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"Cyclone Bombs, The Dimming, Conservationism" ft. Dane Wigington 1/4/23

"Cyclone Bombs, The Dimming, Conservationism" ft. Dane Wigington 1/4/23

Released Thursday, 5th January 2023
 1 person rated this episode
"Cyclone Bombs, The Dimming, Conservationism" ft. Dane Wigington 1/4/23

"Cyclone Bombs, The Dimming, Conservationism" ft. Dane Wigington 1/4/23

"Cyclone Bombs, The Dimming, Conservationism" ft. Dane Wigington 1/4/23

"Cyclone Bombs, The Dimming, Conservationism" ft. Dane Wigington 1/4/23

Thursday, 5th January 2023
 1 person rated this episode
Rate Episode

Episode Transcript

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0:00

Hope

0:56

you poured yourself something smooth tonight,

0:58

ladies and gentlemen, because we're taking

1:00

a trip down a chaos bill.

1:05

I hope you bore yourself a bomb cyclone,

1:08

get yourself warmed up. That's

1:12

right. It's

1:16

the pre show for quite frankly on

1:18

this fourth day of January very twenty

1:20

twenty three, the year is just

1:22

Wigington

1:25

we're serving bomb cyclones at

1:29

the bar tonight, it is the

1:31

special for this evening, having

1:33

little bit of a geoengineering night.

1:37

And and we have a first time guest on

1:39

in that in that respect.

1:42

First time guest making an appearance.

1:46

Has seen his work all over the

1:48

internet for many years was first time ever

1:50

talking to him. His name is Dane

1:52

Wigginton. Geo engineering

1:54

watch dot org. So

1:57

got some I just figured we talked to him

1:59

about all of these these

2:02

incredible storm systems, We

2:05

had a winter deep freeze. They

2:07

called it a bomb cyclone. I'm sure there's

2:09

a reason for that. And there's another one

2:11

coming up on two the California

2:13

coast, like within the next day

2:15

or so or something. It's just forming or

2:18

So wanna bring up and just talk a little

2:20

bit more about get get his opinions. Get Dane's

2:22

opinions on what's going on here. Because,

2:26

you know, everybody looks at things differently, whereby

2:28

reads the tea leaves differently, and

2:30

I'm I'm looking forward to it. And I think we

2:32

should have more than enough time for calls ft. More

2:37

than enough time. So

2:39

that's what we're gonna do tonight. I

2:41

I put in the notes for tonight show that

2:43

in the second half, if there is time

2:46

that we're gonna read a thread on the Unobomber

2:48

because I told you that there's

2:50

there's a lot of rumors going around,

2:52

it'll I mean, unplug, like,

2:55

four chan, tumbler, everywhere

2:57

else that Ted Kucinski had died

2:59

in prison. And, of course, that makes

3:01

a lot of autists very upset because,

3:05

yeah, nobody I don't I don't

3:07

know very many people or any at

3:09

all who stand by his

3:11

mail bombing computer stores

3:14

and stuff like that. But as

3:16

far as his written manuscript and manifestos

3:18

go and his IQ Man

3:22

o man is there a lot to unpack in his

3:25

And it turns out he's not dead.

3:27

I think he's about eighty years old now. He's not

3:29

dead. Don't worry ladies and gentlemen. The Unibailer

3:31

is safe. We still have him.

3:35

He's still of us. But

3:39

I I wanted to jump into AAA

3:41

thread that someone had written about

3:43

him, especially since it really

3:45

breaks down. Every once in a while, we go into

3:47

the manifesto. And we find some really

3:49

based shit that's in there. So

3:53

I wanted to do that, but there's not gonna be enough time, I

3:55

think, to do it with any kind of intent.

3:58

So I was going to maybe

4:01

hold that off. Especially

4:03

when he talks about Leftism, why Leftists

4:06

cannot divorce themselves from techno

4:08

the technocratic state, why they need

4:10

it, why leftist always

4:12

ends up being this devolved

4:18

mishmash of ugliness and and

4:20

depravity and depression and

4:22

there's just so much there. Obviously, he

4:24

went off the deep end and there's

4:27

a lot, lots to unpack. And I've been watching

4:29

a lot of yellowstone as as you

4:31

you may know, so it's all kind of tying in

4:33

together because the new Yellowstone Prequel

4:36

series nineteen twenty three already

4:38

in the three episodes that are out.

4:41

Very awesome and interesting

4:45

commentary on

4:47

life and change and

4:50

and all that. That happens frequently

4:52

in all of the writing of Yellowstone. But in

4:54

nineteen twenty three, it's been happening

4:56

too. And the fact that it's all taking place in Montana

4:59

where the unit bomber was was

5:02

camping out in some kind of a shanty

5:04

in the woods. Well, I

5:06

guess that just makes things even more

5:08

appropriate. So we'll do that

5:10

some other time this week, not tomorrow night

5:12

because we have a great guest then too.

5:14

Toby Wright, but maybe a little bit on Friday

5:16

night. I have a

5:18

I have a couple of really positive

5:21

philosophical things to do with you guys

5:23

and gals. So This

5:26

is the time these are the times

5:28

that I tell myself, don't overbook the

5:30

months. You need some nights where there's

5:32

just nothing going on, so you can do these things

5:34

with the audience. And I

5:36

think I have to just start

5:38

looking forward to February for booking

5:41

and and not overdue myself here

5:43

because there's there's there's too much to

5:44

do, and I'll be getting backed up.

5:47

So that's that. 702 PM,

5:49

I wanna thank I

5:51

just wanna thank all of the my

5:53

friends on the affiliate's page and quite frankly,

5:55

dot tv. It's Wednesday,

5:58

so I just wanna give a shout out

6:00

across the board. There's quite frankly

6:02

jester cigars from lefties. There's

6:04

wonderful wonderful botanical chocolates

6:07

from the magic men and women over

6:09

there at Yescau. They're

6:11

magical people. You want

6:13

alchemy chocolate? Yes. Kakau.

6:19

More. You got the CBD. You got the

6:21

the prepping. All of it needs to

6:23

be done. But there's so so much

6:25

more there. And it's all from wonderful

6:27

American businesses high craftsmanship,

6:31

great customer service. Go to the affiliates

6:33

page on, quite frankly, dot tv when

6:35

you're watching the ft show

6:37

tonight. And what is

6:39

going to be featured on the after show? Well, it's

6:41

it's rabbit hole, Wednesday, so a bunch

6:43

of stuff like that. But the first thing you'll be doing

6:45

is going down a trip. Down

6:48

the the the dimming rabbit

6:50

hole, Dane Wigington full

6:54

length film, two hour film that they

6:56

put out they put out in, I think, twenty

6:58

twenty one. So we'll be playing that in the

7:00

second half if you wanna get deep into the

7:02

weeds with some more weather

7:05

weather warfare concepts, which we'll be

7:07

talking about tonight, set the table nicely

7:09

for that. And And is

7:11

that all I want to say in the opening?

7:13

Yeah. Yes. That's it.

7:16

That's it. Remind you all if you're gonna take

7:18

part in book club next Wednesday,

7:21

Next Wednesday night after this show,

7:23

which I'll be cutting off maybe about twenty,

7:25

twenty five minutes early, we are no longer

7:27

reading chapters one through four. It's one

7:29

through five. You're gonna

7:31

see it's a very quick read.

7:34

And one through five, I

7:36

updated the official thread on quite frankly

7:38

form as well. So there you have it. Alright.

7:40

Let's jump into the grab bag, shall we?

7:47

Number one, the house

7:50

adjourns until eight PM,

7:52

the halfway house of

7:54

representatives adournes until

7:57

eight PM as McCarthy, this

7:59

loser, poser. I am so

8:01

happy that this man

8:03

is frustrated. I don't know how this

8:05

ends. It seems like Matt Gates and

8:07

all of his colleagues are standing firm,

8:09

and they just want this guy to go away.

8:11

And and maybe he does. Maybe

8:14

he does, but I am so happy

8:17

that he's being embarrassed right now.

8:20

That what makes this country look bad.

8:22

No. No. No. No. No. No.

8:24

We've been in embarrassment for a long

8:26

long time. That's another thing.

8:28

That's another thing that I love watching

8:30

those old, these old period pieces like

8:33

like nineteen twenty three. You have this

8:35

this character, Spencer Dutton,

8:37

who is a World War I veteran,

8:39

and now he's just off adventuring

8:43

in in Africa, and he'll come

8:45

across, you know, British women

8:47

and and all these other p and

8:49

they and they just can they can see an American. They

8:51

just know an American when they see one. But

8:53

it's not because they're wearing purp you know, they

8:55

had the purple hair and their

8:57

face is just riddled with piercings and all

8:59

that shit now. It's it's because

9:01

there's something rough

9:04

and dangerous about them, but,

9:06

you know, but, you know, attractive.

9:09

Not anymore. Not

9:12

anymore. Not anymore. I guess

9:14

that's what I was put around too.

9:16

House of Jersey till

9:18

eight PM as loser Poser

9:20

McCarthy fails to secure

9:22

a speaker ship after her sixth

9:25

ballot good good. This is

9:27

what I hope they would they would do to every

9:29

spending bill. To every spending bill, to every spending

9:31

bill, to starve the government, of

9:33

all the money that it shouldn't be taking in anyway.

9:35

The house has adjourned until eight PM

9:38

eastern time Wednesday ft failing

9:40

to receive a majority of the vote for

9:42

sixth time. Representative Victoria Sparks

9:44

of Indiana once again voted present,

9:47

making a threshold for McCarthy to

9:49

win too. Hundred seventeen. The

9:51

final tally which was unchanged from

9:53

the previous two votes was two

9:55

hundred twelve for Jefferies this

9:59

this brain dead New York Democrat

10:01

that, of course, is, I guess, the the the

10:03

new house speaker of choice for them for

10:05

the next eighty thousand years. They'll

10:07

start making his clones next

10:09

week. He'll have fifty thousand clones

10:11

waiting for him so he can be he can be house

10:13

speaker into the year twenty five hundred.

10:16

Two hundred one votes for the

10:19

the gray haired gray

10:21

bush poser McCarthy. Twenty

10:24

for the sky Donald's, and

10:26

then let one present vote. Kevin

10:29

McCarthy appears to get lose another

10:31

round a a voting for house

10:33

speaker. That said in a potentially

10:35

positive development for McCarthy, representative

10:38

Chipotle said there have been to negotiations

10:40

over the past two hours. That's horrible.

10:42

That's terrible to hear. Whenever

10:44

you hear Congress has had production

10:46

negotiations. That's terrible. That's

10:48

bad sign. Bad sign

10:51

for us, of course. Roy

10:53

Anne added that he is not a hard

10:55

no on McCarthy and that GOP

10:57

conference is trying to repair that damage

10:59

today and progress has been made. Seeing

11:01

it. Yeah. You know what what McCarthy's gonna say that

11:03

I heard. I hear you.

11:06

I hear you. Darn too

11:08

in routing. Here we have.

11:10

People are frustrated out there and we need

11:12

to do better some

11:15

stupid milk toast address.

11:17

That's what we'll get. CNN is also

11:19

reporting the Republicans are considering appointing

11:21

four members each from the

11:23

pro slash anti McCarthy campaign

11:26

negotiate a path forward. Here's

11:28

a

11:28

little bit from Matt Gates not too long

11:31

ago. In some way to try to

11:33

divide our conference. But look, he's

11:35

a desperate guy whose vote

11:37

share is dropping with

11:39

every subsequent vote. And I'm ready

11:41

to vote all night, all week,

11:43

all and never for that person. So

11:45

I tell you what, when he comes out

11:47

and heads back to this squatting in

11:49

the speaker's office, which why isn't he

11:51

allowed to beat Now, I heard about that too, and it is a

11:53

good question. Why why is

11:55

he being allowed in the speaker's office if

11:57

he has not been confirmed

11:59

as a as a speaker?

12:01

I see. They just they just take what they want,

12:03

these these freaks. Like, is

12:04

there some basis in

12:07

law or statute or rule someone

12:09

who comes in second place in sixth

12:11

consecutive speaker races to be

12:13

old. Yeah. Yeah. The law is it's the

12:15

Joe Biden rule. You know, he didn't he

12:17

didn't win the election, of

12:19

course. But he still called himself

12:21

the office of the the office holder

12:23

of the president-elect. And

12:26

that was it. That was the that was all

12:28

she wrote. That was the end of that story. And

12:30

and and they just

12:32

inaugurated

12:32

him. Alright? Well, I guess it's not leaving.

12:34

And he's technically I mean, he's already

12:37

been speaking from the office of the president-elect. What

12:39

are we gonna do? Just go back

12:41

on this. Top

12:45

Catholic archbishop, my

12:48

man. Viga

12:51

know, urges a three day fast for

12:53

January sixth defendants. Catholic

12:57

archbishop, Carlo Marie Avigno, who

12:59

has served in several high level

13:01

Vatican roles, said he encourages a

13:03

three day fast to bring heavenly protection

13:05

for defendants charged. In

13:08

January sixth capital riot and for the

13:10

nation as a whole against the

13:12

subversive attack of the deep state.

13:14

Vigano X Vatican Secretary General

13:16

and former holy see diplomats the

13:18

United States, called for a fast from

13:20

January third to fifth. I wish I had

13:22

known that. Would definitely

13:24

done that. I guess I

13:26

could just do three days on my own. I'm gonna

13:28

have to call up Jay Goolanello before I do

13:30

that one. I have I've gotten to

13:32

I've done a twenty two hour fast in

13:34

the last six months, and that

13:36

was basically by accident. I

13:39

don't know if I can go three days. I

13:41

wanna eat a little bit of bone broth along

13:43

the way. Something.

13:46

The forces and that's strong with me. In your

13:48

message, he says. In your message,

13:50

you tell me about your initiative

13:53

to announce three days of fasting to

13:55

to prop to

13:57

propitiate, heavily

13:59

protection to the United States of America

14:01

against the subversive attack of a deep state

14:03

Vigno wrote to McBride. Oh, this

14:05

is a he wrote

14:07

in a letter to Joseph McBride, an

14:09

attorney for multiple January sixth defendants.

14:12

Megan wrote to McBride, I can

14:14

only encourage and bless this commendable gesture

14:16

of penance to be accompanied by

14:18

prayer above all the holy rosary.

14:22

The archbishop concluded his

14:24

letter by giving his greatest and

14:26

paternal blessing to those who

14:28

defend Catholicism, make

14:30

rise and McBride told the

14:32

epoch times on Monday, quote,

14:34

I wrote the archbishop because he

14:36

embodies the outspoken protective spirit

14:38

of Saint Michael the archangel. And

14:40

is renowned for his condemnation of both

14:43

the deep state and the deep church.

14:45

End quote, people participating in

14:47

the past will consume only take

14:49

liquids from twelve AM through six PM,

14:51

consume one meal a day, practice

14:53

abstinence and pray. Oh, that's it? Oh, I can

14:55

do that. One meal a day is easy. Easy.

14:58

I I might actually go to it soon. I

15:00

might have one massive meal a

15:02

day soon because I

15:05

don't know. It's it's it might even get even

15:08

easier. Rabbi

15:11

Yihuda Levin, leader

15:13

of the Jews for morality. Commended

15:17

the archbishop's statement and called for Jews

15:19

to fast as already required on the

15:21

tenth day of Tibbett. Which

15:24

corresponded to January third.

15:26

In addition to mourning, the events leading

15:28

to the destruction of the temple rabbi

15:31

Levin asked Jews to also have in

15:33

mind all those American citizens who

15:35

are political prisoners and otherwise victims

15:37

of malicious prosecution and

15:40

persecution by the deep state

15:42

and a corrupt judiciary. Well,

15:46

Ft least the real picture, the real problem

15:48

has not been lost. It's not going out

15:50

of frame for some people and that's great.

15:53

Now, this is messed

15:56

up. This is

15:58

from the Jerusalem Post. Headline,

16:02

Mother of the Year, US

16:04

teen a US teenager

16:06

discovers their

16:08

cyber bully was her own

16:10

mother. Like,

16:13

mommy dearest. Let's

16:15

see here. A teenage girl who suffered.

