The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast - 274. Cometh the Horsemen: Pandemic, Famine, War | Michael Yon
Episode Date: July 29, 2022We are heading into one of the most epic famines in world history, where the poor will freeze in the dark and burn in the sun while they starve.Michael Yon, one of America’s youngest Green Berets at... 19 years old, joins Dr Jordan B Peterson to discuss the current state of affairs across the globe. Michael has traveled and lived over half of his life abroad in more than 80 countries . Author of three books in the United States and three others in Japan, he is America’s most experienced combat correspondent.—Links— Catch up with Michael: https://michaelyon.comRead Little Girl, a retrospective here: https://michaelyon.com/dispatches/little-girl/// SUPPORT THIS CHANNEL // Newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/jordanbpeterson.co... Donations: https://jordanbpeterson.com/donate // COURSES // Discovering Personality: https://jordanbpeterson.com/personality Self Authoring Suite: https://selfauthoring.com Understand Myself (personality test): https://understandmyself.com // BOOKS // Beyond Order: 12 More Rules for Life: https://jordanbpeterson.com/Beyond-Order 12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos: https://jordanbpeterson.com/12-rules-... Maps of Meaning: The Architecture of Belief: https://jordanbpeterson.com/maps-of-m... // LINKS // Website: https://jordanbpeterson.com Events: https://jordanbpeterson.com/events Blog: https://jordanbpeterson.com/blog Podcast: https://jordanbpeterson.com/podcast // SOCIAL // Twitter: https://twitter.com/jordanbpeterson Instagram: https://instagram.com/jordan.b.peterson Facebook: https://facebook.com/drjordanpeterson Telegram: https://t.me/DrJordanPeterson All socials: https://linktr.ee/drjordanbpeterson#JordanPeterson #JordanBPeterson #DrJordanPeterson #DrJordanBPeterson #DailyWirePlus #Psychology
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi everybody, it's my pleasure and privilege today to be speaking with correspondent Michael
Yon.
I reached out to Michael because I've been extremely interested in the European civil
protests specifically those centering in, at the moment, in the Netherlands, inspired
in no small part by the Canadian truckers, Convoy.
Those protests are receiving short shrift and minimal coverage in what has been come to known as the legacy media, which is more and more in a collusion relationship,
let's say with the globalist utopians
who are attempting to guide our destiny
so destructively and unsuccessfully.
I reached out to Michael because I want to find out
to the degree that I can what's going on,
particularly in the Netherlands and more broadly
in Europe and around the world.
And he's a cardinal person to talk to in this regard.
And he's a very interesting person in his own right for all sorts of reasons, which we'll
get into as we progress.
Michael was one of America's youngest green berets.
That's not an easy thing to manage.
At 19 years old, he spent more than half his life overseas in more than 80 countries.
So he's been everywhere, man, and has seen many things. Mr. Yon is also the author of three books
published in the United States, including Moment of Truth in Iraq, 2016, and three others in Japan
covering among other topics, the present and developing information war with China.
He is America's most experienced combat correspondent, not necessarily a title for the faint of
heart, let's say.
Most recently, as I said, and this is the proximal reason for this discussion, Michael
has been tracking and covering the rising tide of civil disobedience in the Netherlands and elsewhere in Europe.
So thank you, Michael, very much for coming in to talk to me today.
I understand that you're in the Netherlands right now.
You've been there for a couple of weeks.
And so tell us a little bit about yourself and why you're in the Netherlands and what you've
been seeing and what you think it means.
That's there, Jordan.
And thank you for inviting me on.
I've watched your show for years now.
It's incredible to come on.
Yeah, and you mentioned the Canadian truckers.
Their courage cannot be in their inspiration, cannot be understated.
Courage is courageous as is cowardice.
And so we must display courage.
Recently some months ago earlier this year, I drove from California to Washington,
DC with American truckers who were inspired by Canadian truckers. And they were flying
Canadian flags all at... These are American truckers, and Americans over bridges, I must have
seen hundreds of thousands, flying almost as many Canadian flags as Americans. You may
have seen it on the news while the news sort of blockaded it.
No, no. You never see anything like that on the news in Canada because, yeah, our media
is so subsidized by the government that we, anything that runs against government dictates
and I hate to say that about a country like Canada is just minimally or minimally covered
or not covered at all.
I had no idea that the American truckers were flying Canadian flags. You'd think that'd be news in Canada because isn't it news when Canada becomes
interesting? And in fact, I know almost nothing about the truckers convoy in the US to Washington.
And I do try to follow the news. Jordan, the truckers convoy in the United States from California
to Washington, it was actually pretty massive.
And I was there every step of the way.
And so many Canadian flags, you wouldn't believe it, hanging off bridges, sides of the roads,
even in blue states, and it was all from inspiration from Canada.
And so, yeah, again, courageous, courageous, cowardice is courageous, and the Americans
were very proud to follow the lead of Canadians.
And so again, this is spreading across the world.
Yeah, well, that's amazing.
And they just don't even know it, do they?
They don't even know it, because they don't know the Canadian truckers to know it.
No, no, they have no idea.
And that's really sad, you know, that we're in a situation where we could have that be something that we don't know.
Well, that's part of what puts us in the situation that we're in.
You were with the American truckers when they went to Washington.
What sort of effect do you think they had?
It was galvanizing.
Of course, it's just one battle of awareness at that point.
I spent so much time with the truckers because in every country
that I go to, I want to know what the farmers think. I go straight to farmers. I want to know what
people like truckers think, law enforcement, military, that sort of thing, you know, the basic pulse
of the of the countries that I go to. And so, yeah, it had a good effect. It's certainly, as you know,
this is a long road. You've been talking about this for years, and you've been fighting this battle for years,
and you know it's a knockdown dragout fight, and it goes on.
But you've mentioned, I've watched some of your recent programs, you acknowledge that
we're actually making progress against the weath and the other, they call them weath here,
the World Economic Forum, the WF, and Netherlands, they call it weath.
We are making progress.
You know, no plan ever survives for us contact with the enemy.
And now we are the enemy for Weft, obviously.
And now that millions of people are waking up, it seems like by the week at this point,
you know, Weft is suddenly in for an actual real fight.
And so that's why I was just in Mexico,
tracking migrants has I been doing.
This is all part of a larger jungle, let's say.
It's not just about farmers, it's not just about truckers,
it's not just about the information,
information more obviously it's PhD level warfare.
All of the substrate for everything
going on is information more, as you know.
So who do you, okay, so you said we are the enemy, let's say, and so who do you
mean by we, and what do you, what do you think the fights about, how would you characterize
it, and who do you think, so to speak, is on the other side, you mentioned the W E F,
and of course, there are enemies of the moment, or what would you call it, villains of the
moment, and I think, deservedly so in many ways.
But how do you characterize this battle?
Why do you think of it as a battle?
What does it look like from your perspective when you're talking to the truckers and the
farmers and the law enforcement types?
Well, actually, it's intergenerational.
We could go back to the 1920s and talk about Russian information war
and even earlier 1879, Grant was talking about it
when he was in Paris.
And so, but so this isn't something that started last week
or even last generation, but some of our biggest opponents
at this point are certainly weft and CCP, of course.
I've written three books on CCP information more,
unfortunately, that are only Chinese.
That's the Chinese Communist Party for those of you
who aren't up on the acronyms.
And we'd be hard pressed to find a more devious enemy
than the Chinese Communist Party.
If you're a supporter of the CCP and its machinations,
then you're either woefully ignorant to a degree
that's almost incomprehensible or malevolent to the core,
or some appalling combination of both.
It's so strange to hear you talk about the CCP and the WEF in the same breath,
because you wouldn't think at all that those would be natural allies,
given that the WEF hypothetically is on the side of the planet and the West and civilization,
and the CCP are nothing but tyrannical war mongering North Korean wannabes.
So they're not, Jordan, I mean, that's an important point.
They're not necessarily on the same side, but they're part of the same jungle.
I mean, these are two serious opponents.
You know, there's nobody that actually runs the jungle per se, right?
And one of the massive opponents, obviously, is Chinese Communist Party.
And they are excellent.
They are masters of information more.
Again, I've written three books on this that are only in Japanese language.
I wrote them in English, but I was asked to publish books by a Japanese publisher in Japan
about this, which I did.
And an attempt to wake up Japanese to the intense information more that they are
undergoing. You know, I got kicked out of Hong Kong in 2020, by obviously the Chinese
Communist Party, because I was covering the fighting there for seven months and getting
my share of rubber bullets and tear gas constantly, those things do sting, but they're not quite
like bullets. The bottom line is, is the Chinese Communist Party, their information ground game is so intense.
