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5:46
they
6:00
call it a golden parachute where the Saudis
6:02
will kind of come in and in
6:04
this case they took about a 10% stake
6:06
in Credit Suisa and they've done the
6:08
same to Citigroup and some other banks
6:11
and so then the golden parachute is that all
6:13
the
6:14
you know the really high
6:16
flyers the rough chiles and these people
6:18
kind of get out of these banks sell their stakes to the
6:20
Saudis and let it kind of go under or you
6:22
know quietly go under and the Saudis
6:25
get some stuff in return for doing that obviously
6:27
they get armed with the teeth and they get
6:30
guaranteed oil buys and all
6:32
kinds of things.
6:33
So there's that. And then also
6:35
think, just the Fed banks, the big four,
6:37
they really created kind of this panic where everybody,
6:40
you should go to the big four, you should move your
6:43
money to the big four, right? You've been hearing that right for
6:45
the last week
6:46
and that's what they want. So they want to really maybe
6:48
crash out some of these regional banks, the competition
6:51
in other words. And
6:53
then another part of it that's not being talked about
6:55
as much I think is just the commercial real estate market.
6:57
A
6:58
lot of these regional banks are really
7:00
heavy into commercial real estate
7:02
and again they kind of screwed
7:04
themselves because they're inbreds and they don't think straight.
7:08
So they lock everybody down and then all
7:10
this office space in downtown yeah
7:12
San Diego or Denver or wherever just
7:15
goes empty and people still aren't going
7:17
back to work until those office spaces aren't getting
7:19
rented
7:20
and so there's a big commercial real estate bubble
7:23
that's really burst I'd say already,
7:25
probably to be followed by a residential
7:28
bubble, but it might take a while for that one because
7:30
it's a kind of a different story behind it.
7:33
Mm hmm. Yeah, all good information.
7:36
I've been reading a couple different angles
7:38
on what might have triggered the
7:41
bank run ish on
7:43
Silicon Valley Bank. And one of the
7:45
things being Peter Thiel and a bunch
7:47
of the rich guys getting mad that
7:49
they had their money locked up for 10 years
7:51
at only 2% in these bonds. And
7:54
so they just made calls to each
7:56
other and said, Hey, why don't we all take our
7:58
money out in unison.
7:59
And that caused a big issue.
8:02
And I've heard other analysts say that
8:04
this was the rich venture capitalists
8:07
taking a shot at the Fed for
8:09
raising rates because they've gotten so greedy
8:12
and they've taken for granted these really low
8:15
interest rates that we had for several years,
8:17
which is where they're making all these bets. It's
8:19
like they're making all these
8:21
bets on startups and you
8:23
might
8:24
throw your money at 10 of them and eight of them
8:26
fail, but two of them pop so big that
8:28
like it's all worth it, but it requires
8:31
that cheap capital to be able
8:33
to make those bets. And then of course, as you say,
8:36
the green tech is in there and a
8:38
lot of the
8:39
tech startups and the green tech stuff
8:41
is not really making money as it should, it's
8:43
propped up.
8:44
And the Fed raising the interest rates
8:47
has kind of stalled
8:49
all that. Yeah.
8:50
And I mean, yeah, for us,
8:52
that seems like it's a good thing.
8:54
And as you noted too, I've
8:56
also been reading that it might be the start of a controlled
8:59
demolition of the mid-sized banking system.
9:01
So we get pushed into the loving arms of
9:03
the big four banks that will roll out the central
9:06
bank digital currencies once all
9:08
of us have moved our accounts over.
9:10
Yeah, it's hard to know. It seems like there's a lot of stuff
9:13
going on. Yeah, there's a lot going on. I mean,
9:15
yeah, for example, Bitcoin is up 33 percent this
9:17
week. So in a
9:19
way, are they rushing the kids back
9:21
out of the banking system who don't trust
9:24
it now, because they've never
9:25
seen this and
9:27
creating this panic. And they can, by the way, they can create
9:29
this panic. The only way they can do it is that we're so
9:31
connected, right? That we're so online
9:34
all the time.
