Episode Transcript
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0:08
Not not
0:11
not not knowledge far dead. Damn,
0:16
and Jordan Prime. And when at it.
0:19
Acknowledge party dot com. It's time to break.
0:21
I have great respect for knowledge, but
0:24
knowledge and life. I'm sick of them posing
0:26
as if they're the good guys shing we are
0:28
the back of technology to find Dan,
0:30
and Jordan, knowledge fight Need
0:36
money. Handy
0:39
and Bandy. Big and Bandy.
0:41
Big and Bandy. Big and
0:44
Bandy. Big and Bandy. Big Bandy. Just talk
0:46
bray. Andy and Kansas shirt on the air picture
0:48
holder. Hello,
0:49
Alex. I'm a victim calling with your fan.
0:51
I love your word. Knowledge fight.
0:55
No. No. No. No. No. No. No. Knowledge fight. Dot com.
0:58
I love you.
0:59
Hey, everybody. Welcome back. Now let's try them down.
1:01
I'm joined. Work up, dude. Just like to sit around,
1:03
worship with the altar of Celine, and talk a little bit
1:05
out Alex
1:06
Jones. Oh,
1:07
indeed we are, Dan. Jordan. Dan,
1:10
I have a quick question for you. Brite
1:12
spot today, buddy. My brite spot today is vindication.
1:15
Vindication. I have
1:17
been very publicly worried about
1:19
Uncle Howdy. There was a concern. Gotta
1:26
say, I
1:29
think I'm done.
1:34
You know, I think I think about
1:36
sometimes sometimes people bring up, like, they
1:38
they're going through the back catalog listening to
1:40
this
1:40
stuff.
1:41
Mhmm. And then they hear this, like, little saga
1:44
in bits or something like that. I
1:46
love the idea of
1:46
somebody, like, ten years from now listening
1:49
being like, I I gotta know how this Uncle
1:51
Howdy Fig turns out. The fuck is this?
1:54
And then you've forgotten wrestling story
1:56
line. And this episode is what brings it
1:58
home. Man. Man. Oh, man.
2:00
So for people who did not watch the royal
2:02
rumble or are not aware of Rasslin
2:04
business. Bray Wyatt has
2:07
come back, and he's been tormented by
2:09
a weirdo and a top hat shirt that's allowed here.
2:11
And it was
2:13
culminating in a pitch
2:16
black mountain dew, pitch black match --
2:18
Oof. -- between himself
2:20
and this guy named LA Knight. And it turns
2:22
out we no one what the pitch black match was
2:24
gonna
2:24
be, and it was just people in, like,
2:26
glow in the dark.
2:27
It was cosmic bowl. It was cosmic bowl. Yes.
2:29
Yes. It was cosmic bowl. I felt felt
2:31
so bad. Yeah. I know. That was really
2:33
embarrassing.
2:34
I hadn't been very public
2:37
about that worried. I knew it was about
2:39
this. Being
2:39
excited about it would have made you in retrospect feel
2:42
real dumb. Oh, yeah. I would have felt
2:44
so terrible. Yeah. Almost as
2:46
terrible as you feel if you drink a little do.
2:49
But why the fuck did they make that? I
2:51
don't know. Somebody had it there.
2:53
Yeah. Did you take a sip? I did. I did.
2:55
I tried a cocktail Oh,
2:57
you see it? Because Anta tried it just
2:59
straight. Yeah. And it's it's very bad.
3:01
Meat? Yeah. I couldn't yeah. It's
3:03
very good to plant meat. No
3:06
ice. I
3:08
don't like the iced milk to get diluting. Exactly.
3:10
I gotta get the full
3:11
flavor. So anyway, I
3:13
think I might be more accurately described
3:15
as not that interesting.
3:17
It's getting
3:18
I've given up on Bray White now at this
3:20
point. I I think Clairewell
3:22
is sweet Bray. My favorite part is
3:25
that while we were watching that, I was like,
3:27
okay, cool. And I went to take I went to
3:29
the bathroom. I was gone for maybe
3:31
sixty seconds. And then when
3:33
I came back, they were like, you missed all
3:35
cloudy. Yeah. Like, it was all gone. It was all
3:37
done and gone. Yeah. They showed up on the top of
3:39
something really tall. Threw a bad
3:40
elbow. Gotcha. Then it
3:43
was gone.
3:43
Disappeared into the night. Yep. Good
3:46
stuff. So who knows Nelly.
3:48
Anyway, it's fun, some ways, because I guess I'm
3:50
free of the the curse of --
3:51
Yeah. -- of Brave. You
3:53
know, you've had you've had one foot in,
3:55
one foot for too long. There's been a lot of
3:57
hope that something would work out just just just
3:59
so seriously.
4:01
Anyway, what's your bright spot?
4:03
My bright spot is it's
4:05
it's very very cold.
4:06
Okay. Yeah. not my bright spot. Think it's about
4:08
five degrees. It's very, very cold outside.
4:11
My bright spot is my wife
4:13
bought me some gloves. She bought me some really
4:15
warm gloves. And ever time
4:18
there's that delicate equilibrium if
4:20
you have if you have a dog between
4:22
having gloves and being able to
4:24
open the dog bags --
4:25
Sure. -- to pick up the shit.
4:26
I don't I don't know about this, but I understand
4:28
what you're talking about.
4:29
You've sensed, you know, and those dog backs can be
4:31
impossible to open those sons. These
4:33
gloves keep my hands warm
4:35
and open the dog
4:36
back -- Perfect. -- do they register on your phone?
4:38
No, they don't.
4:39
Wow. That's
4:40
it's two out of three. You can't have all three of
4:42
those. As
4:42
Meat Loaf once said, two out of three ain't
4:44
bad.
4:44
Nah. You ain't lying. Isn't
4:47
that a song I know? Neither was he.
4:50
Well, that's good. Yeah. Nice gloves. Amazing
4:52
gloves. That makes a lot of
4:54
difference. Oh, yeah. There were years
4:56
when I had, like, some just shitty
4:58
mittens. Yeah. And it was kinda
5:00
like, I can do better than this, but I never
5:02
thought to. And then I got good gloves. And I
5:04
was
5:04
like, oh man. It it was I
5:06
always go I'm like, okay. Well,
5:08
I I get these fingerless gloves, you know, so I
5:10
can open the dogbags with my fingers and see
5:12
fingers got
5:13
holes. Yeah. Well, you gotta look bad ass, obviously.
5:15
Because I lift weights all the time too. I'm
5:17
always holding a dumbbell.
5:19
But but
5:20
then your fingers get cold and then you get the warm
5:22
gloves. Can't open the dog bags.
5:23
Yeah. So
5:24
you gotta take the glove. It's a nightmare
5:26
nightmare. These are perfect. Well,
5:28
that's great. Yes. So Jordan
5:30
today, we have an episode -- Mhmm. -- that we got we're gonna
5:32
do here. Okay. So here's there's a
5:34
couple of variables that are in play. Mhmm.
5:36
First of all, we didn't have an episode on
5:38
Monday due to Uncle Howdy's Chad
5:40
Elbeau. Drop that he threw. That's it.
5:42
Yes. Yep. And also,
5:45
I had been doing a lot of
5:48
I I have a number of deposition
5:50
stuff that I was going through. So there was a
5:52
lot of that -- Mhmm. -- preloading
5:55
work. And
5:57
so we we're here at Wednesday,
5:59
and I was really hoping to do a
6:01
present day episode. Because I I felt
6:03
like it was time to check-in. Yeah.
6:05
Yeah. Yeah. But Alex has been out of
6:06
studio. He's he's been what? He's been out of studio
6:09
since, like, Wednesday. Yes, it
6:11
is.
6:11
Maybe Wednesday or Thursday, I think the
6:13
twenty sixth You know what? I'm
6:15
gonna be honest with you. I don't think things are
6:17
looking too well for his business. No. Bad thought
6:19
video was down. All
6:21
good morning to me also. And
6:25
here here's the one thing I wanna bring up.
6:27
Yeah. There is one notable thing
6:29
that happened in that time that we could
6:31
catch up on, but it doesn't merit an episode.
6:33
Sure. And that is Leanne Macadou came
6:35
back. What? Leanne was back a
6:36
dude. No shit.
6:39
Yeah.
6:39
Yes. It's been years. Yeah. She was
6:41
back in studio at doing an interview with
6:43
Alex and watched it just made
6:45
me feel how dissonant everything
6:47
was -- Yeah. -- because she comes from a different
6:49
time -- Right. -- in Infographics. When
6:51
it was smaller, it didn't, you
6:53
know, it doesn't feel right for
6:55
her to be in the shouting
6:57
about the devil.
6:58
Yeah. What was she what was she doing?
7:00
I don't know. It was boring as hell.
7:01
I mean, for sure. For sure. I
7:04
skimmed through it a little bit. But
7:06
yeah, it just did it didn't it didn't feel right, but
7:08
it also bummed me out because I had really hoped
7:10
or at least kinda
7:11
thought, like, well, you know, she's living
7:13
her life in the same way with, like, Jacari Jackson.
7:15
Yeah. At least they've moved on. Yeah. You
7:17
know? Yeah. Past past is the
7:19
past.
7:19
Right. It kinda bummed me. I'd see her
7:22
back on there. Like, you don't need to do this.
7:23
No. Nope. No reason. That suggests the
7:26
past. It's not the past. Usually, you're not there.
7:28
So anyway, we're not gonna talk about that. We
7:30
are talking about two thousand three.
7:32
Oh, okay. We're gonna talk about December eighteenth
7:35
and nineteenth. Alright. Two thousand
7:37
three, that is a Thursday and Friday.
7:39
Here's part of the reason. Because the
7:41
bath party is back. You've
7:43
done some more research and actually they never
7:45
did
7:45
debatification. They were all they just took
7:47
armbands off. Off? Nope.
7:49
Nope. Oh, although that doesn't come up on today's
7:51
episode. Okay. So maybe
7:54
maybe I'll just change his mind. Yeah.
7:57
No. See, on the twenty second. That was the
7:59
weekend. Ah, that's right. Alex did not have a
8:01
Sunday show at this point. Great. So
8:04
here's the deal. We have
8:06
these live shows in Milwaukee
8:08
coming up. That's true. And here's one of here's
8:11
my hope. Okay. And
8:13
maybe this is an excuse to do episodes in the
8:15
past. I accept
8:17
that that's a possibility. But
8:19
I think it would be fun. If
8:21
we could do one of those episodes
8:24
is Alex's response to Howard Dean's
8:26
scream.
8:27
That would be amazing. And we
8:29
can't do it. It can be done. That is in
8:31
January two thousand four. Right. He can make
8:33
it there in time. Right. Right. But it just
8:35
requires a little bit of commitment to
8:37
pass. Here's what it is. Alright. It's not
8:39
a rationalization if it's a goal.
8:41
Right? And if it's a goal and you
8:42
succeed, then it never was a rationalization
8:45
to begin with. And it's a victory. See?
8:47
I like the way you think.
8:49
So anyway, we're in the past. Exactly.
8:51
And we'll get down to business on this episode. But
8:53
first, let's say hello to some new walks. Oh, that's a
8:55
great idea. So this one right on time. Merry
8:58
Christmas, Christa. Like, Christa, but
9:00
Christmas also. And happy birthday. Thank you
9:02
so much for now, Paul, as you walk I'm a
9:04
policy walk. Thank you very much.
9:06
Right on time. Right on time queue.
9:08
Next and Jordan, we have a couple of
9:10
technocrats in the mix. Thank you so much. Is now
9:12
a policy walk before we get to the episode
9:14
here, a couple of other context drops, you are
9:16
now a policy walk. I'm a
9:18
policy walk. That's mean -- That's
9:20
mean. -- that's just that's too complicated.
9:22
That a little mental breaky for me.
9:24
Thank you so much for now, a policy walk. I'm a
9:26
policy
9:26
walk. Alright. Well,
9:27
now that seems perfectly curated
9:30
eighty following the last one. That's amazing.
9:32
Next, here I am, wonks
9:34
again. I'm torn and the pieces. I knew
9:36
they wanna be seen. But anyway, you're you're now
9:38
ballsy wonk. I'm a policy wand. Thank you very
9:40
much. And David Mc SNibble, Snabel
9:42
of the Grimble Pibble. Thank you so much. You're now a
9:44
policy wand. I'm a policy
9:46
wand. David, very much. And we got a technocrat in the
9:48
mix Jordan. And this is not just another policy
9:50
wonk a name that's turned the programmable. Right. You
9:52
are now a policy wonk? No.
9:53
No. Oh, no.
9:54
But we got a technic great. This
9:56
is really fun. This
9:58
is first of all, thank you
10:01
so much. Hale, fucking Satan.
