The Joe Rogan Experience XX
[0] we're going to get to the bottom of some shit this this is an unusual very unusual man that's with us today first of all thank you very much for doing this man I really appreciate it it it's an honor I bought your book you gave me a copy of it today but I already have it because I bought it about five years ago which is crossing the Rubicon that's when it came out right when did that come out in August of 04 when I first became aware of you was that speech that you gave I don't know where you were but as a speech that you gave where you were you were talking in front of some judge in some sort of a courtroom somewhere and you were explaining how you were an LA police department officer and you caught the CIA selling drugs and you were just fucking saying it you were just standing in front of this judge what was that instance who was that that was a you're a fighter and you know about war and battle and stuff this was one of those circumstances, one of my favorite axioms about combat, about fighting somebody, was given to me by a chief warrant officer four from Army, from Army Criminal Intelligence Division.
[1] Don't shoot unless you get a headshot.
[2] And I had the head shot that day on the director of Central Intelligence.
[3] And, you know, it's kind of like something that you can spend your whole life in a fight or combat waiting for everything to line up, but you know when it lines up.
[4] And it's like, that's what happened.
[5] years I'd been trying to make somebody pay attention to the fact that CIA had been bringing drugs into the United States.
[6] And I had lost a career because I blew a whistle on that.
[7] And I'd been 18 years and I finally got a chance to nail a guy.
[8] That seems so crazy that you're the first guy to come out with that.
[9] I mean, I know I've heard stories before and I know I knew about the Mena Arkansas situation with, what was that gentleman's name?
[10] Clinton?
[11] Yeah, Clinton.
[12] Terry Reed and the other dude, the dude that got caught that was, or that Barry Seal, that's the guy.
[13] He's the guy who died with George Bush's phone number in his pocket.
[14] You know, I mean, that's a fascinating story.
[15] There's a guy who says that he was bringing in drugs for the CIA for a long time, right, from South America.
[16] And they would have a spot where they would drop it off.
[17] And apparently two kids saw it.
[18] And these two kids, they killed these two kids.
[19] And then they said it was suicide.
[20] That was the train track deaths.
[21] Yeah, the train track deaths.
[22] So the parents forced some sort of an autopsy, and the autopsy found out that these kids had been murdered, and then it just spirals into this thing unwining, but who would have ever believed before there was something like that?
[23] I mean, that's a big, that was a really big case.
[24] Well, I, yeah, I came out with it publicly after I resigned from LAPD in November 78.
[25] And I resigned because Chief Gates was going to let me get killed, and he wouldn't give me back up.
[26] And, you know, and it was, it was really sick scenario.
[27] I had perfect rating reports and all this stuff.
[28] So then I resigned and then I went to the LA Times.
[29] So my clock on being public started in 79.
[30] But here's what's interesting about all that stuff.
[31] You go back to CIA's been dealing drugs ever since before there was a CIA.
[32] Long story.
[33] It's an economic issue more than it is anything else.
[34] Is it just something where they can't pass up?
[35] It's just too much money.
[36] It's going out there anywhere?
[37] Yes.
[38] And it helps them do things that they don't have to get a problem.
[39] approved, right?
[40] Well, that's only part of it.
[41] You have to remember that Bill Casey, Ronald Reagan, CIA director, was a stockbroker.
[42] The CIA was created by the Dulles brothers, John Foster, and Alan Dulles, who were partners in Sullivan Cromwell.
[43] They created, founded the CIA.
[44] Alan Dulles.
[45] So the CIA and Wall Street have always been one and the same thing.
[46] And the deal with drug money, which when I wrote a lot of the stuff that's in Rubicon, is that you can move it.
[47] it with profits to earning ratios off books in a crooked economic paradigm.
[48] And with price to earnings, if you launder a million dollars worth of drug money onto a corporation, let's say GE, who has a price to earnings of 30 to 1, you've just created $30 million in stock value.
[49] There's a huge multiplier.
[50] And the CIA, this is all part of the same corrupt economic paradigm, which is destroying us now.
[51] That's the case that I started on then trying to find.
[52] out what the fuck is going on around here how did you find out and did other people know and just keep their mouth shut like how did you how did you know how was there like ultimate proof to you well well when i saw it with my eyeballs was proof but see how i got into it's a completely different deal um i have a have a special birth my mother was a senior cryptanalyst for the army security agency in world war two her work product went to secretary state secretary war and president Roosevelt.
[53] She worked on Japanese codes, the Russian codes.
[54] Okay, my father was a decorated Air Force hero, a veteran.
[55] He was in B -17s, World War II.
[56] Then he came up on all this stuff.
[57] And he both were connected with CIA.
[58] So I came from a CIA family.
[59] So, I mean, I used to come home from grade school and say, Mom, what's for dinner?
[60] And she'd say, I can't tell you.
[61] Gotcha.
[62] So, so anyway, so I was marked.
[63] And plus, I was gifted, you know, I was a good, smart, you know, guy.
[64] And so I was being groomed because the CIA has people in the police departments all over the country, and they have for years.
[65] Law or no law, that's what they do.
[66] So I was being recruited into that because I already had a cue clearance, which I had just from living with my parents.
[67] And so that kind of marked me as somebody who was like on the inside.
[68] But I wasn't really, you know, I wasn't going to go along with drugs when that's what I saw what it was.
[69] I wouldn't do it.
[70] And everybody else is just going along with it?
[71] Or do they just turn a blind doctor?
[72] There's, how does it, I mean, how does it go?
[73] How does it work?
[74] Well, what happens is, and I'm sure you understand this, is that we live in a world that's full of sellouts.
[75] We're surrounded by sellouts.
[76] We're surrounded by it.
[77] And this came up really recently with Occupy and my friend Shamar Thomas and all the stuff that we got together involved with that.
[78] It's about honor.
[79] and some people just aren't capable of selling out, I guess, and I guess I'm one of those.
[80] But most people resign themselves, and not everybody knows this.
[81] Like not every LAPD cop knows this happens, you know, it's compartmentalized.
[82] But there's a lot of people out there in law enforcement, and I think we've seen this with the Occupy movement of the way veterans and some cops have responded to.
[83] There's a lot of people inside the system who are really honest.
[84] and they're just waiting for somebody else to show them how to do it.
[85] Wow, what a terrifying situation.
[86] So you're the first guy to step up, and you step up and step out and say that in front of all these people on television.
[87] What happens then?
[88] Yeah, I'm not so sure I was the first to step up.
[89] Like that?
[90] Well, I was the first to do it and stay alive, and the first to do it and find a way to get shit like this done.
[91] Do you think it's almost safer to come out with something like that than it is to be the guy who hasn't said anything, and they could silence.
[92] Yeah, I mean, being transparent publicly is your absolute best defense, and that's something I've done for 35 years now.
[93] Jesus, though.
[94] But you got to a point at one point where you, a point at one point, where you were worried about your own life.
[95] Like, you left the country for a while, right?
[96] Many times.
[97] I've never not really been...
[98] Are you like one of those dudes wakes up and hears something and just fucking packs your bags and gets on a plane?
[99] No. I mean, how many times did you do it?
[100] No, no. you make peace with it you have to learn how to live with it one of my training officers at LAPD had been a Marine with the Fifth Marines in the Citadel it way and he said you can get used to anything and that was a that was a real teacher so it's not that you can't live on adrenaline forever you know so you make peace and then but being public is is is always the best safety why were you worried about your life what was it specifically well what I what I would have what I was exposing night now you have to bear in mind that when I was at LAP and I resigned I had pulled like the tail of something out of a hole I didn't know what was attached to the rest of it's like I'll just go pull in this one worm and else until I it's the can of worm so but clearly what I had the CIA was directly involved in bringing heroin into this country illegally of using police officers in their pay or control with the clearances to protect those drug shipments and they were laundering the drug money and and that it had to have been known at a white house level and that was in 1978 that's incredible and they just thought they could just keep getting away with it well yeah but yeah those who went in a rigged game get stupid yeah those I mean, you know, if it's always playing your way and this and that, you get sloppy.
[101] You get real sloppy.
[102] It's true.
[103] Wow, that's a brilliant point.
[104] I've never heard anybody put it that way, but you're absolutely right.
[105] It's just human nature.
[106] Yeah.
[107] And what I say now with the collapse of human industrial civilization is that dinosaurs are not capable of being anything other than dinosaurs.
[108] Well, it is certainly if you look at like what we're doing, while we're struggling at home so badly, we insist on engaging in all these things overseas that are.
[109] pay strange dividends we don't we don't you know there's nothing tangible about it but tangibly in this country right now like people are having a really fucking hard time but yet all of this money and all these resources are going overseas to to fight wars that almost no one agrees with and when you look at it like i mean that is just sloppiness that just to seem sloppy this it's so preposterous yeah i mean it's so without merit yeah like if there wasn't some sort of a 9 -11 attack and you propose this sort of a ridiculous war right everybody but get the fuck out of here but because of the initial 9 -11 attack because there was something so big they capitalized on it and now they have ridden the bad intentions right into the ground when you were on leno recently with ron paul i saw it was great segment i mean like oh so uh but what i caught and i've been doing i you know i've met ron paul i know him we're not good friends he's been in a film i made but i've tracked him for a long time when when ron paul said um now the white house is trying to tell us that Iran had something to do with 9 -11, well, that's what they, and the audience went berserk.
[110] Yeah.
[111] The collective consciousness in this.
[112] They're waking up.
[113] Everybody here is like way filled right up to here, right up to here right now.
[114] And they're just ready.
[115] And really, that's why I think Ron Paul is such a threat right now.
[116] Because if Ron Paul wins in Iowa, knock wood, it's a whole new political ballgame in this country because that all of a sudden, and it's going to be the norm, a substantial norm for people to see somebody like Ron Paul not believing all that bullshit.
[117] Then it's safe for them.
[118] How rigged do you think voting is?
[119] Do you think it's rigged at all?
[120] Do you think it's 100 % legitimate?
[121] Well, you think it's rigged still.
[122] Listen, after 2000, and I've been an investigative journalist for a long time, and I've done a lot of writing about this.
[123] Election 2000 was stolen, election 2004, choice point, D -Bold, all the soft.
[124] where at all.
[125] I watched that documentary on the hacking democracy.
[126] It was unbelievable.
[127] Right.
[128] So fascinating.
[129] But they can rig within certain, because there are people who see the polling places, there are people, and people know, you know, we had 80 people come in who are on Paul.
[130] So they can't just say if 80 % of the people vote green, the 80 % voted red because nobody would believe it, right?
[131] All right.
[132] So I think that Ron Paul is so far, way much further ahead than he's being shown in the polls.
[133] I really think that there is, let's say Ron Paul is in the 40s and 50s in Iowa, which they wouldn't dare let be known.
[134] And the point is, if he wins or wins with a landslide, it's now Democrats and Republicans no more.
[135] It's Ron Paul and the Democrats and the Republicans, and we've got a whole new paradigm.
[136] Wow.