For instance, I went to Nanjing to look at the rape of Nanjing Museum.
This museum is, I've studied Museum Warfare in numerous countries.
For instance, Indonesia, Malaysia, long list.
And I'll often go to museums to look for hints
of behind-the-scenes influence.
And you see in the rape of Nanjing Museum in Nanjing, China,
that thing must have cost $50 million.
I don't know how much it costs, but to be directly accurate,
let's just assign a number of $50 million.
And when you show up there in the morning, there's dozens of buses filled with school children
and they go in their different color shirts for the different buses and the different flags.
And I was the only foreigner there to my knowledge.
And when you're about halfway through the museum, you're like, wow, that was the biggest museum.
That's like the Louvre on this.
It's not quite that big, but it was quite a large museum.
And, but then you realize you're only halfway through it.
Now, as a mental health expert,
you know that there's two components to hatred.
And those are anger and disgust.
That's like H2O.
If you can combine anger and disgust,
you will get hatred every single time.
As you go through that. I'm a writer,
so I study these things as well. As you go through the Nanjing Museum, it's all about hatred and
disgust focused towards Japanese, right? And it's clear, you know, if you want to know what a country's
future plans are, you watch their information ground game. And the information ground game and the information ground game against Japan is a pure hatred
In the for instance, they ring the sirens several times here in Nanjing, you know as if there's an air raid going on
When you're you know, I've spent quite a bit of time in China all over the place
You know at nighttime if you're in the hotel room
You'll always see the movies here comes the drunken Japanese soldier again was uniform and he
You'll always see the movies. Here comes the drunken Japanese soldier again with his uniform and he kills the Chinese
parents and rapes the girl and he staggers out drunk.
There's that movie.
And then next comes the second movie that night, same thing.
It's the same story, every single night, seven days a day.
I don't suppose they show drunken cultural revolution students from the 1960s, killing people and destroying
all the last vestiges of Chinese traditional culture.
No, sir.
That's obviously not the...
No, obviously not the...
And you can see, for instance, in Okinawa now, one of the things that, I mean, you've
talked about these things before, I have an office in Thailand.
They're trying to split Thailand into three different parts.
I was out with the Malist in Nepal for about a year.
One of the things that they did to help the malice to eventually win if you want to call
it winning is to get everybody to speak their own languages, right?
Everybody to go with their own, dividing conquer.
When I was recently in Morocco, same thing.
You see a new Berber language written on the road signs, which is like a new made-up language.
I mean, Berber is not made-up language, but the written component is.
And I see these things all over the place.
You know, it's been happening down in Columbia.
I was down in Columbia last year with a Senate term, Maria Cabal.
And Maria said, why are they trying to get all the indigenous people to speak their own
languages and to fight each other and to fight us?
And of course, you know, Columbia just fell as well, right?
So this is the same thing that is doing in Panama.
I've spent a lot of time in Panama recently.
And I'm watching that closely.
You see, Panama is melting down right now.
And you know, obviously there's a Panama canal there that's of some significance to put
it mildly.
Also, Panama is a major invasion route to the United States. I've spent many months, I took two
congressmen there last year into the Darian gap, one of the most dangerous
jungles in the world. Actually, I can't believe they went out there, but they
went deep into the Darian gap and I showed them exactly this invasion that's
coming through Asia and Africa and South America up through Colombia, up through
Panama and going straight to the through Colombia, up through Panama and
going straight to the United States, right?
People from about 140 countries completely unvetted and it's growing.
It's becoming massive.
I was there when Mayorkas landed right in front of me as Black Hawk helicopters some months
ago, expanding our program there for this invasion route.
So all of these things fit together, Jordan, as you know,
the implementation.
How do you stop from becoming paranoid?
And I mean, you're behind the scenes looking at all these
strange things, this web of intrigue on multiple fronts.
How do you protect yourself against paranoia
and conspiratorial thinking?
And this is a very dead serious question,
because it's very hard not to take on the trappings of your surroundings. And when you're constantly
looking at intrigue and malevolence behind the scenes, I can't see how that could help
but color your entire worldview. And so given that, why do you think people should trust
your perspective and believe and believe that what you're seeing is varietical and not tilted by your own,
what would you call it?
Preoccupations and situational peculiarities.
Well, that's an excellent question,
and I've asked myself that many times
because self-auditing is essential in this line of work.
And I do think I've had a sort of self-vaccination
when I was younger on this particular topic because
since I was a child I was always into science, especially physics.
And I was just basically, I was failing school because all I wanted to do was study physics.
And so, you can never waste a moment of your time studying mathematics and that sort of thing,
right?
And so, you know, when you start off when you're 9 or 10 years old, basically enthralled
by the sciences, and you live in a fact, you build a fact-based world around your life,
you build self-autotating into your thinking processes, right?
You're always questioning whether, am I, is this just a perception? Am I right or wrong on this sort of thing?
You know, so yeah, I mean obviously I'm always
so part of it so part of its scientific rationality do you have people around you friends and family that also help keep you in check?
Well, I've never really been highly conspiratorial to begin with. I mean, for instance, when I on the museum warfare, you know, I mean, that was brought up to me by someone,
actually a military officer, a former now that I work with closely.
And he flew over to Thailand to brief me on it maybe eight years ago or something.
And we briefed me on it quite a while.
And then we started flying around to different countries
like Indonesia and Malaysia.
And looking at these museums, I said, wow.
This is clearly cookie cutter museums,
as clearly designed to cause hatred against Japanese.
And when we look at, oh, good Lord, I could go in
for literally, I've written three books about it.
So I'll have to self edit there,
but so I make it going forever.
But there is clearly a larger organization around these,
the museum warfare, and it's definitely centered in China.
For instance, when I was at Ipanang, there was a,
there was a, the curator of the museum, I said, wow,
what a nice museum you've got here.
Of course, it was all about hating Japanese.
And, and, and, and he said, wow, what a nice museum you've got here. Of course, it was all about hating Japanese.
And he said, oh, I just got back from Beijing.
And he said, I was invited there because they enjoyed my museum so much.
And I said, oh, really?
Do you have any photos?
And he pulls out this book under the desk.
Actually, it's a large book.
I photographed the whole book.
And it's got photos of all the curators
from all these different museums such as
Holocaust Museum in Houston, Texas, right? And it's got all the names in there. I photographed everything checked out every name in the book, right?
It's clear and it took a lot of research, but we can clearly see this is part of a
very
sophisticated organized
information operation that is that's just part of it.
Okay, well let's let's turn let's turn to the WEF and let's turn to the global
utopiasts and to what happened in Canada. The Canadian truckers here they were
pushing back against what they regarded as unwarranted government overreach
and intrusion into their private lives on the COVID front fundamentally.
And I was a supporter of the truckers right from day one.
I believe like you do that truckers and farmers and the men, particularly the men and the
women who work on those frontline occupations have a pragmatic wisdom that the intellectual
types often don't.
And I've also noted too that the intellectual socialist types
really like the working class in principle,
but they actually don't like the working class as such
because they tend not to hold the same utopian intellectual views
that the globalists do.
And so we saw that in spades in Canada.
And I've seen my government take a turn for the worse
on multiple dimensions in Canada
that's jaw dropping in its continuity and depth.
And it's clearly the case that Canadians haven't woken up to that yet, although perhaps
they're starting to.
And a huge part of that is this appalling and unconscionable media conclusion.
And so now we see something similar happening in Europe, particularly in the Netherlands.
And we should let everyone know.
And you have to listen to this.
This is so important.
The Netherlands is the world's second biggest exporter of agricultural products.
This little tiny, postage stamp of a country that was scraped out of the ocean has managed
to put itself together so that it cannot only feed itself, but so that it's a major agricultural supplier worldwide.
It's a phenomenal accomplishment.
We should be so happy with the Dutch farmers that we can hardly stand ourselves.
And instead, the courts, in particular, have mandated that the farmers be scuttled
and the government, their own government, has basically come out right out and said,
well, because you guys pollute so much, we have to crack down on you as well as reducing the speed limits of our cars,
which is an author of polling move.
And we're sorry, but a lot of you are going to have to go out of business, but to make
an omelet a few eggs have to be broken.
As the president of Greenpeace in the Netherlands said recently, well, we know, we're not going to combat climate change, the climate change emergency without inconveniencing
a few people. And now there's what 40,000 truckers in the Netherlands who are up in arms. And
I believe 100,000 people have protested in Spain. And this is spreading into Germany and
into the fishermen in the Netherlands as well, who are also being pressured by these
utopian types. And so how do you tie that into what happened in the Netherlands as well who are also being pressured by these utopian types.
And so how do you tie that into what happened in Canada and the US and what do you think
is going on?
