The David Knight Show - Tue 7Jan25 Trudeau, the Very Model of a WEF Tyrant; Jan6 "Sting" — Many Still Won't Acknowledge THEY Were Stung

Episode Date: January 7, 2025

(2:00) Trudeau Must Go - the very model of a WEF tyrantA look at one of the worst "Covid" lockdown, marxist, and globalist tyrantsWATCH his "lowlights" clips(27:07) The Canadian Bench of WEF & Gl...obalist Puppets - Who Will Replace Trudeau?What is the strategy of the left for his replacement?Will they run their own "Lala Hilarious" — and for what purpose(52:06) LIVE comments (59:07) The Jan6 "Sting" — many still don't acknowledge THEY were the ones stungNearly 1,600 people have been PERSECUTED by Biden and 200 more are on the list, but we should not forget HOW they were set up, WHO set them up, and WHY they were set upSome personal stories of victims(1:32:27) Ukraine is Collapsing Quickly — What Comes Next? (1:40:38) Musk's new rage and his newfound love for the 'F' word and YouTube CEO claims "YouTube is a BASTION of Free Speech"??? (1:46:41) I asked Musk's ChatBot, Grok, to access my "sensitivity and negativity".  Here's how it views me… (1:49:54) LIVE comments (1:49:54) Lala doesn't want us to eat beef but she ate a LOT of crow yesterday as she was the one who had to officially declare Trump the winner in Congress (2:01:43) INTERVIEW Komposite — A Fix For Blockchain LimitationsNoam Krasniansky, founder of Komposite.orgWhat is blockchain and what are its limitations — scalability, high costs, and limited adoption.  Noam has designed a blockchain infrastructure capable of supporting over 3 Million nodes that is more decentralized than the current infrastructure, is more efficient, and has a revenue sharing aspect. In addition, Komposite offers a way to safeguard Brands and helps facilitate the first steps to web3If you would like to support the show and our family please consider subscribing monthly here: SubscribeStar https://www.subscribestar.com/the-david-knight-show Or you can send a donation throughMail: David Knight POB 994 Kodak, TN 37764Zelle: @DavidKnightShow@protonmail.comCash App at: $davidknightshowBTC to: bc1qkuec29hkuye4xse9unh7nptvu3y9qmv24vanh7 Money should have intrinsic value AND transactional privacy: Go to DavidKnight.gold for great deals on physical gold/silver For 10% off Gerald Celente's prescient Trends Journal, go to TrendsJournal.com and enter the code KNIGHTBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-david-knight-show--2653468/support.

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Starting point is 00:00:38 Learn more at toronto.ca slash APS. In a world of deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act. It's the David Knight Show. As the clock strikes 13, it's Tuesday, the 7th of January, Year of Our Lord 2025. Well, I'm going to focus today on Trudeau and some of his highlights, or maybe I should say his lowlights, one of the worst tyrants in the West. And as one outlet said, one of the last of the COVID tyrants to go. Sorry, that's not true. Trump is on his way back, and we don't know who's going to be replacing Trudeau. So we're going to take a look at what might happen with that as well. We have a very concerning situation there in terms of some of the people who might be replacing him on the
Starting point is 00:01:56 liberal side. And we're going to take a look at January the 6th, which we didn't do yesterday. I've covered it so many times. I said yesterday, five years ago. No, it wasn't five years ago. It was four years ago. Feels like I've been fighting it for longer than that. And I did fight all of these lies for five years, all of 2020. We're also going to take a look at Michael Mann, the climate guy, and his, the Michael Manure and the Flat Earth
Starting point is 00:02:26 Society. There's a lot we can learn from what people are afraid of at the turn of the 20th century. We'll be right back. Well, yesterday, during the program, we had Trudeau resign, but then quite, not quite, you know, he left his foot in the door. He didn't leave.
Starting point is 00:02:51 He's not going to leave until they pick a replacement in the Liberal Party. And that's going to happen sometime in March. There will be elections in October. And right now, it looks like Pierre Polyev, I think is the way he pronounces his name, is looking, the conservatives are looking to be way ahead of the liberals because people finally had enough of it. They didn't have enough of it, though, after COVID. That was the thing that surprised me the most.
Starting point is 00:03:22 This is how so many of these COVID tyrants stayed in. And like Trump, how many got reelected? So Babylon Bee reports it, and they combined two different stories from Canada that are tragic. One of them is Trudeau himself. The other one is the escalation of euthanasia. Their so-called MAID program. Yeah, they're killing people left and right in Canada. And so the Babylon Bee says Trudeau will be humanely euthanized.
Starting point is 00:04:02 Amid growing public outcry across the country, the Canadian government announced Trudeau would be humanely euthanized after his resignation. i don't know about his resurrection either that's also in question in accordance with what has become a canadian tradition the old unuseful prime minister will be quietly put out of his misery to prevent him from becoming a burden to his fellow citizens well you can bet that they're not going to be euthanizing the leaders aren't you yeah he said the one person talking about the quoting from the department of euthanasia which they don't have but they might as well with their aid program made program he said we're thankful for trudeau's service and have assured him that he will meet his end peacefully and painlessly it's canadian way eh trudeau said we achieved a lot of historic things under our leadership
Starting point is 00:04:51 most of them were just really really awful but historic nevertheless yeah and we'll talk about some of his historic announcements um so again yesterday he announced that he's going to um step down they say in the life site news thing that he's retiring i don't think he's going to retire at all maybe out of canadian politics but i'm sure there's a place waiting for him at the world economic forum or bilderberg or one of these other places i, he's one of Klaus's favorite people, remember? Talked about new young leaders that they put in and all the people that they'd stuffed in. It's not just Trudeau, but also Chrystia Friedland, who is touted as one of the possible replacements for him in the Liberal Party. And we'll talk about that in a second here, because I think it's interesting. And it is something that we're seeing happening in every country.
Starting point is 00:05:47 As they are creating global government, we see the same patterns happening in every country. So polling is down. Why is he leaving now? Well, finally, the polling has come around. People didn't kick him out because of the coveted stuff but finally it is starting to come around he says i intend to resign after the party selects its next leader through a robust nationwide competitive process his resignation comes a few weeks after both his housing minister sean fraser and deputy prime minister christia freeland left the liberal government i guess he lost the support of the
Starting point is 00:06:27 world economic forum or just her right because he is a key representative of that the authoritarian legacy of justin trudeau freedom in the rearview mirror is the headline from reclaim the net now they focused mainly on speech issues and we'll talk about that but i focused mainly on the covid issues and his covid tyranny and we've got a clip here of some of his low lights there's a level of admiration i actually have for china because their basic dictatorship is allowing them to actually turn their economy around on a dime and say we need to go green as fast as we need to start you know investing in solar I mean there is a flexibility that I know Stephen Harper must dream about of having a
Starting point is 00:07:19 dictatorship that he could do everything he wanted. If you don't want to get vaccinated, that's your choice. But don't think you can get on a plane. If you don't want to get vaccinated, that's your choice. But don't think you can get on a plane or a train beside vaccinated people. There will be consequences for those people in not being able to go to a gym or a restaurant, not being able to go to a movie theater,
Starting point is 00:07:40 not being able to get on a train or a plane. That's why we've been unequivocal. If you want to get on a train or a plane. That's why we've been unequivocal. If you want to get on a plane or a train in the coming months, you're going to have to be fully vaccinated. You don't have a right to endanger others. Those people are putting us all at risk. Regardless of the fact that we are attacking your fundamental rights or limiting your fundamental rights, and the Charter says that's wrong, we're still going to go ahead and do it. Or whether it's our most recent initiative on banning, sorry, on freezing the market
Starting point is 00:08:21 for firearms, which will start moving us in the right direction over the medium and long term. But Justin Trudeau, I mean, I thought he was kind of a cool guy. And I started to read what he said. This is a couple of weeks ago. He was or maybe this is September, but he was talking about people who are not vaccinated. He said they don't believe in science. They're often misogynistic, often racist.
Starting point is 00:08:46 No, they're not. That was not smart of him at all. Right. He said, but they take up space. And with that, we have to make a choice in terms of a leader as a country. Do we tolerate these people? It's like, tolerate? Now you do sound like him.
Starting point is 00:09:01 And recently, he talked about them holding unacceptable views. Small fringe minority of people who are on their way to Ottawa or who are holding unacceptable views that they're expressing. We've heard your frustration with COVID, with the measures that are there to keep people safe. I think Canada has stepped across a line that people might not understand. But what they're doing is giving themselves power to confiscate assets, freeze bank accounts of anyone in the
Starting point is 00:09:38 country suspected of anything. In fact, you don't have to be suspected of anything. It's extrajudicial. There is no process around that. And so this idea that that can be done to one's political opponents, which is what these people are, is just completely wrong in my view. So I think, yeah, I think we do need to stand up for what is right in this world and for freedom as opposed to authoritarianism, which is otherwise going to creep up on us. If you joined the protests because you're tired of COVID, you now need to understand that you are breaking laws. The consequences are becoming more and more severe.
Starting point is 00:10:23 You don't end up losing your license, end up with a criminal record which will impact your job, your livelihood, even your ability to travel internationally including to the US. Mr. Trudeau, you are a disgrace for any democracy. Please spare us your presence. I doubt that it would have been more appropriate for Mr. Trudeau, Prime Minister of Canada, to address this House according to Article 144, an article which was specifically designed to debate violations of human rights, democracy, and the rule of law, which is clearly the case with Mr. Trudeau. Then again, a prime minister who openly admires the Chinese basic dictatorship, who tramples
Starting point is 00:11:10 on fundamental rights by persecuting and criminalizing his own citizens as terrorists just because they dared to stand up to his perverted concept of democracy, should not be allowed to speak in this house at all. Mr. Trudeau, you are a disgrace for any democracy. I'm going to ask one is about Ukraine. First of all, what's your name? My name is Michael. Canada is traditionally known for advocating for peace. I know we are a member of NATO, but I know we don't have a nuclear weapon. Why has your government failed to draft a peace proposal to end this war in Ukraine? I'm gonna have to call you out, Michael.
Starting point is 00:11:55 You're completely wrong about the war in Ukraine. It is not a proxy war between the United States and Russia right now. That's Russian propaganda and disinformation. My job is to call that stuff out. I will never apologize for standing up for an LGBTQ2 plus kids' rights to not have to undergo conversion therapy. The fact of the matter is, Mr. Speaker, Canadians are afraid of climate change. They're afraid of the extreme weather events. They're afraid of the concerns we have about a brighter future. And what we are doing is fighting climate change every day.
Starting point is 00:12:43 Whether we are in the stages of the fourth industrial revolution about to begin, what a breathtaking possibility that is. The one thing certain about the next industrial revolution is, like the three that preceded it, it will bring enormous change. Yeah, it'll bring enormous change. And unfortunately, even as they change him out, I don't think much is going to change. It's not even just him. And it's not even just the Liberal Party, as we see in country after country.
Starting point is 00:13:21 Take a look at what is going on right now. You heard him, you know, trying to tout and remember his alphabet tyranny there. After he also pushed fear about climate, fear about COVID, fear of unvaccinated people, fear, fear, fear. That's the way the tyrants rule us. Well, some people are not afraid of the fear. And some people are not going to kowtow to that. Canadian pastor Derek Reimer gets one year house arrest and probation for protesting drag queen story time. He's done it over and over again. Now, he's getting this done to him in Alberta.
Starting point is 00:14:05 And we saw in Alberta some of the most, some of the harshest attacks against religious freedom. And we haven't even gotten to the speech stuff yet. But of course, those things are connected. A Canadian pastor says he trusts in the Lord, keeping him strong after being sentenced to one year of house arrest, along with long probation sentence for protesting drag queen story hours. So don't you do it again. Or if you do, you're going to go to jail for a very long time, right? And this is in Alberta, where we have the conservatives,
Starting point is 00:14:29 where we now have Danielle Smith. Where is she? You can't trust politicians. Don't put your trust in politicians. Don't put your trust in conservative politicians. Don't put your trust in billionaires. Don't put your trust in chariots and horses or whatever, right? He says, the Lord is at work. I trust him, said Reimer, who vows that he will
Starting point is 00:14:52 appeal the house arrest, but he's not going to stop with this stuff. He's been arrested many times for protesting drag queen story time, many other pro-LGBT events. And the very fact that Trudeau and these people pushed this tyranny, this 2 plus 2 equals 5, the very fact that they pushed that to you, that Orwellian equation that is really
Starting point is 00:15:18 when you reduce all the different alphabets, he's got like a plus 2 there at the end. Heard that? Well, it all really works out two plus two equals five you know uh lgbtq plus two equals five it's uh it's insane but it just continues and it's going to happen with the conservatives or the liberals we're going to have more have to have more of a grassroots revolt it's not going to be solved by getting some conservative and at the top the top is totally rotten uh that's a miller one two three
Starting point is 00:15:58 says congratulations the canadian people excited to become our 51st state well you know trump trolled them a great deal on that. But I'll tell you what I think is coming up, what I think that's really about. But let's take a look at some of his legacy about free speech, because Reclaim the Net talked about that significantly. Few things capture Trudeau's tenure better than his government's legislative war on free speech. Let's start with a dynamic duo of digital overreach a couple of bills one of them the c10 bill and the other one the c36 bill c10 trudeau's government framed the bill as a noble effort to modernize a broadcasting act
Starting point is 00:16:40 the law had not been updated since 1991 now we got to constantly update our laws right well the goal they said was to level the playing field between traditional broadcasters and streaming giants like netflix and youtube well that sounds good but the devil's in the detail or the lack of details they give themselves very broad powers. A bill gave Canada's broadcast regulator sweeping authority to police online content, originally user-generated content like vlogs or TikTok dances or indie films, were supposed to be exempt.
Starting point is 00:17:18 However, midway through the legislative process, Trudeau's government quietly removed those exemptions, and suddenly your cat video could be classified as broadcast content, giving bureaucrats the power to decide whether it met Canadian cultural standards. But of course, this is not going to be about cat videos, is it? It's going to be about your criticism of their agendas. The bill's language was so vague that it could allow the government to dictate what canadians saw shared or and created online and of course that is the goal that's a goal for all of these globalists the government dismissed the concerns one in clear limits on government power
Starting point is 00:17:58 apparently made you a conspiracy theorist and then you have bill Bill C-36. That was a hate bill. His definition of hate was so expansive that it could potentially criminalize unpopular or offensive opinions. Offensive to people like Trudeau, as you just saw there. Openly talks about it. Well, you know, of course, this is a violation of the Charter of Freedoms. No question about it. I don't care because of course, this is a violation of the Charter of Freedoms. No question about it. Well, I don't care, because the majority of us have decided that we don't want the Charter of Freedoms. You see, that's the problem with a democracy.
Starting point is 00:18:31 Everybody talks about democracy, like this is the goal. It's not the goal to have a democracy. In a republic, you have the rule of law. You have principles that are there, and those principles are made to be very, very difficult to change. those principles are made to be very, very difficult to change. But when you go to a democracy and you go to people like Trudeau,
Starting point is 00:18:51 they say, well, the majority of us just don't like those anymore, so we're just going to ignore them. And that's where the danger is. And Trump did that as well. As I pointed out, this was in lockstep. You had Trump, Trudeau, Macron, Boris Johnson, all these people, Jabsenda, Ardern in the New Zealand, all of this. Morrison in Australia, all of them doing the same stuff in lockstep with each other because they are not about their country. They're not loyal to their country. They're traitors, every one of them to their countries. They are loyal to a global agenda that you better educate people about.
Starting point is 00:19:37 I know you know about it if you watch this program. The bill didn't target clear-cut incitement to violence, but it targeted anything deemed likely to expose individuals to hatred or contempt. And we've got Republicans doing that now. Oh, well, you know, somebody disagrees with what Israel is doing, and they show hatred or contempt or even debate what the policy is in Israel. Just shut up and send them your money. And if you say anything about it, we're going to prosecute you and put you in jail for a crime. And we've got Republican after Republican after Republican filling their pockets with foreign money and censoring our criticism
Starting point is 00:20:17 of a foreign government that we are subsidizing and giving weapons to. You saw that one guy singles him out because he wants to talk about Ukraine war. Why are we having peace talks, he said. First of all, what is your name? You've been noticed, citizen, straight out of Dr. Zhivago. That's the thing I always remember. The love story just went right over my head when I saw it as a kid. But boy, the communism hit home. It's like, I always remember. The love story just went right over my head when I saw it as a kid. But boy, the communism hit home. It's like, he comes home, and they've taken over his home.