9:35
So people are going skiing in Bozeman or
9:37
whatever, and they're literally moving their money out of
9:39
First Republic or Silicon Valley Bank
9:42
or Signature Bank or whatever. And
9:44
so you can create that kind of like a panic
9:47
that created kind of this bank run online
9:50
now. And it's sort of like
9:52
what the woke mob, you know, I look at like the, I'm
9:55
sure you read my book, you know, this hive mind that
9:57
they've created with social media,
9:59
which is all
13:58
And
14:00
so,
14:01
well, why were white people like that? Well, they were like that
14:04
because earlier in
14:05
their heritage, you know,
14:07
they were hunters and gatherers too in Europe. But
14:10
then these Anunnaki moved
14:12
into Babylon over to Egypt, crossed
14:14
to the Holy Roman Empire and
14:16
the Middle Ages. And they treated
14:18
the white people just like that. And they taught
14:21
them to be like that. And so the book's really about
14:23
how we've been taught this certain
14:26
set of
14:27
preconceived notions
14:29
that we just take for granted,
14:31
and how all those really come
14:33
in the end nowadays from the world of society,
14:36
which is the bloodline.
14:39
Basically it hid behind religion for a while, hid behind
14:41
Judaism first, created this
14:43
fake Jewry in Babylon,
14:46
which wasn't Judaism, it was Talmudic
14:49
Satanism. And
14:51
this is where the Baccarat family came from,
14:53
which became the Bauer family, which became the Rothschild
14:56
family eventually.
14:57
But the Baccarats were key
14:59
in the Silk Road slave trade and
15:02
all the other Silk Road trade. And they
15:04
were trading with the Li family from
15:06
China. And they're
15:08
supplying a lot of slavery, slaves,
15:10
this Tang dynasty. But
15:12
the Li's are in one of the bloodline families as well.
15:16
So early on, they came here and they just spread
15:18
out everywhere. they just,
15:20
looks like took it over. So they hid behind Judaeus
15:22
and then they hid behind the Catholic Church.
15:24
They were openly pagan in Egypt.
15:26
I mean, they're just the Pharaohs. They didn't even speak Egyptian.
15:28
They didn't speak the local language. The
15:30
only one that did was Cleopatra VII, the last Pharaoh.
15:34
And then she had a tryst with Julius
15:36
Caesar and they had a kid named
15:39
Caesarean. And the
15:41
amazing thing about doing this book was how seamless
15:45
the history is actually. You just
15:47
look at it, and you study and you can just
15:50
map it how the Anunnaki moved
15:52
to become the Pharaohs into Babylon
15:55
and then from Egypt
15:57
these elongated scale pharaohs
15:59
as soon as the
17:59
They're coming out of the closet, so you can actually,
18:02
now you can see these names coming up.
18:05
They helped facilitate, you know,
18:08
William the Conqueror and William the Third. They
18:12
pretty much, you
18:13
know, moved the masonry into the city of London,
18:16
which is already part of the Roman Empire, very important
18:18
part of it, became much more important in the 15th
18:21
century shipbuilding,
18:23
and then really took off. And they moved the Masonic
18:25
stuff into the city of London created this one
18:28
square mile. Nobody knows when because the papers for
18:30
the city of London Corporation have mysteriously
18:32
disappeared.
18:33
The charter does not exist.
18:35
So that's interesting too, because it's probably 2000
18:37
years old, this thing.
18:40
But anyway, that's when they started to hide
18:42
behind the Royal Societies and sort of the
18:44
Anglican Church or Protestantism.
18:47
And they actually funded Martin Luther
18:49
because
18:50
as a kind of a revolt against the
18:52
Catholic Church, which it heads with.
18:55
And the whole premise of Martin Luther also
18:58
was, you know, you didn't need to
19:00
do good acts to go to heaven. That's the Protestant
19:02
thing, right? The Catholics believe,
19:04
yeah, you have to believe in Jesus and God and all that, but
19:06
you also have to live a good life. But the
19:08
Protestants don't believe that. So that's
19:11
kind of big, because when you're a
19:13
8,500-year-old
19:15
hybrid alien human dynasty
19:18
that lives like a parasite off humanity
19:20
and the earth,
19:21
you don't really want to be responsible for your actions,
19:24
right? So that just takes that right off of you and
19:26
it's all you gotta say is Jesus is your Savior, right?
19:28
And that's it. And that's all you hear from these evangelical
19:30
people nowadays, which is just insane,
19:33
you
19:34
know, while they're driving around in their pink Cadillacs
19:36
and, you know, God said I should live in the castle
19:38
and, yeah, right. So anyway,
19:40
it's this kind of garbage that was inculcated
19:43
in people, you know, throughout all this history of...
19:46
So then they went,
19:47
once the Masonic thing had taken hold
19:49
in the city of London, That's when the Royal Society
19:51
popped up.
19:52
And so then they're not hiding behind, you
19:55
know, the Judaism anymore.