[137] Yeah, so he has to win by such a substantial margin that they can't fake it has to almost be unanimous but you know it's so for the the frightening thing to a lot of people about it is the the sheer change that a ron paul would bring about and you know that a real change like that is absolutely terrifying to people even though they know that the situation right now is completely fucked up completely unfair the congress is bought everything's stolen it's a total wreck they would still they're terrified of change they're terrified and not so much anymore you've got to get beaten into a state of reasonableness you think it's at the tipping point we're at the collapse of human industrial civilization since 2008 the world has turned inside out several times it's getting nothing but worse and people are you know one of the best lines I heard out of the Occupy movement was somebody was asking the protesters are moving along in New York and said what are you protesting and this really attractive smart woman says everything Everything.
[138] Everything.
[139] Everything is corrupt.
[140] Everything is a lie.
[141] Everything is bogus.
[142] And, you know, there's a lot of us that can see that.
[143] Is it gotten worse or have people just gotten more aware?
[144] Both.
[145] Both.
[146] Both.
[147] So it's accelerating as well as people picking up on it.
[148] Oh, the rate of change.
[149] Now, you got to remember, I'm this guy that's been at this 35 years.
[150] Yeah.
[151] And you don't want to know.
[152] How do you look so healthy?
[153] You should be a fucking mess.
[154] Oh, I am.
[155] The amount of stress, but you look fine.
[156] I eat really good.
[157] Yeah.
[158] I'm on two and a half acres in Northern California outside of Sebastopol, permaculture.
[159] You grow your own food.
[160] We're growing food.
[161] And I eat raw, organic.
[162] I go out and pick a raw salad out of my garden and just eat it after you pick the leaf.
[163] Oh, wow.
[164] And so I eat good.
[165] And other than that, I'm maybe good genes.
[166] And I spent a lot of time working out and training over the years, you know, too.
[167] I had to.
[168] hung with some really cool people along the way.
[169] Right now, I have a bad rotator cuff here.
[170] The cartilage is gone, so I can't work out too much.
[171] Oh, really?
[172] Yeah.
[173] Yeah, that's a drag.
[174] Shoulder injuries are, they're very complicated, very difficult to fix.
[175] A lot of people have shoulder issues.
[176] It becomes a big problem until they have surgery on it.
[177] Yeah.
[178] And even then, like surgery now, they're pretty good at it, but back in the day, if you had a shoulder issue, it was a big one.
[179] It's just such a complicated joint.
[180] Mm -hmm.
[181] But that's, so that's the way you blew off steam, but I can't imagine being under that kind of pressure.
[182] Knowing that people were upset at me, knowing what you say you know about all these fucking bad people, man. And you're, you know, and you're out there, you know, exposed, constantly, you know, doing radio interviews, constantly doing, you know.
[183] I'm, I wouldn't have been able to do any of this without my spiritual life and some very deep and profound spiritual practices.
[184] I'm a Gaian.
[185] I believe that this planet is alive.
[186] A Gaian?
[187] A Gaian, yes.
[188] Is this, what kind of, what is this, is like a religion?
[189] Yeah, Guyon, Mother Earth, she's alive.
[190] You know, isn't it interesting that you take the planets out from the sun?
[191] Mercury is a God.
[192] Venus is a goddess.
[193] Or Mars is a God.
[194] Every other planet is a God or a goddess except for this one.
[195] Why?
[196] Her name is Gaia.
[197] She's a lie.
[198] So is this something that's actually written down?
[199] Is this an ideology, or is just your, you have a philosophy behind it?
[200] It kind of originated with Dr. James Lovelock, and it's new and it's also very old.
[201] I'm also, I've also studied Native American spirituality quite a bit, and it's exactly the same thing.
[202] Well, it seems to me that we have a pretty limited idea of what life is or what's, conscious.
[203] You know, we feel like if it can't react and communicate with us, it can't be conscious.
[204] But there's, you know, apparently there's been some studies that show that it's very possible that plants recognize people when they're in the room and they feel energy and they can actually react to someone doing something like to them.
[205] You know, they might have some sort of consciousness that we can't understand.
[206] We just only assume that consciousness is human consciousness.
[207] There might be rock consciousness.
[208] I mean, everything might out of a consciousness.
[209] It might just be enabled to express itself.
[210] And the idea of this has a giant super organism.
[211] It's so fascinating.
[212] Oh, yeah.
[213] It's so amazing because we know that everything, nothing exists on its own.
[214] I mean, every single body is a mixture of all sorts of different bacteria, you know, microbiotic particles and all sorts of different things that are constantly helping you or macrobotic.
[215] You know, like when you're eating yogurt, you know, you're taking in troops, you know, when you take an acidophilus, you're bringing in like healthy animals, living organisms.
[216] I mean, it's so fascinating that we am absolutely need that in order to stay healthy and be alive one of the things I just did recently was was very cool I live in the West Sonoma County and I there's a spa and I had done like three months without a day off for collapse net that's that's my my company and doing the radio show and so I treated myself and they have the spa where you go and you actually take a bath in a hot living compost pile and it's specially bred compost but the Everything is alive, and it's warm, and you become, and it just, it sucks stuff out of you that's just, you know, really cool.
[217] Wow.
[218] Wow.
[219] That's freaky.
[220] Yeah.
[221] It's so weird, what a different, you know, like a soup.
[222] You know, we're not just one ingredient.
[223] It's really fascinating.
[224] And to think of the earth as being that, just expressing itself in a larger way.
[225] There's a great movie that just came out this year called Animal Mundi, M -U -N -D -I, out of Australia.
[226] And it's got big names, it's got Nolmchomsky in it, it's got a whole bunch.
[227] And it's all about the, and there are some tremendous, tremendous awakening things in the other.
[228] You just look at it, and the science is really good to support that too.
[229] See, I think the big problem is now is if, let's say you and I are Martians or from another planet, we just came down here to check out what's happening with these creatures down here, right?
[230] And first, well, they're insane.
[231] They're destroying the place.
[232] right you know and and that's all they have to live on so yeah what are they doing they're shitting where they eat and i really think that that originates with uh genesis one i mean i'm i'm at war with god or at least the religion the god of old the gods that brought us to this point and and i'm at war with the god that gave man dominion over the planet bullshit that's why we're destroying it we've been separated from it we were taught that we and i don't believe that that's true.
[233] And I believe that if there's any one lie that's enabled all this corruption, a lot of it to be hidden under the guise of religion, that's the big one.
[234] So you think that if you can get enough people to recognize this earth as a living thing, we could change the way people behave and change the practices?
[235] I mean, it doesn't seem to be, it doesn't seem to have been that long ago that people didn't destroy the earth at all.
[236] You know, just a few hundred years ago, the oceans were clean, right?
[237] I mean, how many, how many hundred of years ago was there was there no pollution well no you would have to go back probably to the 1200s earth no there was there was pollution in in Rome yeah poop but let's go back 40 ,000 years ago okay okay and then our ancestors Urgen ag or whoever the you know first they were living their religion 24 7 there was not a textbook so you didn't nobody persuaded them converted them that's just the way they lived the was the Bible.
[238] Wow.
[239] Some things are sacred.
[240] And, you know, there are things that you don't do, like stick your finger into a light socket.
[241] Thou shalt not because, you know, it hurts or you die.
[242] And there were rules in nature.
[243] Thou shalt not.
[244] Stay out in the cold over X number of hours or after.
[245] This was the, that was the religion because it was a direct feedback.
[246] Well, I've always felt the Native American ideal of using every single bit of the animal that you kill in honor of the animal.
[247] Yeah.
[248] That there's something very important about that.
[249] I went to, it's fair, Tom Brown of Tom Brown Tracker School's a friend of mine.
[250] And I went to his tracker school, Max, my assistant.
[251] I went to his tracker school in February.
[252] And that's what they teach, too.
[253] You know, but anyway, so our ancestors 40 ,000 years ago, running around, right?
[254] They didn't all of a sudden stop one day and going, why am I having this wilderness experience?
[255] That was all norm.
[256] So what mankind's task is now with the collapse of human industrial civilization, which is here, which cannot be stopped.
[257] is not so much to learn but to remember stuff that we've known inside of us forever and you've got to clear a lot of garbage out of the way you know to get there and I'm pretty optimistic about what I see I mean I started collapsing at my company collapsenet .com there's the plug and we're in 68 countries we're getting 40 ,000 visitors a day you're optimistic in one way that the collapse is going to be a good thing No, I'm seeing people awakening.
[258] I am seeing people, you know, as I said in the movie, collapse.
[259] Mankind's choice now is evolve or perish.
[260] Grow the fuck up or die.
[261] Because the laws of nature cannot be overturned.
[262] And that's the fundamental thing that's wrong with this infinite growth paradigm that we live in.
[263] Okay.
[264] We'll do that separate.
[265] So where was I?
[266] All of that done.
[267] All of that done.
[268] and that world we live in is dying, and there's a new consciousness emerging.
[269] Now, my friend Colin Campbell, who is one of the, he's the godfather, the peak oil movement, said that the species Homo sapiens might not become extinct, but the subspecies of petroleum man most certainly will.
[270] Wow.
[271] Okay, so there's post -petroleum human, and there's a new consciousness emerging, and there are tens of millions of us around the world.
[272] And truly, I think there may be hundreds of millions or a billion or more, of us around the world.
[273] We just haven't been allowed to see each other yet.
[274] There's something with that matrix that keeps you from seeing all the other people who feel.
[275] That's why with you and Ron Paul on Leno, when the audience started cheering, it was like that was a bitch -slap bucket of cold water in the face of Barack Obama and everybody in Washington.
[276] You know, who thought they could actually get away with this stuff again?
[277] What do you think Obama, do you think Obama knew what was going to happen before he got into office?
[278] Because he seems, it seems to me, he seems so ineffective it's almost like he had an idea of what it would be like and then when he got in there is just nothing like that Barack Obama's extremely effective he's extremely effective for his client base which is the banks that is a banking president and there's no difference between Democrat and Republican he but Barack Obama had no into you know he just seemed like one of us when he was running for president he seemed like one of us it seemed like He was going to...
[279] Because he was probably.
[280] You didn't have microphones on all, buddy.
[281] It's probably because he was.
[282] He was.
[283] He probably started off thinking that he was going to be in the show.
[284] I always wanted to know.
[285] I mean, if that was a case.
[286] He wouldn't have been nominated.
[287] He wouldn't have ever gotten close to the nomination unless his loyalty had been secured.
[288] Wow.
[289] It's so crazy that that's real.
[290] I mean, it's such a fucking rigged game.
[291] Yeah, it is.
[292] If it really is that rigged, I mean, it's almost preposterous that it's able to go on as long as it has.
[293] I was, I've had, I've done a lot of shit.
[294] I've been around a long time.
[295] I was the press spokesman for Ross Perrault in Los Angeles County in 1992.
[296] At a time when Ross Perrault was ahead of both George Bush and Bill Clinton.
[297] I remember that time.
[298] In the polls.