Starting point is 00:20:54 And the guy who is the head honcho in his home, they've got people living in all these different rooms. He's a wealthy doctor and all the rest of stuff the guy uh looks at him and he's he's hoping he keeps pushing and pushing and pushing and hoping that uh shivago is going to say something to him finally he doesn't he keeps his cool he doesn't get upset he knows what they're trying to do he knows they're trying to goad him into this and uh finally the guy does does another look at him says you've been noticed citizen your attitude has been noticed it's like that's what trudeau was doing to that guy i said why isn't canada doing something have uh any peace talks about this you want to just continue the war
Starting point is 00:21:42 well then it is a proxy war isn't it if you don't want to do a Well, then it is a proxy war, isn't it? If you don't want to do a peace talk, then it is a proxy war. Anyway, so hatred or contempt, anything from political dissent to sharp critiques of government policies. And of course, the United States, that includes foreign governments who pay the politicians. Even more alarming was the prospect of a snitch culture the bill encouraged private citizens to report each other for suspected hate speech potentially turning disagreements into legal battles and then you had the financial freeze i like the way reclaim the net puts it the financial freeze heard around the world everybody paid attention to that. That was Chrystia Friedland.
Starting point is 00:22:27 Freeland, okay. I think we should call her Freesland. Not because it's cold up there, but because she froze the bank accounts. And not only the bank accounts of the people who were protesting. The Canadian protesters were a model of civility. I mean, they show up, yeah, they showed up on the streets and everything. How many times has the left done that? Sit-ins and all the rest of this stuff, but they were very peaceful. They were having a party.
Starting point is 00:22:58 It's fine when the left does it. It's fine when they do it in the university in the 1960s, but when people do it for their freedoms during the COVID lockdown, oh, they are horrible. And those people are going to have their bank accounts closed. And if anybody gives any money to them, we're going to shut your bank account down, too, anybody that contributed to them. That was the amazing thing. You know, again, all this stuff, it went on for so long. And I guess, you know, my timeline on it is just, I looked at it and it's like, was it as late as 2022?
Starting point is 00:23:29 I thought it was earlier than that, that they pushed back. But I remember when it happened, saying, finally, somebody somewhere is doing something about this and protesting the government. We're not doing anything at all about it. And as a matter of fact, DG8, thank you for the tip. He says, David, January 6th should never have been about the government. We're not doing anything at all about it. And as a matter of fact, DG8, thank you for the tip, he says David, January the 6th should never have been about the election. People should have gone to D.C. over the COVID tyranny. What a joke that they went to D.C. in support of Mr. Lockdown and father of the vaccine.
Starting point is 00:23:59 And that's exactly right. And when I talk about January the 6th, the reason that happened is because the mainstream alternative media, people like Alex Jones and others, pushing them to do that. Okay, trust him. He's playing 40 chess. Just trust the plan. Take your vaccine. It's sugar water.
Starting point is 00:24:19 Now go to Washington and protest for the guy who did all this stuff to you. And help me. Send me money for Stop the Steal so that I can rally people to do this. It was all entrapment. It was all a psyop. And it began with a CIA shill. That's why it's very concerning when I looked at Sean Ryan. Boy, it's deja vu all over again. That former Navy SEAL and CIA guy
Starting point is 00:24:46 who was pushing this narrative about Matt Livelsberger. Anyway, in 2022, when truckers and their supporters descended into Ottawa to protest the COVID-19 mandates, Trudeau didn't meet them with dialogue. Instead, he dusted off his Emergencies Act, something no prime minister had dared to touch before.
Starting point is 00:25:12 Overnight, financial institutions became Trudeau's personal enforcers, freezing accounts of protesters and anyone who dared to support them. And it was his deputy prime minister, Chrystia Freeland, second in command, who eagerly played the bad cop. Under her direction, the financial clampdown turned Canada's banking system into a political weapon. Freeland's cozy ties to global financiers made the whole thing look like an international crackdown on dissent. And that's exactly what it was. That's why it looked like that. Trudeau's message was clear.
Starting point is 00:25:50 Disagree with the government and you might lose access to your life savings. It was a master class on how to turn financial systems into handcuffs and leave civil liberties in tatters. You see, it's not just, you know, and tatters you see it's not just you know and then you know this is um this is before biden did his uh his thing uh with the uh weaponizing the financial system here in america uh trump is about to do the same thing with tariffs if he's to be believed now there are reports inside of his campaign well maybe well, maybe he's changed his mind. Maybe he's going to back down on that, like he backed down on the H-1B visas and other things like that. You can never trust him. He has no principles. He has positions. You understand?
Starting point is 00:26:35 You understand the difference between positions and principles? You understand the difference between policies and principles? You're going to find out. We're find out get a real lesson on this thing but yeah this has been something that is dear to the heart of the Davos villains and it's exactly what these people are. The crowd there that is pulling this stuff down, I can't find it wherever it is. There it is. Excellencies, ladies and gentlemen, your annual global risk report makes for a stunning and sobering read. For the global business community, the top concern for the next two years is not conflict or climate.
Starting point is 00:27:37 It is disinformation and misinformation, followed closely by polarization within our societies. In a world of deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act. You are listening to the david knight show yeah disinformation now this uh reclaim the net says disinformation is the government's new buzzword oh it doesn't just belong to trudeau and canada that's the new global buzzword got all these programs here that biden has put in as well. And you know, when we look at the way they've weaponized this system, we look at the fact that, you know, they could just, like that, seize your bank accounts because of a protest or because your political opinions.
Starting point is 00:28:39 Yes, that's a thing. And it's not just something that is attached to Trudeau and Freeland. That is a thing. It's one of the reasons why I say, look, I don't want to have, I want to have something that's physical, something that is private. Yeah, somebody can, you always have to worry about thieves about anything, but there's nothing like the government thieves. Like I said the other day, you know, a thief can break into your house and steal what you got. But if you've got the local government with a pen, they can take your house and all your equity, as we saw with them stealing that from people. People who had an issue with health or some crisis in their life, and they got behind their property taxes. They just come in and take the thing and take all your equity. One woman owed about $3,000 in equity.
Starting point is 00:29:27 They got $102,000, $3,000 in taxes. And they took her house. She had $102,000 in equity. They kept that. And it's happening even though you got the Supreme Court saying stop it. And you got state courts saying stop it the local officials are still doing it so again pay attention to your local elections that's really where the rubber meets the road that's where the rubber meets the road for all of this stuff the
Starting point is 00:29:57 globalism the lockdown everything else in some places they stopped it at the local level. Other places, the local level made it much worse. Focus there first. You'll have more of an effect there anyway. Anyway, disinformation became the word. They use it like a Swiss army knife of excuses. And of course, they're subsidizing obedience as well. Not only are they saying, don't do this, but if you do this, we'll give you money. Right.
Starting point is 00:30:29 We want to have a vibrant spectrum of journalism. And so what we're going to do is we're going to give some money to some people, some struggling journalists and press outlets. They're buying sycophants. That's what they're buying. It works a little bit differently here in the United States. What happens is you get people like Alex who realize that if they give up on being nonpartisan, and if they jump fully on board with somebody that is a rising star like Trump, and if they sell people what people want to hear
Starting point is 00:31:05 rather than what is true, then they can make a lot of money. But in Canada, what they're doing is they're just giving money to struggling journalistic centers because nothing says press freedom like reporters who are dependent on a government handout or dependent on towing the line of Trump. Right?
Starting point is 00:31:27 Again, it's not as direct here. With Trump, it's more subtle in the background. Big Brother gets a Twitter account. Yeah, under Trudeau's watch, Canadian intelligence agencies dramatically expanded their social media monitoring. Activists, protest groups, voices that were traditionally central to Democrat discourse suddenly found themselves under a microscope.
Starting point is 00:31:49 Imagine logging into X to vent about a new housing policy only to realize that your tweet has been flagged by a government algorithm. The message was clear. Dissent might not be illegal, but it was certainly inconvenient. Is that the lesson that people are learning now on X from Musk? Don't you dissent from him. I mean, if he will throw Nigel Farage under the bus, imagine what he'll do to you. He's been doing this everywhere.
Starting point is 00:32:22 Yes. Do not criticize Elon Musk. If you want to be on Twitter, i don't care about twitter uh to hammer the point home his administration launched a series of public awareness campaigns to educate canadians about the perils of online misinformation and it wasn't um it wasn't ursula fond of lying, who was playing a Bond villain. Oh, people can be hurt. It'll hurt people's feelings. I don't know what it was.
Starting point is 00:32:53 I didn't say. Anyway, dripping with paternalistic condescension. It blurred the line between fact-checking and outright propaganda. Canada's new normal is a fear of speaking freely activists wondered whether their next rally would land them on a government watch list well that's absolutely right but again that's a reclaim the net just focusing on the damage done to free speech but i think what was done with the covid lockdowns is even worse that hit so many different things including free speech. But I think what was done with the COVID lockdowns is even worse. It hit so many different things, including free speech. And this article from the Daily Skeptic
Starting point is 00:33:33 in the UK, Toby Young, says Justin Trudeau, last of the democratically elected lockdown tyrants. Well, is that true? I mean, you know, when we look at trump he just had morrison from australia come to mar-a-lago and they're all smiles and handshakes and laughing it up and partying at mar-a-lago folks it is a big club and you ain't in it it's the mar-a-lago club it's the global lockdown club and there's trump right at the center because folks he led the global lockdown mr anti-globalism mr anti-davos who went there multiple times and then locked us down oh but no it can't be trump trump is against all of this stuff right well um tubby young says uh the move came after weeks of pressure from his colleagues in Canada's
Starting point is 00:34:29 Liberal Party amid a significant and growing rift over how to handle relations with Trump in his second term. And this is a common theme that's being sold to us by the mainstream alternative media. Well, look at this. Trump took down Trudeau. No, no. Trudeau has just worn on people so much that the conservative party is accelerating in the polls. They know they're going to lose.
Starting point is 00:35:00 And so they allowed him to resign, unlike Joe Biden that they just threw under the bus. But it's the same type of thing. They can see how disgusted, finally, finally disgusted people are of Trudeau. And so they need to get somebody in there new. Now, I think what is happening, I think it does involve Trump, and I think it does involve populism to some degree. Because what is happening is these people are getting out of the way for the most part, because they would love to turn it over after they've made a mess, after they've got this ticking time bomb of an economy, they would love to step aside and let this bomb blow up
Starting point is 00:35:49 while Trump and other populists are in office so they can say, see, you need socialism. That's what we need. Got to bring that back. I honestly think that's what's going on. They want to hand this hot potato to the populists so that they can be blamed. And, you know, when you look at Trump, he is largely responsible for kicking this stuff off. He was the one who started spending $6 trillion a year. And Biden continued that.
Starting point is 00:36:16 You know, when you look at the slope of how the deficit was going up spending okay but trump all of a sudden went took a new uh new angle goes up hyperbolically and uh biden kept that thing going and that's response that's why we are in the situation that we're in right now so you know certainly trump would deserve it but they want to make sure that they're not the ones in power when this thing blows up, I think. Trump announced on social media after his re-election plan to introduce a 25% tariff on goods from Canada, which led Trudeau into a frenzy to try to clean up his relationship with the U.S. So he goes to Mar-a-Lago. Now, it wasn't just that.
Starting point is 00:37:00 I mean, all these people are going there to kiss the ring. Bezos, Zuckerberg, Morrison from Australia. Everybody's gone. wasn't just that i mean all these people are going there to kiss the ring bezos zuckerberg morrison from australia everybody's going to kiss trump's ring isn't that interesting um i will not be kissing his ring or any other parts of anatomy uh the day after unveiling the idea trump uh trudeau rather immediately flew down to mar-a-lago to do some damage control so that's it yeah um so that's the perception being sold by everybody else but i think it is a fact that people are sick and tired of this they're sick and tired of the speech tyranny they're sick and tired of the lockdown tyranny they're sick and tired of the alphabet tyranny
Starting point is 00:37:43 the reason trump wants to impose tariffs on Canada is to pressure Ottawa to do more to secure the border and to stop leaking illegal immigrants into the U.S. Well, whatever his motivation is, if he's going to weaponize the financial system in just a different way, right? I mean, Biden weaponized the financial system and liquidated
Starting point is 00:38:05 blew up the petrodollar that have been in place since Nixon. And so whenever you weaponize our financial system, what these people are creating is some kind of an improvised explosive device, an IED, right? Hey, let's try this. They're just improvising and it is a explosive device the question is uh who is it going to blow up on i mean this is like some game where you get the sticking time and you keep passing it down the to one person uh in another chair and don't be surprised when this thing blows up they only care about how it's going to be perceived and who is in power when it happens. But either way, it's going to blow up on us. We're the ones who are going to be hurt by this financial IED. Trudeau's party may be hoping that if he goes now, with the liberals still having
Starting point is 00:39:00 until October to call a general election, The new leader can prevent the conservatives winning a majority, just as Jabsenda Arden's resignation in January 2023, nine months before the New Zealand general election, helped to stop the National Party there from winning a majority. And I'm sure that's what they were trying to do with Lala Harris. The problem with Lala Harris was that, even though there was only a couple of months for people to take a look at her, that was still way too long.
Starting point is 00:39:34 It was so shallow that you could see through her immediately. Toby Young says, the Daily Skeptic says, by my reck reckoning trudeau is the last democratically elected leader who was in office during the pandemic and imposed a national lockdown the last one to be defenestrated well trump was in office trump imposed a national lockdown but trump has not been defenestrated unfortunately meaning thrown out the window uh trudeau's potential replacements would continue his same anti-life anti-family agenda says life site news while liberals assure canadians that a new liberal leader would not carry on the radical agendas pushed by trudeau each of the potential replacements in the Liberal Party, has embraced an anti-life, globalist ideology,
Starting point is 00:40:27 and would likely plunge the country into another term of anti-family, anti-freedom laws. And that's true. You know, when they talk about Mark Carney, Mark Carney is a radical in terms of the climate stuff. But he's a radical in terms of climate stuff because he's a radical in terms of the climate stuff. But he's a radical in terms of climate stuff because he's a radical in terms of central banking. And they don't talk about that. From their perspective,
Starting point is 00:40:53 LifeSite News is looking at the alphabet tyranny, the LGBT stuff, the ideology. I would call it a theology, except that's legitimate because they make themselves god you know theology is a study of god right well if they're god and they're studying their navel and other parts of themselves trying to figure out what they are what am i you know i'm gonna i'm god and i can change myself from male to female or vice versa but
Starting point is 00:41:21 uh i still gotta study what I want to do. So LGBT really is a theology if you think about it. Anyway, Carney supports all the green stuff because that's the path for them to destroy the economy and to create a global tax and a global surveillance system, something that tracks your activities and your purchases. They have to have that global problem to track that. And that's what the climate agenda gives them that not even a pandemic gives them. Eventually, you run out of steam because people see that people are not dying. That's what happened with it.
Starting point is 00:42:05 But of course, with the climate agenda, it's always just over the next hill. Next year is going to hit. Carney has been a longtime supporter of the globalist agenda, including promoting the UN's energy regulations in January 2023. He attended the World Economic Forum's meeting in Davos, Switzerland. Of course, he's always there. The key thing about Carney, and this was mentioned by a listener yesterday, they said, he attended the World Economic Forum's meeting in Davos, Switzerland. Of course, he's always there. The key thing about Carney, and this was mentioned by a listener yesterday, they said, oh, what about Mark Carney?
Starting point is 00:42:31 I said, oh, yeah, what about him? He's Canadian, but he's been the governor of both the Bank of Canada and then later governor of the Bank of England. This guy is like a one-man bank of international settlement, the central bank of central bankers. He is the central banker of central bankers. He is the central banker of central bankers. He would be very bad for Canada. And, of course, there's some other people that are on the list as well.