10:03
You're now, technically. But the reason I'm
10:05
I'm holding off on hitting a button here is
10:07
because in parentheses right after
10:09
it says, if that's cool. They
10:14
wanted their shout out to be a
10:16
very polite salutation of
10:18
shape. So thank you so much. You are
10:20
now a technocrat. I'm a
10:21
policy wonk. Poor start. The
10:24
honking
10:24
mother telling you, brother. Someone
10:26
someone suddenly sent me a bucket of poop.
10:28
Daddy sharp. Giorgio
10:31
Banks has a Caribbean
10:34
black accent. He's a loser
10:36
little little teeny baby. I don't
10:38
wanna hate black people. I renounce
10:40
Jesus Christ. Thank you so much. Thank you very
10:42
much. Now, Jordan, we do have another
10:44
con context drop. From this
10:46
this episode. Right? So here you go. You're gonna love to hear
10:48
this because I know you were talking about your dog bags or --
10:50
Right. Right. -- I am. Ninety eight
10:52
percent of dogs will not eat
10:54
you in That's
10:55
great. That is great news. Great news. That
10:57
is great news. Although two percent
11:00
Wait. But the question
11:02
is when? Mhmm. When will those two
11:04
percent eat me while I'm sleeping?
11:05
Sure. That's the curve that's the kept worrying
11:08
part. Easy
11:08
target -- Yeah. -- when you sleep it. Yeah. But eighty
11:10
eight percent of dogs won't eat
11:11
you. Won't eat me. Wow. That's nice. We'll
11:13
learn we're gonna learn a lot about this later on.
11:15
Yeah. So It's
11:16
terrible. Whether or not they're all good. Are there more
11:18
dog
11:19
circumstances where
11:19
we're in talking to you. There we go. Okay.
11:23
And I'd just like to remind you that Alex likes to
11:25
kill dogs, allegedly. And
11:27
where's dog? Where's Nunkman? So we
11:29
started on the eighteenth here and man
11:31
o man. There is
11:34
a lot of treading water.
11:36
On this episode. He's he puts
11:38
up the call for phone calls. Sure. And
11:40
then he's clearly not getting
11:42
any. And so he's just filling time
11:44
with what describes meaningless platitudes. The
11:46
bumper sticker that reads, the man who dies
11:48
for the most toys wins is a
11:51
fraud. The man who
11:53
dies, who has HAS
11:55
UPLIFTED HUMANITY WHO HAS
11:57
TAKEN CARE OF HIS OR HER
11:59
CHILDREN, THE PERSON THAT
12:01
DIES WHO HAS INVENTED TECHNOLOGIES
12:05
AND WHO HAS
12:07
BROUGHT FORWARD IDEAS
12:10
of goodness. The person that
12:13
that builds civilization wins.
12:17
The person who promotes
12:19
creativity and freedom and
12:21
decency and honor and
12:23
family wins. I
12:27
the globalists understand this. They're all about control.
12:29
They're all about knocking out the spark of
12:31
creativity, controlling it, dumbing
12:33
us down. Their skin near
12:35
to death of you and your innate
12:38
power were made in the image of God,
12:40
ladies and gentlemen, and they want a
12:42
ravush of the excitement
12:44
and the dynamic on
12:46
test that is life. They don't
12:48
want you ever to get on the
12:50
field. They want you to shrink
12:52
into obscurity. Never
12:54
affecting change. Never being a
12:56
decision maker. Never having
12:58
power.
12:59
And this
13:00
show, this broadcast is
13:02
about exposing that.
13:04
It is. Can I ask
13:06
a
13:06
question? Yeah. Yeah. Was he just arguing with
13:09
a bumper sticker? He Okay. I
13:10
mean,
13:10
that is definitely how it started.
13:11
I just wanna be sure that we were arguing
13:13
with a bumper
13:14
size, a bumper sticker on the way
13:16
in, and I have contacts
13:18
for the day. Let's
13:19
see now. That seems like an issue. Yeah.
13:22
Like, legit, I
13:24
could not think anything other
13:26
than, like, this is
13:27
filler. He is just
13:30
saying stuff. Is that I
13:32
mean, some
13:34
respect where it's due. I don't think I
13:36
could just if I was doing a call in
13:38
show and no one called in, I don't
13:40
think arguing with a bumper sticker would
13:42
be up there. And I think that's a perfectly useful
13:44
thing to
13:44
do. No. IIII think that I
13:47
mean, in another context, not in the
13:49
context of Alex Jones. But there is something fairly
13:51
admirable from a performance standpoint of
13:53
being able to say nothing for a really long
13:55
time. It's very difficult to do.
13:57
Yeah. But it all also is Alex. Yeah. It
13:59
kinda sucks. It's for the worst. But anyway, here's another
14:01
minute of filler. The global
14:03
turning is out of its embryonic stage.
14:06
It has been born. It
14:08
has been loosed. It is
14:10
now on two eat
14:12
toddlers about feeding
14:15
on populations. Uh-huh.
14:17
It will soon be a powering
14:20
cyclopsian wickedness,
14:23
a thousand feet tall,
14:25
rending the sheep like
14:27
population. My
14:30
friends, it is upon
14:32
us. It is
14:34
of honest. The first
14:37
waves of his black
14:39
storm have smashed
14:42
in to what is left of
14:44
done. Okay. He's left. Okay.
14:47
Western, the civilization. Uh-huh.
14:50
What else you got? What bag of
14:52
you to think for yourselves, to break your
14:54
conditioning, to fire up your
14:56
internal combustion systems,
14:59
to stoke. Furnaces of
15:01
liberty in your heart. I
15:03
have started taking a creative role
15:05
in
15:05
class. Just to say. Well,
15:07
you don't deserve your center. Well,
15:10
of do intro to metaphors. Yeah.
15:13
I was worried. I was thinking at this
15:15
point. Boy, there's not much
15:17
going on here. This episode
15:19
could be a snooze.
15:22
But then, we get some
15:24
calls. And also
15:26
before that, Alex He
15:28
has some space
15:29
thoughts. He has
15:30
some space thoughts. And we love space thoughts.
15:33
Right. We're a huge space thoughts fan. Well, let's see.
15:35
Apparently, we heard about this on a previous
15:37
episode. Yeah. Bush was supposed to announce that we're
15:39
going back to the moon. Correct. And he
15:41
did not. And Alex has some
15:43
thoughts about the moon. Bush was
15:45
scheduled yesterday to
15:48
announce another lunar mission to the
15:50
old moon. The old old man
15:52
happens to be all the years. Thirty
15:55
plus years. All mooning.
15:57
They've sent probes and other things. Then we'll get
15:59
into the whole argument of, did we go to the moon? Well,
16:01
I know they got advanced
16:01
technology, but I
16:04
have seen the photographs released by the government
16:06
where you'll have
16:06
the little
16:07
distance markers on the lens of the camera.
16:10
Okay. You can't not think we went to the
16:12
bottom. Well, that's impossible. Do
16:14
you understand what I'm saying? You know how on a camera,
16:16
they'll have a little or target mark in
16:18
the middle? How do you have a photo
16:20
where the astronaut is partially
16:22
in front of
16:24
something that's on the
16:25
lens. Why do
16:26
they release all those photos with that?
16:29
Why did you know,
16:31
was the flag lapping. Why
16:33
aren't there any stars in the
16:35
field? Again, I don't talk
16:37
about that. I don't get into that because
16:39
there's no way to prove it either
16:40
way. Well, all of those things that you're
16:43
describing as weird are very
16:45
easily explained. So
16:45
provable because we went to the I here's
16:48
here's my problem. Alright. He
16:50
cannot not think we went to the
16:53
moon. Why? Because based
16:55
upon his conception of the
16:57
enemy quote unquote that we are facing --
16:59
Mhmm. -- and their technical logical
17:01
advancement. For us not to have gone to the
17:03
moon would mean any number of
17:05
different technologies simply couldn't
17:07
exist or if they
17:07
did, then that he believes that we have the
17:10
one hundred percent easy
17:12
technological capability to go to the moon
17:14
whenever we don't
17:14
know. Sure. Yeah. Yet somehow
17:16
for one reason we didn't of
17:19
Utah. Alex does bring that up that we have all
17:21
this technology that is being
17:23
secreted away from Right. Med beds.
17:25
And so a possibility for
17:27
why we did go to that. There's
17:29
also other reasons to think maybe we did.
17:31
No, they're right. I don't
17:33
don't know what any of them are. All of his are
17:36
bad. So here's just
17:38
what I think. Uh-huh. I
17:40
understand the impetus that he
17:42
has. I mean, he has to be interesting and he has to
17:44
appeal to a crowd of people who don't believe shit
17:47
at
17:47
all. So We can't
17:48
just say that, of course, we went to the moon. Right. That's
17:50
just not gonna be that's not gonna fly on this shot.
17:52
Gonna turn off a lot of people. Right. But
17:55
it's just funny to me
17:57
that, like, you have this
17:59
rigorous kind
17:59
of, like, attention to
18:02
detail. Like, Look, I wasn't on the
18:04
moon. I don't
18:04
know. I
18:05
can't prove it either
18:06
way. Maybe
18:07
we didn't go at the moon. Maybe we don't. But
18:10
that makes up the dumbest shit
18:13
about other
18:13
stuff. And you just accept that as Yeah. Well, I
18:15
mean,
18:15
obviously, that's Obviously,
18:17
there were seven gunmen if
18:19
it's a shooting or whatever. Oh,
18:21
no. That's not saddam. You
18:24
can see because he doesn't have the right beard
18:27
leg think his kids and himself are with a bunch
18:29
of gold in Belarus. Yes. To
18:31
port actually, remember
18:33
that.
18:33
Belarus. That's Belarus. Yes. This will
18:35
come all
18:36
comes back to Belarus. It does. Vichenko.
18:39
So like I said,
18:41
there were some calls. Uh-huh. And this
18:43
one wants to this this character wants to
18:45
get into whether or not the moon was
18:47
staged. Okay. Yes, Alex.
18:50
I own. A
18:52
pioneer laser disc of the
18:54
original moon walk. And
18:56
as Bill Cooper contended,
18:58
you can see a
19:00
cable, a black wire cable running along
19:02
the ground or the floor. And
19:04
Bill Cooper said that that actually the
19:07
Lunar Walk was still owned in
19:09
a Disney studio in
19:11
Florida. So
19:12
are we being bamboozled again?
19:15
Well, they claimed. What that a
19:17
man who staged another moon
19:19
landing in two thousand and one
19:21
space odyssey in the mid
19:24
sixties, they claimed Stanley Kubrick
19:27
had done that. And they claimed that
19:29
Stanley Cuprick, among other things, making nice
19:31
white shut, was about out to
19:33
weigh in on what he had
19:35
done because they supposedly used COVID because
19:37
he'd already done a successful
19:39
staging that you couldn't tell
19:41
was but that they admitted it was
19:41
you know, a representation. Are you
19:44
telling me that
19:44
you didn't know two thousand one was a movie
19:48
making of marfifty
19:50
Clark's book. It was so real. Are
19:52
you telling me? He was so pissed
19:54
that the government was
19:55
like, you've gotta you gotta do that for us. Wait.
19:57
Is that genuinely part of the rationale
20:00
for it is that they saw him do
20:02
such a good job that they were like,
20:05
whoa. That's exactly what it's like when we
20:07
did land on the moon. So now when we
20:09
tell people,
20:09
I gotta say that I'm not
20:11
the world's biggest expert in
20:13
moon landing conspiracies. But
20:16
I have I've dabbled around.
20:18
Sure. That is not what I've heard. I have not heard that No.
20:20
No. That two thousand one was so
20:22
good that that got them to be good.
20:24
I
20:24
thought isn't it supposed to be like
20:26
the other movies are him revealing through
20:29
little easter eggs that he did fake the
20:31
Bay moon landing. Like, I saw room two
20:33
thirty seven. Everybody in the everybody
20:35
in that documentary was
20:36
like, oh, the shining is him admitting he faked
20:39
the moon landing. Sure. Yeah.
20:41
People people do do say that Although,
20:43
I love this, turn a phrase,
20:45
that, like, Cubic made eyes wide
20:47
shut, and he was about to weigh in. He
20:50
I'm gonna weigh in on this.
20:52
Yeah. Yeah. I'm just
20:53
gonna be gonna be side over here and we'll weigh in
20:55
on how I fix it on the
20:57
moon. Listen, you guys have talking for a
20:59
while. Now that I got Tommy Cruz over here right next
21:01
to me, I'm gonna go ahead and let you know, I
21:03
fake the
21:04
moonlight. Weighing in.
21:08
So we have another caller. Okay. We have no closure
21:10
on whether or not the moon landing was fake.
