Episode Transcript
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0:10
Not not not
0:12
not knowledgeable. Damn.
0:16
And jordon pines shredded. Acknowledge
0:19
party dot com. It's time to break. I
0:21
have great respect for knowledge. I
0:24
knowledge and light. I'm sick of them posing as
0:26
if they're the good guys. Chang 760 are the
0:28
bad guy. Technology will find And,
0:30
enjoy the knowledge fight me.
0:35
760 money. Handy
0:39
and panty. Handy and panty
0:42
or stop it. Andy and Bambi 760
0:45
Andy and Bambi just on the break. 760 and
0:47
Bambi shareowners. Well,
0:49
Alex, I'm a fifteen color a huge fan.
0:51
I love your room. Knowledge
0:56
fight. I
0:58
love you. 760. Welcome
1:00
knowledge, but I'm dad I'm Jordan. Workable dude.
1:02
It's like to sit around, worship with the altar of Celine
1:05
and talk a little bit about Alex Jones.
1:07
Oh, indeed we are. Dan,
1:09
Jordan. Damn. Jordan, a quick question for
1:11
you, buddy. What's up? What's your bright spot today?
1:13
My bright spot today, Jordan, is
1:16
Well, I guess I have you
1:19
know, I for the last year
1:22
or so, I have wanted a PlayStation
1:24
five. Yes. Yeah. And,
1:27
I mean, first of all, that's that's an expense.
1:29
Yeah. But then second of all, you couldn't spend
1:32
the money because no one had any of them.
1:34
If they were impossible to find. Mind boggling.
1:37
Before the Christmas this
1:39
year, for the holiday, I was able to find
1:41
one and I decided to get myself a
1:44
little bit of a Christmas present. And,
1:47
yeah, I got APS5 and
1:49
I've been messing around with couple games
1:52
-- Yeah. -- having decent time.
1:54
Yeah. Enjoying some arkham
1:56
nights. I I saw because
1:58
I you you had told me that you got it. You
2:00
texted me and told me you got it. You said it was fantastic.
2:03
It's been great. I had no idea what
2:05
it actually was. The PlayStation
2:07
five? No. I've saw the PlayStation five. I
2:09
mean, it's a great system. No. I saw
2:11
I saw a thing on TV
2:13
about it. About ark nights. Yeah. Because I
2:16
don't have TV or anything. Sure. So when I was
2:18
over with my family for Christmas, they had
2:20
commercials and stuff. Yeah. It's a fat man.
2:22
Yeah. And I was like, oh, look at that. It's a Batman
2:24
game, but spoiler alert, Batman dies in
2:26
the first minute of the game. Oh.
2:30
Yeah. But it's it's I mean, look, I
2:32
don't know. I guess, I've heard that I don't
2:34
know this to be true because I don't pay a whole
2:36
lot of attention, but I understand that there's some
2:38
backlash about they're not being Batman and
2:40
it's probably based in sexism
2:42
at some level because batgirl is one of the
2:44
playable characters. Sure. But
2:46
I I've I've enjoyed it so far.
2:48
I look. It plays 760,
2:51
essentially, exactly like
2:53
any of those old -- Right. --
2:55
Batman Arkham games. Right. Right. Right. It's
2:57
all you really want. I mean, honestly, deep
2:59
down, it's just a bunch of ones and zeros.
3:01
There are no men or women inside the
3:03
video game at all. True. True.
3:06
And then, like, I started playing it. I
3:08
was like, man, I missed the Ridley 760. That
3:10
was fun. You just wander around to get Ridley trophies.
3:13
Mhmm. And then as the game as I played, like, maybe
3:15
an hour into it, like, rid of the trophy. No.
3:17
I was like, man, I'm so glad there aren't new in the
3:19
trophy. That bummed me
3:21
out. There are too many of them.
3:24
They're all over the fucking 760. It's like,
3:26
I'm never gonna get all eight hundred of
3:28
these or whatever the flat spots. 760, it's
3:31
fun. God. What's your bright spot? My
3:33
bright spot, Dan, is we're back doing
3:35
this. Hey. It's my bright spot. You know,
3:37
you've been you've been ill for a week
3:39
or so concerned about -- Sure. Sure.
3:41
-- insisted on only communicating via
3:44
760 pictures. Yes.pictures of my
3:46
marbles. Exactly. Yeah. Including
3:49
four different Morpheus cards. Yeah.
3:51
III understand I'm a bit of an annoying
3:54
760. So, yes, Morpheus was a great
3:56
way to communicate. Well,
3:58
I mean, first of all, I appreciate your concern.
4:00
And the nice messages that
4:03
folks sent to get well soon as such.
4:05
Yeah. But whatever it's worth, you were
4:07
not overly worrisome.
4:10
Well, that's nice of you. And I
4:12
and I appreciate your offer
4:14
to to help out and whatever.
4:16
But, like, you know, we gotta go puff now.
4:18
That's all we got. You know, if you got some Nikewills
4:20
at that's
4:22
amazing. Yeah. That is one of the
4:24
few things that it does make me feel like we're
4:26
living in the future. I I don't think I've
4:28
been sick since there have been
4:32
service like that. Yeah. Yeah. It was
4:34
it was so weird to have
4:36
in my mind, like, I need
4:38
aspirin or or whatever. I
4:40
need Tylenol or
4:41
Right. But I I
4:42
can't get down the street to the CVS.
4:45
Right. Or whatever. Right. But oh,
4:47
not a problem. Amazing. It's yeah.
4:50
It's really really spoiled. I know.
4:52
I know it's it's it's it makes
4:54
me feel somewhat older I suppose
4:56
or something, but just like the the
4:58
absolute amazement. Are you telling
5:00
me that aspirin can be delivered to my
5:02
door? Or? Right. No.
5:04
It seems like it's not that complicated
5:07
of a problem -- Right. -- that
5:09
we took a while to solve. Right.
5:11
Right. Right. But, yeah, III
5:14
don't know what exactly we
5:16
got some sort of a
5:19
cold or something. I'm not sure.
5:21
I I tested for COVID and I was
5:23
negative. So the the work certainly doesn't
5:25
seem like that was the case, but Yeah.
5:28
I'm I'm feeling much better. You
5:31
know? Well, I'm glad to hear it. Yeah. It's
5:33
tough to tough to take time off.
5:35
But first of all, because it's fun. I enjoy doing showed
5:37
up this talking about this
5:39
dumb asshole. It's weird.
5:41
But also, you
5:43
know, it's I have a
5:45
compulsion to work. I you you
5:47
really do. And I may have been working
5:50
on some side things while we
5:52
were You may have been
5:54
working on some side things before we started
5:56
talking now. Yeah. I I
5:58
just not I still have a lot of that I need
6:00
to send out, but I was not doing that well. I was
6:02
saying -- Good. -- as an abundance of caution.
6:04
But, yeah, there's other other
6:06
side side stuff. Did you breathe
6:08
into any double wrap and send it to
6:10
China to teach them a lesson about --
6:12
Hey, man. It's morning in China. We
6:14
had time to get up. Alright.
6:19
Okay. So Jordan -- Yeah. -- we
6:21
have an episode to do today. Get
6:23
back on our horse Mhmm.
6:26
That we're gonna ride in on and talk to you.
6:28
Talk to you. Talk to you. Talk to you. Fuck this
6:30
or So
6:32
I decided a little something.
6:34
And that was that I I don't wanna
6:36
do a present day episode. So we're gonna be
6:38
talking about another two thousand three episode. Yay.
6:40
About December ninth and tenth two thousand
6:43
three. Here's some of my reasoning on it. Okay.
6:46
Holiday content is a little bit all over
6:48
the place for Alex. True. And then
6:50
here was what I here I saw this and I
6:52
was like, go fuck yourself. He
6:54
had a video about Band dot
6:56
760. And the title of it was how one
6:58
man changed the world and you can
7:00
too. I'm like, oh, it's gonna be about
7:02
Jesus. Yeah.
7:03
Of course. It's Christmas time. Is
7:06
it going to be about reset wars? It's
7:08
about Alex. Of course, it's about
7:10
Alex. Yeah. One man
7:12
changed the world. You can't, too. I I was like,
7:14
this is not the time for this. This
7:16
is the season where maybe
7:18
you should you know, if you're is this
7:20
a big big religious outfit
7:22
as you say. Maybe there's --
7:24
Nice. -- people. As a a
7:27
760, spiritual
7:30
leader, many would say, and
7:32
devout Christian, I think Alex
7:35
knows on Christmas Day
7:37
more than any other day, it should be
7:39
about Alex. Yeah. I I
7:41
will say I didn't actually watch that video.
7:43
So maybe it is all about Jesus, but the
7:45
thumb male of it is a hundred different
7:47
pictures of Alex from various points in his
7:49
career. So it's it's
7:51
probably Yeah. It could be. Yep. Could
7:53
be about Alex's. Jesus. That was that was, like,
7:55
alright, buddy. Yeah. You have
7:57
fun. Unless you're throwing a hatchet, get the fuck
7:59
out of here. Yeah. Yep. And so I was I was just
8:01
thinking about the year that has
8:03
been. Yeah. And, you know, it's for
8:05
us, it's been really Interesting.
8:09
Certainly, there have been developments. A
8:11
lot of things about Alex's court cases
8:13
-- Yep. -- have touched
8:15
us a little more closely than would be
8:17
expected. True. But III
8:19
don't wanna dwell on that. I wanted to think
8:21
about all of the dangling threads we
8:23
have about it. So
8:26
this is just what I came up off the top
8:28
of my head. Okay. No. What
8:30
else have we got? Diesel
8:32
Oh, yeah. Still out. Still out.
8:34
760 still going. That
8:36
the thread has been dropped entirely. Eric's
8:38
has not reported on the almost
8:41
zero cases now in the United States.
8:43
Oh, no. Nancy Pelosi's husband's
8:45
attack being faked, and that
8:47
didn't happened. I don't know what's
8:49
happening with that. Alex seems to have dropped that
8:51
760 line. Sure. Nuclear war was supposed to
8:53
have broken out by now. Yep. In
8:55
the invasion of Ukraine was only gonna last a couple days. That
8:57
was gonna be short. So we have both nuclear
9:00
war starting and Zelensky was
9:02
on Putin's payroll -- Right. -- and all that.
9:04
This is not much
9:06
down to fruition. The dollar was supposed to
9:08
collapse. Here's gonna we have no update on that.
9:10
All the food plants were under
9:12
attack That was right. I forgot about
9:14
the food was all under attack.
9:16
Yeah. The Man.
9:19
All of these things supposed
9:23
to make us scared this year. And then, you know,
9:25
I think I think it did work out, but
9:27
just wasting everybody time. He's
9:29
wasting his listener's time with
9:31
nonsense to try and get them scared about
9:33
stuff. It does feel like there should be a
9:35
year end wrap up, like like a
9:37
whatever, like AV 760 like, top
9:39
fifty things of this year. And if you
9:41
really go through and, like, list the
9:43
amount of things that Alex wanted
9:46
or the thought should have happened and --
9:48
Mhmm. -- you're like, that would be a
9:50
busy year. That would be a busy
9:52
fucking year. God, I
9:54
760 mean, it would be a disaster movie. Yes. It
9:56
would be horror film. Stop. If
9:59
just, like, you know, like, let's
10:01
let's look at it as, like, a reverse
10:03
liar, liar. Where instead of
10:05
Jim 760 not being able to
10:07
lie, it's everything Alex says is
10:09
spoken in 760. Truth. Yeah.
10:11
Yeah. It's like a it's like a highlights zone. I
10:13
get the christy novel kind of thing. Yeah. I
10:15
gotcha. Yeah. It's a classic knives
10:17
out mystery. Yes. Yes.
10:19
Apparently, all 760 people are mad about.
10:21
They mad about I don't know. I've done with backlash
10:24
as to anything. I don't give
10:26
a shit. I have not seen
10:28
this film. It's great. But I've heard
10:30
I don't know. I've seen some tweets. 760 good.
10:33
760, instead of dwelling on
10:35
these dangling threads and, like, how Alex is
10:38
probably not going to, you know, spend the
10:40
end of the year cleaning up his mess. Nice
10:42
to explain. Like, well, I got this one
10:44
wrong, got this one wrong. Oh, that'd be great.
10:46
Wow. I was way off. 760 year
10:48
you should have if you work at Infowars,
10:50
you should have a roast every
10:52
year. At the end of the year, at the
10:54
big old holiday party, you sit up
10:56
at the desk and everybody just kind of makes of
10:58
all the shit you made up. Yeah. Right? That would
11:00
be great. That'd be the most fun.
11:02
Sure. Yeah. I will come
11:04
as a diesel tank. No. Because
11:08
I'm picturing this as a roast, like a
11:10
fryer's club roast. Right. But each person
11:12
on the day is one of the things
11:14
Alex lied about and they all roast up.
11:16
Okay. Alright. So they're the
11:18
concept of the thing. Yes. 760. So
11:20
a 760 dressed as a nuclear bomb
11:22
would walk up and be like, hey, Alex.
11:25
I bet you thought I was gonna drop. Well,
11:27
here's a new bomb dropping on you. I
11:29
didn't. I got something long does work?
11:31
You could 760 a, like, a food
11:33
plant on fire. Yeah. That'd be fun.
11:35
Anyway, we're gonna be in the past
11:37
just because I wanted to
11:39
you know, Ease 760 way back into the waters
11:41
of doing the show, and
11:42
he didn't really feel like watching
11:45
him naval gaze. 760 here
11:49
we go. We're gonna get down to business before do. Let's
11:51
take a little moment and say hello to some new
11:53
walks. Oh, that's great idea. So first,
11:56
success Thank you so much. You are now a
11:58
760 walk. I'm a policy walk. Thank you very
12:00
much. It's like excess but vexing.
12:03
Next, I 760 the only nonrepublic into my
12:05
company of a hundred twenty 760, which includes
12:07
info warriors, queue followers, and three
12:09
percenters, and your podcast is what gets me through the
12:11
day. Thank you so much. You are now. 760.
12:14
I'm a policy walk. Thank you very much.
12:16
Hang out. Next, I'm
12:17
760, and winky is my chosen mount. Thank you
12:19
so much. You're now a policy walk. I'm
12:21
a policy 760. Thank you very much. This
12:23
is a donkey kong thing.
12:25
Oh. I think okay. 760 deal.
12:28
Wendy is the the frog. I
12:30
think Yeah. Something like that.
12:32
760, next, Dan, listening to old
12:35
episodes, and it's my favorite thing when you
12:37
say Beazlebub.
12:38
Beazlebub. Thank you so much for an eye of policy
12:40
walk.
12:40
I'm a policy walk. Right. Say that for me.
12:44
Beazlebub. Biesel I don't say
12:46
diesel bump. I think maybe
12:48
it may be going way back to
12:50
to, like, when we were in your old room
12:52
-- I think that whole -- I think more often, I
12:54
would say, old scratch. Yeah. Something
12:56
like that. That's fun. That's more fun.
12:58
And foundation to donate the
13:00
in force desk to the knowledge right studio. Thank
13:02
you so or an I hope policy
13:03
walk. I'm a policy
13:04
walk. Thank you very much. Thank you. I'd love
13:06
to, but Bill's already got a climb.
13:08
Alright. 760 got a couple tech right in the mix
13:10
here to do. So I'd like to
13:12
say thank you to Jacky in
13:14
Arkansas. You are now a technocrat.
13:17
And if everyone is an alpha, then no
13:19
one is an alpha. Thank you so much. You are
13:21
now a technocrat. And catching up
13:23
with your backlog. And Dan, you
13:25
busted my brain. Also, it's probably my
13:27
birthday by now. Thank you so much. You are
13:29
now, a technocrat. I'm a
13:30
policy wonk. I have risen
13:32
above my enemy.
