The David Knight Show - Tue 9Jul24 David Knight Show UNABRIDGED
Episode Date: July 9, 2024(2:00) NewsWhat do we say to people who survived lockdown financially, and survived jabs, who think Fauci is a hero and are as disinterested in what's about to happen as they are in what happened to o...ther people? Jim Quinn has his answer, I have a different answer even though my experience has been similarMaryland has a massive "self-created hole" — billions in annual deficits to pay for a failing education system. You will own nothing and property taxes for government schools is one way to get there quickly(27:11) News continued…Has the earth's inner core slowed? Has it reversed course? The debate sheds some important light on the current state of scienceExpect to see a big push to get you to get facial scans such as this questionable science that says they can detect disease and overall health from a facial scanAs the technology now exists for the first time to support global governance, one author asks "do people want precious freedom"?(43:41) "Climate Change" is a Conspiracy Theory, Chemtrails & Geoengineering are REAL WATCH military veteran who has become a whistleblower about chemtrails (51:40) News continued…The public seems to have caught on that college is mostly a politicized waste of time and moneyNashville judge rules ALL writings of the Nashville Tranny-Murderer to be kept secret with the most absurd "justification" everEU's Digital Services Act (DSA) — the most comprehensive and insidious attack against free speech ever devised(1:20:59) Thank you to donors and listener comments, questions, and letters regarding toxic train derailment, recent guests and more (1:36:06) More Wag-the-Biden PageantBiden explains himself in some of the "Goodest" clips yetWhoopi whoops it up for Biden. Even if he gets poopi, she doesn't careLike other old politicians who've become addicted to power, Biden will only leave feet firstChris O'Donnell — STOP THE HAMMERING OF BIDEN. Chris thinks Biden (and all candidates) should go to debates with all their aids to answer the questions. (1:50:05) RNC Top-Down DictatorshipNo pretense of participation by delegates as the platform has been decided behind closed doors a week before the conventionWhat's in the 20 goals of the campaign?RNC got it right on abortion from a Constitutional and a pragmatic standpoint of saving lives by NOT calling for federalizing the issue(2:03:07) Wrong-Way-Mo Car Driving on Wrong Side of Road Treated Like a VIP by CopsDriving on wrong side of the road, running a red light, NOT stopping for cop. Would you or I be shot for this? The WrongWayMo Google car doesn't even get ticketed(2:13:07) INTERVIEW Sen Niceley (TN) Protecting Food & Farms at the State Level TN State Senator Frank Niceley on what has been done and can be done AT THE STATE LEVEL:to protect local farms and local food & dairythe PRIME Act at the state levelChemtrails prohibitionmRNA in food prohibitionHealth freedom — purchase of Ivermectin over-the-counterfinancial privacy of gun and ammo purchasesEminent domain reformControlling purchase of farmland and businesses by hostile nationsRequiring wind farms to pay the true cost of end-of-life waste for the "bird blenders"Find out more about the show and where you can watch it at TheDavidKnightShow.comIf you would like to support the show and our family please consider subscribing monthly here: SubscribeStar https://www.subscribestar.com/the-david-knight-showOr you can send a donation throughMail: David Knight POB 994 Kodak, TN 37764Zelle: @DavidKnightShow@protonmail.comCash App at: $davidknightshowBTC to: bc1qkuec29hkuye4xse9unh7nptvu3y9qmv24vanh7Money should have intrinsic value AND transactional privacy: Go to DavidKnight.gold for great deals on physical gold/silverFor 10% off Gerald Celente's prescient Trends Journal, go to TrendsJournal.com and enter the code KNIGHTBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-david-knight-show--2653468/support.
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You're listening to The David Knight Show. As the clock strikes 13, it's Tuesday, the 9th of July, Year of Our Lord 2024. Well, today we're going to take a look at some movements in terms of driverless cars, in terms of the power requirements for artificial intelligence.
And they're already admitting what I said from the very beginning.
They're going to build their own power sources while they cut us off of the grid.
This is where this is headed.
We're also going to take a look at chemtrails and at climate change,
why the chemtrails are real and the climate change isn't.
How about that?
Chemtrails are real.
Climate change is a fantasy.
But we're going to begin with the news.
We'll be right back.
Stay with us. Well, I want to begin today before we get into the current event type of news, where we look at how they're driving us mad.
Not crazy, but angry mad
uh i want to take a look at an interesting op-ed piece from jim quinn at the burning platform
and in it he recounted how he was um he understands what's going on especially the
fourth turning he mentions that several times he understands the times in which we live, the forces that are accumulating and escalating.
But in it, he was talking about friends of his that he hadn't seen for a while,
catching up with them as to what's happened in the last few years,
and how, first of all, they didn't understand it.
Secondly, when they explained it to him, they really didn't care.
Really didn't care.
And it's kind of where we find ourselves today.
They didn't care because it had not really affected them yet.
Yet.
Or maybe they didn't realize, in the case of one of them, how it did affect them already.
And he was too kind to point that out
but he said i've been writing articles for the better part of the last 16 years warning about
government debt the government surveillance state the military industrial complex the fed the regime
media propaganda machine the wall street cabal all of these coinciding with the onset and the progression of this current fourth turning crisis.
He said, I typically keep my views to myself when I'm around other people.
If they want to see what I have to say, he said they can go to my website.
I kind of do the same thing.
Like I mentioned, an encounter that I had with somebody that worked in the press this last weekend.
It was a social function.
I really didn't want to get into it.
And I really don't like to talk about it.
It's just not enough time to come in cold and talk to people about it.
But he had a situation where he got together with some people I hadn't seen for quite a while.
And after he'd had a few drinks, that's one of the reasons I don't drink,
he began to want to engage them in conversation
and to tell them what he thought so he said i knew one person i wanted to talk politics
markets and economy uh she did so he said these are subject areas where i normally just listen
and keep my views to myself and after i'd had several drinks, I let my guard down. So I proceeded to school her about the coming financial crash,
the great taking, how the U.S. initiated the conflict in Ukraine,
how it didn't matter who got elected
because shadowy globalist billionaires continued to pull the strings.
Her reply was that I was saying the same things 10 years ago.
And yet, her stock portfolio is now at an all-time high.
Well, I can really identify with him.
Can you?
You probably can as well.
She said, all my facts are correct.
Yeah, the national debt is at $35 trillion.
Interest on the debt is accumulating at $1 trillion per 100 days and so forth.
Financial disaster should be close at hand, but to her, nothing else mattered than the fact that nothing bad had happened so far to her.
So why should she worry about any of this stuff?
Oh, this is really familiar territory then i turned to the covid scandemic he said the national shutdown the vaccine the coming bird flu
hoax and how much i despise my government this is where i may have gotten a little too vehement
and my discussion as others in the group seemed concerned i might be having a heart attack
i'm gonna meet him someday it's like we're like uh twins separated birth or something
she was vaxxed and boosted she believed everything the government told her
masks social distancing etc she was appreciative of the government's ppp money which had kept her
restaurant from going bankrupt and she thought fauci was a hero be still my heart um
i loudly declared fauci to be a mass murderer who should die for his crimes. I told her the vaccine had killed and injured far more people than it ever saved.
Shutting down the country over a flu was the work of fascists.
And the entire pandemic was used to steal the 2020 election through mail-in ballot fraud.
From her perspective, nothing else mattered than the fact that she had not died from the jabs.
And her business actually made more money from the PPP program than it would have by staying open.
Oh, she's part of the problem, I guess.
These people who made more money from Trump's welfare program than they did from actually operating their business.
I told her anyone who can't see the truth at this point is purposely keeping their head
in the sand because they don't want to admit that they were wrong.
I didn't have the heart to point out the serious illness that her husband developed after getting
the jab.
But I did tell her, he says, that hundreds of thousands of small businesses did go bankrupt
because the government shut down, and she was lucky that hers survived.
The PPP program was essentially the government breaking your legs
and giving you a wheelchair and expecting you to thank them
for their generosity by giving them more tax dollars.
They said, I realized there was no use in trying to change the mind of a normie
who had been conditioned and propagandized for decades to
believe what she was told by politicians and regime media her discomfort caused by the cognitive
dissonance of knowing that the current trajectory of the nation's finances will lead to disaster but
seeing her net worth continue to grow as the markets rise,
has led to an overwhelming level of normalcy bias in viewing the world.
You see, what do you say about this?
Well, we were told that people will become lovers of self.
She doesn't care what is happening to the overall economy. She sees herself as completely above and divorced from the consequences that happen to the nation, to the state, to her community, to her neighbors.
Not my problem, you see.
It's that self-centeredness that really is at the core of this.
Now, Quinn doesn't see it from that perspective he sees this more from a george
carlin perspective than a jesus christ perspective and um so he said millions of people have fallen
into this mental trap that'll not be resolved until the economy implodes till bombs are falling
on our cities and warring factions leave chaos and death across our countrysides
you know we look at that or you look at the economic consequences may my stock
polio is doing great well that can evaporate in a moment i've seen that happen you go back to the
2000 dot com crash i mean all those tech companies are doing great now they had real products
that people use anything but for a moment there it all disappeared and so
these types of things can happen the fact that nothing has happened to her
even and she can't recognize the fact that something did happen to her husband
but the fact that nothing has happened to her physically from the jabs and
boosters the fact that the stock market to her physically from the jabs and boosters
the fact that the stock market has not crashed and that her paper wealth has not evaporated and
disappeared the fact that the bombs are not yet falling but everything's just fine what reminds
me is the story of the guy who falls out of a 25-story window and five stories down. He thinks to himself was so far so good.
Right.
That's where we are.
Isn't it?
Uh, we may be closer than five floors to the bottom of this thing.
I hope not.
Uh, but, uh, he referred back to a Metallica program, program, song, the lyrics.
They said nothing else matters.
He says, we accelerate toward the dark, partially obscured, multidimensional climax of this fourth turning over the next several years.
Every one of us will need to determine what really matters.
What really matters what really matters he began his essay by saying um
you know he he really likes evidently this metallica song which i know nothing about
nothing else matters he quotes a couple lines from it and he said there was a lead singer from
metallica went into a bar and there was a funeral being held for some hell's angels guy or something
like that and said he'd originally written the song about his girlfriend or something,
and they were using it as kind of a format to talk about their lost friend who had died.
And he said, yeah, this could be something that is a lot more significant
than just losing my girlfriend.
And it is.
He says, I often feel like I'm going through the motions going to work every day posting articles warning people who already know
these problems trying to figure out how to survive whatever is headed our way
without becoming too depressed to carry on so how do you do that? Well, you know, he says, he looks at it and nothing else matters.
He said, I have an open mind to hear different points of views.
I agree with Trump and RFK Jr. on a number of issues.
That's why I vehemently oppose their views on other issues.
The only politician I've ever felt perfectly aligned with was Ron Paul,
but I also thought that he wasn't mean and forceful
enough to succeed he says does any of the daily drama regarding biden's senility or zelinski's
acting abilities fronting the u.s war against russia matter to me it seems like theater it's
designed to confuse to distract to obscure what's really happening under the curtain
where the real people running the world are plotting their next move
with their never-ending war on humanity, family, and freedom.
Well, I agree with all that.
The problem is, is that if you take this from a strictly secular and political standpoint,
none of it makes any difference.
None of it makes any sense, and there's no really reason to carry on.
I don't understand really how people who don't have a different perspective on it, who don't
have a spiritual, eternal perspective on this, I don't understand how they do continue on.
It really is a hopeless situation.
But there is hope.
There is a confident expectation.
You know, Jesus said, what does it profit a man to
gain the whole world and lose his own soul?
What if we fixed all the political problems?
What if we secured every
aspect of the Bill of Rights and we had
limited government? What if we were
prosperous and healthy
and our family was as well?
Well, that would only last
for a moment.
For a moment.
What would it profit you to establish heaven on earth when, as we look at these billionaires,
especially as they get older and older, even people like Warren Buffett, even though he says, hey, you know, look, I'm not trying to be morbid here, but I made all my money
in the insurance industry and I understand the actuarial tables.
And so let's talk about what happens when I'm gone to keep this company going.
Is that it?
Is that what you really want to do?
You want to have some company that keeps going on?
What happens to you?
You see, this life is such a tiny, tiny fragment of time.
What we do here does really matter. There's a free offer that's out there.
All you have to do is ask for it. All you have to do is ask for it. But there's a free offer out there that most people don't even want to entertain that idea. And, you know, if we
convinced everybody of all this stuff and we won every fight on this earth,
what difference would that make if we lose everything in eternity?
You see, this world is simply a small temporary representation of the real thing.
That's our perspective. And because of what we can do here that will affect what we do eternally, that's why we fight.
And I have no problems with that.
That's the thing that keeps me going.
I would have a real problem if this fight was predicated on winning in politics
and trying to convince people like this person he was talking to at the bar
that it really mattered.
She's too caught up in herself.
She can't see anything except what is happening right now.
She can't even see the perspective of a couple of years in this life,
let alone an eternal perspective.
We have to keep that or we'll be
suicidal i've known friends who have committed suicide who had no hope but we can have confident
expectation there's reasons to have that and that's what i wanted to talk about before we we got into the news because you know the news is the news is just as much uh theater and distraction
as this presidential election that's the purpose of a lot of what happens in life you have to sort
out what really matters and what is a distraction and you know what is going to have an effect
for a very long time?
The next four months will be portrayed by the propaganda spewing pundits as leading up to the most important election of our lifetimes.
We'll be told by the regime media that nothing else matters other than this election.
But does any of this Potemkin village BS really matter? You see, you need to understand that in this short
lifetime, everything here is ultimately
a Potemkin village outside of what is going to last
forever. And so, yeah,
these things do matter. Life does matter. And there will be
rewards, punishments for what we do
in this life. He said, the impulse to just roll over and accept our fate because nothing
we can do on an individual level matters, he says, is unacceptable to me. So what is it that
keeps him going? Because he's not looking at spiritual issues. Again, he mentions the fourth
turning. He said mentions the fourth turning.
He said the fourth turning could end badly with the destruction of the world as we know it,
or it could end with a new beginning.
He says, I know we might lose this fight, but if we don't fight, we will surely lose.
Together we stand a chance, but separately they will win.
Resist until your dying breath.
Yes, I agree with that. Resist, but resist what?
And resist how? You see, what you really do want is a new beginning. You want a new beginning in
this life. Yeah, you've made mistakes. Yeah, there's no reason for God to accept you,
except that he's made that offer a free gift.
So you want that new beginning.
And we look forward to a new beginning that's going to last forever.
That's the issue.
So, yeah, we resist until our dying breath.
He says, you know, we may lose.
If you are a Christian, you're in Christ.
Christ is already won.
Therefore, you have won.
Let that be your perspective.
I, quite frankly, don't know how he carries on with that perspective.
It's kind of a pull yourself up by your bootstraps type of thing.
And good for him if he can.
But ultimately, like I said, even if we win this fight on this earth and we lose everything else, what have we profited from that?
Well, when we look at how we got here and some of the things that are going to be happening to us, you know, many times we talk about it and we talk about what happens with our homes and property tax making, essentially, our homes always rental.
We never own our home.
I have many listeners who always point that out when we're talking about things.
And that comes back to the property tax.
The property tax turns you into a perpetual renter.
You'll own nothing, right?
Well, where does most of that property tax go?
It goes into a black hole that we call government schools.
And Maryland is a good example of this.
They had a massive educational reform bill.
They said, you know, it's just not working.
Nobody can read.
They can't think.