[299] Hi, I'm Ross Perot, short, floppy ear detection with a big nose.
[300] Hey, I'm Rock.
[301] Remember when he took out that ad, he basically bought a half an hour of television on prime time and explained what's wrong with, what was it, the tax structure?
[302] I forget what it was.
[303] but it was just and and uh the uh debt yeah debt yeah and he explained it all and spelled it out and he's the only one that made any sense i mean he seemed like a crazy dude but everybody wants to be president is crazy well what what what i'm saying with that is i've been around presidential politics a long time and i studied in a lot of ways my rubicon's in the harvard biz library okay uh so yeah it's that rigged yeah it is that rigged it's terrifying yeah it's terrifying that this is the freest country the world has ever known and it's been fucking hoodwinked by giant corporations we have been there was a guy I had a source somebody who was in a position to know when William Casey had his first briefing as DCI Director of Central Intelligence under Ronald Reagan would have been in January of 81 he said to those in the room he said we will know that we have been successful when everything the American people believe is true is false Wow Holy shit Yeah It's just amazing that this has sort of been The way governments have done things Since the beginning It's like no one has ever like Been straight with the people And had it all You know Even and has there ever been a culture ever That has been like Completely cool as far as their government goes I just watched an amazing movie last night The Cove And even in that movie It was a movie about dolphins How much the Japanese government lie to the people about mercury poisoning.
[304] Yeah, well, apparently that's what Shane Smith from Vice .com was telling us about the meltdown.
[305] It's a much more of a health issue than the government is letting on.
[306] Well, all of that stuff is cooked.
[307] But the reason why, let's take a quote from Meyer Rothschild.
[308] It was Senior Rothschild, the guy who was the London House.
[309] He said, give me control of a nation.
[310] currency, it's money, and I care not who passes its laws, who governs it, it's irrelevant.
[311] The infinite growth, and look at what we're seeing around us with the economic collapse, the endless fucking corruption.
[312] You know what killed me when all it was going down, when the bailouts were happening, and Obama actually had the nerve to say that they was going to limit the bonuses that these guys got to half a million dollars.
[313] You're like, as if someone actually talked him into thinking, that that made any sense to regular people.
[314] The regular people are going to get himself, yeah, you know, he had to get his half a mill.
[315] He had to get...
[316] The bank is falling apart.
[317] People are bailing out the bank with their tax dollars, and then somehow, another, it's rigged in the way that the CEOs get bonuses?
[318] What, what is that bonus based on?
[319] Those who win in a rigged game gets stupid.
[320] Barack Obama thinks people believe that he actually killed Osama bin fucking Lodin.
[321] Yeah.
[322] Nobody believes it.
[323] I don't believe it.
[324] I'm not convinced.
[325] There's too much.
[326] I've talked to too many military people that don't believe it.
[327] I've talked to people that, you know, probably shouldn't be talking about it.
[328] And they're like, this is just fucking horseshit.
[329] We've known that guy's been dead for years.
[330] Are you allowed to smoke?
[331] Please, yeah.
[332] Fire up, dude.
[333] All right.
[334] You can take a shit on the floor if you want.
[335] You're Michael Rupert.
[336] Oh, geez.
[337] All right.
[338] Do whatever you got to do, buddy.
[339] I want you to be comfortable.
[340] I'm pretty impressed that his smoking because in the movie collapsed.
[341] He smoked probably like a carton in the first 10 minutes.
[342] You know, that's, yeah.
[343] Chris Smith, the director.
[344] director love that film noir effect and I can do the sexy thing with the cigarette obviously you know what I'm saying it's more doom and gloom if you got it work it you know well you know if the end world's coming why not get cancer too fuck it you know and you go American spirits is that actually healthier oh yeah much healthier there's no additives of that at all this for folks who don't know if you enjoy your cigarettes there's 599 different fucking things that are added to cigarettes and our government said we're cool with that oh yeah you want to add more well we have cigarettes we have And cigarettes are pretty addictive, but, you know, we came out with some way to really fuck with your neurotransmitters and make it, like, super addictive.
[345] Is that okay?
[346] We just throw that in there?
[347] Yeah, and the seafood from the Gulf is safe to eat, too.
[348] I mean, yeah, I saw commercials like, the Gulf's coming back.
[349] And they're serving shrimp.
[350] And I'm looking at them like, they're bombs.
[351] They're sliding a shrimp bomb your way.
[352] Like, what is the fuck is in that, man?
[353] I hope it's okay.
[354] But Jesus Christ, did they fix that oil problem?
[355] Because I heard they didn't.
[356] I heard there's a new slick.
[357] I heard that people have seen other slicks.
[358] You know, I don't think it's completely capped off, right?
[359] No, no. I had a good friend, Matthew Simmons.
[360] So scary.
[361] A colleague who was, he had been the world's largest energy investment banker.
[362] He was a colleague of mine in the peak oil movement for many years.
[363] He died.
[364] I think, I won't say that yet.
[365] But he died under mysterious circumstances to me. But he knew all about the Gulf.
[366] And it was a total blowout.
[367] No, the seabed is destroyed.
[368] He was telling the truth.
[369] there's the shaft from deep water rise and it went down and and what's happened is is that the whole seabed is now fractured all around it and it's the oil is seeping up and there's no way to there's no way to control it oh my god but so terrifying you know I was in New Orleans for the first time recently and I really really enjoyed it like what an unusual city what an amazing city really is one of the last few places that has its own true identity You know, when we were hanging on there, it was like, what a great place it is.
[370] And that's where I saw CIA bringing drugs into the country.
[371] That's where I became an eyeball wit to it.
[372] Jesus.
[373] You know, New Orleans.
[374] No, yeah.
[375] New Orleans is, there's a mojo in New Orleans.
[376] That's a fun place, man. That's a fun place.
[377] It's almost like it's another country.
[378] Like, you should have to have a passport to get there.
[379] It's like you're going to another country.
[380] Very strange.
[381] Or the fake that those poor people got hit by that, man. You know, after Katrina.
[382] And they get hit by that.
[383] And, you know, I mean, how is the ocean now?
[384] I mean, so much ocean.
[385] How long does it take?
[386] The seabed is the issue, right?
[387] Is that what it is?
[388] Well, it'll destroy the food chain because, you know.
[389] Because if they had just stopped what got into the ocean, the ocean would probably absorb it all because it's so enormous.
[390] Well, of course, they were lying about the quantities.
[391] I mean, you know, I had known it was over 100 ,000 barrels a day early on.
[392] 100 ,000 pounds.
[393] Oh, it was much higher than that one at a couple of points.
[394] And that's never been really fixed.
[395] See, that's the problem with the.
[396] this old paradigm.
[397] Fukushima, okay?
[398] Japan is mortally wounded with radiation.
[399] Collapsed at my side.
[400] We have been documenting, you know, tens, hundreds of thousands of times, greater levels of radiation released over broader distances.
[401] Seizium, there's been a spike in mortality in the U .S. as a result of Fukushima, a 35 % spike in neonatal mortality right after Fukushima.
[402] In Japan?
[403] Here.
[404] Here.
[405] Pacific Northwest, San Francisco North.
[406] and Japan is mortally wounded with radiation and the global food supply is now contaminated as a result of the cesium the plutonium and you know baby food was just found detected the other day with radiation yeah yeah really in Japan or in America in Japan but that could have been easily sent to America do we buy their baby food I hope not so how do they fix that is it is possible to fix that area that area is fucked right it's going to go through the ground for the next 30 or 40 ,000 years.
[407] That's the half -life of cesium.
[408] So it's okay.
[409] So yet, no, it's permanently unusable.
[410] And what they're finding is that the birds have eaten radioactive seeds and they're shitting out radioactive poop all over New Zealand now.
[411] Oh my God.
[412] See?
[413] And so that's a mortal wound to the global economy.
[414] Holy shit.
[415] You know, that's what we do at Collapsed.
[416] I bring all the stuff altogether so we can get a real picture of how bad things really are.
[417] So is it safe to say that CollapsNet is the last place you should go if you're thinking about getting some sleep.
[418] It's like 11 o 'clock at night.
[419] You're like, no, it gets her shit on.
[420] Let's check online.
[421] See what's going on.
[422] Let me head over to CollapseNet.
[423] Yeah.
[424] And then you find yourself sweating and making coffee at 5am.
[425] If you go to his website, you immediately see this poor sad guy.
[426] You're like, ah.
[427] Some dubious.
[428] At the stock market, watching his house explore.
[429] Yeah.
[430] What we become.
[431] This yacht's melting.
[432] It's like we're the place where Occupy around the world goes to find out what the fuck's going on.
[433] We're clearinghouse.
[434] We're really trustworthy, useful information right now.
[435] I'm really tight with the Occupy folks.
[436] You know, I'm an Occupier.
[437] I wasn't Santa Rosa, you know, and deeply.
[438] Is that the next civilization?
[439] Because, you know, this is one of the things that I'm hearing from people lately, the Occupy folks, is not just the standard, you know, we want these motherfuckers out.
[440] they're saying we could all live together here we could grow our own shit we could you know we could form a community just take this somewhere else that's what i keep hearing now that you never used to hear before it's like everybody wants to open up their own waco compound everybody everybody's ready to do it on their own and i don't mean that in the bad way i mean that you know what waco could have been i don't know but how can you even say that what waco could have been but the idea behind it have a community you say that well not waker why does it always go bad man how come no cult leader can come along and actually make a bad ass cult and everybody's cool with each other.
[441] Well, you know?
[442] All those people at Waco murdered.
[443] Yes.
[444] That was Delta.
[445] Yes.
[446] That was horrendous.
[447] You know, what was the Rules of Engagement?
[448] Is that the documentary?
[449] The details it and shows you, they're fucking tanks with flamethrowers shooting into these people's houses.
[450] They crushed people inside their houses, ran over them with tanks, looked that place on fire.
[451] See, that's that's a fact.
[452] I mean, you can't avoid that.
[453] We've been watching all these crimes taking place right in front of us.
[454] Yeah.
[455] All our lives, man. I mean, 2 ,000 election was stolen right in front of our eyes, and we didn't do anything.
[456] And that's, you know, that's been, you know, I carry a lot of rage over the 35 years I've been doing this, too.
[457] But one of my biggest angers, if you'd only listen to me 30 years ago, this might not have, if you'd listen to Iran -Contra people, if you'd listen to, you know, all of the protest movements, 9 -11, if you'd listen to.
[458] 2003 invasion of, nobody, this country never mustered the will to call the crimes out when they saw them.
[459] Because they were there for everybody to see.
[460] And now we're all kind of going, well, yeah, of course that happened.
[461] And of course that happened.
[462] It's amazing how this is all predicted by the founding fathers.
[463] You know, they knew that everything was going to get slippery and things were going to get weird.
[464] The fact that Benjamin Franklin was the one who said he who chooses security over liberty deserves neither.
