The Michael Knowles Show - Ep. 1116 - The Power Is Shifting And The Libs Want A Truce

Episode Date: November 1, 2022

Click here to join the member exclusive portion of my show: https://utm.io/ueSEl The libs ask for a “pandemic amnesty” now that Republicans seem poised to retake Congress, the Supreme Court prep...ares possibly to overturn affirmative action, and a new report reveals that Facebook and Twitter have regularly conspired with the federal government to censor conservatives. - - -  DailyWire+: Stay informed by listening to Morning Wire and Election Wire on DailyWire+, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to podcasts Become a DailyWire+ member to watch the brand new DailyWire+ series “Dr. Jordan B. Peterson On Marriage”: https://bit.ly/3SsC5se  - - -  Today’s Sponsors: Birch Gold - Text "KNOWLES" to 989898 for your no-cost, no-obligation, FREE information kit: https://birchgold.com/knowles - - - Socials: Follow on Twitter: https://bit.ly/3RwKpq6  Follow on Instagram: https://bit.ly/3BqZLXA  Follow on Facebook: https://bit.ly/3eEmwyg  Subscribe on YouTube: https://bit.ly/3L273Ek Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Big news, guys, now that the Republicans are poised to retake the House, very likely the Senate, and probably many governor's mansions, the liberals who have tormented us over the past two years, who shut down our businesses, who made our relatives die alone, who kept our kids out of school, who forced us to choose between keeping our jobs and injecting ourselves with a dangerous experimental drug, The liberals who called us idiots and murderers for not wanting to destroy the global economy and turn our kids into lab rats, those liberals are now calling for a truce. What are the odds? Isn't that so weird? Headline in the Atlantic, let's declare a pandemic amnesty. We need to forgive one another for what we did and said when we were in the dark about COVID. You know, we just all, we just all did some things. You know, some of the same.
Starting point is 00:00:55 us kept your kids out of school and forced your relatives to die alone. And some of us had our kids kept out of school and had our relatives forced to die. You know, it's just like, it's just like we're all kind of the same here, right? Some of us destroyed the global economy and injected everyone forcefully with an experimental and dangerous drug. And some of us had that done to us. And so it's like kind of all the same, right? And we all just need to move past it, don't we? I won't read the entire article, you should. Just some highlights. while discussing the social distancing and the stupid hankies on your face and all that, they say, these precautions were totally misguided.
Starting point is 00:01:34 In April 2020, no one got the coronavirus from passing someone else hiking. Outdoor transmission was vanishingly rare. Our cloth masks made out of old bandanas wouldn't have done anything anyway. But the thing is, we didn't know. We didn't know. Some of us knew. I knew. You knew.
Starting point is 00:01:52 But, no, we just, we didn't know. Some people thought that the hanky was going to stop the global pandemic. You know, we just didn't know. In spring and summer 2020, we had only glimmers of information. Reasonable people, people who cared about children and teachers, advocated on both sides of the reopening debate. They didn't. They didn't.
Starting point is 00:02:14 All the people who were completely wrong and who often had very bad intentions were on the side of keeping the schools closed. And all the people who had mostly good intentions and who were correct were on the side of opening the schools. The people who got it right for whatever reason may want to gloat. Those who got it wrong for whatever reason may feel defensive and retrench into a position that doesn't accord with the facts. Treating pandemic choices as a scorecard on which some people racked up more points than others is preventing us from moving forward. No, no, you are preventing us from moving forward. You, you people, you libs who got everything wrong and who inflicted a
Starting point is 00:02:55 great deal of pain, usually intentionally, usually with a lot of glee on people, you, by refusing to acknowledge your transgressions, uniquely your transgressions, you are preventing us from moving on, because you won't let us learn a damn thing from the last two years. You won't acknowledge anything, you won't admit anything, you won't say that you're sorry. We have to put these fights aside and declare a pandemic amnesty. Moving on is crucial now. because the pandemic created many problems that we still need to solve. Yeah, right. The first problem we need to solve is you people, you're the problem.
Starting point is 00:03:34 You're the one who inflicted all the problems on us. The pandemic, such as it is, the virus was just a virus. There are viruses. There are epidemics. There are pandemics. That was not the trauma of the last two and a half three years. The policies that you all forced on us, the hideous anti-human policies, global economy, global political order
Starting point is 00:03:57 destroying policies that you inflicted on us. That was the problem. Pretty big change of tune, wouldn't you say? Because last year, you didn't get all this kumbaya, let's all get along kind of stuff. Last year, they were laughing at the thought of our deaths. LA Times. Mocking anti-vaxxers COVID deaths is ghoulish.