21:12
Still don't know. Nope. Alex, iffy,
21:15
on the
21:15
subject. He's
21:16
on the Alex, I
21:19
understand that within the last
21:21
forty eight hours, you
21:24
have told the people that on
21:26
Saturday, while all the
21:28
alleged Hussein double was
21:30
being captured. That the
21:32
Congress passed into law
21:33
secretly, the pay
21:36
Tria two and was signed by Bush. Can you confirm
21:38
this, sir? Yes. And
21:40
people keep bringing this up and rightfully so.
21:42
I'm glad you're concerned. There's
21:45
a lot to sign off on there that definitely
21:47
doesn't match the rest of the
21:48
shit. People
21:49
keep bringing this up a lot, Alex,
21:51
because it did not happen. Well,
21:54
Alex hasn't even been on the
21:57
Saddam clone or not clone. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right.
21:59
Right. Right. A
22:01
thing. So Alex is now agreeing
22:03
to that. That was fake. Yeah. Why not?
22:05
And he Alex, like, I don't think
22:07
he said that it was secretly past.
22:09
It was just another bill that was allegedly
22:12
patronized too because Ron Paul talks some shit. Right.
22:14
Right. Right. So now we have a whole new
22:16
narrative taking shape that this caller is
22:18
putting forth that Alex assigning off
22:19
on. Collaborative
22:19
storytelling can be fun. And you're
22:22
responsible. True. So
22:24
Alex has a something
22:26
to say about the globalist trick
22:28
that they do. They have a trick that they can
22:30
play. They're big trick. It's not
22:32
a trick. The globalist
22:34
have a great back to it. They
22:38
kill Kennedy, they put out their
22:40
official story, blanket the news, everybody it, and
22:42
then it takes thirty, forty years to
22:45
expose the truth. And now
22:47
ninety two percent of the American people say the
22:49
government killed Kennedy in major
22:51
polls. What I at dozens of
22:53
them a month ago on the fourth
22:55
anniversary, dozens of polls, and
22:57
they they were all eighty five to
22:59
ninety six seven
23:01
percent. And I actually show up
23:03
here for an hour, calculated
23:05
over a dozen different polls. A local
23:07
KXA and TV poll, a New York
23:09
Times poll, USA TODAY. Always been trustworthy.
23:11
Seeing an end poll. I just averaged a bunch of these
23:13
polls together, but they were all above eighty
23:15
five
23:15
percent. And they
23:17
averaged up to ninety two
23:20
percent and it's the same
23:22
thing with Patriot Act II or Patriot
23:24
Act
23:24
I. It took us a year
23:27
before at Patriot Act one gotten the news.
23:29
I mean,
23:29
I wrote an analysis of Patriot
23:31
Act one just
23:34
about a week after
23:36
Patriot Act one was written,
23:38
and no one even knew about the provisions of
23:40
it. And the average person hadn't heard about it till a
23:42
year later, and that took our labor to get that out.
23:44
So if you wanna translate the trick that Alex is talking about the
23:46
globalist have, what he's saying is that
23:48
there's a general understanding of
23:51
what happened in an event that
23:53
once that happens -- Right. -- it becomes difficult
23:55
for him to get his bullshit to stick. Right.
23:57
This is essentially my wet concrete
24:00
metaphor. The only chance Alex has to get
24:02
his narratives any traction is to
24:04
act fast. Too fast for
24:06
fact checking or any kind of responsible
24:08
process in fact. Taken to
24:10
its logical conclusion, the ultimate goal really
24:12
is making up news before it happens. Right?
24:14
Becoming tomorrow's news today Exactly.
24:16
Which is why no one should be too
24:18
surprised that -- This is where this
24:20
goes. -- does seem like an inevitable end
24:22
in hindsight -- Right. Right. -- telelogically.
24:25
Also, I live through the post nine eleven period, and I
24:27
will say that Alex was absolutely
24:29
not the only person who was concerned
24:31
about the Patriot
24:32
Act. The town I lived in
24:35
Columbia had a fairly decent left wing
24:37
activist community, and it was something that was
24:39
discussed well prior to a year after
24:41
the
24:41
bill passed. Yeah. This is just Alex delusional and imagining
24:43
he's more unique than he is. Like, the
24:46
ACLU is fighting
24:47
it. Yeah. Yeah. Alex's
24:49
mortal enemies, the ACLU.
24:51
I would like to know if there has
24:53
been ninety two percent of Americans
24:56
agreeing on anything in any
24:58
poll ever. I know I know for
25:00
a fact I know for a fact we get to ninety two
25:02
percent on whether or not you should put some
25:04
Ebola in your drink. Like I don't
25:06
know what ninety two percent of Americans
25:08
agree on ever. Yeah.
25:10
I
25:10
mean, I'll I'll look up. I'll see you.
25:12
How many times have we seen so many
25:14
the obvious should you put your hand
25:16
in a burning bush And fifty
25:18
percent of America is
25:19
like, what if it's Jesus talking? And you're like, well,
25:21
I guess that's a fair point. Uh-huh.
25:23
Well, actually, hold on. Okay. Yeah.
25:25
I'm I'm googling this here, and I got a
25:27
gallop coal. A gallop poll from twenty
25:29
thirteen. A poll
25:30
on how many Americans believe -- But if you want
25:32
to agree on false, majority in
25:34
US still believe JFK killed in
25:36
a conspiracy.
25:37
Alright. Well, that means See, the reason I let
25:39
it slide was because it, like, I think it
25:41
kind of checks out. I feel like a lot
25:43
of people are pretty suspicious
25:45
about
25:45
JFK. I think the reason though
25:48
is also kind of just fun. Like, I think at a
25:50
certain point, I I
25:51
okay. I think
25:52
I think Alex is actually fairly close according to
25:54
this Gallup tracking. Two
25:58
thousand three
25:58
was, like, about seventy five percent.
26:01
I believe that there were others involved
26:03
than just -- That's where --
26:05
really high. Yep. And that is really down from
26:07
eighty one in, like, two
26:09
thousand one. That's crazy. Yeah. Wow.
26:12
So it is it is
26:14
I finally don't believe that there is a
26:17
conspiracy around it. If fifty percent of
26:19
Americans believe it, well, then obviously
26:21
it happened the way that it was supposed to.
26:23
This is the most oppositional devices
26:25
ever come handy in my
26:26
life. It also is a little bit shocking to
26:29
consider that, like, you know, they have this
26:31
majority of people who believe that the president
26:33
was assassinated and in a conspiracy, and no
26:35
one has done any Nobody's really that
26:37
myth. Just let it go. Come on. Who
26:39
knows? Really was a long
26:40
time. Every now and again,
26:41
there's a conspiracy. What are you gonna do?
26:43
So Alex gets another caller, and this guy has
26:45
a public access show. Uh-huh. And he
26:47
decided to play Alex's Bohemian Grove
26:50
documentary on
26:50
it. And You
26:53
got a little bit of surprise. But one
26:55
other thing, Alex, I put
26:58
your Bohemian Grovan. Can
27:00
able access the other
27:01
day. Wonderful. And when I
27:04
got it back, they
27:06
had blocked out the the
27:08
portion where George w
27:10
was in called?
27:11
The local
27:12
access station erased
27:15
the tape or didn't happen? They they erased
27:17
the two parts of it. One one in the
27:19
middle. I don't know what that was, but I know
27:21
that they they did erase the
27:23
part where Georgia w was
27:25
you could see. It's just a real quick flash of
27:28
him.
27:29
You're talking about
27:30
where I show news articles with him there.
27:32
That was blocked out? Yes.
27:36
Yeah. They they blew it out. Where is
27:37
that in Indiana deck?
27:39
Richmond. And
27:41
but but they did air it.
27:43
Oh, yeah. They did
27:44
it. And then they
27:46
destroyed your property? They did. They destroyed
27:49
it.
27:50
Well, Jack write me a letter,
27:53
and I appreciate you airing that, we'll try to
27:55
get you another copy, and
27:58
that is disgusting. And you need
28:00
to demand that they
28:02
you for damaging your property. You don't think
28:04
it might have been an accident? Or,
28:07
you know I mean, if it's a tape,
28:09
if it's like a
28:09
VHS? It's a literal tape. Two
28:12
thousand three, which III understand
28:14
two thousand three is the past, but
28:16
we still didn't use VHS tapes as much
28:18
as you might think.
28:18
But I think this would have been
28:21
for sure based on it being a local access station --
28:23
Yeah. -- in Indiana. It might
28:25
even have been a beta tape. No. I'll
28:27
probably not add doubt it. But, yeah, it could
28:29
have just been some sort of a glitch
28:31
or something. They didn't edit over.
28:33
Those are magnetic. Those
28:35
are magnetic. They didn't intentionally
28:38
black out the part with George Bush? Like, as if,
28:40
like, oh, this is the only copy of
28:42
this. Back in the day, you could put a magnet
28:44
too close to a tape as it
28:47
would go away. Right. Yeah.
28:48
See, this is the problem with thinking everything
28:50
is a conspiracy. It is. It sounds like There's
28:52
no big deal. You're like, oh,
28:53
god. And
28:53
then Alex has to go into
28:55
customer service mode. We'll send you a new tape right
28:57
out right away, sir.
28:58
We'll actually see if there's an interesting
29:01
dynamic here. There is that little bit. Of
29:03
customer service. But then there's a larger
29:05
picture to this. And that is,
29:07
like, Alex wants everybody
29:09
who has public access to play
29:11
his content. Yep. Now that is not what
29:13
public access is for. No. But free
29:16
publicity? Yeah. I don't think
29:18
so. Yeah. That's what he wants. When you
29:20
try to air one of my documentaries locally
29:22
on Axos, and they
29:24
say, they'll usually air it, then they'll
29:26
get one or two complaints from there.
29:28
What? There's been a bunch of news articles.
29:31
The news Look at
29:33
this up. I have a
29:35
newspaper articles where it causes big converses.
29:37
Big ones in Maine. They shut down the
29:39
whole access station because of it. Converses in
29:41
in upstate New York, Converses in
29:44
Florida, up over the films. We've covered those on air.
29:46
We've had guests on about it. They'll
29:48
put it on. People will freak out over
29:50
it. You could have naked top
29:52
less women on these access channels nobody cares, but you start
29:54
airing this hardcore stuff, the concentration
29:56
camps who carried out nine eleven,
29:58
local constabulary gets mad. I'll
30:01
talk the local access station, they'll say, well, certainly,
30:03
well fifty calls saying, please hear it again. We
30:05
had one call from the local
30:06
government, and we're not gonna AIR IT
30:09
ANYMORE. THAT'S USUALLY THE MO. BUT
30:11
THEY HAVE THESE RULES NATIONAL
30:13
THAT THE FEDS HAVE WRITTEN
30:15
OR the local governments. They're just guidelines
30:17
that say it's got to be
30:19
have a local interest. Well, every time
30:21
they tell one of our listeners
30:23
this, I tell the listener all
30:25
fair. Might as well tell them on air.
30:27
Watch the
30:27
channel. Tape all the
30:30
federal propaganda tapes.
30:32
Tape the other stuff that was
30:34
made outside the city show that
30:36
they're airing stuff that doesn't have a
30:38
local interest, then go to them and
30:40
say you better air my paper. I'm gonna sue
30:42
you for termination. So
30:44
that's real simple. That scenario that
30:46
Alex is describing has definitely not
30:48
happened a bunch of times. And I would be
30:50
shocked if it's ever happened. Like in outraged
30:52
mayor of the constabulary cracking down
30:54
on a local access channel because
30:56
they played Alex's
30:57
film, the fuck out of here.
30:59
What you
30:59
can see here is Alex trying to find
31:02
these fringe off the beaten pathways to
31:04
get his content out, and it's really
31:06
interesting to recognize how big
31:08
a priority that has been to him his whole
31:10
career. You get the sense that even here in two
31:12
thousand three, Alex is fully aware
31:14
that no one wants him and he's essentially
31:16
unemployable in any formal place of
31:18
business and he's gonna have to make it on his
31:20
own. No network is ever gonna pick up his
31:22
show, but his listeners can try
31:24
to spam his shit on public access.
31:26
It really is like the predecessor to his
31:28
later effective adoption of social media and YouTube.
31:31
For whatever else we say about him, Alex is
31:33
fairly crafty on this front, probably
31:35
because he has to be. Yep. Now the
31:37
problem is that local access
31:39
airwaves aren't just free time slots for Alex to hijack.
31:41
Oh. This is pretty rich that
31:43
he's suggesting that this listener go to the extent of
31:45
suing the station for discrimination. If
31:47
they won't air out because
31:49
it also implies that
31:51
Alex realizes that discrimination laws
31:53
are real. Oh, that they might be useful.
31:56
But there there's also a conflation
31:58
that's going on here, and that is local access and
32:00
public access. Right. Those are two different
32:02
-- Right. Sort of
32:04
types of content. I
32:05
mean, it is it is heavy. Yes.
