling war. This is worse. I didn't think I could do worse than that, but I did. So I had
another, you know, time to question, what am I doing with my life? What are my life choices? What do I
really what do I really want to do with my skills and my my whatever gift guy's giving me and my
passions and I mean I love to create imagery it's just like the only thing I'm good at so I wanted
to stay in that lane um so right then was about the time that these seminal alternative news
side started coming out like info wars and there was a few others and transjournal and I reached out
to them and because I figured these guys are exposing the lies of the mainstream media that I
used to work for and of the advertising agencies I used to work for so I wanted to bite the hand
that fed me so I started I started working for people in the health freedom movement people
and liberty movement people and all these different movements you know people like you include
and um and I've been there ever since.
because I do think there are good people out there
who are trying to get to the truth of the matter
about all of these issues
and journalists and activists and filmmakers and writers,
and I've worked for a lot of them,
and they're my heroes.
So, and politically,
I got, I was on the contract for the RFK campaign
when he was running for president,
because I believed in what he was doing
And his work to expose the vaccines and the dangers of pharmaceuticals.
Right.
So I still have a hand in the political realm, but I'm basically working for people who I think are the good guys, you know,
that I can sleep well at night now, David, because I think I'm working for people or at least trying to tell the truth, you know.
It's like it's not equivalent like when, like when people get fined.
for, like, the way they went after Alex
for what he said,
like, the New York Times and CNN
tell lies of much greater magnitude every day.
And nobody gets sued.
And by the way, their lies
lead to wars that kill millions of people.
Their lies sell products that kill millions of people,
and they're never held accountable.
And then they're not, the difference
between them and, say, what
independent journalists do is that
they're purposely trying to,
lied to you. They know they're lying to
you. You know, it's one thing to make a mistake
in the, you know,
the search for the truth. We're not always going to be perfect,
but there's a big difference
to somebody who's purposely
knowing to lie to you, to hurt you
and your children,
then somebody was just trying to figure out in real time
what the hell's going on because it's very confusing.
I agree. We've been
lied to so much about, so
about everything
that people become so
skeptical that, you know,
I think, unfortunately, it fosters this environment where nobody believes anything.
And that's where we're at now.
Nobody believes anything.
So they come up with 100 different theories of how Charlie Kirk was killed, right?
Because nobody believes the official story.
That's right.
And we can never get to the bottom of anything because everybody has their own theory about what happened.
And there's no universal truth anymore.
We're in the post-truth age.
And I think that's our, so truth is going to be the greatest, most valuable commodity.
in the future.
I mean, here's what you need.
Here's the fundamental truth.
Government lies.
It always has, always will, for its own interest.
So if you understand that and come to whatever the government says or the official press says,
with a healthy dose of skepticism, I think that's the most important thing.
You know, you mentioned the fact that you realize that they had to get the approval of the State Department
for what they were saying at the New York Times.
And, of course, we know about Operation Mockingbird and the rest of this stuff.
I thought it was really amazing the disingenuous astonishment of the fact that Hegseth openly said,
well, you're going to have to get approval for anything that you release.
I don't like that, but that's not anything that's really different.
The only thing that's different about that is that they're going to own it and say it out loud
rather than doing it behind closed doors.
I had a friend who worked to the Pentagon, and he worked for the side that was vetting movie scripts.
If they liked your movie script, if it was kind of,
complimentary of them and their agenda, they would give you access to military equipment that you
could use to film your movie. If they didn't like it, you didn't get that equipment. And that
might sink your movie because the expense of trying to get that equipment, otherwise they
provide it at a reduced cost or for free. So that kind of thing has been going along for a very
long time. Yeah. I mean, I'm still surprised. I'm old enough to remember Frank Church,
the church committee hearings, like he had the receipts. He proved it back in the 70s. And nobody
care. It's like it did nothing. They just went back to business as usual. Yeah. That's right.
I mean, you know, thank God for him and his work, but I mean, you really didn't do anything in the
big picture. Yeah. And all the stuff about the heart attack gun, as I've said before, that was a
really a distraction because the whole thing began because from their inception, the CIA and the
NSA were spying on Americans without a search warrant, which, you know, takes us, we've been
fighting that thing going up to, you know, 2012, 2013. It snowed and all the rest of
stuff. So the result of that was still, the result of the Church Committee hearings was the
FISA Act, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which they then used to give themselves
legal cover to do what they'd been doing from their inception, which was to spy on Americans
without search warrant, as Rand Paul says, you know, spying on Mr. Mrs. Verizon. You know,
you go to one judge and a secret court that nobody knows about.
and you get legal cover to violate the Constitution.
So they'll always turn this stuff to their own advantage.
Well, yeah, and speaking to that subject,
I worked, one of my heroes is William Binney,
and I had the pleasure of working on a documentary about William.
I met him, just a great guy.
And, I mean, we quit because he said the systems he designed
to spy on potential terrorists
with being used to spy on everybody.
Yeah.
And that's against the oath he took.
that's illegal, and he said he's not going to do it.
So what do they do?
The FBI raided his house and arrested him under false pretenses and false charges.
Yeah. But, yeah, so just get back to my journey.
Yeah.
So I don't lose track.
After the RFK thing, I worked for him for a year, and it was a great experience,
and I got to see just how dirty the Democrats are.
I mean, Republicans basically left him alone.
You know, Trump would make some, you know, nasty,
comments now and then, but the Democrat has actively tried to destroy him with lawsuits and
moles and people doing dirty tricks and it was a constant relentless assault on him that really
opened my eyes again. I mean, I was naive again. Whenever I, I underestimate how evil these people
are and how willing they are to be corrupt and to use the power they have or abuse any power they
have in the courts, in the media, in academia, in tech, I mean, which they control those
institutions, unfortunately. And it just, it's sickened me. It sickened me the way they
smeared him and lied about him and sued him and tried to play dirty tricks with ballots
and just on and on and on. Oh, yeah. So then I got, that made me realize that the battle isn't
political. This battle is spiritual. So I wanted to move from the temporal plane into the spiritual
plane of my work and come back to my Christian roots. I was raised as a Catholic. And I had a
personal experience when my, my fiance started having seizures one night. We were watching,
actually, it was the Obama movie. It was like an apocalyptic Obama movie, leave the
leave the world behind
which has to be a foreboding title
because my
my girlfriends were watching this
she says my heart hurts and I don't
feel right and I said
maybe this anxiety from this
Obama show you know
screw Obama it's not watch this
it's upsetting you and then
she just
went into seizures and she was
extremely healthy she was extremely
there was nothing no pre-existing
in condition she just
started convulsing and seizing and just
1,000 yards stare and stop breathing
and I'm not a doctor
but I think breathing is pretty important
and
I didn't know what to do David I felt so
inadequate and helpless
I had no idea what to do like should I do chest
compression or I'm like I didn't know
I didn't know what to accept to call 911
and I just held her
and she was in this
in this state of a comatose state
I don't know if she was dying
I thought she was dying
and then she came out of it for a brief moment
with this from this look of just terror
and fear to this calm
and this peace came over her and she started laughing
and I started like
was this all a joke but she's not that
she's not that kind of person
and she and she was laughing
and her whole face just and her whole body
was just relaxed and she was at a place of peace
and then she clenched back
and went back into this convulsive state
and I believe like she went to the other side
I believe she was at peace with God
for a brief period
and that it just wasn't her time
or she just got sent back
or I don't know obviously what happened
but it was extraordinary
have any recollection of that?
None, none of any of it.
Your brain doesn't remember that stuff
and probably protect you.
But it was extraordinary
and it reawaken
my faith and that was
a year and a half ago and thank God
she's healthy now. 75% of the people
who go through when she went through
it was a brain bleed
75% of the people die
that happens to. So she
was in coma, she had a long conval.
but thank God she's um she's healthy now yes and it brought both of us closer to God and it made
me want to dedicate my work to the Lord and every piece I do now is a devotion to God
every stroke of my pen is a meditation and prayer and um I want to lean into that as much as I
possibly can that's great you know before you came on we were talking about what's going on
in Canterbury Cathedral.
And that used to be the basis for why people would make these elaborate cathedrals.
It was out of a devotion to God and wanting to honor him.
And, of course, depending on what gifts he has given us, we can all have different ways
that we can do that.
And, you know, whatever your job is, you can always do it in a way that you try to honor God.
And yet, what do you think about?
Did you see that story where they paid somebody to do?
graffiti on the interior walls of Canterbury Cathedral?
Did you see that?
Yeah, to me, it's, it's worse than graffiti.
It's like, it's vandalism, but, you know, it's like, it's so funny because these things
that were created in the so-called dark ages, they couldn't make those today.
That's right.
It's because of what you said is because they weren't doing it for the profit motive, right?
They were doing it for the profit motives.
well, you know, spelled differently.
And that's the only way humans can create something like that.
Your heart and soul has to be in it.
I mean, you go into those cathedrals and you feel the presence of God.
You feel the presence of the highest achievement humanity is capable of.
And they did it in the so-called dark ages, like with none of the tools,
none of the technology we have.
That's right.
It's astonishing.
And it's just the amount of time and human labor and life force
and sacrifice and artistry and craftsmanship and skill that went into those things,
just that alone is enough to uplift your spirit.
They're uplifting edifices and monuments.
And today we have monuments like the 9-11 monument, which is a, it's a black box.
It's a hole.
It's like a giant urinal.
You go to that black box memorial.
And it's just like a spinning, sucking,
hole to hell
with no light of skis
and it's just
there's nothing uplifting about it
that's right
about the sky so you want to
jump in and kill yourself
and be sucked into hell
so
that's the feeling I get
when I go there
and I think in some ways
it's appropriate
considering that we know
what happened there
yeah
but it's just
the answer to everything
I think is just
we had to try to live like saints
I mean, if everybody lived to the better angels, the whole world would overnight become a better place.
Everybody's trying to figure, going to all these marches and protests and all this nonsense.
And it's like, fix yourself first.
That's right.
If you fix yourself and you just, just be a good person, that's it.
Don't lie, don't cheat, don't steal, don't hurt your neighbor.
That alone, there'll be no more crime, right?
Why would the people crime?
Crime is based on a human doing something that he knows, is.
sinful and knows it is illegal and knows it is wrong.
So instead of trying to fix the world from the outside, you got to fix it inwardly.
You know, get closer to God and understand that the infinite power and glory of God is not a
separate thing from you.
It's within you.
That light is within you.
And you just need to accept it and let that connection grow.
and become stronger with everything you do
and every good thing you do makes it stronger.
You feel closer to God from every good thing you do,
every good work you make.
I agree, yeah.
Yeah, it's a very powerful sermon
that they actually wound up doing
as a lecturer as to what is wrong with our society, I think.
Because when you look at the graffiti,
not only did they go into a place
that was beautiful and uplifting
and they essentially tear it down
with their ugly stuff that they put on it.
And the most, the ugliest thing about what they were putting on there with their graffiti
was what it actually said.
It was a rage against God and his creation, every bit of it.
And that's really kind of shows us where our society is.
So the Church of England is still setting the foundation for England.
It's just setting a satanic foundation that is there.
Oh, absolutely.
That's satanic.
I mean, that's a purposeful defilement.
It's like putting the cross upside down.
Everything they do is an inversion.
Like the pentagram, the original five point of star was supposed to represent the five wounds of Christ.