19:57
They're not hiding behind the Catholic Church.
19:59
not even hiding my
31:59
really interesting times, but it's like, again,
32:02
it is a test. It's like, which way are you going to
32:04
go? Are you going to cave in? Are you going to say
32:06
a bear is not a bear? Are you going to just
32:08
agree to that
32:09
and let them get away with that deception? What's the next thing
32:11
going to be? It's okay to kill your kid,
32:14
and that's okay now. I mean, you know what
32:17
I mean? Because this is a Satanist cabal
32:19
that wants to invert our morality.
32:21
And I do feel like the morality of the
32:23
general public, especially after seeing the young people
32:25
is slipping. Like they don't even sometimes
32:27
have a sense of morality,
32:29
like what's right and wrong. It's more about, you
32:31
know, what I need to do to comply,
32:33
or what I need to do to make authority happy,
32:35
or what I need to do to make money, or there's
32:38
no set of like values, and
32:40
there's definitely no like sense of reciprocity.
32:43
So when you fracture that sacred
32:45
hoop of reciprocity,
32:48
and you fracture those relationships,
32:50
you're
32:50
left with this sort of linear understanding,
32:52
in this.
32:53
It's a dead-end cul-de-sac. It means you just keep
32:55
going and going and
32:57
you never round that circle and you never deal
32:59
with things you need to deal with and you never reciprocate.
33:02
And then your life just gets extremely
33:04
isolated and lonely.
33:06
And that's the idea of technology.
33:08
It's a beast system. I think it is the
33:10
beast. I think technology is the beast we're talking
33:12
about. Now the people behind the algorithms
33:15
of this technology are part of that beast too because
33:17
their Wautico mindset
33:19
programs these algorithms in certain ways,
33:22
and they're nuts. I mean, they're certified
33:24
Satanists. They may not even know it. They don't even
33:27
know a lot of them that they're Luciferian, but
33:29
the way they act, take
33:30
a bite out of the apple, mock God,
33:32
move into agriculture from hunting and gathering.
33:35
But one of the things I learned in this book
33:37
already, but they were forced in. People were forced into hunting
33:39
and gathering.
33:40
So once much that humans fought,
33:42
it was that we were literally forced into hunting and gathering
33:44
by the serpent and tempted out of the Garden of
33:47
Eden, which was hunting and gathering, which was so much
33:49
easier and so much better and so much
33:52
more about reciprocity. And
33:54
you counted on everyone, you know, it was
33:56
clear in your tribe that everyone was equal,
33:58
that there was no higher... It was
34:01
pretty anarchist, really, like leave people alone, they
34:03
leave you alone, but with a kind of an anarcho-syndicalist,
34:06
definitely bent because they help each other.
34:09
Everybody had free healthcare, everybody had
34:11
free education, everybody got to eat.
34:14
Hunter ate last
34:15
because Hunter knew that by eating last, he gained
34:17
more respect and he would,
34:19
that sacred hoop would stay intact. That's the good red
34:21
road
34:23
that you walk. You have to walk a road
34:25
in this life and you pick your road and it's
34:27
either the good red road or it's a road that's lost.
34:30
And it's all about the value system.
34:32
It's all about your values. It's all about
34:34
what you value. You know, do you value relationships,
34:37
reciprocity, or do you value
34:39
money, material things,
34:40
all these things that happen starting with us
34:42
settling into agriculture. Because
34:44
you know, when you sell into agriculture, you get more stuff.
34:46
You have a place to store the stuff,
34:48
right? You're in competition with the next guy
34:50
across the fence all of a sudden where you used
34:52
to work together, right? Women,
34:55
the status of women crashed under
34:57
agriculture. I mean, that's when women really
34:59
took a hit. I mean, hunting and gathering societies,
35:02
they were equals, they were on the councils. You know, it
35:04
was all those old men, old women that were the tribal
35:06
councils. They didn't have chiefs. That was a total
35:08
foreign, again, with Tico concept, that there'd
35:11
be this one person that ran your whole damn tribe.
35:13
I mean, that's just not the way it was. But
35:16
nowadays, they appoint, the BIA appoints
35:18
the most corrupt people as the chiefs or whatever
35:20
the tribes. Yeah,
35:23
that's one of the most unique aspects
35:25
of your book and your take on
35:27
a lot of this stuff is that
35:30
the
35:30
Anunnaki arrived and then
35:32
forced humanity into agriculture
35:34
because usually it's framed as a good
35:37
thing. A lot of researchers call them the
35:39
culture cedars and consider
35:41
agriculture to be one of the big positive
35:44
things they taught ancient people along
35:46
with
35:46
mathematics and science and all
35:49
kinds of other stuff. And I
35:51
think that's an interesting take. I mean, you lived
35:53
on a multi-generational farm. You
35:55
had another farm in the Ozarks. So
35:58
you know that that's not necessarily.