[465] they did understand it's amazing that they figured it out but you know if if you go back especially you know I'm a big fan of Tom Jefferson you know who said you need a revolution every generation damn right you do share everything up start over again and you know can't we just Rodney King this motherfucker can't we just all get along why can't we all just get along how can't how about these cunts who are running the world just get their shit together without us having no but you know rise up can't you guys evolve they're going to have to die off right the older ones are going to have to die off.
[466] They're just way too set in their ways.
[467] The people that were willing to call Waco and actually have that happen, they didn't understand the impact of the media because it hadn't really become apparent yet.
[468] No. They didn't know.
[469] They thought they were going to get away with business as usual because they come from a long career of doing that.
[470] And that's just how they get shit done.
[471] They didn't think that there was going to be a video camera that was going to take film footage of it and make it into a documentary, explain everything and show it in slow motion and great detail.
[472] Because that had never been done before.
[473] But it's done.
[474] And you can see it.
[475] Once, you know, that's actually a good point for the way media and all this gear has been useful in the Occupy movement around the world.
[476] I mean, Anonymous is out there kicking ass right now, you know, and, and so this, this is kind of a dimension, which I think is a fucking movie is what it is.
[477] Oh, yeah.
[478] It's a movie.
[479] I mean, this is a great action film right now.
[480] It's a lot of crazy shit going down.
[481] I mean, this is V for Vendetta sequel.
[482] On the World News Desk, I analyze.
[483] like 200 stories a day, 150 stories a day.
[484] And we, that's how we bring you the news from all over the world.
[485] These really good stories.
[486] But, you know, I'm watching some of the shit happening.
[487] I'm going, past the fucking popcorn.
[488] I mean, it's like, I can't believe some of the crazy stuff I'm seeing right now.
[489] Where is it all going to end?
[490] Does it, is there a real obvious?
[491] You've been really good at predicting a lot of shit, man. You, you predicted, like, pretty much every single big economic event that's happened.
[492] You were on that before, you were right with Peter Schiff you were on that, you were predicting that stuff like way back in the day.
[493] What do you see now?
[494] When you're looking at it now, where do you see it end?
[495] What's your prediction for how it ends?
[496] Okay.
[497] Or rather comes to a balance again.
[498] Where we are right now, where we are right now is like the mega end climax at the end of Act 2.
[499] The global economy is imploding right now.
[500] Europe is dead.
[501] And there's $1 .4 quadrillion dollars in derivatives out there that are imploding.
[502] Because money, like I said in the movie, that's exactly the point I was on in this.
[503] Whoa, this is spooky.
[504] Anyway, money has no power.
[505] Money only has power because of energy and resources.
[506] Okay.
[507] And you can print an infinite amount of money, but we live on a finite planet.
[508] And we're running out of all the stuff that makes that money have any power.
[509] The money itself has no power.
[510] And that's the big adjustment that civilization is collapsing.
[511] There are 6 billion people living here now only because of cheap energy.
[512] And our population has gone straight like that since the discovery of oil.
[513] And it always goes like that and it crashes.
[514] And that's we're on the cusp of the crash right now.
[515] So you think we're on a cusp of not just of a, economic collapse, but a biological disaster?
[516] Everything.
[517] What is, I mean, how are you going to get rid of that many people?
[518] Well, wow.
[519] You think this is?
[520] Gee, you can let all the radiation out of Fukushima.
[521] You can let all the oil out of the Gulf.
[522] You can let billions of tons of methane.
[523] There's now being released from the tundra in Arctic Siberia.
[524] It's a catastrophic event for a tipping point.
[525] We've destroyed the environment.
[526] well, that's going to kill a lot of people, but there are 10 calories of hydricarbon energy and every calorie of food consumed in the industrialized world.
[527] The energy is going away.
[528] And the topsoil I used to grow food on is nothing but dust.
[529] It's a sponge on which they pour chemicals made from oil and natural gas.
[530] So people are going to starve to death.
[531] Holy shit.
[532] So it should have never got this crazy in the first place.
[533] We got way ahead of ourselves.
[534] Technology got far enough ahead that we could support gigantic groups of people and we sort of like bought a car on credit.
[535] I'm going to rest with your mind.
[536] Please do.
[537] I want to stand by.
[538] The people that do this, the people that run the infinite growth monetary paradigm system, which to identify now, I would say would be the owners of the Federal Reserve, the Bank of International settlements in the city of London.
[539] Let's start there.
[540] They've known, that this outcome was coming for a long time.
[541] And they're engineering and they are making money from this now.
[542] The sick bastards are deliberately letting things crash.
[543] So they've engineered it, they're profiting from it, and then when it crashes, what happens then?
[544] Does it crash to a point where money is useless and we start all over again?
[545] Or it crashes to the point where we have a thermonuclear war that we're on the cusp of right now over an invasion of Iran for bullshit reasons, regime change in Syria, which will bring in China immediately on Iran side in a thermonuclear conflict.
[546] We could blow ourselves to smithereens.
[547] So why are we doing that?
[548] Why are we even thinking about doing that?
[549] Um, the parable of the scorpion and the turtle.
[550] Okay.
[551] Oh, Jesus.
[552] I hate that one.
[553] I use it all the time.
[554] Oh, you know it?
[555] I know it.
[556] Okay.
[557] Okay.
[558] They're scorpions.
[559] They cannot.
[560] That's all they know how to do.
[561] Yeah.
[562] Make money on the way up.
[563] Make money on the way down.
[564] This is pure evil because they know what the outcome of this is.
[565] They know that the outcome of their actions would be either through climate change to kill all life on this planet, which is well underway.
[566] We're having massive mass extinctions now.
[567] Run it economically into the ground, pollute it, blow everything up.
[568] They're doing all of that.
[569] Yeah.
[570] And for those who aren't aware of the parable of the scorpion and the toad, the scorpion asked the toad to give him ride across the water.
[571] And the toad says, I can't do that.
[572] you'll sting me and kill me. He goes, why would I do that?
[573] He goes, if I did that, we would both drown.
[574] So he goes, okay, and he gives him a ride, and in the middle of the water, the scorpion stings him.
[575] And he starts to die, and he says, well, what the fuck?
[576] And the scorpion says, it's in my nature.
[577] I'm a scorpion.
[578] Yeah.
[579] Doesn't the scorpion die in that also?
[580] Yes.
[581] And that's the point of this peril, you know.
[582] It's ridiculous, but it is what's going down, right?
[583] I mean, no one thinks that this can go on forever.
[584] Do they think that they could just ride the, the asteroid before impact and die, like right before everything falls apart, they're like 80, 90, they're really not going to make it to 2020 or whenever it is, they're going to go madbacks.
[585] Well, it's supposed to be 2012.
[586] According to the Mayans, but they couldn't even predict their own demise, those silly boys, those silly people.
[587] There's a lot of prophecies that are, you know, that are lining up coincidentally.
[588] And I, you know, I'm not saying I ascribe to that.
[589] I'm a detective.
[590] Well, you know, I think it's really fascinating that to think that there could have been alternate paths for intelligence, you know, the path that Western civilization went on with our interpretation of reality and our construction methods and all the different things, the way that we have expressed our tech, our intelligence, that it could very well be.
[591] And it's been proven to be in Egypt and in the Mayans.
[592] And there was an incredibly brilliant society that operated very, very much different than ours.
[593] An amazing, different way to think while one group part of the world was thinking about something else, they were studying constellations and building these amazing stone structures that really are mind -boggling.
[594] And then when they find out that there's thousands of them still undiscovered in Mexico and South America, that they're just, the trees grew over them.
[595] But there was a great culture down there.
[596] An amazing culture, completely alien to what exists right now.
[597] And they operated on a different operating system.
[598] I mean, as you were saying that I was having visions of First Nations, Native Americans, having really essentially perfected their religion in that they lived in a very balanced way with their environment.
[599] But see, that's a different operating system.
[600] It's like a different vibration inside completely.
[601] I don't know if you ever done any psychedelics or anything like that, but it's kind of what you get like a DMT trip or something.
[602] You know, you see other dimensions and you've been.
[603] become so much more aware of other realities and other truths.
[604] And really what I think, what's happening now, as the old, the infinite growth paradigm is dying.
[605] It's obviously dying.
[606] I mean, anybody who can't see the collapse of human industrial civilization now needs to be Darwinianly deselected.
[607] I mean, so how do we get through this?
[608] Do we get through this without a die -off or it has to be, there has to be a die -off?
[609] I think that the way we get through this, first of all, is to realize that there's no we.
[610] In other words, for all seven billion of us.
[611] so we've got to cut off the rest of the world and build up effects no not not that either what what you have to do is form your own communities of of of people who have the same consciousness and you can do it in a big city where i live in westinoma county it's just ripe with that we're like one of the one of the test beds for that so there's a lot of a lot of hippie pussy yeah yeah it's very important matter of fact yeah if you're going to have some sort of a cult you've got to have hot hippie pussy.
[612] You know, if you're going to start your own civilization out in the woods, can't do it with just dudes.
[613] That shit's going to get boring.
[614] Yeah, and there really is a lot to be said for being very in touch with nature and the rhythms of the planet because once you become aware of them, some, they're very sensual.
[615] And they're very, you know, once you really start to plug into and connect with some of the life that goes on.
[616] But most people in the world don't have any clue about that.
[617] Yeah, it would be nice if we could all like break off into like -minded groups of really, nice people so you would guarantee that your community would just be really fucking cool you know no ego issues everybody's had a few mushroom trips yeah you know you know people like to do yoga they don't fuck with you they don't tell you that your music sucks right you know we it's so difficult to get that though we we we're so many human beings now when you fly over cities do you do you ever look out in amazement and what a crazy structure like los angeles really truly is you see the lights like when you flew in here was you flying at night no I we we drove.
[618] Okay.
[619] But I have flown into LA.
[620] It's ridiculous, right?
[621] And you fly in at night.
[622] I very rarely flying at night, but I did recently.
[623] And flying in, you see it, you're like, how is this not science fiction?
[624] How is this not some crazy Blade Runner fucking movie?
[625] Just the way it looks.
[626] You know, flying into this giant grid of artificial light.
[627] Motherboard.
[628] It's amazing.
[629] Yeah, it's a, it's so, it's so, it's such a thing that we take for granted.
[630] You remember my friend Larry?
[631] Larry had this house in the Hollywood Hills and you would look out at night and I never realized like why does everybody want to live in the Hollywood Hills the fucking pollution's up there it's shitty what a fucking vision that view is the view of the Los Angeles skyline at night like it doesn't look good in the day and the day you're just looking down at like gray shit and pollution but at night time you're seeing this crazy electronic tron grid yes you know it means really amazing we don't we don't see it because we're down in it and a part of it right but what a bizarre thing we've created.
[632] Well, you know, part of that is also it's unnatural.
[633] Yeah.
[634] In other words, those collections of lights definitely shouldn't be here in Southern California because there's no water here, you know.
[635] I also have a theory that it's bad for our consciousness to have these things at night because we're not allowed to see the stars then.
[636] We're not able to see the stars.
[637] I think that's not good for people.
[638] I think people, I think a couple stars in the sky, those are too abstract.