13:34
I might quit tomorrow, actually. It's gonna take
13:36
a little break, you know? A
13:39
little breaky for
13:41
me. And then
13:43
we're going to come back,
13:45
and I'm gonna start to show
13:47
over. I'm a double don't we take it
13:49
off the air up? You know all those blah blah blah blah
13:51
blah. Fuck you.
13:54
I got plenty of words for you, but at the end
13:56
of the day, fuck you in your new world
13:58
order and fuck the horse she rode in
14:00
on and all your
14:01
shit. Maybe 760 was almost
14:04
broadcast. Maybe I'll just be gone a month,
14:06
maybe five years.
14:07
Maybe I'll walk out of here tomorrow and
14:10
you never see me again. That's
14:12
really what I wanna do. Never
14:14
wanna come back hearing you. I I apologize to
14:17
the crew and the listeners yesterday that
14:19
I was legitimately having
14:21
breakdowns on 760.
14:23
I'll be better tomorrow. He's not oh.
14:25
He's not even better in the past. Oh. He's
14:27
not great in the past. I like
14:29
I like that. I like the add a it's probably
14:32
my birth by that. I think every every shout
14:34
out should now have that. It's actually by one
14:36
day or it was probably by
14:38
anniversary or was that Yeah. Just just put it
14:40
in there because they will celebrate and we'll
14:42
celebrate it with you. Yeah. For sure. Yeah. You
14:44
know, birthdays are just, I mean, a
14:46
celebration of you and a life and and
14:48
what have you Totally that any day.
14:50
Yeah. It's your birthday. Thing.
14:52
Absolutely. That's the way to do it. It's like
14:54
760 cent. It's a birthday.
14:57
Don't show it. 760
14:58
on. That's I That's the
15:00
beginning of it. No. No. No. I
15:03
understand that. I understand that. Is that your
15:05
fifty? Yep. People
15:07
760 they look here in the same. That
15:09
was That was karaoke for
15:11
the day. Sounded like you were saying Bieslebab.
15:14
Biesle. So
15:16
Jordan, we're gonna start here on the ninth. Yeah.
15:18
And when I play you this clip, you
15:20
may come around to the idea that
15:22
my witchcraft 760 knows no
15:24
bounds. There is so
15:26
much news so
15:29
much information today
15:31
that we're going to cover, and I'm
15:33
going to cover all of it,
15:35
if SARS hits US quarantine
15:38
could too. The New York Times, any
15:40
excuse to get martial law
15:42
rolling in our
15:43
lives? That Eric's last
15:46
injured forty one US troops.
15:48
Yep. So Alex is
15:50
gearing up to make
15:52
people afraid that's a SARS corintines.
15:55
760, man. Are gonna be coming
15:57
to to the US? It
15:59
I but the thing about COVID,
16:01
the thing about COVID that really
16:04
gets into my head now is
16:06
when you look back at all these all the
16:08
previous possible
16:10
pandemics, you know, Yeah. Like, they warned
16:12
about global pandemics. People said this
16:14
could become a global pandemic.
16:16
And it seems like they did a good
16:18
job. Do we have to, like, reevaluate
16:21
I feel like we should go back
16:23
and reevaluate the quality
16:25
of previous pandemic responses
16:28
and be 760, holy shit. These
16:30
guys were unbelievably great
16:32
because what happened with COVID is
16:34
clearly 760 guys were the fucking worst.
16:36
Well, I think I think yes definitely 760
16:39
should be a a certain amount
16:41
of that. Yeah. But then, I think, you
16:43
know, it can be difficult because they
16:45
are different -- Sure.
16:47
-- agent Sure. There are different viruses.
16:49
So like -- Yeah. -- it's hard to
16:52
compare one to one, and also some some
16:54
of it, unfortunately, I 760, also does come
16:56
down to luck. True. And
16:58
some things that are slightly outside of your
17:00
control or require, like,
17:02
complex cooperation that sometimes you can't
17:04
rely on other people 760. True.
17:06
But but yeah, I do think that there are probably lessons of
17:08
the past and, you
17:10
know, other coronavirus outbreaks
17:13
that 760 like what
17:15
happened then and didn't happen
17:17
now or vice versa. Maybe 760-
17:19
Yeah. -- draw some you know, I'm not it's
17:21
not I'm just saying Fandied about
17:24
in the in the
17:24
office. Well,
17:26
I don't want to stick different, so
17:28
that is that Alice wasn't a millionaire.
17:31
Yeah. 760 two
17:33
thousand two, two thousand three 760 outbreak.
17:35
That's that's
17:35
our new conspiracy theory. If there
17:38
is a potential disaster happening,
17:40
somebody needs to steal all of
17:42
Alex's body and make
17:43
sure he's nowhere near it. And then whenever the
17:45
disaster is averted, Alex can pop back up
17:47
on air or something like that, you
17:49
know? Yes. Yeah. So he
17:50
will need to keep him poor as a preventative
17:52
measure against future outbreak. He needs
17:54
to be quarantined 760 his
17:56
money. Right. Yes. And also, this
17:59
is December two thousand three. This is
18:01
a bit after SARS
18:03
had already Yeah. I
18:05
mean, it was contained in July -- Right. -- two thousand three.
18:07
That was when it was, like, alright. We
18:09
we got this we had a good handle on this
18:11
thing. Right.
18:12
There were, like, sporadic cases into two
18:14
thousand four, but, like, it's not
18:17
in in December two thousand three,
18:19
the speculation of This being
18:21
something that's gonna cause quarantine seriously in
18:23
the United States -- Yeah. -- is a
18:26
it's a long shot. Yeah. Yeah.
18:28
Yeah. But, yeah, So it's on Alex's
18:30
mind. Oh, boy. Here's another thing on his
18:32
mind and that is that he's about to go to
18:34
Houston. Okay? Mhmm. What's he doing in
18:36
Houston? Well, there is a
18:38
place there. They show movies.
18:40
Okay. Alamo Drafthouse. Oh.
18:42
But he's mad because they've got views.
18:45
Don't they? No. This this one is apparently pretty
18:47
cool. Also, the Austin one is
18:49
apparently cool 760 he won't stop talking about how
18:51
Mel Mel Gibson was just there showing the
18:54
passionate press and Austin
18:56
one. Right. And apparently, he's
18:58
going to the Houston one, and the
19:00
guy who runs the Houston one comes on the
19:02
show trying to sell tickets, which is like
19:05
What kind of a I'm sorry. What
19:07
movie do you hear? What
19:09
what kind of buried
19:11
biz I I realized I
19:13
haven't spelled this out. Right. He's doing an
19:15
event -- Right. -- in this at the
19:17
Houston Draft House --
19:19
Uh-huh. -- where he's showing one of his
19:21
films, doing a q and a, and then they're
19:23
showing they live. Okay. So it's sort of a
19:25
big event. Right. But none
19:27
of the theaters at the Alamo Drafthouse
19:29
are that big. And if
19:32
they're needing to move tickets by
19:34
having the manager come on Alex's
19:36
show -- That's okay. -- to do a little PS,
19:38
I don't know what's going on here.
19:40
This is this is,
19:42
like, the bad version of doing
19:44
morning radio -- Yeah. -- try and sell tickets
19:46
to a comedy show. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
19:48
Absolutely. I just I just flew in last night
19:50
and I still 760 get up at five thirty AM
19:52
to do this damn zoo cruise
19:54
show because the manager just called and
19:56
said we've only sold eight tickets. Right.
19:58
We need ten tickets all just to do a
20:00
show, man. Right. And it implies
20:03
one of two things. One is, like, Well,
20:05
it's either you got a really bad club or
20:07
no draw. Yeah. And
20:09
the drive test is a pretty good. Pretty good client
20:11
you. Pretty good. Yeah. They
20:13
live is a good movie. I don't
20:15
mean 760 say Alex is a backdrop. If
20:17
they had just announced they were doing a
20:19
night of they live, I bet they would've done
20:22
pretty well themselves. Yeah. Maybe Alex 760 a
20:24
negative factor of this. It does seem
20:26
so. So anyway, he talks
20:28
a little bit here about his last time
20:30
doing one of these screenings.
20:31
Right. Now
20:32
I don't think that'll happen on the second go
20:34
around and they didn't sell out until
20:37
seven 760 to hundred
20:39
people just showed up right when it was about to
20:41
start thinking that they could get in. And
20:43
to my dismay, two
20:45
hundred got turned away. I
20:48
I suggest you go to info wars dot com
20:50
and link through on the website -- Sounds good.
20:52
-- and buy your tickets now
20:54
or get there at about five
20:57
760 Saturday. Don't get there till six o'clock.
21:00
Now, again, a lot
21:02
of folks, am already
21:04
seen it, so it won't be as bigger crowd probably,
21:07
but still you
21:09
need to get there thirty minutes early
21:11
to get your tickets if you're not buying
21:13
them online. I wanted to discourage you from
21:16
coming. Frankly, we ended up
21:18
letting about thirty or forty more than we should
21:20
have, Ian, and I had take a
21:22
bunch of people in for free once it
21:24
was overflow. Wait. What? Folding
21:26
chairs. And of course, Mel Gibson's
21:28
dad and a lot of his 760, and Mel
21:30
Gibson's sisters and people show showed up.
21:32
That was a lot of fun. I didn't wanna say they were gonna
21:34
be 760. You know, they told me they were gonna be there,
21:36
and I don't know if they'll be there this time.
21:38
But, really, why did
21:40
you just of that. Great place to meet light
21:42
minded people. Just
21:44
it it was amazing. It it was a
21:46
lot of fun and a lot of
21:49
great information. A great place to meet minded
21:51
people like Mel Gibson's holocaust
21:54
deniers. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Mel Gibson's dad
21:56
was there. So Why don't I meet
21:58
holocaust deniers? You know where to
21:59
go. a get. What a celebrity 760.
22:02
This is event. Man.
22:04
The dead of Mel Gibson. Yeah.
22:07
Oh, dude, we got Richard Spencer's
22:09
dad here today selling a a
22:11
fucking cars outside of the BMW.
22:14
So, you know Nazi's. Nazi's.
22:16
Nazi 760
22:16
are doing alright for themselves. I I should
22:19
say in the interest of
22:21
fairness, I don't know what Richard Spencer's dad's
22:23
beliefs are. I do
22:25
know how Yes. We
22:26
we do know that. Yes.
22:29
Also, I don't know if III mean, look, I don't
22:31
know if I buy Alex's story about
22:34
and people in free and out of this stuff. A couple.
22:36
Doesn't sound like the Alex. I
22:38
know. But this sounds
22:42
really low stakes.
22:44
Yeah. Yeah. For the Alex that
22:46
we know in the present day. Yeah.
22:49
Sounds like somebody who's giving,
22:51
like, family member directions of how
22:53
to get in free to the show.
22:55
760. Absolutely. Show up half an hour 760.
22:57
You can't show up, like, right
23:00
at doors. Alright, man. Oh,
23:02
yeah. This is this
23:04
is It's almost weird
23:06
to to to you
23:09
know, 760, people come
23:11
from somewhere. They don't just start where
23:13
they are, but -- True. -- for for for
23:15
this type of thing to then
23:19
steamroll into what it became. You know, you're I'm I'm
23:21
I would understand this type of
23:23
thing. If later on, he became
23:25
a slightly more successful version of
23:27
himself, you know. Instead of Well, that's what he was until a few
23:29
years ago. Well, exactly. That's what I'm saying. Yeah.
23:31
You know? Like, that a while
23:34
back, this would make sense. But
23:36
we live it's like he's turned into
23:39
fucking super shredder after drinking
23:41
too much booze and now it's
23:43
it's collapsing around him. You mispronounced
23:46
booze. Well done.
23:48
But, also, let's not forget
23:51
that, like On an episode not
23:53
too long ago, he flew to Kansas
23:55
City to do a local radio --
23:57
No. Right now. -- to get a car dealers. Not wrong.
23:59
So, like, not wrong. At this point in the
24:01
past, he is just, like, great.
24:03
He's all over the place. You're 760
24:05
I wanna say one thing. I think some people
24:08
have a little bit less excitement about
24:10
the past episodes as opposed to the
24:12
present because, you know, the present has
24:14
a lot of like hot topics and things that are
24:16
in the news and -- Mhmm. -- you know, getting Alex's
24:18
take on it can sometimes, you
24:20
know, help understand where
24:22
a lot of right wing talking points are. Sure. And I I understand that,
24:25
and I don't want to, you know,
24:28
ignore that completely. Oh, of course not. But
24:30
going back to the past some
24:32
other side
24:32
advantages. And this, they
24:35
live show is kind of touches
24:37
close to one of them, and that is
24:39
I wanna find more movie reviews.
24:42
I wanna find
24:44
more episodes where Alex tries to explain
24:47
exactly what he thinks art
24:49
is saying -- I I -- because that's great. To
24:51
me, I recently remembered that
24:53
we did that episode talking about
24:56
his view of the Second Matrix
24:58
760. And like, oh yeah.
25:00
That to 760, I need more
25:02
of that. I need more of,
25:04
like, Alex saying, I believe that
25:06
this is the message of Avatar.
25:09
Whatever they What? Yeah. Him
25:11
trying to interpret art outside
25:13
of whenever he's leaving
25:15
politics and and and really does try and
25:17
get it to art criticism. Art
25:19
for its own sake -- Yeah. -- is one of
25:21
the windows into a truly bizarre mind.
25:23
Yes. Yeah. Yes. And that is that
25:25
is what I wanna find. That's the goal of digging for in
25:27
these hills. You're right. So anyway,
25:29
we get back to SARS. Sure. And some
25:31
of this might sound a little familiar.
25:34
Alright. Let's launch straight into the news that I
25:36
mentioned in the first segment. If SARS
25:38
hits US quarantine, could
25:41
two. Now, this is the
25:44
this is the Model States held
25:47
Emergency Powers Act, the 760 Inoculation Program,
25:50
the 760 was saying that we're gonna use
25:52
smallpox for sure to hit Dallas
25:54
Cleveland and Denver according
25:56
to 760 head, fair
25:58
monger, Gary of the Hart
26:00
Robin Commission. He probably seen him on television. He said we
26:02
would be hit last year, but ninety
26:04
nine plus percent of
26:07
police 760 fighters and medical
26:09
workers refused to take it till
26:11
now they've had to move on to SARS, which
26:13
has been looked at very 760, is genetically
26:16
engineered, has been altered
26:18
by humans. Again, I've got voluminous,
26:20
prestigious medical reports on that. And
26:22
now they're trying to fear monger with
26:24
that weapon, I will remind you that West
26:27
Nile was given to Saddam in
26:29
nineteen eighty four by Donald Grumsfeld
26:31
and the commerce department.
26:33
So we have that as well. And
26:35
this is how they're gonna get their control. Oh,
26:37
we're just giving you martial law for
26:39
your 760, general, ever heart.
26:42
Northcom command in Colorado
26:44
Springs just shed. The former CENTCOM
26:46
head Tommy 760 just
26:47
shed. Why was it the commerce department?