Starting point is 00:04:17 Yes, but it may be necessary. It's necessary to mock the deaths of conservatives who are skeptical of the dime. dominant regime. They were making the moral case for mocking our prospective deaths. But that was then, you see, and this is now. That was back then when they had all of the power. But now, we conservatives might have even a little tiny bit of power. So let's just call it a day and move on, right? Right? I don't think so. I think the best that I can offer in response to let's have a pandemic amnesty is military tribunals. I want these monsters arrested and tried and shipped off to Guantanamo Bay,
Starting point is 00:04:59 frankly. That's my initial negotiating position. And it damn well had better be the position of the Republicans that we're about to elect, because anything less than a full accounting of the lies and deceit and outright crimes of the COVID era will be nothing more than an invitation for the Libs to do it all again. I'm Michael Knowles. This is the Michael Knowles show. Welcome back to the show. My favorite comment yesterday is from Abraham Cardenas, who says, it's very nice of Michael to dress up as Rachel Maddow and to have a picture of Joe Biden on his desk. Yes, that's true. It was very spooky when I had that bust of Joe Biden there, that skeletal bust. And yesterday, of course, it was Maddow Monday. It leads right into Noel's Vember baby.
Starting point is 00:05:50 And so I think a great way to kick it off. I've lost my lesbian glasses for today. I'm back as my own man here, ready to. say true things to protect my country, to protect my wealth in yours, which is why you got to check out, Birch Gold. Right now, text Knowles to 98, 98, 98, inflation continues to plague our economy. The current administration's irresponsible spending patterns continue to exacerbate the problem. Now is not the time to have all your money tied up in the stock market. Do not let your savings wither away. Hedge against inflation with gold from Birch Gold. Text Knowles, K&WLES to 98-98-Berch Gold will send you a free info kit on protecting your savings with gold.
Starting point is 00:06:35 Birch Gold is giving out a free gold bar with any purchase made by December 22nd. This offer must be claimed by Black Friday. With almost 20 years of experience in converting IRAs and 401Ks into precious metals IRAs, Birch Gold can help you too. Do not sit around while the Fed devalues your hard-earned money. Text Knowles, KNAWLS to 98, 98, 98, and learn how you can convert at least part of your savings into a precious metals IRA. If you place an order by December 22nd, Birch Gold will send you a free gold bar. Text Noles, KNAWLAS to 98, 98, 98, 98. It has been a rough few years, hasn't it?
Starting point is 00:07:14 Hasn't it? But this year, seems like things are kind of turning around. I'm not, I am not totally depressed and despairing and blackpilled, okay? I think this year's actually been pretty good. One, we're almost certainly about to elect a ton of Republicans, hopefully get some accountability for the last few years, hopefully move the country in a good direction. But just the Supreme Court would be enough to say that 2022 is one of the greatest years in American history, despite Joe Biden, despite the potential of World War III, despite the record high inflation, despite all of that. just the Supreme Court. Let's not forget, 2022 is the year that we overruled Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey. And there's an analysis that just came out from 538, which is the sort of center-left polling outlet.
Starting point is 00:08:05 538 by Nate Silver has new data, which indicate that at least 10,000 women were unable to get an abortion in July and August because of it. the Dobbs decision. Now, of course, 538, because its left wing, is presenting this as a terrible, awful thing. Oh, no, 10,000 women were denied that medical care and the reproductive rights, and isn't this terrible? And that was just in two months. Imagine later on when even more of these pro-life laws are implemented. I look at that number, and I think, oh my goodness, this is this is some of the greatest news in American history. Because you're finally seeing 850,000 people a year are killed through abortion or were during the reign of Roe and Casey. And now that's turning around.
Starting point is 00:08:58 10,000. It's very difficult for human beings to conceive of numbers greater than 100. But 10,000 people is a lot of people. It's a lot of people. My graduating high school class was about 330 people. So that's three times my high school class is 1,000 people. So 30 times my high school class is 10,000 people. 30 times my graduating high school class,
Starting point is 00:09:32 that number of people will be alive because five justices on the Supreme Court had courage. We think of these court decisions and these laws in very abstract terms, what they mean for society or humanity or the culture or whatever. We're talking about individual people. How many friends do you have? Like five, maybe? People don't have a ton of close friends. Think about how valuable every single one of those people is to you. What you wouldn't give to make sure that that person gets to live, gets to be, if they were in danger, if they were in danger of death,
Starting point is 00:10:12 to be rescued. Now, multiply that person by 10,000. There will be, in 10 years from now, 15 years from now, people will be doing interviews, maybe 20 years from now. They'll be doing interviews saying, I am alive today because Amy Barrett and Brett Kavanaugh and Neil Gorsuch and Sam Alito and Clarence Thomas had courage and moral clarity. That's incredible news. Now, there's even I'm not going to say better news, but there's more great news coming down the pike from the Supreme Court. The hits seem poised to keep on coming. Because now this term, the Supreme Court is going to take on another major social question that conservatives have fought in vain for for many decades.
