The David Knight Show - Tue Episode #2110: FDR’s Lies & Trump’s War Machine: The Empire Never Ended
Episode Date: October 8, 202500:15:16 – Trump’s AI “MedBed” VideoTrump reposts an AI-generated “MedBed” healing video tied to QAnon conspiracy circles. Knight mocks the surreal blend of messianic propaganda and delusi...on within Trump’s online following. 00:24:16 – OSHA Cover-Up on Vaccine InjuriesKnight exposes internal OSHA documents instructing employers not to log vaccine-related injuries, linking the cover-up to Trump’s Operation Warp Speed and Big Pharma immunity. 00:40:00 – Colonel Douglas Macgregor on IranMacgregor warns that Trump’s Venezuela strikes and saber-rattling toward Iran show his complete surrender to the military-industrial complex. Knight calls it proof MAGA has merged with neocon foreign policy. 00:52:54 – UN Pushes Global ControlSegment outlines UN efforts to regulate homeschooling and redefine “children’s rights,” presented as an assault on parental authority and national sovereignty. 01:02:37 – Epstein Flight Data BombshellA new data leak reveals over 2,000 previously hidden Epstein Island flights from global financial centers. Knight argues Trump and GOP leaders are protecting their own by keeping the names sealed. 01:18:28 – Sam Altman Predicts AI ImplosionKnight covers OpenAI CEO Sam Altman’s prediction that the AI boom will collapse like the dot-com bubble, crashing the global economy while investors chase “digital alchemy.” 01:27:12 – Tesla Doors Trap DriversTwo students die trapped in a burning Cybertruck after electric doors fail. Knight calls Tesla “a death trap for the gullible,” slamming the cult of “smart tech” over basic safety. 01:47:19 – Colorado’s Christian Censorship CaseThe Supreme Court hears challenges to Colorado’s law criminalizing Christian counseling on sexuality. Knight frames it as a constitutional showdown over faith and state control of speech. 02:21:03 – FDR’s Peace Lies & Wartime HypocrisyRoosevelt’s “your boys won’t fight abroad” pledge is exposed as cynical manipulation before dragging America into WWII. Knight compares it to modern bipartisan deceit on foreign wars. 02:47:58 – Supreme Court Packing & Power ObsessionKnight and Beito dissect FDR’s failed 1937 court-packing plan, noting it as a rare moment when Congress defended constitutional limits against executive overreach. Follow the show on Kick and watch live every weekday 9:00am EST – 12:00pm EST https://kick.com/davidknightshow Money should have intrinsic value AND transactional privacy: Go to https://davidknight.gold/ for great deals on physical gold/silverFor 10% off Gerald Celente's prescient Trends Journal, go to https://trendsjournal.com/ and enter the code KNIGHTFind out more about the show and where you can watch it at TheDavidKnightShow.com If you would like to support the show and our family please consider subscribing monthly here: SubscribeStar https://www.subscribestar.com/the-david-knight-showOr you can send a donation throughMail: David Knight POB 994 Kodak, TN 37764Zelle: @DavidKnightShow@protonmail.comCash App at: $davidknightshowBTC to: bc1qkuec29hkuye4xse9unh7nptvu3y9qmv24vanh7Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-david-knight-show--2653468/support.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
In a world,
of deceit telling the truth is a revolutionary act it's the david night show as a clock strikes
13 it's the 7th of october year of our lord 2025 we're going to take a look today at some new information
about uh Jeffrey upstein there's been some uh an independent uh data
mining company found that there's a lot more activity at Epstein Island in terms of flights there
than we've ever seen before. Not a couple hundred people, several thousand. And he broke it
down as to where they are coming from, the general areas where they're coming from. It's kind of
what you would suspect here. So we're going to take a look at that as the Supreme Court makes
its ruling about Glane Maxwell. It looks like she's going to have to send a message. Help me,
Obie Don, you're my only hope.
It's a pardon from Don or nothing for her.
So we're going to take a look at all of that as well as the news and how things happening
with this piece in Israel.
We have an interesting interview coming up in the third hour, a man who's written a new biography
about FDR, and you might say, well, what could be new about this?
It is an excellent, compelling book.
It has a lot of parallels to this.
This time that we're in right now in this fourth turning presidency, we'll be right back.
Well, it wasn't that many years ago that we had David Petraeus.
It was about 2012, 2013, when he came out as this is the guy who was part of the Afghan surge.
He was a genius that we were told was going to be responsible for us winning the Afghan war.
That didn't happen.
Before he went to KKR and became a Bilderberg regular, they put him at the CIA, and he came out and said, before long, your refrigerator is going to be listening to you.
Well, if only it stopped at just that.
Now we have Samsung on its high-level refrigerators.
These are refrigerators that are full surveillance mode, which you pay extra for, right?
These are refrigerators that cost up to like $3,000 between $1,33,000.
and from that kind of money what you get is a refrigerator that not always spies on you
but it sends you ads all the time so when you walk in the kitchen it is serving you ads
and there's no way to turn that off unless you want to turn off the other smart features
and i'm thinking exactly why do i have to have a computer and smart features on a refrigerator
this is kind of a set it and forget it type of thing can you think of anything
I don't know.
Frigerators have seemed like kind of a solved technology for a while now.
You don't really need anything else.
You need a box that keeps things cold.
Yeah.
I don't need a TV.
You got one job.
Can you do that?
I need better shelf organization, maybe.
What I don't need is a lot of electronics unless they're trying to start a new cold war.
And I think that's really is.
How sturdy is that screen?
Because it's constantly getting slammed, right?
It's getting slammed.
And if you have changed.
children, they're going to bang on things.
Oh, yeah.
They're going to try to climb.
We're trying to figure that out, aren't we?
Yeah, the age that he's in.
He's getting in all the cabinets and...
Anything that can be opened and slammed will be opened and slammed.
Yeah.
Going to my office now and everything is either on the floor or thrown up on top of
something disorganized to get out of his reach.
So, uh, anyway, it's over the air software updates.
We'll serve as an ad pilot program on the Family Hub refrigerators.
You know, Samsung has really been in the lead in terms of,
of intrusive appliances, you know, TVs that spy on you and all the rest of this.
But it's, so it's designed to strengthen the everyday value of these home appliances for
customers. No, it's going to strengthen the everyday value of ad revenue for Samsung.
That's what this is really about.
You don't get a cut of that.
It doesn't seem like users can entirely turn off the ads unless you completely disconnect
the fridge from the Internet.
Why would I want to have a refrigerator on the Internet?
the internet. But then you lose all those smart features that you paid for, that you paid
thousands of dollars extra for. I can't wait for someone to hack my fridge and start using it to
mine crypto or something like that. Yeah, there you go. Well, let's hope, says this article from
ZeroHedge that with the arrival of humanoid robots in homes, likely by the end of the
decade or the early 2030s, these bots don't become the ultimate ad trackers that bombard
consumers are targeted ads on other devices inside their own homes just imagine c3PO and rc
waddling up to you hello would you like to buy by the way did i tell you you know in the c3PO's voice
oh yeah there's another there's a product for that you know it's kind of like the trim and show or something
ad placement all the time you're like what's going on with this you know oh yeah bridge
play ads obviously they're going to have these robots that know everything about you play some ads
oh yeah that's right yeah it's not the ads uh the ads are a nuisance but the government is the danger
we suspect an incoming ad infestation is creeping into vehicle infotainment systems which is why it
might be wise to buy an old mercedes diesel these people are coming along the lines of eric peters
here um because uh it's uh you know it is just uh as he calls these things they're devices right
So now they're making the refrigerator settlement appliance.
They're making it advice.
By the way, here's some more bad corporate ideas.
Cracker Barrel, however, has finally dumped the ad agency
that was responsible for the logo change stuff.
But they still have the same CEO to kick this whole thing off.
You need to get rid of the idiot that hired the idiot.
Yeah, that's kind of throw these people out there as scapegoats.
The CEO, Julie Messino, gets to keep her job.
it was only the logo thing that was a problem but it was the redesign of the restaurant there was a
bigger issue than the logo by the way you know but in just a week after they did the new logo
they lost a hundred million dollars in stock market cap yeah so this has been a running trend
with businesses just redesigning their logos to be more and more minimalistic you had duncan
donuts went to duncan and now it's just the two ds next to each other just yeah
What's the, why?
I don't know.
Yeah, it's a dumbing down.
Well, communities will not survive in California.
They're saying because of the insurance companies,
insurance companies are making homeownership literally unaffordable.
It's unbelievable what some of these people are paying for insurance.
One person's insurance bill went from $17,000 a year, which I thought was outrageous,
to $72,000 a year.
I mean, that's like $6,000 a month, just an insurance.
That doesn't cover your mortgage or taxes or anything else like that.
And these are especially hard hit in rural areas.
They're going in and telling people, they're going around like inspectors looking at things and saying,
you've got to fix this on your house or that on your house.
You've got to replace your roof.
And one person just ignored it.
And then they started to cancel her insurance.
And so she challenged it.
And there was nothing wrong with her roof.
They were just trying to intimidate people.
And this is the type of thing that I have seen down in Tampa.
This was what the mayor in Tampa, Sandy Friedman, was doing.
A lot of the people who owned property down there called her Sandlot Friedman
because what she was doing was going in and using nuisance regulations
to put confiscatory fees and start compounding them on people.
You're in violation of this or that.
I tend to find most regulations or nuisances.
Oh, yeah, but I mean, this is to the extent your house needs to be repainting.
you know one lady that was there when my sister went down she was managing some houses that
my dad had sold the mortgages a long time ago to some some people there were small houses
and the people who bought it were poor and elderly they didn't know how to deal with us so they
called her and she went down to help them and they had an old lady who said you know she had
an alleyway behind her house and she said somebody had dropped a partial railroad tie on it and
She couldn't remove it because it was too heavy for her.
So she called the city and asked them to remove it.
So the city sends out some inspectors.
And rather than remove it for her, they issued a fine and said, you know,
well, this is going to cost you, you know, like $100 a day until you remove it.
And they would do that type of thing until it got up to a certain level.
And then they would just confiscate the property for the fines that they had assessed against it.
And so the property owners were starting to push back.
And they created an organization to push back against this.
and there was somebody there at that hearing.
And she starts to talk about that and lays out what I just told you.
And the judge says, well, is the railroad tie on your property or not?
And somebody stood up and said, don't answer that.
They'll steal your home for answering that.
So we've seen that type of thing being done by governments.
But, of course, this is an insurance company that was California, put all kinds of requirements on the insurance companies.
And rather than maintaining public areas and,
getting the deadwood out of the public areas, which is, you know, they've allowed those fire
hazards to multiply. And so they put extra restrictions on the private companies. So a lot of the
private companies just said, fine, we won't do any insurance in California. So they created this
organization, the state of California did. And it's this state organization that is doing what
we saw the property owner, not property owner association, but the people that were harassing
the property owners who are associated with the government in Tampa.
And that's what they're doing in California.
They're going into the rural areas of northern California where they have a lot of rain.
It's not the dry part of California.
And they are ramping up the insurance and treating it as if it was like southern California
with the dryness that is down there.
And especially going around and telling people, if they've got a home out in the rural area,
you can't stack the wood anywhere close to your home.
You know, get it way, way, way far away.
If you have it close to your home, that's it.
We're going to condemn your home.
But this just shows the danger, I think.
What they're talking about is the California Fair Plan, which comes with very high deductibles
and very limited coverage.
Basically, you're only covered for fire, and that's about it.
They don't cover any other property damage that would be there for your home.
So they don't cover the mudslides, the earthquakes, or any of the other acts of God
that California is regularly hit with?
Yeah.
It reminds me of George Carlin.
In his early days, he had the hippie-dippy weatherman.
He's talking about how there was, you know, this front was moving in from this direction.
This other one was moving in.
It looks like they're headed for some general smiting.
But anyway, this is, again, a failure of government to, you know, to, in every regard,
by ignoring the marketplace, by ignoring maintenance.
the land is under their control and all of this is government failure and it's coming down on the
heads of the people who are there truly is amazing to see that hit well Trump is going to be
marking his 80th birthday as the U.S. marks its 250th anniversary and he's come up with an interesting
way to celebrate it you know he's always been a WWE guy before but now he's going to go to
UFC the ultimate fighting contest I guess is what it stands for boy I sure do
love watching some sweaty Chechens wrestle each other. Yeah, well, Connor McGregor's going to be
there, so the least of the Ben Irishman wrestling with Chechens. Who's that guy? But yeah, he's going to
set this up at the White House. We've, real class act. Here we go. Is it going to be in the
ballroom? I don't know. He doesn't have the ballroom ready yet. They're going to set up a giant
octagon. I don't know. I mean, that's a standard thing that they do with the UFC stuff.
No, it's the White House octagon, not the ballroom.
You know, the White House cage match
That's where he puts former cabinet members
Oh, yes, the historic octagon
Right next to the Oval Office in the Pentagon
As all that is happening, you have the Guardian
Trying to make the case that the president is unhinged
And I think you can make that case pretty easily
Except they don't really go there
They are looking at very minor things, you know,
This is kind of like all the lawfare against him for all this ridiculous stuff when,
in fact, you know, he had done the lockdown and the stimulus checks and all these other things.
He had violated the Constitution in amazing ways.
He should have been impeached for what he did in 2020 with the COVID pandemic stuff.
But instead, you know, they come after him for some petty stuff.
And that's the way the Guardian comes after him.
I guess we can say that Trump derangement syndrome is real and alive still.
They want to get really petty over a lot of these different things,
rather than pay attention to the real stuff, to the important stuff.
As the government shut down loomed in the U.S. last week,
the president posted an AI video, which depicted Hakeem Jeffries,
the first black house minority leader,
wearing a sombrero and exaggerated mustache with mariachi music playing in the background.
Hey, you know, they,
Guardian needs to get a life.
They thought that this was racist and dangerous.
That's their terms, right?
You guys need to grow up.
I still have a medbed video, which was far weirder.
Yeah, that's right.
Well, they also mentioned that one.
And that one, I think, does bring up some interesting points because, I mean, clearly that
meme video was a joke, and they can't take a joke.
They call it racist and dangerous and so forth and reprehensible.
Also, I think we're past the point we're having a first black this or first black that
means anything.
Yeah.
You guy, it's who cares.
Yeah, I know.
You know, let's stop with all the firsts and everything.
Can you do the job or not?
You know, that's the issue.
So when you talk about the medved bed thing,
we'll play a little bit of that, Lance, if you got it.
But anyway, the video...
President Donald J. Trump has announced a historic...
This is his daughter-in-law, except it's not.
It's an AI version.
...of America's first med-bed hospitals
and a national med-bed card for every citizen.
Every American will soon receive their own med-bed card.
With it, you'll have guaranteed access to our new...
And this obviously is not Trump.
It's an AI Trump.
So the question is, why Trump tweet out a fake video of him saying things that he never said before?
And his daughter-in-law, as well, Laura.
This is the beginning of a new era in American health care.
Okay, well, that's enough of that.
But as we pointed out, the med-bed thing is this Q-a-Non nonsense, too.
So maybe that had something to do with them tweeting about.
he puts that out and then he pulls it down later and when caroline love it was question about
that she said well um the president saw the video and he posted it and then he took it down
it's like yeah well why did he post it if he saw it he saw that he was there fake does he believe
that the government is about to send out med beds to everybody is that way he tweeted it out
uh but then they kind of touch a little bit on the Tylenol thing
But again, as the guardian is guarding the pharmaceutical companies, among other things,
they're not really going to get the heart of the issue.
The real issue with Tylenol thing is, in fact, it's being used as a red herring.
This is the kind of betrayal, I see it, as a betrayal, not as dementia.
They're trying to portray everything there as dementia and say, you know,
he said that about Biden, but it's true about him.
well he did confuse albania with armenia which as an american i can understand i'm sure given
the state of eastern europe these two countries hate each other deeply but no one else will be
able to tell them apart yeah that is the essence of eastern european politics these two
countries that are nearly identical border each other and they despise each other for no particular
reason. So, you know, he will talk about that and he will send troops into situations like
that. He doesn't even know the names of the countries. That's American foreign policy. That's
our master's stroke of the American Empire. We're picking aside. I don't know anything about it.