26:49
Yeah. Because it's commerce. So there's a really
26:51
interesting dynamic to the game that Right wing
26:54
propagandist shitheads like Alex have to
26:56
engage in that I like to call out a little
26:58
bit here. In order to run their
27:00
game of constantly making the
27:02
audience afraid about novel and exciting
27:04
threats, they're required to rewrite
27:06
their own past ideas. For
27:08
Alex to compellingly freak out his
27:10
listeners about COVID being a lab made bio
27:12
weapon in twenty twenty, it's pretty important
27:14
for him to not give off the impression that
27:16
he's just the kind of guy that says that all the
27:18
time. He would lose a lot of
27:20
his ability to convince them that
27:22
he's proven that the sky is
27:24
falling IF THEY WERE MADE AWARE OF HOW MANY TIMES HE'D
27:26
CLAIMED TO HAVE PROVEN THAT IN THE PAST, BUT
27:28
HE'S REALLY JUST MAKING SHIT UP. SO
27:30
IN twenty twenty, THE two thousand three 760 outbreak
27:32
is real, in service of helping Alex
27:35
make the argument that the current one
27:37
is not. If things have not a
27:39
control in two thousand three 760 the way they did
27:41
it in our present. Alex would have
27:43
played a similar 760 game
27:45
as he has recently, but it
27:47
wouldn't have been nearly as impactful 760 as far
27:49
smaller influence and the
27:51
dynamics around social media not being there at
27:53
the time. The models stay
27:56
emergency powers act was a piece of draft legislation that
27:58
was crafted by a Georgetown Law professor
28:00
with support from the CDC.
28:03
It was not ever adopted or passed on
28:05
a federal level, though some state governments
28:08
have passed elements of it. For
28:10
instance, in March two thousand three, Arizona passed a bill
28:12
requiring the Department of Health Services to
28:14
redact personally 760 identifying
28:16
info from health records before
28:18
they're released publicly. A
28:21
couple of these state bills do provide a
28:23
clarification of what law enforcement
28:25
entities can do to assist with
28:27
Department of Health orders involving quarantines,
28:29
but it's a far cry from anything like martial
28:31
law or what Alex is saying. Yeah. Plus, this
28:33
is the state government says state's rights
28:35
or something. Also, Alex fails
28:37
to mention that his board 760, THE
28:40
ACLAU IS AN ENITY LEADING. THE
28:42
OPPOSITION TO THE MODEL STATE
28:44
EMERGENCY POWERZACT, DUE TO
28:46
CONCERNS ABOUT vague language that could lead to
28:48
civil liberty infringement. Alex
28:50
just ignores that because it would make it harder for
28:52
him to paint him as the evil demon global
28:54
to his audience if he acknowledged what they actually do.
28:56
Right. Alex is further mixing up
28:58
his history. 760 used
29:00
chemical weapons on civilians in nineteen
29:03
eighty 760, the shipments of West
29:05
Nile were made in nineteen eighty five.
29:07
They weren't specifically 760 Sodom and
29:09
they weren't made by Rumsfeld, but they did
29:12
happen. There was an a wrecky scientist who had previously
29:14
been a researcher in Fort Collins,
29:16
Colorado who received shipments of West
29:18
Nile presumably for lab
29:20
research purposes. There is a
29:22
huge conversation that deserves to be had and
29:24
has been had, but maybe could be
29:26
had more about the unintended consequences
29:29
of dual use chemical agents that were sold to
29:31
Iraq for research purposes
29:33
before Desert Storm. Right.
29:36
But that actual conversation has almost nothing to do with
29:38
West Nile. Right. And Alex
29:40
is all over the place.
29:42
Yeah. But to the
29:44
extent that, you know, our soldiers
29:46
did end up finding
29:49
these these old agents
29:51
-- Sure. -- and stuff and and being
29:53
affected by them -- Yeah. --
29:56
is unacceptable.
29:59
Yeah. No. No. 760 right. Terrifying. Agree. Agree.
30:02
But it makes me wonder like, listening to that
30:04
makes me wonder how old those
30:06
conservative Bingo cards really 760. You
30:08
know, Like that. Like, are we going to find fossilized
30:10
records of a dinosaur being
30:12
like, 760, they're busting in
30:15
protester dinosaurs. You know, like, it's
30:17
it's the same shit
30:19
from the jump. Well, you know,
30:21
you always see people
30:23
760 I I am a little bit
30:25
worried about this. Coming out of my mouth now because
30:27
I have not looked too into it until You know,
30:29
you do see those, like, political cartoons
30:32
that are ostensibly from
30:34
Oh, yeah. Yeah. Seventy years ago,
30:36
and they're, like, thematically fairly similar
30:39
to -- Yeah. Yeah. -- to now.
30:41
When there's when there's things that,
30:43
like, kinda, mirror totally. 760 so, yeah, I think I
30:46
think some of the Bingo cards
30:48
probably pretty similar. Yeah.
30:50
Because, you know, it's because and
30:52
and it has to be because the Bingo
30:54
card has nothing to do with what's being said. The
30:56
Bingo card is bad. Add
30:58
thinking. Mhmm. It is how you are thinking poorly
31:01
in response to an impetus.
31:04
So it's it's like a it's like
31:06
any old logical fallacy.
31:08
The fallacy isn't changing. It's
31:10
the thinking -- Right. -- that's causing it.
31:12
Yeah. And 760 but this is largely
31:15
similar things. Right. Like
31:18
being surrounded by people who
31:20
you perceive to not be like
31:22
you. Right. New technology that
31:24
you find threatened. Totally. Those
31:26
are kind of pretty common.
31:28
Or public health crisis is an
31:31
official cultural changes. Yeah. Anything Those are the
31:33
kinds of impetus for bad
31:35
thinking. Yeah. And the bad thinking? Yeah.
31:37
It's not gonna be that's not gonna
31:39
change. Nope. different time
31:41
periods. And here you
31:42
go. I mean, just 760 And here we
31:44
go. Yeah.
31:45
As the health officer
31:47
of Alameda County, doctor Anthony
31:50
the item is prepared to make tough
31:52
choices if SARS reemerges
31:54
this winter or spring as many
31:56
infectious disease experts
31:57
fear. Now, again,
31:58
it kills about one out of a hundred to get
32:00
it. The flu kills thirty five
32:03
thousand. But 760, you're used to it. You're
32:05
not scared of it. It's not the
32:07
unknown till they have to fear monger
32:09
with this. The way, the federal government Two years of your fear
32:11
my frozen bodies near the North
32:13
Pole of bed, explorers, and
32:15
whalers dug out the
32:17
super influence of the kill forty
32:19
million people about
32:21
eighty five years ago. You're the
32:23
one. Fear my guard saying
32:25
that they are developing it
32:27
as a weapon. So why? Pop up
32:29
too. That
32:29
is not fear bongering.
32:31
So we've reached
32:34
the knee jerk talking point of comparing a
32:36
public health concern to the flu in
32:38
order to minimize eyes it. There weren't
32:40
relatively few deaths from the two
32:42
thousand two outbreak of SARS, but a lot of
32:44
that probably comes down to there being a
32:46
robust response to it us get being
32:48
lucky. Alex is just a
32:50
little bit off on that flu story
32:52
too. In nineteen ninety eight,
32:54
researchers found freight placements of the nineteen
32:56
eighteen flew in six
32:58
unearth bodies from the 760 Arctic
33:00
-- Mhmm. --
33:00
Arctic.
33:01
Mhmm. That flew is one that really scientists
33:04
because it wasn't really clear why
33:06
it was so deadly and how it
33:08
moved so fast. Research on that end of
33:10
things is tough because there aren't exactly a ton
33:13
of preserved samples of the flu that people
33:15
can just work with. Thus, the
33:17
goal was to find some bodies
33:19
who might have contained the virus but
33:21
got really deep frozen, which
33:23
led people to the Arctic. Right? They
33:25
tried the time machine, but he was trying to kill Hitler with it,
33:27
and then it collapsed in on itself after creating
33:29
a paradox. It was a terrible idea, so they just went
33:31
for bodies. Yeah. 760. Let's go to the cold. Makes
33:33
sense. So from a New York Times
33:35
article, quote, in a diary kept by the coal
33:37
mining company here, doctor Duncan found
33:39
the names of seven men eighteen
33:41
to twenty nine years old. Farmers
33:43
and fishermen who had just arrived here to earn
33:45
extra money at winter jobs in
33:47
the mine. But they had
33:50
contracted flu on the boat
33:52
trip from mainland and died in the
33:54
first week of October nineteen
33:56
eighteen. This is a fascinating
33:58
story, but ultimately they did not find
34:00
samples that could be used for research since
34:02
the bot 760 turned out to have not
34:04
actually been buried in permafrost as
34:06
they had expected. Right. If Alex was following this
34:08
story, he probably should have known about
34:11
this by two thousand three, but in reality, the
34:13
details of the story aren't useful to him.
34:15
The only part of the story that is
34:17
any value is the insinuations he
34:19
can make out sensational and inaccurate versions of
34:21
the headline. Right. That's why it still lives on in
34:24
this form. It's just
34:26
ridiculous. Yeah.
34:28
Yeah. That's that's
34:30
a bit different from the store the
34:32
story, they found living
34:34
samples of the flu that killed forty to
34:36
fifty million people and they're turning into a
34:38
weapon. Oh. That's scary. Yeah. The story
34:40
of they went looking and didn't find
34:43
anything less scary. Less. Like at
34:45
the beginning of a Godzilla movie 760
34:47
Godzilla comes out of the water
34:49
and starts blowing stuff up, you're like,
34:51
wow, that's scary. But if it was just
34:53
water -- Mhmm. -- you'd be like, this is not a movie at all,
34:55
man. And then there's like a gecko. Yeah.
34:57
Exactly. Like not a movie. This is just
34:59
Vista. Yeah. No. I think if I understand
35:02
correctly from what I was looking
35:04
at, it's 760 issue
35:06
was they thought that the people were buried deeper
35:09
than they were. Right. And so it
35:11
would have preserved -- Damn. --
35:13
if it was, like, meters
35:16
760, but instead it was not
35:18
even close. And so the ground
35:20
would have thawed and frozen and thawed
35:22
and frozen, therefore, the
35:24
snow. Right. Usable samples. Oh, man. What a that's a
35:26
true, like, national treasure ass
35:28
moment. You know, that's Nicholas cage being,
35:30
like, I figured it out. We've come up with
35:32
this long
35:34
cureaus, circuitous route to get these samples
35:36
because we can't find them any other way.
35:38
We've dug to the fucking Norwegian
35:41
760 There's nothing.
35:43
Yeah. Oh, also the article that I
35:45
was reading. Maybe it was a little
35:48
unfair to the people who
35:50
buried them that they
35:52
were blaming them, which well,
35:54
there were two there were, like, two speculations. One
35:56
was that, like, they didn't wanna dig all
35:58
the way down because it was cold out. These
36:00
lazy 760 people. And but, you
36:02
know, you still marked down there. Is that or
36:05
whatever. But the other the other one was
36:07
a little bit less sort suspicious.
36:10
that was, like, they might have been scared of
36:12
being exposed to it. I mean, it's
36:14
killed 760 flu that killed forty or fifty
36:16
million people I wouldn't wanna
36:18
touch plague bodies. 760 a little bit more
36:20
sense, and it's less like these
36:22
bumps. That's a quick jump
36:24
down. These lazy grave diggers
36:26
will help us save people from the
36:28
few flu in the future. So
36:30
Alex talking about this a little bit
36:32
ends up MOCKING SOMETHING THAT IS
36:35
IN HINE
36:35
SITE, QUITE A GOOD PREDICTION.
36:38
Reporter: THE AUTHORITIES COULD 760, NOT JUST PEOPLE
36:40
WHO WERE SICK, BUT ALSO WHO MIGHT BEEN
36:42
EXPOSED TO THE SARS VIRUS
36:44
DR. ITON SENT. THEY WILL
36:46
CHAIN YOU DOWN. Reporter: THE BOWING
36:48
760 said could house up to one hundred people, the one
36:51
in Austin house a thousand, and could be guarded to keep
36:53
anyone from leaving. 760.
36:56
If a virtual certainty
36:58
that sometimes in the near future, we will
37:00
see SARS like events in the United
37:02
States are highly communicable infectious
37:04
disease. That will require
37:06
mass quarantine or isolation
37:08
doctor items
37:09
sent. We'll talk more about
37:12
this and other key news,
37:14
but this is their blueprint, their
37:16
smokescreen for martial law
37:18
brace yourselves for
37:19
it. Or
37:22
itin was saying something that was, you know, pretty
37:24
commonly accepted and known
37:27
within medical and you
37:29
know, epidemiological communities. Yeah. The problem with
37:32
those predictions is that they
37:34
are true -- Mhmm. --
37:36
regardless of when or
37:38
if they come like, when they come
37:40
true is not the important factor.
37:42
It's not like, oh, he
37:44
predicted some amazing and such like, no. This is an
37:46
inevitability about life existing
37:48
with humans. There will be another
37:50
pandemic. It's just how it fucking works.
37:54
You don't you can't mock people and be like, oh, that's a dumb
37:56
it's not a prediction. Uh-huh. I'm just telling
37:58
you math. But that's how
38:01
it works, man. Yeah. It's a
38:03
it will rain -- Yeah. -- eventually. Exactly. And you can
38:06
have an
38:08
umbrella or you run the risk of
38:10
getting west. How it works? And getting rained
38:12
off. Yeah. These are the
38:14
inevitability's and the option.
38:16
That's so way it goes. Yeah. There are no other ways to go.
38:18
Right. I understand that denying her.
38:20
Right. Right. Right. You are
38:22
still going to get wet though.
38:24
Sure. Yeah. So
38:26
III find it to be a little
38:28
bit rich that Alex is kinda being smug about
38:30
this when the guy was just, like, totally
38:32
right. Of course. Of
38:34
course. He was. So there's been been
38:37
some bombs in Russia.
38:40
Sure. We're not on Russia's team
38:42
though in two thousand
38:42
three. No. We are not. We not
38:45
five killed and suicide attack in Russia of
38:47
female suicide bomber detonated
38:49
explosives in a car near Moscow's
38:51
red square on
38:54
Tuesday and five people in entering thirteen, the art art art archives
38:56
news agency reported. The blast took place
38:58
on the capital's main shopping street
39:00
near the National Hotel ambulances
39:04
were on their way to get
39:06
eight victims, and people were
39:08
treated on the
39:10
spot, window those on the first and
39:12
second floor of the hotel were shattered. She
39:14
said Russian state television showed
39:16
footage of broken windows at
39:18
the of the car our alarms could
39:20
be heard. We've caught Putin
39:22
blowing up buildings and bombing stuff, and
39:24
then no body of the suicide bombers
39:26
found. There are real 760, but the majority of the time it's
39:28
government, Putin uses it as a police state
39:30
crackdown. So this one might be
39:31
real. Mhmm. But, yeah, Alex
39:34
says never
39:36
never heard of Russia or Putin doing
39:38
this kind of thing in the present? I
39:40
mean, but in the past 760 had caught him.
39:42
He had caught him, and he said he
39:46
does it. All the time. Mhmm. Like, it's a regular, like, a house for
39:48
pink state stuff. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
39:50
Yeah. You know, you just gotta do some police
39:52
dating. Uh-huh. And
39:54
how's somebody he's like, hey, I you
39:56
pretend that there's a car bombers. You 760 Cracked
39:58
down. Putin has a habit of
40:02
terrorizing his is
40:04
civilians.
40:05
I mean, arms are real terrorists somewhere,
40:07
but not
40:08
in Russia. That's all Putin.
40:11
Anyway, that's curious. Weird.
40:14
So Alex takes a number of calls
40:16
on this
40:18
episode. And this
40:20
this this collar has a I mean, this this
40:22
is bad news. I don't know how else to say
40:24
it. There's there's
40:26
something that we know And that is that Alex's films have
40:29
a ninety to ninety 760, ninety
40:31
eight percent 760. This rate?
40:33
Yeah. 760 super effective. Yeah.
40:35
Yeah. Their date dangerous. They're more transmissible than
40:37
most diseases. Yeah. Yeah.