35:59
easiest lifestyle, and it's really
36:02
hard for us to get an accurate picture of
36:04
an unadulterated system
36:06
because we've been in
36:09
this one for so long. But there's another
36:11
section in
36:12
the book that I really liked where you break
36:14
down the history of
36:17
Crown slavery and the British East
36:19
India Company from the Kingdom of Castile
36:22
invading the Canary Islands, and
36:24
workers not being able to own land but having
36:26
to work on Crown-owned land
36:29
that not only comes up in sugar cane,
36:31
cotton, tobacco, rice, coffee, plantations,
36:33
but also just in agriculture
36:36
itself.
36:36
Because the king is like, this is
36:38
my land,
36:39
you can work it and
36:41
then give me the crops and then take
36:43
what's left if I have anything left that doesn't
36:46
fit in my storehouses. But
36:48
you also have this really good breakdown
36:50
of the history of the Congo, which
36:53
contains most of the world's rare
36:55
earth minerals. It's still being
36:58
mined by slaves today for
37:00
our smartphones, electric car parts,
37:02
and a lot of other modern technology, including
37:05
most of the green stuff, which is a real
37:07
mind fuck for a lot of people because
37:10
we think about slavery as this thing in the past
37:12
and oh my God, that was so terrible.
37:15
How could people live like that? We would never
37:17
live like that today. You are living like that
37:19
today. the things you
37:21
use throughout the day come from these
37:23
slave
37:25
systems over there in the Congo. But
37:28
I didn't know much about the names of
37:30
the people and corporations involved,
37:32
and I hoped you could walk us through some of that history,
37:35
and crown puppets like
37:37
Mabuntu, Sisisiku,
37:39
and companies like Glencore, which are now
37:41
kind of running the show.
37:43
Right, yeah, well,
37:45
you know, the Congo was The Fiefdom of
37:47
the Belgians, you know, it was the only
37:50
country the Belgians had really
37:52
in Africa. And I shouldn't say the Belgians, it was
37:54
the Belgian crown, which were Habsburgs.
37:56
And it was King Leopold
37:59
for most of that time.
41:57
biggest
42:00
slave
42:01
trading company was the Royal Africa Company.
42:04
And so, yeah, of course,
42:05
then they brought him here. But so
42:07
it just goes through this kind of transformation
42:10
from open slavery. And
42:12
then when slavery ended, and
42:14
some people think it was just because it was too expensive,
42:17
it was cheaper
42:18
for the oligarchs to actually
42:21
pay people this pittance of wages
42:25
and not have to feed them and not have
42:27
to house them,
42:28
not have to put up with insurrections.
42:31
So they started this decolonization.
42:33
And I will chapter about that, about how that was just
42:35
a total fraud,
42:37
because yeah, the kings and queens aren't
42:39
ruling your country directly anymore.
42:41
The British administrators left Kenya, but they were
42:43
just replaced by these African administrators
42:45
who were corrupt,
42:47
you know, who were appointed chiefs, you know, by the British.
42:51
And then they just continued to work
42:53
right away with the IMF, which was set up post-World
42:56
War II, right about the time of decolonization.
42:58
So you go from open colonization
43:00
to sort of financial parasite colonization,
43:03
where you
43:04
sink these countries into debt and
43:07
people like Mabutu run the country. Mabutu
43:09
gets rich, siphons off IMF,
43:12
loan, money, sure, siphons off a lot,
43:14
just total corruption. They
43:16
put the money back into the offshore bank system,
43:19
which is controlled by the city alumna course, as
43:21
we know, through the Bank of England numbered accounts.
43:23
And then, you know, so they're helping both through
43:26
that system in so many ways, but they're
43:28
black. And so it looks better. And so
43:30
the
43:31
late stage of this is you go from
43:33
science and rural societies, and
43:35
you kind of crescendo with the vaccine,
43:38
mRNA, and now it
43:40
appears that they're taking this, it's always a sales
43:42
pitch, right? It's always they have to convince us. So decolonization,
43:45
oh, that's so hip that's so cool that really
43:48
helps people out.