Well, it's all part of this larger world economic forum attacks on us, of course.
And by the way, I lived in Europe for six years.
The Sprecha Doge is having Deutsche Land Periodic Evolence.
I lived four years in Germany. I lived two Europe for six years. The Sprecha d'Arch is the Shepen-Dochlan Periodic Evolence. I lived four years in Germany.
I lived two years in Poland, and I've been all over Europe.
But mostly not recently.
Mostly I've been in Asia recently in other places.
And so, but yeah, it's clear that, for instance,
when I was recently in Mexico following the migrants,
just streaming across, in May alone, we had about 310,000 illegally
crossed into the United States in one month.
And so how many?
How many?
310,000.
Roughly 310,000 known cross just in May, right?
And so I'm not sure what that number is this last month.
I've tried, I don't know the number yet, but the bottom line is it's increasing at a very high rate.
This human osmotic pressure, I call it hop, human osmotic pressure.
The push and pull of migration is greatly fueled by one information campaigns, which I've
seen in Columbia, for instance, on CNN, encouraging people to go north.
And also, obviously, another thing that causes hop is war, famine, pandemic.
And also the economic negative pressure, which would draw you into another place, right?
So there's the positive pressure that pushes you out, and the negative pressure that pushes
you in pulls you in.
And this is really dramatically expanding.
You can see this also in Europe, as you know,
they're being overwhelmed with hungry mouths,
actually, as we go into a global famine,
which I've been warning about.
Yeah, okay, so let's talk about this global famine, man,
because I see the upcoming in the fall in a big way.
And so my sense is, well, partly because of the Ukraine conflict
and the fact that we're wiping out a big chunk
of the world's wheat supply and fertilizer supply,
that we're going to be putting about 150 million people
under intense food pressure, really starting this fall.
I think that's when it's going to kick in.
And my sense is, well, there's no way that can happen
without mass migration pressure on Europe,
maybe of a scale that makes the last migration crisis look like virtually
nothing. And so it might be in paranoid about that. You seem to be thinking along the same
lines. And you said you've seen this coming for about three years.
I think you're understating it, actually. So what's going to happen in the fall?
I started warning in January of 2020, actually, and I've warned every day since and it's and I'm at this point I
were in about you know half a dozen times a day. So pan
for let's talk about pan for first pandemic famine war
the triangle of death they always go together if you get a
big war or a big pandemic or big famine you'll get the
other two you get one get the other two.
You get one, you get the other two.
It's three musketeers.
And all of these things, any one of them creates the hot,
human-osmotic pressure, right?
So these things go together.
So when I saw this, I was one of the very first
alerting on the pandemic, right?
I was in January and mid to somewhere around January 19th,
I think I started warning about pandemic.
And so, immediately, having studied war for so many years, not just kinetic war and the
shootouts and all that, I did that for years back when I was quite skinny and running around
out and the wars and all that.
But there's also information war, which is the PhD level of warfare. And then
there's these other components that people must study if they're going to be a serious student
of war, which is migration, pandemic, and famine. They always go together, period.
Right. Okay, so let me ask you, let me ask you a question about that. So my sense was that
on the pandemic front, that because we disrupted the supply chains, and
we have by no means fixed that in the least, there's a shortage.
You can't get a car in Canada, you can't get a motorbike, you can't get a personal
watercraft, you can't get paper and cardboard for books.
There's a massive backlog and lineup for everything.
I know that one container ship in five is now snared at a port.
And so I know what happens when you put pressure
on the supply chain, the people who suffer for that,
the most are the people at the bottom
of the economic hierarchy.
And so those are gonna be people
that are barely hanging on in developing countries,
especially in North Africa.
That'll be my guess where this is gonna affect,
this is gonna have the biggest effects.
And so, you know, if you show a 1% increase in unemployment, you get a 5% increase in
psychiatric hospitalization. And that's because there's a lot of people who are just barely
making ends meet. And then if you double the cost of necessities like energy or, let's say,
fertilizer, or we could even put in food, then you're going to produce a tremendous amount of economic
pressure on these people, tilt them into starvation.
And so we've seen what's happened in Sri Lanka, which is just an absolute bloody major
significant ongoing catastrophe.
21 million people in Sri Lanka, there's no way we're going to be able to feed them in
any real sense for any long period of time.
So all that eco-movement forward on the Sri Lankan front
is gonna ensure that those poor starving people
are gonna eat every goddamn animal
on that entire country to stave off starvation.
And then they're gonna burn everything for fuel
because what the hell else are they gonna do?
So this idea that we can make people poor,
hungry, cold, or hot by scaling back food production
and disrupting energy supplies,
and that somehow going to save the planet is as backwards a conception as any dimwit could possibly
formulate. And so, okay, so what do you think is going to happen in the fall?
Massive famines. And, you know, I went to Sri Lanka four or five, six years ago to have a look
see. I'm often just doing and looking and checking the police and the food supply.
And that was plenty of food.
Sri Lanka had so much food.
Yeah, it was just like in cheap and plentiful, right?
And then the next thing, you know, here we go.
Now, yeah, one thing about famine.
Famine creates famine in the same way that war creates war and fire creates fire.
Famine creates famine.
So when we go into these initial phases of famine,
you'll see immediately, obviously,
price controls will start to be enforced.
This happens every time.
It's happening right now in Panama.
In the last 48 hours, price controls on gasoline
and it's some other things.
Oh yeah.
A lot of violence now in Panama.
In fact, just minutes before you and I came on,
I was talking with a friend in Panama about the current situation. That's how close I keep tabs on
Panama. For various reasons, one is the Panama Canal. Another thing is, for instance,
when people are hungry, as you know, within 48 hours, they're going to hit the streets.
They'll start robbing the stores. They'll start robbing the trucks and the trains and the boats. And
so then supplies stop going. Governments always start taking food from the farmers. They, without
exception, in my study over the years, the government always go for the farmers and like
in Egypt, recently forcing the Egyptian farmers
to sell to only approved, you know, warehouses,
that sort of thing.
So people start robbing from the farmers as well, right?
And then the farmers say, hey, I'm not making,
I'm either bankrupt or I'm not making any money.
And so the farmers stop farming.
So that's how you see we get into the second season of this,
right?
And so the
famine creates more famine, just like fire creates fire. And then famine, you know, let's say
you have 20 million people that are hungry in Sri Lanka, and as their nutritional, you
know, resources diminished so to does their physical resilience, and now they're open to
disease.
Many of the people that die in famines actually die from things like they call them famine
fevers, one of those is typhus, another is relapsing fevers, cholera which is not a famine fever,
waterborne of course, fecal, anyway the bottom line is many of the people that's not
most who die during famines are actually from disease.
And then this causes that human osmotic pressure
and these sorts of things often lead to more war, right?
So it's a recursive sort of, you know,
the factors just keep, you know,
it's almost a fission reaction, right?
And it is a sort of a problem.
Yeah, sure, I'm not even, it's out of control.
Pause the feedback loop.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Runaway, pre-dodestribution problem. Runaway, runaway catastrophe. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Runaway, pre-dodestribution problem.
Runaway catastrophe.
Yeah, I get it.
Positive feedback loops emerging everywhere.
And why do you think, what are the factors
that are driving the re-emergence of the famine?
You said there's a lot of instability in Central America,
and so we're gonna keep an eye out there.
Obviously Sri Lanka has collapsed entirely,
and there's absolutely no doubt whatsoever
that a major part of the reason that Sri Lanka collapsed
is because the globalist utopians gathered
the reins of government in Sri Lanka
because it was actually developing at quite a rate.
And as you said, it would have a lot of food
and not a bad general income level just a few years ago.
So this wasn't the catastrophic country to begin with.
It was a country on the move upward,
and it was completely scuttled by these globalist plans. And so what's contributing to the developing
famine right now in and where do you think it's going to be most intense? Where will it be the
most intense? That's something I think about every single day. One of the things I've learned
in wars and then the study of war is whatever you think will probably turn out to be wrong.
Yeah, you know this. I watch so many of your programs.
This you know the
the systems that
that emerge will will present themselves in due course, right?
What we can see is the the you know when I i talk with uh... lara logon the famous uh... correspondents you'll say
they've been talking about you know uh... one point two bill they meaning
world economic form have been talking about uh... one point two billion people uh...
uh... force to migrate they've been talking about that for years and it's true
yeah they're gonna blame it they're bloody well gonna blame it on climate change
you watch that's what we're gonna blame it. They're bloody well gonna blame it on climate change. You watched.
That's what we're gonna do.
Absolutely.
You bet.
Yeah.
So 1.2 billion.
1.2 billion.
So my estimation of 150 million is you think is optimistic?