And so the Satanist inverted it and turned it into the pentagram.
So those symbols are very important.
And imagery is important.
And they know that.
And they use it to their satanic purposes.
And the defilement of God and the dishonoring of God.
And we see the, you know, the result, just look around you.
I mean, it's like there's demons everywhere.
And there's demons in high places and low places.
And, you know, a society rots from the top down.
I think it starts with these people who just designed these so-called utopias for us,
like the AI post-human utopia, I think they hate themselves, the misanthropes,
and they project their self-hatred onto humanity.
And then if they can destroy humanity, they can somehow destroy the parts of themselves
that they hate, like in a youngian shadow sort of.
I agree, yeah, especially when you look at the transgender stuff.
The purpose of that is to take very young, impressionable people,
or maybe even somebody who's an adult and that's very impressionable,
like Christopher Beck, who was a Navy SEAL that they pushed into becoming a training.
But it's to train them to hate their body, to hate themselves,
and then to engage in self-mutilation.
And so I think that is truly the satanic aspect of it.
Tell us a bit about your project, Jesus Park, that you're working on.
You've got a GoFundMe attached to that as well.
But tell us about that.
I think we've got a picture, Lance, that you can show the audience of that.
So, Free Flickers, I just started, yeah, I had this, I had this dream, this vision, David, of this park in this beautiful sort of pastoral, natural setting with trees and rocks.
And I've done a lot of imagery of Christ, and I wanted to create.
the face of Christ, out of all natural materials, like his crown of thorns would be actual trees, like, you know, so the scale would be enormous, like his face might take up a half acre or more, but it'll be a place of contemplation, a place of prayer, a place of peace, and for me, it'll be a labor of love and a devotion to God.
And I say it came to me in a dream, a download,
and I just feel like I have to make this thing.
And while I'm still young enough, which might not be my phone.
So that's what I'm working on right now.
And I do need some funds to realize it, talking to some churches
and to have land and trying to find the right spot for it.
But I think it would be an incredible lasting monument and shrine, really,
that I hope that people can enjoy.
So you'd be able to see the picture that we got,
that'd be like an aerial view that people would be able to see it.
Yeah, so you can see.
In my vision, you know, I've done models of it, and it's, I mean,
if it's on a slight.
slope you should be able to make out his face from the ground but you won't be able to look at the
full picture so maybe you know from a drone shot or something like that but you'll be able to see
what it is and and um uh it looks great in my dream you know now i just have to make you
have you got any you haven't got a sight for it yet but are you are you angling for a particular
geographical area that would have uh well i live i live on yeah i live on long island and there's
this beautiful shrine out on the east end of Long Island called Our Lady of the Island.
And they have, I think, about 100 acres of land.
And there's a full 20-foot marble sculpture of Mary.
There's an outdoor church that I go to there.
And it overlooks the Great South Bay.
It's just an incredible spot.
And they have a lot of land there.
So I've reached out to them.
I don't know if it's going to work out.
but, you know, there's a lot of logistics involved.
So it's going to take some planning in a little time, but I'm determined.
So if I have to at some point just buy a small piece of land, maybe upstate New York,
you can get an inexpensive land.
Whatever I have to do, you know, I'm going to make this happen.
Yeah, that's great.
Well, you know, in Tennessee, land is fairly cheap, and they have a lot of unusual sites for people
to come see.
So you might get a lot of traffic there if you put it further south.
But yeah, that's a good idea.
I don't know much about it, but I'll take it right down to Tennessee.
Why not?
Yeah.
Instead of people going to see Rock City, they can see the Jesus Park that's there.
Where can people find the GoFundMe?
How do they find that?
Well, you can find all of my thought crimes on.
If you go just Anthonyfreita.com, Anthony FRABA.com.
Like, there's links to all my projects there.
Okay, good.
And your book is not out yet.
Is it thought crimes of Anthony Frida?
Is that out yet?
No, that's not, but that was, the title was inspired by an actual crime that was
happened because of my artwork.
I did a book cover for CJ Hopkins, who wrote this book, The Rise and Fall of the New Normal.
And I did a takeoff of Rise and Fall of the Third Reich.
That cover, and I put the COVID mask with a little, with a swastika, barely visible behind the mask, the COVID mask.
And they decided to charge him for disseminating Nazi propaganda in Germany.
And he was facing like years in prison.
Yeah, I remember that.
Yeah, so that was my book cover.
And all he did was tweet that cover to get, to get indicted.
so that's a literal crime that I've been involved with as an accessory
so you can't use the symbols of the Nazi regime but you can act like Nazis and
that's okay right no but it's selectively enforced because you know they're stern
and magazines in Germany they'll show Trump in full Hitler regalia all the time that's
just that's fine yeah if it's used for the purposes of the left they get a pass
and CJ is not even a right-wing guy
he's just one of these guys who
is a skeptic, he questions everything
so it's kind of ironic
that they're using this illegal
subversion of their own laws
which is something the Nazis would do
to prove that they're not Nazis
you know it's like
there's a lot of ironies there
but anyway he has this ongoing
legal battle with them and in Germany
they don't have double jeopardy like we do
so they charged him and he went to trial and he was acquitted and now they're going to
charge him again with the same crime just keep they can keep coming until they get the verdict
they want wow wow and it's not a new incident of anything it's for the same exact thing right
well we just had somebody that was arrested here in tennessee for a meme that he put up and
they got him in you know two million dollar bond to get him out of jail and again it was because
And we see this kind of censorship is going on both the left and the right.
This was about the fact that this guy didn't like Charlie Kirk or conservatives.
And so there was a school that was going to have an event to honor Charlie Kirk.
And he put up a meme that he didn't even create that other people I created.
It was a picture of Trump.
And it was a quote about what Trump had said about a school shooting.
And it said, we got to get over this and move on.
And so he put that up as his comment.
about the Charlie Kirk shooting.
And because the place that he did it was something like Perry, Idaho or something,
was where the high school was, where the shooting had been.
And this was in Perry County.
And they said, well, you were trying to intimidate people here in Perry County
by using this meme that you didn't even create.
And so the sheriff arrested him for that.
Two million dollar bail.
We're seeing free speech attacked everywhere.
Every country, every political.
philosophy is coming for speech because especially when we're looking at memes or
political commentary like you do it's very very powerful they wouldn't be coming after it
otherwise yeah definitely well I'm pretty certain he's going to win that lawsuit because
that's that's outrageous I'm used to censorship and I've been I mean I know you've been
through it too just constantly be platformed and demonetize and D this and
that and says, you know. And by the way, everything that I was, you know, censored for turns out
I was right about. That's right. I never got to be. I was right about all of it. Every single
thing I said, it was mostly about COVID. And then I'm also fairly certain I was put on a domestic
terror list because Biden had a list of anyone who questioned the COVID narrative was put on a
list. Yeah. And I was a high profile about that. So I mean, I'm considered a potential violent. They
used the word violent potential violent domestic extremist terrorists if you were questioning
COVID narrative. Yeah, because they say that, you know, speech is violence. And I say,
no, censorship is violence. And the people who use and enforce censorship are the ones who
usually do resort to violence one shape or the other, you know, like arresting this guy.
The sad thing is, is that you see that both sides of political spectrum, and I'm talking about
not just the politicians, but I'm talking about the grassroots people are cheering this kind of censorship.
If they don't like what you have to say, we have lost the understanding of the importance of free speech in our society.
And that includes America, it's not just in Europe, but it's in America as well.
People don't realize that these tools of tyranny will be used against them eventually and have already been used against them in many cases.
And they still are cheering this on.
It's truly amazing.
I don't know how we get around it.
Yeah.
No, no, I've never seen the country so divided.
There's no room.
That's why, you know, the Charlie Kurt thing was so symbolic because if you're not going to talk, you're going to kill each other.
And people are talking that.
It's like because they don't want to talk.
They want to kill.
And what is that?
I mean, I know you're a great student of history.
Like, where does this go?
It goes one place.
It's called Civil War.
That's where it goes.
It's like, this is nothing new.
We've seen it thousands of times before all throughout history.
This, when there's a divide of this extreme nature where there's no communication,
they're either good or evil, you're either with me or against me.
It leads to civil war.
I mean, I don't know how close we are to it, but unless something radically changes,
which I don't see any evidence of, we're in some perilous times here.
I agree. I agree.
Yeah, we have lost our foundation.
You know, we've lost our foundation in terms of principles that made the West great.
And we've lost our foundation because we've turned our back on God.
That's what we were talking about earlier.
And that truly is the foundation as the Lord Jesus Christ.
And once we turn away from that, we are adrift as a society.
And so even though we used to have guns everywhere, now the guns are being turned on each other and being used on us.
And there's a lot of different aspects to it.
I think the heavy use of drugs is a part.
of that. I think that even plays a role
actually in the
technocrats. I had been told years
ago that when these guys would go hang
out at the Burning Man thing, that
they were dropping
LSD and they were also taking
what was that, DMT or something, where they
come in contact with machine elves.
And the interesting thing about this is that
you hear from the same
people who are in different geographical
areas, they start talking about
how they had the same types of encounters.
and they're channeling technology from these entities that they're coming in contact with.
And you can have people in radically different places that have the same experiences that are there.
They even call them psychonauts, not nuts, but nuts, like an astronaut or something.
And so it's interdimensional travel, I think.
I mean, they're opening a portal to hell, for lack of a better word.
I mean, this tells another dimension, heaven's dimension, our plane is done.
dimension. And those drugs somehow, I don't know how it works, I can't even come close to
explain it, but it makes the veil between the dimensions permeable. Yeah. And they're able to
permeate it with these substances, and it's a dark energy, and we're seeing it. And that's
connected to the whole AI thing we were talking about before. Yes. And these drugs are facilitating
it, and you're totally right. But the other things, when you turn away from God,
I mean, Deepak Chopra said you leave a God-shaped hole.
So what do you fill that hole with?
You're going to fill it with drugs or porn or wokeism or something or Satan.
You know, it's like it has to be filled because that's part of our human makeup that we have to have something to believe in.
So if you don't fill it with God, the alternatives are anti-human and they're Satanic and they're dark.
You're taking something that should be filled with light and you're filling it with darkness.
That's right.
Absolutely.
Well, you know, it's kind of interesting.
I use this quite a bit to attack the pharmaceutical companies.
I'd call them Pharmakia because that's the Greek term that's used in the New Testament.
Frequently was transferred, translated as sorcery because people would include these lucenogenic drugs as part of their spiritual experience and that type of thing.
that's a very old thing, but also it talks about how the pharmacia and the great men of the world
would not repent of their murders.
That's how I was using it for the pharmaceutical companies, and I thought it really fit.
But that really is what we're seeing.
And with all the technology that we've got and all of this idea about how we are so scientific
and materialistic, and we don't believe anything unless we can measure it, well, that we have
seen over and over again is simply not true.
the people that we disagree with are more than willing to pursue by faith a lot of different things.
Whether you're talking about the climate change agenda or the pandemic, they accept a lot of stuff
on the basis of faith. It's just what they have faith in. They have faith in these institutions.
They have faith in people who have credentials that say that they're a scientist or an authority
and something. So it's just a difference in what they have faith in. But I think it's very important
and what you're doing in terms of artwork.
That gets to people on a different level
than just talking to them straight about the facts.
Whenever we can engage the emotions,
and art does that, and movies do that,
and Christians are starting to learn
to use the tools of movie making.