We're throwing darts at aboard. That's right. So he wrote on truth social that he had been
briefed on a shooting at the Mormon Church in Michigan to kill four people. The Trump administration
will keep the public posted as we always do, he wrote. But when he posted again, he wrote, but when he posted
again in a couple of hours. It was a video about the gold fixtures and fittings that he had put
into the White House. So the highest quality, 24-carat gold used in the Oval Office in the
cabinet room of the White House. Foreign leaders and everyone else freak out when they see the
quality and the beauty. Best Oval Office ever. So again, the president's in-person appearances
have also become odd. You know, I look at this litany of issues.
that the guardian and the left have with Trump and ask,
but what about the Constitution?
Does that matter to you?
Does it matter to you what he's done to the Constitution?
They're torqued out of shape about the fact that he has focused on gilding the Oval Office,
but what about the Constitution that he is gelding?
So if they want to try criticizing, it certainly is a target-rich environment.
But instead they're talking about this.
Yeah, go ahead.
He's sending troops into the cities, but they're worried about
this video here.
Oh, look, if you put a mustache and
sombrero on someone, therefore.
La Cucaraja.
Yeah, that is not amazing.
You talk about the irrelevance of both
sides here with this stuff.
So, when he addressed the top
military, as I pointed out, it was really
strange, this, what he calls
weaving and everything, it was really just kind of
rambling. It's not
weaving, and it's, it's
irrelevant to what he's really talking about when he started
going on this long discourse
about the firemen. The firemen up there, they're getting shot at. It's a great job. I love my
firemen because my firemen love me. They vote for me in large numbers. So he's like to pay
millions of dollars to bring all the top brass of the military from all over the world, where they
shouldn't be anyway. And then brings them in to like to talk to them about the fireman.
And of course, he says other things that he said, America's respected again as a country,
not respected with Biden. They looked at him.
down stairs every day. Every day this guy was falling downstairs. I walk very slowly. Nobody has to
set a record, but try not to fall because it doesn't work out well. A few of our presidents have fallen
and it became a part of their legacy. We don't want that. Need to walk nice and easy. You not have,
you don't have to set any record, he said. Be cool. Be cool when you walk down, but don't,
don't bop down the steps. And they talks about how Obama used to do that.
But I wouldn't try that.
So again, this is the people come in for this.
And he's, he's frambling on about how he has to be careful going up and
downstairs because he doesn't want to look like Biden.
And talking about his beloved fireman that he has to hold in the steam.
But here's the really sound like Biden.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They're starting to emerge.
Like I said, it's a uni party.
It's a uni geriatric party.
One party run by very old men here.
Anytime you bring up something like this.
I remember that article you covered years ago from the pharmacist that works in D.C.
Oh, yeah.
Talking about you would not believe the prescriptions I fill for these people.
The intense medication some of these guys are on.
They're just out to lunch.
That was a major, major article.
And Drudge carried it, and nobody paid the attention to it.
Nobody read it.
It was a huge article.
And now it's vanished.
I've tried looking it up since then, and I can't find it.
I'm sure it's still there.
Oh, I bet they deep six to that thing for sure.
Yeah, Google is a search engine designed to hide things, and I think most of these search engines are now at this point.
I tend to use Yandex most of the time.
It's pretty good about pulling things.
But the document itself may be gone.
And what Travis is talking about was article.
I think it was done by the Washington Post.
I think you might be right.
I'm not sure, but I think it was done by them.
And it was really not the main focus.
The main focus was, you know, the fact that the House members have got all these special services.
and everything and how they work.
And the main focus was a guy who had, he was elderly,
and he had done this work for ages and ages and ages.
You know, they've got their own special pharmacy there.
And just as an aside, you know, about 20 pages into this article,
he said, and yeah, you know, it's amazing when I see the prescriptions that are coming
in there for some of these people.
He goes, it makes you wonder how they can even get into the building.
And so I was like, well, that explains some of the things that we've seen from some of
people here. But that's been deep-sixth, I guess. Remember hold. I can't find it. It's just
every single politician is determined to pull a Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Just stay in there for as long
as they can. Die in office if possible. Well, because that's what gives meaning to their life.
They don't have any meaning to their life outside of that. And it's why they're so dangerous.
Well, talking about danger, OSHA has one job, doesn't it? Supposedly, OSHA is
supposed to be all about safety, occupational safety and so forth. And, you know, we saw OSHA
violate all of its own rules during the so-called pandemic. They had rules about wearing masks if
you were working in a very dusty environment. You know, like if you're clearing up 9-11 waste
and debris in New York after the collapse, you should wear a mask because otherwise you're going
to breathe in a lot of stuff that's going to cause you long-term health issues and eventually
kill you. So people who are working in dusty environments, OSHA had requirements for them to wear
a mask. However, and it was these same in 95 masks. And they said, however, after 20 minutes, you've got
to give the people a break and they've got to be able to get out and take that mask on. And they
completely ignored all of that during the Trump pandemic lockdown. They said, you keep that mask on
all day. And so now we find out, this is an exclusive from Children's Health Defense,
OSHA admits that it told health care employers not to report COVID vaccine injuries.
A whistleblower alerted the defender and OSHA spokesperson confirmed an internal directive
telling health care employers, in other words, hospitals, etc., not to report or to track
COVID-19 vaccine entries.
And again, this is going back to the Harvard study, it was only 1% of what they found with.
Their study was only about 1%.
percent of the vaccine injuries were reported to the VAERS database and that's supposed to be
adverse events reporting system vaccine adverse events reports and it's only about 1% were reported
and yet we all knew that it was much worse with the COVID situation not only did they make
it difficult so people wouldn't report this stuff but they actively told them not to and here
you've got OSHA the people who are supposed to be about safety all about safety safety is in
their name. Safety is their middle name. It literally is. And yet they said, don't report these
dangerous vaccines to anybody. They removed the policy from their website after the defender inquired
about it. Critic, but they were able to get a backup version of it. And so they got the archive version.
That's one of the reasons why they really hate the internet, what is it, internet historian? It's the
internet archive yeah the way back machine internet archive yeah the way back machine internet historian is the
youtube channel that's right one of my favorite that's a that's a good good uh video there but anyway
critics said the directive concealed the scope of vaccine injuries and made it difficult for
injured workers to obtain workers comp or disability benefits yeah that's right uh so again they violate
their own rules and they go even further and say don't put it in that's why he said
If on the VAERS database, they have 38,000 people who died after getting the vaccine.
Stop and think about that.
We've had vaccines killed nationwide because we had nine people that were injured by it and not even necessarily killed.
And now we got 38,000 and we don't do anything about it.
And guess what?
That is far less than 1%.
If it was just 1%, that would mean that we had 3.8 million deaths.
and they're not going to pull this thing off.
That shows you the clutch,
the way that Albert Borla
and the big pharmaceutical companies,
that shows you the pull and the power they have
with Donald Trump.
Donald J. Trump.
Jay for jerk.
The federal agency exempted health care employers
from reporting workers' adverse reactions
to mandated COVID-19 vaccines.
OSHA issued the directive
in 2021, June of 2021, to encourage vaccination during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Oh, well, Biden was in office, yeah.
But who cheered all this stuff constantly?
Trump, even when he was running for re-election in 2024, he was still cheering this
for the longest period of time, and he will still do it if you confront him.
He'll still tell you that he saved millions of lives and that he was the one who turned
everything around with the vaccine.
He certainly did turn everything around with the vaccine, but he killed about
4 million people just in the U.S. alone, easily estimated here.
The directive also stated that OSHA, a division of the U.S. Department of Labor,
would not track workers' COVID vaccine adverse events, even though it acknowledged that
the vaccine may cause injuries that would require employees to take time off.
OSHA also outlined its COVID-19 reporting policy on its website under frequently asked
questions page for COVID-19.
What they had on their website, which is now what they removed after Children's Health Defense called them on it,
they wrote on their website previously,
OSHA does not wish to have any appearance of discouraging workers from receiving COVID-19 vaccination.
Also, does not wish to disincentivize employers' vaccination efforts.
As a result, OSHA does not intend to enforce recording requirements to require any reporter to record workers' side effects from COVID-19 vaccination.
So, you know, don't say anything about this because we don't care what happens to people.
We've got a goal, and that is to get as many people vaccinated as possible.
And we really don't care about individual health.
That's the way public health operates.
Public health, public education, public safety.
They're never about health education or safety.
It's about government control.
It's about treating you as subhuman.
So a former medical coder for an Arizona hospital,
called OSHA's policy, especially inflammatory,
said it was an admission that they knew that the vaccine was not safe, of course.
And it carries a risk of injury serious enough to affect one's ability to work.
Yeah, if you die, you're not going to be able to work.
I mean, we're talking about four million people.
That's not people that were injured.
Those are people who were killed.
And the number of people that were injured is probably tens of millions that are out there.
So as to not discourage vaccination, employers are not required to record instances of adverse events to vaccinations on the OSHA 300 log, effective through May of 2022, said the directive that they obtained.
To require employers to report non-symptomatic COVID-19 cases, but not report severe adverse vaccine reactions, diametrically contradicts OSHA's most basic purpose, safety.
So just think about that.
you would have to report to OSHA if somebody got a PCR procedure that said that they had COVID,
even though they had no symptoms at all.
But if somebody is sick or died from the vaccine, you don't report it.
Doesn't that tell you everything about Donald Trump and this whole fake pandemic stuff?
That's it in a nutshell.
The whole thing was an unbelievable scam.
Even I still have a hard time believing this.
years later just how vicious these people were this uncovered directive is just another example of a
systemic willful blindness that pervaded the prior administration said a guy for a legal affairs
director for react 19 advocating on behalf of COVID-19 vaccine injury victims well previous
administration what about this administration what about RFK Jr why don't you stop this now
you should be banning this instead you're out there misdirecting people about autism
telling them that it's from Tylenol or something else they need to focus on this stuff
it is really a head fake as I said before RFK Jr was used by Trump to get money from
the vaccine companies so that he could get paid off by them and then do their bidding
and now he's being used RFK Jr. is being used again by Trump to get the MAGA
people to trust him. And he's not doing anything about this stuff. You've got poison that is killing
people. And the best they can do is say, well, I don't recommend that, you know, but poison,
hey, come here, a little dog. I just put some poison in your milk. But if I were you, I wouldn't
take that milk. That's the best that they can do. I've said, personally, I don't like poison,
but you're, yeah. Yeah, it's insane. I've shown that clip a million times. Anyway, this alone is a
scandal, a federal agency prioritizing vaccination propaganda over workplace safety and transparency.
OSHA's mission is to ensure safe workplaces. By directing employers not to record vaccine
injuries, they violated their own mandate and betrayed public trust. Well, name me one agency
that doesn't do that. These unconstitutional agencies are there to serve themselves, to grow their
little fiefdom, their little empire, their little bureaucracy. And they really don't care.
about you or their initial mission.
The directive is proof of a cover-up.
By silencing injury reports, OSHA denied workers their rights,
erased their suffering from the record,
and shielded corporations from liability.
And remember that while all this was happening,
the rules that were put in by Donald Trump through CMS, Medicare and Medicaid,
we'll give you a bonus if you point at somebody and say that they got COVID.
We'll give you another huge bonus if you put them on a ventilator.
And then we'll give you a 20% bonus for everything that you charge them in the hospital because now they've been labeled as a COVID patient.
I mean, this was so incredibly heavily subsidized and incentivized financially.
And then at the same time, they come out and say, well, we want to know if anybody is non-symptomatic but has had a PCR procedure that pointed the finger at them.
But if they're sick and dying, we don't care.
Don't tell us.
We don't say anything about that.
OSHA's policy for reporting COVID-19 vaccine reactions differs from policies for reporting adverse events related to other shots, such as the smallpox vaccine.
So they already had a lot of stuff about vaccinations on the OSHA site, talking about how we need to know if somebody has a reaction to this stuff.
But, again, they're not just the whole thing is so incredibly corrupt.
how could anyone trust government i'm just done with politics i will never vote again i
well i say never i can't imagine a situation where anybody that i would ever vote for could even
get on the ballot let alone uh get into the debates anyone that i would vote for they'd assassinate
long before he got a chance to make it into office that's right people i vote for a bit in jail
uh so speaking of going to jail james comey uh his best bet may be the key figure in his defense may be the
key figure in his defense may be the guy that Trump had hired to investigate him, or at least
that his previous attorney general, Bill Barr, had hired. This guy that we kept hearing about
Durham, Durham, Durham, Durham's going to take care of it and all the rest of the stuff. John Durham,
former special counsel, he was brought in to investigate, Russigate stuff and the former FBI
official, Comey, during his four-year investigation. And as they're pointing out,
in this Ross story article, Durham, whose appointment Trump supported, told federal prosecutors
investigating James Comey that he was unable to uncover evidence that would support false statements
or obstruction charges against the former FBI director. So Trump's own guy investigated
him years ago, and he did not get indicted because the special prosecutor didn't find
anything. So what Ross Story is saying is that this guy may be a key witness in defense
of James Comey.
But when we look at the James Comey thing,
I think one of the things that really stood out to me
over the weekend was this back and forth
the political drama about the perp walk, right?
This is one of the things that they do to people.
I mean, they did it to Roger Stone
and they've done it to Steve Bannon and other things.
When you do a perp walk with somebody
who is not a dangerous criminal,
you call the press up,
and then you handcuff this person
and you walk them out through the gauntlet of the press.
So everybody can take pictures of them
I mean, can start to portray your political enemy as a criminal.
Look, law enforcement's handcuff this guy.
He's obviously a criminal, right?
So the perp walk is a purely political, political theater move that is there.
And so the fact that an FBI agent was supposedly relieved of duty was fired because this FBI agent refused to do a perp walk of James Comey.
And people were pushing back on Cash Patel.
And his response was, well, you work, you do what we tell you to do, basically.
I'm paraphrasing him.
You do what we tell you to do.
And if you don't do what we tell you to do, you're fired.
He would neither confirm nor deny that the guy was fired.
But many sources said that he was fired.
And Cash Patel, when asked directly about it, would not say that he was not fired.
Instead, he implied that the guy had been fired because he was insubordinate.
The order was to perpwock James Comey.
So an FBI agent was relieved.
of duty for declining to arrange a perp walk of former director James Comey in front of news media
cameras after Comey was federally charged last month. Four people briefed on the matter said on
Friday. So Comey was charged on September the 25th of making false statements and obstructing a
congressional investigation. An FBI spokesperson declined to comment on personnel matters.
Reuters did not immediately determine how or when senior FBI official.
was warned to stage, wanting to stage, bringing Comey in the Bureau's Washington Field Office,
only a summons to appear in court was issued in the case, not an arrest warrant.
However, defendants will often report to an FBI office for booking after a court summons is
issued. Trump has threatened to imprison his political rivals since he first ran for president
2015, but this is first time that he has sought and secured a grand jury indictment
against one of them. Trump's Justice Department is also investigating others such as Letitia James
and John Bolton. So Cash would tell in the kind of classy way that the guy has, when this stuff was
reported about the Purplock, he called MSNBC a clown factory of disinformation. And he got a little
bit more explicitly vulgar with it. But yeah, it's, he said, he said, he
put on X. I'm sorry, not on like he didn't put it on X. It was put on there by a former
US attorney for the Eastern District of Michigan wrote on X, DOJ policy prohibits
perp walks in front of news media. And so then you had a lot of people replied to that like
Roger Stone, Navarro, Bannon. They said, oh really? Then what happened to us? This tells you
though, that this is a political theatrical prosecution. It's not real. So the FBI has now not just
fired the guy who refused to perpwalk him, but they have now supposedly fired, finally,
the Southern Poverty Law Center, which is trying to do PURPWks to anybody that they disagreed with
on the right. They call us racist. They put us on a hate map and all the rest of this stuff.