43:49
Yeah and then so now it's the woke movement
43:51
and they're really the woke movement is what they're hiding
43:53
behind now.
43:54
It's gone from the Royal society and its science,
43:57
which yes, is still kind of God, I
43:59
guess.
46:00
You
46:00
know, like you should be the president do whatever. Seriously.
46:03
I mean, seriously, but I mean, it's just,
46:06
we're stuck with this because we don't have the
46:08
guts to really call it out
46:10
and identify it
46:11
and take it out. I don't care how we take it out. I'm
46:14
not a pacifist. I'm
46:16
not a warmonger for sure, but
46:18
I don't care how we take it out. And I don't
46:20
think God cares either. Or what
46:22
God cares either.
46:23
Well, it's obligation to take
46:26
it out because
46:27
it's a parasite that's injuring our brothers
46:29
and sisters,
46:30
including our brothers and sisters in the natural world
46:32
every single day. And they've stepped
46:35
over the line a long time ago. So
46:36
we are within our rights of self-defense
46:39
by any means necessary.
46:41
Right. I would agree. I would agree. Man,
46:44
the more things change, the more they stay the
46:46
same as they say. And
46:49
that's a really good breakdown of the history
46:52
of the exploitation of Africa
46:54
and slavery. I mean, the only difference
46:56
today is that they keep
46:59
the slaves in Africa and bring the product
47:01
here instead of bringing the slaves here
47:04
to work on creating
47:06
the products in our own backyard. I mean, that's
47:08
really the only difference. So the
47:10
fact that
47:11
people want to pretend like we're all equal
47:14
and they love humanity, it's
47:16
like, well, you're not doing shit, honestly,
47:18
you know, you're actually buying the products
47:21
that cover. It's a cover Like I say,
47:23
it's a sales pitch, right? So what passes
47:26
us woke, like people think of that as progressive.
47:28
And there's a reason for that because, you
47:31
know, the bloodline, what they really want to destroy is
47:33
any notion of progressive, like real progressive,
47:35
which is tribal society,
47:37
which is reciprocity, which is sharing,
47:39
which
47:39
is equality, real equality.
47:41
I mean, they talk about equity, but I've never seen
47:44
the lives of black people in worse shape in this country.
47:46
I've never seen the lives of the native people
47:49
on the reservation, a hundred miles from here, worse. They
47:51
have never seen it worse and yet they
47:54
gave lip service to the
47:55
color you scan, they give lip service to your
47:57
gender, your transgender.
47:59
don't care.
53:59
and I feel terrible for men.
54:02
I was lucky, but that's
54:04
what we're dealing with here. We're dealing with the Indian
54:06
way of thinking,
54:07
the native
54:08
indigenous people of the earth way of thinking,
54:10
which is reciprocity, kindness,
54:13
generosity,
54:15
fortitude, strength,
54:17
never focusing on the needs of yourself,
54:20
always focusing and on the needs of the whole,
54:23
versus the society
54:25
of tech zombie, woke,
54:28
narcissistic,
54:30
Luciferian people,
54:32
who do not know even that they're Luciferian,
54:34
but the way they act, they are, certainly are. Yes,
54:37
and it seems like a really hard
54:39
lesson to learn because society
54:42
and culture
54:43
gives us all the wrong messages
54:45
and incentives. So the only
54:48
place you're gonna get that is from family,
54:50
which is also probably why there's
54:52
more detachment from family
54:54
than ever. And schools want to raise
54:57
the kids and schools want to do things
54:59
with your kids without even informing you. And
55:02
it's a, it's a messed up place to be for
55:05
sure. Let me ask you about
55:07
the Anunnaki's motivation
55:09
because we hear this story that they came
55:12
here
55:12
because they wanted to
55:15
extract materials to
55:18
take home, to repair their
55:20
own ozone and their own atmosphere
55:23
and
55:23
you would think they would want to go
55:26
home.
55:26
I'm just curious what really motivates
55:29
this alien race to come down here
55:31
where they all they don't respect us. They don't
55:33
even like the earth. They think we're all just
55:36
dumb monkeys. Well
55:37
then why stay here
55:40
and rule over us in that
55:42
fashion? Like if we were to try to
55:44
create an analogy and scale it down and
55:47
me and you got lost in
55:49
the jungles and stumbled upon a bunch
55:51
of monkeys, we wouldn't really want
55:53
to rule over them in
55:55
the jungle. We'd be like, this is really dumb. I'd like
55:57
to get back to where I'm from, where everybody's
55:59
on.