16:18

This is

16:21

crazy. A teenage

16:23

girl who suffered from cyberbullying discovered

16:25

that the anonymous troll behind hate

16:27

messages she received over the past

16:29

year was her own

16:31

mother, Joan Crawford. Kendrigail

16:35

Makari from Michigan abused

16:37

her daughter online using juvenile

16:39

slang to keep herself from being

16:41

identified SHE WAS ARRESTED LAST

16:43

MONTH AFTER A YEAR LONG INVESTIGATION TO

16:45

WHICH FBI EXPERTS WERE CALLED IN

16:47

TO HELP SEARCH FOR THE BULLY.

16:50

I'm so happy that the FBI took

16:52

some time off in Michigan from

16:54

framing people for bogus

16:56

kidnap plots that they cooked

16:58

up themselves. To help find the cyber

17:00

bully. I actually am,

17:03

because nobody should have to go through this, especially

17:05

when their own mother is behind it.

17:08

Even though the car used a VPN

17:10

She So she thought of everything didn't

17:12

she? To disguise the source of the

17:14

messages and spiced up her messages with juvenile

17:16

slang to make them look like they were written by a

17:18

boy or a girl, detectives were

17:21

eventually able to connect the messages to

17:23

Lakari. The victim turned to

17:25

her mother. After the victim turned to her

17:27

mother for help, she allegedly reported the bullying

17:29

to authorities. She even went so far as

17:31

to cooperate with the mother of

17:34

her daughter's boyfriend. The mother of wait wait

17:36

wait. She, Ugh LaKari, even went so

17:38

far as to cooperate with the mother of her

17:40

daughter's boyfriend at the time to help

17:43

quote unquote, find the cyber bully

17:45

who sent the poor girl up to

17:47

a dozen messages a day.

17:49

What the heck? This is

17:51

sick. Initially,

17:53

school authorities could not help in local law

17:55

enforcement did not have the resources to track down

17:57

the culprit. Isabella

18:00

County prosecutor David Barbery,

18:02

Till local radio station

18:05

WKRC, quote, when the case

18:07

first came to our office, it was strange and

18:09

almost unbelievable. He had that

18:11

this continuous campaign of abuse,

18:13

quote, we are talking about several

18:15

hundred text messages. There are more than

18:17

a thousand pages of text in

18:19

the file. Barbara said the messages

18:21

were mostly disturbing, humiliating and

18:23

mean text messages. However,

18:25

after computer experts in the FBI identify

18:27

that the messages CAME FROM

18:29

LACARRI'S PHONE. SHE BROKE DOWN UNDER INVESTIGATION AND

18:32

CONFESS TO THE BULYING SPREE AGAINST

18:34

HER DAUGHTER. Bill

18:36

Citi's school superintendent William

18:39

Tillman said the forty two year old Lacari

18:41

was basketball coach at her daughter's school at the

18:43

time of her actions. She

18:46

was arraigned on Monday December twelfth to

18:48

release on five thousand dollars bail

18:50

using a computer to commit a crime as a

18:52

felony. With a potential sentence of up to ten

18:54

years in prison. That's nothing compared to

18:56

losing your mother. That's

18:58

nothing compared to

19:01

losing your mother. In the I

19:03

mean, this is beyond Black

19:05

Mirror. If you ask me,

19:07

this is so messed up. That's

19:09

it. You lost your mother.

19:12

How you ever gonna look at that person the same way again?

19:15

Likari was

19:19

also charged with stalking a

19:21

minor in obstructing justice, both of which could carry an

19:23

additional five years behind

19:25

bars. At this time,

19:27

it's unclear if there is enough evidence to

19:29

transfer the case to trial. And

19:31

the hearing on the issue is postponed to January twelfth without

19:34

a reason being given. That

19:36

is just so bizarre

19:39

and disturbing. I

19:41

wanna see what she looks like. I

19:43

wanna see what she looks like, the mother. I

19:46

wanna look into her eyes. I wanna see the mugshot.

19:48

I gotta look into the eyes.

19:52

That's where the real crazy

19:54

comes out. That's

19:56

where it comes out. Alright.

19:59

Well, that's it. Let's

20:01

start this show off. Now as I ask every

20:03

night and I'm gonna ask all throughout the

20:05

show for as long as we on

20:07

platforms like rumble and on YouTube.

20:10

Let's make the use of the weight we

20:12

can possibly throw around and

20:14

like this broadcast. On

20:17

rumble, whether you're on if you're on

20:19

rumble mobile, there is a there's a thumbs up

20:21

button just like Twitter. So depending

20:23

on how you're on mobile, or if you're on

20:25

desktop and you can see the plus or minus

20:27

sign, give us a rumble plus and

20:29

on on YouTube. Make

20:31

sure you just hit the like

20:34

button. It's such an amazing

20:36

thing that you can contribute to the show

20:38

every night. It's like lighting a

20:40

candle ft

20:40

church. Like lighting a candle

20:43

at church. It's not not exactly the

20:45

same thing. But it's just habit.

20:47

That's what I'm talking about. Make it a

20:49

habit like lighting a candle a church.

20:51

Alright. We will be right back. Don't

20:53

go

20:53

anywhere. You guys can get have been wonderful to

20:56

me as per

20:58

usual.

20:59

I'll go home and get you a fucking

21:02

shine box. You

21:19

let one ant stand up to

21:21

us, then they all might

21:23

stand up. Those

21:25

pewdie little ants outnumber

21:27

us a hundred to one. And

21:29

if they ever figure that out, there

21:32

goes our way of life.

21:34

It's not about

21:35

food. It's about keeping those ants

21:37

in line. That's why we're

21:40

going

21:40

back. Does anybody else

21:43

wanna stay? Let's Alright.

22:31

Okay. So

22:35

welcome to the show. Is

22:39

seven nine ten PM. We have a couple

22:41

of moments before we bring on Dane

22:43

So I wanna set the set the

22:45

the stage. Remember, you can send

22:47

in superchats to quite frankly superchats

22:49

dot com, you can go

22:51

and drop drop some rumble

22:53

rants in there. There is the gold pills

22:55

on foxhole, which is embedded cozily

22:58

on quite frankly dot tv, which many of

23:00

you are just set up there for the rest of the night.

23:02

Because after we end here at nine, we go right

23:04

into rabbit hole Wednesdays in the after hour program.

23:07

Here's what I wanted to bring up.

23:09

Little stories like this. That

23:11

we get all the time now, could climate

23:14

change kill backyard skating

23:16

rinks? A citizen science program

23:18

called Rinkwatch encourages

23:20

backyard or backyard rainmakers

23:22

to submit data on ice and

23:24

weather conditions. But what do you think's going on?

23:27

It's just becoming harder and harder

23:30

to predict how

23:32

they're, you know, whether or not they're gonna be able to

23:34

have ice rink weather. Because

23:37

things are so all over the place. And, I

23:40

mean, I I don't I don't have any I

23:43

don't I I don't deny

23:45

the fact that there's some crazy things going on out there.

23:47

And no no matter where you were in

23:49

the country on Christmas

23:52

weekend, was probably sub

23:54

zero weathers or getting close to

23:57

Save for a couple of corners, like the

23:59

tip of floor done, some of the

24:01

southwest and all that. But every everything else was

24:03

frigid. And then a couple of days later, we

24:05

got, like, a seventy degree swing

24:07

back upward. Today, it

24:09

was nearly sixty degrees if not

24:11

topping sixty. I was outside Wigington

24:13

the t shirt today and sweating.

24:15

It was fantastic. I loved it. But I tried to tell

24:17

myself, don't get used to it. It's only January

24:20

fourth. But

24:22

aside from the concert reporting

24:25

on how crazy and unpredictable the

24:27

weather is getting. There

24:29

are stuff like this, the bigger

24:31

things, the bomb cyclone, which I just referenced

24:33

there, there's another one coming for the California coast? Did you hear

24:35

about this? San Francisco,

24:38

as we prepare for incoming weather,

24:40

let's take a moment to pause and look at

24:42

the visible imagery and marvel at

24:44

what mother nature is sending our way. Is it mother

24:47

nature though? That's what I

24:49

want to know. Is it

24:51

something now tonight when we

24:53

talk about and it's a massive

24:55

storm. Massive storm heading

24:57

toward California right now.

24:59

The image shows the beginning of what

25:01

they call a bomb cyclone foreign formation over

25:03

the Pacific Ocean and

25:06

atmospheric river swirling toward

25:08

an atmospheric rivers

25:10

swirling toward the San Francisco Bay

25:13

area. The atmospheric river is

25:15

connected to a rapidly intensifying

25:17

low pressure system that will grow strong enough to be

25:19

classified as a bomb cyclone. These

25:22

are things not

25:24

only the sensational nature

25:26

of storm and weather

25:28

reporting. But the sensational name of

25:30

weather naming and the

25:32

everything that goes along with it

25:34

And when we talk about geoengineering and weather

25:37

warfare, I'm

25:39

I'm always very interested in it. But

25:41

my my interest peaks when we start

25:43

going through things like that. And we have

25:45

a first time guest that

25:47

spends a lot of his time, if not dedicated

25:49

his whole life, to this kind

25:52

of this kind

25:54

of topic, and his name is Dane

25:57

of geoengineeringwatch dot org.

25:59

Here's a little bit of his bio. Dane has

26:01

a background in solar energy, former

26:04

employee of Bechtel Power

26:07

Corporation, and was licensed contractor in California and Arizona.

26:09

He's been engaged in constant

26:11

climate geoengineering research for the last

26:13

fifteen years ft. His personal residence

26:15

was featured in a cover article on the world's

26:18

largest renewable energy magazine,

26:20

home power. He owns and

26:22

manages a wildlife preserve next to

26:24

Lake Shasta in North

26:26

California. Dane puts all

26:28

of his focus ever and energy

26:30

researching the climate engineering issue when

26:32

he began to lose every significant

26:34

amount of solar uptake when when he began

26:36

to lose very significant amounts of

26:38

solar uptake due to the ever

26:40

increasing solar obscuration. Caused

26:42

from jet aircraft spraying in the skies above

26:45

his mountain top home. He also

26:47

noted a significant decline in forest health

26:49

was occurring and accelerating Extensive

26:51

testing and researching into geoengineering issues

26:54

was commenced, which

26:56

revealed alarming discoveries, and

26:59

Dana's focused all of his time and efforts toward

27:01

exposing and halting climate

27:04

engineering operations since two

27:06

thousand two. So got

27:08

a lot going on there. And I would have

27:10

to imagine that in the

27:12

the moments that we have after

27:14

the show concludes and we air

27:17

the dimming, A lot of that is gonna come to life to you right there on

27:19

your screen. So make sure you do

27:21

not change the channel after we're done

27:23

here. But we want to welcome Dane

27:25

to the show right now. Dane, how are you, my friend? Hey,

27:30

Frank. How are you? I'm doing well. It's great

27:32

to have you on for the first

27:34

time.

27:34

I I appreciate your

27:37

willingness to address a climate sharing issue. That's

27:39

all we do here. Do you know your drink? Watch that

27:41

order. Well, it's definitely one of those things. If you've been

27:43

on the Internet and you've taken any kind

27:45

of interest in these topics for

27:47

any amount of time, you've

27:49

definitely come across articles and work that has

27:51

been published on on your website. And

27:53

it that's why it's it's it's exciting to

27:55

have you on here. And I

27:58

love for you to talk a little bit about first this this

28:00

last film that you put out, the dimming, which

28:02

we're gonna broadcast on, quite frankly,

28:04

dot TV afterwards. What should

28:06

we expect from that? Well,

28:11

you can see in the dimming and that's the culmination

28:13

of many years of research

28:16

work and effort on many

28:18

arenas in this subject. But what you

28:20

can see is conclusive proof of

28:22

climate intervention operations being conducted in

28:24

our skies. And if people don't believe

28:26

when they see with their own eyes, there's not much else

28:28

we can tell them. In that film, the

28:30

Disney, we have two US air force

28:32

generals, a brigadier general, a major general,

28:34

a former US government

28:36

scientist, US Forest Service, Fish and

28:38

Game, former US presidential cabinet

28:41

member former Canadian Ministry of Defense. Many

28:43

top scientists, we had great

28:45

effort in expense rank, took a

28:47

national oceanic and atmospheric administration

28:50

flying lab to altitude

28:52

with top scientists in it. We

28:54

sampled what the heavy aircraft were

28:56

emitting at altitude. We

28:58

processed that sample one of the world's most renowned laboratories,

29:02

RPI, and we found exactly what we knew we

29:04

would find. Climate engineering elements

29:07

starting with aluminum, end of

29:09

debate. This is going on.

29:11

We have up close film footage of these

29:13

aircraft at altitude nozzles visible,

29:15

turning spray dispersions on

29:17

and off. We have the

29:19

entire meteorological community pretending

29:21

that this on and off disperse

29:23

is just some sort of atmospheric layering.

29:26

That's complete nonsense. Again, when we

29:28

have film footage of the

29:30

nozzles visible sort of on and

29:32

off, there's no more discussion or debate it's

29:34

happening. Howard Bauchner: My question has always

29:36

been. When it comes

29:38

to that, if I it doesn't

29:40

matter if you have The footage of the nozzles are

29:42

not. If you're on the ground level, you look up and

29:44

you just see this thatch work that's

29:46

going across the sky all the time. In

29:48

some places, it's a

29:50

much worse than others. But I I always

29:52

wondered that, especially from these commercial

29:55

airliners, is this something that is

29:57

being triggered by the pilots? Is

29:59

this, like, conscious schedule

30:02

of, you know, dumping this stuff? Or is

30:04

it just built into the

30:06

beforehand to be done without any conscious effort

30:08

of the people flying it.

30:13

All available evidence indicates

30:15

the latter is the case. And this

30:17

is we're working with commercial pilots

30:19

right now. We're supplying them geotrink watch

30:21

out or printed materials that

30:24

they are covertly placing in

30:26

private lunch rooms and other locations because

30:28

they know these operations are going on. They know their

30:30

aircraft are being used in many cases.

30:32

It does not directly involve commercial personnel.

30:34

I want to make that very clear. We have

30:36

no evidence that it's involving commercial

30:39

So now, we military tankers as

30:41

well, Frank. And we have, for example,

30:43

US military, KC-10s, KC-one

30:46

hundred and thirty five's,

30:48

C17 Globe Master is a huge part of this

30:50

scenario because those takers in many cases

30:52

like the KC-one hundred and thirty five can carry a

30:55

hundred tons of payload to altitude

30:57

many many times what a

30:59

commercial aircraft could carry given

31:02

its other payloads And when

31:04

we have the

31:07

statistics on these tankers that the US

31:09

military has three times more

31:11

tankers than all other

31:13

militaries in the world combined.

31:15

US military is certainly a key player

31:17

in all of this

31:20

And and onto more written

31:23

documentation of these programs going on, and G0J wants

31:25

the word, we have many, many documents it's going

31:27

back many decades. Of of

31:29

one example, an eight hundred

31:31

page US Senate document from

31:33

nineteen seventy eight

31:35

outlining the full scope and scale these

31:37

operations even then, specifically

31:40

stating that governments, even

31:42

otherwise adversarial governments, adversarial

31:45

relations, US, China, Russia would cooperate

31:47

with these programs because you can't just

31:49

climb an engineer over your own country.

31:51

So we can speculate about all the agendas

31:53

and the objectives but the fact that there's global

31:56

cooperation and the fact that these

31:58

programs are ongoing and

32:00

wreaking absolute havoc. This is weather

32:02

warfare. It's weather and biological warfare

32:04

period. The elements are toxic. We're all breathing

32:06

these elements, aluminum variant, stratum,

32:08

manganese, polymer fibers. We now know graphene from

32:10

our last one hundred lab test. So, geoengineering

32:13

watch that order is not shooting from the

32:15

hip. We are a hard research

32:17

institution. We have many contacts

32:20

and governments. We are simply trying to bring this issue to life. Right?

32:22

I and and it is it is coming to

32:24

life a lot for and especially for a

32:26

lot of people who are just sick

32:29

of getting sick too.

