Timcast IRL - Sunday Uncensored: Mike Glover Member Podcast: Monkeypox IS An STD According To New Report, Families Are Eroding, Crew Talks US Collapse
Episode Date: August 21, 2022Tim & Co join business owner & veteran Mike Glover for a spicy bonus segment usually only available on Timcast.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices...
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Discover the magic of BetMGM Casino, where the excitement is always on deck.
Pull up a seat and check out a wide variety of table games with a live dealer.
From roulette to blackjack, watch as a dealer hosts your table game
and live chat with them throughout your experience to feel like you're actually at the casino.
The excitement doesn't stop there.
With over 3,000 games to choose from, including fan favorites like Cash Eruption,
UFC Gold Blitz, and more.
Make deposits instantly to jump in on the fun.
And make same-day withdrawals if you win.
Download the BetMGM Ontario app today.
You don't want to miss out.
Visit BetMGM.com for terms and conditions.
19 plus to wager.
Ontario only.
Please gamble responsibly.
If you have questions or concerns about your gambling or someone close to you, Welcome to our special weekend show, Sunday Uncensored.
Every week, we produce four uncensored episodes of the TimCast IRL podcast exclusively at TimCast.com.
And we're going to bring you the most important for our weekend show.
If you want to check out more segments just like this, become a member at TimCast.com.
Now, enjoy the show.
So a story came out from NBC.
And it says, sex between men, not skin contact, is fueling monkeypox,
suggesting that it's quite literally the seminal fluid of men resulting in the infections,
which is why, according to several studies,
the pustules are on the face and the anus and the genitals of men.
Because in order for you to get monkeypox, you need an abrasion or a lesion of some sort.
For the most part.
Like, in almost all circumstances.
Well, Lydia was suspended.
Yes.
Bastards.
What did you say and why did they suspend you?
Okay, so I made a somewhat inflammatory statement where I said that it was an STD.
Which they took issues with, I'm assuming.
I still don't know exactly what I said wrong.
They said it was hateful or something.
All I did was say no one's asking the question, even on the right, why are kids contracting
this?
And it's up to nine now, for the record.
It's up to nine children across the U.S. who have gotten this.
I want to know why.
And that was my only question, and Twitter suspended me for that.
Did you know?
How did you get?
I mean, obviously, there's some indications it might have been an std but
what kind of turns you on so i i was concluding that it because call me crazy but because it was
appearing in gay men who had attended massive orgies i was like i assumed during pride month
i was like this looks like an std call me crazy so the official narrative was that it's just skin-to-skin contact that causes it. And because
orgies are heavy
skin-to-skin contact, you're likely
to get it. But the new study is saying
actually it's the semen.
I'm glad they did it fast because this is with the HIV
scandal. They thought it was like
if you drank out of the same cup as somebody, you could
get it. Yeah, the CDC for a while was like it's
any close contact, so like kissing
or any kind of like
anything that's considered intimate close contact but i think they are really trying to dodge a
bullet on seeming homophobic in some ways they don't want to come out and say like it is fluid
it is sexually active people you're not going to get this by just sitting too close to someone who
has it uh and i think you're totally right. I mean, it is worth getting the ding on Twitter
because this is a real question.
Why are children contracting monkeypox?
Especially when, even when the CDC was like,
oh, it's skin-to-skin contact.
But they were saying intimate skin-to-skin contact.
Like, why would you?
That doesn't seem right at all.
Let us, with this new knowledge,
reassess the dog that got a new skin-to-skin contact.
Have you heard this story before?
No, this is real, right?
There's pictures of it.
Is that the actual dog?
He's a greyhound.
Do you want me to pull the pictures?
No.
Oh, yes.
It's for out of hospitality.
We'll show you these strange pictures of lesions.
You scrolled past them automatically. I scrolled past the human asses. so it's up to you, honey. It's for out of hospitality. We'll show you these strange pictures of lesions. Ooh.
You scrolled past them automatically.
I scrolled past the human asses.