1:01:59
utopian dream after this great
1:02:02
reset is a new world order based on the complete
1:02:04
electronic enslavement of humanity.
1:02:07
And that's a hell of a guess. I mean, it sounds like
1:02:09
all the buzzwords on the conspiracy bingo
1:02:12
card, and maybe the story
1:02:14
of the next decade perhaps, but what
1:02:16
do you see the next decade really looking like outside
1:02:19
of what you say in that paragraph?
1:02:22
Well, I think that's pretty much their
1:02:24
plan, but it's just how's it gonna go? And I
1:02:26
don't see it going that way because I
1:02:28
think we're gonna win. So,
1:02:31
I mean, I think we're gonna,
1:02:33
I don't know. I'm pretty optimistic
1:02:35
actually about things because I see
1:02:37
a lot more people, even
1:02:39
just this idea that a lot
1:02:42
of people aren't going back to work, you know? And
1:02:44
a lot of people give them a hard time for that. Oh,
1:02:46
these kids, they don't have a hard, no, they shouldn't wanna go
1:02:48
be slaves anymore.
1:02:50
That's the biggest part of this problem is that
1:02:52
people accept their slavery
1:02:54
and then they get their paycheck
1:02:56
and then they go piss it away at the shopping mall. It's
1:02:58
owned by the same family that
1:03:01
stole your labor at the factory or wherever.
1:03:04
And you just keep feeding this parasite
1:03:06
with your shopping and with your working, with your
1:03:08
shopping and your working and shopping, working and
1:03:10
it's just like quit. And it's just so, this is
1:03:13
a good sign.
1:03:14
And I just think there's,
1:03:17
I don't know. I think they're really might've overstepped
1:03:20
here with this COVID situation is what
1:03:22
I think. I'm really encouraged
1:03:24
by the Republican hearings because
1:03:26
now that they got just a, like, even if it's just a,
1:03:28
you know, one or two person majority,
1:03:31
that they now have the committee chair. So, you know,
1:03:33
they're doing the Hunter Biden laptop,
1:03:35
the
1:03:35
dragon, Matt Taibbi, you know, in
1:03:37
front of the hearings and, and he's spilling
1:03:39
the beans on Twitter files,
1:03:41
which is pretty funny because Taibbi's a total leftie
1:03:43
too. And then you got
1:03:46
the Wuhan situation kind of coming
1:03:48
to light big time under
1:03:51
another committee. Yeah.
1:03:54
So, I mean, there's actually a lot of stuff coming
1:03:56
out. I mean, when Robert Redfield testifies
1:03:58
before...
1:03:59
subcommittee that
1:04:01
Fauci pretty much invented this
1:04:03
narrative that it didn't happen as a lab
1:04:05
leak, even though Redfield
1:04:08
thought it was. And
1:04:10
then when asked, was it gain
1:04:13
of function research funded by the US government
1:04:15
through EcoHealth Alliance that
1:04:17
caused the release of this virus,
1:04:19
he said yes. So,
1:04:22
I mean, 7 million
1:04:24
people are dead. And again, they're
1:04:27
going to try to do a limited hangout because they got
1:04:29
caught and they're going to try to say it was China now. That's
1:04:31
going to be, you know, they'll get Laura Ingraham
1:04:33
and the whole right-wing mob behind them and saying,
1:04:36
yeah, yeah, it was China, it was China. It wasn't
1:04:38
China. It wasn't China. China
1:04:40
said, when this first happened
1:04:42
in March of 2020, I heard a Chinese defense
1:04:45
official interviewed. The only time I ever heard a
1:04:47
Chinese defense official interviewed about it, and
1:04:49
he said, they asked him where it came from, and he said, the
1:04:52
US military brought it to our country. And
1:04:54
that's That's exactly what happened. They brought it to their country
1:04:56
during the world military games
1:04:59
in Wuhan. It
1:05:01
may even have something to do with an interaction
1:05:04
of 5G with this coronavirus
1:05:07
that would somehow stimulate parasites
1:05:10
maybe because it's cybermectin works for
1:05:12
some strange reason. Don't know, but
1:05:14
it's very sophisticated operation where
1:05:16
they're trying to, I think, use the 5G to enhance
1:05:19
the killing ability of the coronavirus
1:05:21
that they created. Yeah.