And so I think there's going to be some very important work
that is done there.
But gradually, the Christian movie industry is picking up.
But I think there's so much that's been lost
in terms of artwork that we're,
would move people. I think that what you're doing is very important.
Well, thank you, David. Yeah, and speaking of film, I started working with a film production
company. I think you're right. The answer is to create a parallel M&E economy that is
in accordance with our values. Yeah. And then the values of Western civilization and Christendom
are things that we have faith in, things that we believe in. And a lot of it's been sort of
kind of hokey, kitchy stuff
up to this point, but we're trying to create
with Man Alive Media Group, this group I'm
working with, right now we're working
on a film about
World War I. We're going to do a film about Joan of Arc.
And we're trying to make them very high-minded
and to the best of our ability
great pieces of art, because you're right.
Art speaks on a different
level than just
it's a conversation, different kind of
conversation. It's like, you know, poetry
or prose. It's like it's something
that engages our mind in a different way and hopefully opens up our mind to this conversation.
But we have to be able to talk. And censorship is the enemy of all of us because then we're not
talking. And if we're not talking, we're probably shooting each other. Because so.
We make peaceful change impossible. We make violent change inevitable, as Kennedy said. That's right.
And I think it's very important. You know, for the longest time, Christians,
have retreated from the arts and they feel like the best way to engage people is with a
didactic aspect. And of course, there's value in that. But there's another way to reach people
and that is by showing them, you know, and portraying as a narrative. I just talked to the author
of Flags of Our Fathers, who's just done a book on Vietnam. He spent 10 years in Vietnam
talking to people there. And his name was James, was it James Bradley? I think it was.
Bradley or Radley. I'm sorry, I can't remember his last name, but a very interesting guy.
And when he did this book, you know, his previous books were nonfiction.
But he wanted to do a fictional book because he said there were so many facets and so many different things that he had to use fictional characters to bring them together.
And so not only does it engage our motions more so if we have a narrative story, but it also allows us to pull together the relevant.
things in a way that we couldn't if we had to stick to exactly what the true story was.
And Hollywood knows that for the longest time.
We'd go see something is based on a true event.
They always change it, always begin.
This is based on a true story, but the actual characters are fictionalized and so forth.
They always do that.
And so I think it's good, the kind of projects that you mentioned there, when we're talking
about people living their life according to Christian principles.
I think that's probably the best way that can be done rather than going in to the
Bible and then fictionalizing that, that always kind of rubs me the wrong way, trying to rewrite it.
It doesn't have to be didatic or so blatant.
I mean, there was great Christian authors, you know, Tolkien and C.S. Lewis, and they were coming up with their own mythology to sort of mirror Christian themes without, you know, saying literally this is Jesus and this is what happened.
That's right.
So, you know, Christianity to me is the myth that's true.
Yes.
But we need to create alternative myths to reinforce that myth to bring people to us
because it's just so boring to just, you know, tell the same story.
Even in brilliant filmmakers' hands, like, it's been done.
And it's so it's just going to turn a lot of people off.
But if you do it in a way that's creative and original and interesting and unexpected
and entertaining and edifying.
Now it's something different.
Now it's a work of art on its own,
not just pastiche and not just biblical scripture translated into film.
That's right.
I remember the film critic Brian Godawa,
and he actually was able to do a film.
I think it was called, to end all worse.
I'm not sure about that,
but it took place American soldiers in Japanese prison camp during World War II.
But his whole idea is that very much like, you know, I think it was C.S. Lewis who said that the Christian myth is the greatest myth, and it's real. You know, he doesn't mean that it's fictional. He just means by myth, he means an epic story. And so that was kind of Brian Godal's take on it. He said, you know, every one of our, really the stories that really resonate with people always have a redemptive arc in the story. And he did a really good job with that.
And he also would kind of draw that out in his film reviews that he did.
But that, that I think is something that, you know, if we're not going to be able to fight a culture war if we don't have culture, someone said.
I think that's exactly true, right?
I've got to steal that line, David.
We're going in unarmed, right?
I mean, yeah, it's stating the obvious.
But, yeah, I mean, we got to, listen, you know, it's on us, you know.
Yeah.
I think it's incumbent upon Christians of people who are means, people who are creative, people who have talent or something to give, like put it towards the chorus because the other side certainly is, you know, the Satanists and the demons and the world lunatics and the Islamists and the Marxists, like, they're all on board.
You know, you just watch Netflix and there's messaging in every single thing they do.
Oh, yeah.
It's all anti-Christian, anti-male, anti-white, anti-American, and it's just, I mean, it's so ham-fisted, but they shoehorned into everything.
A story does nothing to do with what they're talking about, though, you know, white people are bad.
What does that have to do with the comedy I was watching?
So, you know, we could do it more artfully.
There's so many great artists and writers out there that are Christian, and we need to come together and build these teams, and that's what I'm.
trying to do in my own little way that's great so best place for people to find out how they can
get your book when it's available and also to find out about the jesus park if they want to get
involved in the go fund me we need to go to your website anthony frida and that is f r eda dot com right
is that the best way for them to find you yeah it's always been great talking to you i only
had a chance to meet you once, and that was up at Gerald's event four years ago and his
Occupy Peace thing. And so when I saw that he had a book out there, he's like, oh, yeah,
I definitely love to talk to Anthony about that. You've got a great story to tell. And it's been
a great journey that you've been on. I really want to thank you for the work that you have done.
It's been very important. And look forward to a lot more to come from you in the future.
Thank you so much for joining us. Thank you, David. All right. Thank you.
Before we run out of time, let me get to some of the comments that are up here.
And as Lance my producer said, Jesus used parables and analogies.
That's right.
So we're following in the right way when we use those type of things as well.
So one of his favorite ways to get a point across was to use a parable, a story about something.
And in most cases, I think there was at least one or two that were not fictional,
but they were all giving a story there.
And so crash and splash 75 says average lifespan of lithium miner 30 years.
So enjoy your battery.
I said like a lot of these things.
Cobalt as well.
Cobalt is being dug out of the mines by young children operating at slave wages
and a situation that kills them.
So, yeah, that is, we have to understand that's behind a lot of this stuff.
Car insurance is now higher to pay for than battery burns, says Jolson's.
And Guard Goldsmith, good to see you, Guard, Liberty Conspiracy, says last year,
the very U.S. Government Bureau tasked with promoting EV travel, banned EV bikes and scooters
from being brought into their Colorado building for fear of fire.
That's right.
Jason Barker, nice of the storm.
Good to see you.
He says, AI is good for memes, but not for real art.
Meme, images, and music.
And that's really what it does.
I mean, a meme just kind of picks up on a theme and imitates it.
And that's precisely what AI is.
But the real danger of AI is not that it's going to become some self-aware sky net thing.
I think the real danger is that it is a very effective tool for pulling together data and for doing searches and surveillance that can be used to control.
us. That's really where the devil is in that detail. Thank you so much for joining us. Have a good day.
Thank you.
We're going to be able to be able to be.
Making sense common again.
You're listening to the David Knight Show.
This is an article from RT, and it kind of goes into the philosophy of Alexander Dugan.
remember him, the guy that they say is Putin's Rasputin or Putin's brain. He is a philosopher.
His daughter was assassinated. They were trying to get him. And I had the opportunity to interview
him when I was at Infowars, which is kind of a strange interview. I wasn't quite sure where the guy
was coming from. This was at the beginning of the Trump administration. And at that point,
there was a lot of enthusiasm amongst general Russians thinking that, well, this is great. We're not
going to have the Russia, Russia, Russia fear anymore. We're going to normalize relations with
Trump. He even had, if you remember, a small town named a street after Trump temporarily
until Trump showed that he was on the same team with these people. But as part of that,
there was a guy he used to work for Fox News, and he contacted Info Wars because he was now
working with a TV network in Russia. And he said, they'd like to get Dugan on. I was the one
that they had interview him.
And unfortunately, I wish I'd had the time to read his book.
I didn't know about his book.
I didn't understand that I was looking at some other articles about it.
It just came up very quickly.
But he wrote a book talking about the fourth approach.
And when I interviewed him, it was kind of strange because I perceived this guy as coming
from a more traditionalist, almost a czarist nationality.
because a lot of stuff they talks about is very nostalgic for that period of time and that type of thing.
So I thought, this is a guy who's anti-communist, and maybe this is why they want us to interview him.
And so when I asked him, there was some talk at the time.
Some of the people were saying, we've got to get Lenin out of Red Square.
You know, they've had his decaying body there and Red Square since he died.
I don't know.
Maybe we're getting close to a century ago.
And so there's some people who wanted to move his body out there.
And so I asked him about that.
He goes, oh, no, no.
That's part of our history, and we honor it.
And it's like, okay, where is this guy coming from?
He likes linen and he likes the czars.
He's all about culture and history.
And so he sees all of that as playing into a cultural history.
And his view is that instead of having a philosophy, a political philosophy,
an economic philosophy that can be used for world domination,
we need to have the world set up with multiple cultural and
ethnic diversity, really. It's real diversity. They're talking about real multiculturalism,
where you have national cultural ethnic identities and people are operating in their own
interests. In other words, what we had before this kind of globalism. And when you look at the
three philosophies, communism, fascism, liberalism, meaning what we have in the West, you know,
and I guess really that kind of liberalism, which is not really about liberty, but that that
that's how they try to sell it. And so in all of these, they have all resulted in governments
who seek to have global domination because we understand that power corrupts and absolute power
corrupts absolutely. And they can never have enough. These people who are in political power
are just like the billionaires. You could be a billionaire, you could be a trillionaire,
and it still won't be enough of these people. They always want more. And so you can be the leader
of the world's largest country, richest country, most powerful country, and you're always going
to want more. You're going to be the leader of a region or a leader of the entire world. And we see
this play out. It's just human nature. And so this is an interview that RT had with a guy who
was co-founder of Austria's Identitarian Movement that believes that liberal Europe has lost its way.
So what is the Identitarian Movement? Well, it's about nationalists,
preservation, cultural, ethnic, natural, national identities.
And so this guy was inspired by Alexander Dugin and his fourth political theory.
And it is, again, like I said, liberalism, communism, fascism.
But then he puts out a, he envisions a world of multipolarity, a world of distinct civilizations with their own culture and values that rejects universal.
ideologies. But key to all this is that he sees it as being led by Russia. He thinks that only
Russia can lead this. Also, when I talked to him, it was kind of interesting, his view of America
as just being a successor to Great Britain and its sea power. And so he saw a continuity of
sea power versus land power. Russia, of course, being land power. China as well being land power.
but the American and British tradition was one of sea power, which led them, especially to
be able to do global domination economically.
And so he sees Russia as the only counterweight to this kind of Western globalization.
Markovic is the guy that they interviewed.
He's moved, he said, beyond a single focus issue on immigration, turning instead to a broader
philosophical program that champions Eurasian unity, a sovereign European civilization, and
resistance to the West's rule of deceit. Today serves as a Secretary General and press spokesman
for an institute that was named after a famous Russian military commander. So this is a Vienna-based
organization found in 2014 to promote Austrian-Russian dialogue and to safeguard Europe's
cultural heritage, he says, from liberal globalist erosion. So you can imagine he's going to
big target on his back here with the Austrian government. And we have seen that the Austrian Nationalist
Party, even though they won the election, the last election, all the other parties got together
because in multi-party election, nobody's going to get past 50%. So you've always going to have a
coalition. Well, as we saw in France and with a nationalist party that's there, all of the other
parties set aside all of their differences over everything else. And the communists, the socialists,
the liberals that were there, they all united against the nationalist party to make sure that it
didn't form a government. So it's in opposition. Which also went to show you just how little
difference there is from the liberals, the socialist, and communists. They were, they're all interchangeable.