And of course, this is all by design.
It's not an accident.
But the people are looking at it and they say, we want to have some results. So what is their response? To keep doing the same
thing they have always done, throw more money at it. And they have thrown so much money at it,
it's going to bankrupt the state government or it's going to bankrupt property owners.
Guess which one's going to go bankrupt? The negative outlook incorporates difficulties that Maryland will have to face.
To achieve balanced financial operations in coming years without sacrificing service delivery goals
or adding to the weight of the state government's burden on the individual and corporate taxpayers, said Moody's.
And they have pointed to out-of-control education spending.
This is the first time they've issued negative outlook for Maryland since 2011.
The fiscal cliff that they're looking at is primarily driven by education programs,
including the one that they call the Blueprint for Maryland's Future,
a series of education reforms that are going to cost $3 billion a year.
$3 billion a year.
That's throwing a lot of money at a problem.
And that's not going to fix it at all.
When the reform was passed, the progressive lawmakers in Annapolis didn't pass a funding mechanism.
They didn't even appropriate any money to pay for this.
Maybe they're too close to Washington to care.
Maybe they don't understand that Washington has temporarily a superpower.
The Federal Reserve note that fiat currency that they don't have to worry about the debt,
but Maryland will.
A Republican state senator said it is a self-created hole. That's right.
The government schools are a fiscal hole, a black hole, sucking more and more money into it all the
time. But it is also a black hole intellectually and a spiritual abyss education spending was always increasing this is just
putting a rocket ship on it without the kind of accountability that's needed so let's just go
faster you see and sometimes that's a good thing sometimes it's a good thing to have the uh
democrats attempt to drive the car over the cliff at a faster speed than the Republicans,
because you might not realize that you're going to be going over the cliff if the Republicans are at the wheel. But if the Democrats do it and really step on the accelerator,
you see that cliff coming up pretty quickly. You might wake up and do something about it. I don't
know. Maybe not. Their fiscal projections show an expected billion-dollar budget deficit by 2025,
$1.3 billion by 2027, and more than $3 billion by 2028.
Soaring deficits are a function of the blueprint for Maryland's future.
The blueprint is nothing but red ink. They're going to pump $30 billion in taxpayer funds into public education over 10 years.
And then after that, they're going to increase it even more.
They're going to start spending more than $4 billion additionally every year after that.
So instead of adding, you know, Three billion a year. For a decade.
And then reducing it.
No.
They're going to.
Then after the decade.
They're going to go four billion. A year.
After that.
So in order to pay for it.
According to these statistics.
The state would have to.
Either increase the personal income tax.
By 39 percent.
Or raise the sales tax.
By 89 percent.
Or increase property taxes.
By 535%,
you'll own nothing.
And the people will be happy about it
because they will have been educated by and dumbed down
by this Marxist system,
which teaches envy.
They'll be happy because even though they don't have anything,
nobody else around them has anything either.
That's one of the core values ofxism that we don't usually talk about
envy envy a system an economic system based on envy based on tearing everything down to the
lowest level that's why it was round at the time of the founding of this country jefferson and
others called it uh called these people levelers they just want to level everybody down the lowest level and they're happy as long as nobody else has
anything even the washington post is talking about how bad the schools in maryland are
baltimore spends thirty two thousand dollars student, and their teachers make over six figures when you account for pensions.
Yet 23 Baltimore schools have zero students that are proficient in math.
There you go.
There's your zero again.
You know, we got zero COVID.
We got zero emissions.
We got zero achievements zero math uh absolute zero parents
are furious but politicians don't even care it's a familiar story isn't it maybe the parents should
care and do something about it if enough people got out of this system,
nobody would be interested in paying for it again.
That's the key thing.
You know, it's important for us to fight for our freedoms
and it's important for us to fight for our kids.
But it's also important for us to put out this fire
that's burning down the neighborhood.
Well, we're going to take a quick break
and when we come back, we're going to take a quick break, and when we come back,
we're going to take on the big problem of the Earth's core.
Seems like everything is moving backwards, you know,
or coming to a standstill.
And so the scientists,
and there's a lot of disagreement
about what is happening at the Earth's core,
and I think it kind of gives us an interesting insight
into, you know, the science.
We'll be right back. Thank you. you're listening to the david knight show well as i said before it seems like uh we've lost our
core values our society is moving backwards and maybe it's gotten so bad that even the earth's
core it's going backwards according to some scientists and when i saw this my immediate
reaction was how could they know that how do they know are they how are they
observing this how are they measuring it and there's not really much discussion about this
there is a lot of discussion about the fact that there's a lot of difference of opinion
among scientists in other words it is not settled especially when they cannot directly observe and
measure this they're doing this indirectly.
You know, there's so many different scientific theories out there about things like subatomic physics.
You know, is it the Niels Bohr thing?
Is it quantum physics?
Is it something else?
You know, what about disease even, right?
What is it?
Are there pathogens that are out there?
Is there such a thing as a virus?
What is this?
Well, when they can't observe something and they start to create models to explain it,
we can say the same thing about the universe when they look at the universe
and they come up with ideas about dark matter and things like that
to kind of fill in gaps.
And there are other theories.
They come up with more theories.
And so you need to take what scientific experts are telling you with a grain of salt.
If they can't measure it,
if they are not willing to show you their data, especially.
Deep inside the Earth is a solid metal ball
that rotates independently of our spinning planet,
like a top whirling around inside of a bigger top,
shrouded in mystery, says CNN.
And again, how do they know this?
Intrigued researchers,
since its discovery by a seismologist in 1936,
the intercourse movement has puzzled them, both its rotation speed and the direction that it's rotating.
Ah, but now they've got it figured out.
Always be wary of that.
We just saw an ozone hole.
Oh, really?
It wasn't there before.
Well, we don't know.
We never looked. But because there's a hole there, we have to assume that it's because of some kind of destructive activity of humans.
Was it maybe there and you never saw it? No, no, it's destructive activity of humans. We know that.
So the rotation, speed, and direction of the core has been at the center of a decades long debate in other words
it's an unsettled theory part of the trouble is that the earth's deep interior is impossible to
observe or to sample directly so in other words no science no science like the climate stuff
like the plandemic stuff no science not going to show you the data don't have any data as a matter of
i got computer models and i've got theories and so then they start to tell you all the things that
they think they know about this this is cnn of course differential rotation of the inner core
was proposed proposed as a phenomenon in the 1970s and 80s, but it wasn't until the 90s that seismological evidence was published,
said a senior expert of physical science at a university in Australia.
Well, a lot of this stuff.
They said it's important how they interpret the findings.
I kind of, when I look at a lot of these big issues that they're just starting to pontificate about,
and that's really what they're doing, they're pontificating about it.
I'm reminded of the little story about the ants in the house,
who somehow discovered that if they could all get together and move the lover on the thermostat,
that the temperature in their world would change
and uh they were so proud of themselves look at us we can change the temperature
never wondering really who actually built that thermostat
and not understanding anything about the hvac unit behind it
and that's kind of where we are.
We're kind of where those ants are.
And when the researchers argue over how to interpret these findings,
Karen and I spent a lot of time working with the Creation Museum
when they were getting it open.
And one of the things I liked about that museum was that they,
what they do when you go there, they show you something,
fossil records, some kind of geological thing or something like that.
It said, here's what we can observe.
Now, here's our interpretation of that observation.
And here is an evolutionary interpretation of that data.
We both have the same data.
We have different interpretations of it.
Who's right
yeah let me explain mine to you know let you see what the other one is here as well and they put
them both side by side because we've got nothing to hide uh anyway limited available data they said
as a result studies which followed over the next years and decades disagree on the rate of rotation also its direction with respect to the mantle some analyses even propose that the core doesn't
rotate at all so maybe it's rotating maybe it isn't we don't know the sign the direction or
the speed research published however june the 12th has now cleared this all up, according to CNN.
The people you can trust.
In the journal Nature, they not only confirm the core's slowdown, but it supports the 2023 proposal that this core deceleration is due to your SUV.
Oh, no, they don't go there yet.
Yet.
Yet.
Okay. Perhaps if it's because of man-made activity, and I'm sure they're going to get around to that at some point in time.
Everything that happens is our fault.
If they figure out that it's a bad thing, it'll be our fault.
Well, you know, perhaps we have a solution for this.
What if we all got into our SUVs and trucks and we all drive in the opposite direction?
Could we make that work better?
So, we've been arguing about this for 20 years, and I think this finally nails it.
I think we've ended the debate on whether the intercore moves and what its pattern has been for the last couple of decades.
Well, these are people who want you to believe that the Earth is billions of years old.
They don't know anything about geology.
They don't know anything about the inner core.
And they don't know anything about climate.
They said the sloshing of metal-rich fluid in the outer core generates the electrical currents that power the Earth's magnetic field, which protects our planet from deadly solar radiation.
Boy, that's pretty lucky, isn't it?
We really got lucky.
I know there's no designer or anything like that.
It's just a series of innumerable consequences that helped us to have this.
It wasn't any kind of design.
No, none at all.
Though the inner core's direct influence on the magnetic field is unknown,
is it really what is causing it even?
Again, they don't know.
They don't know the direct influence,
so they don't even really know if it's the cause, do they?
Scientists had previously reported in 2023 that a slower spinning core could potentially affect the Earth's magnetic field.
And it could also fractionally shorten the length of a day.
So we better get in those SUVs and start driving in the other direction fast.
Because the spinning of the inner core affects movement in the outer
core inner core rotation is thought to help power the earth's magnetic field though more research is
required to unravel its precise role and there is still much uh to be learned about the inner
core's overall structure novel and upcoming methodologies they're going to have computer
models as well will be central to answering the ongoing questions
about the Earth's inner core,
including that of rotation.
So again, they come back to the fact that
that's how the article ends.
So it's not settled at all, is it?
Meanwhile, science has got a new way
to predict your health and your future.
Just let them scan your face.
It's that everything always comes back to facial scans, biometric stuff,
ID numbers and all the rest of the stuff.
And this is kind of like a,
a big tech version of a palm reading where they look at your lifeline.
This is something that came out of China, and they said,
well, if we look at a heat imprint of people's faces,
we can see that there's a general trend that would indicate your aging.
And so we can extrapolate that to looking at your thermal radiation from your face,
we can make inferences about your overall health and your life expectancy.
So go get your face scan.
It's going to be really good.
They said, you know, facial scans could soon do more than unlock your smartphone or identify you at the airport.
Yeah, I'm not a big fan of face scans.
So let's come up with a good reason to get your face scan.
Oh, well, it'll tell you about your overall health.
Peking University in China.
By the way, it's interesting.
I haven't seen that word for a very long time.
Peking.
They always talk about Beijing now.
It used to be Peking.
But now they still call this university Peking University.
They analyzed thermal facial images of over 2,800 individuals who were aged 20 to 90.
And they discovered the distribution of heat on our faces changes in distinct ways as we age.
They conducted a small experiment where volunteers engaged in a two-week jump rope exercise program.
Remarkably, after two weeks, the participants' thermal ages decreased by an average of five years.
Start jumping.
Again, you know, it's one of those deals like driving the suvs in the opposite direction get that
that core spinning there um you can make time flow backwards uh if you start jumping rope
uh but they continued to sell this thing as a quick non-invasive if you don't
consider
privacy as a loss of privacy is an invasion.
But the key thing about this is the study limitations,
which is at the end of the article, as the researchers also note
that factors like emotion, outdoor temperature and seasonal influences could have affected
this facial temperature.
Okay.
We're done with this, right?
Doesn't make any sense anymore.
Uh, the exercise intervention study had a small sample size and a short duration.
You mean like the, uh, the vaccine stuff?
We keep coming back to junk science it's total junk science so this could require
further investigation to confirm the long-term effects yeah when they come up with crazy stuff
like losing five years of uh or gaining five years of life expectancy by jumping rope after just a couple of weeks of that that's where we are do people want
freedom by the way this article from brownstone i thought it was very interesting they talked
about an author his name is bauman who wrote liquid modernity back in 2000. And he, in it, he said, do people really want freedom?
Can they bear the challenges and the responsibilities of being free?
Well, you know, Broadway producer Stephen Sondheim was there way before him.
Back when I was in high school, we did a funny thing happen on the way to the forum.
And in it, you had Sudalus the slave.
And he's all excited about being free and in the middle of his song about being free he stops and he goes wait a minute if i was free nothing would be free
he almost he stopped he stops cold and has to think about it for a while does he really want to be free i mean as
a slave everything is paid for you know he doesn't have any responsibilities or any worries
all he has to do is just do what the master tells him he's fine and so in it he said bauman says uh
in 2000 again decades after sondheim uh Is liberation a blessing or a curse? A curse designed as a blessing or a blessing feared as a curse?
Another author back in 1942 says the truth is that the truth that makes men free is for the most part the truth that men prefer not to hear.
Boy, isn't that profound.
Except Jesus said it 2,000 years ago.
He said, you'll know the truth and the truth shall set you free.
But people don't want to hear that truth, do they?
And that's what he said.
Yeah, people, the truth that would set them free is what people don't want to hear.
And in this article from Brownstone, the author is Bert bert oliver uh and uh olivier i guess bert olivier uh anyway he
says um he goes back to the story of odysseus the fictional story and um he said in it uh he got He got some sorcerers that turns a bunch of the turns, the sailors and the pigs.
And Odysseus gets the stuff to reverse the curse.
But the pigs are running around.
They don't want to be changed.
And so he says, and this reimagining of it that one guy wrote.
Once he changes one of them back, the guy says, what'd you do that for?
I was happy.
I could wallow in the mud and I could bask in the sunshine.
You know, there's a lot of, Jesus talked about that as well.
The pig has returned to the wallow in the mud.
A lot of times people don't really want to be free do they they would rather
rather wallow in the mud and not have a master who's going to tell them what to do even if that
master provides everything for them we find ourselves in the middle of the biggest attempt
at global power grab in history now we come back to politics the first one in fact that has been
capable of being applied to the world in its
global entirety we've never had the technology for anybody to do a global government government
before or even global governance as he points out this is not something that's available to
alexander the great to the roman empire to napoleon not even to hitler to be able to
uh conquer the entire world and to keep it under their thumb.
For the first time, we have seen this.
I think it's one of the things that attracts these megalomaniacs
and these Nazis like Klaus Schwab and Ursula von der Leyen so much.
And so he says, like the fictional swine that Homer wrote about in The Odyssey,
he said people generally rather like to remain in their comfort zone their head in the proverbial sand just as the person
we're talking about the beginning of the show uh the jim quinn uh the burning platform came across
uh they'd prefer to have their head in the sand rather than face the mere possibility that they could choose or even have to choose
urgently to act because our very ability to exercise our freedom is at stake this was brought
home forcibly a few weeks ago in the town where we live there was a debate he said about chemtrails
which regularly appear in the sky above the town and erupted on the town's social media chat group.
And at one point, a participant candidly admitted that he preferred not to pay attention to these disturbing phenomenon because it only upsets him.
Don't talk to me about that. I'm happy if I don't hear anything about that.
And actually, I had an email from someone who lives in Knoxville.
He said, even though the chemtrail law went into effect on July 1st, I'm still seeing chemtrails in Knoxville daily.
What are we supposed to do now?
They aren't enforcing their own laws.
So what good are they?
I really enjoy your shows.
You're the only one who uses common sense.
This is from Scott.
Well, interestingly, Scott, we're going to have Senator Frank Nicely on.
One of the people who got that law passed to penalize people at chemtrails.