32:31

I know a few people who have

32:33

have stumbled into this this line of research

32:35

just because they had A

32:37

FEW EXPERIENCES OF COMING OUT OF THEIR HOME

32:39

IS IN THE SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA

32:41

AREA AND WONDERING IT

32:43

WASN'T LIKE A PALLEN SEASON. THEY

32:45

WERE WONDERING WHAT THIS creamish kind of

32:47

film was over everything. And they

32:49

actually went out and they had it tested and and

32:51

a number of times came back with a lot

32:53

of the elements and compounds that

32:56

you're talking about right there. And

32:58

that that so it's just starting off

33:00

a lot of people down this path of research

33:03

because it's personally affecting And I'd have to

33:05

imagine as we get into more bigger

33:07

picture questions that

33:09

the bomb cyclone

33:12

kind of weather events

33:14

we are getting normalized with

33:16

right now. That has to be in some

33:18

way, shape, or form related.

33:21

What do you what do you say about that? Because my

33:23

interest, like I said, in the opening, always peaks

33:25

when we witness these sensational

33:28

weather events. What do you think

33:30

precipitated these storms in particular? Are they

33:32

in any way shape or form natural

33:34

or have been naturally occurring before

33:36

the age of geoengineering?

33:38

What we see now

33:41

is in every way, unnatural.

33:43

There is no natural weather

33:45

at this point. You manipulate any part of

33:47

the global climate system, you alter the

33:50

entire system. And in fact, what we have

33:52

is a complete disruption

33:54

of system all around the world. And

33:56

there are multiple layers, many layers

33:58

to these processes. We discussed

34:00

the aerosol dispersions of material that

34:02

we're talking about tens of

34:05

millions of tons annually being

34:07

dispersed into our skies because these are nano particles which are

34:09

the most harmful kinds that swallow the particle

34:11

with more of a hard it

34:13

is. Ft doesn't matter what the element is in

34:15

question. And these elements are manipulated

34:18

by frequency transmissions.

34:20

And I know you know what harp is in

34:22

ask, and that's one example. There's about a hundred of that type of facility around

34:24

the globe being the most powerful. When

34:26

you saturate an air mass, with

34:29

these electroconductive particulates, you can manipulate those

34:32

particulates with the frequency transmissions,

34:34

thus you can manipulate the

34:36

air mass. In the case of heart,

34:38

an ionist for a heater and its ability to heat the ionosphere to extraordinarily

34:40

high temperatures, they can and are

34:44

manipulating atmospheric pressure

34:46

zones, i. E. The term we hear so often now, the

34:48

bomb cyclone, we hear that term all

34:51

the time. A decade ago and beyond,

34:53

we never heard it. And again,

34:55

they they as how many times Frank have you

34:57

heard the meteorologists say the rain will

34:59

be changing over the

35:00

snow. Have you heard that one? Yes.

35:04

You're at all the time now. And so often, the quote, snow, the

35:06

frozen material, which I don't really want to

35:09

dignify as calling snow because

35:12

it's so toxic. So full of

35:14

climate engineering, chemical ice denblading elements that this is

35:16

what process they're using to cause these

35:19

flash cool downs. You probably saw that

35:22

Denver went before New Year's

35:24

went from fifty one

35:26

ft. Denver port to twenty

35:28

four degrees and a twenty four below zero, excuse

35:30

me, in a matter of hours, seventy five degree

35:32

drop. In a matter of hours, was

35:34

back up to six degrees a couple days later. We're

35:36

seeing that type of weather whiplash

35:39

everywhere. And geoengineering watch

35:42

dot org is the only

35:44

organization to trying to bring to light that these are chemically

35:46

nucleated cool downs. This is chemical winter

35:48

weather. And when we have the

35:50

Chinese government openly disclosing

35:54

they were doing this type of process. Popular science covered it, Fox

35:56

News, MSNBC. Your listeners can

35:58

your followers can search this. Frank, they

36:00

can search Chinese scientist, engineer,

36:04

Snowstorm, find all these major mainstream sources covered

36:06

it. But yet when it comes to the

36:08

US, we see no one covering it

36:10

except that

36:12

we're gonna I I hope that

36:14

changes because these engineered flash cool downs are

36:17

absolutely not nature. So

36:20

let me ask you this

36:22

then, because here's another thing. In the same vein

36:25

as watching or

36:28

or wondering what commercial pilots may or

36:30

may not know about what has

36:32

been attached to their planes and what

36:35

kind of missions they're really

36:38

flying other than transporting

36:40

people from New York to

36:42

Disneyland. I I often

36:44

I often wondered are these

36:46

individual weather events deliberately

36:49

manufactured events one

36:51

offs? Or is this just

36:53

a predictable or what we're watching

36:55

right now, a predictable consequence

36:58

of just ongoing operations

37:00

at sea and in the

37:02

sky. Is is it a mix

37:04

of both? What do you think it is more of? It is absolutely

37:07

an intentional manipulation

37:10

that does cause chaotic downstream effects. But

37:13

when we have winter

37:15

snowstorms with their moisture originating

37:17

from the wreck

37:20

could warm Gulf of Mexico. It's raining right

37:22

now as I speak. It's raining in Canada

37:24

north of the Great Lakes

37:26

because they apparently don't have enough

37:29

tankers available to nuclear, that precipitation is

37:32

fast enough. And it came from the record when both of

37:34

Mexico with tornadoes and thunderstorms all along the

37:36

way. Now we have thunder

37:38

snow, didn't exist in

37:40

decades past. So these

37:42

are absolutely manipulated events. And when you

37:44

look at the Jetstream

37:46

configurations that they are able

37:48

to create, ft is

37:50

phenomenal that the complexity, it

37:52

looks almost like the front of a

37:54

a newer modern car with a fan belt that

37:56

goes around about ten pulleys and counterclockwise rotating

37:58

some clockwise rotating others, and

38:00

they're able to steer the upper level wind

38:02

currents profoundly. And that's

38:04

done

38:05

again what the pressure zones of the diaper gypsum describe. When

38:08

you create a high pressure heat on mat, have you

38:10

heard that term, Frank? Not a pressure heat on

38:12

what you heard that a lot during the

38:14

summer on sourcing temperatures under a high pressure heat though? I I have not heard

38:16

that in

38:17

particular. No. The meteorologist use it

38:19

all the time now.

38:22

That's exactly what we get from an ionosphere heater. So in the northern when

38:24

they blast the ionosphere with three and a

38:26

half million watts of power, and they create

38:28

a high pressure heat dome,

38:31

that rotates clockwise in

38:34

the northern hemisphere, and

38:36

that rotates the upper level winds

38:38

clockwise around that high pressure

38:40

heat dome. So in doing so, they're able to steer upper

38:42

level wind currents, and that's what they've done to

38:44

California, by the way, for the

38:46

last fifth teen

38:48

years. It started in two thousand seven. And if you look at the dissemination from

38:50

geoengineering lifestyle art going back a

38:53

decade or more, everything we said

38:55

would happen has happened, engineered

38:57

drought catastrophe, target California.

39:00

Bay Park and Ionosphere heater created high

39:02

pressure heat, dome over California.

39:04

And that rotates all the moisture around us,

39:07

up and over us, often through

39:09

Alaska, and they're chemically nucleating moisture

39:12

the whole time, which is cooling it down. These are patented processes

39:14

by the way. They're cooling

39:16

that down and cooling the air mask

39:18

as it heads into the Eastern US.

39:22

And that begins to cool the Eastern Yes, which by the way,

39:24

for the last ten years running, is the most

39:26

anomalously less warm region in

39:29

the entire world. And your listeners can search

39:32

that we're adding to our patents list all

39:34

the time. We've added

39:36

probably twenty or thirty for twenty

39:38

twenty two alone. So Again,

39:40

these are not made up

39:42

processes, and chemicalized nucleation

39:44

is a very profound process

39:47

ft seeding and clot moisture with

39:50

endothermic reacting elements,

39:52

that's an energy absorbing element. Like you've

39:54

seen a ski slope. Yeah. Frank, you've seen

39:56

ski slopes that have the recoverable snow and the

39:58

whole mountains

39:59

bear. You've seen that before.

40:02

Right? Absolutely. So

40:04

again, if people accept that, but

40:06

for

40:06

some reason, they have difficulty accepting that you

40:08

have a US military tank or dumping a

40:11

hundred tons that type of material into ground

40:13

moisture and creating frozen material on

40:15

the ground. We we captured a

40:18

satellite image,

40:20

of a stripe of snow across Kansas

40:22

on flat topography, flat ground. It

40:24

was a stripe of snow,

40:28

ten miles wide, and I believe about two hundred miles

40:30

long, a perfect symmetrical stripe.

40:32

Obviously, that's not nature.

40:34

But yet, we have

40:36

the deny that's coming from so many places. And and even from,

40:38

unfortunately, many in in alternative

40:40

media are not acknowledging these engineered

40:42

cool downs, but we hope

40:44

that changes we have

40:46

such extreme examples. Do you remember by

40:48

chance Frank hearing about a hundred

40:50

thousand cattle that died to death and a

40:52

flash snowstorm happened in twenty thirteen?

40:54

Do you chance, remember that one? I don't remember that

40:56

one, but I do remember the the

40:58

thousands or so that that did

41:00

that in a I

41:02

think it was last summer in the middle of

41:04

what they said was a heat

41:06

wave. Though there's a lot of descent among

41:08

farmers as as to what it could have been.

41:10

A lot of people said it couldn't have been the heat,

41:12

but I I don't remember the two thousand

41:14

thirteen

41:15

flash freezing. No.

41:17

Yeah. I remember that the heat did that in Kansas with

41:19

the cattle as well. And actually,

41:22

if, you know, given the high pressure

41:24

heat dome, those

41:26

cattle can die that

41:29

on that scale because

41:32

what's created I'll back up to the flash cool down in a minute. What's

41:34

created is what's called the wet bulb effect.

41:36

And with humans, it's called the wet bulb effect.

41:38

It's a combination of temperature, humidity, it's

41:40

a taller to the human

41:42

body. You push temperatures past

41:44

a certain point, same with cows, same

41:46

with any type of

41:48

living organism, they can't

41:50

cool themselves. So again,

41:52

we're creating unnatural conditions, including the heat.

41:54

We had the same type of scenario in British Columbia.

41:56

In early twenty twenty one. We had temperatures in British Columbia along the

41:59

coast that were sixty degrees above normal,

42:01

was a hundred and twenty-one point

42:03

five degrees on the

42:06

coast of Columbia, try to get your arms around that. That would be

42:08

like my location in Reading in Northern

42:10

California on a hot summer

42:12

day being

42:14

about hundred and sixty

42:16

degrees. No. And people don't connect

42:18

the dots and how much sixty degrees above

42:20

normal

42:20

is. So back to the flash

42:23

freeze, what we had October fourth twenty

42:25

thirteen, South Dakota one hundred thousand

42:27

cold hardy cattle

42:30

died

42:30

in a freak flash winter

42:32

snowstorm. Snow started falling at

42:34

forty degrees and they can chemically nucleate ft far

42:37

above freezing temperatures. The process begins to

42:39

cool the air mask. Frank, it's just like

42:41

you know when you have a first

42:43

aid kit on your shelf that has an ice pack in

42:45

it, you can sit there for twenty years at

42:47

room temperature and you can mix those chemicals and you

42:49

end up with frozen ice

42:50

pack. Right? Yeah.

42:52

Same scenario on an unimaginable scale.

42:54

So start us going forty degrees

42:57

Ft the same time, we captured the weather maps where

42:59

they took them offline. We captured them at g and g and

43:01

y, etcetera. During the dimming, by the way,

43:03

it was eighty nine

43:05

degrees and rainy. In Kansas City

43:07

was eighty five degrees in reading in Chicago. How could you

43:09

possibly have a snowstorm in South Dakota that

43:12

kills a hundred

43:14

thousand cattle? Two days later, they're

43:16

laying around in the mud dead.

43:18

No snow. Obviously,

43:20

that's not nature. Nice. So, again, the degree

43:22

Go ahead. No. No. No. I'm I'm I'm I was I'm with you. And that's and

43:25

that's what we saw with the I think

43:27

the the first time we got a a look at

43:29

this, because, obviously, this was nationwide

43:32

saved for a couple of corners

43:34

of the of the map over here in

43:36

the United States. It was a nationwide thing.

43:38

It it was freezing temperatures down

43:41

to the Mexico border, but this was not the

43:44

first time that we had seen this in the last three

43:46

years. Well, it was just either

43:48

last winter or the

43:50

winter before. That was a a deadly cold front that went through

43:52

the deep south and people were wondering what the

43:54

hell are we talking about here where it

43:56

strained the the the power supplies

43:58

and all

44:00

that stuff. SO, AGAIN, THERE'S THAT

44:02

NORMALIZATION FACTOR FOR SOMETHING THAT WOULD

44:04

SEEM COMPLETELY OUTLANDISH IN

44:06

THE PAST. Ft is.

44:09

It's amazing how people accept it.

44:12

And let me back up to

44:14

the deep freeze in Texas as you

44:16

you may alluded to the ago happened

44:18

in early twenty twenty one. You

44:20

remember that? Zero degrees in Dallas. Right?

44:24

Yep. So

44:26

at the same time, it was zero

44:28

below zero in Dallas. It was

44:30

about eighty five degrees at approximately

44:33

the same latitude in Florida. At the same time,

44:35

it was below zero in Dallas. It was

44:37

thirty three degrees warmer at the

44:39

North Pole. And the

44:41

moisture for that winter storm came straight off the record

44:43

warm Gulf of Mexico. Again, since

44:46

winter storms come off the Gulf of Mexico, and now we

44:48

have the meteorologists

44:50

on the Climate engineering cover up institutions like the weather

44:52

channel, claiming that winter storms have a

44:54

warm side and a

44:56

cold side, how completely

44:58

ridiculous is that? So

45:00

when we we look at Winterstorm Elliott,

45:04

which we communicated about off air. This is the Christmas

45:06

cool down that happens. We see a

45:08

correlation with these cool down events with

45:10

some other

45:13

scenario that makes them more significant.

45:15

In that case, the holidays, when people have

45:17

to endure that type of difficulty

45:19

traveling during the holidays, they

45:21

remember that event. And that drives a

45:23

wedge into populations as to whether the planet's what

45:26

state the planet's actually in when

45:28

they're not considering climate engineering. So

45:32

During that coast to coast cool down again right

45:34

time for the Christmas holidays

45:35

perfectly. Let's back up

45:38

before that. We have

45:39

previous coast coast cool down this

45:42

year. And when did that what did that

45:44

correlate with? It correlated with the

45:46

COP twenty seven

45:48

Climate Conference. Coast to

45:50

coast cool down in the

45:52

US while it was above normal

45:54

temperatures through the entire northern hemisphere and

45:56

that correlated

45:58

exactly was timed exactly with the cop twenty seven climate

46:00

conference because those conferences are not about changing

46:02

business as usual in any way, shape,

46:06

or form. Those climate conferences, and we saw the same thing, by the way, in the

46:08

Copenhagen climate conference, can't, it's this is

46:10

just a matter of procedure for them. They are

46:12

demonstrating what they

46:14

can do climate engineering

46:16

in the countries at those conferences

46:18

are being behind closed doors forced

46:20

to either actively or passively support

46:23

climate engineering as their mitigation,

46:26

if you will. Okay. So then then then

46:28

this this leads me directly to my

46:30

next question. And that is

46:32

always why.

46:34

Is is it be I mean, every

46:36

operation must have an endgame. And we

46:39

know if we go farther down the line,

46:41

what has been declared by either

46:43

the the UN, the club of Rome, anything like that.

46:45

We've got agenda twenty one, we've

46:47

got the great reset. We

46:49

know about deindustrial realization

46:52

goals. We know the end of the nations. They

46:54

want end of nations. They want end

46:56

of privacy. End of sound money.

47:00

Great reset. We got that over the last couple of years alone.