40:40
But unfortunately, a caller calls
40:42
760. And
40:44
says that, like, people aren't enjoying them that much. Whoa.
40:47
Multiple? Alex,
40:50
look, If you get three
40:52
or more of any of the junk titles, whether it's nine
40:54
eleven, road to tyranny, 760 to terror, police
40:56
state three total of enslavement, arc secrets
40:59
inside 760 Grove, America destroy by design. They drop
41:01
down to twenty dollars a piece. They
41:03
make great gifts, and they're
41:05
waking up roughly eighty percent to
41:08
ninety percent of those
41:10
-- Dropping 760. -- the
41:12
films. Because lately, I've 760 I've
41:14
been hearing from a few people that say
41:16
folks aren't waking up. All of them aren't waking up. So I think that number's down to eighty
41:18
percent. 760 is that? A
41:20
mental average of it. What are you talking
41:23
about? Keeps of mental ever
41:25
760 insane one
41:28
insane thing is that does it why
41:30
would you edit
41:31
it? Why would you edit it
41:33
down? Oh, you gotta be modest. You gotta stay humble. But
41:35
but what? Wait. I
41:38
don't understand how oh,
41:41
So you're at ninety five 760. I think
41:43
it's probably because there had been,
41:45
like, some despondent ish calls.
41:48
Sure. Like, there had a couple 760 within
41:50
the last week or so on his show who
41:52
had said, like, you know, people aren't responding
41:54
to x, y, or z. Right. And
41:56
so maybe just in the sake of, like,
41:58
let's it least match the energy that the
42:00
collars are bringing. Sure. Sure. Let's not oversell
42:02
this thing. Listen, it's gonna look
42:05
glaring. We're down to eighty.
42:07
I mean, I mean, if this is kind of
42:09
like a negotiation strategy. You know, you
42:11
start so delusional. Right. But somehow
42:13
the reasonable 760- Yeah. --
42:15
direction you take it is even
42:17
more delusional. Right. And eighty is like crazy. It's absurd.
42:19
Yeah. Absurd. 760. I mean, if you
42:22
count politeness and people
42:24
just 760 look great. It was
42:26
great. Then maybe 760 That's
42:28
just because people are nice. I'd put it down
42:30
to twenty percent at best.
42:34
At best. I mean, look, how many family members
42:36
does Mel gibson have?
42:38
That's good. That could swing. That does swing.
42:42
That does you the numbers. So Alex is down on these tapes,
42:44
man. Eighty percent to ninety percent.
42:46
Rough. That's that's a big hit. When you say
42:48
eighty percent to ninety percent, 760 what
42:50
you mean
42:52
is seventy? Yeah. Mhmm. And so, look,
42:54
everyone's a little bit sad.
42:56
Mhmm. And that prompts,
42:58
I think, a little of a conversation
43:00
about how important and great Alex's tapes
43:01
are. Charles? Yes,
43:03
Charles. Go ahead. I I thank you
43:05
for what you do, mister
43:07
Jones. I I just like to say
43:10
for this Christmas, all the listeners is wake up one person
43:12
this Christmas. Well, don't all
43:15
our audience will be strong, but we'll have a
43:18
760 have a better chance to win this
43:19
thing. I really don't feel mister
43:22
Jones we got that much longer. I
43:24
really feel
43:25
Red The New York Times, Charles, have you
43:28
seen the takeover? Yes.
43:30
Then you saw the local news
43:32
asked in our own video, our own interview out there at the do they not
43:34
have porta potties, barbed wire fences, thousands
43:37
of cots in places to
43:39
chain us down that was
43:41
built in nineteen ninety
43:44
nine 760- Yeah. -- and in the airport to get changed
43:46
in the floor and all that. And now,
43:48
you The old airport's a huge
43:50
camp. And now and
43:53
now they're openly in the New York
43:55
Times telling
43:55
us, oh, it's a new development
43:57
our safing. They're building these in every town. Well, that's what
43:59
they
43:59
probably told the Jewish people to get them in a
44:02
gettoad. It was what they say. Oh, they told them it was
44:04
to stop infection and for their
44:06
security. And for their
44:08
safety. And then there was, of course, the
44:10
760 that took place when they were
44:12
herded them into the box cars
44:14
and then on into the
44:15
chambers. But mister Jones, if everybody listening to this,
44:18
this one
44:20
person, to
44:22
one, and everybody can do it, mister George. I beg
44:24
them, please, file a country. 760 would
44:26
wake up somebody in their family, a
44:28
neighbor. Just do it.
44:30
We'll we'll be face is strong. have a better chance. We
44:33
don't have that much longer. And mister Jones, I can't
44:35
go to let my wife go to
44:36
Aufina, can't maybe be raped by
44:39
some aren't true. Well, at that point, you know what you
44:41
gotta do, bud. We're trying to oversight. But if
44:43
they wanna pull it, it's gonna happen. And
44:45
I would advise the police 760 everybody else
44:47
to stay home and to not try
44:49
it. Yes. And and please, I 760 you can tell to
44:51
me talking about the tapes. I know you do. But
44:53
if everybody get the tape and get to somebody
44:55
for
44:55
Christmas, that's we we were be twice strong.
44:58
Just what do you taste any one of
45:00
them? Any
45:00
one of them? And and believe me,
45:03
it'll start tomorrow in rolling. You know what
45:05
I'm talking about? It'll start the mind thinking.
45:07
The tapes are the only way I got to fight. It's the only way I
45:09
got to fight. In 760 right now, I'm
45:11
a VCRs are giving me trouble. I'm
45:13
trying to show it down,
45:16
but should I'm gonna I'm gonna still put now
45:18
trying to put out a hundred and twenty a month
45:20
now. This is so sad.
45:22
Wow. It's that bums me
45:24
out. So that was the
45:26
weirdest, creepiest Christmas message
45:28
from Louisiana Dentures I've ever
45:30
heard
45:31
about. What the fuck was was that? Yeah, man.
45:33
Please. If just if just water you if just water you would
45:35
just give it to your knee, your knee. Mister Jones? Just
45:37
give it to your knee. Was your body?
45:39
Is there anyone you No.
45:41
Just 760 one teach
45:44
one. My 760 VCR has
45:46
given me 760. That was that was the saddest thing I
45:48
think I've ever heard by a tire light. My VCR
45:50
has given me troubles, but the tapes are
45:52
the only way we can fight. I
45:54
mean, God. You're bleak.
45:57
You're genuinely afraid that your
45:59
wife is going to be taken to a
46:01
FEMA camp and raped by a foreign
46:04
soldier. Yep. That's what you think.
46:06
And the solution is
46:08
spread Alex's tape spread
46:10
that free 760 marketing for
46:12
Alex. What happened in that
46:14
man's brain? Alex.
46:16
Poor poor man. Yep.
46:18
Alex did. Alex, scaring
46:20
people about a hundred
46:22
different things so they can't keep track of
46:24
anything and and selling them the solution. Wow. But,
46:26
I mean, we talk about this a lot. The the
46:28
impotence of
46:30
Alex's just of model --
46:32
Yeah. -- and and that guy is such a
46:34
good example of that where it's like the
46:36
only thing we can do is
46:39
promote Alex's content. Yeah. This
46:42
is the the end all be all
46:44
of the fight against the globalists is
46:47
just being Alex's street 760. Yeah. Yeah. I
46:50
mean, the the thing is and I this
46:52
is this is a weird
46:54
little side
46:56
thing. What's what's strange to me about that
46:58
is that Alex talks almost nonstop
47:00
about, like, suicide bombers
47:02
and and all of these 760.
47:05
You know? Like, people who are in
47:07
an actual fight driven
47:10
to a point of desperation so serious
47:12
that the only way they feel like they have to fight back. The only thing they have
47:14
to fight back with is their life. And he's
47:16
telling these people they're in that type of
47:18
fight, and the way they have to
47:21
with everything they've got is by making
47:23
video tapes. Right. And giving them to people
47:25
and fixing your 760 -- Yeah.
47:27
-- man -- Yeah. -- that's
47:29
How does that not break through your cognitive
47:32
dissonance? I'm
47:35
not sure. If bumps me
47:37
out, though. It really, really, really
47:40
bums me out. I'm not I'm
47:42
not one of these people who takes, like,
47:44
holidays too seriously. Sure. 760 know, like, I think
47:46
you and I are both kind of, like,
47:48
Christmas, you know, raised
47:50
Christian appreciation. Have kind
47:52
of a weariness of Christmas --
47:54
Yes. -- it's kind of like a whatever it
47:57
is. Yeah. But there is something about
47:59
this guy being like, this Christmas, please
48:01
make a copy of Alex's tape.
48:03
Touch me. It's a
48:06
terrible. It's like the worst miracle on 34th Street
48:08
speech. Yeah. You 760 it's like,
48:10
please just 760 it's shado
48:12
again. Who knows? He's from
48:14
a bad Christmas movie.
48:16
It sounds so genuine.
48:19
It sounds so earnest. It sounds like
48:21
this man wants to leave the
48:23
world a better place knowing that he doesn't have much
48:25
time left. It's fucked. But
48:28
but he's not saying I don't have much
48:30
time left. Is it 760
48:32
don't? No. No. No. I know that the world is
48:34
gonna ask. But when when an old man
48:36
says 760 don't have much time
48:38
left, it could be
48:40
dual. Yeah.
48:40
So, anyway, that call was a bummer, and this call is a
48:42
little bit more fun. Jay in Colorado,
48:45
Jay
48:45
are on the air. Thanks
48:47
for holding. Hi.
48:48
Alex. Welcome. And I
48:49
don't like to go on
48:49
too much about the videos. I know
48:52
Dave's been that way
48:52
with the call so far, but I've had a
48:55
problem with the delivery of mine, and 760 not been
48:58
just two weeks 760 something like
48:59
that, like, six weeks 760 at
49:02
a
49:02
three back
49:03
with the new one. I'm not sure if the new one
49:03
is holding -- Oh. -- delivery of of the other two,
49:06
you know? Because you 760 know you said No. It's
49:07
been released.
49:08
And what you need to do is you need
49:11
760 call because I'd say about one out of hundred videos. We get the
49:14
wrong address or something that goes on and on. You
49:16
need to call this number right now.
49:18
Okay. Fine. 512291
49:22
fifty seven
49:23
fifty, and we'll ship it out to 760. Is
49:26
that really? Is that the office, the --
49:28
Yeah. -- machine 760.
49:29
51512291
49:33
fifty seven fifty for for
49:35
anybody that's
49:37
had any trouble. Now what else is
49:38
on your mind, sir? Well, also the I
49:41
also then I got some of
49:43
those fairly TBD. Yes. And
49:46
I have some double play a
49:48
DVD 760 Same number, man.
49:50
Like, camera number. Same
49:51
number. There's one number. Whenever Tom
49:53
broke up, whenever his name comes on the
49:55
screen they're before? you
49:56
need to you need to call
49:58
us. We'll send you another one. I can't get through
50:00
that. Anybody in that, you know, one for
50:03
portion that they can't all
50:04
they can do
50:05
760 Sir, what happens is if you call 8882533139
50:09
that's an operator
50:12
service and they will give you my office number,
50:14
and they will call you back today.
50:16
So they my message
50:18
isn't
50:19
they? You know, from the
50:20
Well, let me let me put you on hold, and I'll get your
50:23
phone number, sir, and I'll ninety
50:25
nine percent of
50:26
people. 760 nine percent of people 760 have a problem,
50:29
but but some and so I'm gonna put you on hold right now. I've
50:31
got the other one in two and
50:32
a half weeks. I've got the other one in two and a half weeks. Give
50:34
me more details. 760 of the toll
50:36
free number.
50:37
the
50:37
sure do.
50:38
That where all the problems are stemming from. And I may drop that service, forget
50:40
the new one because the operators are
50:42
riding addresses down wrong or
50:45
going to people's neighbors and stuff, and it's
50:47
killing me. So that's it. Every
50:50
word. Let me 760 me finish. Let me
50:52
finish.
50:53
I know. You don't have your fucking tapes, man. I get it. I'm
50:55
in the middle of an explanation.
50:57
I know you're going to undercut this. Let
50:59
me fucking finish. Blaming
51:02
the call center, but write it down the
51:04
address 760. I actually checked with the call
51:06
center, and they said that they had my address. Right?
51:08
They confirmed it they I actually
51:10
work at the call center. I mean, 760 really we're
51:12
good friends with all these people. They're
51:14
good they're good honest god fearing 760.
51:16
Yep. So it is it is fun to hear a customer service couple. It
51:18
provides me a tech support with
51:21
Bill Cooper. Love it. God
51:23
love it. It is something
51:26
else. Alex is being
51:28
annoyed. He's just gotta
51:30
sit there and take it. He can't just be
51:32
like, end call. He's gotta be like, oh, let me try and help your problem,
51:34
sir. I don't I don't know why you can't
51:36
just hang up. Be like, this is not
51:38
this is not an on air
51:41
my man. I gave you my number to call.
51:44
Please call that number. Mhmm. Please don't
51:46
continue telling me more things
51:47
about how poorly my business
51:49
is run. I know it. I think
51:51
that maybe there's even a vulnerability
51:53
that Alex has at this point in
51:55
his career of, like,
51:57
appearing that he has other people who do things --
52:00
Yeah. -- like shipping department and
52:02
-- Yeah. -- stuff like that. Like,
52:04
the the He's gotta be the one
52:06
man -- Right. -- his Yeah. That's the whole
52:08
thing. The idea should be that it's, like,
52:10
him putting his He's putting stamps
52:12
on the envelope to his. You
52:14
sending out
52:16
buttons. Yeah. That's kind of the image. Yeah. And then I think
52:18
maybe hanging up on
52:20
the guy would kinda bust that a little bit. Yeah.
52:22
Well, I mean, that's a good thing.
52:24
We don't do our call in shows. No. Because
52:26
then people would call it, it'll be
52:28
like, I haven't gotten my button yet and
52:30
we're like, 760, you haven't. It'll
52:32
be 760. It'll be
52:34
there. I might eventually hang up on
52:36
people. No number no number to call,
52:38
no recourse. It will
52:40
be
52:41
there. Mhmm. So 760 one last clip here, and it's
52:43
another caller who has an interesting story to tell about a
52:46
national monument. A couple
52:48
other real quick things. Where
52:50
we got 760 the statue of
52:52
liberty from, namely the
52:53
Illuminati, supposedly. 760 know that that
52:56
portion of it. Yeah. It's a trans it's
52:58
a giant grand's bestite. And then that's that's his mainstream
53:00
pokes. Right. It is a male
53:02
or the unisex god
53:06
goddess, Lucifer. The
53:09
Illuminati torch and the sun god crowned, and that's what the
53:11
maker -- Sorry. -- France said that I've
53:13
I've read mainstream books about it. It
53:15
it's true. May
53:17
and it's an Illuminati 760. Yeah.
53:20
We have mainstream books. Mainstream
53:22
books have made it very 760.
53:25
To anyone who wants that information. Well,
53:28
and the French sculpture
53:30
has even said this. Right. Right. Right. So
53:32
this should be widely known
53:35
that -- It's not. --
53:37
the United States symbol of
53:39
freedom and hope is
53:41
actually an illiquidity 760 deck
53:44
devil. It's the devil. Well, it's the
53:47
devil. It's either a cross dresser
53:49
or it is
53:51
the devil. Yeah. And it's
53:53
got a Illuminati crown and torch
53:56
of Prometheus, I
53:58
guess, maybe. Yeah.
54:00
None of this is based on anything.