32:07
Is what Alex is
32:08
talking about. Right. Right. Right. Right. Right. Like,
32:11
what he's talking about or
32:13
NPR type public
32:15
radio station -- Yeah. -- as opposed
32:18
to Any weirdo can come in
32:20
into the show, like Chris
32:22
Gethord.
32:22
Yeah. Yeah. It is it is such a
32:25
wild thing to think about, but
32:27
Even back then, Alex is basically like, I'm not
32:29
going to be syndicated unless people
32:31
do it on my behalf. In the same
32:33
way that I'm not gonna get my shit out
32:36
on face book unless people post it on for
32:37
me.
32:37
And unless I, you know, you've put out a
32:40
ton of
32:40
A shit ton of content and
32:43
a breakdown barriers to access, like telling everybody you
32:45
can just repost my shit for free.
32:47
Yep. You know, there's yeah.
32:49
And incentivizing people to do it by
32:51
being, like, you're gonna go to a FEMA camp you're
32:53
totally. Yeah.
32:53
Yeah. Yeah. No. I mean, it's it's
32:56
a fucked up business model, but
32:58
if if you were if you
33:00
were like playing a game where you
33:02
never actually had to see the
33:04
horrors that this would inflict on people.
33:06
Mhmm. That would be a good winning strategy, you know? Because
33:08
you don't have institutional support, you don't have
33:10
all of this stuff. But if you put it
33:12
in real life, then you're a monster
33:14
ruining people's lives. So don't do
33:16
that. I would say, it's not wise. That's my advice. It's not
33:18
cool. Yeah. So Alex has
33:20
George Humphrey on, who's a
33:23
local show guy in Austin.
33:25
And also just a weirdo that Alex has
33:27
on a
33:27
bit. I don't know what this guy's fucking deal
33:30
is, honestly. His name's George.
33:32
How
33:32
I think it was something like the city council or something. We've talked
33:34
about him at least ten times.
33:36
So he's he's definitely made some calls to get
33:39
some public that shit He's on public
33:41
access. Well, you know he's good.
33:43
Yeah. His name is apparently on
33:45
the plaque outside the Austin public
33:47
access station. According
33:49
to Alex. That's great. Now
33:52
I don't know why
33:54
this guy
33:55
is. Why why is --
33:57
Yeah. -- why I don't know why he's you. I don't know what his
34:00
deal is. I don't know what his I
34:02
don't know what his claim to fame is other than, like,
34:04
years past he was on the city council.
34:07
Yeah. I he he is, like,
34:09
trying to climb trying
34:11
to rock climb the
34:14
the giant beam
34:15
downtown. You just there's nothing to grab on your face. Yeah.
34:17
You're just gonna slide
34:19
down. Yeah. I I can't stand
34:21
this door chump for guy
34:24
because he's so he's bland.
34:26
Anyway, their shows on public
34:27
access. Alex and George Humphreys are
34:30
being
34:31
cyberous. Oh,
34:32
no. It
34:32
is amazing that the country that is supposed to have
34:35
the first amendment of free speech and
34:37
freedom of the press is
34:40
that these access stations
34:42
which were built specifically to
34:44
give the people access to
34:47
speak are being censored.
34:48
By the way, on the big access station in Austin,
34:51
whose name is on the plaque from when they broke ground
34:53
on it? Who voted to to put
34:55
that in? Well, there were
34:58
robust that worked on it. But your name is on it.
35:00
Yeah. And now on my
35:02
show, on your show, specifically the
35:05
Patriot
35:05
shows, one happens for the
35:08
last two months every time we're on,
35:10
George?
35:10
Well, at least on
35:13
my show is that there
35:15
has been some technical interference. Now -- Mhmm. --
35:18
I don't know what is causing
35:20
any
35:20
impact. It's an FM it's an FM
35:23
modulator sending it through Grande in
35:25
Time Warner. And it it
35:28
it happened three years ago. We demanded
35:30
they stop it. And it blacks
35:32
out. Folks, they're blocking us out.
35:34
Only happens on our
35:35
shows. Well, we as a matter of
35:37
fact and again, I'm
35:39
not I'm not saying that they are doing this. I'm just
35:41
telling you telling the listeners what happened last
35:44
night on my
35:44
show. We couldn't get up for the first
35:47
two and a half minutes, but anyway.
35:50
You can
35:50
see your mail by telephone. Very grateful
35:52
that here in Austin, we do have
35:54
this access because we have the ability
35:57
to speak to the
35:57
people and with shows like yours and three
35:59
or four other shows is that
36:02
Austin in many ways has
36:04
become so
36:06
somewhat educated in one of the leaders of the resistance
36:08
to what's going on. And
36:10
it all has to do
36:13
with edge DUCATION AND INFORMATION? Andrew: WELL, IT
36:15
DOES. AND YOU KNOW, THEY'RE SHUTTING ACCESS DOWN AROUND
36:18
THE COUNTRY. I DIDN'T MEAN TO GET OFF INTO A
36:20
DISCUSSION OF THIS,
36:22
BUT folks that haven't put my films on or haven't gotten your
36:24
own shows, you need to do it. This
36:26
is a way we have millions of listeners
36:28
if all of you in
36:30
your town on, go get an access show. And if they
36:32
try to stop you, get their rules, get
36:34
around it, get it's either a rule. It says a
36:36
lot of times they get
36:38
up gets there, folks. Well, most of the time they'll be happy to put you on.
36:40
Just some of the time you get resistance,
36:42
you need to put this on, you
36:44
need this is
36:46
a bit than you to reach millions of
36:47
George? Well, absolutely any
36:49
Not for you. No. That's not how
36:51
it works. You
36:54
it's you know what, the stuff that
36:56
Humphrey is saying about, like, Austin public access. It's like, yes, you and
36:58
Alex have shows on that. You live
37:00
in Austin. Yeah. That is
37:04
your local accent makes sense. I don't
37:06
think that Alex would love it
37:08
if, like, people started playing like
37:12
Michael Moore movies. No. No. Like, just tried to
37:14
start the just clogging the airwaves with
37:16
nothing but Michael Moore movies. But
37:19
that's the exact same strategy that he's trying to get
37:21
his audience to carry out on his
37:23
behalf. Yeah. And It's a
37:26
real piece of shit thing to do. Right? works
37:28
because it's an abuse that people
37:30
are, like, there's an inherent
37:32
level of people just going
37:36
like, hey,
37:36
We understand that this
37:37
isn't perfect, but if you don't
37:40
abuse this too much, we're not
37:42
gonna fucking fight about it because we don't
37:44
know where exactly the line
37:46
is. So if you abuse it a little bit,
37:48
fucking, you know what, you got away with
37:50
it. Mhmm. And he's
37:51
like, okay. So because they're gonna let us
37:53
get away with a little what if we just overrun
37:55
the entire fucking system? Well, and he's found, like,
37:57
a sort of a weak point in as
37:59
much as, like, a lot of people don't care about
38:01
Well, man, don't care.
38:03
Stuff. You know? And so, like, using
38:06
arbitrage.
38:06
You might be able to steamroll a
38:08
little bit there, whereas you would not be
38:10
able to do that other mediums. You wouldn't be
38:12
able to do that at a radio station
38:14
or, like, a real TV
38:18
channel. I don't mean to say real
38:20
TV
38:20
channel. I don't wanna impute
38:22
local public access. No. No. Of course.
38:24
Many of our many
38:25
of the favorite things that I've seen people make have
38:27
been on Sure. Local access.
38:30
So I just have to check-in
38:32
here. Alex gives us an
38:34
update on the success rate of the
38:36
tapes. Okay. Take action. Ninety percent of those that see the
38:38
films are waking up. The
38:40
New World Order is so out in the open
38:42
now. It's hidden in plain sight. We just
38:44
gotta point
38:46
it out folks, and they're waking up. What we gotta do at
38:48
Quik before the globalist carry out more
38:49
terror. Is that a ninety percent success rate?
38:52
Wait. Was that up from eighty five or
38:54
does that sound from ninety
38:56
two. Because I think we were at ninety
38:58
nine.
38:58
Mhmm. Right? Ninety eight ish. Ninety
39:00
eight ish. Not as many as dogs.
39:03
His wonky.
39:04
Yeah. Right around that. He's right
39:05
there. And then they added some new breeds
39:08
of people. And then it went down to eighty five.
39:10
Right. You remember that? I I'm fairly certain he
39:12
was down eighty five at one point.
39:14
I think it did go back up and then it's back down a little bit to be
39:15
Right. Right. Drama. That is
39:18
a stock
39:19
ticker to watch. Watch
39:21
this too. Watch this
39:24
thing. So Alex talks a
39:26
lot on this episode about Camp Trails.
39:28
Mhmm. But
39:30
Mhmm. He doesn't say anything meaningful, really. Like, obviously,
39:32
we already know through, like,
39:34
constant like, over the years
39:37
Alex believes and Kemp trails their spray and shit. Sure. Sure.
39:39
Sure. Sure. But in
39:42
this entire episode, it's just kind
39:44
of like I I when I was gonna grow lions
39:46
would go way faster. I've
39:48
seen it with my own eyes
39:51
and, like, I don't really give
39:53
a shot. Now you're a now you're a drunk old man at a bar. But there's
39:55
one clip that I wanted to play
39:57
because Alex talks about ChemTrail's
40:00
a lot.
40:01
Okay. It's not like a
40:02
lot a lot. It's not an uncommon thing.
40:04
Sure. And so this caller calls in,
40:06
and he's like, I just wanna thank you
40:09
for talking about this stuff. Like,
40:11
if Alex has been holding back, I'm talking about Kevin Trailes. And I
40:13
think it's really silly, and
40:16
Alex's responses
40:18
that kind of appropriate. T.
40:19
J. In Minnesota.
40:19
Go ahead. You're on the air. Alex, I'll talk as
40:22
fast as I can. I never expected to make
40:24
the call to you again
40:26
because we jammed off your name. I'm an affiliate the last time I
40:28
tried talking about spray planes. I
40:30
wanna thank you. I think
40:32
you've turned on the career
40:34
corner or a vocational corner or
40:36
a pro life corner in your career
40:38
today by having this man
40:40
on, but most actually because you're
40:42
talking about spray planes out of
40:44
spray. Let's throw this Kim trail
40:46
demonet. You and I has worded out the
40:48
window on real military science. This country has been
40:50
sprayed for three years or more.
40:52
Every single state, your
40:54
guest, no
40:57
nose. He knows. What? And
40:59
I never expected you to have
41:01
a guest on that
41:04
nose that he advanced. Craig, sir, sir,
41:06
sir. I've had Clifford Carnacom on. I've
41:09
had George Humphrey on
41:10
probably, I don't know, ten times. So
41:12
They got
41:13
a primary target, Alex. Look,
41:15
aren't you, ma'am? One
41:19
primary is
41:20
not
41:21
power.
41:21
I want to go governors of our
41:23
sovereign states take action to get these
41:26
aircraft out of our airspace and God
41:28
bless
41:29
you. You're back on the
41:32
the
41:32
white guy to
41:33
rest. What? The white star left,
41:34
the good
41:35
guy to rest for
41:38
what you've done this morning. I really appreciate it. Well, I
41:40
mean, I I cover Kim Trailes and the bill,
41:42
the legislation, I in road
41:44
attorney, sir. Thanks for the
41:46
call. Yep.
41:48
Like, I got this. I've had George Humphrey on a bunch of
41:51
my thing, man, Cliff Cardikov. Who the fuck
41:53
that? Who are you?
41:54
Who are you, CJ? TJ,
41:57
what are you talking about? TJ
41:58
wanted to give Alex a nice pep talk. You
42:01
know what?
42:01
I will say this. For
42:02
doing something that he does fairly regularly.
42:04
You're not usually an impression guy, but
42:06
you did a fairly good version of him up top. Thank you. Before the clip, I think
42:09
that was pretty good. I appreciate it. I got
42:10
it. So we have one last clip from
42:13
this episode, and it's It's
42:18
Alec, I felt the very
42:20
bored. Most of the show is fairly boring. Sure. Now
42:22
the
42:23
nineteenth is definitely pastures. What what will I hurt
42:25
of George Humphrey? Very boring.
42:28
So we have twenty minutes left
42:30
in the show. And Alex is teasing
42:32
that he's gonna get to his
42:34
headlines. Now,
42:34
coming up, we're
42:35
gonna talk about him throwing out the
42:37
enemy combatant designation that it mean Bush
42:39
is gonna quit? Bush being paid off by the communist, Chinese, and to his
42:41
family? Of course. I wanna get into
42:43
the fake
42:43
terror
42:44
alerts. You name it here
42:47
in just a few minutes, we'll go to that. Right now, I wanna
42:49
bring Jim Sheppard up, the owner and head guy at
42:51
New Millennium Concepts who makes the
42:53
best water filters. I
42:56
know of. There's twenty minutes left in the show.