Starting point is 00:42:56 Chrystia Freeland, key ally of Trudeau's, but she resigned. All eyes are on her as a potential candidate because she was the deputy prime minister. So she'd on her as a potential candidate, because she was the deputy prime minister. So she'd be like the Lala, and she may wind up being like the Lala in this next one. Conservative leader Pierre Palliev is tipped to replace Trudeau with unbelievable odds. But these are odds coming from Palli Market. These are people, sometimes that can
Starting point is 00:43:26 be useful but i don't know why so many people focus on that but you look all these polls are pretty much garbage really especially when you're talking about something that is um you know nine or ten months away from us but on polymarket he's got a 92 chance of becoming canada's next prime minister people willing to put their money down on that but again it's just a 92% chance of becoming Canada's next prime minister. People are willing to put their money down on that. But again, it's just a betting market. So Trudeau is going to remain in power until the party elects a new leader. And they will have to do that. The general elections will be in the fall.
Starting point is 00:43:57 Or the new leader will probably come up sometime in March. Polyev campaigns for more oil and gas production and against Trudeau's botched immigration policy, which led to hundreds of thousands of arrivals straining an already overheated housing market. Overheated even in Canada. But it's, when you look at the common thing that we're seeing is the immigration and the climate stuff and the destruction of energy and the economy that accompanies that. Conservatives currently hold a 21-point lead over the liberals. Now, that's one of their political polls.
Starting point is 00:44:40 That's not polymarket where it's 92 percent uh but then christia freeland again coming back to her i kind of i think it's interesting that these people that they have put forward as front runners christia freeland uh and um mark carney and the guy who is there, Dominic LeBlanc, who took her place. So he's now the Minister of Finance. He replaced Freeland. And so she was finance minister. Now, she doesn't have any background in finance or accounting or anything like that. She was a journalist.
Starting point is 00:45:23 And she worked with the world economic forum that's what she majored in she's got a degree in klaus schwab and when schwab talks people listen um so that was the extent of her economic education but of course having been a finance minister even though she was just a journalist. Now she's a financial person. And I don't know Dominic LeBlanc. I don't know what his background was, but I suspect that he was just the politician that was put in as finance minister. And if people don't know any more about finance, then our Department of Energy occupant knows
Starting point is 00:46:02 anything about energy or engineering or anything else. What is her name? I can see her face. But anyway, she was nothing but a politician. And they put her in for prohibitions because, you know, she doesn't know about prohibitions. She doesn't know anything about energy. But she will prohibit stuff. But getting back to mark carney again former bank of canada
Starting point is 00:46:28 and bank of england governor he has long been touted as a potential leader for canada in recent days he's reportedly fielded dozens of calls to liberal politicians who view him as a potential replacement for trudeau he's 59 years old. He studied at Oxford University and Harvard University. He previously worked at Goldman Sachs and was a chair of Bloomberg. That resume should scare you. This is what I think is going to happen. You know, Chrystia Freeland, she's a woman. She's their, you know, DEI candidate or whatever.
Starting point is 00:47:05 And she's a woman. She's their DEI candidate or whatever. And she's their la-la. You've got to say, at least she can speak coherently, unlike our la-la. I don't think la-la hilarious could have ever worked even as a journalist. She couldn't put together a complete sentence. But anyway, this is what I kind of think. Like I said before, I think they want to hand off this hot potato to the conservatives. And so I think they'll run their la-la, Chrystia Freeland.
Starting point is 00:47:37 They could say, well, she was number two, and it's her turn, and she's a woman, and all this kind of stuff. They'll ignore Mark Carney. But you watch out after they blow everything up, and that's going to happen, because I don't know exactly when it's going to happen, but I know it's going to happen. When they blow up the economy,
Starting point is 00:47:56 the guy who is really serious, this guy who's got a long resume of running big financial institutions and central banks, somebody who is a dyed-in-the-wool globalist for sure, Mark Carney will be brought in to fix things up. So they get Chrystia Freeland out of the way, use her to hand over power to the conservatives. Then when all this stuff that they put together blows up, they bring in a guy who is a dyed in the wool globalist to set up the system
Starting point is 00:48:29 that he wants to set up carbon taxes and all the rest of stuff prohibitions on energy use prohibitions on food you name it so that's what i think is going to happen they're going to bring him back to build it back better globally that's what i think is going to happen um 3d dem demo derby says trudy needs to cut and run like all of his new world order pervert pals tptb knows we the people got most of their numbers now and the um the powers that be took me a while for a second like tp the powers that be uh know that we got their numbers now and the dim dummies got nothing well problem i think is that uh they know that we got their numbers on cbdc for example and they basically said okay we won't do a cbdc what
Starting point is 00:49:18 they're going to do is with trump they are going to and and to me, that was as big a pivot. All the stuff on crypto and the five eyes, which is the US, Canada, UK, New Zealand, Australia, all of them saying, we're not going to do CBDC. Yeah, the World Bank and the Bank of International Settlement, they're still working on a global CBDC to be pushed into poor countries and things like that. And they'll get away with that. But they know they're going to get resistance from us here in these five countries. So they decide that they'll do it through the back door. And Trump is their guy.
Starting point is 00:49:59 And if you look at the people who are surrounding Trump. And we're going to have a guy on in the last half hour of the show today. He's going to talk about blockchain. About the possibilities. About the vulnerabilities of it. And. He's going to talk about blockchain, about the possibilities, about the vulnerabilities of it. And so we're going to talk about that. But they're acclimating everybody to this. I think they want to do all these functions in terms of the functions of CVDC will be executed
Starting point is 00:50:20 in a private-public partnership. It'll be done. Everybody will say, hey, it's being done by the corporations. What's the problem? It's like the censorship. It's being done by the corporations. What's the problem? It's like the censorship. It's being done by the corporations. What's the problem?
Starting point is 00:50:28 And then you find out, as we always knew, that the corporations were created to do this, that they are the beard for government. They are the velvet glove, and the government is the iron hand of censorship, and it will be that same way with the CBDC stuff. Guard Goldsmith.
Starting point is 00:50:48 Good to see you, Guard. Liberty Conspiracy. Evenings through the week on Rockfin and on Twitter. He says, Trudeau really is an example of egomania. That's absolutely true. So, we're going to take a quick break and we will be right back Thank you. Making sense common again. You're listening to The David Knight Show. Well, we got some interesting comments.
Starting point is 00:52:53 Pull that one up about the babysitter down there at the bottom. This is something I didn't know about. I did. So, thank you. G Pigeon says, LeBlanc wasin's babysitter when justin was growing up very long time friend and appointments do not fall far from the tree that's right yeah i don't know well uh justin go back to his father's home country cuba and hang out there um you know the socialists the marxists love that place i mean bernie sanders
Starting point is 00:53:23 who honeymooned in russia when it was still the soviet I mean, you have Bernie Sanders who honeymooned in Russia when it was still the Soviet Union. And we had de Blasio who honeymooned in Cuba. And then you had Justin Trudeau who actually, I don't know, he went to, I guess his wife kind of had a honeymoon in Cuba while they were there, the three of them. I don't know. While Niagara says Trudeau was not the first one to use the emergency measures act and that was my recollection too but i just you know i read it i thought well uh what was it reclaim the netherworld that's why i uh say who it's kind of first of all i want you to know what they're writing what i'm saying and make a distinction between it uh but um that that was
Starting point is 00:54:02 what i thought i thought his father had used it. His father used it under a different name, called it the War Measures Act. There's something about the Trudeaus and Tierney. Yeah, it's like a hammer and sickle thing or something. If you look, they probably got it tattooed on their back like Roger Stone's got Richard Nixon on his back. Richard Nixon was on my back when I was a kid, I tell you, with the 55-mile-an- hour speed limit and the rest of the stuff that was there.
Starting point is 00:54:28 Adelander, I love these new opening graphics. Well, thank you. Thank you for letting us know. I like them too. I think Whistler did a great job with them. DGA, thank you for the tip. He said, at least the Canadians fought government over COVID tyranny. At least they were smart enough to know government is not the answer to restore freedom, unlike the Trump cult.
Starting point is 00:54:50 Yeah, that's right, Mr. Judisco. That's right. I agree, absolutely. SA Miller123 says, let's remember the Trudeau lockdown, the truckers' bank accounts when they were protesting a true and evil tyrant at heart. Yes. Canadian people were trampled and controlled by their government for the very fact that they are unarmed. We can never let that happen here. Now, the problem is that there's one way that you can disarm people is by controlling free speech, isn't it? If they don't want to fight.
Starting point is 00:55:22 If they don't know what's being done to them. If they're told trust the plan now that's one way to disarm people isn't it uh dga um never forget all the tyranny stuff got a big boost when trump sued the miss universe pageant to allow a canadian training to compete that's right he's always been about that you You know, Amazon Prime, Jeff Bezos went down to Mar-a-Lago to kiss the ring. What else can we do? What can I do to get on his good side? You know, Musk has got the inside track and I'm competing with Musk on these contracts. What can I do? Oh, we'll throw together a documentary about Melania Trump
Starting point is 00:56:05 and her life story. Is that going to be X-rated? I mean, how are they going to cover all this stuff with Epstein and all the rest of the four of them? You know, Epstein and Ghislaine and Melania and Donald? What do they do about that kind
Starting point is 00:56:22 of stuff? What do they do about her modeling career and all the rest of this stuff? We talk about hagiographies. I think they're disgusting. Hagiography is where you make somebody, it's like an autobiography where the person is held up as some kind of a holy saint. That's going to be a bit of a stretch with Melania. That's what I think about when you talk about the LGBT stuff. She is the darling, the darling of the LGBT crowd there.
Starting point is 00:56:47 Pushing it really hard so uh outie modern retro radio good to see you he's he's uh writes to uh another listener 12 june 1776 he said canadians hate trudeau the next agenda is going to be a hard sell for the next puppet and we'll see what happens they've got the media there and they've got they they laid a lot of groundwork for controlling speech. They understand how fundamental that is, that tyrants do. And, of course, the founders of this country understood how fundamental free speech is. That's why they made it the very First Amendment. And they understand how fundamental to a society's existence Christianity is as well.
Starting point is 00:57:30 And so they put freedom of religion there right alongside free speech. I've seen yet another atheist come out. This one is not in the UK. I don't have the article in front of me. I forget his name, but I kind of recognized it when I saw it. Very much like Richard Dawkins saying, I don't believe any of this stuff, but it certainly gave us a better society than what we're headed to. And that's what this other guy is saying. And that actually is even what Friedrich Nietzsche said when he said, God is dead and we killed him.
Starting point is 00:58:00 God help us or something like that to that effect. And we saw what happened to Germany after they got rid of God. God didn't die, but Germany died because they took God out of their society. Now we got atheists all over the place saying this as well. Dawkins and this other guy as well. Ray Garbutt, thank you very much for the tip. I appreciate that. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:58:24 That's a new name I've not seen before. So thank you very much. Uh, Brian, Deb McCartney. I thought Freeland was heading out of the country for bigger aspirations rather than taking on the failed prime minister. Why, why be prime minister of Canada when you can be ruler of the world, the world economic forum or something like that. You know, there, there's a job opening there. If Klaus will let go of the reins with his cold, dead hands.
Starting point is 00:58:49 Atomic dog. Freeland is a WEF member. She's literally a Davos operative. She would destroy Canada. Yeah, well, so was Trudeau. Davos operative. He did his best to destroy Canada. The Softy Jacker says Pierrere is a canadian mike johnson
Starting point is 00:59:06 oh boy that's a bad that's a bad is uh i've seen that kind of alluded to by some other people yeah he does have that milquetoast thing there but you know and if he's not going to stand on his principles that's not going to be a good thing. Anyway, Octo Spook. I wish this was the end of St. Trudeau, but he is falling on his sword for the New World Order. And I don't think they're done with him yet. And I see him as still having some use to him. Absolutely. They're going to recycle these people just like they did Jab Senda out of New Zealand.
Starting point is 00:59:44 They'll find a job for him. like mark ruta mark ruta tried to destroy all the farms and all that kind of stuff in the netherlands so the farmers and other people created a political party kicked him out where did he go well they put him in at nato well we've got let's talk a little bit about january the 6th you know i saw it yesterday and i thought i've talked so much about january the 6, I'm just not going to talk about it. And then I started seeing what everybody else was writing about it. I was like, I just can't let this thing go. And, you know, when we look at what's going to happen, you know, I've got listeners, Susan, saying it was the most reprehensible thing.
Starting point is 01:00:23 She saw how Trump betrayed the people on January the 6th. And it absolutely is. But we saw this betrayal coming. And again, I don't know what I can say that I haven't really said before about all this stuff. A lot of people said, well, you need to interview this person about the January 6th stuff and all the rest of the stuff. And it's like, look, you know, I did my best to try to warn people about that. I mean, I really did my best. I spoke out against the people I work for. I got fired for doing that, speaking out against it.
Starting point is 01:00:58 Because I could see the lies and the deception. I could see how they're acting as Judas goats. They were fleecing these people and they're going to get them in a lot of trouble. And I knew that. And I knew that. And I knew that there wasn't anything that could be done on January 6th. Not a thing. And like I said yesterday, I thought it was five years, because it seems like five years. It's fighting Alex all of 2020 over this pandemic garbage, even before martial law was declared.
Starting point is 01:01:24 It was nonsense how they were hyping the fear and everything. Well, this is one guy, this Air Force veteran, shot in the head with rubber bullets, non-lethal munitions, on January the 6th, and was shot in the face with rubber bullets by the police while peacefully demonstrating on the Capitol grounds. He was nearly injured by flashbang grenades that cops indiscriminately threw into the crowd while lacing the air with tear gas. Who knew this was going to happen? Well, I did.
Starting point is 01:01:57 And I knew that there were going to be agent provocateurs there as well to cause all this stuff to kick off. And they were itching to do it. I mean, it was such a stupid game that they were playing. And again, it irritated me to no end that people would not resist Trump. And they did nothing about that. Again, because they were told to stand down. They were told that Trump had it. And I recall when I started my program on down. They were told that Trump had it. And I recall
Starting point is 01:02:25 when I started my program on January the 6th, that was a Wednesday. And I said, well, yesterday, Tuesday, January the 5th, they had the runoff elections in Georgia. And because everybody was tied up with Trump and protesting Trump's election, nothing at all was done about the Georgia election. Nothing. No money was spent on it, and it turned the Senate over to the Democrats. And no laws were changed. Here you've got a Republican governor, a Republican legislature in Georgia, completely going along with all this stuff in the Republican Party in general, and all the Republican voters, nobody cared about any of that kind of stuff. The Republicans wanted to turn it over to the Democrats.
Starting point is 01:03:10 It's the same kind of, look, I've seen this stuff over and over again. It's a tag team match. You start to get tired of one guy, and they flip the other one. That's why I said what I did about Trudeau and about Pierre Palliev. They're going to flip it out, let things blow up, or let him be the Mike Johnson of the place, and then they'll bring in the guy they really want that's going to be the drill sergeant to push everybody into this global economy, Mark Carney. Following the protests, the police escalated into a deadly riot.
Starting point is 01:03:42 Fisher founded an organization called Investigate J6 that faithfully gathered and investigated the thousands of hours of CCTV and police body cam footage, along with the totality of video obtained by the media and protesters that fateful day. The footage, which Congress for years refused to release to the American public, showcases definitively, documents the unprovoked excessive force that police unleashed against the entire crowd outside the Capitol, including Fisher and his father. You know, it's interesting. They gave that footage to Tucker. Remember how that was a really big deal? Oh, Tucker's going to save us now. Tucker's going to say, well, these guys did because Tucker didn't do anything with it. Tucker made it all about Tucker. Look at this. I'm so important. They gave me the January
Starting point is 01:04:33 the 6th footage and he didn't do anything with it. He's such a ridiculous limited hangout. Again, he's got Aaron Seary from RFK Junior's Children's Health Defense. Aaron Seary's a lawyer there. And he goes on with Tucker. Tucker is surprised that there are aborted baby parts in these vaccines. It's like, hey, pal, what did you think everybody was protesting over religious objections about with this stuff? You want us to believe that you're that stupid? He's not stupid. He's a liar liar he's another one of these cia people it's absolutely amazing anyway he just used all that footage to hype himself this guy put together an organization to show
Starting point is 01:05:16 some of that stuff but of course he doesn't get any attention tucker took all the attention. Fisher was arrested more than a year later, on January the 13th, 2022, in a pre-dawn raid conducted by the FBI. Again, you know, one of these raids that can get people killed. He was charged with assaulting, resisting, or impeding federal officers, disorderly conduct, civil disorder, entering restricted grounds. You know, when the police are standing there at the open door telling you, yeah, come on in.