[639] You know, the moon, like, oh, there's my friend the moon.
[640] And I'm used to him, the image of the starry nights in Nebraska when you're driving on the highway and you just pull over the car and you open the door and look up and go, holy shit, get out of the car, get out of the car, look at this.
[641] And you lying on the hood of your fucking car for hours just staring up at the goddamn Milky Way.
[642] But we don't get to see that.
[643] We don't get to see that because we want to keep everything lit up at night.
[644] And because of that, you don't get that humility, that realization that you were in front of.
[645] the infinite that you're experiencing an impossible vision of incredible beauty.
[646] Connected.
[647] Yeah.
[648] And we've sacrificed it for streetlights.
[649] For streetlights we've sacrificed the most incredible thing you could ever see and very few people ever get to see it and it's right above your head.
[650] You don't get to see it.
[651] You just don't.
[652] You don't get to see it for what it really is.
[653] There's an old story from John Dunn.
[654] It was some early Christian monk, a story about a guy who was writing around on an ass all day, a donkey, looking for a donkey.
[655] In other words, it's like, I'm trying to find God, I'm trying to find God, and you're swimming in it, but you're just not aware of it.
[656] And it's that shift in conscious.
[657] And now we've got seven billion people on the planet now.
[658] So not everybody's going to get to do this.
[659] This is where stuff gets really hairy.
[660] Whenever someone says something like that, we're going to have to kill them.
[661] No, they're going to die.
[662] I don't want to kill anybody, but death is inevitable.
[663] Come on.
[664] But that's a lot.
[665] big number though.
[666] So how many people do you believe in the Georgia Guidestones?
[667] Do you believe this should only be like 500 million on the whole planet?
[668] I believe that there is a balance that can be achieved that's probably much greater than that if if mankind were to live with permaculture I think we need more than 500 million though just to fight off to animals I don't think we're going to get to choose what the number's going to be I think the way we are right now with animals that's very rare than an animal attacks you I think this is a perfect place to be the animals are pissed off too yeah they can suck my dick They're all animals.
[669] I'm on teen people.
[670] If we're just out there dominating to the point where we don't have to worry about them eating our children.
[671] Right there, I think that's good.
[672] Because this is a rare point in history.
[673] People have sort of forgotten that at one point in time, just 50 ,000 years ago, fucking blink in the eye, everywhere you went, you could have got eaten.
[674] You know, everywhere you went.
[675] You're just animal, wild animals everywhere.
[676] 50 ,000 years ago, there was fucking saber -toothed tigers were still around.
[677] You know, but there was always a balance.
[678] Humans rose to a population of, two or three million stayed there for a long, estimated five million.
[679] But it was stable for more than, well more than a thousand years at like a billion people on the planet.
[680] Wow.
[681] It was about, you know, but even this, we were still overusing resources.
[682] We were still chopping down all the forests in Europe because all of the, see, all of these, all the colonial expansion was to find more resources to consume.
[683] We reached the end of the planet.
[684] You know, there's no more places to go discover to get more stuff.
[685] So how do you stop people from breeding?
[686] Because kids are awesome.
[687] I love having kids.
[688] It's like one of my favorite things in life.
[689] So is that part of the problem?
[690] I mean, it can't be.
[691] It can't be of one or two people that you make.
[692] The real problem is a lack of resources, right?
[693] The real problem, isn't it possible that there could be some sort of a scientific discovery, something that changes the game as far as the way we can, you know, we can harness energy that could possibly pull us in a more positive direction than a complete total collapse?
[694] No. Like some sort of a skid in.
[695] No, nothing.
[696] It's impossible.
[697] Damn.
[698] We're fucked, period.
[699] Well, there are now...
[700] You should have a T -shirt and sell it on your website, though, by the way.
[701] It says, we're fucked.
[702] We're fucked?
[703] Yeah.
[704] That would be great.
[705] I have to think about what to put on the backside.
[706] There are...
[707] Website address.
[708] There are one billion internal combustion -powered vehicles on the planet today.
[709] One billion.
[710] Oh, my God.
[711] They all run on oil, okay?
[712] And it took...
[713] untold tens of thousands of gallons of oil to make the vehicle.
[714] You've got to mine the ore. You've got to melt it.
[715] You've got to form it.
[716] Paints are oil.
[717] Plastic is oil, blah, blah, blah.
[718] So it took all the oil to make that.
[719] So even if some new technology appeared today, you couldn't plug it into any internal combustion powered vehicle and make it work.
[720] There's seven gallons of oil in every tire.
[721] Yeah.
[722] How many gallons of oil are there in electric cars?
[723] It depends on how big the car is.
[724] I mean, you know, there's, you know.
[725] Must be a lot, though, right?
[726] Yeah, I mean...
[727] It's impossible to make a car without using oil?
[728] Yeah.
[729] And even an electric car.
[730] And in electric car, you also have to worry about conflict minerals that are powering your batteries.
[731] Electricity is not an energy source.
[732] Electricity has to be generated.
[733] How do you generate it by burning oil, by burning coal, by burning natural gas, or a nuclear reactor?
[734] Jesus Christ.
[735] Okay, so electricity is nowhere that it still has to be generated.
[736] And most of our electricity in the U .S. is natural gas and coal.
[737] We're addicted to electricity.
[738] And once we got addicted to electricity, then we multiplied like rats.
[739] Electricity is the lifeblood of human industrial civilization.
[740] Keeps the refrigerator on.
[741] Keeps a TV running.
[742] It keeps a credit card circulating.
[743] It keeps your cameras charged up.
[744] No electricity, no economy.
[745] Yeah.
[746] That's amazing.
[747] Yeah.
[748] It's amazing.
[749] What a mess.
[750] I mean, they had that big blackout down here down of San Diego.
[751] Yeah.
[752] And whoa, that was a bucket of cold water in the face because that was real panic.
[753] That was a multi -state.
[754] those are going to be in the summer right yeah those are going to be coming and eventually they're going to be permanent the power won't be coming back on again isn't there a way to keep the power on so wait dude come on i like refrigerated food yeah i like tv there's got to be a way out of this okay now help us help those that want to be helped in the movie we all have to live in the woods no no well good stay out of the woods No, in the movie, I told the story about campers being attacked by a bear.
[755] Yes.
[756] Okay.
[757] Now, if you're in a camp and a big bear attacks the camp, you do not have to be faster than the bear.
[758] You only have to be faster than the slowest camper, period.
[759] That's the lesson for everybody here who becomes aware of collapse.
[760] The slow campers, the zombies, as we call them, are going to be out there zombies until the last minute, you know, when nothing is working anymore and people are starving to death and they're going to go.
[761] say, well, gee, I don't understand.
[762] This is going to come back any second.
[763] The faster campers, the ones worthy of Darwinian selection, there are tens of millions of us around the world, already moving.
[764] Local food production, first and foremost, start growing food wherever you are right now.
[765] And then building communities and disengaging from that paradigm.
[766] So those are the people who are going to make it.
[767] you know and and some areas in some regions won't but see i get to see this all over the world as a result to collapse i got do you have to be somewhere where you're not going to need a car because this is not an issue and eventually we're going to run out of oil right is that close well no there'll always be oil in the ground i mean gasoline though i mean like when do you think when do you think it'll be an issue where you won't be able to get gas is that is that something you foresee it's an issue in this country right now we've had massive fuel shortages diesel shortages that have paralyzed us.
[768] Diesel for the upper Midwest, Canada.
[769] Yeah, and it's happening all over the world right now.
[770] You don't see it.
[771] We bring it the stories on CollapseNet.
[772] Johannesburg, South Africa, gas station shut down, India, Pakistan, falling apart because they can't get the oil.
[773] So that's a problem that's going to get worse and worse and worse.
[774] It won't be like turning a switch.
[775] You have oil one day and gas one day and no gas the next day.
[776] It becomes harder to get, et cetera, et cetera.
[777] Why is gas cheaper though right now than it was, like say three years ago, though?
[778] That's a result also of the fact that the economy is much slower.
[779] It's 96 % correlation between greenhouse gas emission and GDP growth.
[780] You don't grow the economy without burning oil and natural gas.
[781] Wow.
[782] So there's less demand now.
[783] When Bush was leaving office, though, how did they get away with jacking the gas through the fucking roof?
[784] Because it was almost like, I almost heard like the Rolling Stones playing, who, who, like playing in the backer while they were doing it.
[785] it.
[786] Because it seemed like, you know, they were going out in a blazer grory.
[787] Please meet you.
[788] Francis Ford Copeland.
[789] Yeah.
[790] You know what I mean?
[791] I mean, at the end of it, it was like, they jacked it up to like $5 a gallon.
[792] And everybody's like, what the fuck?
[793] Well.
[794] People, like, couldn't drive themselves to work.
[795] It got to be a real panic.
[796] That was a direct product.
[797] I mean, it wasn't George Bush, Dick Cheney or Hank Paulson or somebody like that flipping a switch saying, okay, we're going to put gas at five bucks.
[798] No. It was a superheeded economy.
[799] We were growing then.
[800] At the end of 2007, we were at, and so the faster you grow, the more energy you consume, again.
[801] But you reach a point as a result of peak oil where you need more cheap oil than you can find.
[802] You've eaten all a low -hanging fruit.
[803] You found all the cheap oil.
[804] It's not inexhaustible.
[805] Deepwater horizons are a result of us being desperate to go out and get oil.
[806] It's more and more expensive to get.
[807] So the economy got so hot that the oil prices spiked because that was what demand was doing at the time.
[808] There was some minor stuff with spec, but it's fundamentally peak oil.
[809] And 147 a barrel oil is what shut us down in 2008.
[810] And we're just about to hit another place right now with oil at 100, 105 that's going to shut everything down because people are so much more broke than they were in 2008.
[811] And we're looking at a possible attack on Iran.
[812] We're looking at Saudi Arabia possibly collapsing Iraq's now in civil war just a week after we pulled our troops out.
[813] Yeah, isn't that insane?
[814] Yeah.
[815] Yeah.
[816] Oh, the U .S. is getting bitch slapped around the world right now.
[817] The Iraq thing is insane.
[818] I mean, they took a day.
[819] They fell apart, like, immediately, like, from the get -go.
[820] Actually, on the same day that the last U .S. troops left Iraq, Noreal Maliki had a delegation fly to Syria, to Damascus, to meet with President al -Assad, because the U .S. is trying to overthrow Assad because he's an ally of Iran.
[821] and al -Maliki, who was a Shiite, was starting to side with Syria.
[822] So the U .S. and Israel have been very intent on attacking Iran, which is a stupid suicidal move.
[823] I mean, it'll kill all of us because the world can't do without oil, and that'll shut down the Gulf and China will beg.
[824] It's ugly.
[825] What's the motivation for this?
[826] What's the motivation to invade Iran?
[827] Oil.
[828] To control the oil.
[829] And because Iran is truly a regional.
[830] power that can threaten U .S. Western control of the region.
[831] But what's happening now as the Western economies fail, right?