Look at that dog anus.
I don't really want to see the dog anus
with the postules on it either,
but, you know.
I didn't want this.
There's actually other photos,
but this is the dog's tail being lifted
in the anus with a monkey pox postule on it.
The theory was the dog was licked.
It was on their skin. They laid in the bed. It got on the sheets. The dog rolled around on it, theory was the dog was licked that it was on their skin they laid
in the bed it got on the sheets the dog rolled around on it licked it licked itself got the
monkey pox i think they fucked that dog but i got it on its stomach too so were they jizzing on its
stomach i don't know what do you mean who jizzes on a dog's stomach who fucks a dog
what the fuck is happening shane there's like some big youtuber who had some story about like molesting his cat and coming on
his stomach what oh yeah yeah I can't remember Shane Dawson maybe I can't remember his name but
he was like a big YouTube guy and like this was a story that like he told on his podcast and then
just like moved on with his life it was Shane Dawson I saw that clip thank you for coming
what you said it was but it was Shane was talking about that thing.
He was like, uh, did I say too much?
Yeah, he was telling a story about, like, being involved with his cat, which I think is considered rape.
I think I figured out why Elon Musk is now trying to go to Mars.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah, I get it.
I don't want to be here either.
This is the worst.
Well, because, like, if you get banned for pointing out that... So the breaking news last night was that a ninth child has contracted...
Nine children have contracted monkeypox.
Right.
Let me pull up George Alexopoulos, because he's got G-prime 85.
He can help us understand everything that's going on.
That's right.
Where is the...
He got banned for it.
Oh, did he?
Oh, actually...
Went over?
No, no, I think...
No, there it is.
There it is.
He reposted it. This is great. This is a, I think. There it is. There it is. He reposted it.
This is a good one.
Would you do this, right?
So it's yes. I guess he got banned for it. He reposted
it. It's a guy saying, hey, what's up, my groomer?
And the guy says, hold on,
comrade. It's problematic
to use hard R words like that.
Oh, sorry. And who's the handsome young man?
My stepson.
Don't mind his little frown.
He caught monkey pox somehow.
Holy fuck.
Oh, gross.
Oh, no.
So dark.
So dark.
I think it's sexually transmitted through the semen,
but also potentially from skin-to-skin contact.
Because if you scratch one of those lesions
and you get that bacteria on your finger
and then you scratch another piece of skin,
I would imagine that putrefactive bacteria would start to putrefy the skin.
It then has to be transmitted to a person who has a lesion as well.
So what the NBC article is saying, what the experts are saying is
it is extremely more likely it is from bodily fluids
than it is from skin-to-skin contact.
And that it's reversed to claim skin-to-skin contact is causing it
when it's actually
gay orgies. Giz to butt contact.
This is crazy. Which, again, why are children
contracting monkeypox?
Isn't this in Revelation? Have you read
Revelation?
The monkey pudding?
They use the word monkeypox?
No, just like
it's something like a disease or
pestilence would affect those who are like... it's it's had something with like a disease or pestilence
would affect those who are like it is yeah what the fuck well they talk this is gross yeah they
talk about understatement they talk a lot about pestilence but i was always given to understand
that that was like in the book of levicus where the um locusts came down and assaulted the
egyptians but there was also a plague that was specifically enumerated in you know the the story
of the the plagues in the Egyptians.
So I'm not sure.
Maybe that's what Revelation is talking about.
It's all over.
1823.
How do I pull up Revelation 18?
1823 is the one that people told us to read.
Right there.
The light of a lamp will never shine in you again.
The voice of bridegroom and bride will never be heard again.
Your merchants were the world's important people.
By your magic spell, all the nations were led astray.
So apparently it was originally they said sorcery,
and sorcery was translated from pharmakeia.
Right.
Which is Greek.
Because drugs were considered a form of magic.
Yeah, pharmacy.
Yeah.
So it's just people pointing out all this crazy-ass shit.
Is it the end of the world?