Starting point is 00:11:01 And that even conservative appointments on the court people like Sandra Day O'Connor and other people have kind of squished on. And so our hopes have been dashed on this before. The Supreme Court is going to take up the question of racial discrimination in college admissions, better known as affirmative action, but the idea that certain students will not get into college because of their race. And other students will have an unfair advantage in getting into college because of their race. There's really, really good news on this front. The Supreme Court just heard oral arguments in two cases taking on affirmative action in college yesterday,
Starting point is 00:11:35 and the signs are very, very promising. So the Supreme Court hears the oral arguments yesterday. these two cases about affirmative action in college being brought by a legal group that is challenging this on behalf of Asian students. You know, Asian students and white students are put at a disadvantage, and black students and Hispanic students get an advantage. Now, we have a conservative court. It's at least a 5-4 conservative court because Roberts is a squish who will usually side with the liberals on really contentious issues. But you've still got then 5-4, you know, you can at least kind of count on the conservative court. And then there's even better news because the newest justice, Katanji Jackson, the justice who doesn't know what a woman is. She's had to recuse herself from these cases because
Starting point is 00:12:24 one of the cases involves Harvard. And she was just recently on one of the boards at Harvard. And so it's a conflict of interest. So she's out. So the deck is even more in the, the stacked in the direction of the conservatives. There was an amazing poll that was done. Pew Research polled Americans and said should race and ethnicity be a factor in admissions? 75%, three quarters of Americans say
Starting point is 00:12:51 no, absolutely not. And don't forget, the Supreme Court watches the polls. The Supreme Court reads the newspapers. So the fact that public opinion is now with the conservatives and with justice when we're talking about affirmative action, this is a really, really good sign.
Starting point is 00:13:12 So the cases are students for fair admissions versus Harvard and students for fair admissions versus the University of North Carolina. The most telling part of the oral arguments yesterday was when Clarence Thomas, the OG, the MacDady on the court, Mr. Conservative, oldest conservative member there, was grilling the lawyer for UNC about diversity because the libs say we need affirmative action because we need diversity because diversity is really good for education. the interest of the university to have diversity by which they mean giving extra points to black students and taking points away from Asians and whites. And Clarence Thomas, black man on the court,
Starting point is 00:13:55 it's very difficult to call the guy racist. He says, okay, judge, I'm following your line of argument. Now, what is your, okay, counsel, okay lawyer for UNC, I'm following your line of argument. Now, what is the evidence that diversity is good for education? Here's the question. Mr. Park, I've heard the word diversity quite a few times, and I don't have a clue what it means. It seems to mean everything for everyone. And I'd like you, first, you did give some examples in your opening remarks, but I'd like you to give us a specific definition of diversity in the context of the University of North Carolina. And I'd also like you to give us a clear idea of exactly what the educational benefits of diversity.
Starting point is 00:15:00 at the University of North Carolina would be. So Clarence Thomas, very good lawyer, he says, look, this word diversity is really slippery. So I need you to give me a definition of what diversity actually means, because I can't quite nail it down. And then after that, I don't want to hear about the social benefits of diversity, the political benefits of diversity. I don't want to hear about the benefits to the black students or the Asian students, or obviously it doesn't benefit the Asians very well, or anything else. I want you to tell me what educational purpose is served by diversity. Now, this should be a layup. If the UNC and Harvard have any case at all for their unjust racial discriminatory practices in college admissions,
Starting point is 00:15:50 this should have been the first answer that they figure out and memorize. It should be so easy, right? But here's the answer. Yes, Your Honor. So first, we define diversity the way this court has and its court's precedence, which means a broadly diverse set of criteria that extends to all different backgrounds and perspectives and not solely limited to race. And there's a factual finding in this record, PEDAP 113, that there are many different diversity factors that are considered as a greater factor in our admissions process than race. On the educational benefits question, Your Honor,
Starting point is 00:16:25 I don't think it's actually disputed here that there are real and meaningful educational benefits that come with diversity of all kinds. SFA's own expert, this is on JA 546, conceded and agreed enthusiastically, in fact, on the stand that a racially diverse and a diverse diversity of all kinds leads to, quote, a deeper and richer learning environment, leads to more creative thinking and exchange of ideas, and critically reduced bias between people of different backgrounds and not solely different racial backgrounds. But you still haven't given me the educational benefits. I love Clarence Thomas there, just in that really slow plotting.
Starting point is 00:17:10 He's almost like the Norm MacDonald of the court, which is that he's an extremely intelligent man, but he kind of plays dumb sometimes. And Scalia did this to some degree as well. So he says, okay, it's a simple question. what's the educational benefit of diversity? And the lawyer says, well, there's actually a total consensus among all the really smart fancy people that diversity is really, really good. And they all say that it's really, really good.