47:02

And, I mean, we we've gotten

47:06

previews into how

47:08

they may want climate

47:10

lockdowns just based on what they were able

47:12

to see during the COVID

47:14

lockdowns. They say so Oh,

47:16

well, This national

47:18

park started coming back to life again

47:20

and there was more deer over here and there's

47:22

more wolves over here and this one

47:24

city over here in South Africa was a

47:26

little less smoggy than it ever was. Maybe we should be doing this more often.

47:28

And of course, when they talk about eliminating

47:30

carbon, they're really talking about eliminating

47:34

people. And that's scary

47:36

enough in itself. But for right now,

47:38

what does it what does

47:40

it serve for them to paralyze an

47:43

entire nation in the middle of Christmas

47:46

holiday. Is it just disaster

47:48

fatigue? Do they are they trying to

47:50

twist people's arms for the

47:52

next election? Is it really just about making sure that people are become

47:54

more and more upset with how their

47:56

lives are being disrupted? That there it

47:59

it's all part of impacting

48:02

upcoming elections, what do you think

48:04

that we are? Where are we in the in

48:06

the plot right now? And and as

48:08

far as motivation goes?

48:13

First, with you on all

48:16

your points,

48:18

climate engineering, is all that

48:19

and much, much more. It

48:22

is ultimately fundamentally about

48:24

power and control period,

48:26

encompassing everything you just stated.

48:28

And much more. We encourage your listeners to

48:30

think and watch a film clip

48:32

of president Lyndon Johnson in nineteen

48:36

sixty two then vice

48:38

president. At the it's the first

48:40

thirty seconds of our weekly G0G watch that

48:42

are update commercial free non political

48:44

called global alert the first thirty

48:46

seconds is Lyndon Johnson,

48:48

stating, like, a lunatic, again, on

48:50

film and on record that he controls the

48:52

weather controls the

48:52

world. He said we had the power to control the world's cloud layer

48:55

to fit in. And he do control

48:55

those the weather controls the world because you control the

48:58

food supply, that's you control populations. What

49:00

else do

49:02

you do? When you can create this kind of a cool down

49:04

event that's not natural in any

49:06

way, shape, or form. You drive a wedge

49:08

into society between those who think there's

49:10

something wrong

49:12

with the planet's life support systems and those who don't. And

49:14

that serves the power structure as well. On

49:16

top of everything else you already cited,

49:19

So you keep the population divided and confused

49:22

as to the true state and the climate and the

49:24

damage done, and all the

49:26

while doing everything else you

49:28

described, miring relations and

49:30

difficulty. You're reducing food

49:32

supplies, which means much of the population

49:34

has to focus on the next bite of food. They

49:36

can't focus on the wider horizon. It's

49:38

ultimately all about power control, but

49:40

there are so many

49:42

layers to that. And when you

49:44

can mask the damage being

49:46

done to the the planet's life

49:48

support systems while at the same time inflicting

49:50

even more damage, this compares, Frank,

49:52

to a pharmaceutical commercial.

49:54

How many pharmaceutical commercials have you seen, ticket this for that symptom,

49:56

and here's fifty other

49:58

side effects. And you wonder who

50:00

would take that? Yeah. But it's the same

50:04

mentality it's a military industrial complex mentality, and this

50:06

is absolutely a weapon of war

50:08

period. And we do see right now

50:12

what can only be considered

50:14

an intentional targeting of agricultural producing

50:15

regions? Oh,

50:18

oh, yes. Yes. Yes. I'm

50:20

glad you brought that there

50:23

too. The the the the middle of the Midwest, we saw a lot

50:25

of there's a lot of anxiety

50:27

about two years ago probably

50:30

around the time that there was that deep freeze in

50:32

in twenty twenty one talking about

50:34

the the corn crops, how they were

50:36

really on the edge of

50:38

Olivian with being so late in the year because of how the

50:42

flooding as well as the freezing was

50:44

screwing up

50:46

all all of those cycle, the agricultural

50:48

cycles out there. But my question

50:50

to you now from here would

50:54

be Is there any form of

50:56

geoengineering that is or

50:58

could be beneficial for the planet at

51:00

this point aside from just stopping everything

51:04

because the term itself, when I think about geoengineering,

51:06

it doesn't necessarily lend

51:09

itself exclusively to malice,

51:11

whether warfare on the other hand.

51:13

I mean, that has diabolical intent

51:16

baked right into it from the get go.

51:18

And surely, we're not the

51:20

best caretakers of our whole planet over

51:22

here. So I just wonder, is there

51:24

anything that you think

51:26

our the technology

51:28

available to us now

51:30

say then during the dust bowl when

51:32

we were just planting millions and millions of trees, and and that started helping

51:34

us get out of that.

51:37

With the veil with the available technology now,

51:39

is there any form of geoengineering that you think could be

51:42

beneficial to healing

51:44

the planet? Generally

51:47

speaking, and the term is a very, very broad term. We have

51:50

many forms of it. We're discussing right

51:52

now, aerosol,

51:54

geengineering, stratospheric,

51:57

aerosol injection. But there are other

51:59

forms of geometrics going on right now, and I'll wrap this

52:01

all into one. We have ocean

52:04

fertilization going on now. We believe the

52:06

elements being used for stratospheric aerosol injection, solar radiation

52:08

management over the oceans, are

52:10

materials that are conducive for

52:14

ocean fertilization as well, which causes an

52:16

ocean bloom of algae that

52:18

sucks up some of the CO2,

52:20

but at

52:22

what cost it kills that section of the ocean. It masks

52:24

some of the problem. But at the

52:26

cost of killing oceans, the oceans die, we

52:28

die in this appears to be

52:30

another form of geoengineering.

52:32

So again, from trying to the state of

52:34

purpose blocking some of the sun's incoming

52:36

thermal energy, to mitigate global

52:38

warming. That's the stated purpose of

52:40

geoengineering, although we know what's being used for weather

52:42

or fair. Ocean iron

52:44

fertilization, same thing. Trying to

52:46

if I can use a a known parable robbing

52:48

Peter to pay Paul. When you you can't

52:50

only do that so long, you can

52:52

only force the clamp the

52:54

plants like support system so long before they

52:56

break, and they are breaking now. And

52:59

what's the military industrial complex doing? They're

53:01

doubling down even

53:01

more. We have also made collapse occurring

53:04

right now. June dreamwatch dot

53:06

org has a former NASA contract engineer

53:08

that works directly for

53:10

us. And has for a number of years with equipment that we

53:12

supplied him. And we know

53:14

we are getting UVC in the

53:17

surface of the Earth right now, not

53:20

just extraordinarily high levels of

53:22

UVB. We're getting UVC. That's the last

53:24

spectrum before

53:26

X-ray. It's killing plankton. It's killing insects. It's killing

53:28

flora. And it's harming

53:30

us. It harms your optical function.

53:35

We're told that stops a hundred thousand feet up in

53:37

the atmosphere, but it's on the surface now.

53:39

And at the current rate of ozone destruction,

53:41

climate is showing being the core cause of

53:43

factor. I wanna stress that. Yes, hair

53:45

spray cans contained CFCs,

53:48

and that's not good.

53:50

But logically, rationally.

53:52

Are we should we be more worried about a hair spray

53:54

can or a military KC-one hundred

53:56

and thirty five dumping a hundred tons into

53:58

the the atmosphere the combined effort

54:00

of all tens of millions of

54:03

tons a year, radio frequency, all of it damaging

54:05

the ozone layer without which we die

54:07

as well. Yeah. So again,

54:09

why we're focused on this achievement and watch out a word because from

54:11

so many directions, climate

54:14

engineering is pounding the nails into

54:16

our collective cofins and and you brought up some people and how they got

54:18

into this issue and and

54:20

what got them involved. And and just so

54:22

your listeners, no. I mean, this

54:24

is the last thing I

54:26

ever wanted to do. I

54:28

was doing habitat restoration. I managed an

54:30

habitat preserving the center of

54:32

Lake Shasta, I would have loved to stay in the forest for the rest of my But

54:34

knowing this was going on above me, having

54:36

some background in solar, my home was on

54:38

the cover, the world's largest renewable energy magazine,

54:41

and and knowing energy. It's not renewable. It's not

54:43

going to save us. But it's better than outright

54:46

burning of carbon fuels.

54:48

But I losing massive amount

54:50

of my solar power uptake from whether these

54:52

aircraft were emitting. I knew it couldn't

54:54

be just

54:56

cold condensation. Began to test my precipitation found what I didn't want to

54:58

find starting with aluminum. Every

55:00

test that went higher and higher, I was

55:02

faced with the fact that I

55:04

was being sprayed like a lab

55:06

rat. He was killing

55:08

everything. How can I face my children and

55:10

not engage in this battle with

55:12

every bit of energy and resource I can muster. And

55:14

I've been doing exactly that for twenty

55:16

years. Yeah. And

55:18

it's it's that right there that creates this

55:22

this almost I don't know. The double double

55:24

edge sword right here or this this catch

55:26

twenty two

55:28

almost. I always said that the

55:30

the libertarian anti globalist

55:33

front who picks up

55:35

the who really stares

55:37

ft environmental issues like this. They they really need

55:39

to do a better job at making

55:42

conservationism a bigger

55:45

focus in in how we go out and present ourselves

55:47

and our arguments in in the world

55:49

and in debate and dialectic and all

55:51

that stuff. Because the

55:54

message about local action like what you're talking about in in

55:56

your nature preserves and there's a lot of people who

55:58

would love to spend their days in the

56:00

forest or any

56:02

kind of habitat ecosystem near them and and be a part

56:04

of the solution. They

56:06

they're they're they're they're they're really being

56:09

squelched out by the bravado of this

56:11

transhumanist fraud movement, the

56:14

World Economic Forum, the the

56:18

I'm the CIA where John Brennan was

56:20

was bragging about all the

56:22

the atmospheric spraying that

56:24

was going on and everything

56:27

in the the in military industrial complex at

56:30

whole, that's a

56:32

very large that's

56:34

a very large big goliath of an enemy

56:36

for to to overcome.

56:38

And that's why I really

56:41

I think what it's really all about right

56:43

now. It's not so much that there aren't people

56:45

out there who want to preserve

56:47

and and be a part of nature and do the right thing.

56:49

But what do we do to defeat the human garbage

56:52

that is

56:54

perpetrating this this this

56:56

war on all of us because it you

56:58

know, like George Carlin said, the

57:01

planet the planet will recover literally from anything

57:03

we throw at it. Once we once we

57:06

exterminate ourselves, the planet,

57:08

the way down

57:10

the line, the planet will recover itself.

57:12

The real showdown right now worth

57:14

considering is the one that determines

57:16

the future of mankind. I think

57:19

that's the one That's the real question that we have to ask

57:21

ourselves. While we are here, how do

57:23

we face and defeat the people

57:25

who are doing this to

57:27

us that really

57:29

bring our future into into

57:31

question.

57:31

Howard Bauchner: Our future

57:34

is very much in the balance

57:36

at this point and very few are willing to face that. And that's a message

57:38

of g and g and what's that

57:39

org. We refuse to spin. We refuse

57:41

to candy code we

57:44

refuse to

57:45

downplay. Based on current

57:48

statistical data,

57:50

we've lost I'll get your other part of your question in a

57:51

lost over seventy percent of Earth's

57:54

Wildlife

57:54

populations in the last forty years,

57:56

terrestrial and aquatic populations down

58:00

eighty percent to ninety percent Clinton, at least in the Atlantic, we think other

58:02

oceans in similar condition, ninety

58:04

percent

58:05

decline, virtual crash. First

58:08

tree cover, first tree populations,

58:11

down over two

58:13

thirds since the

58:16

starter civilization. We are losing Earth's life

58:18

support systems by the day. We are on an incredibly

58:20

short timeline at this

58:23

point. That military industrial machine that you speak of and I

58:26

fully agree with your

58:28

points,

58:28

that is also us It's

58:31

the problem we have seen in the enemy, and he is us.

58:34

They being those ultimately the toplets

58:36

described to listeners who are they. They

58:38

are the central bankers. They are the ones who print the

58:40

money. They the ones who own

58:42

militaries, thus they own

58:44

governments, thus they control the entire matrix,

58:46

those who print the money, but they

58:48

couldn't do what they do without us. The and

58:50

passive support of the majority population. We

58:52

need to focus on priorities. And that's why

58:54

we're focused on this issue with changing what

58:56

sort of because we can't hide from

58:58

what they're spreading in our skies. Not just the effect, the environment,

59:01

the effect on us, highly toxic

59:03

elements, and even in the

59:05

case of polymer fibers

59:08

and graph those are elements that can be used for biological

59:10

carrier platforms. They can carry a

59:12

biological from the cloud to the ground.

59:14

Evidence indicates they're being used for

59:16

that already. We cannot

59:18

hide from this. We have to deal with this. This

59:20

is the biggest hole in the bottom of the

59:22

boat. If we can bring this issue to life, Frank, and

59:24

again, I'm incredibly grateful

59:26

to you and your

59:28

followers for their help with trying

59:30

to force this issue in the full light of day. I would

59:32

argue if we could do that. We would cause a

59:34

shockwave around the world.

59:36

We would one would

59:38

only imagine cause populations to

59:40

take to the streets with their proverbial pitch

59:42

forts and torches looking for

59:43

anyone, everyone, not just with the programs, with the cover

59:46

up. We would have our

59:47

military brothers and sisters who are being told

59:49

they're doing something good something

59:51

benevolent. Just like the pilot in the Vietnam, it was

59:54

told, this won't hurt your

59:56

pal in the ground when you spray agent orange and

59:58

defoli the jungles and kill

1:00:00

the population. Of course, it's going to kill

1:00:02

a US soldier as well, and it did. We need to break down that compartmentalization.

1:00:04

We need our military personnel to understand what

1:00:06

they're participating in. We need them to stand

1:00:10

down. And we need civilian populations to stop

1:00:12

supporting what amounts

1:00:15

to our own self

1:00:17

imposed near term extermination. And that's what it

1:00:20

amounts to. And

1:00:20

again, of all the challenges we face,

1:00:22

Frank, and there are many,

1:00:25

I grant that. If we don't deal with this biggest hole in the bottom

1:00:27

of the vote, if the vote goes down, all of

1:00:29

other challenges, all of their

1:00:32

concerns, all of their causes

1:00:34

become moot. timeline

1:00:36

we're on is incredibly short, and you mentioned

1:00:38

planting trees before, and that is a

1:00:40

form of geoengineering. If humans are planting trees,

1:00:42

anything that alters the energy

1:00:45

balance of human activity is a form

1:00:47

of geoengineering. Unfortunately,

1:00:50

conditions are so bad now they're

1:00:53

so harsh that you can't in many locations plant

1:00:55

trees and have them grow. My

1:00:57

location is one. Formerly thriving

1:00:59

forest of Northern

1:01:02

California I was formerly able to plant up to two hundred

1:01:04

fifty trees a day myself

1:01:06

or

1:01:07

more. They're specially designed for

1:01:09

that forestry. They're they're Genetic

1:01:11

sees from this genetic gene pool where I'm at,

1:01:14

they're adapted this area. I would have

1:01:16

about a ninety five percent success rate,

1:01:18

meaning ninety percent of those trees

1:01:20

I plan. We'll make it through the first

1:01:22

year. Success right now is

1:01:24

zero. Nothing makes it through

1:01:26

the first year. How are we to rejuvenate anything if

1:01:28

we've so damaged life support systems

1:01:30

that we we can't. And again, that's why

1:01:32

I'm trying to point out the severity of

1:01:36

this issue. From the air we breathe, the soils that

1:01:38

grow our foods, the waters we need to

1:01:40

drink, the atmosphere we need to protect us,

1:01:42

climate engineering

1:01:44

destroying all of it. We don't deal with it. We're done. And I don't mean

1:01:46

decades out. We are on an unimaginably

1:01:48

short timeline to mathematically and

1:01:51

statistically right now. Well, let me

1:01:54

ask you this because you you again, with with talking

1:01:56

about how you you have a zero percent

1:01:58

success rate in planting

1:02:00

trees, that

1:02:02

that's that's that's pretty incredible statement right there that you you out

1:02:04

of every hundred trees that you plant, you can't

1:02:06

get one to take root and

1:02:08

survive for the year anymore. That

1:02:11

makes me wonder just how

1:02:14

widespread how widespread all

1:02:17

of this this operation

1:02:19

really is on the planet. There's gotta be a

1:02:21

place where the perpetrators have a

1:02:23

respite from all of this because just

1:02:25

like with using pandemics

1:02:28

as a way to control your

1:02:30

adversaries. It's a very silly thing to

1:02:32

do when you are a

1:02:34

biological creature that can come down with this

1:02:36

this as well, whatever you release to the public unless you have

1:02:38

an antidote. I just got a question

1:02:40

that came in from rumble.