1:05:22
Yeah. the
1:05:24
story that I'm stuck on too. And it
1:05:27
kind of reminds me of 9-11, where
1:05:29
you got Dr. Judy Wood, who wrote this great
1:05:32
textbook about the
1:05:33
actual materials coming
1:05:35
down and how they were fused together in weird
1:05:38
ways. And she basically says
1:05:40
it was some kind of exotic, microwave,
1:05:43
Tesla-like technology that
1:05:45
brought these towers down. And so,
1:05:47
you know, the point, the analogy is
1:05:49
like, this technology is so sophisticated
1:05:53
that a regular person can't identify
1:05:55
it. So you really are left with
1:05:57
nothing but the official story because if you can't...
1:07:59
guys, again, if you look at Louis Pasteur,
1:08:02
member of the Royal Society, right?
1:08:04
All them guys, and it's just never
1:08:06
been proven. Really,
1:08:09
a virus can't travel between an animal into
1:08:11
the human population without being manipulated.
1:08:14
They didn't know that or any, even the
1:08:16
virologist types. But yeah,
1:08:19
I just think a lot of what passes
1:08:21
for
1:08:22
pandemics and sickness
1:08:25
and black plague and all this different stuff, I just think it
1:08:27
has more to do with the unsanitary conditions,
1:08:29
which again,
1:08:30
start with agriculture and then
1:08:33
get worse with cities because cities
1:08:35
concentrate people. There's open sewers
1:08:37
now, there's common,
1:08:39
there's garbage dumps, big garbage
1:08:41
dumps, not just one little tribe
1:08:43
and they move on. So it's
1:08:46
an indication of a lot of bad decisions
1:08:48
we've made from
1:08:50
those benevolent aliens
1:08:53
or whatever. a lot of it is,
1:08:56
and that was the understanding before germ
1:08:58
theory came along,
1:09:00
which is, again,
1:09:04
relatively recent, it's only 150 years old, where
1:09:07
before that it was miasma theory or terrain
1:09:09
theory or there's different things they call it. But for 100,000
1:09:12
years, I mean, people
1:09:14
thought that the reason you get sick is because
1:09:16
you get poisoned. And if
1:09:19
you look at the crown, it's like they have an apothecary,
1:09:21
right? Well, the apothecary
1:09:23
back to them is basically like
1:09:26
a witch
1:09:27
and they study all manner of different
1:09:29
ways to poison people all the time and
1:09:31
they always have and so
1:09:33
those apothecaries are now our scientists
1:09:36
are you know at the CDC
1:09:40
and what are they doing with gain of function research? Oh,
1:09:42
the welcome trust which is the crown's biggest medical charity
1:09:45
and the biggest medical charity in the world,
1:09:47
along with DARPA
1:09:48
is funding data function research,
1:09:51
which does what?
1:09:53
It just attacks people and it
1:09:55
poisons people. You're poisoning people. And
1:09:57
a lot of people think, you know, the
1:16:00
latest book and that yielded some interesting
1:16:02
stuff. We didn't really get into that
1:16:04
thing where all US presidents are related
1:16:06
but it's in Dean's book and he breaks it
1:16:08
down even further.
1:16:10
From my notes here he says that all
1:16:12
the US presidents are actually part of
1:16:14
the plantagenet bloodline
1:16:16
that
1:16:17
intermarried with the French
1:16:19
Anjou and the Norse Viking Rolo
1:16:22
bloodline where the Normandy
1:16:24
interbreeding frenzy occurred in the 14th
1:16:27
and 15th centuries. These
1:16:29
Normans then invaded the British Isles
1:16:31
via William the Conqueror and
1:16:34
now nearly every US president
1:16:36
is a descendant from the planned to Jeanette
1:16:38
Royals. This is also the
1:16:40
Charlemagne bloodline he says. It's
1:16:43
wild, very impressive research
1:16:46
to me I don't even know how you nail down stuff like
1:16:48
that. I was also really glad
1:16:50
we could dedicate a section to the pillaging
1:16:52
of Africa and the Congo slave mines.
1:16:55
I consider that a huge blind spot
1:16:57
in America and I've been thinking about about
1:16:59
it more and more.
1:17:01
They're actually having these crazy reparations
1:17:03
conversations in San Francisco,
1:17:06
where apparently there never really
1:17:08
was a slavery problem. And
1:17:10
really, it's just a logistical nightmare. You
1:17:12
can never unravel who gets what.
1:17:15
Many Africans have come to America outside
1:17:18
of the slavery system. A lot of them still
1:17:20
are coming to America. And then
1:17:22
you have people who intermarried
1:17:25
and interracial families. and generations
1:17:27
later it's a big muddy mess. Yes,
1:17:31
it's a nasty blight on the history of
1:17:33
America, but it's also a very small
1:17:35
piece of the slavery story in
1:17:37
human history.