Kurtzgesaget. Do you guys know Kurtzgesaget?
YouTube channel, they put out a video
the other day called
Is Civilization About to End?
It doesn't mean it is
but if this big YouTube channel with 20 million
subscribers has decided
now is the time to put out a video about
the end of civilization, it's not
because
it's because it's in the air.
It's because they know their audience is asking about it.
It's because they know regular people are feeling it.
And so they decided to address the issue.
And this is a big channel.
They got 4 million views overnight.
Is civilization about to end?
I don't think that's actually phrased right.
No.
So the answer is no.
I had a friend that used to be like,
yo, civilization is destroying the world. And I'm i'm like well it's the type of civilization because
civilization can become we can change and then now we you know get our electricity from trees and
it's still a civilization it's a different one this civilization might be coming to an end yeah
world economic order there's global this american-led you know militant militocracy or
whatever we got hundreds of military bases on Earth.
In some ways, this chapter
of modern civilization or
what we have constructed
may be on decline, but
as we have seen throughout history,
once one civilization falls from
prominence, another one rises
up. So, you know, obviously
I would never
root for the end of the country or anything like
that, but I do think that
our modern way of life and the
modern civilization is not sustainable.
I mean, Tim says this all the time, like,
if you have an ideology that
promotes sterilizing
your young, essentially, then how
are you going to carry on? Alex Jones was right.
That's an understatement.
Remember when he... Yes, when he was like, turn the frogs gay! No, Jones was right. That's an understatement. Anything in particular? Yes.
When he was like, turn the frogs gay!
No, he was wrong. That was the one he was
wrong on. No, no, no.
The essence of what he was
saying was correct. There is
a report from 2019 from Psychology
Today about endocrine
disruptors that are getting
in our water supply. And
a PhD researcher writes an article about
how the endocrine system is very,
very fragile. And there are
biphenols or whatever
in plastic that are hormone disruptors.
And what's happening to people is that
when you're eating some of the
chemicals... So we buy glass bottles here.
So all the water that we do is
filtered and then put into a glass bottle because we don't want...
We do have bottled water because most people don't care, like Lydia is drinking it.
But if plastic is feminizing, then it's probably a good thing for the women and a bad thing for the men.
But yeah, so I might be able to pull up that report in a second.
There was a study, I think, and I wish I could cite it better.
I believe it was done by Swedish researchers that it studied mice populations and it found that basically at the collapse of rodent civilizations,
homosexuality among mice became prevalent.
I mean, there is all kinds of stuff to say
that species stop naturally reproducing
when societies are on a decline
and we're seeing that promoted openly.
Maybe, but we also have this.
Gender fluidity and hormone disruptors.
And he goes on to mention,
what does he say?
Polluted ponds
could turn male frogs
into females.
Hey!
Alex Jones was talking about that.
You cite the right person here.
Yeah.
Another candidate
is pharmaceuticals.
The phenomenon emerged
in connection
with the contraceptive drug
diethylstilbestrol.
I got it.
Mothers who were unaware
of their pregnancy
continued to take the drug.
It was found to have masculinizing effects
on the brains of female fetuses.
The limited evidence available
indicated that when they matured,
such females were less interested
in caring for children
and more interested in female romantic partners.
Recent evidence indicates that phthalates
from plastic and polychlorinated biphenyls, PCBs,
are one of many factors predicting gender dysphoria, particularly in case of male to female transgenders.
Can you imagine if that medication just had like a side effect warning, may produce lesbianism
in children?
Like, it's crazy.
May make your boy want to cut off his balls.
But then if you're modern society, do you say like, well, that's not a bad thing.
That's just who they're meant to be.
I think the answer is simple.
The answer to all of this.
Homesteading.
Getting the fuck away from cities.
Going to Mars.
Whatever.
Going to Mars.
It's a big part of it.
Yeah.
Are you a religious man, Michael?
Yeah, I'm a Christian non-denominational.