1:02:43

From a Katie DeBakey who

1:02:45

says she says, aren't

1:02:47

the perpetrators also breathing this stuff in? I'm

1:02:49

a total newbie on subjects, so apologies if that's a dumb

1:02:51

question. I don't think it is. I think it's a pretty

1:02:53

prescient one. What do you how

1:02:56

do you address that issue? That,

1:02:58

yeah, people

1:03:00

are trying to twist the arm of the planet and

1:03:02

and make it scream uncle, but

1:03:04

there's gotta be some kind

1:03:06

of a way that they've carved

1:03:09

that this can't be that

1:03:10

widespread. Is it possible? That's

1:03:13

a critically important

1:03:16

question. Absolutely, imperative. And thank you for bringing that to

1:03:18

light here. Let's let's look

1:03:20

at what we already know. Those

1:03:22

in power same

1:03:24

individuals, same lineage of

1:03:26

individuals, detonated twenty four hundred

1:03:28

nuclear bombs at planet Earth that

1:03:30

contaminated every

1:03:32

living thing. Why do they need to

1:03:34

detonate that many nuclear bombs? We have four forty

1:03:37

nuclear power plants sixty more

1:03:39

under construction. We know one hour by

1:03:42

Fukushima

1:03:43

alone will be an extinction level event if

1:03:46

other factors don't do the job first and I would

1:03:48

argue they're going to

1:03:49

When society collapses and there's no

1:03:51

question of if it's win and it's

1:03:53

close, who's going to man those four hundred and

1:03:55

forty nuclear power takes about two

1:03:57

to three decades to cold shut one down. We have Chernobyl

1:03:59

that people think is solved, the remedy by

1:04:02

the sarcophagus that was built around it. That

1:04:04

sarcophagus is

1:04:06

synchrony, true rumbles about the rear tent again. And again,

1:04:08

our three nuclear meltdowns

1:04:10

of Fukushima, three China syndromes, no technology

1:04:13

to fix it, no wind inside.

1:04:16

And so let me and we're building with sixty more nuclear pants right

1:04:18

now. On top of all this stage, we

1:04:20

have nuclear weapons as well. So

1:04:24

let's look at those in power. Are

1:04:26

they saying? How do they

1:04:28

behave? They're power addicts.

1:04:30

It's an addicts care that the next fix may kill them.

1:04:32

No. They don't care. They will not let go

1:04:34

of that power

1:04:36

unless we

1:04:39

take it from them. They won't

1:04:41

let go until the brutal

1:04:43

bitter end. And if we look

1:04:45

at psychoanalysis of those in power, and this

1:04:47

has been done. By very credible world experts.

1:04:49

There's a common thread that

1:04:52

is amongst all those that hold

1:04:55

these type and positions power over

1:04:58

societies. There's a quote, this is right from the

1:05:00

textbook, a near total lack of

1:05:02

comprehension as to the consequences of their

1:05:04

actions even to themselves.

1:05:06

They're addicts. They're power addicts. They're

1:05:08

like cells in a cancer. Does a

1:05:10

cancer intend to kill its

1:05:11

host? No. The cancer intends

1:05:14

to proliferate. Unchecked until the host eventually

1:05:15

dies. And again, we're dealing with all of that. So

1:05:18

I know many people think that, well, this couldn't be

1:05:20

happening. It couldn't

1:05:22

be that. Bad. They weren't immune already

1:05:24

have. III have a

1:05:26

couple more questions here from the audience

1:05:28

now too. Juul says,

1:05:30

hi, Frank.

1:05:32

I'm don't know if anyone else who would tell the truth about weather

1:05:34

manipulation that happens in Oregon.

1:05:36

Right at Eugene, there is and

1:05:38

this is right above you, Dane. Right

1:05:42

at Eugene, there is something that divides the storms

1:05:44

consistently. A big swath of

1:05:46

rain on the radar yet right

1:05:49

at Eugene a big blank. Above and

1:05:52

below, Rain, nothing at Eugene. If you

1:05:54

have a chance, could you ask

1:05:55

Dane, what weather weapon this could

1:05:58

possibly be could possibly be if at all.

1:06:00

So it's completely

1:06:03

correct. Completely correct. Well, what's there in

1:06:06

Eugene? A frequency transmitter.

1:06:08

And we have those but

1:06:12

there's another large one below Eureka. We

1:06:14

see it blowing apart the storms commonly.

1:06:17

It can literally blow a

1:06:19

hole in the precipitation. Again,

1:06:21

the frequency transmitters is they're manipulating the

1:06:24

atmosphere that's saturated with

1:06:26

these electrical conductive particles. And

1:06:28

the type of CDU determines rainfall as

1:06:31

well. If we see too small a particle and you over

1:06:33

saturate that storm, that's too

1:06:35

many condensation nuclei. The droplets

1:06:37

can't combine us and falls as

1:06:39

rain. So you end up with day

1:06:42

after day of these

1:06:44

featureless skies, bone dry

1:06:46

underneath, the my the moisture migrates

1:06:48

further inland. When

1:06:50

you expose those particulates

1:06:52

to frequency transmissions, you scatter

1:06:54

them as a repelling effect. And

1:06:57

blows that moisture out into a much broader area. So what do

1:06:59

we see even today? Much of this

1:07:01

incoming moisture, because you heard all

1:07:03

the the talk

1:07:05

of the incoming bomb

1:07:07

cyclone right now that we should be

1:07:09

being deluged here in California. Right? It's it's

1:07:11

not even raining outside of my

1:07:13

location and and Northern

1:07:16

California where there's generally much more

1:07:18

precipitation than areas further south.

1:07:20

Mhmm. And that's ft exactly the same

1:07:22

reason. We

1:07:24

see them completely energizing these frequency

1:07:26

transmitters. We know where they are, and there is

1:07:28

one in Eugene. There's one,

1:07:30

again, Bellureka, Beal. There's a whole network

1:07:32

throughout the

1:07:34

country. Very extensive. This is many layers to geoengineering, but

1:07:36

they blow this moisture out into the broadest

1:07:38

possible pit area that's solar

1:07:40

radiation management. So we saw about

1:07:43

the half of the country covered today with

1:07:46

largely rainless cloud canopy,

1:07:48

and that is climate engineering. So

1:07:51

they siphon off this moisture for that exact purpose.

1:07:53

And then they sensationalize, and that's what they're doing

1:07:55

in California right now. They're training moisture into the

1:07:58

urban area of San Francisco Sacramento,

1:08:00

Stockton, and they get these

1:08:02

photo ops of cars, Submers, and people think,

1:08:04

well, California's deludes, the reservoirs must be

1:08:07

full. There's not enough water

1:08:09

flowing right now and my hydro

1:08:11

turbine on the excitably shaft,

1:08:13

I can't even generate power right now. That's how

1:08:15

little rain is falling here, and

1:08:17

that's what you don't hear. You don't hear about geographically

1:08:20

enhanced rain that's not occurring. That's why the

1:08:22

reservoirs are empty. So they can tell you

1:08:24

just some

1:08:26

rain, some urban areas. That might even approach normal rainfall

1:08:28

in certain circumstances or

1:08:30

even more. But further toward

1:08:32

the mountain ranges and as the

1:08:34

storms go over the mountain ranges,

1:08:36

that should receive 234

1:08:38

times more rain, that's not happening. For exactly the reason that the

1:08:41

call for the immune gene

1:08:43

just exposed to

1:08:44

us. Radio

1:08:46

frequency transmissions, microwave transmissions, and

1:08:48

bottom line is that's a core component

1:08:51

of fiber engineering that needs to

1:08:53

be considered. Then this this goes

1:08:56

hand in hand with what what

1:08:58

also came in in the the

1:09:00

hours leading up to tonight show.

1:09:02

This is for another from another

1:09:04

listener out there right now. Brenda. And Brenda says,

1:09:06

Frank, can you please ask Dane? Are they using some sort of frequency?

1:09:08

Which, of course,

1:09:11

we just we just did, but she

1:09:13

goes on to say this. I live so

1:09:15

remotely up here in the wilderness of flathead

1:09:17

National Forest. Just a

1:09:20

few miles from the Canadian border,

1:09:22

and they have been spraying us relentlessly. And I have noticed a high pitched frequency

1:09:24

in my ears shortly afterward.

1:09:26

And I don't hear anything when

1:09:31

they don't. Being up here almost thirty years and

1:09:33

never seen or experienced anything like this,

1:09:35

my doctor says it's

1:09:37

tinnitus, But I have I'm having a hard

1:09:39

time believing that would love some insight

1:09:41

on this as others have concurred. Thanks

1:09:44

so much. Really looking forward to tonight. Show

1:09:46

respectfully Brenda. So tonight is the spring tonight is following

1:09:48

the spring. Have you

1:09:51

heard anything about this?

1:09:55

Yes. I think Brenda is exactly on

1:09:57

track, exactly on target. There are

1:10:00

many who

1:10:02

do hear these frequencies and they're

1:10:05

very mechanized. I

1:10:08

mean, it's in sometimes pulses

1:10:11

or patterns. That are certainly not tinnitus. And

1:10:13

we have a whole medical

1:10:15

industrial community, Frank, as

1:10:17

you know, telling us

1:10:20

their treatments safe and effective when

1:10:22

they're anything but, and yet they're all going along. So when people wonder and

1:10:24

they do, how

1:10:27

could we have many people involved with

1:10:29

this climate engineering Manhattan project. That's exactly what it is. But

1:10:32

they're compartmentalized they

1:10:35

believe what they're told, they do what they're

1:10:37

told in the medical industrial complex is

1:10:39

a stunning example

1:10:42

of exactly that. Continuing even

1:10:44

today, administering a treatment

1:10:46

that they claim is

1:10:49

safe and effective when

1:10:51

it's anything but So we have the human

1:10:53

race. It goes back to the the no room experiments for the listeners to know what

1:10:55

that is. But

1:10:59

the vast majority would if they were

1:11:01

told by somebody who they perceived to be an authority due to horrible things to

1:11:04

innocent people, and

1:11:07

we need to break that

1:11:07

mindset. People need to come

1:11:10

to a point where they

1:11:12

realize

1:11:12

the only thing they

1:11:15

own is their will. And doing the correct

1:11:17

thing with

1:11:17

that will is if that's not why we're here, then why are we

1:11:19

here. And and back to this issue, and

1:11:22

I know seems hopeless. In in many

1:11:24

ways, it

1:11:28

looks very bad. To to put it

1:11:30

very bluntly, the equilibrium period as you

1:11:32

mentioned, the earth will recover. And

1:11:34

one would hope that it would. But we're talking about based on past paleo events of mass extinction

1:11:36

to the world nearly as

1:11:38

severe or as rapid as what's

1:11:43

occurring now with equilibrium periods of ten to

1:11:45

twenty million years. That's a

1:11:47

long time. So

1:11:50

that's a timeframe that means

1:11:52

that that recovery is irrelevant. It's not it's not a

1:11:54

time frame that matters for us. We have to

1:11:58

salvage something of what here. So I would argue again that the highest

1:12:00

mountain is climb one step at a time. We

1:12:02

have to bring this issue to light and

1:12:05

everyone can play a part of that. And when you wake people

1:12:07

up around you, you feel empowered. You're not alone anymore.

1:12:09

And you do that by learning how

1:12:11

to play chess

1:12:13

effectively and efficiently. You don't wanna in the street and point the

1:12:15

sky and rant. That shuts people down. You pass

1:12:18

on credible data from a credible source.

1:12:20

We try to provide that a g and g

1:12:22

wants that org ft less than our cost. We

1:12:25

we provide our printed materials, which are the most effective

1:12:27

tool we know of, with images that shock people to the marrow.

1:12:29

You don't need no need

1:12:31

in dot meteor the damages

1:12:33

we've captured, recorded, we've printed in high quality publications, we pass it on for

1:12:36

less than our costs, our

1:12:38

printed materials to get them into

1:12:40

circulation. And

1:12:43

those tools are extremely effective at waking

1:12:45

a person's immediate surroundings and that

1:12:47

starts to bonfire

1:12:49

of awareness that begins to spend. And

1:12:51

if we all do that and we and we push this issue

1:12:54

to the full light of day, we could

1:12:56

yet alter this equation in the right

1:12:58

direction. We could take a quantum leap

1:13:01

in the right direction. You can allow the

1:13:03

planet to begin to respond on its own to the damage done, like

1:13:05

allowing the human body to respond on its own instead of killing it

1:13:07

with pharmaceuticals. That's it's

1:13:11

the same sort of process. And again, they're using this

1:13:13

as a weapon

1:13:14

period. And if if we can

1:13:17

bring it still Mike, Frank, I would

1:13:19

argue at minimum, we can buy time.

1:13:21

Howard Bauchner: You know, one last thing

1:13:23

I'd like to say unless

1:13:25

along the way something really good comes in from the audience. I I'm

1:13:28

missing things right now, but I can't

1:13:30

be watching all four chat rooms at once

1:13:32

still. We're

1:13:34

talking a lot about what's going on above us.

1:13:37

And then there's also the

1:13:39

question that comes up pretty infrequently

1:13:41

and that is what is going

1:13:43

on below name earthquakes seismic weapons. I

1:13:45

know that the concept of seismic weapons have been

1:13:48

around since

1:13:51

Tesla, at least. And for a while,

1:13:53

I believe it was two thousand seventeen or eighteen, we had a resurgence of talks

1:13:55

in the subject because of

1:13:57

all that weirdness that was

1:14:00

going on around China

1:14:02

Lake, which I under I

1:14:04

understand was the and probably still

1:14:06

is the researcher laboratory location for a

1:14:08

lot of the weather

1:14:10

weapons that were rolled out during Operation Popeye in in in Vietnam. So

1:14:16

as far as the the ground

1:14:18

beneath us goes, seismic weapons and

1:14:21

maybe not even things we're doing intentionally,

1:14:23

but things that are going to

1:14:26

have bad risk, bad

1:14:28

fallout from drilling

1:14:31

and mining and I know

1:14:34

people like Dutch since talk a lot about talk a lot about

1:14:36

oil operations and fracking

1:14:38

operations that are that are

1:14:43

are setting us up for disaster alongside a

1:14:45

certain fault lines and

1:14:47

stuff. But from

1:14:50

AII would say from a geoengineering slash

1:14:53

weather warfare aspect looking

1:14:55

below our feet, how

1:14:58

much how much credit how much the time

1:15:00

do

1:15:01

you pay to

1:15:04

that? You're completely

1:15:06

correct again. And the same weapons of mass destruction that are

1:15:08

used to heat the atmosphere can and

1:15:11

we believe are being used

1:15:14

to trigger seismic activity under certain

1:15:16

circumstances. Let me give some

1:15:18

examples. We have institutions as

1:15:20

credible as

1:15:21

MIT. I'm sure your listeners

1:15:23

know who MIT

1:15:24

is. Acknowledging, for example, in the twenty

1:15:26

eleven Fukushima quake, Japanese quake, that there was,

1:15:32

quote, extremely autonomous atmospheric heating directly

1:15:34

above the epicenter for days

1:15:36

prior to the quake.