Starting point is 00:17:37 And they've said for years, actually, that diversity is really, really good. And that's why diversity is really, really good for education. And Clarence Thomas there goes, maybe I'm a little slow, maybe I'm a little thick. I don't know. But you didn't answer the question. You're telling me that other people agree with you, but you're not telling me why. You're not presenting any sort of evidence. Even the definition of diversity he doesn't really address. He just says a lot of jargon and gobbled egook and says, well, there's all different types of diversity. I think Clarence Thomas, I hope he never retires from the court. If he does, he's got to come straight to daily wire so we can make a Walsh-esque movie. What is diversity? What is a woman starring Walsh? What is diversity starring Clarence Thomas? The answers are going to be completely non-sense.
Starting point is 00:18:23 sensical in both. This was really devastating, I think, to the UNC and Harvard and pro-affirmative action argument here. On their most basic question, they don't have an answer. What good is diversity in education for education? They don't have an answer. Because the answer is obvious. Diversity in itself is not always or even often a good thing. Why, explain to me why diverse. Explain to me why diversity, take the word however you want to take it, because it's hard to pin down, like Clarence Thomas says. Why is diversity a good thing? Is it on our money, does it say out of many, even many different things, out of many more, out of many far greater distinction and difference and individualism? No, it says e pluribus unum, out of many one. We are not.
Starting point is 00:19:22 not the diverse states of America. We are the United States of America. Unity is a strength. Diversity is not a strength. It's a weakness. So when you bring in people of different backgrounds or different experiences or whatever, that can be all well and good, but it has to come with a unity. So if we're going to have a country made up of lots of different types of people, we need to all speak the same language. We have to broadly believe the same things. We have to be engaged in the same common endeavor. We have to recognize the same common good. In a university, you can bring in people of any kinds of background if you like. But this is the very point of the university. The university is supposed to bring you all together for the single-minded pursuit of truth.
Starting point is 00:20:11 That's why it's a university. It's not a diversity. It's a university. It's right there in the very word. Absolutely devastating to the case. And so I think if the UNC and Harvard team can't muster better arguments than that, hard to see how affirmative action survives 2023. Really, really good news to look forward to. Speaking of attacks on diversity, big news from Apple, Apple has just announced that the iPhone is going to be getting USBC ports. So right now it's got that lightning port, but it's going to change the port, and they're changing it. They're really irritated. They have to change it. They're changing it because the European Union forced them to. The European Union passed a law that requires all phones and tablets sold in the EU to use USBC by 2024. And because it's such a huge
Starting point is 00:21:00 market, they can basically force Apple to give that to everybody. And I mentioned this story, not because I care about tech or Apple or anything like that, but this is the kind of story that's going to split people on the right, because you're going to have the libertarian types who are going to hate this. And they're going to say, this is big government sticking its nose in where it doesn't belong. And Apple has a right to use whatever charging ports it wants. And this is a terrible thing and a great threat to freedom. And then you're going to have the conservatives who say, okay, who cares? That's fine. People have the right in our political community to decide how we live. And the phone is now essential to how we live, specifically the iPhone. And so we have a right to say, okay, we're going to use this charging port. The charging port itself doesn't really matter, but the broader issue of how we view politics actually does.
Starting point is 00:21:47 And I think from, I don't know, the year 2010 to 2015, that more libertarian view really dominated. Let the corporations do whatever they want. Come on, don't let the government get in the way. I mean, and you heard kind of an undertone of that really even for two or three decades now. I think that is changing. And I think conservatives are beginning to realize. The government is not always our enemy, and the corporations are not always our friend. And sometimes it's actually a little bit tricky to tell the difference between where the public sector ends and the private sector begins, where the government ends, and the corporations begin. And we need to wield political power where we can and when we can for justice.