Do you think that when we talk about like revelations, for instance, that it's actually
happening or maybe a self-fulfilling prophecy.
I mean, what do you.
Definitely self-fulfilling.
But I also I always look at these things from a worldly perspective because we live in a world on planet Earth.
And it's crazy because a lot of the people that we call radical in their ideology are actually conservative in their base and completely would look at this and go,
what are you guys talking about? Like all of Islam, all of Hinduism, like all of these religions that
we found radical extremists and look at this and go, what do you mean? You're taking the chemicals,
you're, you're castrating little boys. Like what, what the hell are you guys doing? And they're just
living their life.
And you talked about the civilizations and the scales.
Maybe we're a first world country that just goes back to being a normal third world country.
Because I've been to Africa and they're super happy.
I've been to the Middle East and they're super happy at the core of who they are.
This is what's really funny.
I see these leftists.
They're ragging on conservatives who want national divorce or whatever and they're like blue states comprise 70 of the gdp these
people would be broke and poor and i'm just like that's how you know they've never been to the
country they've never gone to a mobile you know mobile home with a chicken coop and talk to people
there who are like life's good like they just don't understand that the wealth they're talking
about for them is an addiction for people who live in the middle of nowhere they're sitting on
their porch in a rocking chair with some straw in their mouth looking at the mountain with a smile
on their face good point do you think we could not be the uh global police force we being the
american government and the liberal economic order but like that we could liberal international
you really want it the liberal international economy, the LIE.
If it was not the predominant world order right now, do you think that we could live in peace without constant fear of being bombed by stratospheric bomber planes?
No, I think it's already built in the business plan.
I think that's part of the government's MO.
Having access and placement across the world is a national strategy for security.
Having access and placement in all these places throughout Africa, the Middle East, Southeast Asia, every single country has that access and placement.
So I think one of the problems are we're focused on national security from a large perspective.
China's worried about their economics. So you go to Africa, and the Chinese are like fraggle rocks all over that place,
mining, constructing, building,
while we're sitting there worried about the next counterterrorism threat coming from that country, not building self-reliance.
The problems that we're having today have a lot to do with outsourcing everything to the world
and then not making ourselves
self-reliant.
I mean, we just gave $40 billion more to Ukraine, which is a proxy war against Russia.
And we are in a very serious domestic issue in our economy.
Why would we do that?
Well, it's because we're not thinking about our interest, the American people's interest
versus the world global interest. Do you think that the fall of the liberal economic order is
imminent? It's imminent. What would be, so you think industrialization is like, I don't want to
put words in your mouth. I don't want to be like that Kathy, that woman is a soldier saying is,
but you mentioned industrial, like creating things. Do you think that industrialization
is like a method of national security? It completely is. I mean, if you look at the military industrial complex,
it surges capital that we use to surge innovation. And that's the excuse. It's like,
oh yeah, but we want to get jobs and we want to get innovation and technology.
While the rest of the world just kind of does it, we use it as a means of entry. And so I think the problem is that business
model is not, like she said, it's not sustainable. And eventually it will fall off the map. I mean,
there's countries that have been around for thousands and thousands and thousands of years,
and there's a reason for that endurance. We don't have the endurance, I don't think. And all the things that people, like in this YouTube video, feel, that's a real thing.
I mean, that's real.
But a lot of it's fed to the phone.
My thinking is, just like the guy sitting on the porch in Tim's analogy of staring at the mountain,
if all your problems go away when you put down your cell phone, well, then that may be a solution for you.
But when you put down your cell phone and all of those worries go away,
what's left?
And if you don't have no stability, no security, then you have no future.
And so I think there's a combination of doing that, putting the cell phone down,
but also thinking about your future, getting more involved in legislation
and potentially politics, leading by example
in your community, the list goes on.
Do you find that people put off becoming self-reliant because they're just generally
dissatisfied with their life?
Like there's a, when you are self-reliant and you're thinking forward, thinking you're
thinking about the future, it's normally because like there are things that you want
and you're striving for.