They're all for the exact same thing. France is the same as it was before that happened.
That's right. That's right.
He's been branded as a Russian agent because he is working for a Russian institute that is there.
You'd probably take that as a compliment.
He is a devotee of Alexander Dugan's fourth political theory.
And for him, the struggle is existential.
A battle for Europe's soul in the face of unipolar collapse.
He envisions a continent that is reborn through faith, tradition, multipolar solidarity with Russia.
In his view, Austria can either remain a compliant,
satellite of Brussels and Washington, in other words, the EU or the U.S., or we claim its historic
role as a bridge between east and west. The choice he warns will determine whether future
generations inherit a sovereign European civilization or a museum piece. I would describe it more as
a cut flower. The problem with Europe is far more fundamental than any kind of political
or philosophical issue. It is a cut flower because these people have cut themselves
off from the vine, the vine of the Lord Jesus Christ. They want the fruit of a Christian society,
but they don't want Christ. That is the fundamental issue, and it is not about political theory.
The fundamental issue, culture and politics, all that stuff, is downstream from your
relationship with God. And it's not something that you can even operate yourself. If you
shake your fist against God, he's going to shake your country back. And this is, I think,
what we're seeing here. Western media often labels you as far right and as a Russian agent.
Is this just a smear campaign to discredit multipolar voices? He says, yes without question.
In Austria today, any Christian who openly declares belief in God, Jesus Christ, and the Holy Spirit, is branded far right.
Anyone questioning NATO's expansion since 1991 or calling for an end to arms deliveries to Kiev
is accused of being a Russian agent. Even communist and socialists are smeared with the same labels.
if they criticize fascism in Ukraine or Western involvement in the Maiden coup.
Conservatives who affirm biological reality that there's only two sexes are attacked just as fiercely.
If advocating peace and a multipolar world order makes one a fascist,
then half of Austria would qualify under these absurd definitions.
He says they ask them, do you believe the West's unipolar dominance is collapsing?
Yes, since the so-called war and terror began to,
2001, the West has been in a permanent state of crisis, and this is by design. It was an inside
job to create a permanent state of crisis. COVID was the other shoot-it drop, as I've said many
times. The migration crisis, the financial crisis, now the war against Russia have all
accelerated the breakdown of Western unipolarity. He left out COVID, which I think is really
huge. That was a massive global strike against us.
9-11 was targeted towards America, but COVID was really a global agenda, same type of thing.
This collapse, though, he said, offers hope, the end of liberal totalitarianism.
Think about that.
That's kind of, it looks at first like it is a contradiction in terms because, you know,
if you think liberal, I think classical liberal.
But I think that truly is liberal totalitarianism is what we're really seeing here.
Yet it also brings danger, as governments may adopt ever harsher measures to cling to power.
The fall of the West is inevitable.
The only uncertainty is how and when it will conclude.
So they ask him, is the conflict between Russia and the West really about Ukraine, or the clash of civilizations?
He said, it is a class of civilizations.
As Samuel Huntington predicted, the West is fighting the rest of the world to preserve its dominance.
On the opposing side stands the Bricks Nation.
And this multipolar order, and what we see them trying to do with bricks, really flows out of
Alexander Dugan's philosophy here.
He said, our goal is not a global 1984, but the great awakening of all people.
Now, look, this all sounds wonderful, doesn't it?
Just remember, we're talking about politicians here.
And they'll always come up with some grand scheme that's.
sounds wonderful. The Communists had a great marketing plan as well. Austria has fallen victim
to a globalist in forced conformity. They even have a German word for it. And they have abandoned
their sovereignty. Restoring that sovereignty is essential if Europe is to exist as an independent
pole in a peaceful, multipolar world. Europe is in the midst of cultural suicide, ruled by
decadent liberal globalist elite that despises God and worships wealth.
This elite promotes gender confusion, endless wars, and mass migration, while ignoring collapsing
birth rates.
And he says, Russia must be willing to aid in Europe's re-Christianization.
I just don't think that they are the model that we need to see.
And again, he talks about the Freedom Party that's there in Austria, how they were blocked
after they won the election.
And as we said before, in France,
even as Le Pen's party
trashed them in the European elections
and then the first round of the French elections,
they gained even more votes.
And in the second and final round, the French elections,
they picked up even more support.
So how was it that they crashed
from first place to third place?
It's because Macron and all these other political parties,
regardless of what they're still,
stated political philosophy was, they agreed that they would look to see who, in every region,
they would say, which of our parties has the strongest candidate?
And we will have all the other parties drop out and throw their support behind that candidate
in order to oppose the national party.
That's the game that they played.
Here in America, we've only got two parties to start with.
And these guys are playing the game of gerrymandering.
So it operates a little bit differently here.
and you're always going to have a winner in a two-party thing.
So we form our coalitions before the elections instead of after the elections.
It is the political parties that are going to determine who the candidates are.
That's why it was such a big deal when Mike Johnson went to this meeting with Jewish elites
and said, we're going to police out, people who are opposed to you out of the party.
They can make sure that you don't win, and even if you run in the primary,
they can utilize their forces to run everything against you.
And that's the way it's done in the U.S.
instead of done after the election with the coalition.
You're listening to the David Knight Show.
Welcome back and joining us now is Eric Peters of Ericpetersotters.com.
Always great to have Eric on.
He is focused on liberty and mobility because you can't have one without the other.
It's kind of what Jefferson said about life and liberty.
He said the hand of force can destroy life or liberty, but cannot separate them.
Of course, he said disjoined them, but that's a little bit stilted for our language.
But it definitely is true.
And you cannot disjoint liberty and mobility either.
So I always enjoy Eric's take on things.
Eric, I was sad to see that you're, we were just talking about this over the break.
You wrote a piece three days ago.
You said, Our Charlie.
What happened in your family?
Well, yeah, it's a tough thing to talk about.
I hope I'll be able to do this well enough.
But we had about a two-and-a-half-year-old mixed-breed German Shepherd Lab.
And, you know, he's been my companion for that whole time and just a very big presence in our life.
Anyway, he got hit by, I guess, a car or a truck.
I'm not sure exactly which.
And it was really jarring because as anybody who's been through having a pet die knows,
it's one thing when your pet is elderly and old or sick and you know you understand that it's
going to happen and you have time to prepare for it but you know with a with a young pet like that
to just be gone instantly just like that is what happened really difficult you know boy for the
last several days this happened on Friday I've been having deja vu you know certain times of the
of the day like oh I better put put water in Pace's bowl or oh it's time for us to go for our run
I went for a run on Monday and you know one of his things that he would do he would
would carry around him. He was a strong dog, a big log in his mouth. And he would keep it in
his mouth for a mile or more on our run. You know, it was just one of those things. And as I'm
running by myself, which was strange, I saw one of the logs that he dropped off on the trail
and it just really, I'm sorry, kind of really, I'm being overly emotional about it. So I
apologize. Oh, no. I understand. Absolutely understand. It's a, like you said, it's the suddenness
of this. And I think that's one of the things that really magnified what happened to Charlie Kirk.
But I think, you know, when we look at it and how they have taken his legacy and they have flipped it completely opposite of what he was known for, what he ought to be remembered for, they're doing everything they can to make a saint, a celebrity, whatever there.
And in Oklahoma, they want to put a Charlie Kirk statue on every university campus.
I think the right way to honor him is to support free speech.
but it seems like the people who agreed with him and who followed him
want to do just the opposite of that.
They want to attack free speech
and they think this gives them an opportunity to do
what they know the left was doing to them before.
What do you think?
In particular, Trump, did you happen to ask the interview?
It was a couple of days after Kirk's assassination
and I wish I could remember who the journalist was.
It was a woman.
And, you know, she was asking Trump about the calls
to suppress what they called hate.
speech now. It's interesting that Trump, all people in the right, is not doing exactly what they
excoriated the left for doing during the 2024 campaign season. And it was one of the reasons
why people voted for Trump because they were tired of having their differing opinions framed as
hate. That's right. I've got a question. Oh, you're hateful. We, you know, we can't discuss
that because clearly you're a cretan and you're, you know, you're motivated by malicious motives rather
than, hey, I just have a question. Anyway, this female reporter asked Trump about that.
And Trump had the egregious, vulgar goal to say something like, well, Charlie Kirk doesn't, he may not think that way anymore.
I can't remember the exact.
Yeah, that's exactly what he said.
We played that clip.
Yeah.
She said, Charlie Kirk said there's no such thing as hate speech.
Well, he probably wouldn't say that now.
You know, that's basically what it was.
Because again, whether you agree with what Kirk had to say or not, I think the one thing that has to be universally acknowledged is that he was willing to debate.
He was willing to discuss practically any topic, including even Israel lately.
And, you know, the influence of the Israeli government over the American government.
And I think that's ultimately what got him into trouble.
You know, Trump demands lockstep adherence and even worship of himself and his policies.
And he does it in a manner that's just so abrasive and insulting to the people who support him,
this latest business of doing the parking break 180 on Ukraine.
You know, again, it's another example.
You know, if people had been aware that he was going to do that in 2024, I doubt many people would have voted for him.
One of the reasons, strong reasons people voted for him was we are sick of all these wars.
We're sick of being forced to finance it through our taxes and thereby be complicit in it.
You know, the mass murder in Gaza, we want no part of this stuff.
It's got to stop.
That's one of the reasons why people voted for him.
And now, this brazen guy just says, well, we're going to back Ukraine.
And not only that, he's saying that Ukraine has a right to not only seize back every territory that it's lost, but potentially even more than that.
Yeah, take some back from Russia, exactly.
It's madness.
How did they think that this is going to be received by Putin?
What do you think Putin's response to this is going to be?
I wouldn't be surprised if he amps things up because he believes that he's got a narrow window of opportunity now to finish this situation before boots go on the ground, potentially American boots.
That's right.
Yeah, he's taunting Putin saying he doesn't have much of military.
He could have finished this off in a couple of weeks.
You know, like we finished off Afghanistan, right, in a couple of weeks.
I was having a conversation with a friend of mine who stopped by yesterday about this,
and we got to talking about Putin versus Trump.
And the difference between a serious person and a clown.
Now, whatever you may think of Putin, you don't have to say that you like him.
You know, that's a childish argument.
It's not about whether you think he's a nice man or a bad man.
He's a serious man.
He's a serious person with serious credentials who is not an idiot and who understands history.
And look at Trump.
What do we have?
You know, we literally have a clown going up against a.
serious person, a dangerous climate.
I believe he was installed for that very reason.
You know, even had his first commerce secretary, William, let's see, Wilbur Ross,
who said that, you know, it was the Rothschild bank that he was working for.
And he said, you know, when Trump was going bankrupt, he showed up and he saw this big
crowd around him.
He said, I contacted the Rothschild people and I said, hey, this is somebody I think we could
use.
And I think that's exactly what they're doing.
They're using him as a clown.
They're using him to divide people.
They're using him to create chaos.