Starting point is 00:22:31 Does it matter with the charging ports? I don't really think so. But on bigger questions, on the kind of questions that the libs are trying to call a truce on now, on education. on health care, on drugs, on big farm, on all of that, we must wield our power. Totally fine. Totally fine with that. Speaking of government tyranny, really important new report just came out from The Intercept. Haven't seen it going around as much as it should. Read this report from the Intercept. Truth Cops, leaked documents outlined DHS's plans to police disinformation. So what did we learn from this report. The report shows that basically big tech has been colluding with the government to censor right-wingers, and they've been doing it not just in a kind of vague way where, you know,
Starting point is 00:23:24 maybe Zuckerberg and some big lib and the government go out and have a drink and they kind of come to an agreement. No, they did this in a very formal way. Facebook and Twitter set up special portals for the government to rapidly request the takedown of content. So if I'll I go out there and I start posting some questions about the 2020 election, let's say, or I go out there and I start posting some questions about the vaccines or posting questions about the origin of the COVID virus or anything like that, the government could go in there and rapidly request that that content come down. And we know that that content has come down. I mean, we saw it happen during 2020 just with one story. The New York Post posts the Hunter
Starting point is 00:24:04 Biden laptop story. It instantly comes down. You see big tech, almost uniformly, not only censor the story from being posted, but in many cases, stop it even from being sent through private messages. When you logged onto a lot of social media sites in 2020, you couldn't even privately send that story to your friends. Why did that happen? We now have it because of these leaks in this report. FBI agent Laura Demlo was in communication with Facebook that led specifically to the suppression of the Hunter Biden laptop story because the FBI told Facebook that it was disinformation. And then just this year, she met with Twitter and DHS to stress, quote, we need a media infrastructure that is accountable. We find out now because of emails and
Starting point is 00:24:53 documents that have come out that Vigaya Gatti, she was that Twitter apparatchik who censored Donald Trump, booted the duly elected sitting president out of the public square, that Vigaya Gatti met monthly with the Department of Homeland Security to discuss. censorship plans. One Microsoft executive even texted the Department of Homeland Security and said, platforms have got to get comfortable with government. Okay, so this is not just, oh, there's one bad actor, oh, there's a little bit of corruption here. The whole system is extremely corrupt. And it finally makes sense now why the libs are losing their freaking mind over Elon Musk taking over Twitter. First of all, shouldn't they be happy that Elon Musk is taking over Twitter? We're finally
Starting point is 00:25:38 getting more diversity. Big Tech is finally, one platform is owned by an African American. They should be thrilled about this. And an immigrant for that matter. Gosh, it checks every box, right? Elon Musk is not some far right-wing conservative. Didn't he vote for Obama? I mean, isn't he, he certainly holds a lot of positions that Obama would have held. He's kind of a, I always thought he was kind of a center-left guy. He has some kind of right-wing positions. But most importantly, most importantly, they can't totally control him. He does things that they apparently do not like. I don't think that he is going to be allowing the federal government
Starting point is 00:26:17 to come and run roughshod over our speech rights. He took over Twitter on the promise that it will be much more open to all speech and especially to conservative speech. And the libs don't like that because the libs never, ever, want you questioning the narrative. That's why they're so worried about this. Right now, they have a total lock on the narrative. You know, I'm giving a speech tonight at the University of Kentucky. I'm going to be giving it on conspiracy theories. Because, you know, it's one of the two worst things you can be called in the country. Worst thing you can be called as a racist because that
Starting point is 00:26:52 means you're just the absolute embodiment of evil. Racism is just a synonym for evil. And the second worst thing is a conspiracy theorist because it means you're the dumbest, coociest quack out there. And so those combined are the two worst things. And yet, the strange thing with the conspiracy theories is, well, one, just like racism, it's hard to figure out exactly what that term means. But two, plenty of conspiracy theories have been proven true. Like this one, like the conspiracy theory that the government is colluding with the social media platforms to censor the public square and to boot out conservatives. That's just a, that's a conspiracy fact.
Starting point is 00:27:29 Okay. That's a conspiracy theorem. We've proven it. And it's true of so many other conspiracy theories. I mean, we know that the federal government, the bureaucracy, has been involved in controlling the media for many decades in this country. You think about something like Operation Mongoos, which I'll talk about tonight. Well, this is just a continuation of that, except with far greater efficacy, because here it's so technologically advanced. You can actually just go in and say, nope, that person's silenced. boop, you're gone. Nope, that story nuked. You can't even privately talk about it. Boop, boop, boop, boop. And so much more highly targeted. This is why you have people in the popular culture who are, who you might
Starting point is 00:28:12 not expect, who are questioning the narrative. One of them is Kyrie Irving. I'm not the biggest basketball fan, as you might know, not the most athletic fella out there. Kyrie Irving, I was just watching his interview, his press conference. And I expect the press to be talking about basketball and stuff like that. And instead, I find all the press wants to talk about is the fact that Kyrie Irving posted a generally innocuous, seemingly innocuous Alex Jones clip once to his Instagram. Gary, while we're on the topic of promotion, why did you decide to promote something that Alex Jones said. That was a few weeks ago. I do not stand with Alex Jones position, narrative, court case that he had with Sandy Hook or any of the kids that felt like they had to relive trauma or parents
Starting point is 00:29:13 that had to relive to all the lives that were lost during that tragic event. My post was a post from Alex Jones that he did in the early 90s or late 90s about secret societies in America of a cults. And it's true. So I wasn't identifying with anything of being a campaignist for Alex Jones or anything. I was just there to post.