Whereas apathy among young Americans,
oh, the world's going to, it's too expensive,
it's too whatever, I can't do this.
There is an emotional and mental roadblock
among a lot of people telling them,
well, nothing really matters anyways.
Do you think that is something people head over?
Part of it is the lack of purpose.
We're a purpose-driven species.
We want to drive, We want to have missions,
objectives. But when the wokeness takes down and breaks down the family unit, for example,
Marxists say that the family unit is disruptive to the master plan. That's a problem because
now you're saying, like my three-year-old son. My three-year-old son is a train wreck because he's a little boy.
He likes to get near things.
He smashes everything.
My daughter, who's his twin, is completely different.
If I tell my son, get off your butt, and I give him directions,
I have a nanny from Columbia, an au pair.
I did that on purpose because I want my kids to speak Spanish.
I also want them to speak Korean, which they will.
But when I bring her in the room and she hears me yell at my son,
and I'm not yelling, I'm just stern.
My tone is elevated.
She goes, whoa.
And it feels wrong.
But is it wrong?
Because what I just did to him is I gave him structure.
Now he gets off his butt and he goes, oh, that's what I need to do to do the right.
So I'm giving him guidance. We are in fear of that because we think everybody needs this singular
view of life. And so we say, oh, let your son figure it out, navigate in the bubble. Let him
navigate his own path. He's three. He'll navigate my path because I'm his father. So that kind of
thing is very scary for a lot of people. And I think you're completely right on.
I think it's the lack of purpose in society, which is why if you tell me I don't have to think about anything, I don't have to do anything outside of pick up my phone, go to work like a robot, that is going to be a lot more comfortable for most people.
Yeah.
Well, and I think, too, to your point about parenting, a lot of people are afraid that their kid's memory of them will be that one time they spoke sternly and it's upsetting.
Or I hear a lot like I want to be my kid's friend.
Do you actually want to be your kid's friend or do you want to be a source of constant support and guidance?
Like you want to be their parent for a reason.
A parent isn't bad, but there's a fear of authority and being not cool and not being relatable.
And, you know, I think that people don't embrace that role and therefore they parent purposelessly.
Purposelessly.
I can't say it.
We're scared of roles in that way.
Like my mother was a tiger mom.
A tiger mom's a real thing.
She was an authoritarian.
She was very disciplined.
My dad was the pussy.
He was like, oh, son.
My dad faked a spanking once.
He hit the desk next to me to,
to make his mom, my grandma think that he was disciplining. Maybe he's like, don't tell anything,
get some tears in your eyes. We walked out. I'm like, man, my dad's so cool. But if it wasn't
for my tiger mom instilling that discipline, I wouldn't be who I am today. And I think that's
what we need to get back to. The whole breakdown of all this, to me, relates back to the most significant
variable, which is the breakdown of the family unit. And I don't mean family unit and specifically
a man and a woman, how I was raised. I just mean a relationship that's stable, loving,
empathetic, but also driven. Whatever that is to you.
It's like a structure of people who want your best interest and they don't want you to become
complacent.
They want you to strive for everything that you could have in life.
A hundred percent.
I mean, we've outsourced education.
Like the idea for me that I would put my kids in somebody else's hands.
Hell no.
Because of all the woke politics, because all the drama, because the teachers want to
use it as a political platform.
You are not teaching my kids.
Here's an idea.
I'll teach my kids myself.
And you know what?
They'll be ahead of everybody.
Well, no, you're making them socially awkward.
We'll see how that works out in the end.
We'll see who's set up for success and who's set up for failure.
I know a woman who runs a local coffee company here in West Virginia.
And she says that the best staff that she has
are homeschooled kids
because they're taught to communicate with adults.
They're expected to behave in a certain way.
They're not shunted off,
like go play with the other kids.
Don't talk to the teachers.
They're encouraged to interact with a multitude of people
across professional and age groups.
The education system is like the military.
They cater to the lowest common denominator.