[832] Europe is toast and our economy's in the shitter and getting much worse all the time.
[833] China has been growing faster, but China is now starting to fall apart.
[834] But China is more of an economic powerhouse than we are now.
[835] So the people that have the oil will go to those who can pay more for it.
[836] China.
[837] See, when I look at us invading Iran What freaks me out is that that seems like That's a real country Not that Iraq isn't a real country But it was run by a dictator It was run by a guy who was Inarguably completely fucked up We put him in power He was an evil man He had evil children He just, it was a fucking mess And then, okay, we're in Afghanistan Well, it's sort of a crazy situation in Afghanistan But there's a bunch of warlords running the country And there's really only one city It's Kabul and it's a really unusual place you know it's like it's almost like there is no government anywhere and 80 or 90 % of the world's opiate yeah and then all the sudden you talk about Iran you're like okay Iran is a real country okay now you're you're dealing with a superpower you hit it right on the head yeah this is this is like we we've stepped out of the okay we're just going after you know banana republic fucked up countries that are run by crazy dudes and you know who have no power who are obviously humiliated by us just to a decade earlier.
[838] You want to know the biggest difference between Iran and Iraq?
[839] Iran has had those same borders since the time of Xerxes, a thousand years BC, okay?
[840] Jesus Christ.
[841] That's been Iran's borders.
[842] The borders of Iraq were drawn by Winston Churchill with a pen or a pencil in 1921 after the end of World War I. And Iraq was, Iran is all Shia Muslim.
[843] It's all homogenous people.
[844] Iraq is Sunnis, Shias, Kurds, they've got some Hashemite.
[845] And so Iraq really shouldn't be a country.
[846] Nature wouldn't have made it a country.
[847] It was politically drawn that way.
[848] And that's a big weakness for Iraq and a big strength for Iran.
[849] And I think people sort of felt something in that way, like when we entered Iraq.
[850] It's like, yeah, it's a fucked up place already.
[851] It's really a good idea to get rid of this guy, no matter what you think about going Iraq.
[852] It's like, we know that this guy's crazy.
[853] We know that, you know, if he really does have nuclear power, we are fucked.
[854] And, of course, Saddam Hussein had absolutely nothing to do with 9 -11.
[855] He had no weapons of mass destruction.
[856] It's amazing.
[857] He had no chemical agents.
[858] And yet that's the same shit bloody Barack Obama's trying to stuff down our throats right now.
[859] With Iran.
[860] Exactly.
[861] And that's the button that Ron Paul hits.
[862] And that's the bullshit button.
[863] I have a friend, Demetri Orloff.
[864] He's Russian.
[865] He survived the collapse of him.
[866] He's a right.
[867] Brilliant guy.
[868] Good friend.
[869] He calls it the aha.
[870] moment.
[871] It's the moment in the old Soviet Union when everybody went, aha, it's collapsed.
[872] It's not working.
[873] It's not credible.
[874] Nobody believes it.
[875] And Ron Paul is bringing that aha moment.
[876] You know, like the emperor's new clothes, when everybody in this country looks at every other sane person in this country and says, Jesus Christ, this is all corrupt, crooked, we're not, and all of a sudden we all see it.
[877] Do you think another country is going to get some sort of a nuclear power and it's going to become an issue?
[878] Do you think that's what's going to happen to us?
[879] No. I mean, that is the only argument whatsoever about suppressing other nations.
[880] The only argument that it's like, yeah, yeah, we got nuclear power, but nobody else can have it because it's fucked up.
[881] We used it once.
[882] We feel real bad about it, but we don't trust you with it.
[883] I mean, the idea that you would want to stop all these bad guys from creating nuclear power and nuclear, not nuclear power, rather, but nuclear weapons, is something, it's a consideration.
[884] If you're dealing with a really volatile country in the first place?
[885] I think our biggest concern now is not some other nation getting because it's enormously expensive and energy intensive to enrich uranium and and to make the warheads.
[886] Believe me, that's what I come from, it's the background that I come from when I had the clearance when I was living with my parents.
[887] So I don't think we need to worry about anybody learning how to do it or making new.
[888] What we've got is hundreds of thousands of nuclear that are already out there.
[889] It's already there.
[890] We've got, there's...
[891] So we shouldn't be worried about Iran.
[892] We should be worried about the shit that it was missing in the Soviet Union.
[893] We just put up a story on CollapseNet.
[894] It was from Japanese paper.
[895] Max may remember, but it was a good Japanese paper that there's like 700 pounds of enriched uranium that are missing from Fukushima.
[896] This stuff is swimming all over the world right now.
[897] So enriched uranium, if you refresh my memory, It is a byproduct.
[898] Plutonium.
[899] Yeah, anyway.
[900] Enriched uranium is like, that's the stuff that they, the, the, the, the, the issues with weapons and Gulf War syndrome, right?
[901] No, that's the same, that's, that's depleted uranium.
[902] That's different.
[903] Enriched uranium is, is, is uranium.
[904] Nuclear weapons grade.
[905] That you process with, with heavy water, with centrifuges, with, in various ways to concentrate the atoms of, it's either U -235 or U -238 that give you the energy but it's like packing the punch to enrich it to make it fissile so that in a reactor when you pull the radio it'll create the heat because all a nuclear reactor really is is a boiling water pot Albert Einstein looked at the first nuclear reactor he said it's a hell of a way to boil water and that's where all the energy comes from out of every nuclear plant it's just boiling water and steam wow yeah most people don't even know they just know that there's a nuclear reactor and they figure somehow or another they get that into an electricity line or something, you know what I mean?
[906] I mean, the idea behind it is when you look at it that way, it's like, wow, that's pretty crazy, primitive.
[907] Yeah.
[908] What a nutty fucking animal human beings.
[909] Yeah.
[910] Splitting atoms for our own power.
[911] Yeah.
[912] And then when the, you know, when they shut off or they, you know, get hit by a tsunami.
[913] Well, here's the catch.
[914] As collapse proceeds, as it gets worse, as nations, you know, we're seeing sovereign debt, government's going back.
[915] bankrupt.
[916] TEPCO is going bankrupt.
[917] Japan's going to nationalize it, but Japan's got a bigger debt than anybody else, et cetera, et cetera.
[918] As collapse proceeds, our ability to deal with Fukushima like events is going to diminish greatly.
[919] There are 450 nuclear reactors in the world that are running.
[920] And if we don't shut them down and collapse proceeds, they're going to kill everything anyway.
[921] How the fuck did we get this screwed up so quickly?
[922] Pretty stupid, huh?
[923] It's amazing.
[924] It's last few hundred years humans have had on the earth you know to think about how innocuous we were for the first million years of our existence in the last couple of years we just like a firecracker with a long fuse that that last couple hundred years was energy that's when we discovered the energy it's amazing coal oil is why can't we see what we're doing I mean what it what kind of a weird thing are people where they have such an amazing ability to control their environment and to influence their environment, and we can't, for whatever reason, we can't feel what we're doing bad to the environment.
[925] It's almost like we have much more power and much more ability than we have the natural ability to perceive the impact of this power.
[926] It's almost like, yeah, the disconnect.
[927] That's what happened.
[928] That's what it is, right?
[929] When the devil, whoever it was, wrote that into Genesis 1 saying, God saying, I give you dominion over this earth.
[930] Now, See, we are not God.
[931] Is it a mad scramble to figure it out?
[932] Is that what it is?
[933] I mean, do you think that the way humans have to evolve at an incredibly rapid pace, like sociologically or consciously, just to try to catch up with the technology that's evolving around us?
[934] It's almost like this mad scramble is in place.
[935] It almost has to be in place just to keep up with where technology is going.
[936] I call that, I gave a speech in Grass Valley.
[937] that's up on the CollapseNet website.
[938] The speech was called The Birth of Post -Petroleum Human, and I coined a line in that.
[939] I said, we, the people of the new consciousness, will live in the spaces between the ones and the zeros of Cartesian tyranny.
[940] Wow.
[941] That's pretty badass.
[942] Where they can't get us.
[943] That should be on a hallmark card.
[944] You know?
[945] But that's what this is.
[946] You know, this is like Cartesian tyranny is like somebody, somebody hitting the crack pipe just two seconds before they die and they weigh eight pounds you know it's insane because it's supremely arrogant in other words ones and zeros can't measure heart and soul but music does fighting does and there's no that's not a one and zero thing it's something that exists outside of that of those measurements and those controls And that's really what I think the Occupy movement is really exemplifying really well.
[947] So they feel victimized by ones and zeros and the manipulation and corruption of the system that manages the ones and zeros.
[948] And they're screaming out from the visceral part of their, from the mind, from the instinct that's telling them, this is a fucking mess.
[949] So when that woman says, or when they say, what do you occupy?
[950] And she says, everything.
[951] That's it.
[952] You know, when I was saying that the Occupy people are sort of like, white blood cells and they're just gathering around this illness and they don't even know what they're going to do with it but they're they're gathering around all the sick spots there was a reason why and and i got i got deeply involved in that uh when i saw the violence and i've been an activist a long time and i know a lot of veterans i know a lot of special forces and seals when i saw oakland and when i saw that all the unforgivable violence i was a good in the city i was i was sick i was as sick as i was when i saw the rod the king beating happened.
[953] I was just sick to my heart, but so were many of us.
[954] And when Shamar Thomas did his thing, Shamar's been a guest on my radio show, I love, he's way cool.
[955] He's having a hard time dealing with a celebrity.
[956] I say, get used to it, you know.
[957] But there were so many of us at so many levels who stepped up because we were so totally offended by that.
[958] But Occupy was threatening.
[959] And the reason Occupy threatened, and there was a Homeland Security coordinator, the shutdown of all the cities.
[960] We had that on collapse now.
[961] We threatened them.
[962] The tent was such a powerful symbol because you've never seen a fucking mortgage on a tent, have you?
[963] Yeah, right?
[964] It's freedom.
[965] That's the symbol.
[966] And in the space that was created, in my spirituality, it's very important to create it and hold a sacred space, where the magic can happen.
[967] And the occupy spaces, there was such magic happening.
[968] people were connecting and people were waking up to each other and the learning curve was going so yeah okay list of demands we know this and people were just figuring shit out one of the first things that NYPD took out of Zucati park was the library they had to get and they threw all the books away and all of my books were in there yeah they took them right to a dumpster and disposed of them because people would just be in the library the entire time people were coming people were unplugging from the matrix so but why Why would they get rid of the library just because they were using it to, they were hanging out there?
[969] Like, why would they, why would they close the library and throw all the books away?
[970] Why did Hitler burn the books?
[971] Really?
[972] I mean, so they're, they're worried that that's where they're going to get all their information from, this library?
[973] What they're afraid of.
[974] Or is it just a place to hang out?
[975] They're trying to eliminate.
[976] Well, what?
[977] They just hate gay sex.
[978] This is, this is a, you know, it's a big science that, you know, in mass psychology, when you reach a certain percentage of the people, 7 % solution, whatever it is, all of a sudden, everybody starts getting the, that's what they were afraid of.