Starting point is 00:29:37 And it's funny, and it's actually hilarious because out of all the things I posted that day, that was the one post that everyone chose to see. It just goes back to the way our world is and works. I'm not here to complain about it. I just exist. And to follow up on the promotion of
Starting point is 00:29:54 the movie and the book, Can you please stop calling her a promotion? And it goes on. That was the nice part of you. This reporter just keeps showing. But why do you like Alex Jones? Why are you promoting Alex Jones? Why do you, come on, stop.
Starting point is 00:30:07 You can't promote Alex. You can't talk about Alex Jones. You can't why, why, why? And Kyrie is saying, look, I don't, man, I don't know about the Sandy Hook thing or whatever. I don't care. I'm not saying anything about that. I posted a clip from 30 years ago.
Starting point is 00:30:17 By the way, here's the clip. The facts in common sense are in. Yes, there have been corrupt empires. Yes, they manipulate. Yes, there are secret societies. Yes, there have been oligarchies throughout history, and yes, today in 2002, there is a tyrannical organization calling itself the New World Order, pushing for worldwide government, a cashless society, total and complete tyranny. By centralizing and socializing health care, the state becomes God, basically, when it comes to your health, and then by releasing diseases and viruses and plagues upon us, we then basically get shoved into their system where human beings are absolutely worthless.
Starting point is 00:31:00 That's just true. That's just a fact. What's he saying? There have been oligarchies in history. People sometimes conspire in small groups to seize power. And there is a popular phrase called the New World Order that certain people are advocating for. Today, we would probably call that more the Great Reset. But it's the same thing. You used to have very prominent people using this phrase saying, we need a great reset. We need a new world order. That's just a fact. So why, even, by the way, so Kyrie Irving, right, he's very quick to say, I don't, you're trying to talk to me about a Sandy Hook shooting. I'm not saying anything about that. I obviously, I think that's bad that he said that. I'm okay, bad Alex Jones. But what's your problem? Why can't I post this clip about how political power is often different than it appears to be?
Starting point is 00:31:48 Well, no, you're not allowed to post that. I mean, it makes you wonder, the fact that they're punishing Alex Jones this way, but you've now got a court order that he'd pay upwards of a billion dollars for getting a story wrong on the air. Yes, he got the story very wrong. Yes, it was horrible what he said. Yes, he's the worst person in the world. Okay, fine, sure. I mean, let's just grant all that. A billion dollars for getting a story wrong on the air? Followed by now the demand for $2.75 trillion? It's just so bizarre when you think that many other people in our culture have said way crazier things, way way much, more harmful things that have had much more of a harmful effect in the real world. I mean, just talk about what the kind of lies and misinformation that went on during COVID, from the libs who are now demanding a truce and an amnesty and pleading for it. I mean, those lies resulted in much more
Starting point is 00:32:37 actual real world harm than anything that even Alex Jones has said. And sure, he said totally wacky thing. Okay, sure, fine. But in terms of real world harm, it hasn't been more harmful than what Anthony Fauci said. Hasn't been more harmful than what Rochelle Walensky said or Joe Joe Biden said or any of these other people. So why do they go? Because when Kyrie Irving, I haven't spoken to him about this, but when Kyrie Irving sees the kind of multi-trillion dollar requests, billion-dollar judgments against someone for saying something, when he's just being inundated at his press conference by these questions about this one random clip he posted that was basically anodyne in and of itself, that is going to give him and other people more reason to believe,
Starting point is 00:33:21 huh, maybe, maybe there is a kind of oligarchic political power here. I wasn't totally convinced of it before, but now, but now I wonder, conspiracy theories such as they are grow during periods of a lack of trust in our political institutions. And that's not the end of the story. People lose trust in our institutions because of corruption and conspiracy that, actually takes place. We've got the evidence of it in black and white. You know, the corporate media agenda means that the news is presented in a biased way. You know it, I know it, everybody knows it. Thankfully, there is a way to get the most important news of the day without their narrative. That is by listening to one of the top news podcasts, Morning Wire. New episodes are available
Starting point is 00:34:13 every morning, seven days a week, and they cover stories other media outlets won't touch. Every Sunday until the midterm elections, you can also tune into Election Wire for Indeastern for in-depth coverage, candidate interviews, and more. It's the most important mid-term election in recent history. It's coming up soon. You'll want to be informed. He will find Morning Wire and Election Wire on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Daily Wire Plus, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
Starting point is 00:34:37 Speaking of the Deep State attacking conservatives, Lee Zeldon is, he's the Republican candidate for governor in New York, and all of a sudden, he's under investigation for super PAC violations. Here he is being reported by the Hill. Lee Zeldon, the Republican candidate for governor in New York, it's under investigation by the State Board of Elections over allegations that he coordinated with two Super PACs supporting his campaign. What does this mean? According to our current silly election laws,
Starting point is 00:35:12 candidates can raise an unlimited amount of money. That is, people who support candidates can donate an unlimited amount of money, to support that candidate. But the election laws, for some stupid reason, say you can't donate the money directly to the candidate's campaign. You have to donate it to something called a SuperPack, which is a totally separate group that, according to the law,
Starting point is 00:35:42 can have absolutely no coordination or anything whatsoever with the campaign. Now, the SuperPack only exists to support the candidate. or some con men have exploited this law to pretend they say, I've got a super PAC. I've got the new super PAC that support Donald Trump. And they've really never talked to Donald Trump, and they really have never coordinated with Donald Trump, and they really have no intention of giving any money to help Donald Trump.