Starting point is 01:05:47 Yeah, you want to use the restroom? It's right in your hand. These guys are facing years in jail. He was peacefully protesting. And then you got the guy who founded Cowboys for Trump. He was an elected official in New Mexico. I think he's a counselor there in the county commissioner. County commissioner.
Starting point is 01:06:15 And he was, they came after him, Coy Griffin. He never entered the building. He never engaged in any violence. So what was he doing there? Well, he was exercising his constitutional rights on the First Amendment to redress grievances and to protest and to speak out. Oh, that's not allowed? So in fact, pull up the picture there, Karen, of him talking to Trump. Well, wait, before we do that, before we do that, he comes back and he finally caught
Starting point is 01:06:47 on to Trump. He's one of the few people that did. And of course, a lot of them probably have caught on to Trump, but they realize that he's their only ticket out of jail now. So they're not going to say anything about that. But you know, if we go back and we look at this thing, all of this stuff, as I've said over and over again, all of this stuff began just two days after the election. And that's when you had a CIA source. Oh, this guy knows everything, and he's on our side. You know, just like Elon Musk is on our side, and he's going to fix us. We've got all these CIA agents who are now on the side of conservatives and populism,
Starting point is 01:07:27 and they're going to tell us what's going on. And so here's Steve Pachinik, who kicked off the Stop the Steal stuff with his lies about the sting two days after the election. What's happening now, and the reason I couldn't come on the Alex Jones show last night was I was not given the permission that I needed to in order to say what I'm about to say. I do not work for the federal government. I'm not paid by them. This is really I don't work for them, but they give me permission. Contrary to what everybody else said, Trump knew this was happening. Eric knew this was happening and warned the public. I knew this was happening.
Starting point is 01:08:06 However, I could not say anything about it. What happened was we marked, watermarked every ballot with what's called the QFS block chain encryption code. We know pretty well where every ballot is, where it went, and who has it. So this is not a stolen election. On the contrary, we reversed the entire game of war along the lines of Sun Tzu. Oh, I've heard of that guy. And Trump was brilliant and still is brilliant at it. All of this was expected.
Starting point is 01:08:41 All of this is part of the. They knew everything. Operation we're running. And let me tell you that 48 hours ago, not only did we put markers on those ballots, but I can say now with the permission of people in the intelligence community and elsewhere. That he works for. Sent out thousands and thousands of national guards to 12 different states, Washington, Delaware, Texas, Arizona, Alabama and everywhere. So now you have to consider and rethink what this is really about. The genius of Trump is that he is able to pull back at any point and manipulate the opponent without the opponent ever realizing. When we exposed Hillary Clinton, we now exposed and initiated this Biden family. Hunter Biden, Joe Biden, Jill Biden, Jim Biden, Frank, the whole family,
Starting point is 01:09:38 was played right into a game where they were convicted and you're seeing what's happening now. They've been pardoned announced that we watermarked all the ballots with what i said at qfs blockchain which is a very hard encryption code to break and the second thing is we sent as i probably 20 000 or more national guards 48 hours ago none of it was reported and i thank the press for not reporting and in others the press mainstream media is on our side happening if you're seeing a sophisticated sting operation that was initiated by trump steve you've just broken certainly perhaps the biggest news since the election here on this show i have to play this out logically in my head rs rs on your show basically i keep well i love you steve i'd kiss you on the lips right
Starting point is 01:10:33 now if it wasn't digitally yeah it wasn't digital yeah steve patink knew he wasn't going to get on my show i tried that bs one time yeah it's a qbs uh blockchain thing whatever you know a quantum this and quantum look like i said yesterday it's the same stuff you saw sean and this uh shoemake guy i think it was his name or something uh another intel guy well i i've got this stuff i don't know what it's no so the shoemake guy brings in a written thing from a green beret who is now dead or disappeared i think he's disappeared and um and it's got all kinds of crazy stuff on it that can't be verified but it's what people want to hear right so it's confirmation bias there and it's got a lot of
Starting point is 01:11:26 jargon that kind of sounds like well yeah i've heard stuff about blockchain before and i've heard stuff about anti-gravity engines and all the rest of the stuff but and then the guy said hey i don't know if any of this stuff is true but hey you know so so shoemade is playing the role of uh owen and all this stuff you know and stuff? But they did it instead of having somebody like Steve Pachinik. They did it with a document, which is one of the people pointed out and other people pointed out. I forgot to mention it yesterday, but I had a listener point out. It's got some squiggling lines underneath it. So that wasn't a screenshot of a text message that he got.
Starting point is 01:12:06 But either way, they bring in this this message and so the message is speaking well i don't know if this is true or not but i'm going to keep telling you about this just like alex said well i don't know if what steve pachinik is saying is true i certainly hope so but let's just keep having him on well where were the 20 000 troops first of all and um all the stuff about the ballots being printed in washington at the central none of that stuff was true but like i said there is a great deal of this trust me i'm with the cia but i'm on your side now i'm the good intelligence agencies folks there's not any good intelligence they're all going to be playing you for one side of the other for their purposes yeah it's not a monolithic organization yes there is um uh internal
Starting point is 01:12:51 conflict uh and uh you know these people fight each other just like the republicans and democrats do but just like republicans and democrats they're not on your side they're on their side and uh so you know be very careful these people people want to believe the savior is coming they want to believe that musk is going to say free speech and musk is going to save this and musk or trump is going to do that or you know even when we see their motivations and we see how evil they've been oh still he's changed now and all these cia guys have changed and everything well you know after i, after I did that about Sean Ryan, I just want to take a little detour here because it is so much like what we
Starting point is 01:13:32 saw with Steve Pchenik and the sting, which kicked off the stop the steal thing, fleeced their supporters, robbed them, and then set them up to be persecuted. Not just prosecuted, but persecuted. And so I said, oh, wait. I looked at that thing and it said,
Starting point is 01:13:52 Sean Ryan was the guy who put on that other former CIA. Don't ever tell me that he's somebody former CIA. Sarah, who was pushing all of this stuff and said, yeah, and we got Al Qaeda has come across the border and Al Qaeda is going to be doing this and Al Qaeda is going to be doing that. And it's going to be terror events all over the place. And, you know, we're just going to have to shut down that border and we're going to have to do whatever it takes to shut down that border. You know, whether we've got autonomous robot killer machines and autonomous drones to kill
Starting point is 01:14:24 people and we got to have surveillance cameras all over the place and not just at the border, but throughout the United States. And we got to have biometric surveillance at the border so nobody gets in and nobody gets out. And we got to have IDs before you can get a job and all the rest of the stuff, which is what DeSantis and Republicans in Florida have already done. Oh, yeah, everything. We're going to have a lot of attacks. So everything is on the table.
Starting point is 01:14:46 And Trump's your guy. Because Big Daddy's coming home. And like Tucker Carlson said, Big Daddy is pissed at his 16-year-old. And he's going to be spanking his 16-year-old. He starts going into Lolita fantasies or whatever. But this is sean ryan and the interview that he had with this sarah person and listen to what they say about al-qaeda and listen to what they say about 9-11 is anybody doing anything no and actually al-qaeda makes a joke of the fact that
Starting point is 01:15:20 they move the money we give to the taliban to the camps that train the homeland attackers. Right. So it's almost like an insider joke. Like, yes, we are forcing America to fund their own attacks. So that is the plan to that. These people are the inside joke in our government. And then that makes them the inside job government. Like it's an inside job.
Starting point is 01:15:40 Yeah, you knew it. Right. And so Al Qaeda is going to play that game, which is really interesting. Al Qaeda found the Building 7 conspiracy stuff fascinating. And they have actually had discussions about how we could do ruses and bring in the Building 7 people to make them blame their government more. So they're actually even looking at our conspiracy. I'm Al-Qaeda. She's presenting me up as Al-Qaeda.
Starting point is 01:16:04 So basically those people almost back Al-Qaeda. She's presenting me up as Al-Qaeda. So basically those people almost back Al-Qaeda as revolutionaries and rebels. You're the people giving them money and weapons. Kind of like how the Hamas supporters do it. Yeah. I don't. So we have a list of stuff to go down here.
Starting point is 01:16:19 I think since we're on funding the Taliban. Yeah. The CIA runs this stuff. The CIA runs drugs. And then they come after us. We're the bad guys because we oppose their drug war, because we oppose their drugs that they bring in,
Starting point is 01:16:33 because they want to destroy this society. Folks, the CIA is satanic. They're the ones who are doing al-Qaeda, and they come in and say, oh, well, you know, these people who question 9-11 these people who say that that 9-11 was an inside job by those types of people those types of people are there sean and sarah sean um um what's his name again anyway sean ryan sarah adams i would give you two cents for their opinion. These people are professional liars.
Starting point is 01:17:13 Remember when Pompeo, he went to Texas A&M, a conservative place, and he says, you know, I went to West Point. And they told us that we don't lie, cheat, steal, or tolerate people who do. And then I went to the CIA. And we not only lie, cheat, and steal, but we have classes on it. These people graduated emeritus with those classes with honors they are now cia liars emeritus so um when you look at this stuff again there's a clip here on this article go back to the article find the picture of um of uh coy there he is meeting with president trump and he posted out on um let's see where is the date i don't see the date uh but it was before uh that happened and um
Starting point is 01:17:57 he said uh you want to fight well you got it where do you hear that? Is this somebody following Alex? And there he is, meeting with President Trump as cowboys for Trump. Coy Griffin, one of the few riot defenders who isn't accused of entering the Capitol or engaging in any violent or destructive behavior. A 48-year-old county commissioner charged with two misdemeanors, entering and remaining in a restricted building or grounds and disorderly disorderly and disruptive conduct and restricted building or whatever and so he he met with trump but then he figured out what trump was about cowboys for trump founder turns on trump in a conference speech over the Capitol riot charges. Griffin said, we supported President Trump because of his fight for justice as well. And for four years, we cried, lock her up, lock her up, lock her up.
Starting point is 01:18:55 We know she's a criminal, meaning Hillary. What did the president tell us? If I was in charge of the law, you would be in jail, he said to Hillary. Remember that? Mr. President, you've been in charge of the law for four years. At the end of your four years, the only ones who were locked up were men like me and others like me that have stood by the president the strongest. He threw them under the bus. Corey Griffin said it was the greatest entrapment of history. And folks, the people who led them into it were people, it was Trump at the top, Alex Jones at the top, Roger Stone,
Starting point is 01:19:32 all these people that I worked with. They disgust me. I will never support that. I'll never forget that either. One guy has been freed. He spent a good deal of time in jail he said i i went there and i prayed inside the capital for the good of our country and biden sent them to jail again let's not forget biden's role in all this stuff biden americ garland they are not blameless in this nor is the old the left mainstream media. You got Sonny Hostin. Again, one of these people at The View. Who watches this stuff?
Starting point is 01:20:12 I mean, I wonder if they got an audience other than people who tune in to write articles about the stupid, offensive stuff that they say. Sonny Hostin on The View. Said the January 6th riot was like the Holocaust and says we can never forget. Well, the Trump supporters have forgotten, haven't they?
Starting point is 01:20:39 They never really got it for the most part. You know, when I talk about it, I'm the one they get angry at. They get angry at me because they have vested so much in uh trump and in alex you know if i show them pictures of alex telling people that the jab was sugar water if i show them pictures of alex hating um you know when he was inebriated or whatever, he gets on air and he starts going after Trump or people have released some of the private videos of him going after Trump.
Starting point is 01:21:11 And then, you know, he reverses himself. I put that kind of stuff out to tell people don't follow this guy. They get angry with me. They're very angry with me for not supporting Trump. So again, that's why i'm not doing any interviews with any of these january the six people uh either they don't get it or they are hoping that he's going to pardon them and there's not any truth that's going to come out of that
Starting point is 01:21:36 uh the department of justice meanwhile um they have a lot of um well not blood on their hands as well 1583 people have been accused of participating in the riot and faced charges more than half of them pleading guilty before the trial but not a single person has been found not guilty by this rigged process in the District of Columbia. Stay out of that place. Talk about corruption, a district of corruption. That place, for them to have a perfect conviction record over people who are, most of them, exercising their constitutional rights. As I said, that one guy says, I went in the Capitol to pray for our country. Sam, who worked for Infowars and was thrown under the bus by Alex when they charged him,
Starting point is 01:22:31 he was the only one who didn't run away after they initiated the stuff. He didn't run away with the rest of them to the Supreme Court. Instead, Sam was covering it and he was filming it. And he went into the Capitol building and he's there with a camera and he's between the velvet ropes. Norm MacDonald even joked about that.
Starting point is 01:22:52 First insurrection I've seen where people stay inside the velvet ropes. Sam was doing journalism, reporting, and they came after him. People who were shown, you can come in and use the restroom. They're coming after them. Some elderly men who, if they go to jail, be a life sentence. So will Trump pardon these people? I certainly hope he will. And there's going to be a lot of pressure on him to do it.
Starting point is 01:23:18 And I think that he will, because I think that with what Biden did with the pardon of Hunter, that basically cut the legs out for any criticism of Trump for pardoning anybody with January the 6th. The left was, oh, we're the party of principle. See, Biden is going to stand there and he's going to let his son pay the penalty for his obvious crimes. And yet, that didn't happen. And they were left with egg on their face. And then, to further cement that, he's pardoned a bunch of people who were convicted, sentenced to be executed and a bunch of other things. And he's pardoned about 1,500 people. It kind of looks like the Biden administration is trying to do this handoff of the baton and give Trump a running start with his supporters.
Starting point is 01:24:21 That's what it looks like to me folks they're fighting over who's going to be president and and there is a personal aspect of that to them but ultimately they do what they're told and i think that the people who selected trump this time who selected biden the last time uh when you look at some of the stuff that Trump did, even with the election, uh, we're going to do, we're going to lock everybody down and we're going to do a vote by mail and all the rest of this stuff, a whole new level of corruption so they could install Biden. And, uh, so, uh, everything that Biden has done, uh, in terms of coming after Trump,
Starting point is 01:25:02 Trump, who has not served a single minute in jail. Poor guy. He's been the brunt of the worst lawfare of anybody in history. No, the people of January the 6th, his supporters have. Trump has come out of this thing with millions, tens of millions of dollars or more in support from his own people. And every time that they do this obvious persecution, he gets more and more popular, and nothing happens to him with any of this stuff. However, the Department of Justice is still looking at 200 more people.
Starting point is 01:25:39 After the 1,580 people, 1,600 people, let's say. They want another 200. The new figures announced Monday marked the first time the Justice Department, so-called, has revealed how many cases it believes are still pending in the probe of Merrick Garland. What he called the, quote, largest, most complex, most resource-intensive investigation in the Department of Justice's history. They didn't even investigate 9-11 that way, did they? They didn't investigate 9-11 at all because it would have exposed them. But, yeah, nobody was found not guilty. But they came after.
Starting point is 01:26:20 Marky Mark, New Jersey. Thank you for the tips. Says Mitch McConnell also blocked the $2,000 STEMI checks in late 2020, which helped the Democrat candidates win both Georgia Senate seats on January the 5th. Had McConnell not done that, the GOP would have won both Georgia seats.