That was a form of perpwalk. And of course, the FBI has,
always been allied with them, but about 10 years ago, they claimed that they were no longer
using the Southern Poverty Law Center. Now, Cash Patel is claiming that they've severed all ties
with them. So again, this is another one of these deals where they lie to us, like, no, we don't
have any mercury in the vaccines. And then you find out, you know, they pushed that back for 20 years,
and then you find out just recently, oh, yes, they do. They do have mercury in the vaccines. But now
they promise that they're going to take it out of there. Do you believe that? Do you believe that
they're not going to play the SPLC game anymore as well.
And truly is amazing that the guy who's only involvement in the civil rights movement,
Morris Dees, who founded the Southern Poverty Law Center,
his only involvement was to defend the KKK while he was a lawyer.
Then he sets it out, creates a direct mail company,
and then gets the mailing list of the Democrats because he helps Carter.
and he reinvents himself as being, you know, he sees now everybody he sees as
KKK and treats them as such.
So the question is, in 2012, a domestic terrorist used the hate map to target the
Family Research Council, a conservative Christian think tank in Washington, D.C.,
planned to kill everyone in the building.
A building manager largely foiled the attack, but suffered lifelong injuries in the process.
and so they used that hate map was inspired that attack that was there remember the guy came in
and he thought that let him in if he came in with a bag of chick-fil-a i'm here to deliver
chick-fil-a when actually he was delivering bullets for people the guy uh sussed out that he was
crazy and engaged him and got injured with that but that is a long-standing scam that has been
run by the southern property law center as well as
by the FBI.
Well, Colonel McGregor says it looks like we're on a collision path with Iran yet again.
This is a long interview that he had with LifeSight News.
And they asked him in the interview,
I said, is the U.S. preparing for a larger war?
Colonel Douglas McGregor said the potential for conflicts in Ukraine and in the Middle East
with Iran to escalate out of control is huge.
He said,
Trump, with regard to the conflict in Ukraine, has reversed his original stance of staying out of the
conflict. He said, a result of Trump's decision to adopt the Biden policy towards Moscow.
Yeah, Trump has turned into Biden. And we're not talking about steps here. We're talking about
the steps of Russia that he wants to get involved in. Trump has agreed to give Kiev, U.S.
intelligence to support strikes on energy infrastructure deep inside of Russia, of course,
helping Ukraine take the war to Putin.
Again, he is owned and controlled by the deep state.
Trump is.
So he's going to do whatever the military industrial complex wants,
whatever the CIA wants.
Hundreds of top military officials in Quantico, Virginia,
they asked him, this is LifeSight, asked him,
who flew in from all over the world,
what was the deeper meaning of this unusual move?
Is this a straightening up of military culture
in light of a possible,
impending larger war? Colonel McGregor answered, he said,
POTUS is all about optics and glamour. The message regarding fitness and merit-based
advancement was genuine, but the rest was a stream of consciousness and unclear.
That's exactly why you started rambling about steps and about firemen.
We are not ready to fight a major war at this point. To do so would be foolish and dangerous.
Yeah, that is exactly what they're up to doing. So then they asked him,
of the reports that activity is rising in the Department of War.
Can you confirm this rumor?
He says, yes, U.S. forces are concentrating in ways reminiscent of the last conflict between
Israel and Iran.
It appears that we're on a collision path with Iran yet again.
So they asked him, what would be the possible scenario of a larger war, and with whom
would it start?
And to where would it spread?
Well, everywhere.
He says, the potential for conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East,
with Iran to escalate out of control is huge.
The recent French seizure of a Russian oil tanker at sea is an act of war.
NATO is without leadership as a result of Trump's decision to adopt the Biden policy toward
Moscow.
They said that there's growing criticism of and resistance to Israel's policy towards Gaza.
And he said, well, Israel is losing popular support in the U.S., but it still controls Washington
and the White House.
Netanyahu must move.
soon or risk losing the unconditional support of the greater Israel project.
The Islamic states in the Middle East and Egypt are lining with China's backing and Russia's
support.
There is no incentive for Israel to compromise or delay action.
So it looks like we're moving to war in multiple fronts.
And when we look at the unilateral action of the French Navy, it pales in comparison
of what Trump is doing with Venezuela.
and he definitely wants to get involved in a war there.
That's going to be a nice wag the dog distraction for him
and give him a chance to virtuous signal
about saving us all from drugs.
It's going to be utter nonsense.
You know it, I know it.
Green Party in the UK is voting to abolish landlords
because they're communists, right?
The Greens have always been watermelon communists.
They have a thin veneer of green
and on the inside, they're completely red.
So what they're talking about doing, as the telegraph has pointed out,
tenants would be given first right to buy when a landlord sells,
with their total rent paid as discounted.
So I know those are going to take all the rent that you paid over all the years total of it,
and they're going to apply that to the property cost.
And government-backed financing provided councils would give a second right to buy.
The party also wants to introduce rent control.
abolish right to buy for public tenants, and end buy to let mortgages.
In other words, a mortgage where you would buy it so that you could make it rental property.
No, we're not going to give you a mortgage for that.
So basically, the Green Party is full-on communist.
That's what this is all really about.
There's another way to explain this.
And a word, it's communism.
The notion that the landlords added no positive value to the economy,
or two society. That's full Marxism. And that the relationship between landlord and tenant
is inherently and intrinsically extractive and exploitative. So that's where these people are coming
from. We talk about how stupid the society is. How much did you pay it to figure out what to name
your son? It was free. That's right. Well, some people are paying up to $30,000 for advice on
getting the perfect name for their child can you imagine i guess the name i would give them would be
something like what the indians would do son of sucker yeah you know some of the sucker born
every minute isn't there uh son of big chief great fool yeah uh this woman is a um a consultant
for baby naming she's 37 years old today she has over 100 000 followers on ticot
and Instagram, and a portfolio of more than 500 names that she has curated for families.
Her entry-level service starts at $200 for an email of a personalized name suggestion,
complete with meanings and popularity trends.
For in-depth services, her prices soar.
A $10,000 package provides VIP treatment.
What else could you do?
While her most exclusive services, costing $30,000, include everything from genealogical,
research to full baby name branding campaigns.
Every person involved with this, I don't know what we should do with them, but they can't
be left out in society.
I refuse to be surrounded by these people any longer.
It's a tell of utter helplessness.
If you spend $30,000 on a baby name, you shouldn't be allowed to vote.
It's that simple.
Your vote does not count anymore.
Well, if you're in the UK, the answer is already simple.
It's just Mohammed, right?
No, they'd have to think twice.
It's just Muhammad.
Well, we have...
That's popular.
That's right, yeah.
Trump, they report is, this is NBC News, saying that his support among influential
podcasters is waning.
And so they talk about Joe Rogan and Theo Vaughn.
It's like, you know, why did these people support him after what he did in 2020?
And why would anybody take political advice or analysis from Joe Rogan or Theo Vaughn over?
over anything, but especially over Trump because can't you figure out what he did in 2020
and still was bragging about when he ran again, but these people supported him.
And now because, I don't know, was it COVID, was it Pfizer and Albert Borla, was it Trump RX?
Was it the wars?
Was it the no-do process and setting up the drug wars, the invasion of police state and the cities?
was it the censorship?
Was it the on again, off again, tariff,
lockdowns and destruction of our economy?
Was it the Epstein files?
You know, what was it that finally woke these people up?
I don't know.
It's like a multiple choice question.
I think, to me, he checks all of the boxes.
And when we come back,
we'll talk about some of that.
But again, I just want to tell you
that we have an interesting book
that we're going to be talking about
in the third hour.
And there's a lot of parallels.
else, actually, to the current fourth turning executive, and that's the previous fourth turning
executive, FDR. This is a guy who ran as a peace candidate, who then got us involved in
World War II. This is a guy who was very instrumental in the gold versus fiat struggle that was
there and set us on the path of Keynesian destruction, a guy who did a rapid expansion of a
Leviathan federal government, very much like Trump is trying to do. A guy who was
fully into surveillance and attacking free speech, and there was actually a revolt against him
that joined both the left and the right against FDR. But he also used the FCC to censor
and to control his critics. So this is a topic that, as they say, if you don't learn anything
from history, you're destined to repeat it, if you don't learn the lessons of history. And that is
especially true of the fourth turning and the kind of great president that these these great men like
fd r lincoln and trump who set us these collision courses with history and with each other and so i think
this is a very a timely book review has some great reviews from people like jim bovard who i respect a
great deal so that'll be coming up in third hour let's talk a little bit about some of these
comments. Radisbro. Thank you very much. We appreciate the tip.
It says, imagine FBI killing Americans and setting up killers, terrorists, and no one had a problem with it,
but perpwalk and Comey is too far. That would be uncalled for. That'd be mean.
Yeah, that's what the Guardian wants to focus on. Not the fact that we've had a 300 people
grapple out of black helicopters in Chicago and stick guns in the people's faces and throw
flashbangs into apartments and rip kids out and put them into handcuffs.
I mean, that's just normal government as...
You can't be mean to James Comey.
That's wrong.
Dunel Lord.
Everything they focus on, the per block of James Comey,
where, you know, the January 6 people were left in jail for all that time under Biden.
That's right.
It's really amazing.
That's right.
Duned Lord 1337 says, I guess the refrigerator is going to monitor your waistline.
It also says,
someone has already hacked those types of refrigerators that's great that's one i wonder how much
control they have can they just turn up the heat in your refrigerator so all your food spoils
they'll die of domain poison they eat that mayonnaise and just giving you gastrointestinal
trouble all the time francinge it reminds me of that joke i don't know who it was maybe
george carlin he said you're looking at a refrigerator and you're trying to find something
you pull this thing out and you go is that meat
or is it cake?
It's been never so long.
Maybe the refrigerator can answer that for you.
Maybe it's hooked up to a large language model.
Francie, government knowing what is in your fridge.
I never imagine that.
That's right.
There's no information to inane or mundane that they won't collect.
Be my Valentine.
Was it George Cardley who was looking in the fridge for a food item wondering,
did something eat something else?
I handy.
Hospitals already know if you've been jabbed.
or not. So this question, are you up to date on your vaccines? Is that a gotcha? They know when
your V-card is valid or fake. Jerry Alitalo, whoever drafted that directive at OSHA to cover
up COVID vaccine injuries is in big trouble. I'll believe it when they're escorted to prison
in handcuffs and leg irons. Yeah, they'll get a perp walk. Yeah. Right, overture.
OSHA is a toothless dog. It ain't what it pretends to be. We used to have a toothless dog.
Possum King. Zero arrest. Zoxa Voxa. $70 billion deal.
with Pfizer for MRNA jabs
as Kennedy laughs with mass murderers.
Yep, that's right.
Yeah, they're with Albert Borla
and Donald Trump, the mass murderers.
KWD68, Trump says
he's reactivating the base at Bogram.
You never know what his roulette wheel of stupidity
will land on.
Oh, big war, big war.
Yeah, let's restart the Afghanistan war.
Bulldog, we're in for a rude awakening
by the UN agenda. This is bad. Yeah, I pulled
that article up.
so the UN wants to control how and what kids are taught like they own them yeah the UN is coming after
homeschooling it's on their agenda well they have been for the longest time you know for
I played that clip yeah the UN Convention for the Rights of the Child is for all this stuff
that children have rights and we have to separate them from their parents this is what you're
seeing working out in this transgender stuff that's just one manifestation that's the general
rule, though. That children have rights. They should be treated like adults. Adults should be treated like
children. And because the children have understanding, they can change their gender and they can do
many other things. We have to separate the children from their parents. And that's why the
there was the parental rights.org was set up to, but it's like only about a sentence. They had
come up with an idea that would be an amendment to the Constitution. And so I did some of those
ads for them. But the U.N. has hated the family for the longest period of time. All the globalists
do. Because, again, that is God's institution, and they are set and raging against God.
And so they have to destroy the family in order to destroy the children. And they hate humanity.
If you hate humanity, you've got to destroy children. That's their main mission.
Tone of Lord, 1337. Man, I wish we could import Russian arms and ammo again. Their stuff was
Cheap and nice.
You can get an AK-100 series rifle.
They're a current issued rifle for next to nothing back in the day.
The prices on firearms has gone through the roof.
It's truly amazing.
I remember, you know, you used to be able to get a Mossburg 500 for, you know, $150, $200 or something like that.
Especially ammunition costs.
Anytime you want to go practice, it's like, well, better throw $200 down the drain.
Not that it's throwing it down the drain.
It's a useful skill to have, but you all understand what I'm saying.
It's painful.
Bulldog. People don't understand how the UN works. They control your politicians to mandate their
rules. That's right. It's also sort of a cyclical feedback. We, you know, our politicians are
involved with the UN, so they can send legislation there. The UN can send it back. It's all a
gigantic, incestuous, gourdian knot of corruption. Yeah, but when you look at things, it's like
the family of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, trying to do gun control with the
arms trade treaty that's there but everything that we see out there all the climate change stuff
of course that came from the u.n as well the drug war came from the u.n. they have been the seminal point
of so much of this stuff and the question is you know why does trump stay in the u.n if he's an
anti-globalist if he claims that he's against all the things that the u.n has created then why isn't he
out of the u.n well that tells you right there his actions are what you need to look at not what the man
says.
Audi, M-R-R, have you guys seen the ICE recruitment videos?
They want to turn the country into a friggin' perpetual war zone.
They're probably going to get their wish.
Yeah, I know they have like a job that they want people to be, you know,
Homeland Patriot or something like that.
Homeland Defender.
Homeland Defender, I guess it was.
And, you know, again, you can be the one who help us to purge people out of the society.
It really is.
Trump is, when he brought the people in,
He's basically telling him, we've got a war within, and you guys need to practice in the cities.
And that was just the most amazing thing to me that, you know, here we had Alex Jones who did four documentaries at that police state.
And we'd talk about how it was a very concerning and a real harbinger of what was to come, the fact that they were putting military equipment in these different areas, the fact they were holding these drills and so forth.
Now Trump comes out to an assembled meeting of all the top-level brass.
Army, Navy, Air Force, everybody.
And he tells him that's what he's going to do.
And there's crickets from Alex about that and from the conservatives.
They should be upset about that.
But it was all still, it was just about partisan politics.
They care if it's Obama.
They don't care if it's their guy that is going to turn the country into a police state.
Yeah.
Audi, MRR, the price of firearms has gone up because they want a few of the masses as possible to be armed.
Yeah, it's an effective form of gun control.
If you can just raise the price of everything at the point, no one can afford it.
Also ammo.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I've effectively experiencing Lamborghini control.
I will know.
They have made it impossible for me to own one.
Well, again, you go back to the first Obama, some of the first things that he did.
Yeah, try to make it so they can recycle the brass.
Yeah, the military would recycle brass.
And so they had at Fort Drum, New York, which is a major source that, they had them crushed the brass and sell it to China.
at scrap costs, which is really stupid economically to do that because you're destroying the value of
the brass. And they got that turned around with some senators. But that's been their goal all along.
If you don't have ammunition, ammunition control is what they're going to do. And they can do that
with price control. And if you don't have any ammunition, you've got a club. A fancy club.
Yeah, you're like Davy Crockett at the Alamo. We know how that turned out.
Yeah, unfortunately. Trump Burger, buy a 22 long rifle version.
of your rifle to practice. Save the good ammo.
We have 122. It's a lever action. Lever actions are a lot of fun.
Also, iconic. Michael Paul, Mossburg 500 mainstay, still available for under $400.
It's nice to know they haven't gone up to that obscenely. Still, like I say, I remember
you could find them for $150 sometimes, $200.
And I wonder what they are now.
I'll have to look into that.
Well, we're going to take a quick break, folks, and we will be right back.
Oh, I guess I've got to push a button, don't I?
I'm going to be
I'm going to
I'm
I'm
I'm
I'm
I'm
I'm
I'm
I'm
I'm
So, I'm going to be able to be.
I'm going to be.
Thank you.
I mean,
You're listening to the David Knight Show.
Hello, it's me, Volodymer Zelensky.
I'm so tired of wearing these same t-shirts everywhere for years.
You'd think with all the billions, I've skimmed off America.
I could dress better.