So if your kid is the lowest common denominator,
the bottom of the barrel,
and you accept that reality,
then throw them to the wolves.
But if you think you want to set up your kids for success,
don't be afraid at looking at potential options,
including homeschooling your kids.
It can be actually very fulfilling
and it could be kind of easy.
I mean, there's groups in Utah where I live, thanks
to the Mormon or the LDS population
there, they have this stuff down.
I mean, they have preparedness manuals
because they think about this stuff. They were
oppressed. I mean, I love
Utah and that reason.
Well, and I would assume, too, with the LDS community,
one of the LDS
tenets is having a big family. It's important. And you get sealed in the LAS community, like they – one of the LAS tenets is it's like having a big family.
It's important and you get sealed in the LAS church with your family forever.
Like the idea that your legacy lives on through your kids and you are a community that is building in and of itself is part of their culture.
And I assume it must be really intense within the state.
Whereas like other places, it, put off having children,
don't know your neighbors, don't really interact. You should leave home and be away from your
parents. It's much more isolating. Yeah. We're, we're the only country who rolls that way. I mean,
if you go to Afghanistan, Pakistan, Libya, all these places that I've been, the idea of even
separating your child from you and putting them into a room by themselves is very unnatural.
Kids grow up in the home with their parents and they interact and there's no expectation like
you're 18, get out of here. There's not even that concept. It actually in the LDS as well,
the kids stay, they go on mission, which is two years of a worldly or outside perspective,
and then they come back.
And that idea, again, is structure,
and that's scary for a lot of people,
but we're dealing with high rates of suicide,
mental health issues, active shootings,
which are symptoms of mental health issues,
more than we've ever seen in the history of our country. Mm-hmm.
You mentioned earlier the military
applies to the lowest common denominator.
Has it always been like that?
It's always been like that because, unfortunately, the lowest aptitude population of our country has fought and took on the hardest laboring of war for this country.
And it's common, right?
And not to say that if you serve in the military,
which I have, that you're not intelligent.
But what we do is we say,
who's going to fight the wars?
What's the aptitude of the people that we want
in the infantry, for example?
It's not very high.
I mean, I went to infantry basic training
as a 17-year-old and was babysitting
25-plus-year-old adults, grown males.
And so that, you know, again, it's a pool of the population,
but who's literally, you know, who's shouldering the brunt of all of that?
Usually lower economically, you know, impoverished people.
But now nobody wants to join.
But nobody wants to join.
Is it because of the wokeness?
Literally, it is because of the wokeness
because I get it all the time.
People are like,
Mike, is this the time to join?
I'm like, listen, I served under Obama.
He was good for CIA operations
and special operations
because a lot of it,
he didn't have to take credit.
He could take credit for it
when it was appropriate,
but he could just say,
oh, that's not us because covert action.
So I'm like, don't leave politics out of it.
Just serve.
And we're getting into a situation now.
I just talked to the tomb guards today.
They told me they're short-staffed because the record of retention is at a record low.
So there's people leaving, quickly departing the military, and there's nobody signing up for the military.
It's bad, but in some ways good.
It's good.
People are standing up and saying, I'm not going to be part of this stuff.
But it's bad because it's the erosion of our armed forces of our country.
Yeah, it's scary.
I met a guy.
I don't know if he was a captain or something,
and he said his dream was to retire while he was going to serve
until he had no choice but to leave.
And now he's like 30-something, and he's like, I resigned.
Resigned as commission.
Doesn't want to be involved anymore.
He was like, the things they were telling us,
the things they were demanding of us, it was insane, woke bullshit.
And I said, fuck off.
So I haven't said this only on small segments and stuff,
but I separated from active service in 2013.
When Benghazi happened in Libya,
I was in a special operations compound
at Fort Bragg, North Carolina,
monitoring the whole situation.
I was actually supposed to do a key leader engagement
video conference with the ambassador and the team lead of the Special Operations Unit on the ground in Libya that day on September 11th.
We know it happened.