I think highly optimistic.
I would not be surprised.
Jordan, I would not be surprised if within my 2025
if a billion people aren't dead.
I mean, we're really heading into the most epic famines
that have ever happened in human history.
I was looking at an economist cover the other day,
the economist magazine, and it said,
20 million people saved by COVID vaccine.
And I thought, yeah, you bastards, for every
million, for every million persons that you saved with the lockdowns and the whole vaccination,
not the vaccination scam, but the pandemic panic, you're probably going to kill 50 because
of supply chain disruptions and postponed starvation.
And so, you know, that's part of the problem
with turning political decisions over
to the medical experts is that,
well, we save some people with the left hand
and we do 100 more with the right hand.
And there is a lag.
We basically tried to shut down the world's economy
for two years as if we could do that
because, well, look, everything's so plentiful, isn't it?
Doesn't it matter at all that people aren't gonna go to work?
It turns out that it actually matters a lot.
And so what are the factors right now
that are contributing to this emergent food insecurity,
quote, problem?
Why are these people who are being fed, not being sad now? Let's talk about energy.
Energy is another kill shot.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
This highly ill-advised war in Ukraine.
I was in Lithuania last year warning about this over and over and over.
I was down in Morocco with my friend,
War Correspondent Chuck Holtman, we called up Frontex,
which is like the European border patrol, you might say.
Their headquarters in Warsaw, and they said, Belarus, Lukashenko, the dictator there, is
pushing migrants into Lithuania.
And I had been with the Lithuanian army in Afghanistan.
I called them up.
I said, what's going on?
And they said, hey, come on up.
So I flew from Morocco to Vilnius, Lithuania, and I had full access to their elected officials,
intelligence, the camps for the migrants, and army, the whole thing. So for almost a month, right?
So I was very well aware that Russia is up to something, and I was publishing that, right?
And so we've gone into this war on Ukraine, right? And Russia is just of course obviously
a Nord Stream is cut, right? Will it be turned back on? And now as you probably are aware, we just
had a lot of... I wouldn't turn it on if I was Putin. I wouldn't either. And you know, even Trump warned
them about this years ago, love him or hate him. He was very clear about it and we just had an explosion roughly
a month ago at a Texas Port and LNG facility which is critical, right?
We were supplying liquid natural gas to Europe.
This would have helped you need this for the Bosch, the Hayber Bosch process to create
it.
Many of the fertilizers right, That natural gas is very important. Then we had an explosion and a pipeline explosion
roughly two weeks ago in Texas.
And then we just had another natural gas problem
at a plant in Oklahoma.
We've had three Oklahoma, two in Texas, right?
Meanwhile, they're being shut off in from Russia.
And we've got a potential war brewing here,
for instance, between Iran and Israel.
Imagine where that could go on energy supplies.
We're looking at...
Okay, so let's look at that for a minute.
So I'm going to lay down a proposition here
for all of you who are listening.
If you are a friend to the poor and the oppressed
and the hungry and the hungry.
The number one thing you wanna do is drive energy prices
as low as they possibly can be
on every front that you possibly can manage.
And that bloody well includes coal and petroleum
and natural gas.
And then we could add nuclear to that.
And if you wanna throw renewables in
for the tiny percentage that they account for,
you could do that too. But because energy is equivalent to work and because work is
equivalent to food and shelter, if you make energy expensive, what you do is you starve the poor.
And you don't have to starve them very much before they become desperate and things fall apart.
And then we fall into these positive feedback loops that Michael is being describing. And so when
you hear these bloody,
globlest, globalist utopians talk about the necessity
for higher energy costs,
you remember that that comes directly
at the cost of the world's poor.
Kristia Freeland, the deputy prime minister of Canada,
two weeks ago had the unmitigated
and I would say quasi-demonic gall
to announce publicly that $8 at Gallen Gasoline in Canada was actually
probably a good thing because Canadians should be reminded nonstop just how severe the climate
crisis is every time they fill up their cars.
And that's perfectly bloody fine unless you're living on the edge of your economic capability
and the fact that you can't afford to fill up your car anymore puts you into unemployment
and food deprivation and relationship to your
children.
And that's in the rich West.
And now in Europe, we're so goddamn stupid on our energy policy because of these idiot
environmental schemes that we've made ourselves pathologically reliant on the Russians.
And we're going to bloody well see what that costs us.
And I know the Germans are burning coal again because they're, they're switch massively expensive
and counterproductive
switch to so-called renewals has been another catastrophe. And so now God only knows how expensive
energy is going to become. And that's directly related to the provision of the famines that Michael
is talking about. So get ready for this, folks, because it's coming down the pipes.
Jordan, Germans are collecting wood right now.
As much as they can get, they realize
this can be a very cold winter, right?
Yeah, this is going to be a very...
Well, that's what I thought of, the globalist utopian mantra,
let the poor freeze in the dark.
That's how you save the planet.
Yeah, no kidding, man.
If anything, it can destroy the European Union,
that'll be it.
If Germany collapses, it's over.
And many of us have been looking at Greece and Italy and Portugal and Spain for years,
wondering which one would go first.
I thought it would probably be Greece, but we saw Italy looks like they might be the first
to fall off the tree.
And probably the other three, Italy, Portugal, Spain, Greece or Italy already.
Greece probably will be soon to follow.
These are the weak canaries in this coal mine.
I mean, that'll fall out of the European Union.
Oh, yeah.
And now, look, Putin has just cut the gas for the annual maintenance.
And of course, we've got Zelenski over there saying that Canada should not send back the
turbine to Germany and he's inserting himself basically into the life and death of hundreds
of millions of people. Zelensky, the actor, we've never seen something like that.
If things continue, it's all about conditions. People often talk about sparks. You know, what will be the sparks? Yeah, yeah, no kidding, man. Sparks sparks is a amateur question.
Professionals talk about conditions. There's always sparks. And the conditions
that are being set now with whether it be the inputs of fertilizer,
hunger size, pesticides, all the other chemicals that go into agriculture,
the energy, diesel, LNG, just so many factors that are
really going the wrong direction, transport.
Famines in the past have generally been, recently I found in 1910, 1911, Britannica, and I looked
up famine.
I was just seeing what they thought about famine back then.
And it was a very wisely written entry in the Britannica
and they said they, and the entry positive that,
large famines are probably a thing of the past
because now we have modern transportation.
Obviously some of the largest famines were yet to come
because the largest famines are always caused
not by locuses and drought,
they're caused by people taking advantage of these things, right?
Like the, like the, the whole lot of more in, in, in, uh, 1932, 33 in Ukraine.
Very good book on that called Red Famine.
Where six million people were starved to death by the communists and where, where women
were shot, if they went out into the fields that had already been harvested to glean individual
kernels of grain by hand to feed their children.
If they didn't turn over those individual kernels of grain, then they were then they were
summarily executed.
And that was fun in the communist Soviet Union, only six million Ukrainians.
And so and you're exactly right on the famine front as we like to think that the reason
that people starve is because we don't have enough food. And at the moment, the reason that people starve is because we don't have enough food.
And at the moment, the reason that people starve is because we're stupid and often malevolent.
And so, okay, so Germany's in trouble.
And a huge part of this, as far as I'm concerned, is because of these unbelievably ill-advised
energy policies that were hypothetically put in place to aid the planet's movement towards
lower climate transformation.
And fair enough, maybe we have some concern on that front, but this absurd panicking combined
with post-hawk central planning and this insane notion that we can somehow make energy
more expensive without producing cascading sequences of catastrophes is naive beyond
belief and malevolent, at least
in part.
Now, Germany is in trouble because they're hyperreliant on the Russians.
And so now, back to the Dutch farmers.
Now, the Dutch government put pressure on the farmers recently because a legislative
body that was EU controlled, that's my understanding, decided in favor of an
idiot environmental group and that compelled the government, that's a non-legislative
body, by the way, the court compelled the government to act in relation to the farmers.
And apparently the farmers have had enough of this.
And so what's happening in Holland and elsewhere in Europe on the revolutionary front, let's
say, and what do you think their motives are, and what effect is this had in Holland and elsewhere in Europe on the revolutionary front, let's say, and what do
you think their motives are?
What effect is this had in Holland?
Wow.
This is a big topic.
As you know, the US farmers are probably the finest and most efficient in the world,
right?
Practically no Dutch people seem to know that, which is extraordinary, right?
And they don't realize how important their farmers are to the world, as the second largest
food exporter in the world.
Yeah, it's a miracle, right?
How big is Holland?
It's like, it's a tiny country.
You can drive across it in like three hours.
Meanwhile, Mark Ruta, the prime minister, is the teacher's pet of Klaus Schwab.