54:02
Yeah. There was speculation
54:04
that it was
54:06
based on the sculptor's mother
54:09
And then some people had suggested
54:12
that the Skolpere's brother
54:14
also looks fairly similar.
54:16
Oh, say There might be a
54:18
family resemble. Robert, kind of thing. And some of those theories
54:20
were are, you know, pop
54:22
around. And, you know,
54:24
this is like, something the damage
54:26
is pulling out with thin air. Right. Like, there
54:28
are people who bandy these
54:30
ideas about the like, a model for it
54:32
could have been his
54:34
brother or something along
54:36
those lines, but it's
54:38
saying it's in mainstream books
54:40
and, you know, the skullfish
54:43
settle. Alex is just I'm 760 trying
54:45
to be more interesting than he actually I'm gonna tell you this right now. If you start
54:47
worrying about what sculptures are based
54:49
off of, then you're gonna be because
54:51
I'll secret
54:54
Michelangelo's David? Mhmm. Not actually David. What wasn't
54:57
actually him? What? Michelangelo didn't even
54:59
know the guy. Mhmm. Never
55:02
met him. And Venus did have a
55:04
head. No.
55:06
That's a common misconception.
55:08
She didn't have an arm
55:11
-- Uh-huh. -- but she did have a head. And
55:13
then the other arm fell off. Wait.
55:15
Somebody stole that. Does the statue
55:17
have no head and no what? It has it has a
55:19
head. Okay. It has no arm. Oh, where
55:22
did I get the no head from?
55:24
There's another sculpture that has no
55:25
head. There's plenty of sculptures that have no head.
55:28
Yeah. You said
55:30
it. Yeah. You know what? You can take any sculpture right now, and you make
55:32
it not have a
55:33
head screw. So the
55:36
ninth, you
55:38
know, Big picture complaining about SARS
55:40
being a bio
55:41
weapon. Sure. So that's that's a good bit
55:43
of fun. There's an issue.
55:45
A lot of stuff about these tapes. He
55:48
calls about, like, customer
55:51
service and said, Christmas movie speech about these that
55:53
was a sad speech. Yeah. A bizarre
55:56
preoccupation. And then also Alex 760 a
55:58
little bit sit down
56:00
with his water filter sponsor. So
56:02
that's That's that's the Christmas
56:04
spirit. That's fun. Yeah. So we get to
56:05
the 760, and Alex says
56:08
a big story.
56:09
It's Wednesday, the tenth of December
56:12
two thousand and three. I'm your host,
56:14
Alex Jones, will be live for the next
56:16
three hours.
56:19
In the hour of the show, I have one of
56:21
the lawyers for the young people at
56:23
Goose Creek, a public school
56:26
where the police 760 a
56:28
what can only be described as a
56:30
Nazi or Soviet style martial
56:33
law raid. These have actually been
56:35
going on around the country for about ten
56:37
years becoming a lot more frequent but Big Brother's
56:39
own surveillance turned against
56:42
them and
56:44
now now part of the video
56:46
that wasn't released has been released and it
56:48
shows the dog of the German shepherd,
56:50
savaging their backpacks, grabbing
56:52
the backpack shaking its head,
56:55
stepping and stomping and jumping
56:57
on the terrified
56:58
children. So this story 760. It's
57:01
a tragedy, and I'm going to guess that Alex is gonna miss
57:03
the forest for the trees talking about it because
57:05
he always does. Yeah. 760 November
57:08
fifth two thousand three, the police in Goose Creek,
57:10
South Carolina conducted a raid on
57:12
students at stratford High School after
57:14
the principal decided that one student
57:17
was possibly selling weed. The student body of the school is less
57:19
than twenty five percent African American,
57:22
but over, quote,
57:26
a more than two thirds of those caught up in the sweep were
57:28
African Americans. Ultimately,
57:30
no drugs or weapons were found and no
57:32
charges were filed. Great. A
57:35
cynical view of things might lead one to assume that
57:37
the only reason that this became a story
57:40
at all is because there were surveillance
57:42
video of the raid itself and this
57:44
is kind of bleak shit to
57:46
imagine that this could
57:48
conceivably be happening in other
57:50
schools. Yeah. And what that must
57:53
760, like
57:53
One of the reasons that this story
57:56
proceeded the way that it did is because
57:58
twenty of the students who were the subject of
58:00
this raid were represented by the
58:02
ACLU, who had the sources to take
58:04
this all the way to a
58:06
settlement, which changed the way that the school district
58:08
handled searches and it
58:10
established a fund for the students who
58:12
are victim to cover medical expenses and
58:13
therapy. This lawyer that Alex
58:16
has
58:16
on is a member of the legal team that is also
58:20
representing so students, and that's great as
58:21
well. So much of this
58:23
comes down to a conversation about race.
58:25
And I think it's pretty
58:27
clear that Alex isn't going to
58:30
address that. One of the reasons that
58:32
this case is particularly suspicious
58:34
was the timing of the raid, which took
58:36
place at six forty five AM. The reason this
58:38
is suspicious is because
58:40
that was prior to the arrival time of
58:42
most of the school's buses.
58:44
The only buses that had arrived were
58:46
the one that picked up students who
58:48
lived relatively close, which was a group that was predominantly black.
58:50
In essence, the school intentionally
58:54
not created a situation where the
58:56
primarily white students would arrive at
58:58
school to a scene of mostly black
59:00
students being searched and made to Neil while
59:02
police held the on point.
59:04
It's a dehumanizing scene and the
59:06
race aspect of it is
59:08
pretty much impossible
59:10
to ignore. 760 we'll see how Alex
59:12
drives. I mean, I just I I'm I'm
59:14
not in it's gonna
59:16
have to be a lot of effort.
59:19
Mhmm. It's gonna have to be a lot of effort
59:21
to pretend that this is not about
59:23
race. Yeah. Well,
59:26
I mean, I think I think you could probably
59:30
make a couple of
59:32
interesting ways around
59:33
this. One, is that
59:36
it's not all about
59:38
race. There's a large
59:38
portion of it that's race. Sure. And maybe if
59:41
you wanna focus on some of those
59:43
other things, to the exclusion of the larger conversation
59:45
issue. That's but but that's the
59:47
way Alex might might Right. Right.
59:50
No. No. 760. CC,
59:52
it's economic. 760, because the it it it's all about
59:54
economics because of the
59:56
it's just regional. Mhmm. It's just
59:59
it's the areas Right. And and
1:00:01
then he could just be like, well, it's police
1:00:04
state. Yeah. You know, like,
1:00:06
wow. And and I think that that is, you
1:00:08
know, there there is a truth to it that
1:00:10
this is inappropriate policing of anybody.
1:00:12
Right. You know, having, you know,
1:00:14
dogs and
1:00:16
being doing
1:00:18
a search of a school
1:00:20
over something that has no you have
1:00:22
no probable cause or no real reason
1:00:25
outside of a a hunch. Yeah.
1:00:27
Kind of level of evidence is it's it's intrusive at
1:00:29
very least. Yeah. All of the laws that
1:00:31
we have should
1:00:34
keep that from happening. Yeah. But it seems like the laws are being used
1:00:36
to make that happen, which is an
1:00:38
issue. And and, you know,
1:00:40
that that that is fair enough that
1:00:42
there is
1:00:44
like the police statey aspects of this. Sure.
1:00:46
But again, to focus on that
1:00:48
without looking at the broader picture
1:00:50
of it, I think is
1:00:54
it's not dealing with the story as it is. Yeah. That's absurd.
1:00:56
So, sir, Alex talks
1:00:59
a little bit about a
1:01:01
news story about this
1:01:02
raid. And this
1:01:04
is dumb. And department
1:01:07
procedure says that they can only
1:01:09
search someone one at a time and that
1:01:11
you cannot have a whole group ING
1:01:14
SURCHED IN AN 760 LEGAL MARKETICS
1:01:16
DETECTION 760 ONLY AFTER
1:01:18
THE ONSEAN 760 CLEARED THE AREA OF ALL
1:01:20
PERSONAL WILL THE KAY INNER AND
1:01:22
CONDUCT ANY LEGAL NARCOTICS DETENTION.
1:01:24
DETECTION. SO YOU TAKE
1:01:28
THE CLOSE backpack off. The coats off. You do not have
1:01:30
the dog do it while the person's
1:01:32
dressed. And this was a
1:01:34
German shepherd trained in
1:01:36
drug detection. By
1:01:38
a in Czechoslovakia and
1:01:41
760 in attack. So we
1:01:43
have attack dogs. So
1:01:45
for one thing,
1:01:47
Czechoslovakia dissolved in nineteen ninety three. So if
1:01:50
this dog was trained there, that's a pretty old dog.
1:01:52
That's an old dog. I have
1:01:54
no idea why a small town department
1:01:56
in South Carolina would outsource their drug, dog training to Eastern
1:01:58
Europe, but that seems kind of cost
1:02:02
prohibitive. If you want the best you have to pay for it. There's
1:02:04
a really big police dog training
1:02:05
center in North Carolina. Sure. But
1:02:07
they don't know how to do it quite as
1:02:09
well as Slovakia does.
1:02:12
Okay? The Czech 760, once they split
1:02:13
apart, their dog training, went to shit.
1:02:16
So I was really confused about this, but
1:02:18
I traced
1:02:20
down the article that Alex is reading from, and it turns out that says
1:02:22
the dog is a chuckle, Slovakia and shepherd.
1:02:28
Alex is taking the dogs breed and pretending that it means
1:02:30
that the dog was trained in Europe.
1:02:32
I guess because it makes the dog
1:02:35
sound more scary, I will say this. I
1:02:38
am slightly more terrified of an eastern
1:02:40
European German shepherd than it was trained. If
1:02:42
it was trained 760 Eastern
1:02:44
Europe, I feel like that's a that's a stereotypically terrifying
1:02:46
place to train something out in period. Also,
1:02:48
at no point in the article, does it
1:02:50
say that the dog, whose name is Major,
1:02:54
they don't say that it's a trained attack dog. Yeah. This
1:02:56
is at best Alex lying about a
1:02:58
part in the article that describes the
1:03:01
difference between passive and active
1:03:04
alert detection dogs. Some
1:03:06
dogs respond to finding drugs by
1:03:08
sitting which is the passive training and some
1:03:10
will bark which is the more aggressive style.
1:03:13
Alex is either lying about this or just making
1:03:15
up a detail to create an angle for the
1:03:17
audience to hang on to that doesn't involve
1:03:19
the clear racism that underlies 760 story.
1:03:22
Everything about the raid and the search sucks, and I'm
1:03:24
not minimizing any of that stuff. I'm just
1:03:26
saying that Alex is not a good source
1:03:28
of information on anything. If you have the article he's
1:03:30
reporting on in front of you and you watch
1:03:32
along as Alex reads, it
1:03:34
often becomes really clear how his
1:03:36
process works.
1:03:38
He's basically just skimming along and finding words
1:03:40
to use as anchor points. And in this case,
1:03:42
Czechoslovakia is a pretty glaring
1:03:45
and embarrassing one. This behavior is constant and consistent
1:03:47
throughout his career. So generally, if people listen to
1:03:50
Alex, it's probably best for them to double check
1:03:52
his work.
1:03:54
So you can tell how much of it is just shit. He's making up to sound
1:03:56
smarter and more interesting. Well,
1:03:58
putting literally zero effort
1:04:00
into doing any show prep.
1:04:02
Because why would you? Yeah. Yeah. That's He knows that the shit
1:04:05
that he's saying isn't true. So why
1:04:07
put time into preparing? It doesn't
1:04:09
make any sense. Right. Yeah. And
1:04:11
in I mean, it it almost works to your
1:04:14
disadvantage. Because if you have a well
1:04:16
prepared lie, it's too
1:04:18
good to be -- Right. To be
1:04:20
760. Yeah. You need to maintain flexibility. Yeah. Yeah.
1:04:22
Yeah. 760 if you prepare too much, then
1:04:24
you kinda wanna stick with it so you can't
1:04:27
change it as much later you're
1:04:29
like, no. No. No. No. I put a lot of
1:04:31
work into this bullshit. Mhmm. I'm
1:04:32
not gonna just go ahead and say that Putin's a
1:04:34
good guy now. No. This guy was trying
1:04:36
to
1:04:37
chuckle about you. Czechoslovakia. Damn
1:04:40
it.
1:04:40
Oh my god. I can't believe that that's
1:04:42
how do you So I I
1:04:44
got something a little bit backwards and that
1:04:47
is on the the ninth.
1:04:49
The first show Yeah. Alex had
1:04:51
a short interview with Larry Pratt from gun
1:04:53
owners of Larry Pratt. Larry Pratt.
1:04:55
Alright. It's actually on the tenth that his water filter sponsor
1:04:58
comes in. And
1:04:58
here's just
1:04:59
a little taste of that. Every
1:05:01
corner of the countries found
1:05:04
massive levels of Prozac,
1:05:06
herbicides, pesticides, dead bacteria
1:05:08
760 you're lucky, one of times live
1:05:10
bacteria, but dead bacteria are bad enough.
1:05:12
They're toxic, little microscopic pieces of rotten meat, basically.
1:05:16
It's time to filter our water, isn't
1:05:18
it? It really is.
1:05:20
And Alex.
1:05:22
We've we've got a couple Christmas specials that we
1:05:25
want to share with folks. You can't
1:05:27
say Christmas. It's
1:05:27
politically incorrect.
1:05:30
Holidays, we may be arrested for thought crime.
1:05:32
Okay. That way,
1:05:33
you'll keep 760 straight
1:05:36
test. Possible. Yeah,
1:05:39
man. It's I can't say Christmas. It's got a war out
1:05:41
of Christmas. Oh, boy. I have
1:05:43
some very left
1:05:48
What is that? Unseed and destroyed
1:05:50
760 type of Liberal Attack
1:05:52
760 dethrone God? Yeah. A number
1:05:55
of them said 760
1:05:58
Christmas. I I I've said Merry Christmas to you many times. I don't think
1:06:00
anybody cares. Yeah. I don't care.
1:06:02
I don't I don't think anyone
1:06:04
care in two thousand three and they care less
1:06:07
than I manually. Even less. Even less.
1:06:09
So, yeah, that's that's a lot of fun.
1:06:11
One of the things that I think is
1:06:13
interesting to note too is that
1:06:15
I'm noticing a trend
1:06:18
in this period of Alex's
1:06:20
career where a lot of the ad ad
1:06:22
stuff is brokered programming.
1:06:24
Yeah. But it's pretty clear what
1:06:27
it is. It's it's strange because it doesn't
1:06:29
feel like they're trying to hide that they
1:06:31
are an infomercial. Yeah.
1:06:34
They
1:06:34
are still blending content and the pitch. Right. That
1:06:36
is for sure. In a moment, it's
1:06:38
really difficult to tell what's
1:06:42
leading what. Right. But you would
1:06:44
never mistake this for
1:06:46
not a sponsored bit
1:06:48
of time -- Totally.
1:06:50
-- whereas in the present day and closer to the present
1:06:52
day, that line blurs quite
1:06:54
a bit. Yeah. This is very
1:06:56
clearly this is the
1:06:58
segment where I'm
1:07:00
going to make money by letting this guy try and make money. Mhmm. That's
1:07:02
the segment. Yeah. We all know it. 760
1:07:04
gonna say that Alex even makes clear
1:07:07
while there I think it's actually just
1:07:09
after the guy leaves that, like, he
1:07:12
pays for all of the
1:07:14
bandwidth stuff on shortwave.
1:07:16
So, like, he pays for all of
1:07:18
that and an exchange he comes on 760 they
1:07:20
sell his water filters. That's a reasonable 760.