Starting point is 01:26:38 And you know, McConnell is the guy who, like I said, none of the senators, none of them, not Mike Lee, Mr. Constitution, Ted Cruz or Rand Paul. None of them talked about the Paris Climate Treaty. And, of course, Mitch McConnell was out of all the Republicans, probably telling them not to talk about that. And Mitch McConnell himself should have brought that up and said, we can't have a treaty that is going to destroy our economy and our way of life without even voting on it. They never brought it up for a vote. Yeah, total. Mitch McConnell, Glitch McConnell, as some people call him. Another example of the uniparty, isn't he? D. Joe says, thank you for the tip. I'm starting to see the whole MAGA movement starting to wake
Starting point is 01:27:23 up to the cult they've been a part of. I'm not sure if it's too late in the game but hopefully it's a good sign have been watching your show for years even when you were at uh commissary and have to say that you're the only one i can find to tell the truth well thank you that's very kind of you i appreciate that angry tiger um says uh this guy is a scumbag. Mr. Operation Gladio Steve Pachinik. It's something you need to scrape off your boots. Scumbag of the highest order. I know, but the smell just keeps coming back. I can't get rid of the stench from the steam.
Starting point is 01:28:00 But Brian Summer, that's right, Dave. Don't forget, you actually perpetrated the scam. That's right. That's according to the actually they haven't. That's one thing they've not accused me of. They just say, well, for the longest time, I mean, for a couple of years after that, they said, well, you wait and see. You wait and see. You know, this still could happen. Alex had Steve Pachinik on like way into the spring after all this stuff.
Starting point is 01:28:27 Kept coming back because he knew that he'd get views. That's all he cares about. He doesn't care about what's true. He'll sell fantasies and stories to people left and right. He doesn't care at all about what's true. Stealth Patriot, thank you for the tip. He says, I don't want to hear the Trump tards cheering if Trump pardons the J6ers quickly. He let them languish in jail for four years.
Starting point is 01:28:47 He probably wished that they would just disappear. And that's the point. Why didn't he pardon them before he left? He had two weeks before he left. And he refused to pardon them. And some of the people were trying to cover for him saying, well, they haven't even been charged with anything yet. He knew that they were going to be charged. He knew that he was going to have them come after him.
Starting point is 01:29:10 And that's why I said, I think Pat Cipollone told him, you know, no, don't pardon him. And they didn't say the reason why Pat Cipollone said it. But I know the reason was not because Pat Cipollone knew the Constitution or cared about it. It wasn't because Pat Cipollone knew history or cared about it. Because we had had, as I point out many times, President Andrew Johnson, when they pushed the Insurrection Act to come after Confederate soldiers who had been involved in what they could consider to be an insurrection. I think they were fighting a war for independence.
Starting point is 01:29:41 But nevertheless, if they wanted to call it an insurrection, which they did, they put the legislation out there. And so to keep that from happening, to keep us from getting escalated into the Civil War again, Andrew Johnson basically overruled the Congress and pardoned everybody preemptively before they were even charged. And, of course, Gerald Ford famously did that with Richard Nixon, pardoned him for everything, did everything that Biden has just done with Hunter. And if Biden can do that with Hunter, if Biden can do that with other people,
Starting point is 01:30:17 which we're going to see him do that with other people, Liz Cheney and the rest of them, conservatives are so upset that he gave medals to Liz Cheney and gave medals to Hillary Clinton and so forth. Do the conservatives, do the MAGA people remember Trump giving a medal to Fauci, to Redfield, to Birx, to all the people that were on the Operation Warp Speed rigged game? Yeah, he did all of that. Gave those people medals. So don't talk to me. Yeah, certainly.
Starting point is 01:30:49 Liz Cheney and Hillary Clinton, they don't deserve a medal. But if you're going to complain about that, and you're not going to complain about the fact that Trump gave Fauci a medal, I mean, I go to these, I see article after article after article from conservative media and Trump supporters just livid about these medals that Biden gave out. And nothing at all about Trump giving Fauci a medal. Well, we're going to take a quick break and we'll be right back. ¶¶ © transcript Emily Beynon ¶¶ You're listening to The David Knight Show.
Starting point is 01:32:55 Yeah, that's one of my favorite movies. A story about a man who doesn't want to have anything to do with a civil war that these people are fighting over. Rich man's war, poor man's fight. But he can't stay out of it. It affects his family severely. And so that's a thing we always need to understand. When we talk about the geopolitics that are there, these people want to fight over borders
Starting point is 01:33:17 and they want to kill your family for their agenda. And so let's take a look at Russia and what's going on in Ukraine. Russia has achieved a major battlefield breakthrough in eastern Ukraine as Trump inauguration nears. It's just a couple of weeks and they've got to grab as much territory as they can. Everybody's trying to get the line of contact moved as much as they can before Trump comes in. Who knows what's going to happen, though?
Starting point is 01:33:41 Will it be the end of it? I'm kind of leaning towards something happening for peace, because like I said, I think they want to give Trump early victories. Not necessarily Putin, but many others do. And so I think what Trump wants, and I said this when he was running against Biden in 2020, I said, if Biden wins, it's going to be war with Russia. If Trump wins, it's going to be war with China. And if we're unfortunate, it'll be war with both of them, regardless of who wins. So I think Trump is back.
Starting point is 01:34:14 His sights are set on China. And so I think he wants to shut this down. But again, who knows what's going to happen? We don't know. But I showed you the pictures a couple couple weeks ago of the rapid advance of russian forces there and how ukraine was just collapsing well even more is happening now they captured the important logistics hub the biggest settlement in southwestern donbass the ministry of defense in russia claimed further that the ukrainian army had lost more than 12,000 of the 15,000 troops deployed to defend that town.
Starting point is 01:34:51 Figures which are not independently verifiable, says Zero Hedge. The military also said Ukraine lost about 3,000 pieces of various weapons and military hardware, including 40 tanks and other armored combat vehicles. I wonder if it's some of our $10 million tanks. The city has long been a strategic Ukrainian army stronghold in the Donetsk region. The city's importance is also in its location, sitting on a central highway connecting eastern and southern Ukraine. However, there is some independent confirmation of the Russian breakthrough from Associated
Starting point is 01:35:32 Press and other regional sources, even though you can't independently verify this. The Washington Post says Ukraine is in an increasingly dire state as Russia captures territory at the fastest pace since the start of the invasion. So it's even accelerated from that graphic that I showed you over a couple of months and how rapidly the lines are moving. It's going even faster. Moscow is capitalizing on its greatest advantage. Meanwhile, Secretary of State Antony Blinken estimates that Ukraine's chances of regaining ground are zero net zero net zero uh ukraine is unlikely to regain any territory in the foreseeable future but they're not going to give up on this war with russia they said well we just you know have peace
Starting point is 01:36:20 and we'll bide our time and then we'll'll come back to them. But that's the thing. That's the thing, whether or not they're going to go for that. The question is, will they find ways, with the support of others, to regain territory that has been lost? I'll bide my time, said the wicked witch of the West, right? Or the East, which one it was, I don't know. An enduring ceasefire would require Ukraine to improve its deterrence, potentially by receiving international security guarantees or by being given a path to NATO membership. Well, Lincoln says that. That is a non-starter for Russia.
Starting point is 01:36:56 Not going to happen. Ukraine and Russia reached a preliminary agreement following peace negotiations in Istanbul in early 2022. But guess what? bojo the clown out of the uk boris johnson shut it all down because the globalists just as you heard trudeau shutting that guy down he says can we have peace talks hey uh this is a war for the survival of ukraine this is not a proxy war. Shut up.
Starting point is 01:37:27 We're not going to have any peace, right? Boris Johnson, same thing. Again, Trudeau, the socialist. Boris Johnson, the conservative. Socialist, conservative. Why are they all the same? The uniparty, folks, is global. Just as we saw during the COVID MacGuffin. So he shut it down.jo the clown moscow is still willing to consider a long-lasting peaceful solution says rt russian times uh
Starting point is 01:37:55 provided that it is based on the new realities on the ground according to putin in other words you're going to recognize their their the land that they have conquered they said there will not be this is rt there will not be a repeat of the ill-fated 2014-2015 minsk agreements which froze the conflict between kiev and the dadesk and the lugansk people's republics moscow has stated, senior Ukrainian and Western officials have since openly admitted that they never intended to adhere to the agreements. They just wanted to stall, to have time to arm Ukraine.
Starting point is 01:38:37 So this thing has been going on, as we pointed out many times, back to 2014 with a CIA-engineered coup. And then you had people who said, well, we see ourselves as Russian and we would like to remain with Russia, people in the Crimea. And you had the UK defense minister who said, we beat the Russians in Crimea once before, we'll beat them again. It's like, wait a minute, you just admitted that they've had, that the Russians have controlled Crimea for centuries. That's in the 1800s, or you beat them in the Crimean War. So, yeah, they've been all about this for quite some time,
Starting point is 01:39:21 and they're not about to do another ceasefire without getting what they want. It's what Russia is saying what putin is saying the kremlin has emphasized that a neutral non-aligned status for ukraine in other words keeping it out of nato is one of its key demands for a ceasefire moscow's other terms include kiev's demilitarization denazification and maintaining freedom from nuclear weapons you know zielinski is not very happy about that everybody else has got nuclear weapons why can't we have nuclear weapons he said give that madman a nuclear weapon i mean he's like kim jong-un or worse he went on with lex friedman lex friedman very concerned about the attitude of Zelensky. Zelensky, when he did the interview, his mother tongue is Russian. And Lex Friedman said that. Lex
Starting point is 01:40:16 Friedman is from, his family's from Russia. He speaks Russian as well. He said, I want to interview him in Russian. Instead, he wanted to do things through a translator and all the rest of the stuff. And he even engaged him about that. He said, why can't we do the interview in Russian? And Zelensky said, and he played it on his interview. Zelensky said, well, of course I speak Russian. And I may respond to a couple of things that you have in Russian. But he says, we're not going to conduct the entire interview in Russian because that would indicate that we are Russian.
Starting point is 01:40:49 And we can't indicate that. Even though Ukraine has been Russian for 400 years. It's such fraud that is there. Why are we fighting over this? And they don't care a whit about our border. They don't care a whit about the borders of Germany or the UK or any of the Western European countries. No, all the European globalist leaders care nothing about their borders. And the U.S. doesn't care anything about our borders, but they only care about the borders
Starting point is 01:41:23 where they can get involved in a war. Well, Musk has gone to war again with his critics on this so-called free speech platform, the king of free speech who saved free speech for us all, this benevolent billionaire, this altruistic billionaire. Elon Musk cussed out a student who called him a fake news machine. He launched into a foul-mouthed ex-tirade, directed at a student who called him out for allegedly spreading disinformation. This is Yahoo News. Quote, this is the tweet, Elon Musk, quote, is rapidly becoming the largest spreader of disinformation in human history. Hijacking political debates in the process, wrote a Finnish grad student and an activist for the defense of Ukraine.
Starting point is 01:42:18 Okay, so this is somebody with whom I would have big disagreements with. But Elon Musk is not going to tolerate dissent. Not on the platform that he owns. So what does that say about his commitment to free speech? He replied, F you, retard. We could have avoided a lot of disasters by simply telling leftist retards to shut the F up, he said. Well, the Yahoo News says, it's kind of interesting. Musk appears to have made a conscious choice to reintroduce this word, the F word, into right wing parlance of late. Of course, this is something that has been done by Megyn Kelly to great effect as well.
Starting point is 01:42:59 Megyn Kelly has now become a foul mouthed sailor man. Because every time she says the F word, she gets headlines all across the MAGAverse. Every one of the conservative publications will quote her when she says F this or F that. You think Musk doesn't notice that? Of course he's going to do that. I told the story before about when we went to see Penn and Teller. Penn Jillette got up and said, I don't use the F word. He says, you get the people who use it, they use it as an adjective,
Starting point is 01:43:28 as an adverb, every form of speech. And he goes, and it just sounds like you don't have any vocabulary. And then he said, so I don't use the F word, but he says, I go out of my way to blaspheme the name of Jesus Christ. That was the point at which we got up and left and made everybody at the table let us out. But yeah, they do use it. They use it for effect. I had this argument with Alex. You know, we had Paul Joseph Watson started doing the same thing.
Starting point is 01:44:03 And I confronted Alex about that. And because I knew what it was about. And it wasn't just the F word. Paul Joseph Watson started using Jesus. So basically, the compromise was that Alex told him to lay off of Jesus. But go ahead and use the F word. That's good. Good for attention right analysis of musk's x posts and replies shows that he has used the f word or a variant of it 15 times since december the 20th and he'd never used
Starting point is 01:44:35 it before meanwhile just like you know he tells everybody that Twitter is a free speech platform. The CEO of YouTube, a guy named Neil Mohan, says that YouTube is a bastion of free speech. I've used a B word that kind of sounds like that to refer to the people at YouTube, but it wasn't bastion. It was something else. It kind of sounds like it youtube claims to be a champion of free expression yet it enforces selective silencing while mainstream outlets escape unscathed well i guess he's just as out of touch as um elon musk and elon musk groupies are about what's going on there you know as i said before i i can't even get my christmas carols up.
Starting point is 01:45:25 I thought, well, okay, they banned me for political stuff and I know they don't like any of the things that I have to say there. But I do want to put up the Christmas carols. I did about two, three years ago, what I had then. And I created a new account.
Starting point is 01:45:40 I created a new email and everything else. I mean, I didn't have anything uh there and they shut me down you know after about six months they shut me down um but um we're putting up christmas carols that's all but if you believe neil mohan youtube ceo the platform is a modern day agora a self-described bastion of free speech um just because it's an open platform doesn't mean that anything goes he said however oh well you know because if anything went that'd be the wild west i like the wild west i always liked westerns and i always liked the freedom that they had you know that's one of the one problems that i had with uh jimmy stewart films my least favorite film although it was a
Starting point is 01:46:23 good movie was a good movie, was the man who shot Liberty Valance. And if you think about the hidden message in that, the guy's name, the outlaw's name was Liberty, right? And Jimmy Stewart was a lawyer who was going to bring law and order to that area, and they're going to shut down that Liberty. And they did. They shot Liberty.
Starting point is 01:46:43 To civilize the Wild West well i like the wild west i don't know where mohan is from uh he may not be from the west from any western countries you know we're talking about western civilization we're talking about the wild west isn't it interesting that the wild west is a metaphor for freedom and these people hate it they use it as a pejorative term yeah it's like you conspiracy theorists you want to see the wild west and it's like yeah yeah all that guilty as charged um anyway yeah he's this is a guy who i do not think is is from the west but you know i saw this stuff and there's all this uh elon musk has changed his algorithm there at x and he's going to start he wants it to be happier place as he's using the f word all the time as he's he's going the other direction he wants it to
Starting point is 01:47:39 be a happier place well i know shorty giving everybody ketamine uh prescriptions if he's gonna get there or not but um i thought well let me ask x uh the uh ai program that he's got grok that's on x i said let me ask it what my sentiment score is and so i said to grok i said what is my x sentiment score and, well, I can get access to user information, usernames, and stuff like that. However, I don't have access to internal X data systems, including sentiment scores, you know, your social credit score. If you're looking for an analysis of your sentiment on X, I could review your recent post to give you a general sense of the sentiment expressed.
Starting point is 01:48:25 Would you like me to do that? I said, yes. And so it says, based on the post that you've made recently on X, your sentiment appears to be largely skeptical and critical, particularly towards government motives, intelligence communities, and certain public figures. And it's like, oh, he read my mail um there's noticeable pattern of questioning narratives especially in areas like vaccine safety political actions and
Starting point is 01:48:52 media reporting here's a breakdown negative sentiment many posts convey distrust or criticism especially regarding the cia government actions, and public figures like Trump, Tucker Carlson, and media personalities. The use of phrases like, quote, don't trust any of them. These are not things I put on Twitter, by the way. This is stuff on my video, right? This quote that it's got of me, I did not put on twitter i don't maybe i did i don't know maybe i did in terms of sean uh maybe i did now as i think about it anyway uh and the questioning of motives and stories like the cyber truck
Starting point is 01:49:38 bombing suggest a strong undercurrent of skepticism or negativity towards official narratives. And then in terms of positive sentiment, it's that while less frequent, there are moments where you have positive sentiment expressed, often in the context of advocating for truth, transparency, or when discussing alternative perspectives that challenge vaccine safety concerns or media bias analysis. These instances are often wrapped in a call for critical thinking. Given this analysis, if we were to assign a sentiment score for you on a scale of negative one, very negative, to a positive one, very positive, your posts would likely fall in the range, suggesting more negative sentiment,
Starting point is 01:50:29 perhaps around minus 0.4 to minus 0.6. In other words, they would give me like a 2 or a 3 out of a scale of 1 to 10. I'd get like a quarter, I guess we could say. This score reflects the critical skeptical nature of your content although there are elements that could be seen as positive or neutral in the push for informed discourse uh so there we go no wonder i'm shadow banned. Okay. Atomic Dog. Thank you very much for the tip. It says, Innocent man killed by the police, 12-23,
Starting point is 01:51:08 while executing a warrant on the wrong address in Laurel County, Kentucky. If you're not familiar, I'd love to send links to the articles and neighbor security camera video. Email? Yes. Yes. And you can always find my email at thedavidknightshow.com, but the email address is davidknightshowatprotonmail.com. davidknightshowatprotonmail.com.