42:58
And instead of going to your
43:00
actual news, you're gonna do a fucking
43:02
infomercial with
43:04
your water
43:05
guy. We
43:05
got twenty minutes for the water filter guy. Uh-huh.
43:07
And also one of those headlines that
43:10
he's not getting to -- Yeah. -- be about
43:12
the fake terror alerts. Uh-huh. Guess
43:14
who is at play
43:16
right at this point in
43:18
two thousand three? December eighteenth
43:21
two thousand three. Dennis Montgomery is currently
43:24
subrodding the government. Get the fuck
43:26
out. He's a false
43:28
-- Yeah.
43:29
Warnings that -- Yeah. -- discerning from al
43:32
Jazirah TV and shit. All
43:33
this stuff, that was going on. That it
43:36
was, like, It
43:38
was it was happening as so,
43:40
like, Alex doesn't realize
43:42
that if he knows what
43:44
he's talking about. The person
43:46
who's behind fraudulent terror warnings
43:48
would later become a gigantic
43:52
gantic piece of his conspiracies about
43:54
Trump being spied on and election
43:56
conspiracies. It's it's like it's
43:59
like a heist building a crew movie where
44:01
they're like, oh, that guy's in jail, that
44:03
guy's in
44:03
jail, who's there? Oh, no. You remember this guy?
44:06
Bring him back in here. That's crazy.
44:08
Crazy. Yeah. Yeah. Tennis Montgomery is one of those guys who's gonna be,
44:10
like, I'm your your your favorite
44:12
rapper's
44:13
favorite rapper. I I'm
44:16
a con man's con. The number of tendrils
44:17
that slowly find their
44:20
way back to somebody being conned
44:22
by Dennis Montgomery
44:23
at some point, bananas. Yeah.
44:26
So actually a little bit after
44:28
this is when that
44:30
stuff really starts to come
44:32
out. Yeah. But at this point, there
44:34
were just, like, rumblings of,
44:37
like, anonymous sources within the
44:39
FBI -- Sure. -- stuff that said
44:41
that that, like, these alerts. Right. I don't know about
44:43
that. People are just anxious to see signs
44:46
wherever --
44:46
Sure. -- it's so reasonable.
44:49
Everybody was being told at a near constant clip that
44:51
terrorism was around the corner. But
44:53
It's all Dennis. See
44:54
something, maybe not all of that. But Dennis
44:56
is definitely in play. Dennis is in play. So
44:58
we get to the nineteenth, and Alex once again puts out the the
45:00
the
45:00
sign. I want some calls. One
45:03
eight hundred
45:05
259 ninety two thirty one, any
45:08
issue, any item, any topic
45:10
of discussion, any angle
45:12
you want to explore, any
45:16
paradigm time. You want to shatter any piece of
45:18
propaganda. You want to reveal
45:20
hey, Alex. I just called in because
45:22
I wanna to shatter a paradigm. Yeah. I
45:25
mean, but that's a little broad. That's
45:27
what do you wanna talk about? Why don't that just
45:29
come out and say, I want you guys to do my
45:31
show form. I wanna shatter a
45:31
paradigm. I what what paradigm? And
45:34
it all. All paradigms?
45:36
Yes. The the do you mean the paradigm of
45:38
paradigms? I would like to shatter the paradigm
45:40
of Alex not
45:42
preparing and reporting fake stories.
45:44
Yeah. That's because that paradigm
45:47
continues here.
45:48
And, of course, about four weeks ago,
45:50
the family of five was kidnapped who
45:52
lived about four miles over the US border
45:54
-- Okay. -- by Mexican groups.
45:58
And the last time I saw an article about
46:00
a few days ago, they're still holding one of
46:02
them. There's absolutely zero
46:05
now EXUAL NEWS ON THIS. JUST A FEW
46:07
LOCAL NEWS STORIES ABOUT IT.
46:09
SURGE CONTINIONS FOR BOARD TO PATROL
46:11
AGENTS, AUTHORITIES. ON Thursday,
46:13
searched for a US border patrol agent
46:16
who disappeared while pursuing
46:18
suspected illegal immigrants along the Colorado
46:20
River earlier this week. No one
46:23
now reporting on that story about the family being
46:25
kidnapped by Mexican soldiers because it's not
46:26
real. Oh, that would
46:27
be a really good talk about that on a passive
46:29
side. Yeah. Yeah. You're right. Alex desperately wants it
46:31
to be real so it can help by his hatred
46:33
of immigrants. So as far as infowards is
46:36
concerned, it's definitely real.
46:38
That's the level of rigor that he brings
46:40
to the table and why people should trust him
46:42
as a good source of information.
46:44
That's why he'll show up where there's
46:46
buses, and he'll be like, ah, see, they've
46:48
got white kids on that
46:49
bus. And
46:50
that's it. Oh, man. He nailed it. Yeah.
46:52
And then he'll be wearing
46:53
seatbelts. Yeah. You know, they were wearing
46:56
seatbelts. Right? So this story about the
46:58
border patrol agent is very
47:00
tragic. And Alex is reporting it as a situation where it's likely that the agent
47:02
was killed by coyotes that he was
47:04
following. In reality, this is about
47:06
twenty four year old, a guy
47:08
named James
47:10
Eppeling who had rescued an immigrant from drowning in
47:12
the Colorado River and then disappeared.
47:14
It turned out he disappeared
47:16
because he had drowned himself, attempted
47:18
to pursue another immigrant that was later charged with transporting people across
47:21
the border. It's sad because the death
47:23
was needless and he was so
47:26
young, but there was no murderous intent or violence perpetrated by
47:28
the immigrants. Epling risked
47:30
his own safety to save the one
47:32
person who was drowning, and that's a commendable
47:36
lacked. It's just unfortunate that things ended up the way they did,
47:38
and these are the circumstances. Yeah.
47:40
Yeah. That's a situation where everybody
47:44
involved seems to be doing what to them is the right thing and I
47:46
can't really argue with them and the only people
47:48
in the wrong are
47:49
nameless, faceless governments fucking
47:52
with them. Well, I mean, if it weren't a
47:54
circumstance where people were trying to
47:56
-- Yeah. -- you know, to
47:58
clandestinely come over the border, then
48:00
they would to probably be in a position where this border patrol
48:02
agent risks his safety
48:04
to help someone who's drowning and then
48:06
drowns himself chasing another
48:08
guy. Yep. Circumstance.
48:10
The number of needless deaths. And it's tragic
48:12
that his death at this point
48:14
and at this point his disappearance
48:16
is being used as universe xenophobic
48:18
agitation by people like Alex -- A
48:20
guy who is
48:21
shit. -- heroically trying to save the
48:23
people that he is
48:25
ostensibly criminalized. Mhmm. He's,
48:27
you that's that's a story of what it
48:30
means to be human. Instead of
48:32
being, like, uh-huh. See, that's why we should hate
48:34
them more. Yeah.
48:36
C plumber. Great. So now, III
48:38
got to say. Yeah. When I said that
48:40
the nineteenth is better, it's not because
48:42
of any like real content.
48:45
Per se -- Sure. -- or any
48:48
important news. They didn't get Kubrick on
48:50
this one? Mm-mm.
48:52
It's because I think I realized
48:54
where me and Alex differ. I think I finally figured
48:57
out why we have such beef, shoes. There's
48:59
an interesting article here.
49:02
Catch
49:03
right to eat incapacitated. It's really
49:06
this.
49:06
In an LA apartment, a
49:08
group of hungry cats began to eat
49:10
their eighty six year old owner at
49:13
or she suffered an apparent stroke. That's
49:15
horrible folks. I don't usually get
49:17
into such
49:19
gory side issues, but it's just
49:22
interesting. And could didn't get up, primarily
49:24
a leak official said, Thursday. That shows how much
49:25
your cats love you. Your cats are
49:28
absolute trash.
49:30
Damn.
49:31
Wow. That's that's I'm sorry. I'm sorry. So
49:34
So so if I understand correctly. Also, why
49:36
was he laughing while he read
49:37
that story?
49:40
I
49:40
I mean, this is weird. Yeah. This whole thing
49:42
is kids. I I mean, I understanding
49:44
eight
49:44
cats. I don't understand how this so
49:47
story justifies calling Allcat's trash. Allcat's
49:49
trash. I understand.
49:53
This story is
49:55
is also, like, I apologize for sharing the gory details
49:57
with you. I don't understand any part of this
49:59
story other than Alex hates
50:01
cats. Right. And I would
50:04
argue that it's entirely possible
50:06
that we learn over the course of this.
50:08
Uh-huh. That the cat might be a stand in for
50:10
his wife. Now it's
50:15
life.
50:15
So, yeah, Alex could play a sport
50:18
about
50:18
cats. Your dog. If it loves you,
50:20
ninety eight percent of dogs will
50:22
not eat you, and then this
50:24
has been found in about thousand
50:27
cases. It's in police files. You can
50:29
be collapsed for a week.
50:32
The dog can be starving. No
50:34
water. It will it will chew a
50:36
hole through through a thick wooden door, it will bark, it will freak
50:38
out, it will pull you out of the water, it
50:40
will liquefaction, it will love
50:42
you, cash
50:44
cats will eat
50:45
you. This has happened before. Cats don't love
50:48
you. Okay.
50:48
I just I just wanna a
50:51
dark levered folks, and it's a side
50:54
issue, but I don't like cats. I
50:56
can't stand them. They don't care
50:58
about you. They when
51:00
they you can just tell the way they act,
51:02
the way they look at you, their mannerisms,
51:04
just how anybody would have
51:06
cats over dogs. Just I know we got a
51:09
lot of cat lovers out there. Maybe your cat likes
51:11
you, but I I guarantee you. When it when
51:13
the when the going gets
51:14
rough, that cat will turn its back on
51:16
you. You have not tried to eat you. Damn. Okay. I have a new
51:19
theory. Yeah. Alright. Here's my new theory. Okay. And this
51:21
is what we've been missing this whole
51:23
time. I personally. Alex,
51:26
Actually, four
51:28
thousand year old mummy. That's
51:30
why he's afraid of cats. Alright?
51:33
He was embalmed. Mhmm. He
51:36
was obviously cursed,
51:38
and then he would return to Rome
51:40
to do wreak destruction upon this
51:41
planet. Mhmm. But obviously, still scary
51:44
cats. This is a possibility.
51:46
I think
51:48
so. I know what he's going to say.
51:50
And so I'm sticking with
51:52
my theory. Okay. Alright. Then he's just
51:54
mad at his
51:55
wife. Okay. So not
51:58
mommy.
51:58
Still we're fairly certain on Notmommy here. I'm gonna go with
52:00
Akam's razor tells me that
52:02
he's mad at his wife. Alright.
52:05
Well, We gotta get Brendan Fraser over here
52:07
because this is such
52:09
an unnecessary level of
52:11
shitting on top
52:13
angry cats. They just cannot just
52:15
be about cats. But it's not even just
52:17
like, I don't like cats. It's you
52:19
shouldn't. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. You shouldn't like
52:21
cats. You liking
52:22
says, you're all you're delusional
52:25
to think they like you.
52:27
Right. goes
52:30
on. Here we go. That's happened many times,
52:32
and the dog will starve death rather than
52:34
eat you. But not. Now,
52:37
but doesn't know you. It will lead you to be starving, but not
52:39
if it if it knows
52:41
you. She was
52:42
listed in fair condition at Kayser
52:45
Medical Center to hospital
52:47
spokesman, Lisa Court.
52:49
We got more serious issues. I just I
52:51
don't wanna go on my crusade against cats
52:53
to never mention on
52:55
air. I've got a cat. My
52:57
wife has a cat. It doesn't care about
52:59
me. It doesn't care about her.
53:02
It's annoying.
53:04
It's COOPID. Okay. I'm I'm I'm open to
53:06
can of worms
53:07
here. I'm sorry. I like dogs. Okay.
53:09
I have a theory.
53:13
Man, it's that
53:14
Alex is an angel. He's a
53:17
shit.
53:17
Yeah. And cats stay
53:19
away for people who are like that.
53:22
Cats,
53:22
cats lucky fried pieces of
53:23
shit. No. No. Generally,
53:26
you know, outbursts and, like -- Right. --
53:28
that kind of stuff. Usually spooks cats --
53:29
Yeah. -- makes them run
53:32
away. Right. Dogs are trained
53:34
for affection, so they'll find it even
53:36
within violent outbursts -- Right. --
53:38
obviously. Oh, certainly not a
53:40
hundred percent either
53:42
direction, but typically speaking, you're not
53:44
going to have, like,
53:46
a a cat isn't going to put up with a
53:48
lot. Right. I think
53:50
I think you're onto something
53:53
that's so fundamental.
53:55
So
53:55
so, like, pure And
53:57
that is this. A cat
54:00
will give you consequences.