I think that's his role.
And also a distraction and maybe the worst kind of distraction imaginable.
You know, as everything falls apart internally and, you know, potentially, let's say
the Epstein thing percolates up again.
Or we find new details about what may have been involved in Kirk's murder that could have
incredibly damaging repercussions.
What would be a perfect thing to get people's mind off of that?
Well, perhaps a big war in Eastern Europe would do just that.
That's right.
And that's what I have, this creepy feeling maybe in the works.
And I think he's absolutely capable of it.
You know, you look at what he's doing with the, trying to make an excuse that he can blow up ships off of Venezuela without even stopping them or verifying that they're running drugs.
And as I pointed out, at the same time that he's saying this is an appropriate response and J.D. Vance is saying it's appropriate.
Marco Rubio and Pete Hankseth are all saying, oh, this is what our military is for.
No, it's not.
We had our military was stopping ships, inspecting them.
If they find drugs, they'd take the drugs, they would arrest the people.
They didn't line them up on the side of the boat and machine gun them.
And so this is an extrajudicial killing.
I told the audience earlier on the program, I said, Dutarte did this in the Philippines.
He said, you know, if you think it's a drug dealer, shoot to kill.
And he's now in the International Criminal Court, and they're looking at him for those extrajudicial killings.
It's a crime.
It's a war crime that he's doing.
So he's perfectly capable.
It's a psychopathic elaboration of that old, if you see something, say something.
Now, if you see something, kill something.
Yeah.
These are acts of war.
And they're also the acts of a coward bully in that Venezuela.
It's just another example of big old Uncle Sam throwing his weight around
and extraditionally killing foreign nationals outside of the United States with impunity.
Because, you know, we can do it.
What's Venezuela going to do about it?
right. You know, I think at some point, Trump is going to whack the wrong guy. And Putin could
be just the guy who's the wrong guy to whack. That's right. That's right. Yeah, it's very
concerning. You know, even escalated saying, yeah, we should shoot down Russian jets if they're
getting anywhere close to the borders and things like that as well. It's a dangerous time
that we live in. Of course, it's very much like the Chinese curse, isn't it? May you live in
interesting times. There's never a shortage of things to report on. It's like, and now,
for something completely different from Trump than he said yesterday. You know, it's like Monty
I'm glad you brought up China.
I just, I happened, I needed a break the other day
and so I was just watching some random YouTube
videos and I was watching some videos
of depicting
scenes in China around, for example, there are
train stations and their airports, their infrastructure
which is immaculate and
modern. I looked at their bullet trains
and I compared it with what's going on
in this country. China
is actually concerned with China
and trying to build up its own internal
society and improve itself where it seems
that the U.S. is deindustrializing
and rapidly descending from second to third world status.
We can actually see the change from day to day.
Yeah, and it's by design, and it's by the same people that are running Trump,
even though he pushes back against the climate McGuffin that I call it.
Still, it's the deliberate deindustrialization of the West.
And there's two sides of that.
They want to deindustrialize the West while they give China the advantage in terms of manufacturing.
And the huge advantage that they have is in terms of manufacturing.
And the huge advantage that they have is in terms of energy cost.
But as Gerald Slinty has said many times on this show, he said, the business of China is business.
The business of America is war.
And that's not serving us well.
Yeah, destructiveness.
Yeah.
I saw something also related to China that talked.
It was a person talking about how in China, the oligarchs, the really rich people, kind of do what American oligarchs did in the late part of the 19th and early 20th century when they did things like the Carnegie Library.
You know, they funded these vast things that were good for Americans, you know, leaving aside the question of corporate oligarchs, at least they put back into the country.
Whereas now, the oligarch class in this country just flaunts its gratuitous, egregious, theft wealth, you know, with one $120,000 McMansion after the next and yachts and lavish lifestyles, thumbing their nose and rubbing our faces in it.
Yeah, yeah.
And to make it clear, you know, when you look at somebody like Henry Ford who had his issues,
He wanted to make sure that his workers could afford to buy the product that he has.
Who's going to buy these products when they replace all of us with robots?
That's what their goal is.
They replace everybody with robots.
And I said when Trump did his tax cut in 2017, because it was all targeted towards corporations,
and he was going to incentivize them to bring to onshore manufacturing.
I said, that's not going to happen until they've got the robots to replace the workers.
I said that's why they've got the open border immigration
and once they have robots to that point
they'll get tough on immigration
and they will pay these oligarchs
a lot of money to bring factories back
but it's not going to bring back any jobs
they're just going to be incentivized to build the factories
and they'll brag about the fact that they've got manufacturing
in the United States but they won't be using it
to raise a standard of living of anybody
and I think that's really what is happening
and what it's going to happen.
I think so too, and I'd like to focus on
something that you mentioned, which has to do with that word
about owning things.
They're not concerned about that.
It's not that they're, oh, well,
how are people going to be able to afford
these $50,000 vehicles that they're pushing out right now?
They know that the end goal is for you to not own the vehicle.
Exactly.
The end goal is for you to rent the ride,
to rent everything, you know, sort of like the way
that you pay for a streaming service
so that you can watch TV.
That's what they want.
Serial debt.
They want to completely disconnect us,
the typical average American,
from owning anything in order to control everything.
It isn't like they didn't tell us.
They constantly say, you will own nothing, right?
Yes.
And I thought about you this way.
It's why I wanted to get you back on
because I thought,
yeah, I haven't talked to Eric for a while.
I saw that Porsche was having problems,
and Porsche, of course, owned by VW,
and the two of them are having to pull back because they can't sell their EVs.
And I remember, I said, and I talked to the audience, I said, yeah, Eric's been saying this for the longest time.
They should have hired him as CEO of Porsche.
They wouldn't have this issue because you knew.
And, of course, common sense would tell us that they have a huge advantage, these companies that have been making internal combustion engines for a long time.
They had a huge advantage to China or to other potential competitors.
that had to be destroyed by saying, no, now we can't use internal combustion engines.
We're going to have to do the skates of the EVs.
And China's got the advantage with the battery technology.
They've also got now a manufacturing advantage in terms of cheap, available energy.
Energy is so expensive.
In the UK, they're shutting down all their manufacturing.
And in Germany, it's very expensive.
They can't be cost competitive with it.
But now they're saying, hey, we're going to have to pull back a little bit.
We've malinvested billions of.
of dollars in the EV industry, nobody wants these things, nobody's buying it.
So now we're going to have to pull back and try to have a cottage industry of maybe being
allowed to sell some internal combustion engines.
But it's going to break the back if it's even allowed of these, if they even allow them
to sell a few boutique things to the rich, it's still going to break their back.
It will.
And this is a general problem.
Stalantis, which is the parent company of the Dodge, Ram, Jeep, and Chrysler brand announced
about a week ago that they were not going to produce the electric version of the Ram 1500 pickup
that they had planned to bring out in 2026 because they understand that it would be a disaster
that nobody's going to buy it. And so rather than just build these things and then shipping
them to dealers where they're just going to sit and then having to give them away at fire sale
prices, which is what Ford's had to do with the lightning. They figured this smart thing to do
is to cut bait. You know, they've practically destroyed the Dodge brand already by getting rid of the
engine in the charger and getting rid of the challenger altogether and replacing it with this electric
charger which has been an epic flop i mean it is even worse than the ads disaster back in the back in
the 50s and it hasn't been marked on but i mean it's that bad they can't sell these things i have yet to see
one in the wild i have yet to see one on the road uh they haven't even sent me one to review yet uh
because you know they're it's not just that they're short range and all the other problems that
that electric vehicles have, it's not well made.
It's a problematic problem-prone vehicle that suffers endless glitches, such as bricking,
to the point where they have to send out a technician to try to figure out why it won't move.
Now, the other thing is that you brought up, I find this endlessly fascinating with regard to
portion, these other manufacturers that are no longer run by car people,
because any car guy would tell you that a Porsche, there are intangibles when it comes to
a car like that.
It's not just about how quickly it goes to zero to 60.
That's right.
You know, they're fatal error in thinking, well, we'll just basically produce a Tesla that looks like a Porsche, essentially.
You know, and somehow we'll sell that feeling to understand that one of the big reasons that people buy Porsche is because they love that six-cylinder boxer engine.
And they love the sound that it makes and the emotional, visceral feeling that you get that is lost entirely.
Electric vehicles are fundamentally homogenous.
Say what you will about, you know, oh, well, they're quiet and this and that.
But they're fundamentally, when you drive one, you've driven them all.
You know, some quicker than others.
And don't they, does Porsche and some of these other sports car companies, when they make their EVs, do they take the Tesla approach in terms of instrumentation?
Because that's one of the things that is also a part of the field.
You know, how do the controls feel?
Does it feel solid or tensey?
I hate the idea that I've got to use a touchscreen while I'm driving.
How is that safe?
You know, you're supposed to use hands off of your phone or we'll give you a ticket.
But, hey, it's a wonderful thing if we take all the controls, even on a Tesla.
Tesla, you can't even adjust the direction of the air vents without using the touchpad that is
attached to the dashboard. Yep, and they're all doing it now. Right now in the driveway, I have a
brand new 2026 Kia Sportage, which is a nothing special little crossover that stickers for about
$28,000. And it's got a full-width single sheet LCD screen for everything, you know, the main
instrument cluster. And then off to its right is the thing that you have to tap and swipe through
in order to operate functions such as, you know, changing the station that you're listening
to. And you're right. And it's just an illustration of how disingenuous the government is, because
on the one hand, they say to people, oh, you can't use your cell phone while you're driving
because it's dangerous to be looking at your phone and swiping and tapping a screen while
you're trying to drive. You can't keep your eyes on the road. But it's no problem if you
build the thing into the car. Yeah. It's okay. We need to have some controls that I have to take
my seatbelt off in order to use, right? Yeah. So one of the, you know, to get back to circle back to
what we were talking about, the great disaster, in my opinion, and it's another one, is that
this homogeneity of appearance in the interior of cars that has been, that has been bequeathed to us
by this obsession with reproducing the smartphone in your car, the look of a smartphone.
So now you've lost that individuality, too. Instead of having this kind of neat array of
gauges, a really good example of this. A couple of weeks ago, I had the latest Mini Cooper.
And it used to be that one of the cool things about the Mini Cooper, which is owned by the Germans,
It's owned by BMW, but nonetheless, was that they replicated the feel, the look, and the function of the 60s minis.
You know, if you've ever been in one of the old models, they had the cool little chrome toggle switches, you know, and it had that vibe to it, that feel, and it was like no other car.
Well, they did what everybody else is doing, and they got rid of essentially all of the physical tactile controls, the switches and knobs.
And in lieu of that, they put one gigantic pie plate touchscreen, you know, in the middle and the center of the, and it looks cheap.
It looks homogenous, and it's also in a way, in my opinion, it's anti-human, it's antiseptic, it's cold.
And I think they shut down the last UK factory for the mini BMW did.
Am I correct?
I think they just shut it down.
I'm not sure not to look, but I wouldn't be surprised.
I saw something because, again, you can't do manufacturing in the U.S.
because Harris-Starmer, the Nazi, doesn't want you to have any energy.
So they shut it down.
I don't think, you know, it was an article out of the U.S.
And they were saying, you know, this is something that was fundamentally British, as you point about.
Very idiosyncratic.
And now it's not going to be made anymore in Britain because of the cost of energy that's there.