Starting point is 00:36:10 They just use it to make money for themselves. And you saw a lot of these crop up since this stupid super PAC aspect of the law has gone into effect. But when it works perfectly, the idea is, yes, you've got two entities. the campaign pack and the super pack, both of which are designed to get this candidate elected, but they're not allowed to coordinate with each other one little bit. So that's the background. Did Lee Zeldon coordinate with his super PAC? I don't know. Like maybe, I don't even, what does that even mean? Was he at an event that his super PAC was also at? Well, that's true of every candidate of both parties in the country. That sort of has to happen because that's where the,
Starting point is 00:36:50 that's where the action is, right? That's what the money is for. Now, is it that Lee Zeldon or one of his staff members coordinated on a TV commercial or a mailer or I don't know. I don't know. I don't really care. I know the Democrats do this sort of thing all the time. And I know that New York is one of the most corrupt states in the country when it comes to the government. It's New York. Illinois is really bad about that. California is not so hot itself. But New York in particular, Albany is really, really corrupt. And so why are they doing this? Well, they're doing this, of course, because Lee Zeldon is not supposed to be leading in this race. Because New York's a Democrat state, and Kathy Hockel is supposed to glide into re-election, and that's that. And the fact that the people
Starting point is 00:37:38 now seem to be supporting Lee Zeldon, that's a big problem. And so the state, the bureaucracy, the corrupt powers that be, going to have to come in and kind of tilt that back for the Democrats. Would you call that a conspiracy? If you talk about that, would you call it a conspiracy theory? I guess so. It's a theory about a conspiracy, but there's some evidence for it. And especially in light of everything else that we're learning now about how the government is putting its thumb, its boot on the scales for the Democrats, the theory seems to have a fair bit of credibility. Speaking of people breaking the law, there's an update to the Paul Pelosi story. You know, Paul Pelosi, Nancy Pelosi's husband, ends up in an altercation with this Berkeley nudist
Starting point is 00:38:30 who was in the Green Party and then, but now he's being portrayed as a right-wing MAGA Republican, but if you look at the house he was staying at, it's got rainbow flags and BLM signs. And he'll, and he's in the Pelosi house at 2 a.m. How did he get there? I don't. I don't. It seems kind of weird. I mean, listen, people have broken into Buckingham Palace before. So I'm not saying it's impossible. Wouldn't you expect the Speaker of the House and the second person in the line of succession of the president to have some home security?
Starting point is 00:38:57 Surely she has cameras all over. The whole thing is just really weird. Then on the dispatch tape, Paul, the person relaying this dispatch says that Paul Pelosi says he doesn't know the guy, but he names him, he calls him David, and he says that he's a friend. and so that doesn't add up. Anyway, the whole story is really weird. And now it's gotten even stranger because the guy who attacked Pelosi, David DePape, apparently is an illegal alien. And I, I'm not going to laugh. I'm not going to, don't, Michael, don't laugh. I'm very happy that Paul Pelosi is going to make a full recovery. It's good. Even if he's married to the Wicked Witch of
Starting point is 00:39:41 the West, he's a fellow human being. I don't want to laugh about anything, but is an illegal alien. That's, he's, the Republicans have spent decades, the conservatives at least, have tried to stop the illegal alien problem. Liberals like Nancy Pelosi encourage illegal immigration. They say it's wonderful, illegal immigration, diversity, it's our strength. And then it's just, it's, it's not even ironic. It's just, it actually is completely expected by people who look at this political situation. And the liberals do it too. The liberals know that illegal immigration. is really bad and dangerous for a lot of people. They just think they're protected.
Starting point is 00:40:23 This is why they threw such a hissy fit when DeSantis sent the plane loads of illegals up to Martha's Vineyard. They said, this is a humanitarian crisis. This is awful. It's a drain on our resources. It's dangerous. They shipped them off to a military base within 48 hours, okay? Why?