[979] So they closed the library?
[980] They didn't close it.
[981] They threw the books away.
[982] They did the equivalent of burning the books.
[983] They disposed of them.
[984] Wow.
[985] There were a couple thousand books in that library.
[986] Bizarre that anybody could really rationalize that being a good idea.
[987] That's amazing.
[988] That's amazing.
[989] You know, and that's the other thing about this NDAAA thing.
[990] It drives me crazy.
[991] Or NDAA.
[992] National Defense Authorization Act, where they're proposing that they can just arrest people.
[993] They don't have to have a warrant.
[994] They just have to have an idea that somehow or another you're a threat to America.
[995] And they can indefinitely suspend you.
[996] And they won't do it because they're good guys.
[997] Don't worry.
[998] It's just in case.
[999] But no, you can't have just in case.
[1000] That's crazy.
[1001] It's crazy that it's gotten to the point where anybody would even consider saying yes to that.
[1002] You know, in Japan, they can just arrest you for 29 days.
[1003] And in those 29 days, they can torture you.
[1004] And most of the time, they'll get people to, like, say things and write things off.
[1005] and then they'll prosecute them completely.
[1006] Wow.
[1007] It's amazing.
[1008] It's written in the U .S. Constitution and the Bill of Rights.
[1009] Congress shall pass no law.
[1010] Boom.
[1011] Freedom of speech, everything else.
[1012] Okay, the Bill of Rights.
[1013] Congress has just passed a law that violates the Constitution.
[1014] Yeah.
[1015] And the president wants it, and he hasn't signed it because we made bloody Barack.
[1016] So he still hasn't signed it.
[1017] As far as I can tell, it's a huge outcry.
[1018] 25th 27th 7th yeah I don't even know what day it is December 27th yeah so so he probably will um has he expressed I mean he said he would veto it initially right a long time ago didn't he yeah I don't think so not that I've heard I'm expecting him to sign it might read somewhere that when it was first being proposed that people weren't worried if they got through the Senate because the president said he would veto it do you think it's possible the president lies It's just so shocking.
[1019] It's just so shocking that they would literally change what America is.
[1020] The whole idea of America is land of the free, home of the brave, with liberty and justice for all.
[1021] That was like the founding principles of this great experiment.
[1022] Liberty and justice.
[1023] Those words are so fucking important because people don't understand that they are.
[1024] This idea of security being more important is absolutely fucking crazy because guess what?
[1025] You're pretty goddamn secure.
[1026] You feel like, do you feel bad?
[1027] Do you feel like the enemy's all around you and terrorism is everywhere?
[1028] It's not.
[1029] It's not.
[1030] There's a few isolated examples and they're using those isolated examples to fuck you and to control you completely.
[1031] Pat down seven -year -old girls in the airport, make you stand where your weenies hanging in the x -ray machine.
[1032] Listen, I'm all for them doing, you know, airport security the right way.
[1033] I think it's a good idea.
[1034] It's a smart idea.
[1035] They've caught some people doing them.
[1036] But whenever you give people power over other people, I've seen.
[1037] people at the airport, and maybe he just had a bad day, or maybe they were tired or whatever, but I've seen them talk to people and they're kind of shitty to them and real short to them, and I've seen the opposite.
[1038] I've seen people at the TSA that are real friendly and real cool.
[1039] And whenever you have that possibility that a human being's day and emotions, and that factors into how someone is interrogated or someone is handled going through the airport, that someone could just be in a bad mood and be short and snippy, then all of a sudden, that shouldn't be even in the equation.
[1040] That shouldn't be something that people have to deal with when it comes to security.
[1041] None of that stuff should be in the equation anyway.
[1042] It should, if it, if it anything, it should be something nice and simple, you know, you know, just that's conditioning, though.
[1043] That's, that's training.
[1044] That's getting you used to being fucked with.
[1045] And, you know, it's so terrifying to, you know, to think that it's possible that there's people out there that would allow things to happen just to tighten down security.
[1046] You know, they would allow things that they knew could possibly be taking place, let it happen.
[1047] And that way, once it does, we'll tighten up this and this pass immediately, and then we'll just stick that right in in the back door.
[1048] And no one's going to say a word.
[1049] Plus, they make, you know, nice businesses and nice government contracts for people where the money gets laundered to all the guys.
[1050] I mean, it's sick.
[1051] The whole thing is the world is governed by organized crime.
[1052] And if you think about it, man, can you point to any government anywhere in the world that you think is doing a good job that its people are going, yeah, my government's really taking care of me?
[1053] No. No, because they're all run by the banks.
[1054] Gangsters.
[1055] Dick Cheney's the most obvious gangster of all time, right?
[1056] Is he the most obvious?
[1057] Well, that's aside from getting to the owners of the Fed, the Bank of International Settlement City of London, finding out who those financial powers would be.
[1058] And who are those people?
[1059] That's the top of the food chains?
[1060] That's the shadow government.
[1061] We're going to find out more and more about who they are as things deteriorate.
[1062] But Dick Cheney is far in a way the most evil senior manager I have ever seen in my life.
[1063] That's kind of what my book Crossing the Rubicon's about along with a lot of other things.
[1064] Yeah, he was a gangster.
[1065] I mean, that guy shot his friend in the face and his friend apologized.
[1066] You know, that's as gangster as you get.
[1067] He was so terrifying.
[1068] A guy who made a living as the head of a company that fixes shit after we blow it up and then he gets an office and blows shit up and then makes a fuckload of money fixing it.
[1069] He killed 30.
[1070] 200 americans and i say it in my book crossing the rubicon proves that dick cheney was the mastermind and executed september 11th i'll take it to court the books in the harvard business library so you believe that he actually engineered it it's not that they allowed 9 -11 he commanded it and he did this to in order to get people excited about going to war with iraq or and have whatever power we wanted and he was fully aware of peak oil iraq iraq has the second largest oil reserves on the planet.
[1071] So the only way to do that was to allow planes or no, you're, you're saying that he didn't allow it, that he was a part of engineering it, that he was a part, like he literally said, this is what we're going to do, we're going to take some planes, and we're going to fly them into these buildings.
[1072] Yeah.
[1073] Do people fly those planes?
[1074] They trust people to fly those planes?
[1075] Those planes were flown by remote control.
[1076] Remote control.
[1077] Again, like, I come from an Air Force family.
[1078] That is, the tech, what do you think all these drones are flying around?
[1079] That's, okay, and that technology has been extant with commercial airliners in modern avionics for quite some time now.
[1080] Do you, are you in the school that believes that the buildings were also rigged to implode?
[1081] All right.
[1082] I'm schizophrenic on that.
[1083] Mm -hmm.
[1084] Because I don't believe the planes caused the buildings to crash.
[1085] But what I have said throughout the course of my career, I finished writing Rubicon in 04, was that I wouldn't touch it because you couldn't prove it in court.
[1086] The book that I wrote is legally admissible in court.
[1087] There's a chain of evidence.
[1088] There's no chain of evidence with the buildings.
[1089] You can't prove it in court.
[1090] And I'm still that good cop on the street.
[1091] I'd like to see somebody's ass go to jail for this.
[1092] So when I built in my case, I built it from the framework of, can I get this into court?
[1093] You can't get building collapse into court.
[1094] There's no chain of custody on the evidence from the day of September 11th until now.
[1095] Well, I would wonder how you would possibly prove it unless you built something just like it and had the same thing happened to it.
[1096] How could you really prove it?
[1097] That's the mistaken issue.
[1098] I mean, if something happened like that, which is an unexpected event, and it caused the building to collapse, which nobody anticipated, I mean, that obviously, there was some engineering involved in the construction of those buildings, some, like, serious engineering.
[1099] Well, obviously, that engineering wasn't up to par, wasn't what it should have been.
[1100] Shouldn't there be some sort of a lawsuit about that?
[1101] I mean, shouldn't people be freaking out?
[1102] Like, hey, how come you guys built this thing to take an airplane hit and it can't take a fucking airplane hit?
[1103] That's assuming that the court system is honest, too, which I don't.
[1104] Right.
[1105] But again, building...
[1106] If there's a dispute, is there any other way to prove that a plane hitting a building wouldn't take it down exactly that way?
[1107] That's what's called in the intelligence business.
[1108] That's called a red herring.
[1109] That's called an issue the answer to which takes you completely away from the fact that I proved without arguing building collapse that the U .S. government did execute the attacks of 9 -11.
[1110] What was the number one thing?
[1111] If you could explain to it, there's a lot of people that would never believe that anybody in the position of government would ever do anything similar like that, anything similar to that, especially anyone who is at the head of a position of power in the United States of America, the greatest country in the world.
[1112] So what is a number one piece of evidence?
[1113] All right.
[1114] This was a piece of work that I did.
[1115] Rubicon is the, I think, the second or third largest selling book about 9 -11.
[1116] Really?
[1117] It's been read all over the world.
[1118] U .S. government can't admit that I exist.
[1119] That's a separate story.
[1120] We'll get there later.
[1121] But my original work led me to...
[1122] I come from an Air Force family.
[1123] My father was a decorated aviator.
[1124] He was in the 74th Fighter Interceptor Squadron in Maine during the Korean War, waiting for the Russians to come over the pole.
[1125] He was a radar intercept officer.
[1126] So I grew up being familiar with NORAD and scrambled procedures and how it worked.
[1127] When the attacks took place, I saw the second plane hit.
[1128] I said, something's totally wrong.
[1129] That could never have happened.
[1130] That plane would have been shot down along.
[1131] a time ago.
[1132] That's what it was set up for.
[1133] But on the day, how much time was it, was it less than an hour between the two planes?
[1134] Forty -eight minutes, something like that.
[1135] But on the day of September 11th, well, you backtrack a little bit.
[1136] In May of 2001, George Bush gave control of all war game exercises in the country to Dick Cheney, never been heard of before.
[1137] He also, Norad scramble procedures were rewritten before the attacks of 9 -11.
[1138] But on the day of September the 11th, I discovered and I have the evidence in the book, including on the record email from an Air Force major, Don Arias at First Air Force in Tyndall Air Force Base.
[1139] And there were war game exercises that were scheduled.
[1140] Now, normally the Northeast Air Defense Sector, ANG Air National Guard pilots, there's like, you know, 50, 60 planes available in all the states and needs.
[1141] But there were war game exercises that Dick Cheney has scheduled that sent like 80 % of the fighters from Northeast Air Defense sector, to Alaska, Canada, and Greenland for war game exercises on the day of September 11th.
[1142] Vigilant Guardian, Vigilant Warrior, Northern.
[1143] They're all in the book, and I have the records of all of them.
[1144] And who made that call?
[1145] Dick Cheney.
[1146] Dick Cheney made that call.
[1147] Okay, so now you have no fighters.
[1148] But then there was one war game exercise, vigilant guardian, I believe it, was that injected 24 false radar blips onto the screens of the Northeast Air Defense sector as the hijackings took place.