54:04
If the cat does not like or you're doing it, it will
54:07
go. Because you did this. This will
54:09
now happen to
54:10
you. And
54:12
if you're kind of a narcissistic self
54:14
centered person, you'll assume that the
54:16
cat is just an asshole. Yes. That's
54:19
okay. It's our assholes. No. I'll I'll fix
54:22
that. But
54:23
yeah. I don't know.
54:25
Maybe it's you,
54:27
man. I hey. I got I think I got two lovely
54:29
dogs. I love them with my whole heart.
54:31
You got Celine. I love Celine with my whole heart.
54:33
Mhmm. I am not choosing
54:35
in the cat re dog because the person who
54:37
is wrong in the cat re dog
54:40
conversation is the
54:40
person. Liz, the person was a strong companion.
54:44
Yes. I like both as well, but I definitely prefer
54:46
a company of a cat. Yeah.
54:48
And maybe it's just because I'm
54:50
I'm a little bit chiller. And I
54:52
don't like I don't really enjoy, like,
54:55
dogs jumping all around, and I wanna
54:57
take them on a walk or anything. I'll tell you
54:59
this. I'm lazy. I
55:01
couldn't have a dog by myself. Sure. Right.
55:03
I could have it.
55:04
It's very helpful to have another person. Exactly.
55:06
Yeah. And my wife is allergic to
55:08
cats. Right. So that's it's like the math
55:10
on that is if I were by
55:12
myself, I would instantly have a
55:14
cat over a dog. Yeah. But since
55:16
you know, I can't do you know,
55:18
well, and now here's another plot twist. Sure. When I first
55:20
got her, Celine was
55:24
an Right. She was a bit of an asshole. Sure. And that was because
55:26
she'd had a really tough time out
55:28
on the streets -- Mhmm. -- to the
55:30
street cat. And
55:32
through consistency and care
55:35
and, you
55:35
know, proving myself to her
55:38
in a
55:38
way that there's there's trust gain. Right.
55:40
She's the total sweetheart now. And
55:43
I don't know. Maybe Alex
55:45
just doesn't understand this. In
55:48
in in in in so what you're saying is that
55:49
because there's a piece of shit. In order for you and your
55:51
cat to get along, your cat had to trust
55:53
you and you had to trust
55:56
your cat. It couldn't work with just you
55:57
going. I want this to happen and then it happened.
55:59
It does work with a dog though. It can
56:01
-- Yeah. --
56:04
sure can.
56:04
And now here's the other thing too, that I think Alex resents
56:06
that his wife's cat doesn't like
56:08
him. Yeah. So he feels
56:09
entitled to -- Yeah. -- one hundred respect
56:12
from the
56:14
cat. Uh-huh. There's something that's sublimated
56:15
here. One hundred percent the wife and,
56:17
like, he's that's part of why he's
56:19
so angry. I think what's what's amazing
56:21
to me is one
56:23
thing that we've all you know, of all the things that we've done, you know, like,
56:26
given people an impromptu law
56:28
class. Mhmm. You know,
56:30
we've we've gone through different ways that people
56:32
have have lied in all different ways.
56:34
But one thing that we also have done
56:36
is given therapists a really
56:38
good, like,
56:40
this is the simplest example of a thing. You
56:42
know? Like, if you wanna study malignant
56:48
narcissism, It's all here. Mhmm. And you don't even have to think
56:50
hard. Mhmm. It's right there. It's out in front of
56:51
you. It's in your face. I don't want
56:54
a cold water rule
56:56
this. Sure. But I'm also not a
56:58
therapist. Yeah. So anyway, Alex is getting
57:00
really self conscious because he spent a long
57:02
time complaining about cats on
57:04
this
57:04
episode. You know, I've got tons of earth shattering,
57:06
vital news to go over.
57:08
And I hate habits
57:11
spouting off about how I don't like cats. I mean, I don't hate
57:14
them. I just realized that they don't care
57:16
about me. I realized that they
57:18
are parasitic, that they could care
57:20
less about OT YOU.
57:22
AND DOGS WILL BE ON THEIR LIVES
57:24
FOR YOU. AND THAT WAS MY POINT
57:26
ABOUT THESE CATCHTS TRYING TO EAT THEIR OWN
57:29
who was paralyzed on the floor,
57:31
dogs don't do that,
57:34
folks. Dogs don't do
57:36
that. Dogs go in the water to save you. Yeah. They'll starve to
57:38
death right next to you. They're
57:40
amazing creatures. In fact, I wish more
57:42
people
57:43
were as it as the dogs I know. But -- because they didn't
57:46
talk back
57:46
to you. -- have this
57:47
annoying cat. I mean, I pet it and stuff and
57:50
I'm nice to it. I just it's just
57:52
very annoying.
57:54
I know it doesn't care about me, and I don't like having things
57:56
around me that don't care about me. But I
57:58
know -- Oh, man. -- or just basically
58:01
work poorly shit. Finish
58:04
cats compared to
58:05
dogs. I don't know why anyone has
58:08
cats. I'm really
58:09
getting off into petty
58:12
stuff now. Name of color. The
58:14
boy. This isn't
58:16
about the
58:17
cat. This isn't even
58:19
about the cat. This
58:22
just keeps getting more and more not
58:24
about the
58:24
cat. This
58:25
is a show in two thousand
58:27
three. This
58:29
is a mess. Oh, boy. Good.
58:32
Alex.
58:33
Tough day at the office. Oh,
58:36
man.
58:36
It's III
58:39
like it whenever you don't even work. You
58:41
don't even bother with double
58:42
entendre. I hate double entendre. Just give
58:44
me entendre. He sounds like such a fucking
58:46
boat. When he's like, I don't like being around
58:49
things. I don't care about me. Look,
58:51
you're an adult. You're
58:55
an adult. Well, it's tough to it's tough to remember that
58:57
he's only, like what?
59:00
Like That's right. He's really,
59:02
like,
59:02
thirty one thirty two.
59:04
Yeah. Yeah. So he's I'm still
59:06
gonna call that
59:06
an adult. I'm sure he's gonna do it. Sure.
59:09
But it's easy to project his,
59:11
like, pushing fifty. Sure. So now
59:13
on
59:13
Actually, the I find it mature in this period of time
59:16
than now. Yeah. Even in many
59:18
periods of
59:20
time. Not mature at
59:21
all. In many ways, I think he was more of an adult this point. Mhmm. But also,
59:23
this is clearly
59:26
transparent.
59:28
Feelings being expressed on Earth that are
59:30
very bizarre. Yeah. If I ever say something like
59:32
that, I hope you record it and then play it back for
59:34
me later to be like, Jordan, you remember when you
59:37
said
59:37
this? I was worried about it. Yeah. Anyway,
59:40
we get to some conspiracy stuff.
59:42
And turns out around this time, they're
59:44
talking about putting out those
59:46
new dollars with the color.
59:48
Right. Right. Right. Yeah. Yeah. And this is a
59:50
conspiracy, of course. Of course. And by the way,
59:52
you show your earnal knowledge, Brandon Burke,
59:54
of the city weekly.
59:56
Real quick. The Alex is responding to
59:58
an op ed in
1:00:00
a cell
1:00:01
city paper. Yeah. And so that was the
1:00:03
I mean, unfortunately, if your name is
1:00:05
Brandon Bert, it's really easy to
1:00:08
to get a good
1:00:09
Is that
1:00:09
what you're saying Brandon Burton? That's a good
1:00:11
name to get one of it. You know, a lot of good
1:00:13
letters. Yeah. And Charlotte,
1:00:16
Shitti? Yeah. You show your knowledge because the Reserve
1:00:18
policy documents of four
1:00:20
plus years ago said
1:00:23
that they were gonna incrementally change the
1:00:26
money, first with a big
1:00:27
face, then facing in color, then the color
1:00:29
is getting more bright,
1:00:32
and what the reason for that? of the side
1:00:34
issues is counterfeiting,
1:00:36
which the globalists do themselves with
1:00:38
this fiat currency of by
1:00:41
private banks. Okay. But more importantly,
1:00:44
it's about calling in
1:00:46
the old money supply. The money
1:00:48
that's in the ATRESS OR THAT'S IN
1:00:50
THE BRICS. A FIREPLACE OR
1:00:53
THAT'S BARRIED IN A
1:00:55
TINKAN, IN A FOLDERS off
1:00:57
he can in the
1:00:59
backyard. That's what it
1:01:02
does. And they said it's going to
1:01:04
do that. They can call in the
1:01:06
old money, destroy it, take
1:01:08
it out of circulation, which they admit they're
1:01:10
doing, and then only have a limited
1:01:12
amount. They're trying to
1:01:14
go down down from three percent actual
1:01:17
paper currency or cotton currency.
1:01:19
It's actually cloth compared
1:01:21
to the ratios of zeros and ones in the
1:01:23
Federal Reserve, computer banks. Understand. If
1:01:26
you all went to the bank and asked for cash,
1:01:28
there's only three
1:01:30
percent, then even
1:01:32
that much. They claim three percent.
1:01:34
Three percent actual cash or zeros
1:01:36
and ones on deposit with
1:01:40
general depositors. Yeah.
1:01:42
There's
1:01:42
not all the money at the
1:01:44
bank. Yeah. If everybody wants to go get all
1:01:46
the money at the bank, they will discover
1:01:49
that all of the money at the bank is actually a creation of that
1:01:52
we've agreed
1:01:52
upon. Yeah. It would be
1:01:54
so weird. Like, just think about
1:01:56
how many banks branches there
1:01:57
are -- Yeah. -- what would you
1:02:00
Anyway, you would think that if there's any creams
1:02:02
to this theory that Alex is putting forth --
1:02:04
Yeah. -- about the polling and the money supply,
1:02:07
then the amount of physical money that was
1:02:09
in circulation would have to be down in the years
1:02:11
past two thousand three. It's the only thing that would make sense. Yeah.
1:02:13
If the goal is to bring in all the cash that's in
1:02:15
the mattresses and then strict the cash
1:02:17
supply, there's no other way for things to have
1:02:20
gone. Unfortunately, in twenty twenty
1:02:22
one, there was over double the amount of
1:02:24
physical bills and circulation that two thousand three
1:02:26
according to the Federal Reserve.
1:02:28
Just from two thousand three to two thousand
1:02:30
four, approximately four hundred million
1:02:32
additional bills were added to the
1:02:34
circulating pool. Sure. This is just
1:02:36
nonsense Alex's spouting to try and make his
1:02:38
color money conspiracy not sound like
1:02:40
a stupid
1:02:41
conspiracy, which it is. So if I
1:02:43
if I understand this one correctly -- Mhmm. -- let me see if I understand the
1:02:45
policy makers thought process behind all this.
1:02:47
Okay? They're like, look, we've got
1:02:49
all this money. And it
1:02:51
looks fine. But there's too
1:02:54
much fucking buried treasure out
1:02:55
there. Yeah. So if we change the colors of our
1:02:57
money, we'll get all that buried treasure back. You
1:02:59
gotta get it back. I'm gonna restrict the
1:03:01
gas supply in order to push people on to
1:03:04
Seema Cabs. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Also,
1:03:07
ALEX should be well aware that the people who were hoarding
1:03:09
money like he's describing. They don't trust
1:03:11
federal reserve notes. They're stashing precious
1:03:13
metals. Yeah. Most
1:03:15
likely, maybe Bob from Resources on an Alex
1:03:17
Jones special. If you're somebody
1:03:18
listening to Alex Jones, why would
1:03:21
you put cash in a in
1:03:23
a brick. You
1:03:24
but you you can you've got the guy to
1:03:26
bite to turn that into gold whip. Right.
1:03:28
No. It's silly. That's absurd. So
1:03:32
look, they're gonna take your money. Yeah.
1:03:33
Well, they're gonna so they're gonna get all the money
1:03:35
from the mattresses. Right. And now they're gonna
1:03:37
have this these cool
1:03:40
color bells which are cool and they have fun colors on them like
1:03:42
rest of the
1:03:42
world. It's
1:03:43
it's fun. And then they're gonna force you to put
1:03:45
them in the bank. And then if you don't put
1:03:47
them in the bank, We've
1:03:49
heard this before. We're gonna devalue them. There we
1:03:52
go. They also say
1:03:54
that if you don't keep your money in
1:03:56
a bank, they will
1:03:58
devalue your money over
1:04:00
a year down to
1:04:02
worthlessness. Now this is
1:04:04
the FESTIAL FEDERAL RESERVE WEBSITE.
1:04:08
NOT A CONSPIRACY THEORY
1:04:10
BRAND
1:04:11
AND BURN, BUT again, you've shown
1:04:13
your knowledge with your little article. You've
1:04:15
shown that you're not an idiot.