Yeah, if nothing survives any longer except the brand.
You know, that's what you get.
You get the label.
But, you know, inside blocks is all the same.
When you talk about the design of these cars and how we've lost so much of this, around this area, you know, we're not too far away from.
Pigeon Forge.
And last week, they just had a big classic car show.
And that's when it really hits home.
You know, when you see one of these cars, which you never really valued, I mean,
it might have just been like a family sedan or something, you know, 50 years ago.
But you look at it, it's like, wow, that's really quirky.
That's kind of interesting looking.
Look at those colors, you know, and all the rest of the stuff.
Look at the colors.
Look at the chrome.
It really is entertaining to see cars that were just ordinary cars or ordinary trucks a half a
century ago, to see them and to see how different they were and how unique they all were.
And so it really kind of drives at home here in the Pigeon Forge area.
They have these car shows that happen frequently.
The big one was last weekend.
They had that.
But you got some articles at Eric Petersotos.com about some of the difficulties of keeping these older
cars running.
Talk about ethanol blues.
What's that about?
Oh, boy. Yeah, I have to, as the saying goes in the hood, cop to something, which is embarrassing for me because, you know, I shouldn't, of all people, this should not have happened to me.
But I was lazy one day, and this is several months back, probably about eight months ago,
when I was out driving my old muscle car, I have a 76 Trans Am,
and rather than go all the way into town where they have a station that sells unadulterated, pure gasoline,
which is normally what I use to fill the car up with, because it sits sometimes for, you know,
I get preoccupied with work and other things.
Sometimes the car, unfortunately, will sit for several months before I have time to drive it.
Anyway, I filled it up with E10, which is only 90,
percent gas and 10 percent ethanol. And I left it to sit. And it sat for about three months.
God help me. I, you know, I deserve to be beaten for that. Anyway, I went to, I went to start it.
And boy, I barely got it to run. And it was going, you know, smoke pouring out of it.
And long story short, I ended up having to take the carburetor off the engine and completely disassemble it and
clean out the ethanol gunk inside the carburetor because the fuel had gone bad over the time.
that I kept it in storage, basically.
And this is a problem with these older vehicles, because my car was made in 1976.
And in 1976, when you bought gas, you actually got gas for your money, 100% gasoline.
Most people don't understand that most pump gas is 10% ethanol alcohol.
And if you own a vehicle that was made before that came into being, that vehicle was not designed
for alcohol.
Alcohol is a different fuel than gasoline.
It has different properties.
It attracts water, among other things.
corrosive. Does it degrade faster than pure gasoline then, I guess? It does. That's what you're
saying? Because pure gasoline will degrade as well, right? But a much longer period of time.
Yeah, anybody who has outdoor power equipment knows the real problem is if you put
ethanol in a gas jug, let's say, and you put it in your shed and leave it, you know,
it'll tend to accumulate water much more rapidly than regular gasoline. And you can also look at the
color, the change in the color. And as it starts to go from almost translucent to sort of a yellow
and then a darker yellow color.
And that's a clue not to use it, by the way.
Well, that's interesting.
You also talk about oil and additives in the oil that are different now for the older cars.
Oh, yeah, it's not just the additives.
Again, to get circling back to the Trans Am.
After I cleaned out the gunk from the carburetor and got it running well again,
I recognized, oh, boy, it's time to change the oil.
So I went down to the auto parts store, and I looked at the rack of oil.
And the rack of oil is, you know, it's the whole width of the store.
they have all kinds of different oil but they didn't have any 1040 anymore you know and and my car
when it was made was designed to have 1040 oil so that's what specified and that's what i used there's
a reason why there's a specification you know and generally speaking it's sound policy to follow
what the specification is the manual yeah yeah but you know if you've been to it if you've been
to a car of parts store lately and looked at the oil rack you'll see all these exotic formulations
you know zero w 50 this and that because they they thinned out the oil because it helps with
compliance. You know, this is, this is, again, it offers the manufacturers this incremental
friction reduction, which translates into slightly higher gas miles, not anything you would notice
as a vehicle owner, but when you factor it out over, say, half a million vehicles that you
build, then it helps corporate average fuel economy with the compliance with that federal
requirement. And it also helps with emissions. And, you know, this is the obsession now that the
manufacturers have. It's compliance. Their primary customer now is the government, not you. You know,
you're sort of an incidental person comes along to buy what the government says you're allowed
to have. That's right. That's right. Because the government will put them out of business if they
don't please the government. And so that is their primary customer. In many cases, the only
customer that they care about is the government. That's really what's going on with social media
and with YouTube, I think, isn't it? It is. And so long story short, I ended up having to go online
to find a good high quality 1040 for my old muscle car. Now, previously, I'd also had to go online
to get, there's an additive. It generally is, it goes by the acronym ZDDP, and it's essentially
a zinc-manganese additive. And it used to be present in all the store-bought motor oils, but they
began to take it out, and now there's a much less of that additive in store-bought motor oil.
If you have a new or late-model vehicle, it doesn't matter. The engine was designed for that,
but if you have an older vehicle, particularly an older American vehicle with what's called a
flat tap at camshaft. So essentially, an American car made before the early,
early 80s with a V8 engine typically, it's important that you use that additive.
You know, if you're going to be somebody to go, if you're going to go out and buy one of
those classic cars from that era, it's something to be aware of because if you don't use that
additive, you risk valve train failure. The camshaft and lifters in those engines were designed
to have that anti-friction additive in it. And if you use regular oil, you're very likely
to have a problem that you don't want to have. What about the aftermarket?
Let's say that you have some problems because you didn't have the right.
oil and fuel and things like that. How difficult is it to get parts for these things? I'm sure
it varies depending on how rare your car is, but just something is kind of in the middle or
something, maybe like a, you know, a 50s Chevy or something like that. Do they have much
of an aftermarket for parts with that? Yeah, particularly with mechanical things. One of the great
pluses of owning, say, a General Motors product or a forward product from that era is that they
They shared mechanical things, engines, you know, an engine like a small block Chevy was used in practically every model vehicle that Chevrolet made, you know, from the 50s through the 60s, 70s, and 80s.
And so there is a robust and abundant aftermarket as well as used market for those kinds of parts.
You'll have sometimes difficulty finding trim pieces, you know, for an oddball make, you know, say it was a one-year vehicle where they only had that grill for that one year.
I have that issue because my 70 plates is a unique front end for that for that year.
So, yeah, sometimes, you know, these cosmetic parts will be more difficult to find.
But generally, if you pick a popular vehicle that was made in large numbers from that era,
you're not going to have any difficulty finding the necessary parts that you have to have in order to keep the vehicle serviceable and running.
That's interesting, yeah.
Because like I said, certainly you see a lot of classic cars right here.
Yeah, I guess if you had an Edsel and you got your horse collar grill dinged, that'd be a little bit difficult.
You can keep that going.
One of the great examples of Volkswagen Beetle, you know, to this day, you can easily find any part that you need to keep a beetle running.
So, you know, that's a great choice if you just want a very basic simple, completely analog, non-digital, non-data mining, non-connected car that anybody can service.
If they're, you know, willing to turn a screwdriver or a wrench and have basic hand tools, that's a great choice.
Yeah, yeah.
I know there's a huge aftermarket for the Mazas, especially the first generation of Mazda that's out there.
They're even doing full restorations, or at least were, for a short period of time.
I don't know if they are still doing it now.
It was a couple of years ago.
They were doing full factory spec restorations in Japan.
They would do it in Japan.
And the factory itself was doing it.
Mazda was doing it.
I don't know if they're still doing that or not.
Now, you got an article, and I'm reaching back now the beginning of August, Pontiacs were cool.
I thought they were as well.
I was just so amazed that when they decided they're going to get rid of, you know,
of an entire make that they kept Buick and got rid of Pontiac.
I thought that was really strange because Buick was always perceived as kind of an older person's car or it was a family car, something like that, where as Pontiacs had kind of a sporty panache to them, right?
Yep.
Well, there's a reason for that.
For whatever reason, Buicks are immensely popular in China, and that's where they're built.
Believe it or not, GM sells a ton of Buick's in China where it's considered kind of a status vehicle to have.
and all the Buick's they sell here are made in China.
Is that right?
Yeah, we used to use Buick.
We used that as an euphemism for throwing up.
We'd say someone says in the bathroom selling Buicks.
Now, what's really sad, though, with regard to Pontiac,
and Pontiac's just one example of many,
is that you had a once distinctive brand.
In effect, Pontiac actually was literally a car company at one time.
It wasn't a marketing company.
It actually had an engineering staff,
and they engineered their engines,
which were different than Chevy engines.
So when you bought a Pontiac, you weren't just buying a rebadged Chevy.
There may have been commonality of the underlying platform,
but it was a fundamentally different car.
I'll again refer to my own car.
A 76 Pontiac Transam is a very different car than a 76 Camero.
Even though they share a common under thing, the drive frames are different,
and that makes it worth buying the Pontiac.
You know, it's not that one's better or worse.
It's simply that it is different.
And GM actually allowed Pontiac for a great,
deal of time to be sort of the raucous, you know, go get them brand, you know, that had
performance and style and attitude.
Yeah.
Kind of like what Dodge was before Stalantus ruined everything.
Yeah.
You know, they just had this great reputation for, you know, not just crude muscle cars,
but cool muscle cars.
It had some panache to them, you know, like Catalinas and Grand Prix and, of course, the GTOs
and everything, which were a little bit more refined than, say, something like a Chival
SS, which is a great car.
but it's, it's not the same thing as a GTO.
Right, right, yeah, yeah.
And they just hollowed all of this out, and this was, by the way, I think,
the first wave of casualties from compliance.
The reason that Pontiac ended up dying was because General Motors was under enormous
pressure to try to figure out how to get these different brands, Pontiac Buick, Oldsmobile,
all their different divisions that had different engines.
Each one of those engines had to be certified independently by the federal government
as being in compliance with,
the stuff. That costs a lot of money. So General Motors made the decision, well, what we're
going to do is corporatize. We're going to just put Chevrolet built engines in pretty much everything
that we sell. They did this beginning in the 80s. And that way, they only had to certify
the Chevrolet engine, which they could put in a Pontiac and a Buick and an Oldsmobile, which is
what they did. But by doing that, they just gutted any reason for having a Pontiac or an
Oldsmobile or even a Buick. All you're getting is a re-skinned Chevy with the identical
drive train. Over and over again, I tell people, you know, the real problem with industry and
manufacturing and innovation in the United States is the government. They are the biggest
obstacle. They are far more destructive of jobs and manufacturing than any company
abroad or any country abroad. All this stuff about tariffs is a misdirection away from
the true source of the problem, which is government regulation. And even when they're talking about
the housing crisis. Some people are talking about how expensive houses have become because of
government regulation. But the government's not talking about doing anything with that. They're
talking about playing some financialization games in terms of interest rates or subsidies or this or
that, but they're not going to do anything about the overregulation and all the green
mandates that are there. Trump will go to the UN and he'll say, you're destroying your country
with all this green stuff and everything, but he won't take those regulations off of cars or
homes so we can't have nice things anymore. That's correct. We have become as a culture so
habituated to the government being involved in these things. And really, I think that's the
bone of the matter. Why is the government involved in car design? Yeah. You know, a good example
of this is, you know, I wrote an article about Ralph Nader a couple of weeks ago and the
Corvair and his allegations about the Corvair being unsafe. This is a matter for the courts. If the
car is unsafe, effective in some way, that can be handled in tort claims. That's the
way these things ought to be handled. Instead of this broad brush, one size fits all of the federal
government decree, you know, you will have this particular safety standard. And it doesn't matter
what, you know, what side effects that safety standard has, even if it ends up being less safe.