And we'll talk about what the enforcement mechanism is with that, along with some other things. But for the people who want to dismiss this as a non-existent conspiracy theory, here
is a military veteran who has become a whistleblower on chemtrails.
So we're here with Kristen Magan.
She's a military veteran, right?
Yes.
I was in the U.S. Air Force for nine years.
Wow.
And you came out and blew the whistle on geoengineering, things that you witnessed were going on.
Can you give us the real nutshell?
Absolutely.
Basically, I had heard of what many people know as the term chemtrails.
And I worked in a job called bioenvironmental engineering.
And I figured, I thought that was insane.
And why would we do something like that?
Modify the weather by using hazardous materials in our atmosphere?
So, and actually the process of trying to debunk it or disprove it,
I realized it was actually coming right out of my office
as I was one of the people that was approving the chemicals.
And it really shook the core of my oath.
And I did a lot of sampling, a lot of investigation,
and I blew the whistle and I got out.
And I've now used my credentials, a lot of investigation, and I blew the whistle and I got out.
And I've now used my credentials, my oath, and my powers for good to help people understand it's very real.
It's now openly admitted.
There are multiple forms of weather modification.
I specifically found the one of stratospheric aerosol injection.
And collectively around the globe, we have to understand that it is now being admitted because they're saying it's combating climate change.
Well, the climate change we need to be worried about is man-made climate engineering,
also known as geoengineering.
And when you say you had chemicals being pumped into the air,
what kind of chemicals are they putting out that rain down on humanity, basically?
Nanoparticulate metals, like we had different sulfates and barium and stromium.
I know it's probably changed over time. I know they use silver iodide for certain things, but these are,
the odd part of it was the quantities that I saw them coming in, the form that they were coming in,
and it's the same type of materials that I was trying to engineer out of the workplace to
substitute with safer materials. And when you notice that the, what's called the safety data
sheet, the information
about a chemical of what personal protective equipment to wear, how do you dispose of it?
How do you pack it to ship it? When key information is missing, I ask questions and my questions led
to demonization. And I knew I found something I shouldn't have. That's insane. So these metals
are basically toxic for the humans, I would presume? Yes, because it also has aluminum.
And a lot of people will tell you, well, these things aren't horrible in small quantities.
It's not small quantities because when you are putting things above us,
the dissipation rates are dependent on weather and climate.
But it's getting into the food.
It's getting into the soil.
And around the world, these wastewater treatment plants,
when it comes to pharmaceuticals or these toxicants is what they're called, they are not able to filter them out. So if you're
growing organic food, you know, it's, are we going to go back to the plexiglass barriers on our
plants? I mean, it's horrible. That's why you can ban it anywhere. We've had states, states in the
United States ban it. And that is great to get the ball rolling, but people really need to wake up to
it, irrespective of any political party, it's not okay, and you're seeing a huge increase in
neurodegenerative issues like Alzheimer's. It's really difficult for people with respiratory
issues and asthma, and people are wondering why they have allergies 24-7, 365. And I like what
you said about that climate change or the change we experience in weather.
Often we can't disconnect that from these geoengineering activities.
Do you want to say something more about that?
I mean, how do we feel that?
Is there proof or so that that is definitely coming from that?
Yes, there are places that openly admitted it.
Remember Dubai?
And then when people got upset, they retracted it, but the can was already opened. And the issue is,
I know this sounds silly, but when you watch movies with time change, they say if you do
something and something changes, it changes the ripple throughout time. If you are modifying the
weather, you are messing with mother nature. And meteorology is a very, very thorough study.
And I do know a lot of it because of my
profession of plotting hazards. But it does not make sense when you are altering nature where
things are not naturally supposed to occur. We have massive flooding in California and we have
a system called HAARP that is in the United States. And the same people who demonized me
five, 10 years ago are now going, wow, because they're finding it's openly admitted in all of our U.S. documents.
The U.S. is absolutely not the only country doing it.
Wow, that's crazy.
Well, thank you very much for coming out on that and letting.
Again, when we look at this, it's a big false flag attack, right?
They're changing whether they're doing geoengineering or the weather.
They're saying that it's you and your SUV.
It's so typical, the kind of stuff that they do but i think two of the key things and what she had to say was the fact that they were spewing out a lot of the same materials that she was working
actively working to try to get out of the workspace you know the same type of stuff that
we're not uh we gotta this is dangerous and we got to get it out here instead they're the ones spewing it out and uh
you know aluminum for example uh forget that guy who said uh you know it's just a little bit of
aluminum and mercury you can inject that in your veins it's just an adjuvant right who had been
telling you that would cause autism and things like that yeah um uh how about injecting that stuff are we supposed to inject that is that okay
no none of it is quite frankly and it all is a big false fly and so as we look at this as we look at
our dumbed down society our dumbed down schools that we pay a fortune for that we bankrupt entire
states and communities paying for the education you want a
600 increase in your taxes we'll do what maryland is doing and you know what after they spend an
additional three billion a year for a decade an additional four billion a year for more decades
the kids are going to be even dumber it won't be 23 schools that have zero kids that are proficient
in math it'll be pretty much all of them it is a
deliberate dumbing down charlotte isabee said that about the department of education at its inception
40 years ago they're deliberately dumbing the kids down it's the schools are not failing the
schools are doing exactly what they were designed to do and And so when you look at this, the United Airlines Boeing 757
loses the wheels after takeoff.
That's right.
It is a metaphor for our society, isn't it?
Our DEI are throwing away
any idea of merit.
We don't want to reward merit.
No, no, no.
Let's just throw this away.
Well, the wheels are coming off of our
society there's not just one company's products degrees are not worth the paper they're printed on
say a majority of people only 36 percent of americans believe college is worth the expense
well that means that 64 percent don't you have two-thirds that say no and one-third that says yes. And that's
even with Biden paying, picking up the tab, still a waste of your time for almost all majors. There's
a few of them that are going to pay for you. But even that has diminished significantly as the cost
has skyrocketed. And why has the cost skyrocketed well all the libertarian uh economists will tell you
that if you subsidize something it gets more expensive and that's what's happened with
higher education so-called higher education uh what's gotten higher about education is the tuition
not the education it gets higher and higher every every, the higher education. Only 36% of Americans confident about the value of college,
a confidence level that has declined from 57% in 2015.
So in just under a decade, it has gone from just under two-thirds to one-third.
Oh, maybe we're getting the education.
Maybe we're getting wiser to what is happening
here while diminishing confidence in the u.s higher education system was found among all demographics
such as sex age and political affiliation republican respondents saw a drop in 36
percentage points over the last decade a much further decline than democrat or independent
respondents well it's because it's been politicized and politicized against them
nearly a third of the respondents said school is too expensive again because it's been subsidized
heavily by the government while 24 said they believe students are not being properly educated
or taught the skills they need in order to succeed.
You know, when they get out and say, well, my focus is on some esoteric nonsense.
I played the clip for you.
What is the value of that?
They don't know the price of their education.
They certainly don't know the price of their education. They certainly don't know the value of it. 41% of those who lack confidence in higher education cited political agendas as a reason.
Schools across the U.S. are bracing themselves for an enrollment cliff.
And so when you put that in, suddenly now Biden's ideas about bringing in
young people from all over
the world and having us
pay for their education, well that's one
way to take down the United States and it seems to be his
primary focus
is the great takedown
not necessarily even the great
taking but the great takedown
so he can bring students from all over the world
we can train them in Marxism and other forms of degeneracy.
And then at the end, we can promise them a green card.
And we can do all this in order to help the colleges,
because if we don't bring in foreign students from all over the world
with a promise of a free education and a free green card at the end of it,
even if they just go to junior college,
well, then these colleges are going to go out of business.
And you understand the colleges are organized as a very powerful lobbying group.
So ultimately, the reason these schools are so expensive and so broken
is because the feds are involved.
We have the Nashville Shooter's Diary.
We now have a ruling from the judge saying that none of that information
will be released, a little bit too late because the paper there in Nashville
had a lot of the diary released to them by someone inside the police department
and they published it.
But the judge has ruled that over 100 gigabytes of evidence all needs to be kept secret.
Yes, we have.
And what is the basis for this?
Well, we know why she wants to do it.
They don't want somebody who is certifiably insane as these tranny people are.
I've said from the very beginning,
I show the trannies as Norman Bates from Psycho.
That's it.
It is a psycho agenda. And they're not just gaslighting and grooming kids for sexual issues.
They're gaslighting and grooming them to mess with their minds and to create a generation of people that are incapable of functioning in the real world, who don't even want to be in the real world.
They want to be in a virtual reality.
That's part of what this furry stuff is paving the way for.
So it's paving the way for degeneracy for pedophilia and for virtual reality and they're
going to do everything they can to try to support that this nashville judge um last name is miles
has decided that none of audrey hale's writings should be made public. And this is the basis of what she is saying.
She's now saying that disclosure would violate Federal Copyright Act.
What?
None of this stuff was copyrighted.
None of it was copyrighted.
She said that Hale's victims, victims, have copyrights to use the material,
even though the victims haven't registered with the Federal Copyright Office,
and the victims didn't create it.
How do they have this?
She said, whether or not an original work of authorship
has been registered with the Federal Copyright Office
is germane to the amount of recoverable damages in a copyright infringement action,
but it has no bearing on whether or not this state law is preempted by federal copyright law she's a state judge
and she's saying that well nothing i can do about it because there's federal copyright law that
applies here by the way did this judge go to college i think she did maybe she got deliberately
dumbed down.
Or maybe she's just trying to come up with some specious arguments to do whatever she determined to do beforehand.
The judge also ruled that disclosing Hale's writings could inspire copycat killers.
There you go.
There's the copyright stuff.
Copycat killers, copyrights.
It all makes sense now, doesn't it? Well, to no one but that judge disregarding the testimony of an
expert psychologist who said that there's no evidence to support a copycat theory
so she's going to censor that information from the public again she has an agenda. She wants to promote a certain type of insanity, and it would damage that agenda.
And so when we look at the Digital Services Act, as the Freedom for Foundation characterizes it,
they call it the EU's censorship superweapon.
And it really is. It really is. The DSA creates a unified framework for government
directed content moderation across the European Union. And each EU member state now has what they
call a digital services coordinator who has the power to penalize online platforms if they fail to adequately address systemic risks such
as hate speech and misinformation uh those are such subjective terms what is hate speech well
i'll tell you when i see it what is misinformation well i will decide what is true what isn't
uh this is how free speech uh you know dies and is buried.
These official speech commissars can deputize third-party entities in order to act as, quote, trusted flaggers.
A Stasi system.
So this is censorship with a Stasi system. At one point in this article from the Foundation for Freedom,
they say this is the most extensive network with the exception of China's great firewall
to keep information out of China.
Again, China is the beta test site.
One of the strikes I got from YouTube was to say that 2020 was the year that the world became China.
Boom!
Kick that guy out of here.
They know that's true.
I know it's true.
They don't like it when I talk about the Federal Reserve.
They don't like it when I talk about the fact that China is the promotion of all of this stuff.
But it is.
And yet, I would say that this is far more dangerous than China simply because
of its decentralization simply because it is a distributed network rather than
a centralized bureaucracy that's going to be responsible for this.
And it's not just a distributed system throughout these,
all these different countries,
but now they're relying on artificial intelligence.
They needed to have AI in order to shut these things down.
AI's superpower is going to be censorship surveillance.
That's what it's going to be used for.
It'll be masterful at that because it can recognize very quickly and match these things.
That's what it's doing all the time as i've pointed out in the past when i talked about some of these um these examples
where they try to get ai to tell you the situation you know the best one i think was
going across the little puzzle where you got um a um a goat and a wolf and a head of lettuce and you know one will eat the other and you got
to get them all across in your boat to the other side without losing any of them how do you do that
and you simplify that problem and you only have one entity there and it becomes very apparent
that the ai is not thinking it It's simply matching these patterns.
Elon Musk became the first platform,
his ex became the first platform to be investigated
after the DSA took effect.
And so they're looking at very large online platforms
and very large online search engines,
and they have acronyms for that.
They have VLOPS or VLOs.
That's any platform or search engine that serves more than 45 million people in the EU. And so what is going
to be required is that these platforms develop their own means to police this. You see, that's
where the distribution comes in. They're going to outsource it to private entities because those
private entities will do an even better job than
the government would so they have to identify analyze assess these systemic risks they have to
apply their ability as technologists in order to do this artificial intelligence and other things
like that and then they have to put measures in place to stop these things.
And what is it that they want to stop?
Well, we all know.
It's going to be anything that threatens to put out hate or misinformation. For example, they mentioned specifically public security and the electoral process.
Don't criticize their elections.
Gender-based violence.
Well, don't criticize their gender fantasies either because you know
your speech is violence they say discrimination same story there or illegal content which is to
be determined but of course already illegal content would bring up things such as hate speech uh yeah it's going to be a means to
persecute christians it's going to be a means to persecute their political enemies if you look at
what is happening in germany because of the strong increase in afd the alternative for deutschland
the alternative for germany it's a conservative nationalist party. So they've accused them of being
Nazis. I don't know if they're Nazis or not.
There's probably some people
who are Nazis there. There's probably people
who are Marxist, Maoist
and other things in the left-wing parties.
But
what they are doing
is truly amazing.
And it makes you question who the real Nazis are.
They have debanked the AFD,
saying your bank account that donors can put money in,
we're going to shut that down.
We've seen that in the UK against Nigel Farage and other people.
We've seen it against the Free Speech Union in the UK as well.
Conservative groups, people who support free speech,
who support liberty, individual human
rights, they're attacked by these Nazis, these literal Nazis.
And so in Germany, the leftist Nazis, remember, you know, Nazis stood for national socialism.
The only thing these people don't like about the Nazis is their nationalism.
Nationalism in and of itself is not a bad thing
it's actually the other part of it the socialist part of it uh the authoritarian totalitarian
aspects of it that was what was bad it wasn't the nationalism uh so what they've done is they've
debanked afd and now they are taking away the few gun licenses that people have in Germany.
I've tightly controlled.
But if you are now an AFD supporter, you get your gun confiscated.
So shut down your bank account, confiscate people's weapons.
Like I said, who are the real Nazis?
Additionally, digital service coordinators can certify outside organizations as trusted flaggers and other
things like that so the government puts this responsibility on these large companies and
said well you can either do it internally or you can in turn hire somebody to do it for you
is this going to be a new profit center perhaps for the world economic forum for davos
we're going to take a quick break and we'll
come back i got some comments i need to catch up on uh folks if you're watching the show please
like the stream uh that helps us a great deal we're gonna take a quick break and we'll be right back
excellencies ladies and gentlemen yet laus 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.
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.
All right.
And on Rockman, thank you very much, Fran Edwards.
I appreciate the tip.
Thank you.
And on Rumble, for love of the road, good to see you there.
And he says, I'm not going to try to pronounce this name here,
uh,
but someone in the telegram chat wanted to know,
uh,
what that song with a fast playing flute,
uh,
that's played during the breaks is from,
I told him I'd,
uh,
tip,
tip you and ask for him.
I'll listen to this later today.
Thank you very much.
Uh,
it is,
um,
from the Patriot.
Uh,
that's what the visual clips are from and it's a john
williams song from the patriot uh and on rumble plasma stream thank you for the tip it says my
electrodynamics professor gave me a huge smile and no answer when i asked him how the core is
magnetic past the curie temperature i don't know if he ever considered it, but he seemed to be happy.
Well, that's good.
By the way, I should clarify.