And I could, if only David Knight,
would send me one of his beautiful gray MacGuffin hoodies
or a new black t-shirt with the MacGuffin logo in blue.
But he told me to get lost.
Maybe one of you American suckers can buy me some at the David Knight Show.com.
should be able to buy me several hundred.
Those amazing sand-colored, microphone hoodies are so beautiful.
I'd wear something other than green military cosplay
to my various gala and social events.
If you want to save on shipping,
just put it in the next package of bombs and missiles
coming from the USA.
Whether you're feeling,
like the blues or blue grass.
APS Radio has you covered.
Check out a wide variety of channels on our app at APSRadio.com.
See them tumbling down, pledging their love to the ground.
That's right, the tumbleweeds.
You can get your fire-starting tumbleweeds at home.
Stud Products.shop, they've got a sale going on right now. You can pick them up at a discounted
rate. You can also use promo code night for 10% off. Their natural wood, as you can see on
screen. I think with a discount, it's only like four bucks to get 16 pieces. It's an incredible value.
I use tumbleweeds all the time when I, as I said yesterday when I'm starting our charcoal grill.
They make it really easy. I've never had it fail to start the grill. Even when there's wind out,
it's a great job. So I fully recommend
tumbleweeds. And of course, it's not just
barbecue. It's, we've got
winter coming up, you know, if you want to use that
as a, it helps start your
fire in your fireplace.
So they're useful for all.
A great idea. You know,
I, see, you can find
a use for anything. And
home products is found a use for
tumbleweeds. You can start fires with them.
They're handy, handy, handy,
well, I want to, I mentioned
earlier, the Epstein thing. And I think
this is very important, folks, because
really, think about why
this is very important. It's not just the moral
abomination that's here, but what does it tell you when people
who are incredibly ambitious, like Mike Johnson
and Donald Trump, when they will basically fall on their own
swords to keep this information private? What does this tell
you about this? Well, we have some people who are trying to tell us
about it. Epstein Island has received more than
2,000 previously unreported flights. A new
data investigation has uncovered more than
2,000 previously on reported flights to Epstein's private island. The majority of the flights
originated from financial power centers like New York, London, and Geneva, suggesting a
network of professional connections. If you find out who these people are, you're going to find
out who controls our politicians and government besides Israel, in addition to Israel. Some of
them will be an overlap as well. The investigation by Zolingo Data Refinery is shedding new
light on the scale of travel associated with Epstein's Island. The analysis found 2,348 additional
connections to Epstein Island across 5,253 flight records between 1995 and 2007, adding up to at
least 4,966 reported and unreported flights to the island. See, you can go back and do
data mining like this now and glean a lot of information. It's a shame that they won't release all
financial records that are there because that would tell us even more information about who was
being blackmailed. But they keep that under wraps. Researchers also identified 1,089 previously
unknown flight routes that were linking major financial hubs of private destinations.
The findings were compiled from publicly available Justice Department records. The Department
Justice didn't think you could do anything with this stuff, so they made it public.
And this guy analyzed it.
Validated against three independent sources to ensure accuracy, said the team.
The CEO of Zolingo Data Refinery said, being a father, the Epstein scandal really disturbed me.
The American government are putting a cap on what information they will reveal.
And I thought, what the heck?
The world has a right to know what is going on.
And why are these people being hidden?
Why are they hiding behind anonymity?
Well, why is Trump hiding them is really the question?
I thought, let's do it, and let's see what's going on.
The primary sources and materials included released documents from the Department of Justice,
public flight logs, and analysis of data sets.
They then validated the information against three independent sources of information to check its accuracy.
It said Zolingo Data Refinery has completed a proprietary data refinement
and investigative analysis of the Epstein flight logs.
Our priority refinery investigation leveraged advanced data correlation and entity resolution techniques
to uncover previously unreported patterns and connections.
And I'm not sure exactly what that is.
I mean, I know what data correlation is.
I don't know what entity resolution is.
You know, I somehow doubt Palantir would be able to see any of these links when it's billionaires.
That's right.
That's right.
That's right.
Yeah, Palantir, on the other hand, is completely blind.
They can't see any of this, though.
Good point, Lance.
So he found that there was 2348 more individuals who had visited Epstein Island.
And he said, that's huge because we were, we did know only about 150 to 200.
Now they have identified another 2,500 that they now know about.
The data also revealed that there were structured travel patterns out of these 50,
253 flights. It showed that 36% of the flights on the island came from New York City, 18% came from
Palm Beach, Florida, 14% from the U.S. Virgin Islands. Analysis of the flights reveals concentrated
origin patterns and significant clustering around specific geographic hubs. The data shows a network
primarily originating from major financial centers and private aviation hubs rather than
distributed locations.
They showed that 47% of the flights came from financial power centers like New York City, London, and Geneva.
28% came from residential hubs, including Palm Beach, U.S. Virgin Islands, and New Mexico,
and that 5% came from Washington, D.C., the District of Criminals.
So again, if you find these people, then you find not only the criminal pedophiles who are being blackmailed,
But you also start to get an insight into the real power that controls Trump, the GOP, and the Democrats.
These power-hungry narcissists and predators will commit political suicide in order to hide the identities of these predators.
That tells you everything you need to know about these people.
How many different angles, how many different facets do we, well, I guess who could say angles.
You know, you could just like you'd hold a diamond up, look at all the different facets you rotate around.
what about Trump when you look at him from every angle from every angle the man is a criminal
and a murderer it's amazing what's going on with this guy so then the galane maxwell appeal to the
supreme court has now been shut down uh her only hope now is obi don so i guess she's putting
together that that message with the uh hologram help me obiton you're my only hope
court has shut her down. And of course, you know, Trump said, I wish her well. So maybe
Obidon will help her. Maxwell, sentenced to 20 years in federal prison, had sought to overturn
her conviction on the grounds that she was unlawfully prosecuted. She filed her appeal three
days after meeting with a top Trump DOJ official. So evidently, they stressed to her. Now it is
down to Trump to issue a pardon. It's the only way that she's going to get out of jail.
is still the question of who is she alleged to have trafficked them to if there were no
buyers.
That's right.
I like the way they describe it here.
Maxwell's legal team is crestfallen.
Yeah, yeah.
Poor Maxwell's legal team.
How sad for them.
Yeah, probably our legal team coming from the White House, I guess.
When Trump started acting all weird about it, calling a list the Democrat hoax, a fracture
formed with him MAGA as supporters were counting on Trump to release the list.
not act as if he's on it.
This is from Zero Edge.
I thought that was pretty good when Trump started acting all weird about it.
That's one way to put it.
I remember there was like a 15-year period where any normal person would say Trump was acting all weird when he was the best friend of Jeffrey Epstein.
We're, of course, deeply disappointed about the Supreme Court, but this fight is not over.
They're still Obiton.
Maxwell claimed in her appeal that she was wrong.
only prosecuted because she's covered by a 2007 sweetheart non-prosecution deal negotiated by the
U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of Florida. And who was that? That was Alex Azar,
the guy that Trump then made Secretary of Labor. Trump's fingerprints are all over this. I mean,
this is much worse than the six degrees of separation with Kevin Bacon. Just look at the one or two
degrees of separation with Jeffrey Epstein that's Trump and his entire orbit you know he's got this guy
who was just a prosecutor there in Miami and he handpicks this guy to be the secretary of labor
why right it's because of the Epstein connection and when they were interviewing him as part of his
confirmation and they asked him about why he gave them that sweetheart deal he said I was told he was
he was working with intelligence and to lay off and so that's um he was not going to lie under
oath about that because he knows better than to commit perjury in the attorney's office.
Also, I like here how she says, claimed that she was wrongly prosecuted, not because she's not
guilty, just because she's covered under a deal. No, we already bargained for this. But we had a deal.
Come on. You said the trafficking was all right for Jeffrey. Yeah, supposed to be me too. According to the
agreement, it says the U.S. quote, agrees that it will not institute any criminal charges against any
potential co-conspirators of Epstein, including but not limited to four other suspects.
Maxwell was not listed as one of those suspects.
However, her lawyers claimed that she didn't need to be.
Well, the question is, who are those other four people, right?
Are we allowed to know who they are?
Maybe not.
I don't know.
Shh, don't tell anybody.
The Department of Justice, meanwhile, has argued that the former U.S. attorney who negotiated
that deal, Alex Acosta, who then became the
was put in the Trump cabinet, didn't have the authority to bind federal districts,
including the Southern District of New York, where Maxwell was tried and convicted.
So what they said was, well, you had to deal with them in the Southern District in Miami,
but in the northern district where New York is, you didn't have the authority to make that kind
of a deal.
So again, Acosta and Trump, fishy from the Trump's first administration.
It just continues.
All of these things continue.
Folks, we're going to take a really quick break.
You want to get some of these comments out before we do that?
Yeah, Stealth Patriot.
Thank you very much.
Yes, thank you.
We really appreciate it.
Again, it's the support of the viewers and listeners that keeps us going.
Yes.
Says, forgive me for not voting in the congressional primary today.
It seems the only policy I can get out of their TV ads is whether they are pro or anti-Trump.
Yeah, yeah, that's right.
Niebuhrou, 2029, AI will soon be in charge of all background checks.
Good luck, pass.
passing it if the check of your name is that of Western origin. That's right. No more Steve
Smith's. Debeves, responding to Guard Goldsmith. I don't trust the medical profession. It's a
business. They need customers like private prisons. Each will get what they need. Epstein Island
says, mark my words. Trump's name is plastered all over the flight logs. I suppose Epstein Island
would know. Trump's name is plastered all over Epstein, period. I mean, I think, I think,
One of the classic things, too, is the fact that they, when they reported that birthday greeting thing, you know, and Trump says, that's a lie, you know, is what Wall Street Journal reported what somebody described to them.
And they reported it accurately because it was later, later released.
But in between those two periods of time, Trump sues them for like $10 billion.
And they're going to continue with that lawsuit because it isn't, just like with Comey, it's about doing a perp walk.
it's about creating noise and disturbance it's not about getting anything done that's important
just like you're talking before the congressional rates races are all pro-Trump or anti-Trump it's all
just partisan froth they don't care at all about us they don't care about the rule of law they
don't care about creating a civilization or keeping the civilization from falling apart as a matter
fact they're both both sides pro and anti-trump are working to tear the society
down. That's the purpose of this. Michael Paul won. Gold hit 4,000 today. Wow. Wow. That's amazing.
I have a report that didn't age too well. It was from Friday and that was Goldman Sachs.
I said, we think gold might hit 4,000 in the second quarter of next year. It's like, I looked at
that and it's like, well, that hasn't aged too well over the last couple of days. And now it hit
4,000. We had silver over 50. That's amazing what's happening to the stuff. And again, it's not
like gold and silver, getting more valuable. It's that the U.S. dollar is getting far less
valuable. It's also funny that Goldman Sachs doesn't know anything about gold, apparently.
Yeah. It's on a Lord 1337. Well, at least the Supreme Court rejected her appeal. That woman should
receive capital punishment for what she allowed to happen to those kids. Full agreement. Full
agreement. I couldn't agree more. Well, again, just remind you that if you go to David Knight.
gold, I'll take it to Tony Arden, and you can start to gradually accumulate gold and silver
if you don't have a lot that you can put into it, put what you can into it. Don't stash your money
in the bank. Put it in something that is going to hold its value better. The bank's not going to
pay you any interest on anything. And the dollar is an evaporating asset. You can think of it as
I've got a bunch of water here that I'm saving for a rainy day, or maybe not a day that
It's not raining, and you put it in a container that's leaking.
That's really what's happening to your money in the bank.
It's like a leaky container trying to save water for when you're going to need it.
Well, we're going to take a quick break, folks, and we will be right back.
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Well, Sam Altman at OpenAI is warning that the AI industry is due for a spectacular implosion.
And remember, almost all the growth in the stock market has come from investments into a couple of companies.
And also remember that AI, whatever it may do in the future, whatever uses that they may have for it,
has not delivered on the promises and the hype that they put out there.
And once, you know, you look at the stock market.
And the stock market is not really connected to reality.
When people start talking about something, they over-hype it.
And you get a lot of people who are over-optimistic about something,
and they all pile into it en masse.
And that builds the bubble.
And then in the same way, when one of the lemmings realizes that this isn't really what
it was hyped up to be. It may still be something real. It may still have some uses, but when
they realize it's not hyped up, then it is a mass scramble for the exits. And so Sam Altman
is saying, well, there's going to be booms. There's going to be busts. It's going to go over
many different decades. It says people will overinvest and they'll lose money. They will
underinvest and they'll lose a lot of revenue. And this article here says, this is the kind of
Blase-Bromitic talk that you'd expect to hear from a coach of a sports team that's on a
historic losing street. Oh, yes, there'll be ups and downs, and then your eyes glaze over and you
forgive them because, hey, it's just a game. But this is something that's different. He said,
Altman, however, commands a half-trillion dollar startup that is the tip of the spear for an out-of-control
AI gold rush. Pretty much the entire world economy is tangled up in hundreds of billions of
dollars of investment that's been poured into the industry.
This worrying statistic provided to the Wall Street Journal
in the U.S. capital expenditures for AI contributed to more growth in the economy
in the past two quarters than all of consumer spending,
according to Neil Duda, head of economic research at Renaissance macro research,
citing data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis.
So it's hardly an exaggeration.
to suggest that if the AI bubble bursts,
it could take the whole economy down with it.
So Altman told reporters, he said,
so are we in a phase where investors as a whole are over-excited about AI?
In my opinion, he said, yes.
So as that happens, we've got,
in terms of a lot of issues of underperforming,
over-promising and underperforming technology.
Amazon has had its sites set from the very beginning
in terms of using drones for delivery.
Go point to point and have a drone drop it on your front porch there.
Well, they ran into a little bit of a wrinkle here.
And do you have the clip of that, Lance?
This is Amazon drones went kamikaze into some construction equipment.
And I think this is in Arizona, I believe.
Yeah, it was, yeah, Phoenix, Arizona.
And they have some video of these drones that collided with these construction cranes.
and blew up and crashed in debris.
People got pictures of the debris.
It happened about 10 a.m. local time.
The drones were flying northeast back to back before the collision.
The drones smashed into the crane that was lowering an air conditioning unit on the roof of a building.
And each of these drones weighs about 80 pounds.
So these things are pretty significant.
And they're going to roll out the red carpet for Amazon while they shut everybody else down.
There you go. Now, that's in China. That's a Chinese thing. Tell us a little bit about that, Lance.
That was, they put fireworks or something on the, this is part of the Chinese New Year celebration, I believe.
And these drones started colliding and crashing to the ground. Everybody's scrambling. I mean, it's literally raining fire from above.
You want fireworks? Look at that. That's amazing. It's a whole row of drones on fire as they're dropping.
Yeah. Yeah, that was in China.
so yeah some technology needs a little bit of work and so just like with the injections you know you want to do a little bit of testing before you roll this stuff out in 2021 a drone crash and amazon testing range in Oregon sparked an acres wide blaze last December two mk30 drones plummeted hundreds of feet to their doom after their propellers suddenly stopped spinning mid flight so again amazon is hoping that it's
going to have 500 million packages delivered per year by 2030. Half a billion. So just imagine what
the sky's going to look like with drones out there. That might be enough to start getting people
to decide they don't want to use Amazon. We'll see what happens with that. You know, there was also
an article about the Denmark drones and questioning whether or not that whole thing was a false
flag, especially when you look at what it happened about a year and a half ago, with all the
drones up in the Northeast Corridor, are these people really think that they're going to trick us
into World War III with some kind of a drone display over airports?
As this is happening, Amazon is facing FAA and NTSB probe because of this.
And again, it's just a few months after they paused.
their drone deliveries in Tolson and College Station, Texas.
That's where Texas A&M is in Collison and College Station.
Temporally, following two crashes in the Pendleton, Oregon test site.
And so those are already being investigated by the FAA
and the National Transportation Safety Board.