1:04:18
No. No,
1:04:20
mister you've
1:04:22
shown yourself as a
1:04:24
new order. Order. Lati,
1:04:27
boot,
1:04:27
liquor, trying
1:04:30
to convey ensure readers that we're
1:04:32
crazy for being concerned
1:04:34
with the strips and the money
1:04:36
and the color of friction of the
1:04:39
money. It's unbelievable,
1:04:40
folks. I mean, I I think
1:04:42
it is a little bit out there to be
1:04:45
It's
1:04:45
unbelievable. This concern about the strips
1:04:47
in the in the color. I mean, he's quite
1:04:49
he's quite literally accurate. It is
1:04:52
unbelievable. Man, Alex's
1:04:54
shit has certainly held up in
1:04:56
the last twenty years about this one, that particular the
1:04:58
the if you have cash, it
1:05:01
will digitally be Here's
1:05:03
what here's what's way
1:05:05
I can tweak this in my mind. Sure. Because
1:05:07
I often will hear Alex say stupid shit that
1:05:09
is completely detached from reality. Right. And try
1:05:11
and figure
1:05:12
out, like, where is this coming from? There's a kernel of something there. Right?
1:05:13
Sometimes. Yeah. Sometimes -- Yeah. --
1:05:15
sometimes it's not, but I try to find
1:05:17
it. And I think with
1:05:19
this one, it is just a reflection
1:05:22
of you get interest if your money's in
1:05:24
the
1:05:24
bank. I think it's
1:05:26
either that or inflation. You know, like,
1:05:29
inflation makes your money less valuable per but
1:05:31
that's so abstract.
1:05:32
It is very abstract. And that's
1:05:34
not like, but even if even if
1:05:37
-- True. -- that is what they're talk the
1:05:39
inflation is what he's talking about. Right. That affects
1:05:41
the money that's in the bank too.
1:05:43
Right. affect bills that you're holding on to.
1:05:45
No. Whereas, the bills, the
1:05:48
only difference that I really discerned between
1:05:50
these two are great that I'm not a financial expert.
1:05:52
Right. But it seems that would
1:05:54
interest on money that was in the
1:05:56
bank in a savings account or in some
1:05:58
kind of a -- Right. -- earn
1:06:00
interest bearing
1:06:02
account. Whereas if you're just holding onto it in a brick, it's
1:06:04
not gonna accumulate
1:06:04
anything. I don't know. I'm trying to make sense of
1:06:07
this. It doesn't make sense. I I
1:06:09
mean, the only the reason that I think it
1:06:11
has to be inflation is because if he's saying he's
1:06:13
reading the Federal Reserve's website, and
1:06:16
he's also saying that they devalue current and say They're gonna
1:06:18
devalue it down to zero. I mean, but
1:06:20
that's the thing that isn't
1:06:20
made. You don't put it to the bank. That makes even I
1:06:23
get a twenty dollar bill here. Right.
1:06:25
I keep it out. Calculator, zero dollars.
1:06:27
I take it in to the McDonald's. Right.
1:06:29
I try and get myself a
1:06:31
double cheeseburger, and
1:06:34
they
1:06:34
say, I need two of these. No us. Yeah. It says twenty
1:06:36
on it, but it's actually worth a dollar.
1:06:38
Right. Right. Right. That don't screw.
1:06:42
Right. But You understand
1:06:44
if that were the case
1:06:45
though, then every single twenty dollar
1:06:47
bill in the world would also be worth
1:06:49
that one. No. No. No. No. Not
1:06:51
if no. Oh. Just got a twenty out of
1:06:53
the ATM. It works. So good deal is
1:06:55
this. If
1:06:57
I
1:06:57
just got it out of the ATM, then it
1:07:00
would freshly not be So
1:07:01
then but then is he's trying to say that
1:07:04
if you have the old
1:07:06
bills, then the old bills
1:07:08
will be devalued to nothing? No. Because they need to have the
1:07:10
strips in them to be able to do
1:07:12
it.
1:07:12
Man, I just don't know
1:07:14
how to make this evil
1:07:16
conspiracy work. No. I just don't. I just don't see a way to make it happen. No.
1:07:18
If I'm hanging with the
1:07:19
devil, I'm like, hey, buddy. You gotta take the
1:07:22
yell on this one. I don't think we're gonna pull it
1:07:24
off. Yeah. Might it might
1:07:26
be nonsense. Yeah. So let me get a
1:07:28
caller. And this guy is an interesting question. And
1:07:30
it's essentially, what if Michael
1:07:32
Jackson supported
1:07:32
Palestine? That's a good
1:07:33
question. I have been asked keep myself that
1:07:36
question for decades. At least since he's done
1:07:37
What happened if Michael Jackson came out and said that
1:07:39
the Palestinians were getting a
1:07:42
bum wrap?
1:07:43
That would not be good
1:07:45
for the Palestinians.
1:07:46
Chase politics now, wouldn't
1:07:47
it? Yeah. It shows shows how we pay
1:07:50
way too much attention to what celebrities
1:07:52
do. Sure. But I mean, he's
1:07:54
he's a major league world figure
1:07:56
who bumps around with all the world leaders.
1:07:58
Doesn't
1:07:58
he? I mean, when he goes to
1:08:01
when he goes to Asia or when he goes to Germany, he's meeting
1:08:04
with all the
1:08:05
dignitaries. He's very close
1:08:07
to I don't think very much about
1:08:09
that space alien. Sir, you scare me a little
1:08:11
bit. Well, I'm not
1:08:12
saying is one thing
1:08:13
about Jackson's problem is
1:08:16
I think he's being politically assassinated.
1:08:18
And
1:08:18
it was one Michael Jackson is a demonic
1:08:20
hog god. What? Okay.
1:08:22
What is happening? He's a
1:08:26
modern heart gauntlet. Hub gauntlet. Hog
1:08:28
gauntlet.
1:08:28
Hog gauntlet. Not hub
1:08:31
gauntlet. Yes. Gotcha.
1:08:32
What I
1:08:33
find interesting
1:08:34
-- Mhmm.
1:08:35
If I'm gonna count on me being a witch here. Right.
1:08:37
I have called before
1:08:39
Yay's meltdown. I called Yay,
1:08:41
the new Michael the RE
1:08:43
generation and Michael Jackson. And I feel later career is also going
1:08:45
similarly. I
1:08:47
yeah.
1:08:47
I don't I don't know. What what
1:08:49
I do know
1:08:50
-- Yeah. -- is that this caller is
1:08:53
asking a different question than
1:08:55
Alex's answer. Very much
1:08:56
so. I think he's still mad about the cats.
1:08:58
I think he's asking a more
1:08:59
abstract question like,
1:09:02
what if somebody with the power of a Michael Jackson were to shed light upon this scenario? Right. And
1:09:07
Alex is like, You can't say
1:09:09
Michael Jackson in front of me. Right. I think I think that's what's going on. And
1:09:11
then at the same time, running concurrently,
1:09:15
this guy is also defending Michael Jackson in a weird
1:09:18
way. In a very weird way. And Yeah. I I don't know. I just think
1:09:20
it's I think he's
1:09:21
moving. Like questions like this that are
1:09:23
out of the blue
1:09:23
are fun. He's
1:09:26
being politically assassinated or assassinated
1:09:28
politically. Yeah. His character. His character. Yeah.
1:09:31
Yeah. Also after this, Alec starts
1:09:33
to talk about how Michael
1:09:35
Jackson has committed crimes against children. Sure. And he lists off
1:09:39
some folks. And he he I
1:09:42
believe the the Dutch royal family -- Sure. -- does not bring in Epstein --
1:09:44
Oh. -- so that's So
1:09:47
how's
1:09:47
that to
1:09:47
this? Yeah. Era
1:09:50
in his report. I thought he was supposed
1:09:51
to be so far ahead. Maybe not this
1:09:54
far ahead. Maybe that might be too Maybe
1:09:56
a little too far ahead. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So
1:09:59
Alex got a call, I guess. I
1:10:01
don't remember hearing this call, but somebody asked
1:10:03
him about non violence. Mhmm. He
1:10:05
didn't answer the question. And so now he's getting
1:10:07
back to it. He violently. Well, I had to look for the
1:10:09
other guy that asked me where I stood on non violence, and
1:10:11
I said I'd answer the question
1:10:13
and I forgot to do it. Wesley and Tennessee brought
1:10:15
it up, Tom. But again, at
1:10:17
this point, I'm nonviolent. I'm
1:10:20
defensive because we're
1:10:22
doing more good waking folks up in
1:10:24
the info war. If they launch an attack, if they try to
1:10:26
arrest people, round up, do all of that, then
1:10:30
if they will be much different, but it's up to everybody's own discernment. Go
1:10:33
ahead. Here's why Alex's show
1:10:35
sucks on my well,
1:10:37
there's so many reasons. But one of them
1:10:39
is the circumstance where violence would be
1:10:42
you'd pivot from non violence
1:10:44
to
1:10:45
violence. He's hit
1:10:48
that mark. Over and over again -- Again
1:10:50
and again.
1:10:50
-- and
1:10:50
if you wanna look at it from a big picture circumstance -- Mhmm. -- you could say that
1:10:53
the COVID vaccines
1:10:56
are that for sure. One
1:10:58
hundred of his coverage. Yep. There is literally no reason why somebody like
1:11:00
Alex if
1:11:03
he believed was saying -- Right. -- if he
1:11:06
was a sincere actor wouldn't be,
1:11:08
like, I
1:11:11
don't know. Basically, Timothy -- Yeah. --
1:11:13
Vegas. Go to town. Yeah. Yeah. It
1:11:16
seems it it
1:11:18
it this is why it's dangerous. You create
1:11:20
this expectation of some future time
1:11:22
when that catharsis will be encouraged
1:11:24
and it'll be available to you for
1:11:26
all the anger that I'm building up YOU.
1:11:28
AND THEN THAT NEVER COMES. AND
1:11:30
THEN THERE'S A MASK KILLING OF MILLIONS OF
1:11:33
PEOPLE WITH THIS
1:11:36
POISAN VACCINE and to go next time
1:11:38
that That's gonna be time to to really it's the tension. It's really
1:11:41
tension. Tension.
1:11:44
Yeah. Yep. It it's such a
1:11:46
consistent thing within his his
1:11:46
rhetoric. It's -- Yeah. -- I mean, it's
1:11:49
I I it's
1:11:52
it's fucked up that people can
1:11:54
survive it so
1:11:54
long. I I couldn't. Like, living in that constant space. Well, that's why
1:11:59
there's probably not a, like, a huge amount of
1:12:01
retention of his audience over over long stretches of
1:12:04
time. Right. Right.
1:12:04
Right. I think a lot of them
1:12:06
move on to other things. Yeah. Yeah.
1:12:09
Well, things that either re make them realize that they shouldn't be doing that
1:12:11
or things that make them come
1:12:15
to a reverse speaking. Yeah.
1:12:17
Or distract them with a different brand
1:12:19
of conspiracies. Yeah. That isn't so about
1:12:21
that. To build
1:12:24
a hint.
1:12:25
Yeah. Yeah.
1:12:26
Yeah. So Alex has an article that he's covering. And I'm just
1:12:29
giving you long
1:12:32
and short Alex thinks it's really
1:12:34
weird that army operations in Iraq have named some
1:12:36
operations after things
1:12:39
in Red
1:12:40
Dawn. Yeah.
1:12:41
And
1:12:41
he's decided that I think that's a little weird too. Yeah. It's a movie. Yeah. No. No. I'm with you on
1:12:44
that point
1:12:46
too. You don't know?
1:12:48
Doing in Iraq. They know
1:12:50
all too well. Check out, for example, captain Christopher Serino of
1:12:55
the any second airborne who told an journalist in Voljala a few
1:12:57
weeks ago, Voljala. The men are
1:13:00
Voljala talked
1:13:02
about I? Sherry and Trained terrorist and
1:13:04
local freedom fighters. That's right.
1:13:07
He said freedom fighters. Now
1:13:09
check out the code IMPLOYED IN
1:13:11
THE WEEKEND SWOOP OF SEDOMO
1:13:14
SHANEER TO CREIT RED
1:13:16
GONE THEY
1:13:18
CALLED with suspected
1:13:20
Iraqi resistance locations tagged
1:13:23
Wolmarine
1:13:23
one, Wolmarine two and so
1:13:26
on. Mhmm. Press comments have noted that Red Dawn, in nineteen
1:13:29
eighty four,
1:13:32
John Miller as flick that
1:13:34
Chronicles of Soviet invasion of the US is a favorite movie of American Right wingers. What hasn't
1:13:36
often been pointed out is that
1:13:38
the heroes of the Red Dog are
1:13:43
a brave band of rugged small town resistors to
1:13:45
the invasion, and they call
1:13:47
themselves the woven
1:13:49
range. Again, gets worse, folks. It
1:13:52
gets worse. So we're going, man. Operation Red
1:13:54
Dawn, that's
1:13:54
what the Soviets, you know, that's a
1:13:56
Soviet term for invading a a term
1:13:59
the army had for a Soviet invasion. Attack. And then they're
1:14:01
even calling the Iraqi Resistance Walma
1:14:03
Range. Our troops taking
1:14:06
the part seeing themselves as
1:14:08
Soviet occupiers. Yeah. And I
1:14:10
think they're just like movies. Yeah.