I mean, he's even more favorite than Trudeau, right, which is pretty hard to do. And so
that's right. That's a hard contest to win on the appalling front.
Yeah. And so, you know, the bureaucrats and Brussels, they are
ruling by decree, right? And of course, it has nothing to do with
nitrogen. Here, they're talking about nitrogen has nothing to do
with nitrogen has nothing to do with the moaning. It has to do with
Numerous things one is taking the land just as
Happened with Stalin and Ukraine you know with labeling the farmers kool-ox in Ukraine
You know the Ukrainian farmers and attacking and killing them
Here in Netherlands there is a information campaign to make the farmers look like bad guys here as well.
I mean, these are the new products, right?
When, let me tell you something about farmers.
I have spent more than half of my life overseas,
more than 80 countries, a lot of war.
I'm always going out with farmers, right?
And I've never met farmers from any country
I can't get along with.
I mean, like even Taliban farmers had common sense. At one point, I'm
an Afghanistan out with one guy, he's growing opium, he's growing poppy for opium. And
he said, you know, he's showing me the bugs on his plant. He said, your helicopters drop
these bugs on our plants at night to kill our plants. I said, well, no, sir, we should
be doing that because you're creating opium, but we don't.
We're not that smart and he goes, yes, you're not that smart.
And then it's like, let's go have tea.
But anyway, at one point, I'm out with the, because the two years I spent in Afghanistan,
one year was with various militaries like British and American militaries and Lithuanians
and that sort of thing.
And another year was just alone,
running around out with farmers and whatnot.
And at one point, yeah, the farmers,
farmers are so much, they're like truckers in that regard.
There's so much in contact with the,
they have the like,
yeah, yeah, electricians and contractors and carpenters.
That's why Christ was a carpenter by the way,
because if you're not honest, you can't build a house
that stands up, man, and he wasn't a PhD sociologist.
He was a carpenter.
And those people who have to have their hands in the dirt and their feet on the ground,
they have a sense about how the world works that's practical and embodied,
that the pinheaded academic globalists lock entirely.
And they're all often incredibly jealous of.
And so in Canada, it was the farmers and the truckers who rose up, you know,
the misogynists and the bigots and the racists in our prime ministers terms.
And then that's triggered these co-occurring protests in the US and in Holland.
And now, it isn't easy to get farmers upset either, because those tractors that they bring
to the protests, those things are bloody expensive, and most of the farmers don't own them.
They have to finance them.
And so they're running on very thin margins, three to five percent a year generally.
You have to be one county person to run a big farm in a modern economy.
You have to be paying attention to all sorts of unbelievably complicated and sophisticated
things.
And so when the farmers have been pushed to the point where they're willing to take
time away from their farms to spray manure on the government steps, it's probably time
to listen.
So I agree with you on that front, 100%.
So, okay, so you're in Holland
and you're talking to the farmers
and what are they telling you?
Well, you basically are reading my mind,
which is very difficult to do.
So when I was just in Mexico,
and I saw the Dutch farmers,
I know a lot of people in the Netherlands,
and so when I was getting inside, they were acting up, I was like, well,
Dutch farmers are actually protesting.
Yeah, right, right, right, man.
The last people you'd ever expect.
Yeah, so that's why I jumped on the airplane.
Because, you know, if the Dutch farmers are acting up, I need to come over here and hear
what they had to say.
That's for sure, man.
So let's talk about that.
It's, it's, first of all, clearly the, the, the first of all, clearly the WEP, they call it WEP here in Netherlands, the World
Economic Forum, is trying to control food supply, right?
That is production and distribution, right?
And so, in one of the ways to do this is, as Stalin did with, and Mao did in China,
and Stalin did in Ukraine and Russia, is to take the farms away from the traditional
farmers and then put your new your farmers on that land, right?
To what end, Michael?
Like, I read about, you know, the notion that we need, that we need to, you know, turn
to plant-based foods and insect-based protein in the future and that, you know, meat production
and all the cow methane are contributing to the degradation of the environment.
But what do you see this as a plan
or just as a part of the globalist utopian
ideologically blind stupidity?
Because I mean, there are farmers do pollute.
There is runoff from fertilizer.
It does cause algal blooms, for example, in the water.
And these are problems.
I don't think they're insurmountable problems, but you're pointing to something that's more
malevolent and deeper and programmatic.
And we don't want to go there without questioning that presumption.
I always think if you can explain it with stupidity, you don't have to explain it with malevolence.
Well, as you know, that's a... be careful with that one, because sometimes we have to explain it with malevolence. Well, as you know, that's a be careful with that one because sometimes we do have to go
to malevolence.
I know, I know, we do.
And I watch your show enough to know you know exactly why this is happening.
And let's talk about this.
If the Dutch farmers, let's take this as a premise, are the most efficient in the world.
Let's just say they're the second most efficient.
Why would you knock them out of the saddle to get somebody else to produce the food? Where Indian farmers, I mean, who's going to produce this food
in a much less efficient way that would create even more pollution? This is clearly about control.
Also, there's something that you never hear in any press that I've heard in the United States
is the tri-state city. Tri-state city is this smart city that they're proposing to build between the Tri-States
or Belgium, Netherlands, and Germany.
So this mega city basically that would take up all this farmland in that area and which
would bring huge amounts of more people into this area.
So the Tri-State City is something you don't hear much about, but that's another part of this plan. There was a fire about maybe 10 days ago. I went to
it right after the next morning, and it's a the picnic distribution center, which is,
there was a, there was an investment, $600 million into this picnic food distribution center
from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, coincidentally,
and it burned down, right?
And so, you know, that brought a little race of my brows.
Why did that thing just burn down?
There's many of them.
There's others and other ones that are growing.
But the bottom line is, is the bill and Melinda or Bill Gates is buying up farmland,
as you know, all over the place.
I know.
He is the biggest private landowner in the United States right now in the land that he's
buying up, he's taking out a food production.
And it seems to me because he's obsessed about meat production, at least in part, doesn't
leave that that's part of a sustainable future.
And so, but I do share your skepticism.
It's the same thing happens on the bloody energy front.
It's like, well,
Australia won't build coal generating electrical plants, but they'll ship their bloody coal to
China where they're going to build much dirtier plants. And the same thing applies to Canada,
if we shut down our energy industry, which are bloody insane, narcissistic, delusional,
traitorous prime minister, thinks happens to think is a good idea and seems to be working
as hard as he can to manage.
All that's going to happen is that we're going to seed the ground to people like potent,
who we also turned into a radical enemy with his hands on the control pump for Europe.
I mean, I don't see how we could be stupider here in the West if we actually took courses
in stupidity and tried as hard as we could.
We seem to be doing everything we can to break everything
as rapidly as possible.
And then I wonder too, is it, hasn't got to the point
where the people who think that you can't make an omelet
without breaking a few eggs?
And there's too many people on the planet
think that this is some sort of like needles,
eye that we have to go through all this mass starvation and death so that we end up with a sustainable population.
I mean, Jesus Christ, that's a dim and grim scenario. But as you said, why would you take the Dutch farmers out of business when they're so unbelievably hyper productive and efficient?
It's just, it's not like there's too much food, especially not if we don't have farmers.
If anything, I would be trying to get a large agricultural institute here in Netherlands to teach
other farmers how to be as efficient as Dutch farmers are. Replicate these farmers. In Afghanistan,
actually many of the farmers coming over, I was out in the farms quite a lot, were actually Dutch farmers to teach Afghans
how to do things better.
But the bottom line is, as you can see,
there is a huge, I watch you all the time.
You know what's happening.
There's a huge authoritarian,
the desire to have a one-world order is clearly strong.
And this isn't the first time it's happened,
as you know, it's a constant in human behavior.
And also as somebody who studies the human psyche a lot,
as you do, you realize pulling these farmers
off of their traditional farms, unroots them.
It cuts their anchor.
They're boat anchor.
They're gonna be drifting culturally,
so that makes them much easier to,
you can't control farmers.
Well, that's why you don't wanna get rid of the farmers.
You know, Stalin had to get rid of those farmers
because farmers have a mind of their own.
Same with Mao, you gotta get rid of those farmers
because they think for themselves.
And likewise here, these Dutch farmers think for themselves.
And so they're the bad guys.
To me, they're the great guys.
These are the bad men.
Yeah, me too, man. That's our backbone. They are our backbone. That's why I
flew to Netherlands from Mexico. I mean, that's how important this is. Okay, so what have you just
what have you discovered on the ground there? You've been talking to farmers. Tell us first of all,
tell us about how the protests were organized, what their scope is, and what the farmers, why the
farmers are doing this and what they hope to accomplish?