Starting point is 01:51:36 I've seen this story over and over again with the militarized police, the SWAT raids, and all the rest of this stuff. It is a sad story. I've seen situations where the wrong house and they throw flash grenades and has a situation where they threw a flash grenade into a baby's crib, uh, severely burnt. The baby is just, just, and totally unnecessary, totally unnecessary. Uh, Spromford. Wow. I just read that this year, 2025, the famous communist holiday called May Day, May 1st, is the National Day of Reason. Did they do that in Washington? Is that something that Biden and the communists who run this guy they call Joe, is that what he did? I don't know.
Starting point is 01:52:23 Live free or perish. McConnell's wife's family is associated largest cargo shipping company in china and the ccp that's right yeah yeah and uh trump put her in uh i forget the post that he had her in uh she's chinese mitch mcconnell's wife is chinese but he gave her a cabinet position as well um and yet you know they are enemies yeah right yeah mitch mcconnell and trump doing opposite ends uh uh will to box lol david yes skeptic that's right i'm a skeptic uh uh sabbath 1974 says ukraine is a grift not a war zlinski puts kids with down syndrome in uniform on his front lines yeah while putin puts inmates from jail and prison on his to keep
Starting point is 01:53:16 up the charade so the billions of dollars keep flowing oh it is it is true i mean it's just amazing the corruption. I think Lex Friedman, well, I know he did. I didn't watch the whole thing. It went out like an hour or two. And you know that any answer he gets from Zelensky is absolutely going to be a lie. So, yeah, I didn't follow the whole thing. But he did at one point ask him, there's a perception. Many people have called out Ukraine as being corrupt. What do you say to people to regain their trust and to keep the billions of dollars flowing? I didn't watch for
Starting point is 01:53:59 the answer because I just couldn't stand to see it. We'll be right back. Hello, it's me, Volodymyr Zelensky. I'm so tired of wearing these same t-shirts everywhere for years. You'd think with all the billions I've skimmed off America, I could dress better. And I could, if only David Knight would send me one of his beautiful gray MacGuffin hoodies or a new black t-shirt with the McGuffin logo in blue. But he told me to get lost. Maybe one of you American suckers can buy me some at the David Knight Show dot com. You should be able to buy me several hundred.
Starting point is 01:54:35 Those amazing sand-colored microphone hoodies are so beautiful. I'd wear something other than green military cosplay to my various galas and social events. If you want to save on shipping, just put it in the next package of bombs and missiles coming from the USA. Thank you. You're listening to The David Knight Show. Well, you know, these people are all about the environment. And, of course, you know, Democrats especially, but the Republicans, many of them not doing anything about it anyway. But they don't want us eating beef. They don't want us drinking milk. And how come they don't want us eating beef when you see Lala Harris eating so much crow?
Starting point is 01:56:15 She was the one who had to certify the election of Trump. The votes for President of the United States are as follows. Donald J. Trump of the state of Florida has received 312 votes. Kamala D. Harris. Wait, of California has received 226 votes. And all 226 of them stood up. No, they weren't there. Electoral College did not meet. That's, unfortunately, the do-nothing Congress that doesn't know what's happening, how to fix it,
Starting point is 01:57:15 and doesn't care how to fix any of this stuff. It was interesting to see, you know, because, again, everybody was there. They do their official vote total stuff. Didn't get canceled for snow. I saw some pictures of them using snow machines there in Washington. But these guys, they wanted to show up for that. So they're there.
Starting point is 01:57:35 They couldn't come back from the campaigning to help the people in western North Carolina. But they'll be there for the vote count that's sent in from the various electors around the country. Bill Maher had, they say, he fires back at a Hollywood star over the excuse of La La's loss. This guy is John Cryer. And there was something vaguely familiar about him. It's like, haven't I seen him somewhere before? Who is he? And I've completely lost touch with the movie business completely now.
Starting point is 01:58:13 But he was, you know, as a young guy, he was in a couple of mediocre movies. And so I guess that qualifies him to be a political pundit. So listen to this back and forth with Bill Maher. I think the whole country, even unless you're like stupid woke, I hope you're not, but it is Hollywood. I'm somewhat stupidly woke. Okay. The whole country was like, I mean, I think the biggest issue for the election, one of the biggest ones was Democrats pointlessly totally just punted on immigration and let anybody who wanted to walk in for three and a half years did and you know
Starting point is 01:58:57 I think they would probably disagree the people walking in probably felt like it was a little harder actually actually there's a great 60 minutes piece on it border, I mean, you don't get 8 million people here by making it difficult. But there's, I mean, you see they're walking through and the border guys are just watching them do it. They're just watching them walk past. You never saw that? I did not see that. See, that doesn't get in the liberal media. That's the problem is the bubbles we live in.
Starting point is 01:59:30 I think I had it right like that kind of stuff is what lost the election for the democrats it's in all be part of it i don't know i think a lot they have polling on it it's well i think it's inflation i think americans hate inflation certainly they hate inflation they hate riots and they hate well wait the economy is great they tend they hate trans people they just spent hundreds of millions they don't humanizing trans people and and that's disgusting you shouldn't talk politics okay we shouldn't great i don't we don't have to yeah we could play more of that. But our guest is ready. And I do want to talk to him about what is happening with blockchain. He has an organization called Composite.
Starting point is 02:00:14 And he's looking at a way to bridge Web 2 to Web 3. We'll talk about what that is and what the limitations are in traditional blockchain issues about it. And this is something that one way or the other, we're all going to have to deal with blockchain. and what the limitations are on traditional blockchain, issues about it. And this is something that one way or the other, we're all going to have to deal with blockchain. So we're going to take a quick break, and we will be right back with our guest, Noam from Composite.org. We'll be right back. Stay with us. © BF-WATCH TV 2021 You're listening to The David Knight Show. song I wrote You might want to hear it in your pod You'll owe nothing And be happy Ain't got no cash, ain't got no car But 24 booster shots in your arm
Starting point is 02:01:59 Owe nothing Be happy You can't even buy s*** in the store Because of your low social credit score Oh nothing Be happy You'll owe nothing And be happy be happy and eat the bugs all right and joining us now is noam kaminsky i think if i pronounced that correctly maybe i got close like i said i'm going to refer to you mostly as gnome So we'll not struggle over
Starting point is 02:02:45 the last name. But I wanted to tell you, it's very interesting, your project here. And I think a lot of us have much that we don't know about blockchain. But one of the things that you say is that you've talked about, you did a press release about a white paper that would bridge web two to web three. So let's start with that, and then we can talk about your organization. Or you can tell us about your organization if you want to. Again, it's composite with a K, K-O-M-P-O-S-I-T-E.org. So if you'd like to tell us about your organization first, then we can talk about Web 2 to Web 3 bridging and what those two things are.
Starting point is 02:03:22 So tell us a little bit about composite. Yeah, thank you, David. So my name is Noam and nobody really knows me. So I am an entrepreneur. I'm an inventor. I have patents. I have for the last 47 years, I'm 52, been ainkerer and someone that makes, that breaks through barriers to get where I want to, right? That's good. And I was in Shark Tank a few years back, and that exploded for me with a product called Bambooie, right? This one here.
Starting point is 02:04:02 And I made partners with one of the sharks, and my business exploded. We were in all kinds of platforms. We started getting copied. Then after that, I said, if I get copied, I need to make a product that is uncopyable. So I started, I made the next product, had five patents, I waited for them and then I brought them out.
Starting point is 02:04:20 The hair ties that look like telephone wire that women use, I am the inventor. And then the next thing I know is big corporations, billion dollar corporations are suing me to validate the patents because they and they sell millions of dollars and they don't want to pay me. And and I said, the system is rigged. The system is rigged. I I learn through there's a book called The Art art of war by sun tzu it's
Starting point is 02:04:47 a it's a must read if you're in politics or you are in in business and and i came to the conclusion that that was a whole bunch of bleep bleep right i don't know if you can say about right and and so for a couple of for a couple uh for a few months i was really not in a good place and i decided to make a product that was uncopyable that i could build an organization or business where not only would i sell to just the first time to a customer but it could have repeat business because that's the major issue and um and i came to the conclusion that ip property things that have to do with art or have to do with a creators has a better protection than patents for example that you have to defend claims and stuff, have created a very strong legal network.
Starting point is 02:05:53 And then I went into blockchain. I knew nothing about blockchain. You have to understand. The reason I know so much about blockchain is because when I went into blockchain, I said, I don't get it. You were talking to me like everybody should know about this i said i don't get it you were talking to me like you like everybody should know about this but i don't get it so that's that's how i started right and i went to a point that i created a unimos and i created all kinds of security labeling in order to marry collectibles, right, with the blockchain to make them unmutable, to make them uncopyable, and to allow anybody that's an artist, organizations, brands,
Starting point is 02:06:34 enterprises to be able to marry their products to something that will make it uncounterfeitable, right? Well, first I did the Unimus, like I was saying, we call it a house of Unimus. And then I said, you know what, they're going to copy this from me. So I am going to make it possible for other people to be able to do what I'm doing. Right. But that's where the idea of composite came. And it comes from the idea is that it's, it marries the digital with the physical right that's why it's composite it's a composite object really and we put a k because we you need to have something unique right right and so that's how the idea came to be i have a brother as a genius mathematician and knows about
Starting point is 02:07:19 algorithms and math high mass and stuff like that it took about two years to develop. The idea was clear, but you have to develop a path that will allow a deployment worldwide and allow for a very solid project. And that's what happened. About a month ago, we finished the paper. It's completely readable by layman people, except the math, of course. And the idea of blockchain, the idea of Composite was that any organization
Starting point is 02:07:49 or any person that is an artist or even creators can go there, have their own node and have a network within a public network, right? Now, you told me that you want an explanation about what blockchain is. And I'm going to give you a few definitions so that you can say, I hear all about it. The buzzwords, crypto, blockchain, you know, Ethereum, Binance. What do I care, right? Well, you do need to care because this is the revolution. This is going to change the world.
Starting point is 02:08:21 Okay. So let's start with a basic principle of why is it called blockchain right really simple it means there's a chain of blocks and by blocks it means a whole bunch of transactions together in a block that it says okay this is the block that's how many transactions we have and now we're gonna we're gonna make it a into part of the chain and what happens is these these let's say network let's call it a network right they decides what the it brings out a black that is the final the final number of transactions and decides to put it on a chain and they add cryptography at the end of both sides of the block.
Starting point is 02:09:05 So that that amount, that information cannot be changed. That's what it means. It's a block of transactions. OK, and it's on a chain. Second word is crypto. Right. They use crypto like it's money. But really, it is right.
Starting point is 02:09:19 It represents. So in this, let's say, network, let's call it networks. Ethereum and Bitcoin are the most famous ones. We have Ripple. We have all kinds of networks. But let's just make it simple. Crypto stands as shortening for cryptography, right? Cryptography, the idea of cryptography is to put in codes and letters and stuff that has a special key.
Starting point is 02:09:42 That if I send a message like it it cannot be deciphered by anybody once it's transmitter transmitted it and the and the person that receives it can have a like a key and they can they can decipher the message it was using world war ii you know between the allies and and the russian i'm not the russians yeah the russians and also the the nazis right incredible incredible technology uh there's been an enigma machine that everybody is exactly you know that you've seen the movies and there's a there's a key of 256 a characters that that is used by by visa and mastercard and things like that that they do it for encryption but it's also used in blockchain where they put it at the end of the block. And what that happens, how is that
Starting point is 02:10:28 important is because now that block that is created, that is entrapped between encryption and together with another block, now it cannot be changed. And this is what makes blockchain different. Okay. Now, there's another term called decentralization. This is a decentralized network. What does that mean? Okay. When you have an any organization, let's say you have Coca-Cola or you have the government or you have even your own organization, right? Everybody has a central server, right? And from that central server, all the information flows in and out, right? It goes in and out. And that gives one
Starting point is 02:11:08 organization the power of changing things or controlling information, right? And what happens when Bitcoin came to be about 16 years ago, they created sort of like a program. Let's make it simple. They created a program that will allow for a network without a central server. Let me explain. They made a program that will allow for different computers to connect and work together in a process without a centralized control a control let's put it that way and what happened all that blockchain is so this decentralized network is is a ledger as you heard it it's just something that writes information david owes noam a hundred dollars right no one owes his kids uh twenty dollars and everybody can see it so if for example i example, I say I had $100 and I paid $100, I cannot do the transaction twice. I cannot say I paid David $100 and now I'm going to pay,
Starting point is 02:12:14 you know, Trump, let's say Trump, I pay him $100. It cannot, you know, because they will verify on the blocks of information that that transaction already happened. Everybody can see it. And by consensus of the whole, when they look at a transaction, they say, no, this cannot happen because the information is incorrect or because it shows there. Now, let me let me jump in here. And we talked about cryptography and encryption and things like that. And and that has been a longstanding definition of the word. And we think about things like the Enigma machine that was being used by espionage and intelligence agencies to hide information.
Starting point is 02:12:55 I think that's part of where the confusion comes in when people think that the blockchain is private. They hear the crypto stuff and they don't realize that people can still read it. They can't change it, but everybody can read it it which is what you're just pointing out there i think that's a point of confusion for a lot of people well okay so let me just uh explain that just a little bit more so what happens is all these nodes that have a ledger they all have the same final ledger which is in a blockchain, the final one, right? The ones that everybody approves. And so it made it transparent.
Starting point is 02:13:30 Everybody could look at the transaction. And by making it transparent and immutable, meaning that it couldn't be changed, now you could build trust between parties that might not have trust between each other because the information could not be changed. Does that make any sense? Yeah. Example, when you have a bank right something could happen that that maybe they don't have enough money in the in their ledger or whatever but they don't tell anybody the people that are going in and out you know uh doing transactions they don't know that that bank might not be solvent for like you know two or three years because it's centralized.
Starting point is 02:14:06 So this allowed the idea was to to the idea was to stop the manipulation. Right. Explanation in Bitcoin. The idea or the original idea of Bitcoin was to transfer to transfer value. If I lived in Florida and I want to send to a friend in Japan money today, I have to go to my bank account. I have to do a wire, charge him $45. He goes to my bank. He goes to a transitional bank. He goes to an international bank. Then he goes to the Chinese, I'm sorry, to the Japanese main bank.
Starting point is 02:14:36 Then to his bank. Three days later, he's on his account. He still cannot get it because he has to prove he's him. He has to show his cards. He has social security, maybe even his blood type these days and then and then they charge him another 45 dollars and it takes another three days just to get it so six days to transfer a hundred dollars they are charging 45 to me 45 to him he only gets a 10 dollars this it will still be that 90 dollars if you transfer more money but i'm just giving an example right so So the idea of Bitcoin was that I have, within the network, I have a wallet,
Starting point is 02:15:10 and I send him a piece of Bitcoin or a Bitcoin at a time. He gets it within a few minutes, and that's it. There's no intermediaries. There's no government agencies. There's no bureaucracy. It's done. It's simple, and it cuts the middleman, and cuts all those fees and it cuts the control. And that was the idea when it started. Right. And and it was worth very little. He had games so people can collect the
Starting point is 02:15:34 Bitcoin. Right. And then what happened is, is the manipulators of the stock got involved and start manipulating it and start, you know, doing, you know, like stocks and bonds and start manipulating it and start doing stocks and bonds. And it started going up and fluctuating. And it went from $0.10 to $10 to $100 to $1,000. And it has different cycles. And then people, instead of using it, they started holding on to it. Oh, this is worth something, so I should keep it. So the purpose, what Bitcoin was designed for, stopped being the purpose. And now it was just gather.