So yesterday we talked about the AI boyfriends that were murdered by Sam Altman
for these women.
very upset about that. They wanted to cut down on some of this creepy engagement that the AI is
doing. And there are a lot of women who are upset about that. Now, this is an article about the
other side of this. And this is, boys are looking for AI girlfriends because they are
obedient, yielding, and happy to follow, except that they're not real. And so, again, there's
a difference between men and women, but they can both be crazy. Can't they,
I was about this stuff.
Eleanor 24 is a Polish historian, a lecturer at a University of Warsaw.
Isabelle 25 is a detective serving with the New York Police Department.
Brooke 39 is an American housewife who enjoys an opulent Miami lifestyle financed by her
frequently absent husband.
And all of them are AI girlfriends that will send you nude photographs and videos.
And so this is their, so what is that service that?
does the you know where they they pay women to send people escort service no only fans only fans yeah
this is like AI only fans and the people are putting it out saying well hey you know this is all
our alternative we don't harm any women you know these women are not real and so they're not being
human traffic they're not being beaten up by a pimp or whatever and so this is a good thing
except that that's only one half of the equation.
For the men, it's not a good thing.
And so it means that there's not real women on the other side of this,
but it does mean that for men is a very concerning thing.
Again, they also do AI-generated child sexual abuse imagery.
And I remember I had a guest on one time who was saying,
I don't know why people getting upset about these child sex dolls.
And it's like, well, I think I do.
You know, if you're going to feed that appetite, what is going to happen is eventually people are going to act on that appetite, right?
We all know that we have different natures, and what you wind up being is whatever nature that you're feeding.
And so like a drug, you're going to constantly be looking for that next tie.
And eventually, I think it's not an exaggeration to say that on this slippery slope, that it pushes people in that direction.
But the bottom line is it's not real.
The people are being harmed by it are the women who have the AI boyfriends and the men who have the AI girlfriends.
They don't have real friends.
There's nothing real at all about that.
Tesla is being sued by some families who say that faulty doors led to two deaths.
We have a very good friend who has a Tesla.
I got to drive it once.
It's a great driving car, actually.
It's a very different driving car than any other car that I've driven because it's the acceleration.
quick and it's also got regenerative braking. So it's like driving a slot car. You step on the gas
and it really goes and take your foot off and it really stops really short and it's got a low center
of gravity so it's good handling. Problem is the door thing. He got stuck in his car for a couple
of hours and he had to, he said fortunately I had my phone with me and I contacted customer support
and they remotely had to unlock his door. Well good luck with that if you have an automobile
accident and the batteries are starting to catch fire, which is what happened to two college
students in California. Their families are now suing Tesla. They were in a cyber truck,
but my friend doesn't have a cyber truck. He's got a, I think a Model 3, right? I believe so.
Anyway, the doors that open or shut with a push of a button. Again, we have to overcomplicate
everything. Even the vents on the air in your car, that has to be controlled.
with the touchpad, not going to give you a physical thing that you can actually just reach up
and turn it towards you.
That would be too complicated.
The suits have been filed in California court by the families of two people, 19 and 20.
The lawsuits are another setback for a cyber truck, which has sold poorly and been recalled
eight times since last year.
But this is not a Tesla issue that is limited to the cyber truck.
This is across the board.
Tesla pioneered car doors that open or shut with a push of a little.
a button. Several other automakers have imitated that design, usually on the electronic models.
Electric doors give cars a high-tech aura and may modestly reduce wind resistance because
their exterior handles typically do not protrude from the door. The door latches rely on a 12-volt
battery separate from the high-voltage battery that drives the vehicle's electric motor. If the
power is cut off in a crash, the electronic door mechanism may not work. So the lawsuit claims that
the injuries from the crash were very minor, but that they died of burns and smoke inhalation
after they were caught inside the cyber truck could not open the doors and the batteries that
even though it is a minor crash, the batteries can be damaged and catch on fire. They were unable
to escape because manual door releases were too difficult to find, says the lawsuit.
Well, on another note here, home Wi-Fi will soon be able to monitor our heart rates
without any of those smart watches or wearable devices.
So you don't have to get a ring that swells up.
You can't get it off your finger, and you're hoping that the battery and that thing that is
swelling up is not going to burst into flames.
So you soon won't need that.
But I thought this is a very interesting story because if the Wi-Fi is interacting
you with your body at that level, what is it really doing to you physiologically?
New research shows the signal from household Wi-Fi device can be used to monitor heart rate
with state-of-the-art accuracy without the need for a wearable. And of course, they've been
able to use Wi-Fi to surveil people inside their homes as well through the walls. The government's
got apps for that. So they said these people have come up with this thing, call it PulseFi. What was
that, Lance?
A new thing that they can now use the optical sensors in high-quality gaming mice as microphones
to pick up on vibrations in your table and use that as a receiver.
That's crazy.
Yeah, back in the early 80s when I was getting into first working in engineering,
people were working on government contracts.
They had a tempesting program because they said that, you know, foreign countries were able to
surveil people who are working on government projects by monitoring the keystrokes, right?
The keystrokes would, just like you're talking about with that mouse,
keystrokes would produce a certain electronic components with really sensitive equipment.
They could determine which keys were being pressed.
And so there was a special kind of keyboards and computers that had been tempested,
which meant that they had been shielded from that kind of EMF leakage.
But it's just amazing.
isn't it? How the links that people go to to use all these electronic devices to
surveil us, whether it's keyboards or mice or Wi-Fi. Well, these Wi-Fi devices push out RF
into the physical space and have a receiving device, which is typically a computer or a phone,
but as the waves pass through objects, some of the wave is absorbed into those objects,
like our bodies, causing mathematically detectable changes in the wave. Public Fi,
Or, sorry, PulseFi uses a Wi-Fi transmitter and receiver, PulseFi.
That might be a joke where the guy goes up to the counter and I have a sign says free Wi-Fi.
And he goes, yeah, well, there'll be anything else.
Yeah, I'll have some of that free Wifi that's up there.
Anyway, so I'll have some of that free pulse fee.
And so they said the team trained the algorithm to distinguish even the faintest variations in signal caused by human heartbeat by filtering out all the other changes.
changes to the signal in the environment or caused by activity such as movement.
They said the signal is very sensitive to the environment, so we have to select the right
filters to remove all the unnecessary noise.
The researchers ran experiments with 118 participants and found that after only five seconds
of signal processing, they could measure heart rate with clinical level accuracy.
This is the thing that really amazes me.
I've been around computers all my life.
I still can't get over the fact that AI can give it a five-second clip of somebody's voice
and it can clone it very convincingly.
And so here's, you know, just about a couple of seconds of trying to train it on your heartbeat
and now the Wi-Fi app can monitor your heartbeat wirelessly.
So they said they have dubbed this clinical level accuracy in the PulseFi.
It works regardless of the position of the equipment in the room.
room or of the person whose heart rate was being measured.
No matter if they were sitting, standing, lying down, or walking, the system still
performed.
And it only needed five seconds to get within a half a beat per minute error.
Longer periods of monitoring time increased the accuracy.
And so again, and these are some very cheap off-the-shelf components that they did this
with, they can monitor your movement.
If the police are interested in that, they can do that with the Wi-Fi.
even getting down to your heart level.
But I think it also speaks to how we have to be aware of the RF signals that are around us
and in us permeating us and the effect that has on our body.
Because this is just from their perspective, what does your body think about all of that Wi-Fi
that's happening there?
So nearly one-third of EV charging attempts fail.
Here's another thing that I thought was interesting.
You might think that if you're...
you've got an EV that you can just pull up and plug the thing in and you charge.
Well, it doesn't work that way.
It's not like your AC wall outlet.
It's a very complicated handshaking signal that protocol that goes back and forth to do the charging.
And that's the issue because the cars have to be compatible with the chargers.
They've got software issues and protocol issues and those things have to.
be compatible and hold on my car needs a software update that's right and as they're doing updates
you can wind up with compatibility issues between the charger device and your car so when you
find one of these things that's available you don't know if it's actually going to be able to work
and this is over and above the kind of issues where when it's wintertime like eric peters was talking
about he had that eve from mercedes and he even when he found a charging station he
couldn't get it to charge because it was too cold.
And so it's waiting for the battery to heat up.
And that's part of this software protocol that's there and the information that's being
passed back and forth between the car and the charger.
You know, first we've got to get it up to a certain temperature and it's monitoring how
the state of the battery is it's charging it and all the rest of stuff.
So they said, when you see an available charging station, you will be rolling the dice
that it'll actually work.
For new charging equipment, a success rate.
of 85% after the first year after installation falls to 70% after three years.
So that's pretty amazing.
It only got about a third of the time that it's actually going to work, even if you've got
a spot that's available there.
And even in the first year, only 85%.
So it's a 15% chance that it won't be compatible with your car.
What if you jail break your car?
The infrastructure is falling into disrepair because of firms.
firmware and software not being applied, and the same problems are in the cars themselves.
In many cases, the hardware needs to be replaced because it is incompatible with the latest firmware or software.
So, in spite, you'll look online and you'll see that the infrastructure is showing that it has 98 to 99% uptime rates.
In spite of that, only 71% of charging attempts actually succeed, according to the 2025 EVV charging reliability report.
They analyze more than 100,000 sessions across 2,400 chargers.
Uptime tells us if a charger is available, but it doesn't tell us if a driver can actually
plug in, get a charge on the first attempt.
So it's like they have their own metrics and self-serving semantics involved in this.
The complexity of EV charging stems from multiple software systems that must work in harmony.
Charging stations and electric vehicles are literally computers, and it's all about these handshakes.
and how one software understands another.
If you've ever been in a software space,
you'll probably know that sometimes software
doesn't really understand each other.
Oh, believe me.
Sometimes it may create a bit of a wrinkle in that system.
Maybe the vehicle itself,
the battery management system,
doesn't really understand
what the charging system is asking of it.
So these technical barriers create real-world problems
for EV operators.
In one example,
a fleet driver might arrive
at a station showing a green available indicator only to find that after plugging in, the station
fails to initiate authentication or begins the process but returns to the available screen
without completing a charge. Most charging infrastructure involves multiple companies
that are developing separate software components for vehicles, hardware, charge management systems,
payment processing, and connectors. This fragmentation creates interoperability challenges
that directly impact consumers.
So we've made things needlessly complex,
and that results in no reliability.
So let's cover these comments here.
We'll take a break.
Real Jason Barker says I'm ready for a fire sale on GPUs
regarding the coming AI crash.
Trump Berger, they forgot to uninstall the 9-11 software
from those drones, rookie mistake.
That's right.
Got to make sure that you override that code.
spirit of the age i got a window smasher in every car i use and a seatbelt cutter too and those are
handy to have yeah that's really popular in germany and we we did some videos at one point in time for
a company that's doing promotional stuff and they have a lot of different versions of seatbelt covers
and uh cutters and window smashes because again you know if you go into the water even with an older
car all the windows are electrical and so you can get stuck in those things as well yeah you don't
want to be stuck in there as it sinks or as it burns up i handy we don't like those door handles
in ems too hard to get unresponsive people out yeah yeah you got to get the jaws of life i want
how the jaws of life work with the teslas i've seen how shoddy the cyber truck is how
poorly built it seems to be so it probably cuts through that thing like butter that'd be my assumption
yeah i don't know maybe maybe handy has the windrow if you if you had to cut open a cyber truck handy
Let us know.
I'm curious.
Or you know of anyone else.
The metal is thicker on that.
So it might pose a bit of a problem to the traditional jaws of life that rip open that door.
Of course, I don't know how long it takes to get that equipment to sight.
Yeah. Shadowboxer.
They can read biometrics from a distance now.
They can also manipulate it.
Bull, dog.
They're going to build a massive AI data warehouse.
Each person is going to have a digital identity called a primary key.
Yeah.
High boost.
Travis, that is not even a joke.
they absolutely need firmware and software updates and that boats for ice cars also internal combustion engines
yeah yeah not the immigration control yeah and not the ice that the pope was blessing the other
last week we've got all kinds of ice more ice than you would believe well you know the eskimos have
something like 30 words or something for snow so we've got a lot of different meanings for ice anymore
we're going to take a quick break and we'll be right back
We're going to be able to be.
We're going to be able to be.
We're going to be able to be.
Making sense.
again you're listening to the david night show well i saw this headline and it's quickbait but it
certainly worked for me a scientist finds evidence of alien DNA in humans what is this about this
is daily mail um but um uh you know again i look at this and um we when we look at genesis
and the Nephilim and the giants and the mighty men of mythology and things like that.
And what I believe, I always thought it was genetic corruption, not that you've necessarily got
these angels that are breeding with humans, but I figured it was a genetic thing.
So let me take a look at that.
But the lead is kind of buried in this.
They have this sensationalism that they play around with, and then they pull it back at all this stuff.
So there's nothing really here.
And they look at DNA, which really points to God, and they will always try to redirect it to some aliens
and pretend that there's aliens that have not contacted us, even though they had created us
and that type of thing. That's what Crick and Watson did, who discovered the DNA. They would not
attribute it to the Word. In the beginning, there was the Word. The Word was with God, and the Word
was God. All things were created through Him and by Him, but they will not take that. Instead,
they will imagine that there was some panspermia of aliens who went throughout the universe
creating this stuff well the DNA points to God the creator of everything all plants and
all animals have DNA and them scientists claim to have found evidence of alien genetic
manipulation not true it's one scientist who's kind of a quack with large sections of
genes seemingly inserted into people, potentially affecting millions of humans.
In the examination of 581 complete families from a thousand genomes project, this single
scientist, Dr. Max Ripple, and he's got his chief executive of a foundation that he created
called the DNA resonance research.
And so he's kind of out there on the radical friends of this stuff.
You may have a vested interest in finding something like this, huh?
He says he found large sequences of DNA in 11 families that appeared to match neither parent.
These anomalies included clusters of 348 non-parental genetic variations, some of which were from children born before 1990, ruling out human gene editing technologies such as CRISPR, which only emerged in 2013.
He cautioned that his findings are preliminary and require more rigorous analysis.
See, now they're starting to walk it back already with this.
In addition to analyzing publicly available family DNA sets,
RIMPEL reviewed 23 and Me results from individuals who self-identify as alien abductees.
RIMPEL noted the current commercial genotyping services are insufficiently precise to confirm such radical claims.
Oh, so he's got no basis at all for this.
You know what's that?
It's insufficiently precise to confirm any of these radical claims.
extraordinary claims demand extraordinary evidence.
I mean, science, academia in general, has a huge replicability crisis.
Yeah.
The majority of studies cannot be replicated.
They've gone in and tried, just, we don't get the same answers.
I don't know what to tell you.
That's true about virology.
It's also true about climate change, all of that.
He suggested future studies might reveal astonishing possibilities,
including humans developing unusual abilities such as telepathy,
as a result of genetic modification.
This is all just pure speculation.
You know in the future we might find some stuff.
They do a whole article about it.
It picks up a drudge report link.
And it worked because it was quick-bate enough for me to click on it.
How do you get from, oh, I can't find these bits of DNA in appearance to this will create telepathy and superpowers?
Exactly right.
Ripple emphasized the need for high-quality non-culture genetic data.
to avoid artifacts caused by cell culturing.
He said most public DNA databases contain old data from cultured cells.
Culturing can produce genomic changes, so we cannot treat these results as proof.
So, you know, again, that's a sensational headline.
It's completely rebuffed by this.
Ripple's work remains controversial.
He insists it's driven by genuine scientific curiosity.
So it's not driven by science.
It's driven by curiosity.
And speculation and projection.
So again, but seriously, this is something that is happening here in the U.S.
This is Colorado.
The U.S. Supreme Court is going to listen to arguments today on the case that I mentioned before.
This is in Colorado where you not only have the state government there is focused on hectoring that baker over making cakes for homosexual marriages or a transversial.
cake for another individual. He's taken them to the Supreme Court and won over and over again.
They still keep coming back after him. It's like the, um, the UK cops who keep coming after that
woman who is praying silently and they keep arresting her. This is nothing other than
anti-Christian harassment. This is doing time by Colorado. So the officials in Colorado have
multiple times demanded the authority to censor Christians and the state have claimed that the
counselor's speech is behavior, and they say they can regulate it. And again, I talked about this last
week, I think it was, or maybe two weeks ago. This doesn't turn on whether or not the counseling is
speech or behavior, because whether you look at it as a speech or whether you look at it as
behavior, it is still an issue of the free exercise of religion, which can be either speech or
behavior or both. Their agenda is clear and the details
their fight, they insist that no counselor can encourage a patient to consider not being LGBT.