1:15:38

They can't explain that heating

1:15:40

They try to hypothesize that somehow this tectonic pressure caused the

1:15:42

atmospheric pressure caused the atmospheric heat. That is a real reach on

1:15:45

their part. They said we don't have another answer because

1:15:47

we're not gonna tell the truth. That's

1:15:51

exactly what we would expect when we see

1:15:53

an eye on a skier signal bounced

1:15:55

off the now reflective atmosphere

1:15:57

spring particulates and that signal goes right back down into stratum. Frank, what happens

1:15:59

when you heat something long enough? What happens when you put something

1:16:01

in a microwave oven

1:16:04

long

1:16:04

enough? Ft

1:16:06

blows up. Doesn't

1:16:07

it? Expands and blows up. And

1:16:10

when you hit a seismicly sensitive

1:16:12

very good, the

1:16:14

ability of frequency transmissions to create

1:16:16

seismic activity in a seismic and sensitive

1:16:18

zone is absolutely undisputed science. To back this

1:16:22

up a bit further, was personal friends with

1:16:24

former US Army General,

1:16:26

Bert Stoebelein, highest ranking

1:16:29

US official to

1:16:32

speak out. About what really happened to

1:16:34

nine eleven. And General Burke told me that his pentagon context told

1:16:36

him that

1:16:39

the Fukushima, the Japanese quake, was intended as

1:16:41

a shot across Japan's valve

1:16:44

because they were starting to ally

1:16:46

with their regional

1:16:47

partners. The US did not want that,

1:16:49

would not allow that,

1:16:50

that they didn't intend the Fukushima meltdown. But when you cause a nine point

1:16:52

zero, bad things happen.

1:16:55

So again, that's the sort

1:16:57

of haphazard mentality in military industrial complex. And for your listeners, Frank, that know what Prime

1:17:01

was. That's

1:17:04

the detonation of

1:17:06

hydrogen bombs in the magnetosphere, the damage from which is still reverberating today, no

1:17:09

idea what that

1:17:12

would do. They

1:17:14

thought it could collapse the entire atmosphere, but they

1:17:16

did it anywhere. That's the mentality

1:17:18

we're dealing with. So can

1:17:22

installations I answer heaters like hearth be

1:17:24

used to trigger seismic activity. Answer

1:17:26

is yes. And we have a full

1:17:29

report of

1:17:29

that. James, you watch that org.

1:17:31

Is titled

1:17:32

are climate engineering weapons

1:17:34

of mass destruction being

1:17:37

used to trigger cash traffic earthquakes. I

1:17:39

think that's the name of the title. We have other corroborating

1:17:41

circumstances like US officials being pulled out of

1:17:44

Haiti, right before the quake. US

1:17:46

officials being pulled out of Christchurch, New

1:17:48

Zealand, hours before the

1:17:50

quake, including John Carey. How do they know? Why did they leave one head on the meeting schedule? I

1:17:52

mean, how many dots do

1:17:54

we need to connect

1:17:55

here? So The

1:17:58

train is very much off the rails. All your points

1:18:00

are valid, and they are backed

1:18:02

up by credible science. I can't I

1:18:04

will I can't really thank you enough

1:18:07

for being honest with us here tonight, Dane. It's it's been it's been talking with

1:18:09

you. And so

1:18:11

much that was on

1:18:13

my mind, at least with what's

1:18:15

going on in very pertinent ways right

1:18:18

now, of course, the winters, the the Christmas

1:18:20

storm, what is supposedly

1:18:22

heading to the San Francisco Bay area in the next couple of days. And you know,

1:18:24

just it's a new year

1:18:26

trying to look out toward what

1:18:31

may be on the menu for the next twelve months and

1:18:33

and what our role and all of it is

1:18:35

going to be. I I'd love to

1:18:37

have you back again. And I don't I don't

1:18:39

if there's anything else that you like to people with as we take

1:18:42

off for this this intermission

1:18:44

break, but

1:18:46

III really appreciate all this. And I cannot wait to

1:18:48

air the dimming after this

1:18:51

show concludes in about

1:18:53

forty five minutes from now. In your final words,

1:18:55

if there's anything you wanna say also about that particular

1:18:58

the the creation of that particular movie,

1:19:01

go right ahead again and and I I look forward to

1:19:03

to having you back. Well, the gratitude's

1:19:06

mine, Frank. Again, without

1:19:10

voices like yours, would not be able to bring this issue to the full line of

1:19:12

day. So this is definitely a team effort. All of us

1:19:14

working together. All of us spoke in the wheel. A

1:19:17

tremendous amount of effort and energy winner in the dimming and resources.

1:19:19

I'm grateful to everybody was a part of that. Thank you for helping us

1:19:21

to bring that film to light, which we made available

1:19:24

for free

1:19:26

in a moment done in spite of the fact that we spent way

1:19:28

into six figures creating that film for free

1:19:30

the moment it was done. And what I

1:19:33

would encourage people to remember that we are not helpless and

1:19:35

those in power are not gods. But if we stand together

1:19:39

and if we go

1:19:42

about this battle effectively and efficiently as

1:19:45

if we're playing chess and we are, and

1:19:47

we learn how to play well we

1:19:49

can yet alter the outcome of what's coming. The whole page of jingeringwipes dot org is

1:19:51

the activist suggestions

1:19:56

link specific instructions on how each of

1:19:58

us can effectively and efficiently move this fight forward. Again,

1:20:00

we are not

1:20:03

powerless. Encourage everyone to Remember

1:20:07

that, press forward. Make

1:20:09

every day counts.

1:20:10

Make their voice heard. Thank you,

1:20:12

Frank.

1:20:13

Wonderful. Thank so much, Dane, watch

1:20:15

dot org. Have a wonderful night, sir. We'll talk soon. Thank

1:20:19

you. Be well. Alright, ladies

1:20:21

and gentlemen. So we are going to take a intermission break right here. Go

1:20:24

and check out

1:20:26

the website. I have Deane's

1:20:29

website linked in the description of this episode. And when we come

1:20:31

back, your calls, your super chats, and also

1:20:33

just a reminder, ladies and gents,

1:20:36

it's so important.

1:20:39

It's so important to support independent

1:20:42

media that you enjoy

1:20:44

because these types of talks

1:20:46

are not really being done anywhere

1:20:48

in a mainstream way. I know there's a lot of

1:20:50

great people out there doing it. So whenever you find a show that really tickles

1:20:53

your fancy and

1:20:55

you feel comfortable like

1:20:58

an old pair of shoes, a well loved hat. Whatever it is, show them gratitude by becoming a supporter,

1:21:03

especially this show the bare minimum,

1:21:06

please give this episode a thumbs up. Hit the rumble button. Like it. That

1:21:11

helps us right now in the now for the

1:21:13

show to be suggested to other subscribers. It'll move up in the

1:21:16

suggested for everybody.

1:21:18

And we'll we'll meet new friends will

1:21:20

say hello to old friends who haven't seen us, suggested in

1:21:22

a while. So at the very least, do that,

1:21:26

share it, give it a nice review and some five

1:21:28

stars on iTunes and Spotify. Everything else

1:21:30

can be found quite frankly,

1:21:33

dot TV, including how you can

1:21:35

become a sponsor. Right there on the sponsorist tab, I have

1:21:38

I have postcard sponsorships

1:21:40

opened, Polaroid,

1:21:43

and much more That's that's all I

1:21:45

got for you right now. I really enjoy I really enjoy what we do, and I can't wait to come

1:21:47

back from break. So

1:21:51

don't go anywhere. Heading out,

1:21:56

but we're

1:21:59

coming back.

1:22:02

Welcome to Intermission. She'll

1:22:07

be right back. Yeah.

1:22:19

Good emission. Yeah.

1:22:35

Good admission. Now

1:22:59

enter Quite

1:23:03

frankly. Quite frankly. Quite frankly. Quite frankly.

1:23:06

Quite frankly. Quite frankly. Quite

1:23:08

frankly. Quite

1:23:11

frankly. Quite frankly. Quite frankly.

1:23:15

Quite frankly.

1:23:17

Quite frankly.

1:23:20

Quite frankly. Frankly.

1:23:22

Quite

1:23:22

frankly.

1:23:22

Quite frankly. Quite frankly. Quite frankly. Quite frankly. We all support

1:23:23

quite frankly. It's

1:23:27

so brand new. Not

1:23:30

quite. Quite frankly and Roma Adalia.

1:23:33

I really like you. You're very

1:23:35

smart. So everybody watch quite

1:23:38

frankly. With Frank.

1:23:54

Oh, dare you.

1:24:00

Okay.

1:24:12

So

1:24:13

the lines are open. It's eight twenty PM. We'll take

1:24:15

a break in about ten fifteen minutes

1:24:20

or something like that. I wanna take

1:24:22

some calls and I want to go into the superchats and just gauge some reaction.

1:24:29

Would love to do that with

1:24:31

all of you. 9145956953

1:24:35

We are going to We're

1:24:38

gonna go into our superchats first, then we'll take those calls. But I wanna put the

1:24:40

lineup so everybody

1:24:43

knows to get their

1:24:46

phones ready to go. Alright.

1:24:49

First one up is stow

1:24:51

stoops. It's great Wednesday, Frank. Well,

1:24:53

thank you. I think it was

1:24:55

a great one. Had a really fun time.

1:24:58

I've heard Dane Wigginton all over the place. I've heard him on some of my favorite

1:25:00

talk radio shows and

1:25:02

podcasts. And like I said,

1:25:06

You start poking around into what's going on

1:25:08

in the atmosphere, what's going on in

1:25:10

the halls of government, what's going on

1:25:12

all throughout history, has not been written about.

1:25:15

You come across figures like Dane and their work on their websites, and it just your rotation

1:25:20

and familiar you're in many

1:25:22

ways. So it's always nice to to do that. Always.

1:25:27

Alright. Over to RockFIN, we've got a couple

1:25:30

of tips over there. Pragmatic

1:25:32

peacock. Says on

1:25:34

the Christmas weather, the

1:25:36

more the most traveled season,

1:25:38

I suspect it was intentional to keep people home. Geoengineering is real. Yo.

1:25:41

Todd Fife says I've

1:25:43

been following Dane's since

1:25:46

two thousand seven. Glad you got him on.

1:25:49

I know a lot of people

1:25:51

were excited. Free Mind says

1:25:53

they've been spraying very

1:25:55

heavily here in Florida, grid patterned, equally

1:25:57

distance apart like a sheet of graph paper. I've

1:25:59

seen the spray go on

1:26:01

and off creating dotted

1:26:04

lines too, Nasty, hazy

1:26:06

gray lines or gray gray skies shortly follow as opposed to

1:26:09

days that they

1:26:12

don't spray. That are crystal clear

1:26:14

in blue skies. I think people are worsening allergies are linked to metals and chemical

1:26:16

sprays. As

1:26:19

well. I've gotten that free mind. I've gotten

1:26:22

that very same thing. Those

1:26:24

are wonderful rock fin

1:26:27

tipers. I've gotten that very same

1:26:29

thing told to me by friends of mine in the Midwest, friends of

1:26:31

mine in that that the Kansas

1:26:35

City, Missouri area. That

1:26:38

you'll get bluish of the blue and then

1:26:40

sometimes there's just a couple of weeks

1:26:43

where they take off. Bluish of the

1:26:45

blue and you just realize it's It's real.

1:26:47

Ira Wynn Zoso dude was going on, I

1:26:49

think, his first at least the

1:26:51

first broadcast cross country trip a

1:26:53

few years ago, not the one

1:26:55

that he ended coming here

1:26:58

in, but I think

1:27:00

maybe in twenty twenty, he stopped

1:27:02

somewhere in the southwest and just

1:27:06

took note of with the camera, the

1:27:09

sky, just the

1:27:11

deepest blue these these

1:27:14

fluffy, beautiful clouds, the sun looked different. Everything looked different.

1:27:17

It really

1:27:20

does seem like everything

1:27:22

is coming through AAA messed up Instagram filter.

1:27:28

Like, I messed up Instagram filter has

1:27:30

been put above us, so about a mile in the sky or whatever the hell it is. It's

1:27:35

it's for real. It's for

1:27:38

real. And we get those same of patterns here New as well.

1:27:40

No doubt. No doubt.

1:27:43

So let's go into hour.

1:27:48

See what's going on. We already we

1:27:50

already got a wonderful wonderful submission

1:27:52

from, oh, here's SF Green

1:27:55

Eye. Says in San Fran, storm blowing up a

1:27:57

whopper. Hope the trees

1:27:59

stay standing. So

1:28:02

SF Green eyes who's been watching the show for quite a while now.

1:28:05

They feel the

1:28:08

storm coming. Storm

1:28:11

is arriving. On

1:28:14

fox hold. On

1:28:16

fox hold, that'll give some people

1:28:18

a little more time to get falling in.

1:28:21

There's also discord there. Let's see.

1:28:23

Up to the top. Jay Jewel,

1:28:25

thank you so much. Chai

1:28:27

Poss and thank you AGAIN.

1:28:30

THESE ARE ALL TIPPED THAT

1:28:32

ARE COMING IN. KATB, SHAWN JOE HOMGOYS HAS

1:28:34

FINALLY GOT COVID. ONLY SYMPTOM IS THAT

1:28:38

vinegar smells like ammonia. Glad

1:28:40

I'm not vax. That's the only

1:28:42

symptom you got. Wow. These later

1:28:45

variants must be getting weaker

1:28:47

and weaker and weaker. Getting sick sucks, ladies

1:28:49

and gentlemen, please do everything you can to keep yourself healthy and

1:28:51

support your immune system and

1:28:55

keep toxins out of your body, a hinder

1:28:57

ft all. I even

1:29:00

have a during

1:29:03

the wintertime. During the summer, I

1:29:05

don't wanna have any sugar. I

1:29:07

don't want anything. I like

1:29:09

unsweetened iced teas. Every once

1:29:12

a while, lemonade or or something

1:29:14

like that. I I like, you know, I eat fructose. I eat fruit.

1:29:19

On a sliding scale of how much physical activity I'm

1:29:21

gonna have for that day,

1:29:24

apples and plums and pears

1:29:26

and things like that. I love

1:29:28

those. But when it

1:29:30

comes to the the wintertime, there is just something inside of at least,

1:29:32

that says, have an

1:29:35

extra cookie US hole. It's

1:29:39

the wintertime. So but

1:29:42

you have to understand

1:29:44

sugar in all

1:29:47

of its forms. In the in the bread

1:29:49

that you eat, the drinks that you have, the sweat, everything, that

1:29:51

is really just something that

1:29:53

is works against you, especially

1:29:56

immune wise, especially

1:29:58

during flu season when you're not getting out

1:30:00

there in the sun as much, there's

1:30:02

just a lot less happening there. So

1:30:05

Keep yourself keep yourself

1:30:07

nice and strong. Paulie,

1:30:13

9363 Thank you.

1:30:15

Paulie, again, the weather is controlled by our collective intent. Pod

1:30:21

Hermit. Thank you, pod Hermit.

1:30:23

Pod Hermit subscribed.

1:30:26

That's wonderful to see.

1:30:28

Duda Man's is great topic

1:30:30

Geoengineering. Jay Jules, as I watched the trees die in Dane's area,

1:30:33

I used to drive

1:30:35

California, Oregon monthly. And

1:30:39

thank you again for asking my

1:30:41

question, Frank's as Jay Jewel. That

1:30:43

that was the u that

1:30:45

was the Eugene Oregon question. Thank you

1:30:47

for being out there, Juul.

1:30:50

Chai Posse says thanks

1:30:52

Frank for having Dane on

1:30:54

bringing all this evil

1:30:56

into the light. Robert

1:30:59

Sonns? Thank you. And Pipe.

1:31:02

Good to see you again, my

1:31:04

friend. Hanging out. Having a good time. Alright. Let's take

1:31:06

a call. Let's take a call. 760

1:31:11

you're on the air. this? 760

1:31:14

do you hear me? Yes.

1:31:19

I do. How are you doing, Frank? I'm

1:31:21

doing

1:31:21

well. Who am I

1:31:23

speaking with? This is Abraham

1:31:25

from Southern California. Another

1:31:27

Abraham. Welcome to the show Abraham.

1:31:29

Hi. When it

1:31:32

comes to geo engineered

1:31:34

weather, I'm in up in the LA area right now for

1:31:37

work. And we're getting

1:31:40

tremendous amounts of

1:31:42

rain, like, more

1:31:42

than we usually ever get.