Starting point is 00:40:37 It's not because they suddenly realize the reality of illegal immigration. They've always known that it's dangerous and bad for the communities that have to deal with it. They just said, okay, it's just for those poor people on the southern border. It's for those Texans and those Arizonans. It's not for us in Martha's Vineyard. It's not for us, the Pelosi's. Pelosi's dealing with it now, too. Speaking of crazy people, there was another attack on a painting. There have been all of these attacks. I actually was in London. There was this attack on a Van Gogh painting where these lib environmentalist types threw a bunch of soup on it and then superglued themselves to the wall. And then a day or two later, I got to see the painting. I brought a there was no soup left. They cleaned it up, which I guess was good. Well, there have been more
Starting point is 00:41:22 and more attacks. And now another one. This maniac is super glowing his head to a painting. Take a listen. The painting that he's super gluing his head to is a girl with the pearl earring by Vermeer. I mean, this is a very, very famous, very important painting. Do you feel outraged? Do you feel outraged? Well, you should be more outraged about the destruction of our earth. That's the point. That's the thesis of this stupid protest.
Starting point is 00:41:59 As you're saying, you're outraged. And this happened at the Hague, by the way. They were saying, you're outraged that we're attacking this work of art on a canvas. But you're all attacking the great work of art that is the environment with your pollution and your plastics and all. And they're just going to keep this up. It reminds me of that scene in The Jerk with Steve Martin. where the guy is sniping and trying to kill Steve Martin, and he's at a gas station,
Starting point is 00:42:27 he keeps hitting all the cans of oil. This guy really hates these cans. These environmentalists really hate these paintings. And eventually they're going to destroy one of them, and it's going to be very, very annoying. But that's the argument. And they are getting the attention that they so desperately crave. And they are shedding a light on environmentalism,
Starting point is 00:42:50 which could be a good thing actually, because the more we look into these radical environmentalists, the clearer it becomes, they're not helping the natural environment. There is a study. It's been, it's being promoted by Greenpeace, which is the environmental nonprofit, though I think it's actually a kind of self-undermining study from Greenpeace. Turns out that plastic recycling is totally fake. It's so fake. So the study shows, of the 51 million tons of plastic waste, the U.S. households generated in 2021, just 2.4 million tons, just 5% of that was recycled. And it's not because the people don't put it in the little blue bin.
Starting point is 00:43:39 I mean, I generally don't, but some people, people are very meticulous, generally. I've got to put this bottle in the blue bin, or else I'm committing a sin against Mother Gaia and Mother Earth, and so blah, level, whatever. But part of the reason is just there are so many different types of plastic. The plants are not very efficient at processing all of them. And so only 5% of it ever gets recycled. It's just fake. You're performing a kind of ritual in the religion of Mother Earth, but you're not really doing very much to help the natural environment. So it's obviously totally fake and stupid. But there is a kind of conservative inside here, and I think conservatives are going to have to come to terms with the natural environment because for the past several
Starting point is 00:44:25 decades where we've just had this kind of iron-rand, you know, sort of political view where everything's just about money and, you know, Wolf of Wall Street, greed is good, like that kind of 1980s kind of political views. We're coming out of that hangover right now. And the ethos of that political view was, who cares about the environment, whatever. I'm just going to throw these little, you know, soda can holders into the ocean, see how many bottled nose dolphins I can nab. And I'm just going to set a bunch of tires on fire. And I'm just going to, whatever, who cares, you know? And that is not, it's funny and it's reactionary and it's reacting to these lunatics and nuts who are gluing their heads to, you know, Vermeer paintings. But it's not actually all that conservative. It's not,
Starting point is 00:45:14 it's not conservative to trash our surroundings. That's what hippies do. That's what libs do. They trash their surroundings and they make it look like the Woodstock campsite. That's not what conservatives do. We like beautiful things. But the key here toward a conservative environmentalism or conservationism, don't forget, Teddy Roosevelt is one of the first conservationists. The key to it is the focus. Is it about Mother Earth and Gaia and the Delta smelt and the rocks and the whatever? Or is it about human beings? The libs, basically think that we are the pollution. They think that we are the virus and we need to just get rid of humans and stop building things and stop doing things and stop living. And then that'll be really
Starting point is 00:45:59 good because then we can serve the Delta Smelt. The conservative view of it is, yeah, we want to take care of the natural environment and we don't want to kill off all the species and we want the air to be nice for us because we are stewards of the creation and we want to flourish. It is not the end, it's not that we need to orient our industry and our economy and our way of life towards serving the end of the rocks and the trees or whatever. It's hugging the trees and crying when they cut one down. It's that we need to govern and steward our environment for our society so that we have a good flourishing society and so that we can go out and, you know, go shooting those birds and chopping down those trees in beauty and peace. So we've got the
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