But promotion of LGBT choices are fully encouraged.
So again, you can see how political it is.
And these are the same people coming after the masterpiece, cake shop baker, Jack Phillips, who's
beaten them again and again.
Alliance defending freedom is representing her.
They said, she wants to help young people to stress about their gender, achieve their
chosen goal, and grow comfortable with their bodies, and avoid harmful drugs.
and procedures, but Colorado law forbids her from doing so.
The U.S. government and 21 states, in addition to counseling groups, detransitioners,
mental health researchers, and free speech advocates, and others are supporting her arguments
against the state of Colorado at the Supreme Court.
Those will be heard today.
The government has no business censoring private conversations between clients and counselors,
to the lawyer.
There is a growing consensus around the world that adults, that adolescents, that adolescents,
experiencing so-called gender dysphoria need love and an opportunity to talk through their
struggles and their feelings. Colorado's law harms these young people by depriving them of caring
and compassionate conversations with a counselor. He argues that the Colorado law
violates her freedom of speech, but it also violates the free exercise of religion, because
they point out many of the clients come to her because they share her Christian worldview and her
faith-based values.
Colorado law, however, censors her from speaking words that her clients want to hear
because the government doesn't want to hear those views that she expresses.
Directors have called such counseling, quote, sorry, not directors, but detractors,
have called it conversion therapy, because, again, this is a broad term that is aimed at Christians.
But the misnomer isn't accurate since the counseling actually involves helping patients
come to grips with their own reality.
So you're not converting them, except that conversion can clear up their heads.
Also, I'm maybe going to be off base here, but my entire life, I've grown up hearing
the horrors of conversion therapy.
Oh, they used to do electroshock therapy.
I would be shocked if this wasn't massively overblown.
I would be shocked, personally.
I would bet that there was a couple of cases here or there.
yeah and it has been run with and it has been made to be the boogeyman over and over again yeah
and i just flat out i you're right at this point i barely believe it even happened the more they
talk about it the one i'm like eh yeah it was in the dark ages of uh psychiatry i guess you
personally i believe there was more truth to the satanic panic than there what there is to this
that there was more to be concerned there well you know you did have a period of time and the
kennedy's actually did this to one of their children they did frontal lobotomy so there were some
important things that were being done by psychiatrists in the past still are when you look at the
SSRI drugs and things like that but that hasn't been done for a very very long time so
Colorado has already lost in the third and 11th circuit courts I'm sorry not Colorado but
laws like this have been overturned in the third 11th circuit courts the state censorship
plan is based on viewpoint restrictions and they expect that the Supreme Court will therefore
follow through on on this for them now we have actually well our guess is going to be joining us in
about eight minutes but before we get to that I want to talk a little bit about what is
happening in our society in terms of how we get to this point where we have people who are
so afraid to speak up about what is happening in their lives and
hang on I'm trying to manage this thing here I'll get it in just one second here we go
any technology grand yeah it is I got locked in there I got a call for tech support and
gonna help me find this thing ISIS and Mozambique is documenting beheadings and shootings of
Christians and burning churches over 30 people beheaded and they are bragging about that
boasting about it the violence has led to renewed security alliance between Mozambique and Rwanda
Rwandan troops supporting Mozambique and counter-insurgency operations.
6,200 people slaughtered over 1 million displaced.
The Islamic State-Mosambique province released a 20-image photo set this week,
documenting its operatives executing civilians by beheading and by close-range gunfire
and burning down homes and churches.
They claimed responsibility for several attacks throughout the last week of September.
So the article goes through and talks about how many
people they killed and how many homes they burned in one village after the other and yet at the same
time you have one guy here's name is nelson miconda he says he wants to train 200,000 pastors to meet
africa's evangelical boom isn't that interesting how undeterred these Christians are well all this stuff
is happening and we're not even talking about Nigeria which is one of the worst places about that
but in Nigeria and these other places there's these massive terrorist campaigns of
Christian persecution coming in and mass murder of villages and burning their homes and everything
else. And yet, in spite of that, you have Christianity is booming in Africa so much so that he says,
we've got a problem here. We've got to have, you know, we need, these people are setting up churches
so much we need 200,000 pastors, he said. He said, the gospel is preached by evangelicals, provides
hope to the poor, suffering, struggling, and hopeful, growing population of Africa.
As people are transitioning from the African traditional religion and that context, and
beginning to experience Christian faith and modern life, they're trapped still in sickness,
trapped in poverty, trapped in illiteracy, and trapped in the issues of life.
The gospel is preached by evangelicals provides great hope for these people.
He's looking at it, though really is more of a kind of a social gospel as a foundation,
of civilization as opposed to the salvation method message that has there.
But it really is the foundation of civilizations.
And it isn't, these people are not putting their lives on the line because it's going to
improve the quality of their life.
I mean, that doesn't make any sense.
There's something else that's there.
It's that faith and that's something else that is getting them to put their life on
the line.
Otherwise, what is happening with this persecution and slaughter is even though they may be
poor, that would be jumping out of the frying pan into the fire. So it's something else that is
happening there. As birth rates fall in the developed world, Africa, buoyed by its status of having
the world's youngest population, with a median age of only 19, is expected to double in population
and reach two and a half billion. Maconda believes the blessings of youth on the continent will keep
fueling the number of evangelicals on the continent. And this will happen even though there are
are facing this horrific persecution.
So there was an interesting op-ed piece from J.D. Hall that I thought was an interesting
pair with that story about what these people are facing. He says, a short word on cowards
and the God who dams them. He says, have you ever heard a sermon on cowardice? Well, you're about
to. He said, Revelation 21. But the cowardly, the unbelievers, the unbelievers, the unbelievers.
leaving, the vile, the murderers, the sexually immoral, those who practice magic arts,
idolaters, all liars, will be consigned to the fiery lake of burning sulfur, the second death.
He says, if we pile up the sins of the modern church like logs on a fire,
cowardice would be the unseen tender at the bottom. It would be like the tumbleweeds.
Revelation 21 does not treat cowardice as a minor fault. It lists the cowardly,
along with sorcerers, idolaters, liars, and murderers, and so forth.
Again, because what is cowardice?
It is fear, right?
And this fits very well with our interview coming up about FDR.
Because FDR, it's famous for his quote, we have nothing to fear but fear itself.
And yet, like most political leaders, he used that fear to cow people and to following him.
In most churches today, you'll never hear a single sermon on cowardice.
Pastors will scold congregations about pride.
They'll offer vague warnings about greed or they'll deliver soothing talks about gratitude.
they'll never tell their people that cowardice leads to hell.
Cowardous is not nervousness before a hard task.
It's not anxiety in a moment of weakness.
Cowardous is fear enthroned as God.
When Peter swore that he didn't know Christ before a servant girl, that was cowardice.
When the 10 spies returned from Canaan and infected the whole camp with fear, that was cowardice.
God does not overlook such actions.
he calls it rebellion
cowardice is never private
it is a social disease
with fewer men
than risk
one coward spreading panic
throughout the ranks
many people would have that fear may be natural
but cowardice is toxic
and it spreads
and it contaminates everyone that it touches
the same pattern repeats in every generation
one pastor who refuses to speak boldly
convinces hundreds of fathers
to avoid confrontation in their own home.
One father, afraid to lead,
teaches his son that silence is safe.
One politician who bends before cultural pressure
gives cover to an army of bureaucrats
who do the same.
A coward is never just one.
A coward becomes a factory of cowards.
His retreat makes others think retreat is righteousness.
His silence makes others believe silence is wisdom.
Cowardess explains why pulpit.
its roar against injustice and vague terms, but rarely talk about abortion as child's sacrifice.
Cowardess explains why pastors insist on loving all families, but never call homosexuality
of sin. So it's more common in this age, and this is the contrast here, it's more common in this
age, because here we don't have much risk. It's not like the Christians in Africa. We are
not trying desperately trying to work out a way to survive. We have comfort. We have affluence.
So in the past, if you were timid, you could starve or you could be conquered or you
could be killed. Today, a man can spend his life indoors and order everything he needs
delivered to his door. You can avoid all danger, and a safe life breeds soft men. And soft men
become cowards when they are finally confronted with a test.
This is one of the aspects of the fourth turning, and that is, you know, you have a generation like the World War II generation, and they were hard men, but then the subsequent generations get softer and softer, and the institutions start to rot because of softness and cowardice, and then you have another fourth turning, and so it goes through that cycle, and it is bred by comfort.
Cowardous is common in this age because of comfort, and we've made a God out of comfort. Today we expect ease, convenience, and safety.
When comfort is idolized, courage becomes unthinkable.
Cowardous is more common in this age because technology actually enables it.
It's more common in this age because leaders have abandoned courage.
In past centuries, a boy grew up a model of brave soldiers, fathers, pastors, statesmen,
who bore scars from real battles.
A culture with cowardly leaders produces cowardly followers.
It's more common in this age because the church itself has been infected.
instead of raising men to stand, and they're training men to yield.
And so that's the point that I wanted to go through with this.
It robs God of His honor.
It robs us of our independence and of our liberty, right?
That's why people like Jefferson said that you would prefer dangerous liberty to the safety and comfort of slavery.
So we're going to take a quick break, and we come back.
we're going to talk to an author about his new book.
It's called FDR, A Political Life.
It's an excellent book.
I haven't read the entire book, I'll admit, but I've read parts of it.
I didn't have enough time to read.
I just got it as a PDF.
But the parts that I've read are stellar.
And he's got some stellar reviews, some people that I really respect, like Jim
Beauvard and this.
And so they've written some comments on the foreword.
But I think that it's a very important story for today, because FDR,
was, of all things, a fourth turning president.
He was somebody that was there.
A society was being reorganized, and he moved it in a lot of the same directions that we're
starting to see today.
So there's a lot of parallels into what is happening today.
So we're going to take a quick break, and we'll be right back with our guest, who's the
author of this new book on FDR, which is really a book for our time, as well as a treasure chest
for anybody who's interested in history.
We'll be right back.
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Thank you.
Defending the American Dream.
You're listening to the David Knight Show.
Welcome back, and I want to begin with a couple of statements from people about this book.
The book is FDR, a new political life.
The author is David Beto.
And this is the first one that's here is from Hillsdale College.
It's Burton Folsom.
He says the book, FDR, A New Political Life, is the most illuminating one-volume history of FDR ever written.
American historians have come to recognize that Roosevelt's New Deal did not end the Great Depression, but prolonged it.
David Beto carefully explains why so many FDR programs and power grabs were so counterproductive.
To go from the older FDR histories to David Beto's wonderful new work is to make a historic leap from the dark ages.
Also, another author, David McCallis says, when it comes to race and Western influence, FDR's vision of the world order was muddled by delusional phenomena.
He was not a man of empire or genocide like his wartime allies, Churchill and Stalin, but he was a dreadfully old-fashioned Victorian quack, an amateur from.
phrenologist who believed that repopulating the Pacific Rim with certain choice crossbreeding
would create a better world for all. David Beto takes us further than his predecessors along the
breadcrumb path into Franklin Roosevelt's thick forested interior. And again, many wonderful stellar
reviews. And I'm going to say, even though I wasn't able to read the entire book, what I read of it
really does match with this. I'll give you one more. This is from Jim Bovart, who we've interviewed
on this show many times.
He said historian David Beto,
who previously exposed how President
Franklin Roosevelt
ravaged Americans' constitutional
rights, is back with a new book
vividly exposing his
personal perfidy
from the dawn of Woodrow Wilson
administration to 1945,
the betrayal at Yalta and beyond.
With volleys of research,
Beto demolishes Roosevelt's reputation
as one of the
quote-unquote great presidents.
And so I look at FDR, like Lincoln, these are presidents who come in at a time of great societal upheaval and change and war, and they have an active role in redefining our society.
I think we're in a time like that right now.
This is a guy who ran as a peace candidate, but then turned to war.
He was there at the center of the fight between gold and fiat currency.
He was presided over a rapid expansion of a Leviathan and federal government with very creative excuses to override the Constitution.
He instituted surveillance, and there was a free speech revolt against him.
He also weaponized the FCC.
And we can see, you know, when we've talked about what was going on with the FCC,
we pointed out that why should broadcast media have its content controlled when they don't control the press?
Well, you can look to FDR for that.
So, joining us now is David Beto.
Thank you so much for joining us.
It's an excellent book here that you have.
Thank you so much.
You know, it's interesting.
You brought up the, I mean, if you don't mind.
Oh, go ahead.
I'm sorry.
The FCC issue.
And it brought to mind the contrast between FDR and Trump.
You know, Trump makes these wild threats about involving the FCC.
He goes public with it.
He tries to get Jimmy Kimmel off the air, which really wasn't working.
the effort, frankly.
And he succeeds
short term, but now Kimball is back
on the air. So Trump
looks silly. What FDR
did is he did it behind the scenes.
He did it carefully. He would never make
a public statement like that.
He went to the sponsors of,
for example, there was a leading
anti-New Deal radio
commentator called, named
Boke Harder, in
1938, one of the top-rated
commentators in the country on CBS.
And so how'd Roosevelt get him off the air?
He opened an IRS investigation, an immigration investigation, because Carter was from Canada.
And then finally, he went to the executives, or he went to the sponsors, including Marjorie Maryweather Post, who sold, well, she was the original owner of Maralago.
And she used her influence, and Carter was forced off the air.
And by the end of 1938, all anti-New Deal commentators on the main networks were off the air.
And despite the fact that most newspapers were hostile to FDR, he did it all quietly.
He did it all behind the scenes with a scalpel where, you know, Trump used the blunt edge of the sword.
In many ways, we should be thankful for that.
Yeah.
that Trump is like a bull in a China shop so often and sometimes when he doesn't need to get
his way, he doesn't get his way because he's so, I don't know, obvious about it.
Yeah, maybe his role thing is more about getting Americans divided and fighting each other
than it is about the actual reform.
But what FDR did is something that we've seen a pattern of people in government typically
doing, and that is working behind the scenes, quietly sending out messages to make sure that
this group or that group is shadow banned or canceled.
And you can use your own judgment in terms of doing this because you're a private
corporation and you can do that.
But, of course, he kind of did that with, in terms of telegrams and things like that before,
not the social media side, of course, but actual physical telegrams.
FDR had his involvement with that as well.
And they see the early trends of the surveillance state.
The technology has changed, but the nature of men and power.
hasn't really changed that much. Talk a little bit about the Black Inquisition and things
that were involved in that. Okay. Well, the Black Committee was a Senate committee. He was
headed by Senator Hugo Black, who later ended up on the U.S. Supreme Court, despite his
clan background. And Black was an attack dog for the New Deal. He was really Roosevelt's
main ally i would say in the in the congress he was the to go to guy well roosevelt wanted an
investigation of anti new deal organizations and black was more than happy to cooperate in this
so black would call these witnesses and they they would you know sometimes successfully hold him
off he would bring in leading anti new deal figures and so black got the bright idea or someone got the
broad idea. Well, why don't I
get their private telegrams?
Telegrams were the
emails texts of the time.
They were over half of long-distance
communication. People would say
things in telegrams that they wouldn't say
in letters, but they would say now
on an email or a text.
And there were thousands
of them. They were instantaneous,
virtually instantaneous.
So Black goes to Western Union
and the other telegraph companies
and said, I want copies
of all telegrams sent to and from members of Congress,
and he had other people as well, for like a six-months period.
And Western Union's response was, are you kidding?
You know, our customers would hate that.
And Black goes to the FCC, gets approval.
And, of course, FDR would have had a hand in this.
Although, again, he didn't really have to order Black to do anything,
because Black was serving the New Deal
and got FCC
approval. So again, it's FCC
because... The telegraph companies were
ordered to provide
that was one example
all, it's, you know, millions of
telegrams, but then they expanded
the, Black expanded the investigation
to include other cities, targeted
individuals, and so forth.