Travis is telling me Fran Edwards was from yesterday.
So let me clarify that.
Let's talk a little bit about what is happening with these globalists as they now move to, you know, they put out, create their own geoengineering.
They're polluting the environment.
They're telling us that we've got to shut down one thing after the other.
And yet they're the ones who are dumping out pollution in an effort to modify the weather, claim that that is climate change.
And climate change and weather are obviously two very different things.
But now they are setting up their own uh energy uh creation because they're using so
much energy this was sent to me by sam google's emissions have surged nearly 50 percent due to
ai energy demand well i guess we'll have to kill artificial intelligence and private jets maybe
right no no no we'll kill the suvs and the private cars that's
what they want to do uh and um wine press has a story the ai craze is driving up carbon emissions
in an ironic twist well actually it's hypocrisy you know irony i think it's something that happens
um that is a kind of reversal that is unintentional hypocrisy is when you know
very much what you're doing these people know exactly what they're doing the amount of
computational power used for ai is doubling roughly every 100 days how about that you know
ai is it's doubling its computing capacity and probably its energy consumption every 100 days
and our deficit is adding another trillion dollars every 100 days.
The 100-day mark is very significant now.
The Bank of International Settlements has warned that AI adoption
may change the way inflation works.
Well, they're the ones who are going to be behind the global currency,
the global central bank digital currency.
The environmental impacts have so far received less attention.
A single query to an AI powered chat bot can use as much as 10 times the energy that would be used in a previous Google search, a standard search engine.
And again, nobody ever told Google to pull back on its use nobody
ever told google that it was using too much co2 nobody ever told the nsa that they were using too
much energy or too much water did they i talked about that a decade ago when they're building that
massive uh storage facility to store everything for the day in which they get quantum computing
and can go back and data mine,
everything about everybody.
So they're keeping everything that everybody's done online.
So,
you know,
but you can't go back and get your archives in case you lost something.
Don't worry.
I mean,
you're not going to be able to get it from the NSA.
It's going to keep it there and they're using,
put it out in the middle of the desert and they're using more water than most
of the towns there in Utah use.
And they're using more electricity than most of the towns there in Utah use.
I guess, you know, when Elon Musk puts his AI center there in Memphis, at least he's got the water.
Maybe he's a little bit smarter than the NSA.
I don't know. A generative AI system may use 33 times more energy to complete a task
than it would normally take with traditional software. Most AI applications run on servers
and data centers in 2023 before the AI boom really kicked off. The International Energy
Agency estimated that data centers had already accounted for between one and one and a half percent of
global electricity use that's about the same as all planes all aviation you know the big
commercial jets that we fly and the private jets of the elites that accounts for two percent
and before the ai boom it was nearly the same one and a half
percent is what the computers were already using uh and um for example for comparison
the steel sector was responsible for seven to nine percent of energy use and they all take
this back to the co2 emissions and that doesn't matter at all
none of it matter none of that matters on rumble awoots thank you for the tip
it writes uh the cabal who decries that there are no truths no genders can somehow determine the
clear and severe lines on what is hate speech that's right well yeah truth is what they tell
you if they tell you that it's two plus two equals five you better agree with them and then when they tell you that it's equal to seven you better agree with
them uh it's just whatever they happen to say it's just a power play on rock fan dustin helm
thank you very much for the tip i appreciate that um microsoft's disclosed annual emissions increased by about 40%. But hey, that's fine.
They can do whatever they want.
The technocracy can do whatever they want.
The military industrial complex, the intelligence community,
they can do whatever they wish, no problems.
So it's not just the electricity, of course.
As I said before, they consume large amounts of water
in order to cool their servers.
The data centers in the U.S. use about 7,100 liters of water for every megawatt hour of energy that they consume.
Google's U.S. data centers alone consumed an estimated 12.7 billion liters of fresh water in 2021.
So they get first dibs on all this stuff.
They get first dibs on the water.
How about that?
We can just stick our head in the sand, I guess.
And then they're going to get first dibs on the energy as well.
The BOE report says that the energy beast is now fully unleashed, talking about AI.
And so we better pay attention to the energy consequences.
Just as everyone was getting cranked up on this energy transition, which was the big Western imperative, we all got to move to renewable stuff, right?
Well, now they've suddenly changed gears.
And I've played for you just in the last
couple months we've seen this over and over again we've seen it from sam altman we've seen it from
larry fink the financier black rock oh we we gotta find some way that we can uh do nuclear because
that's the only way that this is going to work we got to have this artificial intelligence in order
to track and to follow the slaves.
Oh, and to beat the Chinese.
Yes, of course, to beat the Chinese.
I forgot.
Yeah.
No, it's about us, really.
And so we've got to have this.
We're going to have to have nuclear.
Several billion hungry people's vision for a better future.
Well, that'll have to take a backseat to their new agenda you know this was an existential threat
right and they just decided that their existential threat doesn't matter as much as their surveillance
does uh so the consumption began to skyrocket uh and um with their ai then late last year
something landed uh well this is even before the ai they said and then late last year, something landed. Well, this is even before the AI. They said, and then late last year, something landed on the scene like the Tunguska fireball.
You know, the one in Russia.
Well, why is that?
I don't know, but it leveled an entire forest just like that.
You know, trees don't go down that easy.
This new something hasn't leveled forests for 40 square miles like Tunguska did,
but the impact is going to be even bigger even
if it takes a year or two for the shock waves to fan out and the new fireball is the arrival of ai
it's widespread acceptance and adoption and the view that it is now an imperative
we have a new imperative see how some of these new facilities are building near
natural gas fields for example where they can use that.
And a lot of them in Ohio, near the massive Appalachia gas field.
I said, well, that's fine.
They can drill new wells and meet that demand.
Oh, but no, it's CO2.
We're going to have to build nuclear power they said and again like all these
technologies that they want to switch to very rapidly it's got some big issues that remain
unsettled but here folks is the biggest issue with all of this stuff what makes this new ai
demand so concerning from a grid perspective is that demand can co-locate with the power facilities
this is why they're talking about sam altman and these other people are talking about miniature
nuclear power plants and i said this from the very beginning they're talking about miniature
nuclear power plants because this is not about expanding the grid this is not about getting
more power to you it's about getting just enough power for them.
And again, you can do without.
Just like you can do without the water that they're going to take.
They're going to take all the power for themselves.
They're going to take all the water for themselves.
And they're going to use all that power and water to spy on you.
So they can co-locate these small nuclear reactors they can put them at the
same location as their ai oh that solves a lot of different problems they don't have to build an
expensive grid look at how many tens of billions of dollars have been spent by texas and by the uk and also to create an infrastructure to carry the power that's
generated in their remote wind fields to get it onto the grid for everybody else they spent a lot
of money in texas for that and then they froze up during the cold winter but um they spent a lot of
money on that infrastructure well they take these nuclear power plants and put them right there where their AI
data centers are. Well, then
they don't have to build
that grid to distribute
the stuff to you because you're not going to get any.
So, they don't have, they can bypass
this transmission delivery system.
Meaning that critical power
supplies might not ever make it
to the grid. maybe you'll have to
get that solar power and that wind anyway right because that's really what makes sense for the
solar panels and for the um for the um the windmill i mean it's not steady state the wind
the wind's not blowing you're not going to get any power the sun's not shining you're not going
to get any power however it does get you off the grid and you don't need to have
the massive battery systems that the grid needs to have and they may be shutting everything down
in the name of climate change we're going to shut down all the coal power plants all the gas
plants and everything else and we're going to have clean energy. We're the only ones with clean energy. So we're going to
be the only ones who have energy and we're not going to make enough of it for you. It's just
going to be for their use. They're not going to even have the ability to give it to you.
Users and generators generally prefer the scenario because it cuts out the middle participant and it cuts out the
distribution issue and the pie gets shared only two ways instead of three that's exactly what they
want we'll be right back
the common man.
They created common core to dumb down our children.
They created common past to track and control us.
Their commons project to make sure the commoners own nothing.
And the communist future.
They see the common man as simple, unsophisticated,
ordinary, but each of us has worth and dignity created in the image of God.
That is what we have in common. That is what they want to take away. Their most powerful
weapons are isolation, deception, intimidation.
They desire to know everything about us while they hide everything from us.
It's time to turn that around and expose what they want to hide.
Please share the information and links you'll find at thedavidknightshow.com.
Thank you for listening.
Thank you for listening. Thank you for sharing. If you can't support us financially, please keep us in your prayers.
TheDavidKnightShow.com all right and before we get back into the news i've got some amazing things that are happening
with self-driving cars and other things but before before we get into that, I just wanted to thank some of the people who have sent us support via mail.
And I'm going to read off the first names and last initial because I don't want to violate anybody's privacy.
Timur R.
TK.
Dale L.
Joel B.
HD.
Mary N.
Barbara F.
Carolyn and Donald C. Teal C. hd mary n barbara f carolyn and donald c uh teal c uh two checks because i think um one one of them
was sent last month and just arrived they both arrived at the same time uh karen c ronald c
martin t uh which again was one from last month that was was Marty. Thank you, Marty, for the matching funds
for the end of the month last month.
Lois L., Jeffrey and Cynthia C.,
R.D., Timothy W., John S., and Marty K.
And a couple of short letters here.
This is from Marilyn B.
Here's a warm Independence Day gift
and greeting to you from Houston.
If you want to see what a 2030 agenda city looks like,
look no further than Houston.
It's a concrete desert jungle
being taken over by thousands of multifamily dwellings.
That's cages, she said.
Built along every major freeway and road.
The roads are no longer being repaired as of 15 years ago, she said, built along every major freeway and road. The roads are no longer being repaired as of 15 years ago, she said.
That's bringing in millions, no joke, of cars.
We predict that Houston's gridlock will soon become impassable.
I agree.
I mean, I've been, when we were living in Texas,
occasionally go to Houston, unbelievable.
We had lived there, and it was pretty bad occasionally go to Houston. Unbelievable.
We had lived there and it was pretty bad, 1980 to 1983.
And that is nothing compared to what it is now. It's unbelievable.
A massive interstate system.
And it is just complete gridlock.
Uh, they, and it's a common situation with these big cities.
Austin was the same way.
They continue to add more and more residences, more and more businesses,
but they don't do anything with the roads.
They don't even maintain them.
The only thing that they do any road construction with is with toll roads.
And of course, one thing that Elon Musk got right, got very right,
was when he started talking about tunneling.
It is necessary, if you're going to grow the buildings vertically,
you're going to have to grow the infrastructure vertically as well.
The roads are going to have to grow vertically.
Everybody understood that.
You look at any vision of a futuristic city,
even going back to the 1920s, some of the very first sci-fi movies, silent films.
What do they do?
They show multiple layers of traffic operating.
Well, they don't do that.
They don't do it.
They don't build any more transportation infrastructure.
They just build more residences and bring more people in. That's the key thing.
And then this from Scott,
and I won't mention which lab he's at,
but he says he's at a national lab.
He listens during lunch. He said people there are still wearing masks.
And the DEI
continues.
So, sorry.
This is a couple of emails here.
This is from Michael, and i had not seen this story so
thank you for sending this to me michael he says i'm in a small north dakota town of 140 people
only 17 miles separates my town from the train derailment in borderlack a population of only
18 people live in borderlack and so the press really hasn't covered this.
And I talked to Goat Tree.
He said, do you realize how many train derailments there are all the time?
And he's very concerned as to whether or not, and we talked about this.
I've had him talk about it on air.
Very concerned about whether this is some kind of a sabotage or is it just neglect like the roads that they don't repair.
But there's a tremendous number of train derailments.
And in this particular one, more than 25 cars are derailed, says Michael.
And that's what the press is reporting.
But it's not making it to any of the large news sites.
And I had not seen that.
So they had 25 cars derail, according to the press reports that i was able to find
about a fifth of them you know about five of them were carrying toxic substances anhydrous
ammonia sulfur methanol and the ammonia is the real toxic one. And then it caught fire.
So he says they're on fire.
There's toxic substance that is spilled onto the ground.
They've not told us what the substance is, but of course they know.
And again, now they've said that it is anhydrous ammonia, but no, who knows if they're telling you the truth. I mean, just take a look at Palestine, Ohio and the disaster, uh, that was there along
and others.
I mean, we've had situations, there was a massive pollution of water a couple of years
ago, the EPA, uh, doing something with a mine.
And, um, you know, they just kind of skim over that if they're the ones who are doing
it.
Uh, the town of Bordelac is closed off for miles in every direction.
They will suppress this story and they will get away with it.
If I went out there to investigate or to take pictures, I'd probably be arrested.
Uh, but again, um, and he writes that didn't Biden stop the pipeline from being built for environmental reasons.
Yeah.
Uh, you know, thea and these other things are
environmental disaster in every regard and uh you know when you have um situation with um
you know with oil for example yeah anything there are no perfect solutions
but if you have a pipeline that leaks, that is much more easily addressed and fixed than if you got something like the Exxon Valdez that sinks and releases its entire load into the water that is there.
So that's the reality of it.
And by the way, Michael, when I saw this, I saw that for some reason it added to an email that you'd sent me on December the 18th, 2020.
I saw that at the bottom.
And that was the day after I was fired.
And he said at the time, please start up your own show as soon as possible, even if it's streamed out of your home.
Well, thank you for the encouragement, Michael.
I appreciate that.
We actually did that.
We did it.
So that was Thursday I was fired on.
On Friday, he sent that email to me.
And on the following Monday, we had it streaming out of our home.
So thank you for that encouragement.
And it really was people contacting us that got me to do that, actually.
And it's good to know that you're still there
uh so thank you for listening and listening all these years and for the encouragement
uh and then this is from a listener and i i do want to um he he had a bit of a beef with me
and i think he was right uh this is from brian and uh he was very upset about the fact that I had the Newsom Nightmare author,
John Cox, on Friday.
That interview was originally done way back.
Remember when there was this thing called a primaries
that we're pretending that we're going to have in the U.S. and everything?
And then you had DeSantis and Newsom do a debate with Sean Hannity on Fox News.
And I thought it would be kind of interesting for people to get more of a background on Newsom.
And so, interestingly enough, at that time, and because of the additional national attention that he was getting, making noise like he was going to run for president, the publisher of that book sent that to me.
And I thought, yeah, that'd be good to talk about that with a Newsom-DeSantis debate coming up.
So I got him on and we talked about it.
And then when we were going back and looking at past shows
for the best of interviews on Friday,
I said, well, you know, Newsom is now back in the news again,
trying to push for president.
So let's put this back in here and give some people some ideas about newsome and i didn't do any investigation of john cox i knew that he had run
against newsome uh but um to me that was secondary we really wanted to talk about newsome and you
know when i look at different news sources for example when i look at rt rt will lie to you
about what's going on in russia but they will will lie to you about what's going on in russia but they
will tell you the truth about what's going on in the united states and uh so you know there's that
aspect of it uh but anyway this is what brian says uh he says that real estate developers like
john cox are literally destroying local communities in Indiana and elsewhere in the U.S.
And he says he's a regular listener, former resident of California, current resident of Indiana.
And as part of the interview, John Cox was talking about how he's involved in investing in real estate in Indiana now at this point in time. He says the real estate investors, developers are making large campaign donations to local
politicians who sell real estate development schemes.
This is something that I've always seen.
Local politicians were typically involved in the real estate market.
Once you get to the state level, there typically were lawyers and things like the state and
federal levels and things like that. It's usually lawyers, but at the local level, it's usually real estate people.