Starting point is 02:16:02 Mine, create these coins, which really are tokens. By the way, Bitcoin, Ethereum and all the other things are called tokens are exactly that. You go to a casino, they give you a casino token that says this is $100. It's the exact same principle. It only supposedly works only on that network. Right. The exchanges is what allows you to change one for the other. So the purpose that Bitcoin was there to transfer value went away
Starting point is 02:16:31 and it became value itself. And then the organizations and the financial institutions that were supposed to subvert or go around started getting into it because everybody's into it. And now no longer is decentralized and it's it has different centralization points like an exchange. You go now to Coinbase and you buy it, you put money, you know, they call it fiat money, regular money, and then you have to wait six days until you get it.
Starting point is 02:17:01 You can attach it. They do CMYK, which they want to know all your information. So at this point, the purpose of the decentralization, the purpose of blockchain and what Bitcoin was created has been subverted, right? That's an excellent explanation. And I think it's basically, I haven't read the book yet, but I think it's what Roger Ver was talking about when he talked about hijacking of Bitcoin. That it was set up as a transactional thing and now it's been hijacked as an asset. And as you point out, the big institutions have essentially hijacked it and subverted its purpose.
Starting point is 02:17:38 And it's an excellent explanation of that, yes. The three largest owners of Bitcoin. I believe it's the chinese government the american government blackrock yeah blackrock yeah they govern everything the world government yes yes yes if you are a public organization and germany was really stupid selling all the bitcoin they had but but but so so that explains what a blockchain is. Now, but blockchain is sort of like a tool that is a multipurpose and crypto and the use for financial is just as little sliver of what it can produce. The idea is to create a decentralized work. Okay, so Bitcoin, so let's go
Starting point is 02:18:23 back. So Bitcoin, the purpose of bitcoin was to transfer value then second network that came to to life was ethereum right um there was a guy called vitalik and he was obsessed with bitcoin he loved bitcoin he had a magazine about bitcoin he went to all the things when he started and then he said why don't we use the same network to not just transfer value, but transfer work like a contract, like if you do certain things, then then because it's so open, and it works so well, you you can get paid or, or a contract gets done. And that's how the contract system started to work. And he he he wrote something, he presented, and some people invested. It was only about $15 million that he got.
Starting point is 02:19:08 I think it was an ITO. He didn't even give any tokens at the time, just a promise of the token, right? And they started working on this. And that is the second largest network that exists, that is huge, which it wasn't just for value, but it was for transfer of work. Like if, and it could be used, for example, in transportation. If I received the goods of this, then I payment should happen, right? And the Ethereum network started working. You know, it was smart.
Starting point is 02:19:40 All the new people, all the, what they call us geeks, right? In the movers and stuff, they were us geeks geeks right in the movies and stuff they were all excited and nobody else was right and then what happened is is there was a big a um like a clog on the system um when crypto kitties came out it's an organ in in in Canada there was there was these um they call nfts where you see I don't know when you see different characters yes little little kitties we're not going to go on to that because that that's a little a long explanation but the the this organization a so many people wanted it that when they and to transact on the Ethereum network where the contract was, okay, I give you this image and this number and you give me Ethereum, right? So many transactions needed to happen that it delayed the system for six minutes and it created a glut on the market and it made the price of the transaction go up, right? Which made them realize that the network was not productive or stable when these GLADs happened, right?
Starting point is 02:20:51 Eventually, they started, you know, many years later, they created Ethereum 2.0, which now they have 64 different networks working. It's still finite. But the problems of blockchain in general is that they can only produce one block at a time. No matter how many
Starting point is 02:21:12 nodes you have or how much work is happening, only one, no one node, I mean one block, yes? One block at the end is what they produce. They're all competing against each other, right? And whoever gets that first gets paid so all other like for example Bitcoin has 65 000 notes about right all of them are competing to make a
Starting point is 02:21:33 block only one block at the time comes out so only one note wins and gets paid all the other energy to and all the other work done by the other ones is wasted. That's why they say they waste so much electricity and energy. Because it's an arcane system created to bypass the financial institutions that has grown. And it wasn't designed for huge growth. It is not designed to take the transactions of the world. And that's what I mean by Web 2. Web 2 is all the other regular businesses that are in the internet because everybody's on the internet these days and they have an organization. But blockchain cannot
Starting point is 02:22:11 take those transactions or those contracts or usage because the transactional process is too expensive. So the next thing happens and that's called layer one. It's layer one because it's the basic blockchain. So other companies come and they created a layer two, right? Where they use the basic network and they solve issues that that network has, but in a layer two problem. Example, I'm not going to talk about companies, right? Because I'm not shilling other people. But the point is that a let's say that a transaction in ethereum has gone to six hundred
Starting point is 02:22:50 dollars for one transaction let's just say that happens and and nobody wants to do a contract for a exchange in something cost thirty dollars you know ownership or whatever for a six hundred dollar price it's stupid so So it's counterintuitive. So what the second layer does is they say, okay, come and do a transactions with us. We're called blah, blah, right? Whatever. And we'll take a thousand transactions
Starting point is 02:23:15 or we'll take 2,000 or 5,000. And then only then do we will put that as a transaction on the blockchain. So you divide 600 by 5,000 or whatever. So the transactional cost goes smaller. It's a fraction. It's fractionalizing it, right? Right.
Starting point is 02:23:32 But the real issue is that it has a basic problem. The blockchains have a problem of scalability, security, and price. Okay? It cannot be used by the regular folk. And by not being able to use by the regular folk enterprises, organisations, libraries, the DMVs, or whatever the case may be, it defeats the purpose of using decentralised computing to to solve different issues. So here,
Starting point is 02:24:03 his composite camp comes. Composite Camp comes. Composite will allow in its first stage to have 3 million nodes. Its scalability and change of how we're going to change the paradigm, how it works, is each cycle will not just give you one block. Example, you have Bitcoin, they're all processing the next Bitcoin, right? And 65,000 different nodes are competing against each other. This is the most inefficient computer in the world. Okay?
Starting point is 02:24:42 It is the paradigm of inefficiency right and the second paradigm is that whenever there's a glut for transactions the price goes up dramatically because the purpose of that is because supply and demand but really the purpose is to have people remove transactions so they can actually do the transactions that they can actually afford to do now so we solve this in two ways okay number one when we have all our nodes we're going to have a node which is going to call a clerk node that will separate and do pre pre we call it protoblocks that will give transactions to do to different groups, we call them cords, within the blockchain. So the blockchain, if it has, let's say,
Starting point is 02:25:32 10,000 nodes that are verifying nodes, and we have, let's say, 1,000 transactions or the sort, we can separate them into 10, 10 cordsarts of a thousand nodes let's say for example right and each court will will actually verify a block so it will divide the work between and everybody will be working and everybody will will actually get a gain of everybody that has a node will actually get paid and it will divide the work intelligently now they say but that can be attacked security wise it's true but we we devise a a node chaotic algorithm a sequence that will nobody will know who is going to be or where they're going to be or why when they're going to be with mathematics and algorithms like that but
Starting point is 02:26:24 we change that up at that point we change the paradigm that all the network needs to work on one piece of work. Right. So everybody will be productive. So the result at the end, right, is will be at one point you can have one block. The next the next block on the change could be 10 blocks. The next one could be 75 it could be three so it will be dynamic it will work horizontally and vertically and at that point you resolve the problem of the glut of of the of the productivity now what will happen what are we going to do in our block when we have too many transactions and not enough nodes we're going to do something that is counterintuitive we're going to lower the price of transactions right so the notes are going to get
Starting point is 02:27:12 less money for transacting and we're going to encourage them to put more notes because the notes that you need for our network is any computer anybody with a computer can have a node because the idea is that we want to add more processing power to the decentralized blockchain. We want them to be able to we want to make the biggest, hugest computer in the world available for different people fractionally. Does that make any sense? So so by by lowering the price of transaction, it will increase the amount of... Now, if I have two nodes and I'm making half the price, I'm going to put two more. I'll put my other computer, my wife's computer, my daughter. And then what will happen, the amount of money I'm making will be the same.
Starting point is 02:27:55 And what will happen is we'll increase the amount of nodes. And then by proportion, you'll have much more capacity. At that moment is when you need to increase your capacity. That's how we do it. And more people are going to want to transact because it's cheaper. And then when this increases there, and proportionally there's less transactions than the notes available, the price goes up again.
Starting point is 02:28:21 So everybody that increased their notes now are going to, again, they double their notes, and now it up again. So everybody that increased their notes now are going to, again, they're double, they double their notes. And now it doubles again. Oh, I don't know if it's going to double, but it will increase back to the original price. And now we have made the network grow. So those are the moments of pain that we decided to change how things work in order to grow the network, because in order to grow to 3 million nodes, you have to do it somehow. And that way, we don't lose the customers saying, oh, this is a crappy network. It takes 20 minutes and it charges you $400.
Starting point is 02:28:54 No, no, no. This is fast and it's cheaper. And that's how we will grow the network. And what will happen when you have 3 million nodes using the token, it will become the biggest amount of people dealing with this token. So it will be the most used token in the world. It will basically eat all the other networks up.
Starting point is 02:29:17 And whoever owns that token from the beginning will be part of, we call it the decentralized economy. And ideally, we want to make that token that it can be used for anything, right? We would like to have nodes that, like Louis Vuitton wants to do a node in the network. They will be able to have their network that they control within the public network, and they will be more transparent but they will also be able to protect their products better I give you an example okay really simple example I created these characters core Unimus right that's how the principle started
Starting point is 02:29:55 then I go and I make I make like a pin or a charm this is just for. I made it for kids, right? This is like a little, right? And I put it in a package. I put it in a package and then I put a label. We call it a K-Link. Not a label, but this is going to be stuck to it. It's going to be metallic, right? It's security. I studied how money is made just to do animals, right? You have coverage security. You have to use like infra UV light. You have hologram security. There's a thing called intaglio, right? We'll have what they use in $100 bill
Starting point is 02:30:38 where this changes color, right? It's only done with security. And then when it goes through the process it will print the qr code can you see that there do you see that okay now when we make this that is when this this will become married to the blockchain let's say this is in a package right somebody has it because that has a we call it an nft today right but it will be married to this and this will be unique and it will be under ownership in the blockchain right because everybody will know we make it born it we do the transaction it shows on the block and it
Starting point is 02:31:17 says it belongs to the house of animals now when a customer buys it and they buy let's say five of them right and they they buy it and they get it when they go in their app and they go clicky you know clicky clicky they transfer ownership to them now by doing that it changes completely the paradigm of of of ownership because now you own it as a physical object and you own it as a in the blockchain or or digital let's call it a title and also digital form right and and now I can prove that it's mine I can show the provenance if I sell it to someone else right it goes to the parent company because they verify it and what happens now is when somebody has a bag or a hat or something and somebody wants to own it they just have to go on their on on the
Starting point is 02:32:06 enterprise company um like app and they click on it they can prove that they are the owner and and counterfeit at that moment because the buyer becomes the inspector it becomes obsolete does that make sense yeah that is that that's interesting kind of weds the physical world to nfts or something in a sense, right? Exactly. We were creating this before NFTs came to be, but then that was a brilliant solution. So what happens now, companies will come into Composite, will be able to create all of their products, whether it's for distribution to show how it goes from the factory to the right
Starting point is 02:32:43 distributor or how it goes from the factory to the right distributor or how it goes from farm. People that are organic, they want to see which farm it comes from to your table, whether you have a phone and all the parts have a link to that and then users can see how much they cost. So when somebody offers them $100, they say, hey, I have here $300 worth of parts. It can be that precise. And each enterprise that wants to be part of the blockchain will be able to control all of the items and products or whatever services they are.
Starting point is 02:33:15 And they will be using the public blockchain, the process, you understand, because that's really what it is. And everybody gets paid in tokens back and forth, back and forth. So what will happen? It will become the biggest transactional blockchain in the world. It will change. It will change the world as we know it, because it is the next step of the Internet where you get counterfeited, you get sc a scam you get all kinds of things and of course counterfeiting and stealing intellectual property that's always been a big part of the china price and you know you have situations where people will set up a factory there uh and and they will um uh they will counterfeit let's say a brake pad that was one that was a pretty famous example i saw and they they replicated everything about it i mean you could not even the people that that uh the original owners of and and the people who designed this thing they can look at the package and it's a
Starting point is 02:34:14 knockoff uh that is absolutely perfect except for the fact that the brake pad is like making out of paper instead of other so when what happens when somebody puts it in they think they're getting an original part and they get some cheap imitation and somebody has an accident because the the brake part is is not a real brake and it's defective then the other company would even get sued you know so i could see that people would do something like that in order to to verify that their stuff was genuine because counterfeiting has become so sophisticated. That happened to me. That happened to me. I told you at the beginning of our podcast, I'm an inventor. I'm a producer.
Starting point is 02:34:53 I've made dozens of products that have been on stores. A company, even your own factories will take your product, your label, and sell it bootlegged from the back. Or they will take your formulas and they will put another label and sell it to your competitor. They have no scruples. For them, it's stupid not to do it. Why not? It's business.
Starting point is 02:35:18 But when it happens to them, then they don't like it. As a matter of fact, I believe there's a law in china that if they are they they they they they force citizens to steal intellectual property wow that's how china advances technologically because of intellectual property stolen in in industry it's called it's called a company espionage and so it's a kleptocracy. It's not a communist country. It's just a kleptocracy. Well, you know, they might not ever sell to me again telling you
Starting point is 02:35:51 these things, right? But that is the problem. We use China as the capital or the country to do production because truly it is much cheaper, right? And when they want to make a one world idea is that they want to make one world government right and let's not get started on
Starting point is 02:36:10 that like a complete other other podcast they wanted to have no barriers so they they they they they want you to produce this in china sell it in america have great amount of profitability and and they started taking industry and companies out of America because nobody cares, sort of, right? Why do we want to deal with Americans there? The workers are a piece of crap. Let's just send it to China and we sell it to them, right? And that's what's been happening for decades.
Starting point is 02:36:42 But it is affecting the big companies, it's affecting the little companies. Do you know that counterfeiting is about $1.8 trillion a year? And it affects everybody because it makes prices higher. And people, like you say, they buy a trade card that is bad. But what about when some of the products inside here could be counterfeited? What about if you you have works of art or or or, well, intellectual property is not a problem. It's everywhere from from health, from pharmaceuticals all the way down to ninety nine cent dollar products. Right. You will bring a product to them to manufacture. The next thing you know, they have your sample in a trade show in Germany saying we can do this, right?
Starting point is 02:37:36 That's right. And it's only going to get worse because it's not just the counterfeiting and everything and the currency manipulation, but of course they're being given a huge advantage in terms of energy costs. And so all manufacturing is going to continue to go to China unless they address some of these fundamental things. And there's nobody even talking about addressing those fundamental things. So it's going to be an issue of, you know, manufacturing is going to happen in China. You've got to find a way to push back against that counterfeiting i've been in china almost 45 times throughout my career okay i used to go do it twice or three times a year and i was marveled by how something came and then he got adopted nationwide like
Starting point is 02:38:20 like he was there for hundreds of years right so? So, but one of the things that I noticed the China government did, which I thought was good for them, not for us, right? Was that when they found an industry that they wanted to make sure it did well and somebody could do it, they will give them the money and they will give them the research.