Well, the farmers, actually,
the farmers in Netherlands are amazingly cognizant
of what's happening.
Many people that I talk with around the world
don't realize, you know,
these other things like the Waffet,
you know, W-E-F and these sorts of things.
But the Dutch farmers are talking about it in detail.
They're like, ah, the nitrogen is nonsense.
And it's all about clashwob and Bill Gates is trying to do this
and they'll go into great detail.
They know exactly what's happening.
They're trying to take our land
because of this, this, and that and the other.
And they know it.
They're not just like in Panama, it's another story.
Panama is just like give us cheap gas,
give us cheap cheap cheap cheap cheap this and cheap that
and we'll go home, right?
They're easily satisfied. Not the Dutch farmers, they're more sophisticated. cheap gas, give us cheap cheap cheap cheap this and cheap that and we'll go home right.
They're easily satisfied.
Not the Dutch farmers, they're more sophisticated.
These are serious players here.
And again, that's why I jumped on an airplane.
If people like this are blocking streets around Netherlands and we got the German farmers
joining up with them and saw it, they're blocking the border together, German and Dutch
farmers right.
Polish farmers, you know, I love Poland.
I spent two years there.
Polish farmers are making videos in support of Dutch farmers. That's how much is, look,
that started in Canada, jumped over to the United States. It's over here now. I mean, it's really
growing. This courage is spreading. And so, and you see, Italian farmers, Spanish farmers, people are rising up.
And the more they realize what's actually happening, because, you know, the man behind the
curtain is the W.E.F., the World Economic Forum.
Of course, we're going to have to deal with China, but at this rate, if Germany falls
from these energy issues, which is looking pretty likely at this point, China is going
to peel off the rock too, right?
As are we economically, right?
So for sure.
Yeah, we cannot sustain the...
We cannot sustain the collapse of Germany.
That's absolutely 100% obvious.
That would be an odd-year bloody catastrophe.
If Germany collapses, EU's gone, right?
For a while, right?
And I mean, the EU will probably dissolve.
That's my guess.
I don't know.
We'll see you in time, unfolds. But obviously, that'll take our economies with it and China, right? And I mean, the EU will probably dissolve. That's my guess. I don't know.
We'll see you in time unfolds.
But obviously that'll take our economies with it
and China, right?
And Japan.
And of course, Japan imports what, 60, 70%.
All these island nations and island state
like Hawaii, that import, Hawaii, 90% of their food imported,
right?
All of them.
They are going to be in for a world of hurt.
Japan imports most of its food. And you know, some of these countries they are going to be in for a world of hurt. Japan imports most of its food.
And some of these countries that I have to,
and I kind of, I should say, maybe insulted the French for a while years ago and saying,
why are they defending all these small farmers all the time?
Now I see the French wisdom.
You know, these small farmers, yeah, that resilience, and these, when you go to France, and I'm sure
you've been to France, and their small farmers everywhere provide a great deal of resilience,
right?
And that's why Netherlands, if they lose, these farmers are vital for that.
There is important as their army.
I mean, you know, without these farmers,
you're somebody else's pocket, Bill Gates,
World Economic Forum.
Yeah, well, and also if you lose,
if you lose the farmers for one generation,
you learn, you lose all that knowledge.
You know, and I saw the government said,
well, some of these farmers are just gonna have to move.
It's like, what are they going to do?
They're going to move their farm.
How are you going to do that?
You can't move a farm.
It's not like these things are just what transferable, fungible in this simplistic manner.
And so, yeah, this is, it's such a form of insanity.
And it's all justified by the fact that these half-wit globalists are
claiming constantly to be moral because they're saving the planet. And you know, I know this
literature, I know the planet saving literature, let's say, because I studied it for about
four years. And in some depth, and I think I found the world's thinkers who thought this
through properly. And that would be Matt Ridley and Bjorn Lomburg and Mary and
Tupi, most particularly, and all three of them, and I would put Bjorn Lomburg at the top
of that list.
Those thinkers knew something fundamental and something so bloody optimistic that I couldn't
believe it was true, what I first encountered it, which was that if we really want to reach
a kind of sustainable harmony with the planet, The best way to do that, absolutely, obviously,
is to distribute autonomous free market systems
as widely as possible.
And then to get people everywhere in the world
as rich as we can, as fast as we can,
because the biggest contributor to environmental degradation
isn't industrial development.
It isn't the efficiency of the Dutch farmers,
it's absolute bloody poverty and privation and the probability that people at the bottom
of the economic distribution are going to fall into these catastrophic positive feedback
loops that you described and devastate and lay waste to everything.
As soon as you make people rich, the data on this are crystal clear.
As soon as you get people up to about $5,000 a year in gross domestic product, they start
caring about the environment locally and autonomously.
And so we're in a situation right now where if our leaders weren't so concerned with scoring
cheap reputation points and being hyper moral in their ignorance and pretentious in their
global ambitions, we could be working towards a world where everybody had enough food and enough education
and were simultaneously inspired on their own account to engage in the kind of environmental
stewardship that would leave a good plan for the children and the grandchildren.
We could have our cake and eat it too, you know?
And yet what we're doing is we're breaking the supply chains and dooming the poor and fostering what's going to be a mass migration into Europe. And that's
just going to be a bloody catastrophe. And I hate to see this. And I hope I'm wrong and I'm just
being paranoid, but I don't think so. I don't think you're being paranoid. You know, again, I spend most of my time down range.
I spend a lot of time in places like China, India,
just good Lord.
I mean, you know, when you land in China,
sometimes I wonder if my airplane's gonna make it
through the smog or we're gonna get stuck
like amber in the smog.
I mean, it's so thick, sometimes you can't see the grain.
It's unbelievable.
And likewise with India, right?
I spent almost a year in
India and another year in Nepal, right, it's just in Thailand where I have an office. Sometimes
you have to have air filters in every room because you know, because all of Asia's not all of Asia,
but most of Asia's burning their farmland every year. You can see it in satellite, look it up. I
mean, it's unbelievable. So I mean, this pollution that comes from poverty
is quite intense, not that China is poor.
And rich in India, obviously, is increasingly wealthy,
but they have huge amounts of impoverished people
and their factories still actually are behaving
as if they're poor.
They're dumping smog out unfiltered, it's unbelievable.
Anyway, we could go on about that forever.
But the bottom line is the farmers are clearly under attack here in Netherlands.
The German farmers also were very efficient.
Again, I live four years in and and their farmers are also under attack
and and so all all across europe
how many people are engaging in these in these protests right now and are they
raging as intensely now as they were a week or two weeks ago
uh... my sense is that they're actually growing
uh... they're not uh... they're not say going like panima was in santiago last night
in panama
very violent burning things and stealing police cars
they're not doing that here
but you can see it's a more intellectual uh... at this point
it's not gotten intensely emotional at this point yet
uh... although i anticipate when if the energy doesn't get turned back on and
and and yeah through the Stream, things are going
to get emotional, right?
All across Europe, including here.
Now, most of the Dutch that I talk with, I was talking with a member of parliament the
other day, he was completely oblivious to the famines, right?
Just like Jesus Christ.
Just totally missing it, right?
And so this is kind of of concern. And most of the Dutch people
I speak with actually don't seem to see that, which is up, but there's these stores are nicely
stocked and this is Netherlands. It's a place of money. It's milk and honey here, you know?
As you know, you're a student of history. Often before the storm, everything's quite nice and the wine is flowing
and that's the way it is right now.
Yeah. And so I've read Western reports that it's about 40,000 Dutch farmers and so I don't
know what percentage of the farmers that is and I don't know if those numbers are anything
approximating accurate and I don't know if you also are aware, no doubt you are, of what's happening in Spain,
where I understand there's been about 100,000 people protesting.
And so what's the scale of this in Holland?
And it's growing into the fishermen are also coming out in support of the truckers as
far as I've been able to tell.
And if you want a job that's even more difficult than being a farmer, maybe being a fisherman
would be the more difficult job.
And so what sort of scale are these protests manifesting
at the moment in Europe?
And how many countries do you think are involved?
You said Poland, Germany, Spain,
the Netherlands, scale and spread Italy spread Italy as well. I'm kind of
reticent to make that guess yet and I've actually talked about this many times
over the years whether I was in the fighting in Thailand or the fighting in
in Hong Kong and which I've spent many years in these sorts of things and I'm
often you'll reticent to assign numbers. Now, the media might say 40,000 or whatnot.
I know it's a lot. Let's put it that way. And I do sense that it's growing.
It's not gripped the nation yet. It's not reached that level at all.
You see that the Dutch flags often being flown inverted now instead of red, white, and blue.