I remember Sandy Friedman, the mayor in Tampa. They called her Sandlot Friedman because she had
this scheme where they would go around and use building code violations to condemn poor people's
property. They got enough of them condemned. They'd go in maybe and pay eminent domain for the rest of them and then turn it over to their developer friends well he said there's a
new thing that i was not aware of called a tax increment financing he said if you're not familiar
with it it is a fiscal manipulation where local governments lend money to developers against
future tax gains that result from development projects.
Development projects are typically sold to voters as economic development or climate friendly.
He said developers like John Cox get 100% of their developers fees paid in advance by the municipal government.
In other words, taxpayers to maximize profits.
They build cheap, mixed use,, high-rise apartments in established
neighborhoods of predominantly single-family homes. With little or no demand for rental
housing in these communities, the excess supply destroys base rent, lowers single-family home
values, diminishes neighborhood character, places stress on local utilities and resources,
adding insult to injury, the projected tax revenue never
actually materializes. This is something that is in common with almost all of these tax benefits
to bring in businesses, regardless of what the business is. Anyway, only the developer benefits.
It's worth noting that early adopters of tax increment financing, such as California, have now banned the practice.
This is probably why opportunistic carpetbaggers like John Cox,
who lives in California, come to Indiana to continue the practice.
Despite authoring a book about Gavin Newsom,
John Cox is no different from Newsom.
He should not have been an honored guest.
You can do better.
Well, I agree with you.
I don't like that type of thing.
And if what you said is true, and no reason to doubt that it is true, it was not my intention
to support that kind of crony capitalism.
And we see that happening in a lot of different places.
And so I don't support that.
I do think that it was important for people to understand some of the background of Newsom.
And that's the reason that we had that in there.
And then Hank writes how OBGYNs are handling now more requests for sterilization after Roe v. Wade was overturned by Dobbs. And this is gleefully reported by NPR.
Because the point of all of it is to eliminate children.
That's what this is all about.
Because it's all about depopulation.
So when we come back, we're going to take a look at Biden. And Travis tells me Sandra Friedman is still alive and was the first female mayor of Tampa.
There you go.
DEI.
How could you miss?
Right?
I mean, she has to be good.
She's a woman.
Or do we even know what a woman is?
Your Supreme Court justice doesn't seem to.
I'm not sure we're allowed to make that judgment call.
That's right.
Don't judge me right don't judge me
don't judge me my my uh gender here uh we're gonna take a quick break and we'll be right back
here's a little 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.
Owe nothing. Be happy.
You will own nothing.
And be happy.
Be happy and eat the bugs. Sous-titrage ST' 501 you're listening to The David Knight Show. Well, a lot of Congress has now returned as of yesterday.
And we were told everything was going to hit the fan when these people got back into town.
They were going to get rid of Biden.
I don't see that happening as of yet.
We've had last week, Virginia Senator Mark Warner was trying to organize a meeting with his peers to try to get together a group to get Biden to quit.
And there was a flat out threat on social media to him.
You better hope this doesn't happen.
And so because of that, I still believe that Biden is going to remain.
I don't think they're going to be able to get rid of him, even if they want to do that,
even if it would be a better thing for them to do.
As a matter of fact, Biden himself was very adamant about it.
He said he's going to beat Trump again in 2020.
Well, guess what?
They're trying to push me out on the race.
Well, let me say this as clearly as i can i'm staying in the race i'll beat donald trump i will beat him again in 2020
he's gonna beat him again in 2020 and uh he says let me say this as clearly as I can and then slurs it out.
And then, of course, these people who want him to leave, he simply laughs at them.
And we give thanks to our commander in chief, the president of the United States, the extraordinary president of the United States, Joe Biden.
Ho, ho, ho.
Yeah. Wrong holiday, Joe. Happy Independence Day. Ho, ho. states joe biden yeah wrong holiday joe happy independence day oh oh yeah that's uh the wrong
holiday there but uh he was very adamant he said we're going to protect our children from getting
weapons of war there you go and when he was questioned by george stephanopoulos and again remember he was the chief
white house chief communications director and various other things for clinton and then they
brought him on at abc no conflict of interest there they did a recorded interview with him but
even the recorded interview where they could perhaps set it out the worst of
it even that had some interesting uh weird aspects where biden talks about he oh he's going to do the
job possible mr president i've never seen a president 36 approval get re-elected well i
don't believe that's my approval that's not what our polls show and if you stay in and trump is
elected and everything you're warning
about comes to pass how will you feel in january i feel as long as i gave it my all and i did the
goodest job as i know i can do that's what this is about if he does the goodest job he's an excellent
communicator i that's i just you know it's gifted gifted um but you know what it doesn't
matter if he does a goodest or the baddest or whatever job people like whoopi goldberg are
going to support him anyway and this is one of the reasons why i say i think he's going to stay in
she said i don't care if he's pooped his pants well you know there was all i i didn't really think that when he kind of froze on
stage and bent over a lot of people were saying he's pooping in his pants i didn't think that
that was what he was doing at the time but she doesn't care she really doesn't care so maybe
for a whoopee uh we could come up with an acronym you know when george bush went to japan and um they said that he ate some bad
sushi or whatever well you don't want to talk about that too much you might insult your host
there in japan but uh he stood up at the banquet and threw up and then passed out
and the japanese thought that was kind of funny they They actually came up with a new word, bushusuru, which meant to do a bush.
And that became their word for vomiting.
In his honor.
So maybe we should come up with a new, instead of saying pooping in your pants,
it's much simpler to just say he's making
whoopie uh so whoopie was trying to cushion the blow yeah exactly she said i mean listen i'm gonna
have my two cents because i wasn't here on the day that y'all talked about it i don't care if he's
pooped his pants i don't care if he can't put a sentence together. Show me he can't do the job.
Well, I think that's pretty evident.
It depends on how you define the job.
I mean, if the job is to do a great reset and a great takedown of America, he's doing a really good job.
Leftists are so contrarian.
There's got to be a way we could sigh up them into pooping their pants in solidarity with Biden.
There's a combination of words we could say to get them to do this i just don't know what it is yet that's right yeah it'd become the
fashionable thing to do um when you look at some of the styles that they use i don't think you'd
take too much convincing um they'd have to wear their pants up at a level where they don't fall
off for starters a lot of the democrat voters uh anyway uh she said um uh now he's had a bad night the first
time he went on he debated with lala harris and everybody wanted him to quit then said you can't
talk to women like this or you're doing this wrong or you're doing that wrong and he came back and
said you know what i got it and gave four years so she said yeah, I have poopy days all the time.
See, she's already doing it.
It's already doing it.
In sympathy.
I step in so much poop you can't even imagine.
Now, I'm not running the world.
See, that's one of the things that he said.
Hey, I'm not, I can't do this and that, but I'm running the world.
And it's like, isn't that disqualifying for him to think that he's running the world?
Did we elect a global dictator?
Well, unfortunately, both Republicans and Democrats want the president to be just that.
They want an American empire.
They entertain the fantasy that the guy that they elect, whoever it is, is actually running the government.
Well, the government's running him.
The question is, who in the government is precisely running these presidents?
She says, but I don't know anybody who doesn't step in stuff at some point.
So I'm just saying there's two debates.
And if he can't do what he needs to do for the second debate, I'll join any crew that says get rid of him.
Well, guess what what i said with
wag the biden was i said they're going to have the hometown boy good old shoe he's going to come in
and no matter how bad it is even if he wins ends up the night standing in a puddle of poop
literally people like whoopie will be making whoopie about it and they will still
support him they'll spin it they'll lie about it if they have to they're still going to support him
and they're going to portray him as an underdog as a dogged underdog somebody who's not a quitter
well i you know maybe he can't uh put a sentence together but boy he's not a quitter. Well, you know, maybe he can't put a sentence together, but boy, he's not going to quit.
That's what you want.
Somebody who is defiant and stupid and dictator to continue to go on.
A defiant Joe Biden dares the elites to challenge him at the Democrat convention.
They see again.
He calls them elites.
He's creating this.
He's the underdog persona that is out there.
If any of these guys don't think I should run, then run against me.
Go ahead.
Announce for president.
Challenge me at the convention.
We've already seen how that works.
RFK Jr. did that.
And the DNC in Florida shut down the primary.
By the way, the primaries are already finished.
So how are they
going to do that see here's the issue you know there's legal issues but the bigger issue is
political power and biden c not joe biden but the biden collective that i was talking about the
other day yeah i think of biden as just somebody that's out there in front of everybody else. Uh, that collective that is that we call Biden is going to continue
with this out of his own interest.
Biden dismisses concerns about mental fitness with his Stephanopoulos interview.
He says he would drop out if the Lord almighty told him to.
Well, I don't know.
I don't know if I believe that or not.
Lord almighty has told Joe Biden a lot of things to do that joe biden has ignored up to this point i don't know that
he's done anything that the lord almighty has told him to do so i don't know that he would do that i
think what he's saying here is that the only way that he's going to be term limited is if they
carry him out feet first like i said the other day very
much like darth vader gensberg and diane frankenstein they grasped hold of that power
when they couldn't hold anything else because it's one thing about these people they are addicted
to power and you're not gonna you going to take that rod of power out of
their cold, dead hands to paraphrase Charlton Heston when he's talking about guns. Well,
they've got a different kind of power. Uh, Stephanopoulos said, do you dispute that there
are more lapses, especially in the first several months? Biden says, can I run the hundred and 10
flat? No, but I'm still in good shape.hanopoulos said are you more frail no he said
flatly um so again you know he but he doesn't lie does he um it's it's it's not not about a con
a conglomerate of people making decisions he said it's about the character of the president
well i think he needs to tell that to chris oonnell because Chris O'Donnell says we shouldn't even have a debate between two people.
You need to get their entire staff on, you know, let's make this an open book exam.
Okay.
And, you know, just get the entire staff on there and ask them questions because it's just too much for this guy to be able to
respond assuming again that the mainstream media would ask any questions that are of any importance
or that affect our very existence which they would not do but that's exactly what chris o'donnell
said allow the candidates to have as many staff as they want to join them medical staff you name
it throughout the debate and make sure that
all of them have microphones and the candidates should be allowed to turn to their staffs
and confer with them about anything at any time in the debate and we should be able to hear
everything they say so we can hear if the candidate has competent or incompetent staff we could hear the candidate
overrule some advisors and say something else we could watch the candidates actually think
process information assuming they can think including possibly information that they might
not know until a staff member tells them or reminds them a kennedy you know like what day it is uh
where he is that type of thing you know what year it is what year it is even uh yeah chris
o'donnell just wants them to stop the hammering stop the hammering of biden have you ever seen
that clip i won't play it but it's pretty funny the outtakes of that uh so yeah stop the hammering
of biden he's just fine just bring his whole staff in and let them answer the questions because like
i said before all of these presidents it's the collective behind them it's not the president
they're not running anything you're being this country is being run whether it's trump or whether
it's biden is being run by unelected bureaucrats, faceless
people that you didn't vote for, that you don't even know what their names are.
At least, you know, under Chris O'Donnell's idea, we'd at least be able to see some of
the handlers, unelected, that are part of this.
We'll be right back. Thank you. Thank you. Making sense common again.
You're listening to The David Knight Show.
Well, on the Republican side, i saw this headline tennessee u.s senator marcia blackburn
applauds the passing of the 2024 republican party platform as i said the other day
people were saying hey look they're not even going to have the delegates vote on this stuff
they're going to do it behind closed doors and the reality of these things is that they've always gone through the motion it's something that they
could at least let the activists at the state level who are the ones who
constitute the delegates to these conventions it could at least make them
feel like they had some input they don't care about that anymore this has all
become top-down secret secretive, insular.
They don't want your input.
And I understand it because, you know, when you look at candidates,
even with the Libertarian Party, small independent party,
the candidates didn't want to be strapped down to these positions that delegates had fought over on various issues.
If they disagreed with it, they didn't want to have that there to embarrass them.
So I get that.
Nevertheless,
we're going through a period of time where they don't even bother to pretend
that this is like an election.
We don't have primaries.
We don't have debates.
We don't have any debates about the platform and the rest of this stuff.
They came up with 20 different promises that Trump wants to deliver on.
And, you know, you can look at this as kind of his,
something that he wants there since it's his daughter-in-law that put this through.
Seal the border, stop the migrant invasion,
carry out the largest deportation operation in American history.
Why didn't he do that the first term? one of those things here's another one number three end inflation make america affordable again ma because that spells m-a-a-a ma uh but in inflation
okay well that's cool whip inflation now remember now. Remember those buttons from Gerald Ford?
That didn't work, did it? No details about how he's going to end inflation,
considering the fact that he set all new precedent of spending trillions of dollars on welfare programs,
the same type of stuff we talked about being done by McNamara when he went to the World Bank. Hey, let's borrow a lot of money from the,
actually, I think he was with the IMF.
Borrow a lot of money from the IMF
and then use it for welfare.
Just hand it out, you know?
And people say, wait a minute,
you're just trying to load them up with debt.
You're rent seeking as a bank.
And quite frankly,
that's what the Federal Reserve is doing as well.
Make America the dominant energy producer in the world by far and with an exclamation and this is all in
uppercase well i guess that settles it by putting that by far in there we don't really have to again
just like inflation we don't have to worry about how that's going to be done it's going to be kind
of awkward with the paris climate accord there and it will be there and they will pretend that there's nothing that he can do about it
because they'll pretend that it was actually ratified as he did in his first term they
pretended that the paris climate accord had been ratified by obama and john kerry the two of them
when it needed 60 senators they'll pretend that it was ratified nevertheless uh stop
outsourcing and turn the united states into a manufacturing superpower well you're going to
need to have energy for that and the problem with the energy is the paris climate accord we're back
to that back seat number three say number four rather large tax cuts for workers and no tax on tips well here's um here's news for the billionaire
uh not all workers work for tips you may think that you know since you're handing out money to
people as tips uh seven defend our constitution our bill of rights our fundamental freedoms
including freedom of speech religion the right to keep and bear arms. Defend them from what? Your executive orders where you threw out these things?
We did gun control by executive order and Biden continued with your precedent?
Yeah, we need to defend our Constitution from people like you and Biden.
Prevent World War III.
Restore peace in Europe.
Again, great.
But how are you going to do it?
And the weaponization of government against the American people,
stop the migrant crime epidemic.
Rebuild our cities.
Wait a minute.
These other things are things that the federal government could do, the border, military, things like that, defending the Constitution.
You're supposed to do that as well.
You didn't do that the first time through.
But rebuilding our cities?
Is that the work of the federal government?
Not under the Constitution, it isn't.
Strengthen and modernize our military.
Keep the U.S. dollar as the world's reserve currency.
I think it's too late for that.
Maybe he forgot to put anything in there about CBDCs.
Fight for and protect Social Security and medicare with no cuts including no
changes to retirement age again even though you look at this and it's difficult once you put these
things in how do you unwind this you know social security is unconstitutional but meanwhile you've
got people who paid their entire life 15 of their income has gone into this thing
uh you're going to cut them off?
You've got to have some kind of a transition.
This is one of the reasons why, when you talk about deportation, why he didn't do DACA the
first time.
But that's his number two thing.
He's going to deport people this time.
Really?
You pretended that you didn't have the authority to overrule the executive order from the Obama
administration called DACA.
You went to the Supreme Court and asked them to do something about it,
and they told you no.
So what are you going to do this time?
Again, these are campaign promises.
Do you really expect them to do anything about it?