A good example of that being in the mid-70s, they imposed a roof-crush standard on the industry.
You know, the vehicle had to be able to support the weight of the vehicle if it got turned upside down.
So as a result of that, you've got these gigantic A, B, and C pillars. Those are the things that support the roof,
B-pillars at the base of the shield, B in the middle, and C in the back.
Instead of being, you know, these thin and graceful things that you could easily look around
and you had this expansive view of the outside world around you, now you're essentially
in a tank.
You know, I drive new cars all the time.
It feels like you're in a tank.
You have essentially no visibility often to the right and to the left because of this enormous
B-pillar that's there to support the weight of the vehicle if you roll it over.
The problem is now when you pull out from a side street, you're likely to get, get
key-boned because that thing is, it created a bad blind spot.
You didn't see the car that was coming at you from the side.
That's right.
Yeah, I agree.
You know, how did we wind up still being able to keep convertibles with that?
I know I've got all my convertibles.
I've got some really huge A-pillars on them, but.
Very cleverly.
Like, you know, with regard to some of them, you know, with Mazda, the Miata, as you know,
they built a roll bar into the backs of the seats, basically.
That was one way that they did it.
And some of the manufacturers took that a step farther with pop-up roll bars.
You know, Mercedes did that with some of their high-end convertibles.
And they also managed to reinforce the structure of the windshield in a way that made it supportive of the vehicle if it were to roll over.
But, you know, it's just the point is the government's involvement in this stuff is just so insufferably obnoxious.
And to put a finer point on it, you know, we talk about the government as if it's sort of this entity out there.
And I like to point out to be, what you're really talking about is a relative handful of micromanaged.
bureaucrats who are the weevils within these regulatory bodies you know go to the DOT or
NHTSA how many people work there a few thousand so you've got a few thousand people in these regulatory
bodies who are dictating to 330 million people you know the design of the cars that they're allowed
to have yeah exactly right i just you know and and we have spineless politicians who let the
bureaucrats rule over us and never do anything to push back against them that's by design you know
they've offloaded this they'll say Congress in particular they'll say well we I can't do anything
about it because the you know the bureaucracy is yeah responsible for this right but they're the ones
that offloaded their responsibility under the constitution to legislate you know there's legislation
and there's regulation and regulation has the force and effect of law and yet it's not voted for
which means there's accountability you know you can't out you can't vote out of office an EPA
apparatchik you know and they claim that they're not responsible for it even though it should point out
they delegate this to them, then, you know, if something gets really bad and there's a huge
outroar, uproar about that, then they can come in and say, okay, we're going to save you from
these bad guys, the regulators. So it's a very calculated political ploy, isn't it?
And I think we got, do we have a couple of comments or questions for him?
Hi, Eric, good to talk to you.
Travis here. We've got citizen Robert de Kaka says, Eric, he'd like you to speak on the fact
they're trying to pass legislation, so you'd be able to insure a car that's over 25.
years old, which is just utterly ridiculous because, of course, we know that 25 years ago
all cars were death traps. People were dying left and right. It's only within the past few years
that the cars have become safe at all, and people can drive them without living in constant fear.
Yeah. And along that same line, Eric, California, just, you know, they wanted to,
it's missions, I think, that they had there, and it was like a 35-year moving average,
and they were trying to adjust that a little bit. And they shut it. And they shut it.
it down. It was a huge blow. It was Jay Leno's law. Maybe you heard about that. Purely punitive and
vindictive. Yeah. Leno, I think, learned a valuable lesson. You know, I think he in his innocence
might have believed that rational considerations and reasonable considerations might cause the California
legislature and regulatory apparatus to agree that, yeah, you know, vehicles that are 35 years old
are a very small minority of the vehicles that are in use as daily transportation. And so, yeah,
exempt them as most states do from having to go in from emissions testing. This is purely punitive
because they want to push these cars off the road. And it's particularly egregious in California
because it's not even a matter of whether you pass the tailpipe sniffer test, you know, when you
bring your car into the inspection station and they put the probe in the tailpipe. And in most
states, if it passes that, you pass and you get your sticker. In California, it doesn't matter
whether you pass the tailpipe sniffer test if any of the factory original emissions equipment has
been tampered with, altered, or removed. Now, what that means, you're talking about the 35-year-old
car, or how about a 50-year-old car, and maybe the original smog pump or EGR system had to be
replaced because it's a 35-year-old vehicle. Well, what if there is no aftermarket replacement?
And more finally, in California, every aftermarket replacement has to have a California Air
Resources Board number, a certification that it's been approved by car. So if it doesn't have that,
even if everything works, and even if the emissions are within spec, they will still fail to
vehicle on the basis of failing the visual and not having the car approved replacement part.
So this is purely, purely punitive and vindictive. And I do see this sort of thing expanding.
You know, they're going to start targeting the cars and they're going to say, we can't permit
vehicles that don't have the latest advanced driver assistance technology to be on the road,
you know, because of the threat that they present and the people are going to die. That's the sort
of thing that I foresee that they're going to start doing in the next few years.
Oh, yeah. Yeah. And it's kind of interesting, too, because
When I was doing modifications to Mamiata about seven years ago, the companies, I was getting the aftermarket parts on, which were taking those parts that you just mentioned and pitching them completely.
But they were based in California.
And I thought, you know, this is kind of interesting.
They can't sell their own product.
Even at that time, many of their things were not carb compliant, and they couldn't sell them to people who lived in California, only to people who lived outside of California.
But it's getting much, much worse.
I know, you know, a common thread that runs through all of this is that there's no requirement that tangible harm be produced, in other words, a victim.
A really fine example of this is the crucification of Volkswagen, and I revisited that issue recently in a column.
It's been about 10 years now since Volkswagen got raked over the coals for cheating on federal emission certification tests.
Yes.
And, you know, at the time, and even to this day, I continue to ask, well, who was hurt by any of this?
all the only thing that happened was that the government was affronted you know Volkswagen like every other
vehicle manufacturer programmed its vehicles to pass the test that's the whole point that they made it so
they would pass it and not only this is an important point not just the federal emissions certification
tests nobody ever disputed these vehicles when they were bought and put into service and in states
where people had to go to get emissions testing you know at the state level and get the tailpipe probe put in
they all passed the only the only car fluffle happened after this independent life
lab subjected the cars to an entirely different test that found that under certain operating
conditions, oh my gosh, the vehicle will emit slightly higher, fractionally higher amounts of
oxides of nitrogen, which is a regulated emission for EPA.
And the amount was minuscule.
It was literally a fraction of a fraction.
In other words, something that was meaningless in terms of whether it was hurting anybody.
It didn't matter.
It was so draconian.
You and I talked about this many times.
It was so draconian that it was clear that it wasn't about what they said it was about.
It was really about, as we said, getting rid of diesel.
I mean, they had criminal charges against executives.
There was something like $4 billion, if I remember correctly.
It was outrageous what they were doing.
We talked about that, how you didn't see anything at all like that with the Takata airbags
that were blowing up spontaneously and killing people.
Or with the Pinto, you know, and the deliberate exclusion of some devices that we keep that
explosion from happening.
So it was something
what we'd never seen before,
even when human
lives were at stake,
and there was nobody that was harmed
by any of this stuff.
Well, the reason why they did it,
though, it wasn't just that it was
diesel. It was that Volkswagen
uniquely was selling a lineup
of very affordable diesels
as recently as 2015.
You know, it's 10 years ago, not even.
You could have bought a brand new Volkswagen
Jetta with a TDI engine for about $22,000.
Now, that whole car
had a 700 mile driving range and would get 50 plus miles per gallon on the highway
and could probably be counted on to go for 300,000 miles or more.
Now, it's a curious coincidence, isn't it,
that around the same time the Volkswagen started getting raked over the coals
over this emissions cheating thing,
that's when the big push for EVs began, right around that time.
That's right.
And I think the reason that they went after Volkswagen was because they could not abide
the comparison.
You know, on the one hand, $22,000 jet a TDI,
700 mile range, refill it in three minutes, keep it for 20 years, drive it for 300,000 miles.
On the other hand, Tesla Model 3, $50,000 car that goes maybe 270 miles and is going to need
a new $15,000 battery after eight years. It just would have been a harder sell. So they had to go
after Volkswagen. I think if Volkswagen had continued making engines like that, other manufacturers
would have started to do the same. In fact, Chevy did. Chevrolet, you could get a Malibu diesel
for a little while there.
And other manufacturers would have done it because it's appealing.
I mean, I like the idea of a brand new $22,000 car that gets 50-something miles per gallon, 700 miles.
You know, diesel is great.
You know, it's a wonderful option for people who want a durable, long-legged, long-lived vehicle.
So naturally, they had to take that away from us.
Yeah, it checked all the boxes in terms of competition with the electric vehicles.
As you point out, it's like durability, reliability, affordability, range.
It was all there.
so I had to go
really had to go
they've got an agenda
and they don't want you
to have something
that you can afford
they don't want you
to have a long range
because they want to keep you
on a short rope
with their smart city
and they're probably geofencing
to make sure that you can't buy anything
outside of your approved city
and that type of thing
it's just amazing
it's a really important thing
for people to understand
and it's a difficult thing to understand
because the undercurrent of malevolence
that's there is difficult for most people
to come to grips with, but it's almost axiomatic that you cannot have an authoritarian system
in which people are still free to move about as they like on their own initiative, in their own vehicle,
unsupervised, unmonitored, and uncontrolled.
In order for them to impose a truly authoritarian system on Americans,
they have got to get control over transportation and particularly personal transportation.
And when you filter everything that's going on through that, everything becomes comprehensible.
That's right. I tell people all the time. The TSA is a transportation security agency, right? It's not the airport security agency. And they want to do that they want to eliminate the private vehicles so that everything becomes like the airport. If you like that, certainly you'll be able to keep the authoritarian government. If you like your authoritarian government, you can keep it or they'll keep it for you.
With something like geofencing and the Teslas, they can just simply section you off, say,
Oh, no, your car just simply will not go there.
You try turning that way.
No, we're going to autopilot you back into your safe zone.
That's right.
You're not allowed over here.
You're not allowed to go this far.
And you won't have enough range really to get out of there anyway.
It's a 15-minute city.
That's about how creepy it is.
And it's incredible how blasé so many Americans are.
They think, even if they're aware of it, they will say, oh, well, that would never happen.
They would never do that to us.
Yeah.
You know, Eric, about 10 years ago, I went to an auto show in Texas.
I did a report.
Yeah, Long Star Roundup. It's a real big classic show, and I think it's got to be an American-made car, and it's got to be, they don't include the, it's got to be older than the Mustangs, older than 64, 65, there's a cutoff, right? So they didn't want to take it at that point. But there's a lot of modification to them and a lot of rat rods that are out there, you know, really grungy cars that people kept going and modern.
I went around and I talked to all these people and they were all different ages, you know, people had cars there.
They were 17 or 18 years old that they had fixed up up to people who retirees.
And I asked them all, do you think the government is going to make private cars go away and gasoline cars go away?