It's blue, white, and red. And now the Dutch government,
about within the last week or so,
said that they're gonna start taking those off
of the overpasses because they present some sort of danger.
Oh yeah, there you go.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
The danger is people will take a photo
and put it on, you know, their social media, right?
And then it'll spread.
And one town, I think two days ago,
said that they're not going to do it.
They're just gonna let them fly, right?
So I mean, so the symbols are growing,
I'll meet with all of the duck.
Okay, well we wanna focus on something here too
for the enlightenment of the listeners and viewers.
So I don't know if there's a more intelligently
and compassionately and justly civilized country
in the world than the Netherlands.
So let's think about that country.
First of all, it shouldn't even exist.
The Dutch had to literally drain the oceans and build walls just to make the country exist.
And believe me, man, you bloody well better be organized in order to do that.
And they did that hundreds of years ago and put together this unbelievable system of irrigation
and drainage that ran on those amazing windmills,
which are technological marvels.
And Dutch society is unbelievably civil and peaceful
and productive and interesting and culturally vibrant.
It's a great country.
It's a stellar miracle as Ion Hersheyhey-Ely pointed out, when she moved there from Somalia.
And so we don't want to underestimate the central significance of Holland. And then obviously,
of the Netherlands, obviously that country is predicated to some degree for its success
on the provision of stable food supplies and these unbelievably efficient farmers.
And so the fact that they are up in arms about all this is of signal, symbolic, and practical
importance, which is why I think it's so necessary to focus on their concerns and also so appalling
that this isn't headline news in every legacy media outlet across the West.
Because when the Dutch farmers are upset and moving on mass the way they are, something
has gone seriously wrong.
This is a canary in the coal mine situation.
It really is.
And as you mentioned, the sophistication of these people in general, basically the Netherlands,
the sophistication of building this country
out of nothing. I mean, it's basically flat pyramids. I call this just think of the pyramids
flat. I mean, this is very difficult country to build. And yet they did it back without
modern machines. They did it just in their brains and their brawn and they did it in persistence
and organization. These are extraordinary, they're not normal.
They're like Japanese, right?
They're like people.
Yeah, but more so, right?
And, and, and, and, yeah, right.
Well, they're even taller, right?
They're like, I think the Dutch are the tallest people
in the world.
And so I always feel like a shrimp when I go there
and, and metaphysically as well,
because it is such a remarkable country.
Hey, our tall.
I mean, they're bouncing their head off the moon.
It seems like, it's tall. I mean they're bouncing their head off the moon. It seems like. So, I mean, extraordinary people. And thus came these extraordinary farmers. And thus, they are an
important target to take out for people like weft. When you're talking about information more,
You're talking about information more. And when you're talking also, the food supplies, I mean, this is just like every company,
every, you know, invading army or whatever, always has a budget, right?
There's only so much energy you have, and it's the same with WFWF, the WEF.
And so you need to concentrate your efforts to get things going in places like Russia and
Ukraine, and to get things going in Panama if they're behind that,
and also Netherlands.
So pick your targets.
You're going to pick vital critical notes.
And Netherlands is a critical node.
There's a lot of bang for the buck here
by taking these farmers offline.
And culturally as well, because once Netherlands is unmoored,
remember, this is meant to be the hub
of Tri-State City. Don't forget Tri-State City. And what is that Tri-State City? What's
the idea there? Tri-State City is meant to be a mega smart city between the Tri-States
would be Germany, Belgium and, where those borders come together.
This mega city that many Dutch have actually not heard of.
They will take this farmer's land and make this mega city there and bring people from
all over the world.
And this is one of the reasons.
To what end?
To what end?
To what end?
What's the rationale for that?
Central plan.
Central plan.
Okay, okay. So, okay. So, what are the farmers hoping to accomplish? So what end? What's the rationale for that? Central plan. Central plan.
Okay, okay.
So what are the farmers hoping to accomplish?
In Canada, part of the reason that the trucker's going, boy, ended, I would say, and I would
say it ended pretty successfully in many, many ways.
First of all, they had the sense to end it before it degenerated into anything even vaguely
approximating violence, which was extremely wise and conservative on their part, and careful and compassionate. The
opposite of all the things they were being accused of, but part of the problem with the
trucker's protest, it wasn't exactly obvious what the end goal was, you know. And so
they were accused of fomenting rebellion and wanting to produce a January 6th insurrection, which
was basically what the bloody Trudel Liberals accused them of and tried to convince Canadians
of, and which the Americans, even Democrats, think is an utterly preposterous notion, and
which was factually untrue to the N.C. degree.
So, but they didn't exactly know what they wanted.
They wanted the damn government to leave them alone, fundamentally, and stop mucking about
with the energy economy, and stop intervening in their life that made having a livelihood impossible. But it wasn't more concrete
than that, you know, end of vaccine mandates. That was part of it, the mask mandates. But, and so,
but what is it that the Dutch truckers want apart from not being like
eviscerated and chased off their land?
apart from not being like eviscerated and chased off their land. Well, you know, I would say that the Canadian truckers protest didn't end.
It took on a life of its own. It spread. I mean, it's a fantastic...
Yeah, fair enough, man. Spread in America in here now, right?
And so, yeah, and what do the Dutch farmers want? Mostly they want to be left alone.
They want to be farmers. You know, they...
They want to go back to work. They be farmers. You know, they right I was out of the
They want to go back to work
They're farmers. I mean they're busy. Yeah, I mean they're business people
They're all those things at once. They just want to be left alone
They want to be farmers. They have their own culture and and they just want to do what farmers do which is farm
Right and make money and graze their families and and and and live life right and feed other people
Which is really nice of them.
All things considered.
Right, and I think everybody watching us probably has somebody
in their family who's a farmer, right?
I mean, it's just, I mean, pretty much all of this
are in some way tied to farmers, if not directly,
very close indirectly.
And the farmers, again, we can't understate this, the farmers are a backbone
of this culture. And when it comes to information wars, whether that be Mao unmooring Chinese or
the Russians doing this, you know, creating the Soviet Union, you want to cut people from their
boat anchors, cut them from their cultural anchors, and then they're very easy targets for many things,
for instance, genocide for one. And another is Menta's side, right? Rape of the Mind,
which is a great book which was written in Netherlands, right? Rape of the Mind, 1956,
one of the best books on brainwashing I've ever read, written right here.
Because this has happened many times in the past,
it's gonna continue to happen in the future.
And one of the most important vaccines that we can take
is to study cult making and menta sides.
And how these techniques are used against people.
I've studied these things for years
because when I was in special forces,
people talked about if you want to fight communism, you have to study cults because communism
is a cult, right? It's got cult-like components that are very important. So I studied cults
for years. I infiltrated a cult at one point. Actually, it was a carnival that I tracked down
oddly enough and infiltrated them. That's an interesting topic.
Oh my god, yes. It was epic. But the point is, is cults are cults. And the only cults people
won't see is the cult that they're in, right? People will never see, and that would be,
include me. If I'm going to cult, I'm probably not going to see it, right? But everybody else can see
it. Hey, that guy is in a cult, right? And so, you know, the cult making a waff, the W-E-F,
we can see clearly they've got this climate cult, right?
Yeah.
Everybody's like, oh, we've got to do this.
And, you know, we're willing to kill people
and mass to do it, even though we have no idea
about this matter.
Well, okay, so let's talk about that again.
You know, the reason I like Bjorn Lomburg,
because there are some concerns on the environmental
front, like we've always over fished the oceans to a terrible degree, and it would be better
if we polluted as the least possible.
There is some evidence that human contributions to global warming are a genuine thing, but
I looked at the data as broadly as I possibly could on that front. And I concluded that Lamberg's group in Copenhagen had the most intelligent approach to assessing
the problem and offering solutions.
And basically what Lamberg did was take the IPCC climate report and accept its prognostications
on the global warming front as accurate.
Now, that doesn't necessarily mean he believes that or that they are accurate, but he was
willing to start there.
And then he calculated with teams of economists, and I don't know how the hell else you do it,
what the detrimental consequences for global GDP would be as a consequence of the proposed
climate change.
And then he projected out what our wealth increase would be by the end of 2100 at
3% or 4% a year growth, which is about what we've averaged for the last 30 or 40 years.
And he calculated how less rich we would be as a consequence. So it would be much richer
than we are now, barring all the catastrophes that are man-made that we've been discussing,
but will be slightly less rich than we would have been if there wouldn't be climate change.
And then Longberg lays out a number of things that we can do to ameliorate the consequences
of climate change.
But he goes farther than that.
He said, look, climate change is not actually the only problem that we face.