So he went in there with his staffers
into Western Union and they had to keep copies
of telegrams, right?
That was sort of part of their requirement.
And they got big bonds full of these telegrams, the staffers went through them.
Sorry, that was a government requirement to keep the copies in the first place?
Yes.
Okay.
Well, I think the telegraph company's probably maybe would have kept their own copies anyway.
I don't know.
But they were required to keep copies of all telegrams.
And they went through millions.
And I couldn't believe this when I saw it.
But yes, that was true.
They went through about 10,000 a day over a very long.
period of time and the committee staffers had instructions to don't look at anything of a personal
nature just look at material related to lobbying what would be lobbying well the committee had a
specific definition indirect or direct lobbying indirect lobbying would be any attempt to influence
public opinion so our conversation would be an example of that so any attempt to influence public
opinion would be considered lobbying.
So they went through, copied
selectively, and they went ambush
witnesses, because this was
all secret.
None of the witnesses knew they were doing this.
Wow.
None of them knew.
And eventually came out
because Western Union informed,
started to inform people
who were being targeted.
And one of them sued,
uh,
very prominent law firm in Chicago, still there.
Silas Strawn was his name.
And Strawn was a heavyweight, and in one in federal district court, by that time, Black had done his damage, and he said, well, we're done with our investigation.
However, this was a very good precedent for the future.
Now, of course, Black could use the telegrams that he'd gotten his illegal booty, but he couldn't do any more of this kind of search, nor could official future congressional committees.
Very important precedent, but it's not very well known.
but it was a federal court judge.
Yeah, we usually think about, you know, what's going on with FISA and everything.
And, you know, that came after World War II because with the creation of the CIA and NSA,
they started getting information from the phone company, getting pin information.
Who did they call and that type of thing, which they could infer a lot from.
And, but actually, this predates all of that.
Were they using this as you said, they were questioning,
people, did they use this information as a perjury trap for people?
You know, ask them a question that they knew the answer to?
I suspect that that kind of thing went on. I haven't come across it. I have reason to believe
from just reading some of Roosevelt's comments that he was, you know, this information was shared
with him, but I can't prove it. But I think it was used for all sorts of nefarious reasons.
Historians have kind of looked in the wrong place. They've looked at people like Jager Hoover, who, again, there's a lot of things he did too. But the mass surveillance, this is a better example of mass surveillance, but people haven't looked at it. In fact, I hadn't even heard of the black committee until about 12 years ago when I was doing research and I came across it. I said, what's this thing, the black committee? What's that? Does that describe in the nature of the committee?
Yeah, no. It was a Senate committee. It was forgotten. Not by a lot of conservatives, though. Conservatives would be bringing it up in the 1950s. And that's part of the reason why McCarthyism came about, because they were pissed. And they thought, well, you guys are now complained about civil liberties. What about the black committee? And that's a parallel to today as well, isn't it? You know, when you suffer an injustice like that, you feel entitled to propagate it against your enemies again. You know, so, wait, you're
You guys did it to us.
So what about that?
Let's do it again.
I love the title that you've got here.
Probably Trump's going to do sedition trials, I would guess, right?
That's right.
Same thing the J6 people were convicted of.
The stupid law that should have been repealed.
Exactly.
Or at least severely limited.
I like the way that you've got it here in your book, The Black Inquisition.
That really does get your attention as you're looking at it.
It's like, oh, okay.
You go.
Yeah.
The Black Inquisition.
And then there was a pushback against that.
Part of it was William Randolph Hurst was, of course, targeted that because I guess they could say, well, anything that he says is going to be influencing public opinion, obviously.
So let's get all of his telegrams.
And so he actually, you have a chapter here, the right and the left free speech coalition.
So there's a pushback with that.
He joined with the ACLU left as William Randolph Hearst pushing back.
Tell us a little bit about that.
Yeah.
Well, the black.
committee had gotten a treasure trove of Hearst-related telegrams. But they did a very stupid thing.
They did a public subpoena. None of this was subpoena, by the way, but they did a public subpoena of
one and only one telegram that they probably already had. And this telegram was where
Hearst was accusing this prominent member of Congress, a committee chair, of being in league with
the communists. It was kind of a hyperpolic telegram.
And I guess what the Black Committee, what Black thought was,
people will just see that as so over the top, this will be good PR for us.
But instead, what happened is other members of Congress, like, you know, a guy named McCormack,
who was future speaker of the House, a guy named Emmanuel Seller, these are new dealers.
They say this is uncalled for.
This is the tactics of Mussolini.
So it actually backfired on Roosevelt.
Even many of his own New Deal supporters were against this.
And this is very interesting and very discouraging in some ways
because during this period, you had a lot of civil libertarians on the left,
who were willing, even though they liked Roosevelt,
who were willing to push back against him.
And that is not as true today.
Maybe that will change now,
but it's not what it certainly hasn't been true today well today we're so much more partisan and
tribal and we don't seem to care about principles we don't seem to care about the rule of law
and that's true of both sides isn't it well yeah it's the people at the time give you a sense
of the difference H.L. Mencken was an in-your-face kind of anti-new dealer civil libertarian you know
I don't know agnostic he only needed everybody but he was friends with everybody he had
correspondence that span the political spectrum.
He was respected.
He was liked as an individual.
He could talk to people.
I don't think there are as many people who fit in that category today.
That's right.
Yeah, he was real clever wit.
I mentioned frequently his thing.
A year ago, if I had a gold coin and a flask of whiskey,
the whiskey was illegal and the coin was legal this year.
The gold coin is illegal and the flask of whiskey is legal.
So, yeah, he was always...
I haven't heard that one, but that's...
I was always pointing out the absurdity of FDR, yeah.
So I think one of the very telling things about FDR was the war and peace issue.
And you got in here part of his speech, which truly is amazing that he makes, when he's running as a candidate, as a peace candidate.
He says, I've seen war.
I've seen war on land and sea.
I have seen blood running from the wounded.
I've seen men coughing out their gassed lungs.
I've seen the dead in the mud.
I've seen cities destroyed.
I've seen 200 limping exhausted men come out of the survivors of the regiment of 1,000 that went forward 48 hours before.
I have seen children starving.
I've seen the agony of mothers and wives.
I hate war.
And you write, as he so often did, FDR exaggerated.
His exposure to the fighting in World War I was limited and sanitized.
While the Navy had sent him on a guided inspection of American naval and marine bases in Europe,
the main impression conveyed by his contemporaneous diary account was that of a sightseer.
So talk a little bit about that, how he ran as a peace candidate, and then he flipped, pushing us into war.
Well, FDR was playing both sides of the street.
For example, in the 1930s, he'd been the guy that suggests, well, maybe we need neutrality laws.
And then later, he pushed for repeal of the Neutrality Act, saying, I wish I'd never signed it.
He never mentioned that he was the guy that helped to inspire it in the first place.
So he was a rabid interventionist when he was Assistant Secretary of the Navy under Wilson.
He was constantly trying to imitate his cousin, Theodore, and get some sort of incident, possibly.
So he was a hawk.
But then in the 30s, he sort of realizes there's all this anti-war feeling, and he appeals to that.
He actually applauds the Munich Agreement.
But then after that, he becomes much more of an interventionist.
and certainly aligns himself with Winston Churchill and so forth.
But a lot of this is done quietly.
So he's sort of playing both sides of the street.
And he is in trouble in the 1940 election.
His opponent, Wendell Wilkie, who was kind of an interventionist too,
but starts talking like an America firster during the last part of the campaign,
is making inroads.
So FDR is worried about this.
So very shortly before the election, he gives this speech.
He'd never given a speech this strong, where he says, I've said this before, and I'll say it again and again and again.
Your boys are not going to be sent into any foreign war, full stop, right?
And Wendellke, he heard that on the radio, and he said, that hypocritical son of a bitch just lost me the election.
and whether or not that was true or not FDR was that was a clear motivation his son went up to him and said dad why did you say that you've never said anything like that before and he said basically well I had to win you know for the good of the country that kind of thing
so just amoral an amoral figure yeah maybe worse in in so many ways a very cynical jaded man I think who had great charm
Yes.
But I never really cared for him.
I'm going to confess, did you ever see that movie Sunrise at Campobello?
No, I never saw that.
Oh, it was a movie made in the 50s starring Ralph Bellamy, playing FDR in his battle against polio.
And I just, you know, Bellamy captured FDR in some ways.
It was supposed to be a sympathetic portrayal.
But there was just this charm, which always seemed a little bit phony to me.
and very calculating, but very effective.
Yeah, he seemed that way to me as well.
But I always kind of just dismissed that as, you know,
when you look at movies at the time,
you know, people came across as very stiff and pretentious
and, you know, putting on airs.
And that's kind of the way that a lot of people would come across,
even in the movies at that time.
They wouldn't come across as, you know, genuine or.
And so I kind of just put it up to the, to the,
zeitgeist of the time if you will but yeah it's it's interesting and you begin with his rise to power
talk a little bit about that where this guy come from how to get there he he he had a big advantage
and that he was born into comfortable circumstances not super wealth but but wealth um he was a
distant cousin of theodore roosevelt and very distant like seventh cousin but the family had
contacts with each other and so forth and he went he did he did the typical trajectory of of someone
in that class he went to groton a very exclusive private school and he uh he went to harvard he got
a columbia his law degree from columbia he had very mediocre grades he was not a good student
but he he was a gladhander people liked him he made his impact socially
And then it was, some people approached him and said, Mr. Roosevelt, we'd like you to run for Congress, or not for Congress, for a state legislature in New York.
You know, theater was president at the time. They happened to be Democrats. I guess they thought that that was a brilliant move.
Now, I say that if the Republicans had approached Franklin, he probably would have run as a Republican.
In fact, he had supported his cousin very openly when his cousin ran for re-election.
It was his first vote was for Theodore.
But the Democrats asked him.
It was a good Democratic year, 1908.
So he ran as a Democrat and he was able to win.
And from there, he just impressed people.
He got the attention of a guy named Josephus Daniels,
who was Secretary of the Navy, quite a racist, southern racist type.
But Daniels was charmed by Roosevelt.
He had a very apt comment.
He said, he was just like an actress.
He had that.
He had it, right?
And someone had said it was a case of love at first sight, you know, when Daniel saw him.
And I don't think anything went on, but he made him Assistant Secretary of Navy.
And from there, Roosevelt was imitating his cousin, either intentionally or by chance.
Theodore had been in the legislature.
Theodore had been assistant secretary of the Navy, and then Theodore was vice-presidential candidate, as Roosevelt was in 1920.
So, very similarity, a lot of parallels between them.
One difference, though, Franklin did not volunteer to fight in World War I.
He was in his late 30s. He could have.
His cousin, Theodore, said, you have to get into the infantry, not just the Navy.
You have to get it into the infantry.
you have to get in the fight.
And Roosevelt came back and said,
well, my boss thinks I'm essential.
And maybe his boss did say that.
But Theodore had a similar boss.
He didn't have to go in.
But Franklin was not the man the theater was.
Right.
And so he did not serve in the military.
So at that point he was able-bodied,
at that point he was able-bodied and could have.
Yeah, that was before his bout of polio,
which was 19.
How old was he?
In my Gates right here, 1921.
So it was about how old when that happened?
He was about 39, quite a young man.
And there's an interesting story there.
Now, a lot of people said, can't you say something good about Roosevelt?
I will say that, you know, he showed great determination.
Of course, he had a lot of help.
He had a lot of doctors.
he had a lot of, you know, leisure time, he had a lot of support, but he showed great courage
and overcoming that.
Part of the story that I was surprised by is who did he blame for the polio?
He blamed a Republican center.
And the story on this is really fascinating.
I begin my book with it.
There was an investigation.
Well, there was something called the Newport scandal, the Newport sex scandal.
Do you recall reading that?
Yeah, no, I skipped over to the Black Inquisition.
stuff. What happened was, Roosevelt was Assistant Secretary of the Navy, and there was a guy
at one of the naval bases in Newport who was investigating whether there were same-sex
relationships going on in the Navy, thought this was, you know, a major scandal and so forth,
and even did his own private investigations where this guy would find people to go in and
they would actually have sex, right, with these men, right?
to try to entrap them.
So Roosevelt found out about this.
The investigation was basically had no funding.
The Secretary of War had refused to back it.
I mean, the Attorney General refused to back it.
And Roosevelt stepped in single-handedly and set up a investigative unit headed by him called Section A in the Department of Navy,
which investigated this issue of same-sex relationships in the Navy.
And they would send out investigators who, again, would entrap people by having sex with them.
And Roosevelt, I think, quite clearly knew what was going on.
A local journalist in Newport pushed back on this and accused Roosevelt of doing this.
And Roosevelt basically responded, said, well, you know, isn't it important to, you know, to find what's going on here?
Why are we so worried about procedure?
And it was actually controversially.
We think this period was very anti-gay, and it was.
But people in Congress and the press thought this was abhorrent.
These tactics were beyond the pale.
And that's one of the things that we've lost.
He did his best to cover it up, and it weakened it put so much tension on him that he said that it had lowered his resistance and made him more susceptible to the outbreak of polio, which may have been true, actually, because it was a lot of it was contaminated water, but again, if your immunity, you know, if you had low resistance and so forth.
So he blamed this senator until his dying day for causing his polio.
Well, you know, as you talk about that.
Because of this report investigation, which almost derailed his career, almost destroyed him.
And again, it's the tactic that's involved there.
And people don't know.
Everybody did.
And you would think this would be a period where they would say, oh, they're gay, we need to root them out.
They may have thought that, but this is beyond the pale.
And, of course, these people that had been destroyed, many of them were innocent, you know, they didn't get any benefits.
Right.
They didn't get military funerals.
they were destroyed
and Roosevelt
is able to ride through it
partly because other things go on
that divert public attention
but the New York Times
as a matter of fact
has a big story
where it calls his behavior
they blame him for it
the Times blames him in this article
and basically
you know
comes to conclusion he's unfit for office
but he's able to
escape this
somehow
because of other things going on.
And it's forgotten.
And most people today don't even know about it.
But it's quite an important story in his life.
Well, it reveals his character, which we then saw later when he's coming after politically.
Roosevelt was quite clear that he wasn't worried about the means.
It was the end.
Get something done.
This is a view towards civil liberties.
These people need to be shut up.
Yes.
And I think some way to shut them up.
That was a real hallmark.
That was a real hallmark of everything that he did.
You know, he doesn't care.
I think he was always kind of a default interventionist.
And I think a lot, you know, I mean, I think he did have an ideology.
And I think he had been a Wilsonian interventionist.
He was a great admirer of Wilson, right?
He defended Wilson when he ran for president in 1920,
even though much of the public was sick of Wilson.
He defended the worst aspect, the most repressive aspects of Wilsonians.
So I think that was his default position.
That's the best way I could explain it.
I think the relationship with Churchill made a difference,
but I think you see even signs of that before that.
Where he's trying to do it, his focus is on the North Atlantic.
By 1941, he is desperately trying to provoke an incident in the North Atlantic.
And he builds up minor incident.
or, you know, into cause celebs, and is trying to get into the war.
It's clear he wants to do that by 1941, by any means that he can.
And, but the public is hostile to the idea.
Well, overwhelmingly, the public is, you know, does not want to get in another foreign war.
They remember World War I.
They do not want to do that again.
But he's able to get aid to Britain through Len Elise, which was very open-ended.
But, again, selling this is, well, of course, we won't have to go in.
You know, we can help the British, right?
Give them the tools and they will finish the fight, as people used to say.
And that kind of thing.
Kind of where we are right now with Ukraine, right?
Kind of where we are right now with Ukraine, I guess.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, we can just give them the weapons and we won't really get involved.
But the Germans aren't taking the bait to the extent that he wants.
wants them to. So he kind of shifts to the Pacific, right? And there's massive sanctions against
the Japanese that preceded Pearl Harbor. And of course, what do you have about Pearl Harbor?