Starting point is 02:38:39 Wink, wink. You understand what I'm saying? Yeah, that's right. Here's the plans. Here's the plans. Exactly, to do this. Now, I'll give you a perfect example that i know happens do you know that cleaning pad that is called a magic eraser yeah that thing yeah okay it's made out of melamine it originally came from germany and the reason it's like that is because it was used as a fire
Starting point is 02:39:01 retardant in construction because no fire can go through right yeah about a more than 20 years ago i think um i i remember i was doing a carpet cleaner i used to sell in fairs and exhibitions and stuff like that as i told you i was a tinker and and this customer of mine that was from korea brought this before the magic eraser existed and said oh this is great for cleaning and this and the other and showed it to me so it's amazing and there was sense on the dollar right there was he bought a whole container he brought it from korea right yeah the koreans were buying them from germany saying that it was for construction they were taking the big buns did i froze it looks like i froze can you hear me yeah you did freeze i still got you though yeah you're back here
Starting point is 02:39:43 you're back so um the big buns like they look like huge buns they cut them in pieces right because construction was so cheap and they would sell them for 10 cents and anybody could sell it for a dollar right and and then the germans caught up to this and hey you cannot do that right so what we're going to do now is we're going to do a gray color one a great color one for construction and the white one we made a deal with procter and gamble or whoever they're going to do now is we're going to do a gray color one, a gray color one for construction. And the white one, we made a deal with Procter & Gamble or whoever. They're going to sell those pads, right? And then for a while, you see in the black market, the gray pads being sold for clean as well. Anyway, now, 10 years go by, China is trying to copy it.
Starting point is 02:40:21 And the sponge that they have is full of bubbles. And it doesn't clean as well and it falls apart right i mean this is a this is a great a product to sell because it has um it can it gets destroyed as you clean it and you have to buy another one it's the perfect product right it's a planned obsolescence right there yeah exactly obsolescence that's the way i was looking so um so then what happens is China from one day to another, they had the perfect sponge and, and it was like the German one. And, and that only happened. And I'm telling you only happened because, uh, because of corporate espionage. Does that, does that make sense? Yeah,
Starting point is 02:40:59 absolutely. And my camera, there we go. Maybe this camera is Chinese and it's going against me anyway so so but do you see what i'm saying so so that's overnight they found the plans that's right we just thought of that overnight why did i think of that before oh tiktok it must be tiktok it must be tiktok yeah that's right anyway so so that is it's built upon them they use other people's r&D to improve the products that they are doing that other people want to buy. And a third world country or a country in the Middle East will buy their sponges, which are half or one third of the price.
Starting point is 02:41:34 And it serves a purpose, right? But enough is enough, right? Right. This mega, mega machine that eats up entrepreneurs and innovation and research and development and patents and ingenuity. Enough, right? Enough. and research and development now um have an opportunity to be part of composite have their own node and have all of the customers be within their network right they are part of the network and every product can be proven and and i i'll show you how effective this is you know my wife
Starting point is 02:42:22 likes levitons okay whose wife doesn't right and there's all kinds of bags. Hermes is the most expensive one. They're absolutely nuts how they sell. But it's all about status, right? I have my Louis Vuitton bag, right? And so imagine if a Louis Vuitton bag had a security link within it that shows that that bag is original and it belongs to the person now she wants to sell it right or people see it right and they can go with their phone and do click and it shows it belongs to her it gives a recognition if she bought a second hand because
Starting point is 02:43:01 the problem in the second hand business is where the most counterfeit happens. Right. You go to eBay. You want to buy a second hand bag. It looks just as good. You think it's good. It's a great price. You buy it. Boom. You get it. You want to fix it in the store and say this is counterfeited. You are a thief. Right. That's what they will say to you. But you didn't know that. But imagine now you have a label and the company itself like louis vuitton can you um they have a very fine note on the network and you you want to sell it you don't use ebay you use you use louis vuitton's secondary market now because it's on the blockchain they can make money
Starting point is 02:43:37 because it's clear on the code in every transaction of that product for the rest of the life of that product so i can use louis vuitton to put it on the market somebody buys a second-hand one it's cheaper it doesn't matter right the louis vuitton is the one that verifies as the correct bag the transaction transfer that's how uh um they become like a sort of like an escrow company it doesn't matter they're losing half a half um maybe a hundred billion dollars on transactions on the secondary market now they get 20 25 of that so what happens is the customer now the customers protect the brand and they become the the counterfeit experts and and they defend it. And what happens, somebody buys a counterfeit now that wants to show that they have the bag,
Starting point is 02:44:28 knows that other people are going to see that that's not real. So now it forces and it takes away the demand for counterfeit goods. Does that make any sense? Oh, yeah. Oh, absolutely. That's a great idea. Sorry. No, I. That's a great idea. Sorry. No, I think in your example there, the fact that the people who have been defrauded with the counterfeiting that's going out there, not only do they have a way to stop that, but they also have some way as part of the confirmation network to get some small fee off of each of these transactions. I think it's a great idea. It's a small fee for the seller,
Starting point is 02:45:05 but it's a huge fee for the brand because now he has a new revenue stream that he didn't expect, that he missed. It's a revenue stream that is in the billions of dollars for, let's say, luxury goods. But what about, look, let's take another example. Do you know that Ferrari in 1979, I don't know the exact, I'm just paraphrasing here just understand I don't know which is the year but I remember seeing at one point that one
Starting point is 02:45:33 of the years showed that Ferrari made 100 or 200 cars but if you look at how many cars are listed for that year there's 500 cars right so so so it can be applied for the dmv the dmv could use this system have his own node and produce a driver's licenses it could be applied for for food verification that that is really organic and who it really came from it could be applied for like example honey right we all try to be a little more healthy and supposedly honey is better than sugar and all these other sugar additives but do you know that honey when it comes from from abroad they sometimes put the syrup on it and they mix it up with sugar and and they mix it and blend it and that's why that's the u.s too oh So what about
Starting point is 02:46:25 if you can verify that you are getting the right thing? So it is applicable to everything, but what's more important, the network scalability can grow without affecting the security of the transaction and the block. And that's what Composite does. I'm trying to make it
Starting point is 02:46:41 real to regular people because it says, what the hell does blockchain gonna affect me well listen in in 10 years every transaction will be through blockchain ai oh ai what about if somebody takes your image you've been how many videos on online you have no i don't know i've been doing this for years i don't know i have no idea a few thousand okay let's say okay hey let's imagine somebody takes one of your videos takes your face right and then puts it on the in the next i don't know terrorist attack right and then shows you in or saying something unthinkable right or doing something unthinkable and they and they say unless you pay me a million dollars or three hundred thousand dollars
Starting point is 02:47:24 we're gonna to publish this. And you're going to be on jail or you're not going to be able to be online anymore, right? That's right. of authentication that can go right on the image or on the code of a person of a video or voice music let's say or a contract and that way whatever videos you take out you say this is me right and whatever videos it's not you now you can say it is verified or it's not verified imagine if if now that's going to be a big problem because it's gotten so good and so quickly, it's advancing that people aren't going to be able to tell fakes
Starting point is 02:48:09 from the real thing. It's happening. Whether you're talking about voice or image or people moving and all the rest of the stuff, anything can be faked. Yeah, I mean, it happened like 10 years ago, they had Morgan Freeman, a system, you know, saying you should turn right or you should turn left or whatever.
Starting point is 02:48:26 Right. You know what I'm saying? Right. So so it's applicable. And what's wonderful is that is that the beginning stages and what's happening here, David, is that we were going to make a foundation. This I I'm making this into a foundation because it's the way if you don't do it for profit, it works better because you don't get attacked as much. And we were going to do a foundation in Zag, Switzerland, which is what Ethereum did. Right. And we were going to deploy it internationally. And then the U.S. could have been involved with it because no longer is centralized. Because when you start a blockchain, it's centralized.
Starting point is 02:49:02 You need a body that creates the programming, deploys it, and controls it, and then you let it run, right? And so what we're looking for is to do it here in the U.S. We would like to do this blockchain in the U.S. enough, enough bringing technology and work outside of the U.S. It should be here. It should be great. It should be great. And why not, right? And so we want more clarity when Trump said that he will do
Starting point is 02:49:33 no capital gain taxes in any blockchain products that are done here, right? What does that mean? What does that mean? Can I do a foundation and then do an ITO? Because in order to start a blockchain, you do a foundation and then do an ito because in order
Starting point is 02:49:45 to start a blockchain you do a thing called an initial token offering right you do tokens at a discount that brings money in and so you can do development right but the problem that when you did that in the u.s when all started with blockchain the sec came and said no no no no no this is not a blockchain this is a security because you're asking money for something that is going to go up in price. Does that make sense? Oh, yeah. And it looks like that's going to be a lot of deregulation. Let me ask you this, though.
Starting point is 02:50:15 We're talking about being distributed and having millions of nodes there. This is something that's going to run on people's personal computers. Is it going to be an app or something that people download? It's going to be. They call it a? Is it going to be an app or something that people download? It's going to be. They call it a client, but let's call it like an app. It's a program running using the processing power when the computer is not being used for transaction, for processing. So people will be able to do kind of as their computer is idle,
Starting point is 02:50:41 they would be able to do a little bit of, in a sense, kind of like mining essentially uh in a distributed way yes exactly well the difference with mining in bitcoin is that they're doing a process where they're trying to get in order to make a coin you have to find a prime number a prime number is a number that it can be divided by itself and by one i think yes so so it started as one three five seven that's really easy that's why the the satoshi um he has the first million or two million numbers in his account he's never used them right because it's easy but what happens is the numbers become bigger and bigger and bigger and eventually they're the size of a of of a 20-story building and in order to find the the prime you you need a lot of processing power so that's what mining is calling that case right and also you have transactions where you change
Starting point is 02:51:37 transactions that's another way that the miners make make money but but in this case, the purpose of the composite node is to do transactions of work for the world, right? If a company wants to transfer ownership of this or wants to ship that or the other, then the processing power will happen within other nodes. So it's basically the computer grows, so the capacity grows, so the productivity grows as more nodes get involved and
Starting point is 02:52:06 more computers so it will become like the largest decentralized computer where you can access to do work and it will be paid with tokens within the network so what will happen at some toys oh great that's a great picture of me so what will will happen is that someone that maybe lives in the Appalachian Mountains and has an iPad and has a computer and has, I don't know, something that goes on the TV and goes to work, and he could put those items or computer chips to work and get paid in tokens. And the idea is that those tokens could be used for anything. Eventually, the supermarket will have its own node and you can come with a token and buy milk or coffee or whatever the case may be.
Starting point is 02:53:01 Or you can pay someone else, but it could be used as something that is working for you right and and and if you get early on the on the system you can collect more tokens and as they go up in value we're going to try not to make them go to a hundred thousand dollars i'm sorry but it's impossible to make a utilitarian that way but but then what will happen is it will allow you to it will allow you to gain some when when life doesn't seem fair where all you have to do is you can use those computers that the computer processing power and add it to the network and that's that's what we want we want everybody to make money we want to have the people that have notes to make money when the people that that at the beginning in there um they get tokens in the ito to make money when the people that that at the beginning in their aim they get tokens
Starting point is 02:53:45 in the ito to make money we want the enterprises to be part of it and and definitely control and and not lose so much money and and and hey if governmental agencies want to get involved and use it as well it's great because it adds transparency do you understand that yeah it shows that they're not so close are not're not showing everything. And it gives people more trust. It allows to give more trust because it's a little bit more transparent. It's a great idea. People get a chance to make some money there. But the key thing is coming against the fraud that is just so rampant everywhere. That's a great idea. So you're setting up composite composite.org that's where people can go to learn more about it and follow your progress right and um and you're kind of uh
Starting point is 02:54:32 looking for some more clarity to see what's really going to happen with the trump administration that made a lot of talk about deregulation of crypto so you're looking to see exactly uh where those are going where those lines are going to fall uh but um actually can i interject something i got the number from davy sash which is going to be the the crypto um the blockchain aisr and i did call him and i did send an email i i would like some clarity because i don't want to take this to switzerland and not give it access to Americans. I think Americans deserve to make tons of money, and this network is going to be the largest network in the world, and it should be American.
Starting point is 02:55:12 It's what I think it should. And I would like help on this, because nobody's giving me any answers, and this is going to continue. But if I have to take it to Switzerland, I will, because it still is going to be able to use once it's deployed. But most people gain when they get early on
Starting point is 02:55:33 at the onset of something. If we all have bought Bitcoin when it was $10, it's just $1,000. We'll all be millionaires, right? Right, that's right. A lot of people like that. Yeah, yeah,000. We'll all be millionaires, right? Right, that's right. A lot of people like that. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So they can go into my, I have handles.
Starting point is 02:55:51 I am in LinkedIn. I'm sure you're going to, hopefully you show on the show. I know I'm Krasniansky. I'm in, so LinkedIn for business. I have X for conspiracy theories, which I'm one of them, and that's fine. I have Instagram as well, right, if you want to contact me. My email is really simple. My first name, Noam, N-O-A-M.
Starting point is 02:56:16 Is all that stuff on composite.org? Exactly, composite.org. Well, we'll grab some of that, and we'll put it in the video so that people have that. I appreciate that because anybody can contact me me people that would like to be miners people that would like to to to be part of this even developers in the developing people that are good developers right they even they get paid 400 000 a year if you if any developer gets in an initial part of a blockchain project they get paid in in tokens and they become millionaires. Most developers that start in a project
Starting point is 02:56:49 become multimillionaires and then they become investors. Well, it sounds like a great idea. And certainly I sympathize with you having seen how your work was stolen and it's a great solution to keep other people's work from being stolen. Thank you so much, Noam Kranjans that correct did i get close um let me trust nianski but but you you chopped it up nicely okay you chopped it up nicely i'd have to practice a
Starting point is 02:57:16 little bit more i i today i got kind of close on the canadian prime minister's name so or a conservative party leader's name i should say uh so we work at these things so we'll say no not not trudeau but um pierre polyev i think is the way he pronounces it uh the conservative um who the head of the conservatives that would likely be uh prime minister if they win but nevertheless um yeah some sometimes names can be challenging but this is a great challenge that you've taken on and and it looks like a great idea. And again, folks, it is composite with a K, composite.org, and we'll have the information there so that you can contact Noam and ask him about things. So listen, also, David, I just want to let you know that blockchain, it looks like it's murky, and it's just just for young people and you don't really know. So in the future
Starting point is 02:58:08 I had to learn everything from top to bottom. I've studied more blockchains than most people will know. I've read more white papers than you can imagine. And you did a great job of explaining it. Yes, yes, because I have a brother that is an academic and he's a genius mathematically. But when he wrote the white paper, I said, I don't understand this.
Starting point is 02:58:30 So I had to, you can see me. Explain to me like I'm an 8-year-old. I don't understand this. I don't understand this. So if you ever want to put me again on your show and ask me questions
Starting point is 02:58:42 or people want to reach out and say, I don't understand this. And you want simple down to earth answers that are applicable to, to anybody's daily life. You're welcome. You're welcome. I'll, I'll be more than a pleasure to come again. That's great. Thank you so much. And, um, we didn't, do we have any questions there for him? Nope. We didn't have any questions today. So we'll let people digest this, and they'll have the contact information there to get to you. Thank you so much. Very interesting.
Starting point is 02:59:11 And as I said before, I think one of the best explanations I've seen of the blockchain, the history of this. Thank you so much for what you're doing. I wish you the best of luck. And maybe we'll have this interview one day. It'll be gold, and we can put that. there's a look I interviewed this guy's who's getting started thank you so much what I if you ask me to interview me at that point I will always say yes thank you so much thank you the best of wishes to you and folks thank you for joining us and progress retort thank you very much for
Starting point is 02:59:44 the tip I appreciate that. We'll get to the comment and the other comments. We'll get to those tomorrow. No more time in the program. Thank you for joining us. Have a good day. Hello, it's me, Volodymyr Zelensky. I'm so tired of wearing these same t-shirts everywhere for years.
Starting point is 03:00:06 You'd think with all the billions, I've skimmed off America. I could dress better. And I could, if only David Knight would send me one of his beautiful grey MacGuffin hoodies or a new black t-shirt with the MacGuffin logo in blue. But he told me to get lost. Maybe one of you American suckers can buy me some at thedavidknightshow.com. You should be able to buy me several hundred. Those amazing sand-colored microphone hoodies are so beautiful. I'd wear something other than green military cosplay to
Starting point is 03:00:40 my various galas and social events. If you want to save on shipping, just put it in the next package of bombs and missiles coming from the USA.

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