There's a whole plethora of global problems, which is part of the reason there's like 200
UN sustainable development
goals. And it isn't obvious that we should be dumping trillions of dollars into climate
change, amelioration when we have other problems to solve as well. So he had 10 teams of economists
rank order the world's problems as outlined in no small part by the UN and say, look,
if we were going to donate resources, if we're going to devote resources to the amelioration of these serious problems, what are the most serious problems?
And where can we get the most bang for our buck?
And then he averaged across economists' approximations of what the cost benefit would be in addressing
these issues.
And what he found was that most of the issues having to do with climate change amelioration
don't even meet the top 20.
They're not even included in the top 20 for the things that we should be concentrating
on most.
And I read me, Longberg's work, and I thought, well, I've never seen anyone do a more careful
analysis of the entire situation than this.
Does anybody have a counter argument?
And the counter argument seems to be, if you're not a true believer in the apocalyptic climate nightmare, and if you don't think that no measures, no matter
how dramatic, are not even sufficient, then you're basically an agent of Satan.
And I just don't regard that as a careful and nuanced argument.
I think it's appalling, and it's a reflection of the ignorance and Luciferian pretensions of the globalist utopians and their absolute inability of themselves to become educated
on this front.
And so, well, sorry for the rant, but Jesus, you know, this is serious business.
Now they're trying to shut down the bloody farmers.
It's like what the hell's going on here.
We actually need food, especially poor starving people.
Remember them, socialists aren't those the people that you're supposed to be on the
side of.
Well, all you're doing with your idiot Utopian globalism and your environmental apocalypse
and your willingness to identify yourself as part of the morally neat because you care
about the planet is dooming, well, Michael thinks, a billion people to starvation.
So what the hell?
How is that moral?
Well, the climate problem is so serious that if we have to starve a few people to solve
it, it's like fair enough, man, let's say you're right.
Well, you're not because as soon as you make people poor, you make the environment worse. Period. The end. Not just a little bit worse. Way worse. Radically worse. Just wait
till you see what happens to Sri Lanka on the sustainable biological front. So, okay,
back to the Dutch farmers. So what's going to happen in Holland and what's going to happen
in Europe? You said it's dependent on whether the bloody Russians keep taps off.
What's going to happen? I think about that approximately once an hour because what's going
to happen, this is, you know, the system is emerging. The energy is, the energy is now
cut off. So a lot of these things that are important right now might seem unimportant
just one month
from now.
If that energy is not turned back on again, because this is going to cause an immediate
cascade, right?
And this summer will be over yesterday, you know, it was so hot here, some places closed.
It was only like 99 degrees.
Of course, I just came in from Mexico, so I'm good to go.
I sweat, but I'm from Florida, right?
So I mean, and so they actually were closing some places here
because it was too hot and some public transportation.
It's made me think, you know,
this is actually kind of a minor challenge.
This winter is gonna be cold.
This is a very serious deal.
As you know, energy is a kill shot for food, right? I mean, there's not enough energy.
They're not going to be able to create the fertilizer and transport the fertilizers there.
We already saw a large fertilizer plant close down in Norway and others as well. That's just one of
others. Well, and you and Ukraine and Russia are major sources of fertilizer production.
Yes. And China has just stopped their exports as well.
And many others.
Change.
This is a cascade.
And we're already, it's almost like a Kessler-Sendom cascade here, right?
I mean, it's just, and at this point, I think there's too much inertia to stop it at this
point.
There was, I think we could have had it off even a year ago uh... if we suddenly had serious leadership uh... across
and and we directly addressed
wf if we had a president and a
no we have what we have is leadership who meet and then laugh about putin
shirtless photos
that's what we have instead of serious leadership yet we have
we have a pack of many issues uh The inertia is too heavy at this point.
We're going to we're going to see a lot of starvation and a lot of hot human osmotic pressure
of the migration. Yeah. And of course, this leads to pandemic. We'll have real pandemic because
again, when you have many people starving there, first of all, they start migrating and eating things.
They don't normally eat and their immune systems are depressed.
Anyway, bottom line is, every time you get big famines, you get big pandemics, which
will create more war.
We get that positive feedback loop.
Well, good.
Then we can lock everybody down again.
That would be real fun.
We can lock everybody down again like they did in Shanghai and then we can disrupt the
supply chains any even more. And then we can disrupt the supply chains even more.
And then we can starve a bunch more people.
And maybe we will settle out with 600 million people and have a sustainable planet, you
know, with all those 600 million people living in the ashes and the skeletons, and with
barren, barrenness and apocalyptic nightmare everywhere around them.
That'll be a hell of an outcome.
It's interesting because some people say, hey, that's a
apocalypse and apocalyptic and doom and gloom.
And I say, if you've looked at my work over the many years,
you'll see I'm actually very measured. I wouldn't say
something like this because I know that my many people depend on me
to get things right. So I research seven days a week, travel
the world, talking with the right people, reading so many books you wouldn't believe,
and I try to figure out what's going on,
which is difficult.
But I do have a good track record.
And I can see how the conditions are setting.
It's not about sparks.
We see Panama, for instance, going in the wrong direction
at this point.
And that's obviously vital Panama Canal.
We see issues between Iran and
Israel, which could cause other energy issues. Nord Stream is cut. We've had the explosions
in Texas and in Oklahoma. Energy's got, even if Nord Stream were wide open, Europe's got
problem with energy this winter.
That's just a fact of life,
which means next year, remember,
famine creates famine.
Next year, we're not gonna have enough fertilizer, period.
We're eating the food that's already been growing
at this point.
So right now,
yeah.
So in addition to this,
normally we have a lot more resilience.
For instance,
we're out so that we have in the United States, okay, we do have incredibly
terrible droughts right now in the United States.
Normally, we could kind of fill in the gaps and it's not going to be happy days, but we'll
fill it out.
Nobody's going to starve to death.
But now our resilience is reduced.
And so, we're not going to be able to be sending food out to all over Africa and these sorts
of places without starving our own people now keep in mind by
the way during famines often countries like china were exporting huge amounts
of food while their own people are starving now is doing that actually stall
ended that when uh... when you crane was starving at that's a strange thing
about famine some countries continue to export food while their people starve
uh... but that's a side topic.
Well, that is what you do when you're aiming at starvation.
Yeah, well, so you're a lot of fun to talk to.
Jesus, you're the...
You're the... I don't know.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
That's an even more dismal conversation
than the one I would have with myself.
I would say, well, look, Michael, thank you very much
for talking to me today and enlightening me
and all of the people who are watching and listening about these
preposterous and appalling
occurrences. I sure hope you're diluted and wrong, but I'm afraid you're probably not, and that's really sad and horrifying, and
we're gonna be lucky if we get through this winter without major bloody catastrophe as far as I can tell on about five different fronts and
your bloody catastrophe as far as I can tell on about five different fronts and these absolute abdication of leadership in the West, especially on the environmental front, is right at the
forefront of all of this.
And so, all right, for everyone who's listening, I'm going to continue to talk to Michael
behind the scenes, so to speak. At Daily Wire Plus, I've added that to my YouTube offering or my
online social media offering, let's say, as part of this
daily wire deal, I have been talking to all my guests for an additional half an hour, so about
the development of their career, Michael's had an amazing life, I would say, in about five
different dimensions. And I would like to ask him how his interests unfolded and what pathway he followed and what his calling is to use an
an artistic biblical term and that's all offered at daily wire plus who have been kind enough to produce and film and edit
and help distribute publicize all of this work that's also part of the daily wire plus deal which I think is a good thing for everyone, including me and hopefully the audience. And so we're going to switch over to the Daily Wire Plus.
And if you want to support the work they're doing, which is at least in part trying to bring
actual journalism back into the world so that people know that famine is coming, for example,
please give some consideration to offering them some support, you know. We're hoping to make the daily wire plus into a reliable
alternative news source, which means an actual news source in today's world. And, you know,
I don't know if we can manage it, but that is our aim. So, Michael, thank you very much for
talking to me today. That was extremely interesting in the most horrible possible way. And
extremely interesting in the most horrible possible way. And kudos on your adventurous spirit, man, and your courage in the face of all this, God, you have a ridiculous life. It must be quite
something to be trying to address these concerns conceptually and in the practical way that you're
doing it, traveling and so forth. And by keeping your ear to the ground, it's an amazing thing that you're doing.
And so hopefully, hopefully it's gonna tilt us away
from the four horsemen of the apocalypse
because they certainly seem to be on the march again.
And that's pretty bloody sad to say the least.
So over and out everybody, and Michael, as I said, man,
thanks very much for agreeing to talk to me today.
Thank you, Jordan.
It was been a pleasure and an honor.
Thank you very much sir. I would encourage you to continue listening to my conversation with my
guest on dailywireplus.com.