1:31:44

Over the New Year's weekend, I got

1:31:46

three inches of rain in my house.

1:31:48

The weather forecast said an inch and

1:31:51

a

1:31:51

half. Wow.

1:31:51

So yeah. And for

1:31:54

weather engineering, I don't understand

1:31:56

people deny

1:31:59

it and go, hey. No. It's not real. It's not this that.

1:32:01

I was talking with a friend about this, and

1:32:03

he said Saudi Arabia just

1:32:05

came out and said

1:32:07

that they're actively cloud

1:32:09

seating. Oh, yes. And I found yes. It

1:32:11

did. I found a book at

1:32:16

a library this was probably three

1:32:18

or four years ago, but the

1:32:19

book was copyrighted in, like, nineteen eighty ish

1:32:21

right about there. And

1:32:23

it was a

1:32:25

a little pamphlet type book. And I was like,

1:32:27

oh, they're giving it away for you. They're gonna throw it away, and I

1:32:29

put through it.

1:32:30

And it has, like, three or four pages on cloud seeding. I'm like,

1:32:32

wait. This

1:32:35

was copyrighted when and this was actively

1:32:37

published. It was in

1:32:39

a library.

1:32:39

And I'm going, but yet, people still deny

1:32:42

it. It's so hard for me to believe

1:32:44

that people night, yet there's so much

1:32:46

overwhelming

1:32:46

evidence that

1:32:46

it's being done. 0II and it's

1:32:47

and it's a great point

1:32:50

to keep bringing up to people

1:32:52

that you know, you

1:32:54

don't have to I mean, sometimes, I guess, you have to be a little bit of a broken record, but they figured

1:32:56

out how to

1:32:59

use this technology to

1:33:02

give them military advantages in a war in the nineteen sixties. If they've already

1:33:04

successfully weaponized this thing

1:33:07

over fifty years ago, then

1:33:11

what the hell do you think that they're doing along the

1:33:13

way to achieve any

1:33:15

other smaller piecemeal

1:33:20

political objective? On a global

1:33:22

scale. And that's not to even take away from the fact that, like you said, in Saudi Arabia,

1:33:24

which I have right here, this

1:33:26

is from April of this year.

1:33:30

Saudi Arabia launches cloud seeding

1:33:32

operation over three cities to increase let rainfall.

1:33:34

This is nothing I wouldn't even

1:33:36

say that this is anything that

1:33:38

is really very malicious. It's just that everywhere

1:33:40

you wanna look, we know that

1:33:42

the Russians and the Chinese, they

1:33:45

have use cloud seeding operations to

1:33:47

make sure that very important cultural events would not be out or

1:33:50

had any adverse weather

1:33:53

ruin whatever whatever they had planned

1:33:55

for either competitive events cultural celebrations or

1:33:59

things like that. Doesn't

1:34:02

have to be a malicious thing, but

1:34:04

there are reminders everywhere that this

1:34:06

technology has been around for a very,

1:34:08

very long time it's used in very

1:34:10

casual ways, and it was weaponized a long time ago. And one other thing you should know is

1:34:12

that if you have not

1:34:15

taken the psychological profile, of

1:34:19

the people who are trying to to to

1:34:21

really consolidate all of their

1:34:23

influence on on world affairs

1:34:25

right

1:34:25

now, they don't give a

1:34:27

shit about anything. Why why wouldn't they

1:34:29

dose

1:34:30

it? You know? No.

1:34:31

Especially seeing how much they're trying to

1:34:33

cover it up,

1:34:35

call it a a conspiracy theory. Oh, you're

1:34:37

all

1:34:38

crazy. Those aren't chemtrails. That's just Contrails. I was

1:34:40

said

1:34:41

in how this was

1:34:43

a couple years ago, and there were

1:34:45

two planes flying over. And there's a plane flying, and you can see a

1:34:47

contra. And that contra went out I

1:34:51

don't know. Maybe five or six football lengths

1:34:53

behind the plane, and it

1:34:56

immediately disappeared.

1:34:58

You know, a

1:34:59

couple miles south of that plane, there was another

1:35:01

plane and that contrail did not disappear at

1:35:03

all. And looking at them side by side,

1:35:06

you go, both planes are roughly at the

1:35:08

same altitude because perspective wise, they looked

1:35:10

the same size, same size

1:35:11

playing. And going, why is that one not

1:35:15

dissipating,

1:35:15

like, the regular, you seven

1:35:15

forty seven that's driving flying to wherever

1:35:18

it's going. And but, yeah, people I

1:35:20

don't know.

1:35:21

Do people not look up at

1:35:23

the sky anymore? It's

1:35:26

because I was homeschooled, and I was always outside. It's like, alright, you're done with school. Get outside. Don't come back until dinner time.

1:35:28

And I had nothing better to do as

1:35:30

a kid other than, hey, what's up there?

1:35:35

You know, how does common sense perspective,

1:35:37

you know, is gonna give you at

1:35:40

least something go, hey, that's a

1:35:42

little interesting. That isn't lying in

1:35:44

what lining up with what

1:35:46

I learned in science classes on just how combustion engine works. Yeah.

1:35:51

Well, yeah, there's a lot there's a of things that really bring you to to

1:35:54

I mean, you don't as we've

1:35:58

said many times in the past, It's not even necessarily that you

1:36:00

have to go away to to

1:36:02

school for however many years. Sometimes

1:36:04

all you have

1:36:07

to do is recall some of the

1:36:09

basic earth science classes we had when we were all

1:36:11

third and fourth grade years ago. And

1:36:13

when when we

1:36:16

learned about how dangerous carbon dioxide was. We didn't learn

1:36:18

it was dangerous. We learned that it was essential

1:36:24

for keeping the world green, that it was plant food. And now

1:36:26

and now we need to you you would think that if any if we

1:36:28

had a real carbon

1:36:30

dioxide problem on the planet,

1:36:32

The first thing everybody would say is,

1:36:35

alright. Well, we're gonna plant eighteen billion trees, and we'll be fine. But no.

1:36:37

No. They they need

1:36:39

us to give up slice

1:36:42

slice our throats. Thank you for the call Abraham. Slice our throats economically. Give up all of our

1:36:44

sovereignty on a nation level

1:36:46

and and and pledge our lives

1:36:50

and our fortunes and our families and and

1:36:52

our future children because they want us

1:36:54

to go childless as well

1:36:58

to a collective international tribunal

1:37:00

of demons. That's

1:37:03

that's the more reasonable approach

1:37:06

to carbon dioxide apparently. That's the more reasonable approach. Speaking of

1:37:12

of Saudi Arabia,

1:37:14

by the way, you remember we

1:37:16

were talking about that line project. The futuristic desert city, I

1:37:18

just had to pick it up over here because

1:37:23

they have begun construction, that they

1:37:26

were gonna build this

1:37:28

gigantic mirrored

1:37:32

wall And inside is just going

1:37:34

to be contained pretty much a terrarium for people to live in.

1:37:39

That there's gonna be I don't know how many like, a mega city that is just going

1:37:41

to be a line right across the

1:37:44

the desert. Is

1:37:46

going to be able to be a self contained living space

1:37:49

with all types of I

1:37:52

don't know. Places

1:37:54

to live and shop and

1:37:56

eat and and, like I said, a

1:37:58

terrarium, there's going to be natural

1:38:02

greenery and flowing water and all that

1:38:04

stuff to make the desert a little bit more

1:38:07

livable. We were talking about it and

1:38:09

I think it was last

1:38:11

year probably sometime around Sometime during

1:38:13

the summer, I remember bringing up on a Friday night when Matt was

1:38:15

here, I think. Anyway,

1:38:20

drone footage reveals since he we've

1:38:23

just brought up Saudi Arabia. That

1:38:30

the line has begun, they

1:38:32

say? Look,

1:38:37

heavy equipment is

1:38:39

coming in. I So

1:38:53

we'll see. I guess we'll see. I wonder how

1:38:55

much cloud seeing they're going

1:38:57

to do over

1:39:00

there or are they going to make sure that

1:39:02

it stays extremely dry during the construction? Oh, before we take some more calls, I

1:39:04

even see that

1:39:06

Jim Lee tried calling So

1:39:08

gotta get get the handle. You know what?

1:39:10

We're gonna do this. I'm gonna take a quick break then we'll come back. I got the picture. Thank you to

1:39:13

some people in

1:39:16

the Discord. Thankfully, some people in the Discord

1:39:18

helped me out, and we are able to see the

1:39:21

picture of the

1:39:24

mother who cyberbullying her child. There she is. Doesn't

1:39:26

she look like a a nut job? That is a deeply

1:39:28

disturbed That's

1:39:31

probably the the the the face that she had

1:39:33

on while she was sitting next to her daughter

1:39:35

on the couch cyberbullying

1:39:40

her. Like, what was it inside?

1:39:42

III the the mix of emotions that was going on inside this dog face.

1:39:45

His dog

1:39:48

faces brain. Man,

1:39:50

I feel bad. So I feel bad

1:39:53

for the daughter. I wish we knew where

1:39:55

she was. I I don't wanna docs or

1:39:57

anything like that, but I almost wanna say,

1:39:59

hey, listen. We'll always have a friend over here. And

1:40:02

I don't know.

1:40:05

You wanna play age

1:40:07

empires or something like that. I've got age of empires on steam and

1:40:10

we can play against each

1:40:12

other on steam and it'll, you know, just

1:40:14

to have a you wanna have a

1:40:16

normal experience, a social

1:40:18

experience. On the internet, I'm not your

1:40:24

mother. I just feel so bad. I mean,

1:40:26

there's one you get bullied I mean, I've I got bullied mercilessly.

1:40:28

I got bullied when

1:40:30

I was young. It sucks.

1:40:34

Not fun at all, but

1:40:36

sometimes it's rite of passage

1:40:38

and you get thick skin

1:40:40

and you learn a little bit

1:40:42

about people and then you grow up

1:40:44

to watch those people turn into absolute fucking rejects and losers. That's

1:40:46

always amazing to see them turn into something Pathetic.

1:40:51

That's a great thing. You start learning

1:40:54

about karma. You start learning about

1:40:56

things. But for

1:40:58

that to be a

1:41:00

parent, that's just like I

1:41:02

wanna I just wanna be your I'm like, hey. friend over here.

1:41:08

No. She needs therapy. She needs she

1:41:10

needs a professional. She doesn't need me. And a an old video game from nineteen

1:41:13

ninety

1:41:14

five. She needs therapy.

1:41:16

When that happens

1:41:17

to you from a mother. Alright. We'll be right back. Don't go anywhere.

1:41:19

We still have some time to kill, and it's gonna

1:41:21

be a fun, fun, end

1:41:24

run. Blow and

1:41:26

convert the energy into heat. How

1:41:29

a capacitor stores energy

1:41:31

in form of electric fields

1:41:33

between electric chargers and can

1:41:36

later release and when a load

1:41:38

is

1:41:39

connected between inductors, store energy in the form

1:41:43

of magnetic fields. And yeah, I guess every

1:41:46

wire has a resistance to As you know, a speaker is a magnet and a coil that

1:41:48

when you excite

1:41:51

the coil with and AC voltage, it

1:41:53

vibrates at the same frequency. And that's why they say a capacitor

1:41:56

block's DC

1:41:59

but an inductor blocks AC. Let me demonstrate.

1:42:01

If

1:42:01

I plug it into the

1:42:04

box, directly

1:42:08

voltage, I made it simple circuit

1:42:09

and I'll plug it in. Now the circuit is hot and the

1:42:11

voltages of this

1:42:15

Now I have

1:42:15

replaced the capacitor on my circuit

1:42:18

and I'll plug it in.

1:42:23

Now I enable the power supply. Go.

1:42:32

Go. Shea lot more, and

1:42:34

we can easily

1:42:39

connect them together. Then we

1:42:42

unscrew the outlet and pull it out.

1:42:48

I don't

1:42:50

know. You're cool.

1:42:51

Yep. You're

1:42:53

cool. Did you

1:42:56

say what's QF

1:42:59

TV. Ft, gonna need to go over there

1:43:01

and watch QF TV Mondays,

1:43:03

Wednesdays, Fridays, right after

1:43:05

quite frankly. Okay. Oh, you're definitely

1:43:07

cool. Only on play friendly

1:43:10

dot tv powered by box

1:43:12

hole. Oh,

1:43:14

the music I had set aside was

1:43:17

right there. Stupid

1:43:19

dumbass. Stupid dummy. I'm

1:43:22

cursing less in twenty twenty three for the children. A few moments

1:43:24

later. K. Shop

1:43:27

a fuck up. Poor

1:43:31

I know I'm on the fucking terror watch list. You can suck my

1:43:33

fucking fucking shut the fuck

1:43:35

up. Suck my come

1:43:37

from me. Well, there's no

1:43:40

oh, no unfucking unfitting with the wall. We've

1:43:42

seen that these motherfuckers don't give a fuck about us.

1:43:48

These motherfuckers impairments came and get

1:43:50

them. What the shut the up. I don't

1:43:54

give a but you. I'm gonna hold my balls, talk

1:43:56

my fucking my sex life. They

1:43:58

never been better. Shut the up.

1:44:01

King Bau, Joel,

1:44:03

I can't wait have you back on the show.

1:44:05

You've been wonderful tonight, and and thank you for everything, my man. Frank says, I'm gonna watch my languages

1:44:08

here. King Bau

1:44:10

says hold my beer. I'm

1:44:14

sorry, children. A little bar talk

1:44:16

tonight. We'll be right back. Don't go anywhere.

1:44:18

Gonna be a good night. Still is,

1:44:21

always was. Call me. I wanna know what color

1:44:23

you brought a hole in. Here's

1:44:48

the question. Will I ever

1:44:50

grow up? Somebody just said,

1:44:52

boy, I sure hope

1:44:55

so, Frank, lemon face. If

1:44:57

I grow up, this show is over. Do you understand

1:45:00

that? You

1:45:03

should be praying every

1:45:06

night. Father and Heather, please. Please whatever you do.

1:45:09

Don't have Frank

1:45:12

grow up. Or

1:45:15

the show is over. Okay.

1:45:24

Alright. So let's go

1:45:26

let's go let's go and take some calls. It

1:45:32

is eight forty two. We have fifteen minutes

1:45:34

left, 91459569539145956953

1:45:43

Let's Hey. Let's

1:45:46

see ft. Hold on.

1:45:48

There's a couple what's going

1:45:50

on with Skype over here. I had to clear some out. Come

1:45:57

on now. Come on.

1:46:00

Wait. Wait. Wait.

1:46:03

What the hell? I

1:46:07

keep getting hold

1:46:09

on. I'm just

1:46:12

gonna call. Top

1:46:15

off,

1:46:16

man. Hey, what's going on, Jim Lee? III

1:46:18

got a couple of your calls

1:46:21

there for some reason. It kept saying decline

1:46:23

and I wasn't declining them. I am so surprised

1:46:25

to hear from you tonight, but this is

1:46:27

just this is just so

1:46:29

appropriate to have too well known own figures in

1:46:31

the geoengineering weather modification world

1:46:34

on the same show?

1:46:37

Well, I

1:46:40

gotta say very proud

1:46:42

of you. You did a great job. And I also I'm very proud of Dane

1:46:44

tonight. Wait.

1:46:48

Hold on. Hold on. Hold on. Hold on.

1:46:51

Hold on. Where can you call me from

1:46:53

real quick that is

1:46:55

not your phone? You

1:46:58

want me to hit Skype? That would

1:47:00

be wonderful because you're you're bouncing in and

1:47:02

out. I just called whatever whatever

1:47:05

number I had on on file

1:47:07

because didn't want ft. Look

1:47:10

for your way back.

1:47:13

Alright. Okay.

1:47:14

Yeah. Wondering. Let's

1:47:17

see here. Hold on

1:47:19

a second. One

1:47:23

second. Wanna see what Jim has say because this is

1:47:25

a a peer of it.

1:47:27

They are peers. But

1:47:32

hold on. Let's get

1:47:35

a little bit

1:47:38

of waiting music here.