Cut federal funding for any school pushing critical race theory,
radical gender ideology, or other inappropriate racial, racial sexual or political content on our children well see this is why i say
to the maga people when they say it was only the democrat governors who did 2020 to us i said no
he funded it he funded it the buck stops with him he's responsible for it because the buck started
with him especially you you get what you pay for you get what you bribe people to do and he
understands that his supporters can't apply uh item number 16 to what trump did in 2020 he could
have cut federal funding to control this, to minimize it.
He could have said, if you don't allow people to have ivermectin, we're going to cut your federal funding.
I know by the way, instead of building ventilators, we're going to build
ivermectin, we're going to build, we're going to manufacture ivermectin.
Uh, keep men out of women's sports.
Well, there you go.
Is that that's in the constitution, isn't it?
Well, no, actually, but you know, do you really believe that?
He's a guy who wanted men in beauty contests with women when he had that decades ago.
So maybe what we do is we get men out of women's sports and we put them into women's beauty contests.
That's what we do.
He could probably do that.
He could probably pull that off.
Deport pro-Hamas radicals and make our college campuses safe and patriotic again
you know that is the issue with our colleges isn't it nothing else actually that's a symptom of the
rot and the cancer that is in our colleges cut the college's funding That's what you need to do. Cut funding for all schooling.
That's not constitutional for the federal government.
So you see the problem here, and you see the fact that it is Laura Trump who is pushing this through.
One thing that they did do is they updated their abortion stance.
This is not in the 20 items.
And surprisingly enough, I actually agree with the position that he's got there
he kind of took this position because he doesn't have to do anything one way or the other
but i think that's actually the right reason even though i am pro-life and i want to minimize it
that is precisely why i want to keep it at the state level and i've said this before i said when
you look at people like lindsey graham and other people like that they want to bring it in and politicize it make it a federal issue when the
federal government has no authority to deal with that just like most of these things on his list
of 20 items this is the one thing that he got right federal government doesn't have any authority here
and uh when you look at the practical aspects of it, the reality is, is that if they pass a law in Washington to change abortion, even if it makes it makes abortion more restrictive and saves babies lives.
Don't expect New York and California and other places like that to follow that law. They didn't follow the war on drugs, prohibition of marijuana.
They nullified it.
They did their own thing.
And so, as I've said before, if they make it more restrictive,
the Democrat-run states are not going to obey that law.
They will nullify it, and they can,
because there's no constitutional basis for it,
as Dobbs pointed out.
This is not a federal issue.
It belongs in the states constitutionally,
according to the 10th Amendment.
So the blue states, the Democrat states,
I hate to call them blue and red,
the Democrat states will ignore that.
However, when the Democrats get in,
and they say,
you can do partial birth abortions,
the Republican states
will go along with that.
Well, you know,
we'd like to protect the baby's lives,
but we've got this federal law now.
So you understand what will happen.
If they make it more restrictive,
the Democrat states will not obey it.
If they make it no restrictions at all,
the Republican states will go along with it.
That's why I say leave it at the states
where the Constitution put it.
And if you don't like it at the states,
then you need to modify the Constitution
like so many of these other things.
I would just like to have, before Trump runs,
I'd like to have a prenuptial agreement.
We could call it a
pre-trumptual agreement how about that i would like to know just like one of his former wives
uh when he divorces himself from the constitution yet again what are the remedies that are left to
me with the president trump you know we have um he might try to make America a prison again, which he did the first time.
I can't get past that point.
It still sticks in my craw.
So anyway, he says he thinks it's important to believe in the exceptions when it comes to abortion.
Again, he's arriving at the correct conclusion, I think, in this thing, simply out of spinelessness.
He doesn't have any principles about abortion.
He's not trying to save babies' lives.
He's not trying to obey the Constitution.
And so I think for those reasons, I want to leave it at the state level.
To obey the Constitution, to save the most babies' lives.
And I know that sounds counterintuitive to a lot of people who are in the pro-life movement, but I think that truly is the case. I think a lot of
people who are in the pro-life movement are trying to put it back in Washington because they would
like to have the clout as a lobbying organization. We've seen this many times from some gun control
groups who don't necessarily stand for the second amendment they want to make
themselves look good and uh so that's just the reality of how this stuff works um do we have
our guests yet okay we don't have our guests we're going to take a quick break though and we're going
to be right back stay with us ¶¶
¶¶ In a world of deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act.
You're listening to the david knight show all right let's talk a little about
what is happening with transportation because as i said at the beginning of the program these
people are driving us mad uh not necessarily crazy but uh angry and um this is also sending me
from for the love of the road he said i just saw this uh in the telegram chat figured you'd get
a kick out of it and um this was um actually sent um last week and um uh while we were replaying the
show uh but it is a situation where you've got a waymo car that lost it. It's going the wrong way into oncoming traffic.
And it was actually worse than that.
It got confused at the traffic light.
And so in this video, you'll see the body cam of the police officer pulling this over.
This is in Phoenix.
There have been a lot of issues with driverless cars in phoenix um and so the question is a lot
of people ask so what happens when a police officer stops a car and there's no driver
do uh does a corporation get in trouble well no interestingly enough and so um here is i guess we could call it this is a waymo i guess we could call this
the wrong way mo yeah it stopped it's a 92 adam sam or a 92 adam to sam paul and uh there's no driver
hi Hi.
Connected to rider support.
This call may be recorded for quality assurance.
Hi, this is Richard.
Yeah, this is Officer Hines, Phoenix PD.
So your car here drove into oncoming lanes of traffic.
Okay.
Okay.
That's no problem.
There's like a little bit of a construction
area
and it went into opposing
lanes of traffic, which is real bad.
So far,
I couldn't help but come over
just out of morbid curiosity.
I thought maybe there was a passenger or something.
No, like, you know the construction here?
Yeah.
It was eastbound in the westbound lanes.
Oh!
Which is real bad.
Yeah.
And then I light it up,
and then it takes off through the intersection.
It ran away from him.
He should have shot it.
I appreciate your patience.
I'm going to call you.
Okay, yeah, I don't know if you're able
to kind of, like, review the video or something.
Yes.
Okay, great.
Okay, so let's review the crimes of this driverless passengerless car.
Yeah, I said that about the electric buses.
You know, they want to do these electric buses with autonomous
drivers anything and around austin the city paid for a lot of these buses and i said oh that'll
just be perfect uh because nobody rides these things typically so you can have riderless buses
without a driver completely empty just having them circling around using energy. You know, I mean, why not?
We've got to save the planet, don't we?
So the Phoenix police officer initiated the traffic stop on the wrong way, Mo.
As it drove into oncoming traffic, as it ran a red light, and as it, quote,
freaked out that he wrote in all uppercase letters on his dispatch records.
Now, you know, it's that's a lot of different things.
Now, if that had been an individual, if and of course, the freak out part is that it, you know, when he lit it up with his lights, it ran.
Right. I mean, if it had been a driver, might have shot him.
Right. You see that kind of stuff happening all the time.
Wrong way on the traffic, running a red light, running from a police officer.
But hey, oh, okay, sure, yeah, okay, that's fine, says the dispatcher.
No problem.
And the police say, no problem.
A spokesperson for Wrong Way Mo initially declined to comment on the story uh and then um after it got on reddit
they did they said the vehicle entered inconsistent construction signage and went into an oncoming
line of traffic according to wrong way mo that's consistent with the reddit post as well so
the post is consistent but it wasn't the vehicle's fault at all it was the construction signage
yeah yeah try telling that to the cops if they pull you over for doing the same thing
the driverless car was blocked from navigating back to the correct lane for
approximately 30 seconds according to the company oh it's somebody else's fault with that as well
it's all those humans on the road you got to get them off i we just got to stop the human drivers
out there and while we're at it uh let's let the construction be done by these infallible robots as
well because they won't put up the incorrect signage it's never
google's fault is it that's when the officer pulled in behind the car in an effort to clear
the intersection the waymo vehicle proceeded forward a short distance and pulled into the
next available parking lot said wrong waymo describing the traffic incident as lasting
approximately one minute well that can be a lot of time if you're driving the wrong way mo describing the traffic incident is lasting approximately one minute well that can
be a lot of time if you're driving the wrong way on a road a situation was cleared without any
further action and the police dispatch records say unable to issue a citation to computer
why is that is it because it's google behind that computer and they're you know your
boss you're not allowed to give them a citation or criticize them you know who rules you if you
can't issue them a citation to paraphrase the thing right phoenix police and wrong way mo
confirmed the autonomous vehicles have equipment that senses emergency vehicles, so they should know when to pull over.
Evidently, that didn't work on the wrong Waymo car.
Waymo's training guide for first responders says that the cars can detect emergency vehicles,
can detect their lights, and can detect their sirens.
I wonder how it does with gunshots.
Which, again, whatever.
Somebody else tries to run from
the police when a vehicle is stopped a waymo can unlock its doors and roll down the windows
according to the guide well in may the national highway traffic safety administration announced
that it was opening an investigation into wrong waymo because of 31 incidents of which 14 of them
were in arizona why is that well because a because Arizona is giving them carte blanche to do whatever they want.
It was not in Phoenix, but it was in Tempe, Arizona, where the woman was killed a couple
of years ago.
And so, again, this is something we see over and over again.
No matter how bad it gets, the governments, whether they're state or whether they're federal,
apparently are going to give a pass to these large corporations for whatever
their cars do or whatever their cars don't do.
Well,
we have a senator nicely now on the line.
And so we're going to take a quick break and establish contact and we'll be
right back. © BF-WATCH TV 2021 ¶¶ Defending the American Dream.
You're listening to The David Knight Show.
All right, and joining me now is Tennessee State Senator Frank Nicely. American Dream. You're listening to The David Knight Show.
All right, and joining me now is Tennessee State Senator Frank Nicely, and I've talked to him several times because of his efforts to try to resist things like CBDC, to try to set up a
Tennessee Reserve system to help the state's financing and help people here in the state
as we look at the uncertain issues around what the Federal Reserve is doing and to maintain
our privacy.
It's very important that we have financial privacy with our transactions.
So I've talked to him about those types of issues and some of the state issues, but I
wanted to get him on again.
We've got a here in Tennesseeennessee we've got primaries
coming up at um uh in um it's in august is it is that correct uh senator nicely welcome august
first early voting starts uh the 12th okay all right august the first so it's coming up pretty
quickly let's let's begin i'd like to begin since you're a farmer i'd like to begin with some of the issues about food and farming, because these
are issues that are coming out globally.
But whether they're global or whether they're national, really where the rubber meets the
road is at the state and local level.
We've seen things get really bad in Pennsylvania.
Tell us what's going on here in Tennessee. Well, the Minister of Agriculture here in Tennessee told me that this bill we passed with whole milk and scoops
would probably do more for the dairy farmers in Tennessee than anything we could do.
Michelle Obama made us put 1% milk in our scoops.
And she pushed the kids into yogurt,
a particular type of yogurt, which I've talked about in the past,
which is done by a guy that they brought in from Kurdistan,
and they set him up with a yogurt factory up in New York.
So, yeah, I understand where that's coming from.
Yeah, she wanted everybody to have 1% milk.
And, you know, all the research says children have got to have whole milk.
You've got to have the fat so we can absorb the calcium.
So, in Tennessee, I passed a bill this year to put whole milk back in our schools and dispensers.
And not in these little cardboard boxes, but put it in a dispenser where it's really cold, whole chocolate milk and whole
sweet milk,
whole regular milk.
When you do that, even if you've got the
1% milk, if it's in a dispenser,
they drink a tremendous amount more.
No one likes it in these little cardboard carts.
Someone said,
well, the feds
will allow you to put whole milk at an expense,
but if you put it on the tray, it's got to be 1%.
So we thought we were fine.
Now they're saying, no, you can't have whole milk anywhere.
And I said, well, we'll ask the attorney general about that.
You know, there's nothing in the Constitution about milk in schools,
so that's clearly a state issue according to the 10th Amendment.
So we've got an attorney general now, a general
committee, who's on our side
and I'm pretty sure we'd be putting
whole milk back in our schools. And if
you get these children drinking milk,
good cold milk, whole milk,
they'll drink it at home. But if you
turn them against it in these little cardboard
cartons, I never did like it in a
cardboard carton with paraffin all over it.
I mean, nobody likes it like that.
We've got to get these children drinking milk. There's the calcium, the magnesium,
the enzymes, everything. It's so important.
So that's one thing we did to try to help the dairy farmers. Another thing I did
to the dairy farmers, I passed a bill that lets these bottlers
label it Tennessee milkessee milk wiggles milk
in their dog form they put the logo on their bottle milk tennis 100 tennessee milk they buy
all the milk from uh county up here in claiborne county uh the shipley area shipley furnishes all
the milk for rivals it's all tennessee milk and they have a logo right on there
that says tennessee milk and bill wong said it jumped to itself three percent in one week wow
people like that's local food well i want there to be local food absolutely we support a local dairy
that's uh uh here and um and what i like about it is it's not homogenized you know they have to
pasteurize it in order to be able to sell it which i guess it brings up another issue you know we really have seen the federal government
with this bird flu narrative that they're pushing out there uh pretend that this is something that
has to do with cattle and they're focusing on cattle almost exclusively uh talking about and
we know this has been a globalist agenda to get rid of meat and to get rid of milk uh one of the
things that they really focused on is raw milk.
What is the status of raw milk in Tennessee?
Well, I passed the bill several years ago that allows you to sell raw milk
through the herd share program.
I buy raw Jersey milk from Cocke County,
and I buy raw Guernsey milk from Granger County,
and they get a good price for it, $12 to $18 a gallon.
People say, man, that's high.
I say, that's about the same price you're paying for a bottle of water.
If you buy enough bottled water, you're going to pay $12.
So, I mean, when milk's cheaper than water,
there's something wrong in our society.
So, I passed that bill several years ago.
We actually have more raw milk dairies now in the state of Tennessee than we do commercial dairies.
We don't milk near as many cows, of course, but the average raw milk dairy has four cows on Granger County.
But at $12 a gallon, he can make some money.
He's got a young guy.
He's got a degree from U, UT. And rather than go join the milk mafia
and try to sell it to the co-ops,
he's just going to sell it raw,
get $12 a gallon.
He can milk four or five cows
and make a little money.
That's good.
So we've done so many things
to help the farmers.
I used to be able to let you label your meat
Tennessee meat.
You know, when you buy meat at Costco or somewhere,
it could come from three different continents.
You don't know where it's coming from.
It says USDA inspected.
That just means USDA saw it come in on the ship.
But if you buy Tennessee meat, you know it was born, raised,
and processed here in Tennessee with no ice and hamburger.
Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, let's talk about that because, you know, when you look at it,
and I think that's why it is so ultimately important to support the local farms,
which is what you're trying to do with this,
and you look at their desire to try to micromanage and control everything,
like you said, with the milk.
If you put the milk on your tray, it's got to be 1%. They want to try to manage everything.
And they're trying to manage the dairy cows.
They want to tag and track them.
They want to shut down people being able to process food on their own farm.
Are you involved with the Prime Act in any way?
I know that was something that was introduced by Congressman Massey at a federal level.
Is there something like that in Tennessee?
Well, Congressman Massey, who is absolutely the best congressman in Washington.
Yeah.
We were sitting on a hay wagon up in Virginia, up at Polyface Farm.
We were talking about this problem, and I suggested the PRIMAC to him.
And he gives me 100% credit for coming up with PRIMAC.
And he's actually got it in the farm bill this year in the House.