1:07:22
And I'm sure maybe Alex some
1:07:25
money on top of that too. Sure. Like, maybe
1:07:27
it's a taste of each filter.
1:07:29
Right. Ethically speaking,
1:07:32
you know, you're not trying to Yeah. That's
1:07:34
long as you can try to receive people, then yeah. I I mean,
1:07:36
the question of 760 really just does
1:07:38
come down to, like, are you
1:07:40
focusing on an exaggerating water
1:07:43
based issues in order to sell water
1:07:46
filters -- Right. --
1:07:48
and ignoring other real
1:07:50
water issues like, you know, parts of
1:07:52
the country. That don't have access to clean 760. Totally.
1:07:55
Because those aren't people who could afford
1:07:57
your water filter. Totally fair. Totally
1:07:59
fair. There's ethical angles
1:08:01
in that, but But in terms of, like, just trying to be,
1:08:03
like, we're not doing an ad when we are. Right. That seems to
1:08:06
be a bit different at this 760. Yeah. Yeah.
1:08:08
Yeah. Yeah. issues
1:08:10
with this are more similar to,
1:08:12
like, when breakfast cereal showed you what a
1:08:14
balanced breakfast look like. And it was like, bacon,
1:08:19
eggs, ham, six pieces of fruit,
1:08:21
two glasses of milk, and orange juice all
1:08:23
to make it seem like the
1:08:25
amount of sugar
1:08:26
you are with. Mellow. Yeah. It's not an unacceptable amount.
1:08:28
Yeah. Yeah. There's there's
1:08:30
some information missing. Yeah. So
1:08:33
on the tenth,
1:08:35
Alex takes calls Again, he's 760 takes calls
1:08:37
in the past man. Tell you what? He takes
1:08:40
calls.
1:08:41
A lot of the same people.
1:08:43
That does sound
1:08:43
true. Yep. They're all they're fewer
1:08:46
guests. Yeah. Mano
1:08:48
man. In the same way
1:08:50
that you know, he's not gonna sell out a theater without giving away tickets.
1:08:52
Sure. He's not gonna open the phones without
1:08:54
the same fucking people calling in.
1:08:57
Oh, we're not getting the Louisiana dentures are we? No. Oh, good. I
1:08:59
can't I can't handle another Christmas message. No. No. No.
1:09:02
It's another character that we know
1:09:04
though. Is 760 Old man
1:09:06
house phone? It's Dan in Illinois.
1:09:08
No. Dan and Illinois. He's on all
1:09:10
the time. Yeah. He gets I don't know. He must have 760 hotline
1:09:12
number 760 he
1:09:15
is constantly on
1:09:17
760 I don't I don't play
1:09:19
every time he's around. Because I don't want it to be excessive. Like, I'm Dan. I live in Illinois. This guy's Dan in Illinois.
1:09:21
It's 760 and he's not the
1:09:23
cohost of info
1:09:27
ours. No. No.
1:09:28
But this this bears mentioning, I think
1:09:30
he might be an eighty seven. Right?
1:09:34
Let's talk Dan in Illinois, then Greg, Jan,
1:09:36
and Ethan, and Les Anne
1:09:38
and others.
1:09:39
Dan, you're on the air. Go
1:09:42
ahead. Are doing, Alex. Good, sir. You know,
1:09:43
I'm a little
1:09:44
confused about what all the protesting against
1:09:46
Mel Gibson's film or anything else like
1:09:49
that. Well, it doesn't work when they at
1:09:51
Mel Gibson was here Sunday, showed it to all the Liberals,
1:09:53
and they loved it. So it kinda blew up in
1:09:55
the ADL space. Well, here
1:09:57
here's the
1:09:58
thing. Christians by their existence believe that Christ has got.
1:10:00
English people by their
1:10:03
760 they remain
1:10:04
Jewish. That's true.
1:10:07
Wasn't.
1:10:07
760, he was in God. He was a blasphemer
1:10:09
like it it says
1:10:10
in the bible. While the Leftists don't like Christians and Christianity 760
1:10:14
and they'll they'll attack any anything
1:10:16
Christian. Look at the tent to manage.
1:10:18
I mean, is
1:10:19
this truly
1:10:20
a leftist thing or is it
1:10:22
more of a Jewish thing? Wow. I
1:10:24
am going to change my name and move from Illinois. I
1:10:26
don't wanna be associated with them from there. 760
1:10:30
here. Maybe the problem that people have your religion isn't so
1:10:33
much the religion part, so much is
1:10:35
the part where it makes you go,
1:10:37
well, since they don't believe Jesus
1:10:39
is 760 God, and
1:10:42
they 760 means that they believe that he's a blast from here. So, obviously, we should kill him. religion
1:10:45
part. That's the
1:10:48
problem. Well, that's where
1:10:50
it comes into conflict. Sure.
1:10:52
Yeah. Sure. The the the
1:10:55
idea that there is I
1:10:57
GUESS A FAILING OF OTHER
1:10:59
PEOPLE BECAUSE THEY HAVE NOT BECOME PART OF YOUR RELIGENCE. THAT IS
1:11:02
WHERE -- Reporter: CALLS problems.
1:11:07
Like, here here's the thing. Nobody's mad if you
1:11:09
say Merry Christmas to them. Nobody's mad.
1:11:11
Generally. People are mad if
1:11:13
you say, you have to celebrate Christmas. And
1:11:15
if you don't 760 Merry Christmas back to
1:11:17
me, you're the devil. Right. Right. That's an
1:11:20
issue. I'm perfectly happy to say Merry Christmas
1:11:22
or Copy all days to anybody. Whatever you 760, I
1:11:24
don't want someone yelling at me
1:11:26
to say, man. Exactly. That's all I
1:11:29
That's the I there's no war
1:11:31
on it from my end. Not
1:11:33
for my end. My war is please leave me alone. Just just stop. Don't yell
1:11:35
at me. Just stop. Totally fucked
1:11:37
down in Illinois. Yep.
1:11:40
What I prick.
1:11:43
Go out of asshole. So and Alex gets
1:11:45
another call. And another thing that
1:11:47
happens a bit in
1:11:50
two thousand three is callers call in and this may
1:11:52
be Alex's, like, coast to
1:11:54
coast training. As the callers
1:11:56
will call in
1:11:59
with silly
1:12:00
ideas, and he will just be like
1:12:02
Quebec. Let's roll with the kind of Cuba. Dude, do a little do a little improv. Yeah.
1:12:07
I wanna to go into something else that I think is of interesting. And I
1:12:09
want to know if you've heard anything
1:12:11
about this. Someone told
1:12:14
us, no, some one in Washington, D. C. That the
1:12:17
higher ups had been told to
1:12:19
leave before the year two
1:12:22
thousand and 760. Thereafter OCATE
1:12:24
WITH THEIR FAMILIES BECAUSE I
1:12:26
KNOW THAT MOST ALLEACHS. MOST PEOPLE WHO 760 BILLION
1:12:29
760 ARE BUILDING
1:12:31
comparisons in islands off the US
1:12:33
coast, east coast, west coast in
1:12:36
the Caribbean. 760
1:12:39
are getting islands in the Mediterranean islands in
1:12:41
the South Pacific. And, yes, there
1:12:43
is a massive evacuation taking
1:12:46
place. So this caller
1:12:48
is asking based on intel
1:12:50
that she has gotten, the higher ups have a plan to
1:12:52
evacuate by two thousand
1:12:55
six. Obviously. And I Alex's
1:12:58
responses. They're buying up islands better believe
1:13:00
it. And yes. You have no idea how
1:13:02
much you think that they're trying
1:13:05
to escape. You don't even know how much
1:13:07
they're trying to
1:13:07
escape. I know they're trying to escape so much more than you do. Mhmm. They I'm
1:13:09
the most knowing that they are trying
1:13:11
to escape. Yeah. You
1:13:15
think you've got intelligence. You Maria Banford
1:13:17
character with whatever voice that
1:13:19
is. This is a this
1:13:21
is a This is a signing
1:13:23
off. If you're this person who's calling in, you're gonna
1:13:25
leave this phone call with a Boy, my intel is
1:13:27
good. Wow. Alex has signed Those
1:13:31
people who told me that insane thing are very
1:13:33
trustworthy people and I can't wait to
1:13:35
hear what they have to
1:13:37
say next. Yep. And this extends
1:13:40
to other things, like 760 people
1:13:42
who are clearly in an episode
1:13:45
and are sovereign
1:13:47
citizens. Well,
1:13:47
this is very simple. This very simple. 760 Not right.
1:13:49
760, what I'm getting at is the
1:13:52
definition pertains to US caught
1:13:54
up twenty three thousand two fifty
1:13:57
760 Paragraph a. The meeting of the United States is a federal corporation. You're a
1:13:59
session of a federal corporation. Oh,
1:14:03
boy. Yeah. They replace
1:14:05
the rightful government with a corporation of the same name. Right. The last point that I
1:14:07
wanna make here is
1:14:11
760 you show when they ask
1:14:13
you for your ID, whether you're honestly being stopped by a police officer or
1:14:15
in a court system, present your
1:14:19
ID? What is it that you present? You present your driver's license. Look at your driver's
1:14:22
license. Your name is spelled all capital
1:14:24
letters. They're not looking at
1:14:26
you as the human Gotcha.
1:14:29
Wrong. It's your they're looking for
1:14:31
doom. Work you're you're right. corporation, eyes. The 760 entity, official
1:14:34
corporate entity. And that's
1:14:38
all you want. And that's what we need to turn
1:14:40
around is our court system and turn
1:14:42
this around. Yeah. They get us
1:14:44
they get us to sign know we
1:14:47
are rights through treaties with
1:14:49
the government through contracts. Right. Right.
1:14:51
Yep. They've found
1:14:55
common ground in weird sovereign citizen shit.
1:14:57
Yep. See it, there's a just
1:14:59
a call in with some
1:15:01
silly nonsense, and Alex is
1:15:03
gonna be 760, bet. This
1:15:06
is 760 all works
1:15:08
for me. This this this comports with
1:15:10
my bizarre right wing weird on this. But
1:15:15
Unfortunately, 760, there are
1:15:17
callers who have ideas that
1:15:19
run counter to
1:15:23
Alex's sort can't stand, and Alex has
1:15:25
to push back on them. For
1:15:28
instance, he gets another 760.
1:15:30
And it's from a guy who
1:15:33
has actually read Operation Northwoods. Oh, no. And has a little bit of a
1:15:35
concern about how What what could be
1:15:38
a concern for somebody who's actually read it?
1:15:40
Well, 760 doesn't
1:15:43
necessarily say like, people are gonna be killed. Well, there's
1:15:46
that problem. Yeah. Alex maybe is a little
1:15:50
bit off on it. Uh-oh. You've got it in front
1:15:51
of you. I'm going from memory. Page
1:15:54
nine talks about having their paramilitary
1:15:56
forces, shoot people in DC
1:15:58
760 Miami, and then how to
1:16:01
train patsies. I got 760 Stine
1:16:03
in front of me here. 760
1:16:08
760
1:16:08
single boat of Cubans in Route of Florida, real ore
1:16:10
simulated. See, I told you. Right. Well, then that I
1:16:12
know.
1:16:13
Said what I just said. Right.
1:16:15
Right. Cellular simulated. Right. There but
1:16:18
on the other ones, there was no It
1:16:20
just talked about
1:16:21
You're not No. It it it does
1:16:23
talk about shooting our troops and
1:16:25
shooting people. No.
1:16:26
I've talking about the ones about the unarmed I
1:16:28
think from memory
1:16:29
-- Yeah. -- and you've got it in front of you.
1:16:31
I think four times, they talk about
1:16:33
killing people
1:16:34
and wounding them. Yeah. 760
1:16:35
do mentioned there are some that they would do, and they they're sort of vague
1:16:37
in a couple Yeah. Yeah. They're not clear if
1:16:39
they're gonna
1:16:40
kill John Glenn
1:16:43
or
1:16:43
not. Yeah.
1:16:44
So then you
1:16:45
say, if he died, it can be helpful. We can blame it
1:16:47
on the on the commies. Right? This
1:16:51
is just bullying. That Alex is doing. Alex's
1:16:53
rehearse talking points about Northwoods, which he uses to lend
1:16:56
undeserved support to
1:16:58
his conspiracies about things like nine
1:17:00
eleven and the then recent Beltway sniper attacks
1:17:02
aren't gonna stand up to a person just reading the document. This
1:17:04
is dicey territory, so Alex
1:17:06
has to do two things. That
1:17:10
you see demonstrated in that first over
1:17:16
this caller. Alex claims that the
1:17:18
document says that the globalist's paramilitary forces will shoot people in DC and Miami then
1:17:20
explains how to set up
1:17:22
patsies. This isn't really accurate. The
1:17:27
document talks about developing a communist
1:17:29
Cuban terror plot, quote, pointed
1:17:31
at Cuban refugees seeking 760
1:17:33
in the United States.
1:17:35
This wouldn't involve killing anyone or any
1:17:37
paramilitary groups, although it does say it may involve up to
1:17:40
wounding. They
1:17:43
also say that quote, the arrest of
1:17:45
Cuban agents and the release of prepared documents substantiating Cuban involvement would
1:17:48
be helpful in projecting
1:17:50
the idea of an irresponsible
1:17:52
government. This
1:17:54
is fairly close to discussing how to blame a pazzi, but it's unclear if the Cuban agents referring
1:17:56
to 760 actually be blamed
1:17:58
for anything or if the goal
1:18:02
would just be to arrest some agents in order to
1:18:04
create public perception that they should
1:18:06
be to blame. Or there's
1:18:09
even parts of this plan that suggest using
1:18:11
Cuban friendlies in order to
1:18:14
pretend to be Cuban
1:18:16
communists in order to make
1:18:18
it look like they were attacking something.
1:18:20
Right. So these Cuban agents might even be dummies. They're talking
1:18:22
It's a whole talk of Mamey plan. Yeah. It's splitting hairs a
1:18:25
little bit here, so I'm gonna go ahead
1:18:27
and give Alex half credit. The
1:18:30
document does suggest creating false perception about who's to blame for false fake stocks. Whatever.
1:18:35
The caller then reads the part
1:18:37
about sinking real or simulated ship of refugees. And I suspect
1:18:39
that Alex knows that this
1:18:42
is as close as he's
1:18:44
gonna to get to a 760, so
1:18:46
he pretends that this fully supports what he just claimed, but it doesn't. Alex needs this
1:18:48
appearance of a win in order to
1:18:51
protect the air of frustration and
1:18:54
that he's always right when people question him. This goes
1:18:57
a long way towards the second
1:18:59
aspect of this clip, putting that
1:19:01
in motion, which is to
1:19:03
force the caller to up the notion
1:19:05
that everything is vague. And because of
1:19:07
that, all of Alex's unsupported and extreme
1:19:09
conclusions are actually what the document's saying.
1:19:12
Yeah. It's a demand that the caller
1:19:14
read the words on the page that aren't there because Alex insists
1:19:16
that they are and it's something
1:19:18
that the audience watches and on
1:19:21
some level they probably understand. Yeah. Alex understands reality better than you do, so you need to subvert your
1:19:24
reality to
1:19:28
him. It It's a very
1:19:30
bizarre and scary message. It's the most fucked up example of just I
1:19:33
mean, it's it's a
1:19:35
big bully with authority.
1:19:37
760 you're holding a book
1:19:39
-- Mhmm. -- yelling at you to say that
1:19:42
the book says what they tell you. Yeah.
1:19:44
Doesn't matter what the book says.
1:19:46
You say what they say. Yeah. And
1:19:48
it's it that it worked and
1:19:50
that it worked over the phone. Uh-huh.