Oh yeah, they all said.
And to a man, they pretty much all said, including like 17 and 8 year olds, it'll never happen in my lifetime.
It's like, man, the disconnect that was there at that time was just that that was the most, you know, the cars are interesting.
but the most interesting thing was how these people had lied to themselves about the government's
intentions and its abilities to rob them of their mobility. It truly is amazing.
The intentions were always there. I think the technology has made it much more feasible to fast-track
things. Yeah. They would not have been able to do what they had wanted to do for 50 years,
you know, back in the 80s, 90s, or even the early 2000s. But now, particularly within the last 10 years,
they have now got the ability to utterly and completely control vehicles to a degree that most people would not believe until they have to deal with it.
You know, I give various examples.
One is the illusion that you have in a modern car that you're controlling how fast you drive, you're not.
When you push down on the accelerator pedal, all you're doing is feeding data to the computer.
You're not connected to the engine to a cable system and a throttle any longer.
you're sending data to a computer
and the computer then is telling the engine
okay increase the RPMs or
a certain amount to give you the
illusion that you're the one who's
controlling the car. I had a
Ford Expedition a couple of weeks
ago and I was, this is a big vehicle
big SUV and I'm trying to back the thing up in my
driveway. Now I've lived where I live for 20 years
I know my driveway. There's a
big bush at the one side of my driveway
and I know because again
I've been doing it for 20 years exactly
how far I can back up before I hit
that bush. But the Ford slams on the brakes a couple of feet before I get anywhere near the bush
because, again, safety. But, you know, dig down and to think about what that means, the vehicle can
decide that it's going to stop. Yeah. You know, watch your will. It's going to exercise control.
And bit by bit, they're doing this. I had an article up the other day about this speed limit
assistance technology. I love how they call it assistance technology. Like, you didn't know you were
driving faster than the speed limit. And now the car is full, oh, thank you so much car for telling
me that I'm driving faster than the speed limit. And, you know, first they try to shame you.
There's a little icon that pops up in the dashboard that shows a speed limit sign. And it goes
red. You know, you're driving faster than the speed limit. And sometimes there's a chime that
accompanies it. And this is weirdly standard now on all the vehicles. Why is that? You know,
it's not optional for people who need assistance. If I need assistance, oh, I love that. I'll buy some
assistance. No, they're making it standard because what they're doing is in classic Fabian
socialist style, slowly bit by bit, you know, getting people used to this stuff. And the next
step will be not just assisting you to know that you're driving faster than the speed limit,
it will be preventing you from driving any faster than the speed limit by using the drive-by-wire
throttle, by using the electrically controlled braking system to prevent you from doing it.
And what they're doing with that is making driving such a, it's no longer fun. You feel like
you're guaranteed, you feel like you're a kindergartner again. And that's the,
They want you to just say, you know, the heck with it.
Why am I signing up for a $700 a month loan for the next six years?
I don't even control the car.
The car nags me and pesters me all the time.
It tells me what to do.
The heck with it.
I'm just going to get my app on my phone and I'll, you know, tap it and I'll get my ride.
That's right.
Yeah, the comedian, British comedian, Ron Atkinson,
who plays Mr. Bean, okay.
He was an engineer before he became a comedian.
And he's got a lot, he loves cars.
And he's got a lot of very expensive high.
cars and he said well you don't really drive these so much as you manage them because there's so
much drive-by-wire stuff in it and I remember when Michael Hastings was killed and I think he was
killed I don't think it was an accident and he was he had rented a late model Mercedes when that
happened and he was he thought the people were after him with the government because of what he was
reporting on he had a lot of death threats from the government and so he went out to his car
His landlady said, he would go out to the car and he'd look underneath it and all this other kind of stuff to see if there was some kind of a bomb on it.
But when you have the, when the computer is able to control your acceleration, you're braking, your steering, and all these other things, it's very, very easy to assassinate somebody that way.
And they have illustrated over and over again at the Black Hack Conference in Vegas how easy it is to hack one of these cars as well because they're also online.
So everything is under computer control, and it's also online, so any bad actor, especially the government, can jump into this thing and do whatever they wish.
They can shut you down, or if they want to, they can try to make it look like it was an accident.
This is the type of thing we've been seeing for a long time.
Yeah, you had your article when you're talking about the insurance, when will people decide to stop paying?
And you talk about the fact that you've got an antique car.
You drive it 300 miles a year and stay within about a 10-mile rate.
of your home in rural Virginia and why should you have to pay insurance for that that should
be your decision for that but of course it is this corporate government fascism that we see
over and over again where they force you to buy their product isn't it it is and now they are
using using insurance to price people out of vehicle ownership yeah every you probably
have this happened to you as well has had their premium increase by on average 25 to 30
percent and in some cases 50 percent or more for absolutely no reason having to do with anything they
did in terms of having an accident filing a claim anything or even a speeding ticket you get the
notice in the mail and all of a sudden your premium is you know double what it was the year prior why
because they can you know because you have the option to say no imagine what a cup of coffee would
cost if the government said you have to go to Starbucks you invest in a cup of Starbucks coffee
at least once a week you know we'd be paying $10 for a cup of coffee at Starbucks
That's exactly where we are, isn't it?
That's essentially where we are with this.
And we are getting to a point, you know, I have my ear to the ground about things like this,
and it's also my own personal opinion, that everybody's feeling pinched because of the cost of everything.
Everything's going up and they don't include it in the valuation of inflation either, do they?
No.
And so, you know, when it comes down to a choice between, you know, obeying the law and handing a check over to these insurance mobsters
for a large sum of money that could be used to pay your electric bill or, you know,
know for your family what's the choice well probably a lot of people are going to say you know what
i'm going to buy food for my family instead of sending this check to all state or geico yeah yeah and
so what you know i mean the the illegal aliens can with impunity because they you know they can't
they can't get blood out of a stone can they they don't have any access to seize so and i'm not
i'm really i'm not i'm not i'm not disparaging people who are in that category because i understand
people are trying to improve their lives and all of that just trying to make the point that
there are no consequences for those people
if they want to go out and drive without insurance
and hit you and wreck you, they'll walk away from it
and the state will do nothing about it, but you and I,
we don't hit anybody. You know, we haven't caused any
problems for anybody, but we didn't hand over the money
to the mobsters. They'll cancel your driver's license.
They'll cancel your registration. And if they catch you
driving, they'll impound your vehicle and potentially
arrest you for it. Yes, absolutely right. Yeah, you're absolutely
right. That's the way it works. It's a two-tier
standard already in many different areas that we
got in this country. Well, we're at a time. It's always great having you on, Eric. Anything you
want to tell us about what's happening with your website? Oh, well, nothing more than what's on
there. You know, I posted an article this morning that's more of a thought piece about how we're all
kind of in this bad marriage situation in this country. Yeah, Trump is the guy who has bad
marriages. He specializes in that, doesn't he? Isn't it interesting that for the most part,
most people will say, okay, you know, if you have a situation where a couple just can't work it out,
They're at odds.
You know, nobody would say, well, they have to stay married and be miserable for the rest of their lives.
People accept that sometimes marriages don't work and, you know, there's a divorce.
It's not a happy thing.
But it's better than forcing people who can't live together to live together.
Well, politically somehow that seems to be off the table.
Why is that?
You know, we're at a point in this country with the left, right, and just people who want to be left alone chiefly versus those who won't leave people alone.
Why can't we just figure out a way to peacefully separate ourselves and that way end this fractiousness, you know?
And just instead of going to blows with each other, and that includes blows at the ballot box and trying to constantly figure out a way to elect our guy, to impose our will on the other side, how about we just figure out a way to go our own way and live and let live?
The problem is that probably half the country doesn't want to live and let live.
Yeah, I've talked about that.
You know, if you look at the Scandinavian countries, they have split apart and joined together in various combinations many times.
And, you know, they would peacefully join together, peacefully break apart.
was never a war over it. We don't have a government like that. You know, when Marjorie Taylor
Green started talking about having a national divorce, I said, yeah, the problem is, is that we're
married to an abusive spouse who, once he finds out that we want to divorce him, he's going to come
kill us, you know? Yep. I've got a picture that I recurrently used because I think it's very
pithy and it says it all. And it's a picture of Abraham Lincoln. And the caption reads,
if you try to leave me, I'll kill you. Yeah, that's right. Yeah, the ultimate abusive head of
household. That's exactly the case. Especially in a country that was formed over the right of
secession and self-government. That was the basis of America's existence from the very beginning.
How could you deny that to somebody? I'm always all about secession. And I would say,
if at first you don't secede, try, try again. That would be my motto for it. It's a safety valve,
and everybody should be on board with that. Of course, there is one other thing we can do. And
people at 10th Amendment Center have talked about this a lot. There is another avenue of this,
and that is nullification. That is kind of the middle point. You know, we say, well, we're just
going to ignore what you have to say. So there is nullification and non-commandeering, and short of,
and that effectively can allow you to secede issue by issue if you've got people at the state level
who have the backbone to do that type of thing, and that's the big if we don't, because they're all on
to take. I don't think that we're going to get this country back until we have a catastrophic
economic system that's going to destroy the ability of our government with U.S. dollars or
reserve currency to just print money out of thin air. Until that disappears, we're going to have
this same type of situation. We do have one power under our control, and it is to simply not
participate, to opt out on our own. You know, with regard to new cars, if you don't want to be
data mined and controlled, well, don't buy a new car. You know, keep the older car that you have.
get an older car, fix it up.
You know, during the pandemic, don't wear a mask.
Don't go along.
Don't comply.
If enough of us as individuals, you don't have to join an organization, just abide by
in your own moral compass.
And, you know, if this is wrong, I don't like this.
I'm not going along with it.
That's it.
I'm just taking my stand.
I'm not going to be a cattle and go along mooing with the herd just because that's what
the herd does.
Yeah, I've been thrown out of so many different places and restaurants and Texas.
I had to move to Tennessee because I'd promise these people I would never be back
because of the way that they insisted that I wear a mask.
And so I left then, I said, and I won't be back.
And I kept my word by moving to another state.
That's the only way I could do it.
It's always great to have you on Eric.
Eric petersautos.com, folks, a great site for liberty and mobility.
And a little bit of nostalgia now as well,
because that's how the only way we're going to be able to keep our mobility is with classic cars.
you, Eric. Always great talking. Thank you, Travis. Thank you, Eric. Always a pleasure
speaking to you. And before we go, ACSAB, thank you so much for that. We really do
appreciate it. It says, so awesome, D-K and family. Thanks for everything. I wish I could do so much
more. But you're already doing so much, A-C-S-A-B. Thank you. It really is because of your
support that we're able to continue to do this, and we really cannot thank you enough.
Thank you very much, folks. Thank you all very much. God bless you all. Have a wonderful
rest of your day. Yes.
The common man.
They created common core to dumb down our children.
They created common past to track and control us.
Their commons project to make sure the commoners own nothing and the communist future.
They see the common man is simple, unsophisticated, ordinary.
But each of us has worth it.
and dignity created in the image of God.
That is what we have in common.
That is what they want to take away.
Their most powerful weapons are isolation, deception, intimidation.
They desire to know everything about us while they hide everything from us.
It's time to turn that around and expose what they want to hide.
Please share the information and links you'll find at the David Nightshow.com.
Thank you for listening. Thank you for sharing.
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