And we're working on the Senate,
and I think we're going to make it, but I think he's got
four sponsors in the Senate Ag Committee,
so I think we're going to get it.
What that would do, that would allow
Tennessee farmers to retail meat
that is processed in these
custom houses, like
our local one here. We've got
a lot of custom houses. We have
very few USDAda inspected housing
but that would let local farmers take their sale we're the two bucks right there in ice kodak over
towards marriage um i do a process and i do a great job uh you can have your animal kill there
and sell retail cuts now the farmer can make a lot more money selling retail cuts than he can selling
in a stockyard, shipping it to
Nebraska, Georgia, Kansas,
going to feedlots, and then have to ship it all
the way back. Burn all that diesel fuel, taking
it out there, burn that diesel fuel, bringing it back.
It's better just to,
and it's easy on the animal, just to
process it here
and cut out the middleman.
The middleman wants to make all the money on farming.
That's right.
That's right.
Yeah, and that's what I like about what you do.
You come up with some real solutions, like the Prime Act, for example,
and your solutions are really focused on local issues,
and I think that's really what we have to do.
The Democrats have known this for the longest time.
They've always said that all politics is local.
And you've got local solutions.
And so I think that's very important.
Well, it's the ivermectin bill we passed.
We're the only state in the nation where you can buy ivermectin over the counter without a prescription.
And it's cheaper than buying it at the co-op. For less than $2 a pill, I can buy a 29-gigagram pill for me
if I think I'm getting COVID or any other coronavirus.
It works on all coronaviruses.
It'll work on this new one that's coming down the pike.
Yeah, yeah.
Take one as soon as you think you're getting it.
Take one a day for five days.
You'll still be a little sick, but you won't die.
Well, that's key. And, of course, you'll still be a little sick, but you won't die. Well, that's key.
And, of course, you introduced that in the Senate at the height of all this insanity
a couple of years ago to allow people to buy ivermectin over the counter.
And we had people who were losing their medical license.
We had pharmacists who, well, if you've got a doctor who sends you a prescription,
if you fill that, we're going to take your pharmaceutical license as well.
That's what we're seeing across the country.
And you got it here locally. You got it passed so people can get pharmaceutical license as well. That's what we're seeing across the country and you got it here locally.
You got it passed so people can get that over the
counter. That's really important.
I don't really look at that. I had
the help of Dr. Sibley up in Johnson
City. She had treated 5,000
people for free with COVID with
biomechanics and only lost one or two
who were extremely obese. She
swore by it. She says, don't wait
when you think you're coming down with it, take one right then.
Yeah.
So I paid with frankincense.
I had a stitch in time, saved time.
Yeah, that's right.
Yeah, that's one of the key things, I think, during the pandemic
that was causing an increase in deaths,
the fact that they were denying medical care to people
and delaying it to a very long, long extent,
and then giving them things that were extremely expensive,
ineffective, and unsafe, you know?
And so it's the thing, being able to get ivermectin, get it early, get it cheaply, and it's very
effective.
That's the one thing they didn't want to have.
You, in the Tennessee State Legislature, they got a lot of attention recently for passing
a bill about the chemtrail stuff.
It went into effect on July 1st.
I had a listener in Knoxville saying, well, I'm still seeing these things daily.
What is the enforcement mechanism for people who are violating this chemtrail bill?
Senator Sutton carried that bill, and he put a ten thousand dollar fine in it but somebody that's going to
have to sue uh and actually that brings up another bill i passed this year called proper
action i passed a bill this year that gives a citizen the right gives him standing in court to
sue a state agency or a county agency that's not enforcing state law. So we didn't have that before.
That's a little bill that got no attention.
Intentionally, I eased it through without anyone knowing much about it.
That's very important.
That really is important.
But now then, I passed a bill on cursive writing,
where you had to teach cursive writing.
You had to school board schools or ignore it.
Now then, if a parent wants to, they can sue the school board for not enforcing the law uh or curtsy writing i'll pass one that
says they have to teach founded documents of declaration of independence constitution bill
rights uh so our children have a basic understanding of what our wonderful Republic is and uh so uh we've done quite a few little faces
but back on the chemtrails I'm not sure a lot of times you have to give it's ten thousand dollar
fine but we didn't say for that ten thousand dollar win now if we were to come back next
year and say the local Sheriff's Department's going to get that ten thousand dollars if they identify that plane and they have a way of identifying it that's know where it's going to land
and the terrorists would go after them for that ten thousand dollars oh that'd be great you got
some advice i'd start to get the uh sheriffs to watch the skies
instead of them being on the interstate they could watch the skies to see what people are doing up there.
That'd be, that'd be, that's great.
I think we were probably the first state to pass a chemtrail build.
You know, they were doing over Dubai and they had, they went overboard and had this huge flood and it just flooded out Dubai several months ago.
You know, they were geoengineering the skies, trying to get some rain they got too much rain and flooded them out so uh
it's real yeah i just paid earlier earlier in the program i just played a whistleblower who used to
work for the military and she was talking about her involvement in it and she was surprised when
she found out that uh the the program that she was in was doing it and so she resigned she became a
whistleblower it absolutely is real well we need more principle we're having a need to protect
yeah i mean we've got effective as a boss yes i agree uh in terms of farmland one more issue that
is there is uh people losing it and we've had um foreign nations nations buying farmland you've come on this program and talked
about uh the trap of some of these tax credits on some of the farms uh tell us a little bit about
those few things well we passed the bill this year I actually sponsored it and we worked on it last
year and we we ended up passing it this year but we patterned it after Arkansas to prevent these hostile nations like China,
North Korea, Venezuela, Iran from buying farmland or real estate in Tennessee. And we actually got
it passed and we patterned it after Arkansas. We worked closely with Arkansas and got their
language. They had patterned theirs somewhat after Iowa's uh it's a good start we're probably
going to tighten it up as time goes on but uh you know that's the fact that people begin to
realize this is a problem with these foreign see we can't go to china and buy land you can't buy
land in china so why do we let them buy land here yeah i mean you can't even open a business in
china unless you've got some Chinese Communist Party
member as your business partner.
When we were living
in North Carolina,
they bought Smithfield,
a big, big pork processor.
A lot of people
were concerned about that.
So, you know,
part of your bill
is to stop them
from buying farmland
as well as businesses
like the Chinese
bought Smithfield.
Exactly.
It's, you know, our big meatpacking,
our three big meatpackers that pack 90% of our beef and pork,
they're all foreign-owned.
And then you've got Smithfield owns all the big pork processing.
So we're sitting here slowly allowing these foreign adversaries to come in and
buy up our country yeah that's we need to wake up that's amazing yeah if anybody has any questions
for uh senator nicely um go ahead and put them up there um and again i dug a log thank you for
the tips that spread the word hit the like button uh thank you very much for putting that up and
reminding people there on rock fan on anywhere that you're watching this even if you're not watching it live we'd appreciate that
uh before we leave the farm stuff uh one of the bills they had a lot of people that were
mocking what the tennessee legislature was doing when they said well um uh we know that with a
genetic modification uh there's already been some papers published that they want to put vaccines
in the food people are crazy conspiracy theorists but there's been a lot more of that even since there
was some before they you guys passed that bill and there's been a lot more since then uh tell
us a little bit about that and uh what the enforcement mechanism is for that well senator
hensley who's a medical doctor and a really good, honest medical doctor,
he's not controlled by Big Father, he's a great guy, one of the top conservatives in
the Senate.
He had this bill, and I spoke on the Senate floor and helped him with it, because I've
been reading about this for two or three years.
They can genetically modify this vegetable, mainly lettuce is what they're starting with,
and then the seed from that lettuce from then on will have that vaccine in it,
that mRNA vaccine in the lettuce, and it's so cheap to produce.
Now they're talking about other things.
So Dr. Hensley passed the bill.
He said, hey, if they're going to sell this stuff in Tennessee,
they're going to have to label it a drug and not a vegetable.
Because he said, who controls the ducks?
Who's going to know if you get enough?
Who's going to know if you get too much?
That's right.
You may be a big lettuce eater and you may overdose on mRNA.
mRNA changes your DNA.
I mean, it's a little bit.
I mean, that's a given.
I've read everything I could read on this stuff, and it scares me.
It really does.
Yeah.
Oh, I agree.
I've always said that about fluoridating the water.
I said, okay, you can argue with the science of this as much as you want,
but if you're going to dose somebody with something by putting it in the water supply,
how do you control the dosage?
I mean, and that's fundamentally the issue there
with putting it in our food
and the fact that they don't ever want you
to stop getting whatever this is.
Well, you know, more and more cities
are taking the fluoride out of their water.
I mean, Columbia, Tennessee,
they voted to take the fluoride out recently, and they
had some left over, and it was going to cost, it was
so toxic that after disposing
of the toxic waste, it was going to cost so much
that they just snuck in and
put it in the water.
Even though they passed
the order to stop it, put it in the water.
That's the cheapest way to get rid of it.
But, you know, Europe,
cities in Europe, dental health is improving.
Dental health is a function of calcium, magnesium, and your good minerals.
And this whole thing with fluoride, it's bogus science.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah, absolutely.
And it's the kind of fluoride that you point out.
It's toxic.
That's one of the reasons.
These people, it was industrial waste, and they were going to have to pay a lot of money like you were talking about the municipality
to get rid of this stuff so they came up with the idea hey instead of paying to get rid of this so
we can sell it to municipalities and tell them just dump it in the water and it's a good thing
for you of course i think it's much better to have uh milk uh than it is to have fluoride perhaps
right well i do too and it's uh you know they say the solution of pollution is dilution so they're
going to dilute a different water and get rid of that way but no it's a toxic waste at the
byproduct of the of the fertilizer industry yeah from other industries so uh no it's uh
it's something it's something all the time, Dave.
It's amazing the battles we try to fight in Nashville, and we win a lot of them. Yeah, yeah.
Well, I mean, that's really where it's, you know, so much of the stuff really has to be established.
You know, that's why George Soros put so much money into local district attorney races and to state attorney general races.
And it's why Musk said said see what he's doing you know you have a lot more effect at the local level than you do at the federal level whether you're talking especially if you're talking about the
presidency but even more so than when you're talking about congress if you can get stuff done
at the state level that's why i wanted to get you on and uh you know you're familiar with what's
going on in different states uh you guys exchange information and people really need to pay attention to what's going on in their
state election because that's going to have the biggest effect on your life it's not a theory
everybody lived this for the last four years if things were better at the state level uh if you
had good people at the state level and things were better. You could get ivermectin over the counter instead of having doctors and pharmacists penalized for that.
So the state level is very important.
Talk a little bit about eminent domain.
You've been involved a little bit in eminent domain reform, right?
Well, I'm a landowner and a farmer, and we pay taxes on several acres.
And the thing that scares landowners is eminent domain.
These cities or counties come out and say, they say, oh, that's a pretty farm.
We'll make an industrial park out of that.
So a few years ago, we passed a bill where the county commissions can't use eminent domain for an industrial park.
This year, we passed a couple couple really good eminent domain bills.
One of them says that the landowner has
standing in court. He can take the county or the city
to court and make them prove that they need it
and can't buy it somewhere else.
Then another bill we passed basically
said the city has to
prove that they need it. They have to prove
they've got a plan to finish what they're
wanting to do. They've got to prove they've got
financing ready to go. So they can't just buy it finish what they're wanting to do. They've got to prove they've got financing ready to go.
So they can't just buy it
and keep it for a long time.
But no one wants to sell their
farm for what somebody else
praises it for.
I had an amendment one time that said
anytime the state uses it in a domain,
they would have to pay three times
the praise value.
And if they...
That didn't affect roads and airports, but all the other things.
And if they really, really need it, let them pay for it.
I mean, and that would leave a little bit of taste in the landowner's mouth
if he gave three times what it was appraised at.
And if it's that important for every taxpayer in the county,
let them all chip in a few pennies and pay the guy enough to wait and relocate
and rebuild.
You move a business,
a lot of times the business fails.
Oh, yeah.
You don't have enough capital
to get it over the hump
and get your business back and going.
So,
since 2006,
there's been four good bills passed in tennessee
that's given the property owners more rights and three of them originated in jefferson county
for the county commission we've got a really good county commission right now but three of them
originated the county commission they sent me the resolution i was able to pass it and and i
should throw three out of four good imminent on made bills originated right here in Derrickson County.
Wow.
That's great.
What about,
as we've seen this type of thing,
I remember when they were putting the Keystone pipeline through and it was
being done by a Canadian corporation.
So it was a foreign corporation.
Of course we had the Kello decision years ago.
The Supreme court said,
I think it was Connecticut.
They said that the,
the state could take somebody's land for the benefit of another private individual.
So it was not so they could build some kind of a common project like a road or something like that, but they could take it and essentially turn it over to another business that they liked better.
That was bad enough.
But then when you had the Keystone Pipeline, you had a situation.
And I like the idea of the pipeline.
The problem I had was that it was eminent domain and that they were handing the power of condemnation over to a corporation.
And not just a corporation, but a Canadian corporation, a foreign corporation was going to be able to come in and condemn the property that they needed for their pipeline, taking the property of a lot of people who had had their farm for many generations,
150 years in some cases.
Is there anything like that, a prohibition against something like that
in the state of Tennessee in some of these eminent domain bills?
You know, I don't know that there is.
If you look at a map of the pipelines in America, it looks like America has very close lines.
There's pipelines.
They just go everywhere.
And, you know, even though it's kind of bad, but they bury these pipelines deep enough. You farm over the top of them.
You really never know where they are. it's kind of bad but they bury these pipelines deep enough the farm over the top of them
really never know where they're at um they talk about something about the public good we did pass a bill in the national it said a recreational park is not a public good that meant that they cannot
condemn your land for a uh a recreational park that was what was going to happen up here at the
hospital they were going to hospitals surplus land the hospital wanted to land a land on and maybe and the city was going
to take that for a recreational park and so we passed a bill that took it defined public good
and we we took recreational parks out of that definition of public good so that was a that would be deal with we work with the County Commission on that and like I say
we've got a pretty good County Commission right now that are pretty good
legislation that's good I'm sorry go ahead one thing we did on this gun
purchase you know these credit cards and banks were trying to have special code
on your transaction if you bought a gun they going to put you on a list that you had used your credit card to buy a gun.
Well, we passed a bill where they cannot do that.
And that was very popular with the Second Amendment guys,
which Tennessee is about as friendly a Second Amendment state as you can get.
We're just sure of putting 8 ak's in the pre-case
that's funny uh the uh ak's in the pre-case the um yeah when when we look at that now i think about
financial privacy and things like that and labeling somebody um because oh this person
bought a gun so now they're bad. So that's prohibited for them to,
what is prohibited in terms of what the banks can do
in terms of somebody buying a firearm?
Because I know that Bank of America turned over a lot of,
they did kind of geolocation of people that were there on January the 6th,
and then they also had records of people
who had used their credit card to purchase firearms.
They turned all that stuff over to the FBI.
Is there some prohibition of them reporting
and tracking this stuff?
There's a prohibition of them tracking it, right?
So they couldn't report it.
There's a prohibition in Tennessee of them using a code
that identifies that you bought a gun.
We don't want them knowing who you bought a gun. Of course, all that can that you bought a gun but we don't want them knowing
who you bought a gun. Of course, all that
to do with that gun owner who's cash
and I like cash. I like
to keep cash alive. We need to use some cash
because one good sunspot
and these ATMs go out and
you don't have any cash.
You may get under it for a few
days before you get it working again.