1:19:52
That's
1:19:53
fuck. Up, man. Well, that's the extremeness
1:19:55
of the power imbalance. Yeah. Exactly. Like, I I can get it more if it's Alex's
1:19:59
in imposing frame you're,
1:20:02
like, on a desk. Mhmm. You know, like, trying to read quietly and he's got his big ass up in front But
1:20:04
over the phone, man, just
1:20:06
say, no. I'm reading this 760
1:20:11
sentence. Mhmm. So I was actually I
1:20:13
was I was reading through Northwoods. I'm
1:20:15
trying to find, like, the
1:20:17
instances of of things that could be
1:20:20
construed as, like, the
1:20:22
actual violence. Sure. Sure.
1:20:25
Sure. Sure. And The closest
1:20:27
thing really is that sinking
1:20:29
a boatload of Cuban refugees
1:20:32
on route to Florida. And then in
1:20:34
parentheses, it says real or simulate it.
1:20:36
Right. That is the kind
1:20:38
of the closest thing you're gonna get in there. And, I mean,
1:20:43
I think that even in the context of the document and the
1:20:45
other stuff they're saying, even a
1:20:47
real sinking of
1:20:50
the boat wouldn't involve -- We don't heal the reputation. Yeah.
1:20:52
Yeah. It would be, like, it's a
1:20:54
real boat. We're really sinking 760. Right.
1:20:57
-- and there'll be life rafts -- Right. --
1:20:59
and stuff for everybody. Right. 760. Or what or
1:21:01
the people who are on board will be 760 Well
1:21:04
well, I mean but but that's the
1:21:06
point of the the point of the
1:21:08
document is coming up with a plan that
1:21:10
isn't let's just go blow people up.
1:21:12
Right. YOU KNOW, THE WHOLE
1:21:14
ID. IT'S VERY EASY FOR THEM JUST TO DO. YEAH, OR THE GOAL. I WOULD NOT LEAD THIS.
1:21:16
IF WE WANTED
1:21:19
VIOLENCE, VIOLENCE IS OUR jam,
1:21:22
man. We've 760 so much violence all around us. Yeah. You know? Now I want to say one thing really quick, though,
1:21:26
760 760. Yeah. Make
1:21:29
no mistake. The proposals listed in that document would lead to a whole lot of
1:21:31
death. Oh, is it terrible? Yeah. Due to the whole goal of
1:21:33
it being to provide a justification
1:21:35
to attack Cuba, before
1:21:38
they had time to enter a mutual defense pact with the
1:21:40
Soviet Union. Right. Even the suggestions that
1:21:42
they have about just harassing Cuba
1:21:46
could have severe 760. Leaving aside take
1:21:48
away from the document. It was a bad document
1:21:50
and it's a good thing that it was slightly
1:21:52
rejected because it would have resulted
1:21:54
in a ton of deaths. However,
1:21:57
none of that death would be to the flags that suggested in the That's
1:21:59
just Alex 760. Right.
1:22:05
Another
1:22:05
another thing that people don't bring up often enough about that, the
1:22:07
operation Northwood, an
1:22:12
incredibly stupid plan. Not
1:22:14
very well. It's a bad plan. It's it's not going to achieve the goals
1:22:16
that they think it's
1:22:18
going to
1:22:19
achieve. Probably not. 760 it's
1:22:23
also not a plan. It's sort
1:22:25
of a -- True.
1:22:27
-- pitch elevate -- 760. --
1:22:29
the best of elevator pitches. Right. Right.
1:22:31
It's throwing spaghetti. Exactly. 760 not
1:22:33
saying it's like, okay. Here's our
1:22:37
oh, coordinated strategy, obviously. It's the the NSA or, like,
1:22:39
whoever has the, like, the document that was released. Yeah. The
1:22:41
the full thing is fifteen
1:22:44
760. But 760
1:22:47
only a few pages the actual document. The other are
1:22:50
other sheets like the cover page
1:22:52
and stuff like that. Right.
1:22:54
It's it's not a long document.
1:22:56
And none of it
1:22:58
is, like, very well articulated about how these plans would work. Like,
1:23:00
one of the plans they
1:23:03
have is just like start
1:23:06
rumors, and then the parent sees it
1:23:08
as lots of them. It
1:23:11
it does feel like it's more
1:23:13
of a picture of a whiteboard of,
1:23:15
like, one of those giant school classroom whiteboards --
1:23:17
Mhmm. -- with everybody's ideas written on
1:23:19
it really small, and then somebody
1:23:21
just took a picture. And they're,
1:23:23
like, 760. See? That's the plan.
1:23:25
Mhmm. We got it. The the the actual
1:23:28
appendix, which
1:23:32
is where the actual the
1:23:34
the sort of descriptions of plans are and starts on page ten.
1:23:40
Yeah. So the reason that it's confusing is
1:23:42
because there's a there's a numbering of
1:23:45
the pages from
1:23:48
the original page, like, at the
1:23:50
bottom of the page. Right. And what page it is in terms of the, like, fifteen pages that were released? Right. Right.
1:23:52
Right. In terms of the pages that
1:23:54
were released, it starts on page 760.
1:23:58
And then it goes through fifteen.
1:24:01
So it it's
1:24:03
just those five
1:24:06
pages. And, yeah, one of them is rumors
1:24:08
parenthesis many. Use
1:24:11
clandestine radio. That's
1:24:13
just a wish
1:24:15
list. Yeah. Start rumors,
1:24:18
parentheses, just one though. Yeah. One of them is
1:24:20
start riots near the base
1:24:22
main gate, and then parentheses friendly
1:24:27
760. Yeah. See? That's not very specific. Oh, nailed it. Somebody put it put
1:24:29
it up on the wall. Man, Jenkins put it up on
1:24:31
the wall. Mhmm. It's
1:24:34
going up. Okay. What else did anybody got? Large
1:24:37
fires. Scooters. I like that. Scooters.
1:24:39
Who's got scooters? Put it
1:24:41
up on the board.
1:24:43
Uh-huh. Yep. So Look. I heard
1:24:46
children's hands with nothing else around it. What what what what else going on
1:24:51
there? 760, apparently, outer space. Uh-oh. Yeah.
1:24:53
You have to take that document in total for the spirit of it.
1:24:56
And and
1:24:58
and it it taught SHE ABOUT KILLING REAL PEOPLE, KILLING
1:25:01
760, KILLING Cubans, SHOOTING PEOPLE
1:25:03
IN D. C. 760 D.
1:25:08
C. WOUNDING PEOPLE, KILLING
1:25:10
PEOPLE. 760 JOHN BLED
1:25:12
WAS TO
1:25:14
HAVE AN accident while in
1:25:16
That would be 760 be That would be
1:25:19
That
1:25:19
would be full. I mean, it's
1:25:21
you gotta read the whole thing,
1:25:24
which 760 obviously done, but if you've got
1:25:26
some friend who picks out a part where they
1:25:27
say, well, it says it could be simulated, yeah, it
1:25:29
says it could be
1:25:31
real too. Well,
1:25:33
how are you not picking out
1:25:35
something? Who cares? Yeah. gonna get
1:25:36
fast flagged
1:25:37
in orbit. Glenn is gonna
1:25:40
listen. We
1:25:43
just figured out space. Like, just figured it out.
1:25:45
Yeah. This document was from nineteen sixty
1:25:47
two. Right. 760 you're it's
1:25:50
it actually I looked at the
1:25:52
dates this is like two weeks after John
1:25:54
Glenn left for his first orbit -- Yeah. -- in
1:25:56
nineteen sixteen. Yeah. So now
1:25:58
that we've got that figured out,
1:26:01
760, we also
1:26:03
have the capability to knock it
1:26:05
out of orbit
1:26:06
magically. 760 that? Actually hurting
1:26:09
him. Now Do you know what
1:26:12
the big problem with
1:26:14
this is? Oh, boy.
1:26:16
When you say big, that's
1:26:18
a that's a relative value judgment. What
1:26:20
what is the premise of these
1:26:22
false flags? Like, what's the desired end goal?
1:26:25
I believe
1:26:28
it's to stop
1:26:30
the the Cubans from getting involved with the thing. It's to provide a
1:26:32
justification to attack Cuba
1:26:34
-- Right. -- pretexts. Right.
1:26:39
So whatever you do needs to be blamed
1:26:41
on Cuba. Right. So Cuba shot
1:26:43
John Glynn out
1:26:46
of atmosphere. Yeah. There's
1:26:48
a
1:26:48
big little little big problem with this.
1:26:50
Alright. Now I I know that
1:26:52
you and I would both think
1:26:54
in order to say, shoot
1:26:56
John Glenn out of space,
1:26:58
you would need rocket and the
1:27:01
760 to fire things into space.
1:27:03
Then likes of which short supply at that time. And you're
1:27:05
sixty two. And so much so that they
1:27:08
were all monitored
1:27:10
all the time. Right. I
1:27:12
mean, like, I guess you could make
1:27:15
an argument that they have, you know, alliance with the Soviet Union and
1:27:18
maybe they have rockets and
1:27:20
such. But at that point So
1:27:22
then base is involved. Well, yeah. You're dealing with the Soviet Union.
1:27:24
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
1:27:27
That's that's not really then
1:27:29
Cuba is like a, hey, we'll get to you later. We
1:27:31
got Russia shooting people
1:27:33
out of
1:27:36
space. Yeah. John Glen being false
1:27:38
flagged in space is not going to be a pretext for war
1:27:40
with Cuba. Of
1:27:43
of all things if if they
1:27:46
kind of a concept If you had actually convinced the world that John
1:27:48
760 was shot
1:27:51
out of space by by
1:27:53
the Soviet Union. That's a world
1:27:54
war. Right? You can't just shoot a man out of space. That's that's
1:27:57
just everybody's gotta
1:27:59
solve that problem first. That's
1:28:02
my rule. Okay? I've been
1:28:04
sure. When did the, like, sort of,
1:28:06
rules about no militarization of space come
1:28:09
into play? I think they came
1:28:11
into play like, fifties. I'm not sure. But if it was
1:28:13
before that, then you could make an argument that it's
1:28:15
the Wild West. Yeah.
1:28:18
That's a good point. Well,
1:28:20
I didn't know it was
1:28:23
wrong at the time. Yeah. I I
1:28:25
just think that this
1:28:27
is stupid. And man
1:28:29
make no space law? I I
1:28:31
gotta say, this is
1:28:34
not in operation north
1:28:36
whatsoever. A
1:28:40
false flagger job title space.
1:28:42
Not not on the list.
1:28:46
Alongside Start rumors. Start rumors.
1:28:48
Parenthesis many. Parenthesis is one of them.
1:28:50
John Glenn got shot out of space
1:28:53
by Cuba and parenthesis and parent
1:28:55
seize. Here's here's another one of the suggestions now. But
1:28:58
consider the the jump
1:29:01
between this Yeah. Space, false one.
1:29:04
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Quote, mob mortar
1:29:06
shells from outside of base interface.
1:29:08
Some damage to installations.
1:29:11
760.
1:29:11
You gotta have low-tech and high-tech operations at the
1:29:13
same time. You you people protect themselves against one or the other.
1:29:16
You can't be protected against both,
1:29:18
Dan. They use the word long.
1:29:20
Lob.
1:29:22
Toss them over. Shop put.
1:29:24
So Throw a
1:29:26
couple of grenades nearby
1:29:29
somebody's house. I think maybe Alex doesn't have a
1:29:31
great handle on the stock. Might not.
1:29:33
No. Might not. So Alex gets another
1:29:36
call. This is a
1:29:38
fella from Denmark. Very exciting to get an international
1:29:40
caller. Not so exciting to find
1:29:42
out that he's maybe an 760.
1:29:44
Oh,
1:29:46
Are you saying that the ADL
1:29:48
is there to be anyhow somebody is? 760
1:29:50
are the arms of the 760. You
1:29:53
every time you attack
1:29:54
Illomontii. Well, I
1:29:55
have friends if you attack government corruption in any way and
1:29:57
never say a word of racism,
1:29:59
you will be attacked
1:30:02
by
1:30:03
the ADL. If your real life Nazi,
1:30:05
you will be loved and supported and completely
1:30:08
ignored by the
1:30:10
Southern Property Law Center 760
1:30:13
we sent
1:30:14
all center. But the southern property of law center is is is is Jewish too.
1:30:17
I
1:30:19
don't understand. The inishment
1:30:22
that this is is
1:30:23
Jews. Maybe 760 they have some
1:30:26
kind
1:30:26
of connection to vanadium 760.
1:30:29
I don't know. But
1:30:30
760 that.
1:30:31
Well, there's a
1:30:31
lot of organizations. Look, it's a horrible thing
1:30:34
to throw it tonight. It's got a racist
1:30:36
or way to push back on that. It's
1:30:38
so horst. It's so horrible to
1:30:41
be called racist. Yeah.
1:30:43
That response isn't good. Both
1:30:46
from the caller and
1:30:48
from
1:30:48
Alex. Trust me. You
1:30:50
know, it's 760 startling to
1:30:53
go back and, you know,
1:30:56
just see the kind of
1:30:58
consistency of these types of collars
1:31:00
and Alex's complete inability or
1:31:02
unwillingness to push back on stuff
1:31:05
in any meaningful way. Yeah. You
1:31:07
know, you'd think over time
1:31:10
that something would have changed in somewhat.
1:31:13
Like, he would have gotten more
1:31:15
prepared for them or, like, would
1:31:17
be more capable of pushing back
1:31:19
or more capable of, like, closing the closing
1:31:21
the conversation down without having
1:31:23
to go
1:31:24
to. Yep. But it seems like
1:31:26
it's been pretty much the same,
1:31:28
like, Lot of groups. Wish you hadn't
1:31:30
said that, but, you know, what you gonna do? That sounds nice. Actually, I agree with you. Let's
1:31:32
move on. Hey. You could be forgiven,
1:31:34
I think, if you're in Alex's the
1:31:38
audience if you came away with the impression that, like,
1:31:41
he agrees with all of the
1:31:43
most toxic awful viewpoints but
1:31:47
he doesn't wanna say things to protect his
1:31:49
own, like, bottom line -- Yeah.
1:31:51
-- or whatever. Like, I
1:31:53
don't think that that's
1:31:55
necessarily the case But it would not be
1:31:57
very difficult to talk yourself into it if you're listening to this and, you know, you have
1:32:00
those horrible toxic
1:32:02
-- Yeah. Absolutely. --
1:32:04
760. I 760, just based on
1:32:06
all the non all the non word clue -- Right. -- you know, like the the
1:32:09
nonverbal clues, you
1:32:12
know, like, the tone
1:32:14
of voice, the way that he's pausing, all of those little things could definitely make you add up to like,
1:32:17
well, he didn't
1:32:20
say his first and honest
1:32:22
response. He said what he was supposed to to make the money. Yeah. The the refusal
1:32:25
to even really
1:32:28
wreck 760 nice that
1:32:30
this guy is saying that, like -- Yeah.
1:32:31
-- the Jews run all of these groups that you are saying
1:32:36
are you and are -- Right. --
1:32:38
like out to get patriots and destroy Christians. Right. Right. Right. You're not even you're you're just
1:32:43
leaving that there. Alex. I'm telling you thing you're
1:32:44
telling me. And you're
1:32:46
just going like, maybe. So
1:32:48
this guy, Alex keeps 760 on for
1:32:50
a while, and he asks 760, but
1:32:53
760 Well, sure. I
1:32:55
mean, you got a you got a
1:32:57
Denmarkian who hates Jews. Come on. He 760 him about, like,
1:32:59
opposition to the EU. And
1:33:02
Alex has some stats wrong about
1:33:04
the
1:33:05
EU. Sure. And then this guy
1:33:07
goes 760 even more.