Benghazi happened and Ambassador Stevens and analysts and two global response staff officers were killed.
I went to Libya in October the next the following month.
We had, and I said we, but there were two members
of U.S. Army Special Operations Command
that were with me.
I had a special operations unit
that included three of us,
me and two of my guys.
And we had enough information
that corroborated a man named Abu Qatala
for the attacks on the embassy,
on the annex in Benghazi.
We presented it to the ambassador who was on the embassy, on the annex in Benghazi. We presented it to the ambassador, who was now the charge, Alexander Pope was his name.
And we said, hey, charge, here's the target packet.
We can kill this guy right now.
We can kill or capture him in a unilateral operation.
We could do a bilateral operation with a counterterrorism Libyan force,
which I ran that program.
It was a congressionally mandated program before 9-11
to stand up a Libyan counterterrorism force to counter Al Qaeda in Northern Africa.
Or we could do a kinetic strike. He said, the political climate won't allow us to do any of
that. So we're not going to do it. I saw the email chain between the Secretary of State,
then Hillary Clinton, and everybody else involved, even Brennan, where they said, we are not going to do
any of this. And that was frustrating for me and my guys. When that happened, we were like,
obviously, butthurt as guys who do this for a living, who protect Americans and then kill bad
guys. Algeria, an oil refinery in Algeria was taken hostage and there were three Texans,
three Americans there. And we said, hey, we're going to conduct an operation,
and here's the operation.
Let's do this.
They said, denied.
We're not going to do it.
Like, you're not going to do it.
The Brits, the British SAS, bypassed it and said,
we're going to do it then.
They went to do it.
Algeria did a botched hostage rescue.
They wound up killing some of the Americans.
They did a gun run on innocent civilians.
And I flipped a table on a Lieutenant Colonel, lost my military bearing, which is the first time
as a senior master Sergeant in special operations. When I came back, I immediately left the military.
I dropped my paperwork and they're like, did Mike get a DUI? Did he get in trouble? Like what
happened? He's like, no, he's getting out. And I went to the reserve component. And then I started
working for the global response staff office of the CIA,? He's like, no, he's getting out. And I went to the reserve component and then I started working for the global
response staff office of the CIA because I was like,
that might be the light at the end of the tunnel.
I'm done.
I was blacked out on Fox news as a Benghazi whistleblower telling this story
right after this,
this happened a three part series with Brett bear.
And then six months later I did it without the shadow,
without the cover i was
on active duty at the time wow political expedience overriding military command is troubling to me
because the same thing with the surrender in afghanistan it felt like they were trying to do
it was politically savvy the only reason i would think a government would do that is because they're
either so confident that they cannot lose no matter what or they're in cahoots with somebody else. Like, is there a global force
that is controlling the American political structure
and military right now?
I would, look, there's a whole,
I don't buy into a lot of conspiracy.
I buy into a lot of corruption
because people are corrupt and people are stupid.
I mean, I work for the government.
Like this idea that there's a deep-seated conspiracy
within the
ranks of politicians
is funny to me because I've seen how politicians
operate. They can't plan a retirement party
let alone
construct a plan,
X plan, to do something
deeply-seated in a dark state.
Very difficult to do.
There are idiots in the government, right?
Part of it's political, but also part of it is based on their allegiances where the corruption
is. So when you take China, for example, and how deeply seated we are in China, what happened when
we pulled out of Afghanistan? China, North Korea, and every major player came to the Taliban and
started working mining and resourcing deals. When I was there in 05, and then, and every major player came to the Taliban and started working mining and resourcing deals.
When I was there in 2005 and then back again in Afghanistan in 2010, we knew the Chinese were mining in the Hindu Kush, pulling uranium and all the other precious minerals out of the ground.
And I'm like, what?
Like they're there doing that?
And the Taliban's not messing with them?
No. Like they're there doing that and the Taliban's not messing with them. No, they had agreed. They were in cahoots and they were financially providing support to make this problem go away, but also support
by proxy the people that I align myself with, I would do that.