1:14:12
I ain't got to I just
1:14:14
like you, Alex, the Jackic movies. Yeah.
1:14:16
Look, do you remember what any, like, group
1:14:18
of the Soviets would have been called in
1:14:22
that or the Chinese. Who's who's it? The communists were
1:14:24
invading? I haven't seen Red Dawn. And Red Dawn?
1:14:26
No. It was the Russians.
1:14:27
Oh, wow. Yeah. That was
1:14:30
back whenever during the Cold War.
1:14:32
You could just pick the -- Right. --
1:14:34
the Russians and be like, hey, this is a movie. For some reason, I thought it might
1:14:35
have been China, but then I think that's the new one.
1:14:37
Right? The canceled one was going
1:14:40
to be China.
1:14:42
Right. But then they because we live in
1:14:44
the woke world where maybe it's actually a
1:14:46
smart idea to think about the
1:14:49
weirdo enemies you're creating culturally.
1:14:51
Disperspective. Exactly. Yeah. Yeah. Like,
1:14:52
no. No. There's nothing wrong with that. But but the
1:14:54
That's where I got it mixed
1:14:56
up. They changed it to
1:14:58
just, like, more generalized. I think I
1:15:00
think still Asian terrorists. My point
1:15:02
here is do you remember what they would have called themselves? No.
1:15:07
You remember Wolverine's, of course. As because they
1:15:09
yell it. Yeah. And so you Wolverine
1:15:12
Right. Yeah. Yeah. I told
1:15:13
you. I haven't seen that movie, and
1:15:15
I know that. Understand. Yeah. So it
1:15:17
makes sense. See them as Swazzy. Come on, man. Come on. We're gonna have
1:15:19
a Swazzy thaw. We're gonna watch
1:15:22
all Swazzy's. I don't know about
1:15:25
that. All of this way. We're here to be a long night. I
1:15:27
haven't seen a lot of his work. I haven't seen
1:15:29
a roadhouse. Oh,
1:15:32
okay. Good. Yeah,
1:15:34
I mean, like, Red Dawn's a
1:15:36
fun movie. Maybe it was a morning operation --
1:15:38
Sure. -- calling the Wilbert. Yeah. This doesn't mean
1:15:42
this doesn't mean that they're casting themselves
1:15:44
as the
1:15:44
Soviets. What's just what's interesting about
1:15:47
it though is that if it
1:15:49
does, it would be apt. Like the if
1:15:51
you were casting if you were going
1:15:53
to cast Red Dawn in the
1:15:55
Iraq War, the United States would be
1:15:57
the bad guys. They're the ones invading
1:16:00
you and if there was a
1:16:02
small group of freedom fighters in
1:16:03
Iraq, they would be the Wolverine. It's not a very subtle movie. True. There is
1:16:05
a dynamic there that Alex
1:16:07
isn't unpacking. Right. Ant,
1:16:10
but I also I'm I'm reluctant because I
1:16:13
don't know what is going on
1:16:15
at this point or who the
1:16:17
forces are Totally. Me
1:16:19
neither. Me neither. But yeah. I don't know.
1:16:21
These are weird. I I think it's just so strange that Alex compares everything to movies and then somebody
1:16:24
compares
1:16:26
something to a movie. Like, jets. Yeah. So
1:16:29
one thing that we
1:16:30
miss out on a lot is
1:16:33
the rest of the world. Yes. That's true.
1:16:35
Because Alex is a very
1:16:38
Western centric
1:16:39
viewpoint. He's a
1:16:43
chauvinist? Yes. And So he gets
1:16:45
a call from a guy. He's got a great question about what the globalist plans are elsewhere.
1:16:47
For the globe? Well, not not the
1:16:49
entire
1:16:50
globe, but just elsewhere in the
1:16:52
globe.
1:16:54
Even in
1:16:55
Colorado. You're on the air. Go ahead. Hello?
1:16:57
Yes, sir. Hey,
1:16:58
Alex. How
1:16:59
are you
1:16:59
doing? Good. Hey,
1:17:02
I
1:17:02
had a question. My girlfriend right now is in mid is
1:17:04
where she's from. And I was curious
1:17:06
what the global agenda in that area
1:17:09
of the world might
1:17:11
be. You're
1:17:11
you're all goes a
1:17:14
little fuzzy. Where is she
1:17:16
in
1:17:16
the world? Nick. Showing
1:17:17
my ignorance, is that in Eastern Europe?
1:17:20
Yay. That
1:17:22
kinda right in between. It's right in between Poland
1:17:25
and Russia. Yeah. Central
1:17:27
Europe. I I know about
1:17:29
the generalities of that region a lot
1:17:31
about Ukraine, Poland, the Balkans, but there's so
1:17:34
many there's like fifty little
1:17:36
countries
1:17:37
there. Oh, so many little tree. So many of
1:17:39
the Listen, I know everything about the globalist plan, but they
1:17:41
don't know where Minsk is. Yeah. I told
1:17:43
you, Belarus,
1:17:44
we come back up. It's
1:17:47
in Alex, not knowing wear
1:17:49
a min
1:17:50
Oh, boy. So, yeah, apparently, Saddam was saying -- Right. -- and his sons -- Yeah. --
1:17:52
and all the gold --
1:17:54
Yeah. -- have fled to
1:17:58
Belarus, but Alex -- Right. -- know the capital of the country. They
1:18:00
fled to Belarus, you know, you know, it's a
1:18:02
great deal. Now where is Minsk though?
1:18:06
Is it in the middle of Belarus? Or
1:18:08
is it on the edges? You don't know? Neither
1:18:10
does Alex nor do the globalist. No one does.
1:18:12
Geography is beyond us
1:18:14
all. So we have one last clip here, and Alex is trying
1:18:16
to navigate this call talking
1:18:18
to this guy without revealing that
1:18:20
he Yes. No. I didn't. Even
1:18:22
after five ending out its in central Europe. Right. Still
1:18:24
doesn't know its Belarus. Oh, boy. But there's
1:18:26
so many there's, like, fifty little
1:18:29
countries there. I can't particularly tell you
1:18:32
about that that that country on
1:18:34
the border of Central and Eastern
1:18:37
Europe on will tell you those countries are under the
1:18:39
same system they were twenty years ago. That
1:18:41
country Same system they were fifteen years
1:18:44
ago or ten years ago.
1:18:46
The the same communist strong men now private of the and
1:18:48
money. Right. But they still got secret police
1:18:50
and everything else. I mean, I don't
1:18:53
I don't the petition of that little region. III
1:18:56
don't have those
1:18:56
specifics. I didn't know if there were
1:18:58
any, so I
1:18:59
just wanted to kinda double check.
1:19:01
Alright. So sounds like there's no plans the goal is to
1:19:03
have no plans. III appreciate everything about this
1:19:05
call. I do too. And here's why.
1:19:07
It's because there's dual levels
1:19:09
of things that are being
1:19:12
revealed. Yes. The first is
1:19:14
just a primary basic information. The the the ignorance being
1:19:16
reflected in as much as you don't know that means
1:19:18
Doesn't know where miss There's Yeah. So
1:19:22
some people, you know, not everybody needs to know everything.
1:19:24
I I only think it I only think
1:19:26
it's interesting per
1:19:27
like, right now because Alex is
1:19:29
spinning this conspiracy or has been about
1:19:32
Belarus. Exactly. And
1:19:32
so you'd think that maybe there'd be
1:19:34
a little bit of, like, it rubs off
1:19:37
or something. You would hope. But you have
1:19:39
that surface layer ignorance. And then you have
1:19:41
the second layer which is just somebody
1:19:43
who's in good faith and like
1:19:45
optimistically calling in to
1:19:47
ask, should my girlfriend, I'm worried
1:19:49
about
1:19:50
it. He's, like, checking in. Yeah. Like, is there gonna be a storm tomorrow? The guy who
1:19:52
studies the globalist
1:19:55
plans. He knows everything I
1:19:58
don't know what's going on in that
1:19:59
region. I mean, they
1:20:02
they they everybody involved,
1:20:04
like, the guy calling in about
1:20:07
the globalist plan with a very
1:20:09
nonchalant error
1:20:09
of, like, well, she's in Minsk. I
1:20:11
just wanna know if she set. You
1:20:13
know,
1:20:14
like, what's
1:20:14
the forecast? What do we got coming up on the weather? Is
1:20:15
there gonna be a cold front moving in? Like, what should we do here?
1:20:18
Yeah. I appreciate that.
1:20:21
I love I love the I'm
1:20:23
supposed to know everything, but I have no idea what's going on in multiple sixty countries. Like,
1:20:25
listen, here's what I
1:20:27
would have said. Frankly,
1:20:30
I actually don't know where men's kiss
1:20:32
off the top of my head. Is it I know
1:20:34
it's in Central
1:20:35
Europe, but what country is it in? No. Here's what
1:20:37
I would have done. If I were Alex, I would
1:20:39
have been like, Minsk is fucked. That's you're right.
1:20:41
You're right. If you're so
1:20:43
extreme, was it that you didn't know
1:20:45
how to reveal that you don't know
1:20:47
anything. Exactly. Exactly. And you're just
1:20:48
making up the global issue. Exactly. Yes. That's the problem. Because he
1:20:50
got to the point the the next level that
1:20:55
makes it beautiful is the that country. In the in that area
1:20:58
of that I
1:20:58
know where it is. Why don't you explain to
1:21:00
the crowd? Why don't you go ahead and tell
1:21:03
everybody -- Same energy. -- this
1:21:05
same energy. And that's what makes it
1:21:07
beautiful. Yeah. That's what it is. Matt here's here if Alex
1:21:09
knew that it was in Belarus -- Mhmm. -- here's something he
1:21:12
could do. He
1:21:15
could say, well, no, because Saddam's been found by this point.
1:21:18
But the kids might still be
1:21:20
there going to Alex.
1:21:22
So we could do something like
1:21:24
Minsk is fine. Belarus has a contract. Oh,
1:21:26
yeah. That's a good one. We're hiding the Sodom Thanks.
1:21:28
It's a great place to hang
1:21:30
out because She'll be fun
1:21:32
day. It'll be fine.
1:21:34
It's a safe safe zone. Safe zone. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. That kind of thing. That's smart. Yeah. But you didn't you didn't didn't know
1:21:36
it. Anyway, we come to
1:21:38
the end of this. And honestly,
1:21:43
I think this is all worth it
1:21:45
just for Alex's feelings on cats. Okay. It
1:21:47
kinda was brutal
1:21:50
stuff. So angry at cats. It's
1:21:52
so over the top. It's
1:21:55
so over the top. Angry
1:21:58
and Presumably about
1:22:00
a story about an elderly
1:22:03
lady who was in
1:22:05
stable
1:22:06
condition. Yep. At the hospital. Yep. I
1:22:08
don't
1:22:08
know why. Yeah.
1:22:09
Everything's fine. The bounce back was
1:22:12
extreme. What?
1:22:14
It does. It does make you shouldn't you look at that and
1:22:16
go if his reaction is
1:22:19
that extreme towards just
1:22:22
just cats existing. Perhaps we should grade
1:22:24
on a curve about how mad he is
1:22:26
towards the
1:22:27
globalist. Perhaps the globalists are
1:22:30
equivalent to cat fear.
1:22:32
Well, you could do that, or you can
1:22:34
ask yourself, is this really a bad cat? Hey, that's
1:22:39
the right question. Anyway, we'll be back Jordan with another episode. Maybe
1:22:41
Alex will be back in studio. So he'd be
1:22:43
able to check-in, or we'll
1:22:46
trudge further on towards screamed. Hey.
1:22:48
Or Howard didn't scream. But either way, we'll
1:22:50
be
1:22:50
back. Tell them, we have a
1:22:53
website. And do we do? It's knowledge
1:22:55
right dot Yep. We're also on
1:22:55
1:22:56
to acknowledge underscore fight.
1:22:57
Yep. We'll be back. But until then,
1:22:59
I'm Neo.
1:22:59
I'm Leo.
1:23:02
I'm DZX. Clark, I'm why not? I'm the juiciest ice
1:23:04
cube. And now here comes with the
1:23:06
sex robots. Andy and Kansas here
1:23:08
on the earth.
1:23:11
Thanks
1:23:11
for holding. Hello, Alex. I'm a first time caller. I'm
1:23:14
a huge fan. I love your work. I love
1:23:16
you.
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