1:33:09
Most European countries have not allowed a
1:33:12
referendum because in in all the nations
1:33:14
I've seen polls
1:33:15
on, seventy plus percent of the
1:33:17
people against being under the
1:33:19
EU, but still it expands and expands and expands. the
1:33:24
the people that you talked to
1:33:27
in Denmark, are they against the the EU? The most of even
1:33:31
the Jews. So So the
1:33:33
question is, why are they
1:33:35
going fire the EU then? Do you have the right child control 760 major
1:33:37
hand in my
1:33:39
two? Yeah. All night,
1:33:42
sir. Well, I appreciate your call from
1:33:44
Denmark 760 please spread the word and thanks
1:33:46
for
1:33:46
all of that. Yeah. Yep. Yep. Yep.
1:33:49
So, yeah, the Rothschilds run the media, and that's why you like the EU.
1:33:51
Even the Jews don't like the EU Ivy. Also, those
1:33:53
numbers are way off
1:33:56
in terms
1:33:58
of approval of us. Thank you. The
1:34:00
EU
1:34:00
is very popular. It might be actually
1:34:02
the inverse in most countries. Yeah.
1:34:05
I think you could probably find
1:34:07
a couple I know that Greece was a bit lower on --
1:34:09
Sure. -- on the favorability of how
1:34:11
They got host
1:34:14
more than more than once. Yeah. I think I think now
1:34:16
though, watching well, everybody
1:34:18
in the EU is watching
1:34:20
Great Britain eat itself alive.
1:34:22
And I think they're all like,
1:34:25
We're still in the EU, douchebags. And and let me let me
1:34:27
actually just so in in full disclosure,
1:34:29
the numbers that I
1:34:32
was talking about
1:34:34
are from two thousand twenty two. So, like, they aren't relevant fully to two thousand three.
1:34:36
Sure. But I don't think
1:34:38
that they've swung this far the
1:34:43
median is twenty six percent unfavorable,
1:34:45
seventy two percent favorable. Yeah. That
1:34:47
sounds about right. Greece is
1:34:49
the outlier here with forty nine percent
1:34:52
unfavorable fifty percent I mean, if
1:34:54
you recall what happened whenever the two
1:34:56
thousand eight financial collapse and
1:34:58
they forced Greece to eat it essentially -- Oh, totally. -- instead of
1:35:00
writing off all of the debt.
1:35:02
Right. And that like, outside
1:35:05
of the
1:35:08
EU, even strong favorability among the countries
1:35:10
polled by the Pew Research Center,
1:35:13
twenty seven percent un favorability
1:35:15
among the nineteen country median that they they looked
1:35:18
at. And it's sixty nine percent
1:35:20
favorable. A.
1:35:24
A. So I don't know, Alex is
1:35:26
off and this guy is an anti semite from Denmark. Yep. Great. I don't I don't feel maybe
1:35:28
maybe anti semites from
1:35:31
Denmark and Alex don't HAV
1:35:33
THEIR FINDERS ON THE PULSE OF THE MAIN STREAM. THEY ALSO DON'T HAVE GOOD CHEMESTORY.
1:35:35
YOU COULD TELL HOW THIS CALL WAS FALLEN APART
1:35:37
WHERE AT THE END OF
1:35:40
ALCAD TO You
1:35:44
gotta take care now. Bye. So you have
1:35:46
one last clip, and this is the Alex
1:35:48
fulfilling the promise of talking
1:35:50
to the lawyer of the from
1:35:52
stratford high school -- Yes.
1:35:54
-- in South Carolina. Not
1:35:57
a very long interview.
1:35:59
And this caller he
1:36:02
has 760 up being there for some calls. Uh-huh. And it's pretty unfortunate because
1:36:06
760 The
1:36:09
lawyer himself is a black man, and he brings
1:36:11
up the dynamic that's
1:36:16
at play with the video
1:36:18
recording of the actual raid, being similar inter to
1:36:23
the Rodney King, beating. Right. In terms
1:36:25
of people being able to see the actual thing, unless it's an emotional response,
1:36:27
if people experience
1:36:31
it far more 760 than things
1:36:33
that they can only abstractly -- Right. -- think about. Then a number
1:36:35
of callers call in and
1:36:38
say, how dare you compare
1:36:40
this to run the kick. He was a
1:36:42
horrible -- Yeah. -- criminal. There it is. All this there it was. He has to explain. Oh, no. It's
1:36:45
not what I meant. And,
1:36:47
like, it it's it's
1:36:51
very weird. But he seems like
1:36:53
just a lawyer who's trying to do a
1:36:55
case --
1:36:55
Yeah. -- and what have you Do
1:36:58
a good job. And
1:37:00
Alex actually
1:37:01
does kind of bring up
1:37:03
the racial dynamic. Interesting.
1:37:06
Yeah. But it's on It's
1:37:09
unsatisfying, unfulfilling. When you have snarling dogs that
1:37:11
are trained to attack, to train
1:37:13
to be accustomed to police
1:37:16
in there, police
1:37:18
activities, they're used to dealing
1:37:20
with criminals. And of course, they're meant
1:37:23
to subdue the criminals and and to
1:37:25
use that on on high school students
1:37:27
aged thirteen through 760, I think
1:37:29
what shocked us is the
1:37:31
imagination, what shocked the imagination
1:37:34
is and one of our children going through
1:37:35
that. Well, I have to tell you, I'm not just saying this
1:37:37
because two thirds of the students singled out were
1:37:39
black. I've seen film
1:37:41
of South Africa in the eighties 760 they would have
1:37:43
everybody 760 up on their knees
1:37:45
and watching police dogs bite on
1:37:48
760, and it's very akin to that.
1:37:50
Well, what
1:37:50
what you say is very interesting. And -- Yeah. -- and what we 760 at what
1:37:53
we found is 760 if you even think back to
1:37:55
the sixties, the use of police dogs
1:37:58
in those instances, but but what shot the conscious and what was very interesting was
1:38:00
that not only black students were targeting
1:38:02
although this section of the hall was
1:38:07
an entry for bus was from a a more rural and then predominantly
1:38:09
African American So it so happens that a lot
1:38:11
of black students were there,
1:38:13
and it was Okay. Okay.
1:38:15
It's just a coincidence. Oh,
1:38:17
hey, you know what? This this brings to mind and reminds
1:38:19
me of a party in South Africa. Yeah. There's a coincidence.
1:38:24
I mean, you know, if something
1:38:26
reminds you of apartheid South Africa,
1:38:28
it's because it's
1:38:31
just regular old apartheid Where
1:38:34
you are right now? Uh-huh. it's not Carolina.
1:38:36
It's there. It's always been
1:38:38
there. That's where it
1:38:40
lives. It
1:38:43
it's very easy to convince
1:38:45
Alex this is a coincidence,
1:38:47
unreal. 760 because he's bringing
1:38:49
up that two thirds of
1:38:52
the students who were caught
1:38:54
up in the sweep were African American students. Yeah. And that
1:39:00
is an issue. And for the it
1:39:02
to be just a coincidence because there were white
1:39:04
students there -- Yeah.
1:39:07
-- as well or you know,
1:39:09
two thirds two thirds were African American,
1:39:11
one third non African American. Sure. Now if if you think
1:39:15
that the school is two thirds African American, then
1:39:18
maybe that is coincidental.
1:39:20
Right. But when
1:39:22
you write nice that it's under twenty five percent 760 American.
1:39:25
Those numbers become much
1:39:27
worse. Yeah. They look
1:39:29
real bad almost as
1:39:31
if there's behind them. Well, I
1:39:33
mean, it makes the the two thirds number far
1:39:36
more disproportional.
1:39:38
Oh, yeah. And it makes the the
1:39:40
twenty the thirty three
1:39:43
760, the the one third the
1:39:46
other one third, much less statistically
1:39:48
relevant. Mhmm. Yep. So, anyway,
1:39:50
it's not a coincidence, but
1:39:53
this is the extent
1:39:55
to which Alex It's just baffling
1:39:57
for me. Like, Alex does he brings it up.
1:40:00
Yeah. He brings
1:40:02
up apartheid South Africa. That's
1:40:05
just very strange
1:40:06
to me. I mean, what
1:40:09
It okay. Here's the
1:40:11
problem I have. Here's a
1:40:13
problem I have, and it's a big one,
1:40:15
and it's one that I don't think we're gonna get around.
1:40:18
Probably not. If something reminds you of apartheid South Africa, I
1:40:20
don't don't
1:40:22
care what that thing is. It's a problem that
1:40:24
needs to be fixed from the bottom up. You
1:40:26
know, you tear tear the whole thing
1:40:28
down. If it reminds you of apartheid South
1:40:30
Africa, it needs needs to be destroyed. So I
1:40:33
don't understand how you could even
1:40:35
bring that up. What about
1:40:37
the movie? And then and then be
1:40:39
moved on. You know? Just be like, hey,
1:40:42
that reminds me of South Africa. Oh,
1:40:44
no big deal. Alright. Well,
1:40:46
I'm gonna keep going. That is not okay. Even even if maybe it's
1:40:48
760, no. No. No. No. They like it in
1:40:50
the apartheid South everywhere. Don't care. Don't care.
1:40:54
It's 760 be stopped. Whatever it is, it's gotta be stopped.
1:40:56
Fair enough. You know? Fair enough. I
1:40:58
feel like that's simple. Yeah. Well, I
1:41:00
mean, your policy there, I think, is is
1:41:03
an principal. At the very least, don't just move over
1:41:05
it. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. At least
1:41:07
ask a number of follow-up
1:41:09
questions. A lot of
1:41:12
accept at any excuse that
1:41:14
it's 760 to the sun. Fun.
1:41:16
But that's not the Alex
1:41:18
Jones way. And Forbes has not
1:41:21
made for follow-up questions. It's no coincidentally. It's
1:41:23
like South Africa apartheid. It's not it's
1:41:26
yeah. Particularly when the thing is
1:41:30
that's reminiscent is targeted
1:41:33
harassment and abuse of
1:41:35
black people. Yep. 760. Anyway,
1:41:40
in the past, there is some fun and
1:41:42
there is some not fun. Ain't that
1:41:45
the way of things? Always
1:41:47
love a nice customer service call on
1:41:49
air. They're just
1:41:50
the best. They're just the best.
1:41:53
Dogs trained in Czechoslovakia. That's
1:41:55
great. Pretty sweet. That's great. We're not get
1:41:56
that on another show. There's something
1:41:58
there's something about Louisiana Dmitcher's message
1:42:00
that is going to stick with me.
1:42:02
I'm I'm going to be thinking about
1:42:04
760 sad. Poor man. Very
1:42:07
760 sad. And that's twenty years ago. He's probably dead. You don't know. They might just have an old voice. That's possible.
1:42:09
That's true. But yeah.
1:42:12
The the 760
1:42:15
the nature of this stuff, like the
1:42:18
the pretty frequent instances
1:42:20
of anti 760 collars
1:42:23
that Alex has no ability to push back on.
1:42:25
And the fact that one of them is Dan in Illinois who calls in
1:42:27
every other, every third
1:42:30
show or she's on gets through
1:42:33
constantly is a regular, and that's troubling.
1:42:36
Yeah. And
1:42:40
The the virus thing too. Like, it's
1:42:42
just the the the echoes of the present are there in in ways
1:42:47
that are kind of I mean, it is
1:42:49
it is one thing
1:42:51
that I love
1:42:53
about the past episodes. Is that they are
1:42:56
emblematic of something that's so
1:42:58
crucial, which is just a
1:43:00
very simple if you don't deal
1:43:02
with a problem, it's going to get worse.
1:43:05
True. You know? True. Like, this
1:43:07
is so many we've see so many things where it's like, we didn't deal with
1:43:10
a problem then. We
1:43:12
didn't. 760 information
1:43:16
problem was there. And every reason to
1:43:18
think it would take care of itself
1:43:20
kind of or like, I suppose,
1:43:22
you know, if you Take time to know about things.
1:43:24
You would hear these things and be
1:43:26
760, who's who would believe
1:43:28
this? No, idiot would believe
1:43:31
this 760. And that's that's
1:43:33
unfortunately 760 out to have been a naive position. Yeah. Yeah.
1:43:35
Yep. Yeah. That is that is
1:43:37
a bummer. But I think
1:43:40
that there's second element
1:43:42
too of it that is if the all like, this
1:43:48
constant similarity and, you know, basically,
1:43:50
what you're saying -- Yeah. -- and then if you flip it, it really does
1:43:52
put into perspective the
1:43:55
way that Alex deals with,
1:43:57
like, immediately and these stories that are breaking news now in the present day.
1:44:00
760. You breaking
1:44:05
news twenty years ago. It's just doing the same
1:44:07
shit. It it, you know, it kinda cuts both ways. It does. Ideally,
1:44:09
it should be
1:44:12
able to illustrate to somebody
1:44:14
who's caught up in that -- Right. -- that cycle that, like, no, this is this is the same.
1:44:20
It's all So it's a it's a
1:44:22
Carousel. It's not a Carousel. Yeah. I I mean, it's it's hard
1:44:24
to it's hard
1:44:27
to not think, like, Well,
1:44:29
this is a problem from then. But, you know, like, we were talking about with the
1:44:31
Bingo cards. This is a
1:44:34
problem. This is the
1:44:36
same problem -- Mhmm. -- from
1:44:38
the same bad thinking that's been going on for forever. And
1:44:41
it's just never
1:44:43
been dealt with because either
1:44:45
we've never found a successful way to deal with it or we don't
1:44:48
have the
1:44:51
political or capital. Necessary to deal with.
1:44:53
I think it's probably more of the prior. Yeah. I would I it has to be because it's
1:44:56
so 760. The
1:45:00
biggest problem we're having right now is most
1:45:02
people don't believe in the real world. That
1:45:07
isn't that that is
1:45:10
the the place the the the point from which all
1:45:13
so many cracks come
1:45:15
out. Yes. It is. It's
1:45:18
just we don't believe in the real 760. Point
1:45:21
where a lot of bullshit starts spreading
1:45:23
out. Yeah. Nah. I don't know how
1:45:25
to make you believe in reality. Yeah.
1:45:27
It's the ultimate question. And it's pretty
1:45:29
760, apparently, to make people believe in non reality. It's a lot easier.
1:45:31
Like, 760, Slovakia and dogs
1:45:33
-- Oh 760 god. --
1:45:36
trained. Does eastern European
1:45:38
murder dogs from twenty years ago. Mhmm. Anyway, we'll be back
1:45:40
760 another episode. 760
1:45:42
likely be as bummer ish.
1:45:44
760 until
1:45:47
then -- We have with -- we do have website 760 knowledge fight
1:45:49
dot com. Yep. We're also on Twitter. We
1:45:51
are on Twitter. It's 760 knowledge
1:45:53
underscore
1:45:53
fight. Yep. We'll be back.
1:45:55
But until then, I'm Neo.
1:45:58
I'm Leo. I'm DZX Clark. I'm
1:46:04
Got anything? Feeling better. I
1:46:05
I really feel like I should have thought of a bit during
1:46:07
the time away. I
1:46:10
had a whole 760. Who?
1:46:13
Yeah. But you were in jail. You were in
1:46:15
non thinking about bit head space. True. Yeah. True.
1:46:18
True. I'd ah. Here
1:46:22
we go. What do you got? The
1:46:25
floor is
1:46:26
lava. And now here comes
1:46:28
with the sex robots. Andy and Kansas
1:46:31
760 on the earth. Thanks for holding. Hello,
1:46:33
Alex. I'm a first time caller. I'm a huge fan. I
1:46:35
love your work. I love you. 760
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