Always good to have a little cash laid back.
That's right.
And, of course, you're talking about the international code that the credit card companies use.
That was something that came out of New York State.
And what you guys did was you essentially nullified that here in Tennessee.
Okay, good.
In terms of debanking, because we've seen this happening now, just talked about earlier in germany the afd
political party and again i don't have much of an opinion one way the other of the political party
but i think it is concerning to see that the german government is both debanking people who
are a part of that actually it's the the political party's bank account where they were taking
donations they shut that down.
We've seen that happen to Nigel Farage in the UK.
We saw it happen to the Free Speech Union in the UK.
And then in addition, the few people that were allowed to own guns in Germany,
if they are a member of that political party, they said that you can't own a gun.
But getting back to the banking thing, it's now become a thing for banks to ban people.
When I started the show, I was about five months into it.
And PayPal, which is not a bank, but PayPal in the works that would stop debanking of people?
Because that seems to be a rising line of attack against political enemies.
We did.
I remember it coming through Congress.
I came off the top of my head to explain it, but we did address debanking of individuals in Tennessee.
I think Senator Jack Johnson
carried that bill.
I talked to him this morning, but we didn't talk
about that. But yeah,
that debanking,
I mean,
without a reason,
I mean, that's
not America. You can't do that.
I mean, you've got to get a reason to debacle.
Yeah.
Well, they they got a reason
they don't like you they don't like your politics but uh you know the other thing is is that uh you
know when you you might want to take a look at uh some of these um entities like paypal uh who are
not technically banks uh but there might be something that would be there you know they they
gave that a try in terms of free speech in florida they said well you're not going to censor i think they limited
it to politicians people who are running for office you can't censor them as a social media
company uh the supreme court uh kind of punted on that but um uh so it's yet to be determined
as to what's exactly going to happen with that.
But I think it certainly is something that is worthwhile.
I think it might be worthwhile to do that in terms of financial freedom as well, because that's going to really be that's that's going to be far more important than being kicked off of a social media thing.
Although if you are in the if you are in media, if you are providing information, the both of them have the same effect i mean they can
either shut your bank account down or they can shut your audience down with their banning and
so both of these things are pretty important i think you know dealing dealing in cash gives you
a lot of financial freedom yes they can't track you they can't shut down your credit card who
hate you you know and a lot of a lot of freedom goes on with having no cash.
But one thing that we were able to do, and Senator Sutherland again helped me on this,
we secured the grant from the governor for the Appalachian Electric that put fiber optics
in every home in Jefferson County and Granger County that is on Appalachian Electric.
The AUC Appalachian Electric Co-op.
They have fiber optics to every home.
You don't even have to have a Wi-Fi.
You just run it in, plug it in your computer,
hardwired and cut out all the EMFs.
In this day and age, fiber optics is just about as important as electricity.
That's right.
You can't hardly talk about it.
And a lot of counties in this state that don't have them,
a lot of states in America that does have it,
but the fact that Jefferson and French County are about the AC
has fiber optics right to their premises, that is a big, big deal.
And I have to give Senator Sullivan part of the credit but uh but i
have to take a little credit for that we made it happen yeah oh yeah that's very important um you
know we also have a situation where the tennessee valley authority is very um uh hell-bent on
getting renewables right wind and solar and as a part of that because these things don't work all
the time they have to have a battery
backup and they're talking about putting in these big battery energy storage sites they call bess
and you know very concerning because a the cost and b the fire hazard we've already had it's not a
theory we see these things catching fire all the time. They've had a lot of Rivian vehicles that have caught fire.
Of course, Rivian at Amazon charging stations.
Amazon bought a lot of these electric delivery trucks and stuff from Rivian.
And they've had a whole bunch of them catch fire as they were charging.
And so that is a big issue.
These energy storage sites have caught fire in Australia where Musk put one of those in.
Is there anything at all, any concerns about that at the state level?
Anything that is happening in terms of renewables and the additional cost?
Yeah.
We realize that it's a fab bush by the left.
One thing we did in Tennessee,
we said, if you're going to put in
windmills, you're going to have to put
them on, to tie them down,
dig the concrete up out of the ground,
restore it back the way it was, and dispose
of these fiberglass blades properly,
which there is no proper way to dispose of them.
That's right.
There is no proper way. So we basically stopped That's right. There is no proper way.
So we basically stopped wind power in Tennessee by just making them put up enough money to tie it down.
In Canada, they just abandoned a lot of it.
Yeah.
You drive through the American West,
and it's sickening to see the windmills out through there.
I call them bird blenders.
They kill more ball.
I've not heard them called a bird blender but that's pretty good
that is basically what they are
and these solar panels
most of these solar panels
will never make as much electricity
as it took to build
and they can never do it without tax credits
so if the industry like
wind power and solar
if they can't make it without tax credits, do we really need them?
We had electric cars.
By 1920, there were several electric car makers.
They had beautiful cars.
Some of them run 100 miles on a charge.
There's a reason why they didn't stay.
There's a reason why gasoline cars prevailed and the old Detroit electric car Company went out of business. They were
efficient cars and they'd
drive them around town.
But in America, it's a great big
place. You want to go somewhere, you don't want to wait
10 hours to get your battery charged.
And he's dangerous. Even his e-bikes.
I love an e-bike. I rode that e-bike
in Colorado
on the Nicholson Trail and I just
loved it. If I needed a little help, I could
turn it up, help me a little bit.
But if you put it in your car or in your garage,
that lithium battery's liable to catch on fire
and burn your house down. You can't
put it in your horse cutter because you'll have to set your trailer
on fire.
I mean, it's scary.
So it's really scary when you've got a large
collection of these things to back
up the grid. And so, you know, I like what you guys did with large collection of these things to back up the grid.
And so I like what you guys did with the windmill stuff because it is a big issue.
Those composite blades don't have any way to be recycled,
and you wind up with these massive graveyards of them.
And I've seen them in Europe as well, people doing reports of these massive graveyards of the turbine blades.
So putting some restrictions on that and saying you're going to have to take care of the back end of this thing as well um and so i guess you know maybe something like that would be appropriate for the battery stuff well it it might be it might be it's um
you know we we're right in the middle of the heart of tennessee valley authority
but right now
we are a net importer of electricity and not an exporter.
We should be an exporter.
We should never shut down these coal-fired plants.
We've got coal.
We've got scrubbers on it.
We spent a billion dollars on scrubbers that were cleaned.
They shut them down and they're going to try to burn natural gas.
We've got plenty of coal.
You know, I know you're not a big fan of Trump,
but Trump did say that this country is run by really, really stupid people.
And I have to do with it.
That's right.
Really, really stupid people.
That's right.
You've got to give him that.
Well, yeah, it takes one to know one sometimes, I guess.
Yeah.
But, yeah, it is.
I'm trying to think what else we've done.
We passed it to the public.
It took over 12 years ago.
We've abolished four major taxes.
We have huge surpluses.
We've got $2 billion in our rainy day fund.
We've got $75 billion invested to take care of our retirees.
We don't know a penny on the roads.
Texas owes $20 billion on the roads.
We don't know a penny.
Texas is full of toll roads.
I hate a toll road.
Now, the governor is trying to get some,
he calls them choice lanes,
but you got to pay a toll to get on a choice lane.
It's hard on poor people.
It's unfair.
And it ties our hands.
Once you build a toll road
beside our existing road,
our hands are tied.
We can't add another lane.
We can't use buses on the curb. We can't put a high-speed rail. We can't do anything that competes
with this toll road. And they're always on the foreign companies, money from Spain,
central Spain. And they shake us
down for the rest of our lives. I mean, they'll skim money.
They have a computer system that we can't understand. We'll never know for sure how many
people went through there.
And it's just, it's a license to steal from us.
It is.
It absolutely is.
And, you know, in Texas, and we've been gone now for two years,
I told the audience about a month or so ago,
we got yet another toll charge sent to us.
And, you know, you have to get on the phone with these people
and hang on there with them for a half hour to tell them, I want you to prove
that this was me. Or you pay the toll, or you let this thing accumulate until it gets
up to a really large amount, and then it can get to be a serious issue. But you're right, it's a
foreign government. And you're right, it comes with all these restrictions. As a matter of fact,
in Texas, what they would do is they would add traffic
lights along the feeder roads to add additional congestion to force people to get on the toll roads.
Exactly.
It's a sinister plan.
It's always made for somebody's, it's a sweetheart deal for somebody.
Yeah, that's right.
Well, what is the status of that right now?
I know the governor was pushing that through.
Did he get that approved or is that still in play?
Well, he's got it approved.
I'm not sure we'll ever see any toll roads.
I'm hoping, you know, the governor's got two more years.
I'm hoping the next governor is like me and doesn't like toll roads.
You know, I think it's un-American.
You know, in old Europe, by the time America was started in Europe,
you had to pay a toll from one county to the next.
And when America was created, it was the largest free trade zone in the world
they'd ever seen.
That's right.
And there's nothing about a free trade zone.
Well, these toll roads, they're not easy.
I mean, that's what they are.
They're a toll.
I mean, you just have to pay it to go somewhere else.
And they said, well, you don't have to use it.
Well, if it's a pretty good road there, you got to use it.
That's right.
I've seen how this works in New York.
My wife is from New York, and we would go up there to visit family,
and they just keep going up and up and up in price,
and they get to be incredibly expensive.
And so, yeah, I do hope that it doesn't happen.
One of the things when I was looking at Tennessee in terms of moving here,
one of only 14 states that didn't have toll roads.
So I hope it stays that way.
Let's talk a little bit about, before we run out of time,
let's talk a little bit about a state bank.
And, of course, you've talked about this in the past. You said a lot of banks don't really understand that a state bank like they had in,
I think it was north dakota
was not a competition but an assistance to the banks and you had a brilliant
relabeling for it you called it the tennessee reserve system because that really does explain
to the bankers really more the function of it what is the status of that tell us a little bit about
that well we're it's like a lot of things. It takes years to educate enough people and get enough people interested.
But I think our Constitution pretty much says that we can't have a state bank.
But we're going to work around.
And the only way I see it working is if the state chartered banks would own,
would go together and buy stock and put a state central bank owned by the state chartered banks
and let this bank have our money, can keep it, have a depository there for our gold and silver
if you want to put your gold and silver in the depository.
Gold and silver is about the only thing that maintains your purchasing power through the year.
And we were real close this last year to getting a State Depository.
I went to Texas and toured one in Texas, and they do a great job down there.
Other states are looking at it.
You know, you have a 1929.
I was raised in the shadow of the Great Depression.
I was born in the Depression. I mean, the war was just over. I could say the war, baby raised in the shadow of the Great Depression. I was born in the Depression.
The war was just over.
I considered a war baby in the beginning.
Now they call it a baby boomer, but for years they called us war babies.
And all the old-timers talked about 1929 and how it destroyed everything. If we had a 1929 event event right now our money would be worthless and the only people that
would have any purchasing power would be the people that had a little silver and gold laid
back somewhere and you'd be surprised how many people out here in the country have some silver
and gold and there's three precious metals it's you have lead to that they do buy ammunition
silver gold and lead are three metals. My friend the best in.
But you know, a 1929 event, I mean, people don't realize what happened in 29.
It was, uh, my grandfather had three brothers, two of them lost everything they had.
Two of them didn't owe any money and they, they made small fortunes during the depression.
Basically, I guess that other people's defense. But what I'm saying
is there's no guarantee we won't
have another 1929 event.
So having a small percentage
of our state savings in silver and gold
is a pretty good hedge.
There's no downside. You always
sell it if you need it and it's never gone to
zero. Silver and gold have never been
zero. Yes. And so that's something you've been active in in's never gone to zero so we're going to zero yes and so that's
something you've been active in in terms of trying to get the state of tennessee to uh put some of
its reserve funds and of course they have a uh a surplus uh thanks to the republican congress
that's been there uh you guys have done a great job with that when you talk about the great
depression we go back and we look at the history in north dakota they were able to weather that
better than most of the states they were able able to pay, for example, some state employees,
which other states were not able to do. They would give you an IOU or something like that.
They were able to do it largely because they did have a state bank that was there. So,
you know, it's not like, you know, what we're trying to do is try to decentralize things,
isn't it? Isn't that the real purpose of having these depositories and having a state bank is to try as kind of a decentralized hedge against Federal Reserve mismanagement, right?
That's accurate.
Ellen Brown and Kevin Alston Fitz, two wonderfully smart ladies that talk about this, and they basically say the only way we can get out from under the stranglehold
of the Federal Reserve without a revolution
or a great depression
is for these banks to slowly start giving
their own little state banks
that can be a deposit for the
state, cash the checks.
Like you say, they don't compete
with the little banks. They support
the little banks. North Dakota has more
banks and credit unions per capita than any other state.
They've had a state bank since 1919. Now then, if you try
to start a state bank, federal nerves secretly put lobbyists in here
and they, you know, lobby against it and they tell you, oh no, you're stupid to do that.
Blah, blah, blah. But you have to ignore them
and have some leadership and keep moving forward.
But I'd say Tennessee is a well-run state.
We've been demonized by some of our neighbors being heavily leased by our footage,
you know, AC, one thing or another.
But somehow or another, we've managed to take care of the money.
Well, I see a lot of wisdom there and the experience that you've had
and a lot of people there in Tennessee.
And I do think it is a very well-run state.
I've lived in several different ones
and I really do like what I've seen here in Tennessee
better than any other place.
And you're one of the key reasons
that I think it's working there.
Before we run out of time,
we only got about two minutes left.
Real quickly, anything happening with CBDC one way or the other,
central bank digital?
Well, there's not as much talk as there was.
I have a feeling it's still pushed.
There's still a big push to go forward with it.
People caught on to it pretty quick, different states,
and they're pushing back.
I think they realized that would be the ultimate if they if we
if they push this central bank digital currency on us we would basically be a digital slave yep
that's right and they would control everything that we do but we couldn't buy ammunition you
could only buy maybe you couldn't buy meat they might decide that that's hard on the environment climate change and you can't buy beef i mean it's uh most people and it took me a long
time to realize that there is a globalist movement a sinister bunch of dominant men that try to
control the whole world but they can't do it as long as america is free and it's flying the ointment
is the american south they say the
american south is the flying ointment for the globalists and of course tennessee is a crown
jewel of the american south that's right and it is local you know they're going to have that
for the longest time they said well think scheme globally but you got to act locally and so that's
really where we
cut the legs off of this thing that's where the rubber meets the road is at state level that's
why the state elections are so important and so i wanted to have senator nicely on because
the elections are coming up here in tennessee but wherever you are the most important election
is going to be the state and local elections. And we all saw this in 2024.
It's not a theory.
It's for real.
And I've been hearing the Democrats, they understand what this is.
Soros understands it.
Musk understands it.
These people have made a lot of money through operating with the government,
so they understand how it works.
Thank you so much, Senator Nicely.
Thank you for everything that you do, and good luck to you in this coming election.
Thank you.
I appreciate it, and I encourage everyone to get out and vote on August 1st. Yes. It's you in this coming election. Thank you. I appreciate it and encourage everyone to get out
and vote on August the 1st.
Yes. Thank you very much.
Senator Franklin, thank you.
Let me
tell you, the
David Knight Show, you can
listen to with your ears.
You can
even watch it
by using your eyes
In fact if you can hear me
That means you're listening to the David Knight show
Right now
Yeah, good job
And you want to know something else
You can find all the links to everywhere to watch or listen to the show at thedavidknightshow.com.
That's a website.