What's your take on Pearl Harbor? Did he engineer that to and keep things secret there in a
kind of subversive way? What is your opinion about Pearl Harbor? Yeah, again, he is, his focus is the
North Atlantic, but he eventually comes to the conclusion, well, you know, if we're going to go to
war at Japan, that's fine with me. And, you know, maybe we can get into the European war as well.
I don't think, I think that that's part of what he's pushing. And really since, you know,
he, he, there were opportunities to, to, to have peace agreement with Japan. The Japanese prime
minister offers to meet
with Roosevelt in the middle of the Pacific
to have a summit. So let's hash
this out.
Roosevelt doesn't take the opportunity.
At one point, the Japanese actually say
that they were willing to evacuate China.
He doesn't take the opportunity.
So he's
there's sort of a
distraction. Now, okay, Pearl Harbor,
did Roosevelt know about it?
I don't think he did.
And my argument
for that is, I think the best
evidence is that they did know that
Japanese would attack.
They thought the attack would probably
be somewhere like the Philippines.
Maybe
in Singapore, somewhere
like that. They did not
think it would be Pearl Harbor. Very few
people thought that. Almost nobody thought
that. And part of the reason they didn't
think that is they didn't
think the Japanese were capable.
They didn't think they were good pilots.
They didn't think that they could
pull something out like that.
And even the commanders on the ground, and Roosevelt did shortchange them.
Short and Kimmel there, the Pacific, they wanted observation planes, but Roosevelt diverted all resources to the North Atlantic.
They wanted, you know, if they had had those observation planes, for example, it might have made all the difference.
He short changed them.
But even they thought that the main danger from the Japanese was sabotage.
That's one of the reasons why they put the planes in the middle of the field in many cases.
It made them more vulnerable to attack, but theoretically less vulnerable to sabotage.
So what is Roosevelt's first reaction after the attack?
Well, it's from a butler who saw him, and Roosevelt's response was,
I will go down in disgrace.
He thinks, my God, I didn't expect this.
I'm going to be in trouble because of this.
So I don't think they knew that the attack was going to be at Pearl Harbor,
partly because they underestimated the Japanese.
I think Roosevelt was reckless, however, that he knew an attack was going to come.
I think he could have done much more to warn naval commanders throughout the Pacific than an attack was going to come.
There were clues that it could have come at Pearl Harbor.
naming the time of day.
They did know the time of the day when the Japanese were going to just in the embassy
had been ordered American embassy to destroy their codes, and that was at 7.30 a.m.,
which would have been a very good time for an attack on Pearl Harbor, and they didn't put two
and two together.
So I think it's more incompetence, but I don't buy the theory that has been put forward
by people like Stinnett, who makes this argument that, you know,
that we knew that the Japanese fleet was on the way and so forth.
I don't see the evidence for that.
We did break one of the codes,
but we didn't break the crucial naval code,
broke the diplomatic code.
So we knew a lot of what was going on.
Roosevelt knew a lot about it.
He was reading a lot of Japanese mail.
And maybe they could have put two and two together,
but I think it was sort of racism in some sense.
They just didn't think the Japanese could pull something like this off.
You know, they found out, didn't they?
Well, talk a little bit about you got to...
I'd be happy to talk with people about it,
but I don't buy that that he knew.
Sure, sure.
That it was going to happen at Pearl Harbor.
Sure.
Well, talk about fear and emergency.
Okay.
Well, when Roosevelt ran in 1942, he pledged to maintain sound money.
Now, I didn't exactly say, well, gold, but...
He also gave a speech right before the election, a little known speech called the Covenant speech, where he would talk about, you know, gold contracts, the covenant, right?
And he said he would uphold the covenant.
You know, basically, I will uphold, you know, the use of gold, right?
Then very shortly after the election, he makes a decision to go off the gold standard.
He calls in his secretary of the treasury, who was much more, actually Secretary of State.
state who's much more conservative than him on financial issues cordell hall and he says cordel
congratulate me we're going off the gold standard tomorrow and he pulls out some money and it was
a money that was issued by the whatever the federal reserve bank of tennessee i guess he said this is
from tennessee your own state cordel and what makes this money good it's only good because we say it's good
And again, that is what he did.
Then he does a lot of crazy things after that.
He does a program to purchase gold, and he sets the – well, no, not to purchase gold, but to set the price of gold.
So he says he has this gold buying program, and how does he determine the price?
He determines it from things like – he says, well, I think the price should be 19 cents today,
because it's a lucky number.
You know, he would say things like that.
And Roosevelt was very superstitious.
He had lucky shoes.
He had lucky hats.
So this is not as strange as you might seem.
And it was just a crazy, crazy town.
But what saved us in terms of financially in the 30s was we had massive gold imports from both Europe and the Soviet Union.
people are taking their gold for obvious reasons out of those places and bringing it to the United States.
So we have a tremendous gold inflow to the United States through those sort of happy, not happy, tragic accidents, I guess you could say, both from Russia and from, because Stalin is buying a lot of American goods using gold.
That's part of it.
And, of course, the gold is coming in from Germany because Jews and others are taking their gold out.
Yeah. It's interesting. You know, when you look at how he was reacting, how he had his lucky shoes and all the rest of stuff and how arbitrary things were. That sounds familiar too in a disturbing way, doesn't it? You know, kind of erratic and arbitrary capricious, what he's doing with these things. We're starting to see a lot of that.
Good word.
Parallels of Trump, but there are big differences, too.
Yeah.
But, you know, I think there are, there, there's, there's some parallels that you control.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
So talk a little bit about the end of prohibition.
That's, that's one of the things, everybody, you know, Happy Days is here again.
How much of that was, did he build that up for his, his campaign and how much of that
was really an initiative of his, or was it just that people had had it?
it with alcohol prohibition at that point
he got ahead of that. Was he
opposed on that by
the Republicans, or what was the situation
with the prohibition?
I don't discuss
prohibition a lot, but Roosevelt
was a straddler. He wasn't going to take
controversial positions. He was also
a straddler on trade issues and
tariff issues.
So he was not a leader of
the anti-prohibition forces. There were
Democrats who were. The more
conservative Democrats, interestingly,
tended to be the more anti-prohibition.
And there was a big element in the party.
And people were sick and tired of the prohibition laws by 1932.
The Republicans chose to kind of avoid the issue.
So Roosevelt and getting the nomination, it certainly was a popular position,
but he also recognized that this is a popular position.
And he came out for for repeal of the constitutional amendment, bringing in prohibition.
He took a very strong stand.
I think there were other motivations, though.
One was it's a great tax source.
And as a matter of fact, during the early new deal, even though they're talking about income taxes,
most of the tax collections are from excise taxes.
people like things like cosmetics, cigarettes, alcohol, that's where the bulk of the revenue
was raised.
So Roosevelt is raising the tax top rate to, I don't know, eventually it gets well over 90%,
but it's going way, way up.
He makes a big deal about this, but that means that the wealthy find ways to find tax shelters,
they don't pay it.
So where does the actual money come?
It comes from the nickels and dimes
of people going to movies. There's a tax
on movie tickets. It comes from the
nickels and dimes of working class people.
But Roosevelt is very clever
and never acknowledging that.
And of course, the excise
taxes on liquor as well.
So that I think is maybe in
the back of his mind too. And he uses
that revenue source in a major way.
It's always soak the rich and then it's
always the poor middle class to pay all the taxes.
That's another thing that never
seems. A stark example of that. Yes.
another thing never stops. And of course, the Revenuers, you know, that's what they called
the people that were coming after the stills in the mountains and everything, because that
was really what they wanted. They wanted the money that was there. So talk a little bit about
the Supreme Court packing issue as well. And his fight to essentially just completely rewrite
the Constitution when we look at what happened with the New Deal. Should be called a new
Well, Roosevelt proposes, he keeps us quiet again, but then in 1937, he's all puffed up because the 1936 election was one of the more spectacular landslides in American history, partly because Roosevelt was very effective in using New Deal money, targeted money, and I could talk about that as well, how he was able to win such a big majority, but he thought, I'm going to get a third new deal, right? He wanted to be more radical.
He wanted to do more.
But he thought, what good will that do if the Supreme Court, which has been striking down,
measures like the AAA and the National Recovery Administration, what good will all my effort be unless I get a sympathetic court?
Okay.
Well, he decides, he proposes to increase the size of the court, and he gives a speech where he basically says they're overextended.
They're old. They're tired. I want to help them. You know, they've got a big workload. Well, he gives his speech and he wants to increase the size of the court. And he obviously thinks he can pull it off because I don't know, you're talking about something like, gee whiz, the Republicans are down to like 16, 20 senators. I mean, he's got an overwhelming majority. You would think that he could pull this off easily. And he's, and he's,
so disingenuous and it's so obvious what he's doing that there is a big movement against
core packing led by a new dealer senator burton wheeler who'd been an ally of roosevelt and turns against
him and wheeler is the ideal guy to lead this effort the republicans are very smart they lay back
and let the democrats take leadership and they do now the campaign is very grueling and it becomes
clear during the campaign that Roosevelt is essentially won because one of the
justice is on the court is switched sides and it's clear that he's probably going to get
all of his new deal programs sustained but he keeps pushing on I guess it becomes a matter
of principle for him he keeps pushing on he pushes pushes pushes the majority leader of
the Senate is exhausted he is in bad shape and he ends up having a hard
attack and is found with a copy of the congressional record in his hand. His name is Joe Robinson.
And Roosevelt is, it doesn't go to Robinson's funeral. And there's a lot of controversy about
that. Why don't you go to the guy's funeral? Probably because he was pissed off that Robinson wasn't
doing a better job. And anybody says, well, he would understand, you know, he had to fight for the
and it hurts Roosevelt, no end, and Roosevelt is defeated. So in a lot of ways, that is an example. So in a lot of
that is an example of a left-right coalition. There are many examples, but that's one. He's
defeated by Democrats. Could you imagine that happening under Biden? I would find it difficult to
imagine that. Or Franklin or Trump in the opposite direction. That's right. But it did happen then,
which says something positive about Americans during that period. Americans in Congress
include it. That's right. Much higher level of character.
in a lot of ways.
And I've mentioned many times about the fact, you know, we have our war on drugs that's been
going on for over half a century, but we had the 18th and the 21st Amendment, which said
that they had enough respect for the Constitution, that everybody had, they had a constitutional
amendment to stop in order to start it and then stop the alcohol prohibition because they
knew that they didn't have that power in the Constitution.
But today, you know, we don't care about that.
We just do whatever we wish.
I think it's kind of interesting.
Everybody agreed on that.
We have to have a constitutional amendment.
That's right. It's one of the biggest arguments against the war on drugs, I think, is the fact that we have those two amendments that are there.
But when you go back and you look at this particular case with the Supreme Court, the fact that he's got the votes, but he still wants to press on with this thing because it's a matter of personal prestige and power, I think, the same type of thing that we see with Trump.
And yet, does he take the kind of vengeance against people who go against them in kind of a vendetta that we see Trump taking against Republicans, let's say?
He doesn't attend the guy's funeral or whatever, but, you know, he gives him the cold shoulder.
But did he really go after people like Trump will go after somebody like Thomas Massey who opposes him on his agenda?
Yeah, again, he keeps a secret.
And this is what's interesting.
There is an investigation under another loyalist.
In fact, he'd been offered the position on the Supreme Court before black but wanted to stay in Congress.
His name was Senator Sherman Minton.
and if you search his name, the thing that usually comes up is there's a bridge named after him,
but now maybe that'll change.
But Minton was a very young guy.
He was already in the Senate leadership, first-termer, and he was very tight with Roosevelt.
And Mitten starts his own investigation, basically succeeds blacks, the black committee.
It's the same committee, but black is now in the U.S. Supreme Court.
And so Mitten heads this investigation.
They can't search telegrams anymore, but one of the things they do do is they use Mitten gets permission to look at the IRS tax records of people he targets, for example.
He gets that.
But Menn gets very frustrated because there's a lot of putback, pushback.
people are very upset about his methods and he's he's doesn't he lacks black's subtlety
black had some subtlety and minton is just charging forward um and so mitten gives his speech he said
well we need a law against these big newspapers because most of the press was against roosevelt
so he said let's make it a felony to publish anything known to be untrue fake news basically the
In fact, they use that term, I think.
False news or fake news.
And he proposes this bill.
And what is the reaction to the bill?
Almost universal opposition sets in almost from the beginning.
As it is setting in, Roosevelt is asked about the Mitten Bill at a news conference.
And I think Roosevelt was the guy that had the idea.
I think he put Mitten up to it.
I can't prove that, but I think it's true.
Because Mitton was not the kind of guy to go off on his own.
And he reflects what Roosevelt thought of the press.
He was asked about this.
And he said, well, you know, if we had such a bill,
we wouldn't even have enough room in the federal prison system
to hold all the prisoners.
And it gets a little laugh, right?
And then as he moves on to a new topic,
and I wish they'd done follow-ups.
They didn't.
He says, you boys have.
for it, you know.
That's what he says.
You boys asked for it, you know, I mean, you reporters, you, you know, people, you asked for this.
And then he moves on to the next topic.
And he drops it, right?
Because Mitten ends up dropping it.
But, and it discredits his investigation.
And his investigation is pretty much shut down after that.
So FDRs, those two years after the 1936 election are a low point for FDR.
There's pushback against him.
He loses court packing.
The Minton Committee collapses.
And he puts all of his attention on court packing.
And as a result, he isn't able to get his Radical New Deal program in 1938, 3738, that he wanted because he focuses almost entirely on court packing.
And then later, after it really is too late on these investigations.
You know, it's kind of interesting when we look at this period of time, you know,
when all the institutions were being reconsidered, reinvented, if you will, and he's
fighting against the constitutional pattern that had been accepted, that he was getting
pushed back, even from his own party against some of this stuff, because as we talked
about, people understood the principles.
He had a lot of people who did not share his idea that the end justifies the means, and we
don't see that today.
We're in a much more dangerous situation, I think.
when we look at this way. It's good to go back and look at history. You look at the radical
change that was accomplished during the FDR period of time. And you look at the fact that now
we have people on both sides have become unhinged from or have detached themselves from basic
principles about free speech, the rule of law, and having a due process to investigate things like
that. I think we're in a very dangerous time right now. I think this book helps get people to
understand that if we look at the context the historical context of this yeah we're seeing a lot
of people on the right who were talking about free speech and uh local control states rights
yeah turned down a dime that's right this is very discouraging to see this yeah now they want to
come after their idea of fake news you know now they've got their own fake news vendettas that they
want to come after so it is there is so much here i mean we could do several interviews with this
This is an excellent book.
It is a very important presidency to understand the context of the times in which we live in our government.
And I really highly recommend this book, FDR, A Political Life, by David Beto.
And you spell your name as B-E-I-T-O.
Is that correct?
That's right.
Yeah.
So it's not spelled like the Texas politician candidates out there.
Oh, please no.
And a lot of people will call him Beto O'Rourke, but I think it's Beto, actually.
Oh, yeah.
I believe that's the way his name is pronounced.
Yeah.
I keep telling people that, even if it isn't true.
But I think it is true.
I think it is true.
Yeah, I used to always call him Robert Francis O'Rourke or whatever his original name was.
I said he's a trans-Hispanic.
He identifies as Hispanic, even though he's not Hispanic.
I think he's a has-been now.
Let's keep it that way.
Yeah, that's right.
Yeah, we don't want to.
to resurrect him with any attention, I guess.
But an excellent book, and thank you so much for joining us.
And there is much to learn in terms of politics and history.
It's a very seminal presidency, unfortunately, for many of us who'd like to see government
that follows the Constitution.
FDR's presidency was an unmitigated disaster, and it bears looking at it and see if we
see any repetition in current events.
as a warning, as a harbinger of what's coming, because as we were talking about earlier,
you know, this whole stuff of secretly getting information on his enemies,
we saw that immediately after World War II ended.
We saw that immediately being transferred over to the NSA, the CIA, the FBI,
all these people, using the income tax, the spying people.
These same tactics used over and over again.
Thank you very much.
David Beto, the book is FDR, A Political Life.
Thank you, folks, for joining us.
Have a good day.
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.
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