1:17:39
It's actually funny because I listened to a lot of
1:17:41
comedy podcasts, and
1:17:43
recently there was a clip going
1:17:45
around from Bad Friends with
1:17:48
Santino and Bobby Lee, and
1:17:50
Bobby Lee's Korean, and they're talking about
1:17:52
how Koreans have a superiority complex.
1:17:55
kind of the whites of the asians
1:17:59
and they're just having
1:19:59
comes from is
1:20:00
a really useful tool
1:20:03
for responding to vigilant
1:20:06
woke-ism, let's call it, and the green
1:20:08
agenda, which is even more
1:20:10
important. It's a way to push back against
1:20:13
smart everything and electric cars
1:20:15
because it's not green at the start of
1:20:17
the supply chain. And
1:20:19
it's a good way to say to the activists,
1:20:21
if you care so much about African
1:20:23
slavery, focus on what you can
1:20:25
do about it today rather
1:20:28
than chastising
1:20:30
people who had nothing to do with it
1:20:32
for a centuries old sin.
1:20:35
I would actually like to do a full show about
1:20:37
a lot of this stuff that gets down and dirty with the
1:20:39
details of what's going on over there, but
1:20:42
I'm still looking for the right guest. The author
1:20:44
of Cobalt Red was on Joe Rogan
1:20:47
and that means he has a lot of attention
1:20:49
right now so he hasn't responded to my request
1:20:52
so I need other suggestions.
1:20:54
Let me know in the comments as they say.
1:20:57
But good show, I'm
1:20:59
into it. And I know we're a bit behind
1:21:01
this month, lots of moving parts in my life.
1:21:04
I don't wanna bore
1:21:04
you with it too much, but we were supposed to
1:21:06
close on a house yesterday,
1:21:08
but we had some complications that have pushed
1:21:11
it back. We're gonna
1:21:13
give them two weeks to solve what is
1:21:15
a pretty big problem for me. I'm not
1:21:17
gonna move into the house with this problem,
1:21:20
but everybody's incentivized to make this sale
1:21:23
happen, so I hope that they can just get it done.
1:21:26
Fuck it, I don't really wanna get too personal, but I guess
1:21:28
I'll just open up because there might be a
1:21:30
small chance someone out there can help me,
1:21:33
because this is a real mystery.
1:21:35
After many years, I'm finally splurging
1:21:38
and I'm buying a new house that's
1:21:40
new construction on a well system
1:21:43
in Florida.
1:21:44
So I felt really good about finally being
1:21:46
off city water and out of a place
1:21:49
that was built in the years of toxic materials
1:21:51
like my current place, which is a building from 1955.
1:21:55
I got a kid now, I gotta
1:21:57
do better. So everything was going.
1:25:59
and see who shows.
1:26:02
Coming up tomorrow, there's one in Asheville,
1:26:04
North Carolina. Actually looks
1:26:06
like it's a house party. And
1:26:09
then April 1st, the conspiracy
1:26:11
theorizers are meeting up again in High
1:26:14
Springs, Florida. I hope to attend when I get
1:26:16
down there.
1:26:17
Then we have the stay
1:26:19
golden event, April 8th at Sundowner
1:26:22
Bar and Grill in Sedona, Arizona.
1:26:25
On April 15th, the Tiknall
1:26:28
Walk in Tiknall, Darby,
1:26:31
United Kingdom. They're
1:26:33
doing a nature walk. I like it, creative.
1:26:36
But that's really it. Not much on the calendar
1:26:38
for April. If you wanna make new friends, hop
1:26:41
on in there. You'll find like-minded
1:26:43
people. You can share local resources.
1:26:47
And you know, if you make it, they will come. But
1:26:50
that's about it for me. Very, very
1:26:52
lucky to do what I do. 38 years
1:26:55
young. Thanks to everyone who enjoys
1:26:57
and supports the show. Thanks to great
1:27:00
guests like Dean for bringing the heat.
1:27:02
I couldn't be happier, despite staring
1:27:05
into the abyss for a living.
1:27:07
I'm a lucky man, so take care
1:27:09
of you and yours. I've done my part. Your
1:27:12
move, cunning culture, cedars, tricky
1:27:14
civilizing tricksters, and elite bloodline
1:27:17
bad guys.
1:27:18
or fucking move.
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