1:47:49

Alright. Ghibli, are you there? I am. All that

1:47:51

sounds better. That sounds a lot better. Okay. So

1:47:56

What do you think? What do

1:47:59

you what

1:47:59

do you think about tonight's show? You

1:48:01

fucking nailed it, and I gotta give props

1:48:04

to Dane.

1:48:06

I will be very generous

1:48:08

and say that I agreed with ninety

1:48:10

five percent of what he had to

1:48:12

say tonight.

1:48:13

You know, everybody in Chad already

1:48:15

knows our long history. But

1:48:20

you know

1:48:21

what? It's a new year. It's new me. It's a

1:48:23

new dame. But we should

1:48:25

all be working together on

1:48:28

this

1:48:28

anyway. III

1:48:31

came with an open mind and I

1:48:33

said, you know

1:48:34

what? If

1:48:34

there's a little terminology difference or

1:48:37

whatever, just try

1:48:39

to focus on what Dane is actually

1:48:41

saying. And I think

1:48:42

that he you really fucking nailed it. And

1:48:43

you nailed it.

1:48:46

You had great questions.

1:48:49

I could see where, you know,

1:48:51

some of our previous conversations you

1:48:53

you brought those

1:48:54

up. That was freaking epic. I tried super chatting,

1:48:56

like,

1:48:59

for a good fifteen damn minutes on three

1:49:01

different browsers just so I could

1:49:03

I got ft.

1:49:06

Thank you, Dane. While you were alive and I failed miserably.

1:49:08

Oh, that would have been a good moment

1:49:10

there because, yeah, I didn't know I

1:49:14

didn't know that that you guys had any

1:49:16

any kind of professional

1:49:19

differences on on on the issues

1:49:21

or anything like that until

1:49:23

he was booked, and and and people started saying, oh, that'll be interesting to see what

1:49:26

Jim Jim Lee had to say. I'm like, why?

1:49:28

And so I I heard about this now,

1:49:30

but I I gotta say, this is a

1:49:32

this is a very

1:49:34

pleasant way to end the show. And I'm so so let's let's talk alright. Well, we were talking about

1:49:36

what do you think is

1:49:38

the the the biggest takeaway from

1:49:42

tonight then. You said about ninety five percent of it

1:49:44

you were a hundred percent on board with.

1:49:46

Is what would you differ with?

1:49:49

I mean, just just some of the

1:49:51

smaller. I mean, at the end of the day, you know, saying things

1:49:55

like harp is or, you

1:49:57

know, high pressure domes are caused by heart. Okay. That's not really how it happens, but

1:50:00

whatever. Okay?

1:50:04

So, like, you

1:50:06

know, I think that Dane's strongest

1:50:08

attribute is that he

1:50:10

has a loud

1:50:11

voice. He's very

1:50:14

consistent. And

1:50:14

he opens a lot of people's eyes

1:50:17

and ears to this

1:50:19

topic. And

1:50:20

if, you know, people

1:50:23

wanna get real technical

1:50:24

and they wanna see, you

1:50:26

know, literally scientists quoting my work because

1:50:28

I understand the technology.

1:50:30

That's a whole different thing.

1:50:33

So stay in my lane. Dane can stay in his lane. We can all

1:50:36

you know,

1:50:40

work towards bringing

1:50:43

global attention to something

1:50:45

that is so serious.

1:50:47

These fucking climate change

1:50:50

technocrat bullshit artists that are

1:50:52

out there to control

1:50:54

every resource on the

1:50:56

planet. That's who we

1:50:58

should be focusing on. But the question I wanted to ask Dane, which I've never gotten answer

1:51:03

to, is

1:51:04

what is your solution? You started

1:51:06

to hen at that with the tree

1:51:07

thing. And, you know, that's that's the

1:51:10

that's my been my my biggest

1:51:14

sticking point with Ains,

1:51:16

I'd like to see

1:51:18

more solutions based discussions

1:51:20

coming

1:51:22

from him or discussions with other people

1:51:24

who are also in this

1:51:26

movement about what the solution should

1:51:28

be. You know what my

1:51:30

solution is. I

1:51:31

don't know that my solution is correct. So

1:51:34

the Environmental Modification Accountability

1:51:37

Act, which is

1:51:38

an add on to the weather warfare ban

1:51:40

of nineteen

1:51:41

seventy eight. I don't trust the United

1:51:43

Nations either, so I don't know that

1:51:45

it's a fuck good idea, but it's

1:51:47

a start towards transparency. I think

1:51:50

that we should all be

1:51:52

focused more in this in

1:51:54

twenty twenty three and going forward, there's

1:51:56

enough of us that

1:51:58

know about this

1:51:59

topic,

1:52:00

to do something

1:52:01

about it, and I want us

1:52:03

all to come together and

1:52:05

figure out and it doesn't

1:52:07

have to be

1:52:07

my idea. It doesn't have to be Dane's idea. It just needs to be

1:52:09

an idea that we can

1:52:11

all coalesce behind.

1:52:15

And and make a difference. You know, the

1:52:17

Margaret Me quote, it only takes a

1:52:19

small group of dedicated individuals

1:52:21

in the

1:52:22

world. In fact, that's the only thing

1:52:24

that ever has.

1:52:25

We've got

1:52:26

more than a small group by now. And I think that

1:52:28

Dane is great at,

1:52:30

you know, bringing attention to

1:52:34

the subject. And I think

1:52:36

that, you know, I've got all the references

1:52:38

you need to take them to court.

1:52:41

In between

1:52:42

the two, You know, the work's already been done. What

1:52:44

we need is a solution of people

1:52:46

to come together right now. Well,

1:52:48

hey, you know, here

1:52:51

here is the whole hoping that maybe

1:52:53

you guys maybe you guys can do some some work together.

1:52:55

I mean, you know, maybe you

1:52:58

could be a little Johnny

1:53:00

Lawrence, Daniel Laruso, teaming up, COBRA Cai, kind of a thing.

1:53:03

III don't know, but you would Oh,

1:53:05

I I've told him for

1:53:07

years. I'm down on

1:53:10

for that.

1:53:11

I, you know, I hope for

1:53:13

the best I expect

1:53:15

the worst. Just to be

1:53:17

blunt, if you go to any of his

1:53:19

sites and you post weather modification history dot com, climate viewer dot com, or viewer dot org,

1:53:22

or my YouTube channel, he

1:53:26

will ban you and he will block you

1:53:28

and delete your

1:53:28

comments. So that's where we're at and while fine

1:53:30

with him having an issue. Well, it was a lots of hope.

1:53:35

Bit. I I everybody the

1:53:36

same thing. Go watch

1:53:38

everything Dane has to say.

1:53:41

Go to his website. Go watch all

1:53:43

of his videos because you might learn something from him, you

1:53:45

don't from me, but please watch my

1:53:47

stuff as well. That's the kind of

1:53:49

attitude that we all should

1:53:51

have. The day we we all

1:53:53

agree. The day

1:53:54

we could all be wrong. Yes. No. I I agree with that. One hundred percent.

1:53:56

The day we all agree is the

1:53:58

day we all can be wrong. And

1:54:04

III think that that's

1:54:06

the bigger issue that I as

1:54:09

you said, Is the Climate

1:54:12

Modification Act or anything else that you

1:54:14

had come up with that could be

1:54:16

maybe maybe pushed

1:54:18

through some legislative body. The the be all end all, is it even

1:54:23

a good a good solution. Who

1:54:26

knows? But at least it's something. My question here and

1:54:28

my thing is that I

1:54:30

always talk about local action. When

1:54:34

we talking about side stepping

1:54:36

the pervasive nature of a

1:54:38

centralized government, we talk about acting,

1:54:41

thinking local, and being proactive in that respect. I I as I said

1:54:43

with Dane, and you and I have had this

1:54:45

conversation many times in the past

1:54:48

too, I I

1:54:51

look at the the

1:54:53

concept of conservationism as

1:54:56

something that is completely

1:54:58

neglect did by what we consider to be the

1:55:01

right. I hate even saying

1:55:03

the right. I just said

1:55:05

the anti globalist, a

1:55:07

faction of things I I wish

1:55:10

that we did not surrender the environment to these loud,

1:55:16

ridiculous children who really just want to

1:55:18

kill industry and everybody else in the planet and don't understand anything. When

1:55:21

there is an

1:55:24

actual real a a real tangible

1:55:26

way of of keeping our planet our home clean and thriving

1:55:28

by just being a little bit

1:55:30

more connected to where we are locally.

1:55:34

Nobody's got a local connection. We're trying to defer

1:55:36

everything to the EPA. But at

1:55:38

the same, you know, centralized everything.

1:55:42

Everything. I mean, that that was the solution during

1:55:44

World War two. We called

1:55:46

them Victory Gardens. Yeah. And

1:55:49

it's what we need today. The the caller

1:55:51

who asked from Eugene, Oregon. You know

1:55:53

why you have a drought

1:55:55

in Eugene, Oregon? Because

1:55:58

we get all our shit from China,

1:56:00

and it's on these international tankers

1:56:02

that put out ship tracks that

1:56:05

pollute the sky to the point where

1:56:07

no rain will ever fall on

1:56:09

your hometown. And the

1:56:11

US Navy test warfare, it's called

1:56:13

the US able warfare testing

1:56:15

groundless, the entire Pacific Coast,

1:56:17

plus all the plane

1:56:20

farves, plus all the clouds

1:56:22

eating, plus us all of the, you know,

1:56:24

rogue geoengineering, secret

1:56:27

government, you know, activity, So

1:56:30

which one do you want us blame

1:56:32

it on? Everybody always wants a cent

1:56:35

a single solution, you know,

1:56:37

single answer to such a comp

1:56:39

plugs questions. They're all in on it. And they're

1:56:41

all freaking technocrats and they're all,

1:56:43

you know, holding

1:56:46

to

1:56:47

bankers and stockholders. And at the

1:56:49

end of the day, it's a crazy

1:56:52

system of buccary. We have to focus on

1:56:54

how do

1:56:54

we get through that. Yeah. Or subverted.

1:56:57

No. Yeah. Absolutely. Because, of course, that is

1:56:59

what is hovering above us

1:57:01

all. Even if

1:57:04

we are going into our

1:57:06

local nature preserves or we are are starting our victory gardens or

1:57:08

we have committed

1:57:11

with a Right. A

1:57:13

local group to to plant five hundred trees in in a in

1:57:15

a local field or something like that. Those are all

1:57:17

things that we could

1:57:20

be doing should be doing. But

1:57:22

what's going on above us in the skies, that's something that makes it inescapable for us

1:57:24

all. And I

1:57:26

think that is one I say

1:57:29

aside from local action, we gotta think about what

1:57:31

kind of a confrontation is going

1:57:33

to be reasonable

1:57:36

enough to BTFO, these these technocrat,

1:57:38

you know, terrorist types, and

1:57:40

that's really where we're at.

1:57:42

Jim, I'm so happy that you

1:57:45

joined us tonight. Are you you

1:57:47

have soon? did literally specific

1:57:52

quickly to tell everybody to

1:57:54

tune

1:57:54

in tonight. 0II just did one on Harp scanning an

1:57:57

asteroid and the

1:58:00

baked sunsets

1:58:02

You sent me the article

1:58:04

from the Blaze. III told everybody

1:58:06

how much I love

1:58:07

you and because you sent

1:58:09

that to me. But I don't I don't wanna leave everybody

1:58:11

with this and you

1:58:16

geoengineering weather modification, all of these

1:58:18

things. They don't give a fuck if you're

1:58:20

a Republican, a Democrat,

1:58:22

a Muslim, a Christian,

1:58:25

gay, straight. They don't

1:58:27

care about where you

1:58:27

live, what you believe, or

1:58:30

any of that. It

1:58:31

affects everybody. This

1:58:35

is why it matters so much. This is why I've devoted the last

1:58:37

fourteen years of my life to it. This is

1:58:39

why I've been since

1:58:42

two thousand two. We're talking

1:58:44

What's that? Twenty one years? That's why

1:58:46

people like us have

1:58:47

devoted so much time to this because it

1:58:50

matters. Quite frankly, it's

1:58:53

the most important thing in my in

1:58:55

my universe

1:58:55

that I can think of that's gonna affect my

1:58:57

children's life and

1:59:00

their children. We

1:59:02

have to do something about this. Bravo to you for having on and

1:59:09

Good luck Dane in the next

1:59:11

year. Good luck to everybody. It doesn't matter if you love Dane

1:59:13

or you love

1:59:16

Jim Lee.

1:59:17

We don't give a

1:59:19

fuck. We need somebody

1:59:19

to step up and solve this problem. Well, I'll send

1:59:22

your solutions to both of

1:59:24

us. I'm

1:59:27

like, we'll get one. I'm toasting to a

1:59:29

new year. I'm toasting to

1:59:31

to to I

1:59:34

don't know. To friendships where there

1:59:36

previously were none and that

1:59:38

we can just all let

1:59:41

the planeteers get together and

1:59:43

and and combine our rings, combine our rings,

1:59:45

and the fact that the power

1:59:47

of the

1:59:47

planet. And who knows?

1:59:50

But the low team planet Thanks,

1:59:52

Jim. Love you. Love you,

1:59:54

bro. Alright. Take care. There you

1:59:56

go.

1:59:57

Ladies and gentlemen, it

1:59:59

is eight fifty ft. That's

2:00:01

a nice way of ending this

2:00:03

show. Let me go through the super chats real quick again. Thank you. To

2:00:06

q shook me all that

2:00:10

long. God bless God bless

2:00:12

to you. I'm actually going to release

2:00:14

the scratch in right now. Remember,

2:00:17

we have some work We

2:00:19

have our Wednesday rabbit hole Wednesday

2:00:21

is starting right after this. So go to

2:00:23

quite frankly, dot tv, and

2:00:26

you can have that be your a

2:00:28

companion for the rest of the

2:00:30

night. Wonderful people always hanging out in that chat room. Pepper pants says

2:00:33

I'm actually seniorita

2:00:35

pants. I finally gave

2:00:38

up on Patreon. Now I

2:00:40

am a patron, quite frankly, dot TV. Happy to

2:00:42

be home. Oh, you know, the seniorita pants, Lauren,

2:00:47

I love you. Thank you for all the times.

2:00:49

She was part of the twenty

2:00:52

twenty club. Twenty

2:00:55

twenty club, which is me sending a

2:00:57

video greeting to you every

2:00:59

month. I love doing those. So I

2:01:01

know seniorita pants. Her name is

2:01:03

Lauren. And I'm so happy that she's out there and hanging out.

2:01:05

And thank you to everybody that is watching

2:01:07

on rumble right now. Five

2:01:10

four hundred five rumbles. That's

2:01:13

you know, pretty much likes. We're getting there. We're getting there. With an

2:01:15

average of fourteen hundred people watching there, we should

2:01:17

get that up to about a

2:01:19

thousand. If you're pressing

2:01:22

play on rumble or YouTube.

2:01:24

You should go press play

2:01:26

and then press like and that

2:01:28

helps grow the show. But

2:01:31

other than those two places, I really wanna thank everybody

2:01:33

on Rockfin. There's another tip that just

2:01:35

came in from Tina

2:01:38

Hagen. Tina's happy New and same to you, Darling. Thank you so

2:01:40

much for all the tips from Tina

2:01:42

and Free Mind and Todd Fife in

2:01:44

pragmatic peacock over

2:01:47

there. Thank you guys. Thank

2:01:49

you to everyone. Thank you to everyone

2:01:51

on on theta. Theta right

2:01:54

now has got fourteen,

2:01:56

thirteen people that are watching. That's an

2:01:58

enormous amount of people for theta. There was

2:02:02

almost a a year where there's only three people in there giving

2:02:05

each other massages. Alright?

2:02:07

As before, it would became

2:02:09

the Jacuzzi. It was the massage

2:02:11

Osparla at that point. So, hello to everybody. I'm Theta, you

2:02:13

guys. I'm and Jerry Kogan, that's where

2:02:15

he hangs out a

2:02:18

lot. Nicky's there. Nicky's

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