And if you look into every, even the land, the agriculture in America, we are completely
have given everything to the Chinese.
I'm not into conspiracies either, man, but that would be a good plot for a movie is that
the president's like, we're giving Afghanistan to the Chinese so that they don't
take Taiwan.
Why not?
Look, when I was in Africa, in Niger,
Africa, right before Boko Haram
attacked, I walked around
and was like, there are more Chinese
people here than Africans
from Niger. What is going
on? And I went to the hotel and I said,
what's that hotel?
It's a really nice hotel.
And they said,
oh, the Chinese are building that.
Like, why are they building
all this infrastructure?
Because they have a trade
with the Africans
and mining everything that's here.
For decades, by the way.
So I'm like,
oh, so all the resources are here.
They're getting,
mining to their country,
feeding the machine.
And then, by the way,
they did a deal with that country, which pushed the Americans out,
which they literally did in some ways.
It's modern colonization.
It is.
China has so many people that seeking opportunity, many of them go off to other countries.
And then you end up with like in Australia, they started hoarding all the protective gear
when COVID started and sending it back to China.
So people don't realize this.
They think it's just like, it's just, you know,
immigrants moving in. It's like, but it's literally colonization. It is. And by the way,
all of those government workers and all the contractors and managers all work through the
Chinese government. None of that's free enterprise. They're doing that to support the Chinese
government. So that is colonization. And it's on a massive scale.
And they're playing the long game.
While we've been fighting the global war on terror,
they were building out this economic plan
to take over the world.
If China and Russia right now said together,
we're going to invade America
because they're at their weakest
and we're going to take over their country,
they would be successful.
And you know what they would do?
Russia said, Russian pundits said there will be a civil war in the U.S.
The only question is who do we support with weapons?
What they would do is they would sow discontent or wait until the election,
and then they would invade, but they would do it under the pretext of helping preserve American democracy.
Crazy. You're right.
Of whichever side it would be.
So they'd say to the Democrats,
we are actually here to help you because Donald Trump's a madman.
Let us assist you in this war.
But I think it's more likely
is they would fund the MAGA side
for a couple of reasons.
Donald Trump wants America first.
So that kind of a,
let's China go off and do their thing.
Let's Russia do their thing.
There's not war. Most people, I think, in the country would prefer like a non-intervention kind of
international policy. But it's also because it's the establishment Democrats, Uniparty, who want,
you know, presence in the Middle East, want to expand. And it would be more destabilizing to give institutional power to trump supporters
and populists as opposed to the already institutional powers of the united states
so you'll get some some crises january 6th style incidents i think it what will end up happening is
you get two guys on a highway and they can shut down trade on a major road because all the trucks
i got to go through and they could make two guys and then major road because all the trucks have got to go through. Two guys.
And then what are they going to do?
Deploy somebody?
Good luck.
Two guys.
Look at what happened with the Bundys.
Something bigger like that is going to happen.
There's going to be some small jurisdiction that says
we're no longer allowing the feds to come in,
maybe a state thing.
And then you're going to see Russia or China be like,
we agree with you on all this stuff.
What do you need?
And they're going to say,
if we get these weapons,
we can actually fight back and save this country.
Then you'll get someone going,
but it's China and Russia.
They hate us.
They're doing this to hurt America.
And then they're going to say,
yeah, but if we don't take it,
then the communists in the Democratic Party
are going to take over.
So we have no choice.
There's no way out.
Interesting.
That's a proxy play.
And it's what we do.
It's our MO.
Right. Crazy. Right on, man. It's scary. It's been a blast, dude. there's no way out interesting that's a proxy play and it's what we do it's our MO right
crazy
right on man
it's scary
it's been a blast dude
thanks for hanging out
no I appreciate it
thanks for having me on
what you guys is doing
is very important
and I appreciate you
thinking about me
and then having me on
it was awesome
thanks for coming
for everybody who's a member
thanks for making it happen
and we'll see y'all next time