[1149] now picture you're an air traffic controller looking at your screen right you got a hijack alert boom and you got this war game exercise and you cannot pick the hijack out of the 24 false flips oh my god and now you've only got eight fighters left in the northeast air defense sector they have to fly in pairs you got to have a wingman how traumatic do you think so you couldn't I'm sorry yeah that's so that's how I pieced it together how it was done the planes were easily flown by remote control I believe in New York City the remote control I believe in New York City the remote control was operated out of WTC 7 which is why they had the destroyed WTC 7 Well they had already had remote control planes in the 60s 50s Yeah but how would you explain like the stewardess How would you explain all the people on there?
[1150] Because I mean I doubt like if the stewardess Were like getting the plane ready and they opened up the cockpit And Teddy Ruxbin was sitting there back hey I think the way you do it is the pilots no longer have control the plane That's right Oh okay The pilots are in the plane they start to take off And then they switch it off by remote Control the thing by computer And then they're fucked And these people are controlling this.
[1151] That's been built in for a couple decades.
[1152] They were proposing, that was part of Operation Northwood.
[1153] They were proposing doing that to blow up a jet airliner and blame it on the Cubans.
[1154] They were going to say a whole bunch of people died and they were just going to relocate people.
[1155] And then going back to my family history, my mother worked in the most secret section of Army security agency, the Japanese codes.
[1156] We had broken the Japanese codes and Roosevelt knew the Japanese were going to attack and let it happen.
[1157] I was dating a girl who was working in the White House.
[1158] as I dated her a long time ago and she worked she had something to do with Navy intelligence or something I forget what it was but she entered something into a computer she used some sort of a code word that she wasn't supposed to use she typed in Little Green Men under some sort of a data search and all these people came to her and they sat her down they brought her into her room and asked her what the fuck she was doing and why she was looking into that and really spooked her you know she did it as a joke She thought she would be silly, you know, and, you know, she was a young girl.
[1159] And they're like, what fuck do you think you're doing?
[1160] What are you looking for, hooker?
[1161] Yeah.
[1162] You know?
[1163] Terrifying.
[1164] Listen, those guys run the world now.
[1165] It's amazing that it happened.
[1166] I mean, it's amazing that, you know, you look back in Teddy Roosevelt, you look back in Eisenhower, and, you know, you feel like that's a real goddamn president.
[1167] That's the president.
[1168] That's the commander in chief looking at the people with leadership and trying to move.
[1169] us forward and that that was a guy.
[1170] I mean, look, when he left and he started talking about the military complex and warning people about the dangers, could you imagine a speech like that today?
[1171] No. Everyone's bought and paid for.
[1172] No one would ever do that kind of a speech.
[1173] The United States of America was mortally wounded on November 22nd, 1963, but the coup de gras was administered with the assassinations of Martin Luther King and Bobby Kennedy in 1968.
[1174] And I was alive then.
[1175] And I have some connections to Bobby Kennedy as a result of my CIA stuff.
[1176] I was only a sophomore in high school, but LAPD handled that.
[1177] And I was groomed by the same people in LAPD who had done the Bobby Kennedy thing.
[1178] And Seraan Sihon did not shoot Bobby Kennedy.
[1179] I'm sorry, he didn't.
[1180] That was a CIA hit from start to finish.
[1181] Jesus Christ.
[1182] So Sierhan Sihon was just, what, a setup, a Patsy?
[1183] He was there, Overstone guy?
[1184] He was hypno -programmed.
[1185] They were very heavy into research with L .A. LSD and hypnosis to produce.
[1186] So they talked him into it somehow, another with LSD?
[1187] Well, they were that good at that?
[1188] How do they not know he doesn't blow a fuse and just start shooting everybody?
[1189] It's true psychological butchery.
[1190] You know, there are records still existing from the LAPD files.
[1191] I have some.
[1192] Showing the kind of, he had lots of drawings and scripts.
[1193] So they planted ideas, but they planted in him a hypnotic trigger.
[1194] And that was a walk.
[1195] So it's a Manchurian candidate.
[1196] That's real?
[1197] They can really do that?
[1198] Absolutely.
[1199] It's super effective.
[1200] They can just count on it, go kill a guy who's running for president.
[1201] You would think you wouldn't want some moron.
[1202] Christ, they murdered Paul Wellstone.
[1203] You know, Senator Paul Wellstone, and I did a big thing on that from the wilderness.
[1204] Yeah, they kill people all the time.
[1205] The strange death of Vince Foster is a great one.
[1206] Yeah, so many of them.
[1207] Yeah.
[1208] I read that book a long time ago.
[1209] I don't remember too much of it, but I do remember having my job.
[1210] halfway hanging off my face or half of it like, what the fuck?
[1211] They find this guy, all his blood's missing, got shot somewhere else, brought to this one spot, gun's still in his hand, which you never find.
[1212] When someone self -administers a gunshot moon, that fucking, your hands go flying, the gun goes flying.
[1213] So does the gun, yeah.
[1214] Yeah, you don't have a fucking gun in your hand.
[1215] Yeah, I'm sure you did, right?
[1216] Was that, when you saw that, the Vince Foster thing, was that like a huge red flag?
[1217] Yeah.
[1218] But then, again, so many of us We don't want to think that the Clinton administration would be capable of something like that, though.
[1219] We want to think that it's only the evil Bush administration or, you know, Dick Cheney, he could do it.
[1220] But not Bill.
[1221] Man, he'll just want to get his dig suck.
[1222] I was, I was, I was herbering on Bill forever.
[1223] He's a drug deal and murdering, son of a bitch.
[1224] Oh, that's so scary.
[1225] Arkansas is the only state ever in the history of the United States that had bearer bonds because it was laundering so much cocaine money.
[1226] Wow.
[1227] What is it, bearer bonds?
[1228] Bearer bonds.
[1229] In other words, their bonds that you can walk into any large bank in the world and redeem right there for cash.
[1230] Whoa.
[1231] Oh, my God.
[1232] So they let that be legal because they were trying to get rid all the cocaine money?
[1233] Everybody was on the same side.
[1234] That's an amazing story.
[1235] For folks who, there was a documentary on it.
[1236] I forget the documentary, I believe it was one of those A &E shows.
[1237] Barry Seals, Mina, Arkansas, amazing story.
[1238] And that guy became the president.
[1239] And we think he's like one of the best ones ever.
[1240] Everybody wants to bring them back.
[1241] This is a really funny story.
[1242] One of the first stories I broke it from the wilderness, and that was a newsletter I had for eight and a half years.
[1243] Our final coup was breaking the Pat Tillman cover up.
[1244] My computers got smashed for that, and I got poisoned.
[1245] But one of the early stories we broke, Barry Seal used to own a beachcraft King Air 200.
[1246] It's a really cool plane, turbocharged, two engines, you know, high teetail, pressurized.
[1247] It's a Rolls -Royce plane.
[1248] And I got a tip, and the same plane that Barry Seal owned was George W. Bush.
[1249] plane, Texas State plane when he was governor.
[1250] He was using as governor, Barry Seals airplane.
[1251] And I broke the story, and AP came and picked it up for me. Holy shit.
[1252] Reuters picked it up, yeah.
[1253] Well, didn't that happen really recently as well?
[1254] Like a CIA jet that had been to Guantanamo Bay, at least twice, crashed in Mexico with four tons of cocaine in it?
[1255] We had a story.
[1256] Yes.
[1257] That was a true story, right?
[1258] That goes back to Air America, back to the old Flying Tigers and the Shinalts and the Coorman Tang out.
[1259] Nobody wants to believe this.
[1260] You're, what you're saying right now, do you know anybody believes it now?
[1261] Everybody now, but there's a lot of people out there, especially folks that maybe in their 50s that have had like a normal job and, you know, go to barbecues in the weekends and they go to church.
[1262] They don't ever want to, like, think too far outside the box.
[1263] What you're saying is so fucking far outside the box that there's a lot of people that are going, no, no, no, no, no, you're taking it too far.
[1264] They didn't, they didn't cause 911.
[1265] Proof's all there.
[1266] What do you think is the, what's the number one piece a proof to you that Dick Cheney caused that to happen.
[1267] The war games, they were all under his control.
[1268] Because of the fact, it couldn't have been coincidental.
[1269] It couldn't have been that maybe someone knew that he was doing these war games.
[1270] So they figured that's the time to attack because, you know, but they had some inside people in the Army that knew of this.
[1271] And then they leaked the information.
[1272] And they said, well, we'll get you while they're weak.
[1273] Do you think it's possible?
[1274] Did you just listen to what you were explaining and how, like, not credible that sounded?
[1275] It sounds ridiculous.
[1276] I agree.
[1277] I agree.
[1278] But I'm just giving you a what if because I watched Mission Impossible Five the other night.
[1279] Oh, my God.
[1280] Pretty badass up until the end.
[1281] But I'm willing to suspend disbelief, you know what I'm saying?
[1282] Yeah.
[1283] But I mean, is it possible that that happened or no?
[1284] No way.
[1285] No. Come on.
[1286] You had, of the 19 hijackers, I think, we know that five had received training at U .S. military bases.
[1287] Muhammad Atta, Gunter, Annex, to Maxwell Air Force Base.
[1288] And, you know, I have all of that in the book.
[1289] But hold on a second.
[1290] If you think that the planes were taken over at remote.
[1291] control.
[1292] Do you think that people were, that the hijackers were actually really on the planes and attacked?
[1293] The hijackers were on the planes, but they were.
[1294] They didn't know or they did know.
[1295] Well, there were 12, I call Patsy's who were like sacrificial hijackers.
[1296] They were never meant to live anyway.
[1297] They were on the planes, definitely.
[1298] Plains were flown by remote control because you know, pilots like Al -Hasmi or Al -Media, whoever supposedly flying the plane of the seven into the Pentagon, you know, that's a maneuver like one of the most experienced pilots in the world couldn't make.
[1299] And this was a guy who couldn't get a multi -engine license.
[1300] He couldn't get an instrument rating.
[1301] He had no hours.
[1302] It's not possibly.
[1303] None of those maneuvers could have been performed by any of those people.
[1304] So, and I hold some question as to whether Muhammad Atta and several of the ones that we, I and Michelle Chossodowski and some great work was done on the flight training by Daniel Hopsiger.
[1305] I've seen some stuff online.
[1306] Hopsicker did amazing work about the Venice Flying School and Mohamed Atas Flying Circus and all real hard documentation.
[1307] So I wasn't alone.
[1308] It was me and Michelle Chosdovsky, Dan Hopzicker, and Paul Thompson.
[1309] We were the four guys who really did 90 % of the 9 -11 reason.
[1310] Enlightened me about the argument when it comes to the physics of actually following a plane that what it was, I had read that it's much more difficult to do, like physically difficult to do what they were doing by steering it than it is to do it by remote control.
[1311] What they were doing is physically hard to do because of the G -force of the turn and everything.
[1312] Well, and it's also the calculation.
[1313] Now, you have to understand that when you're flying a 757 or 767 and you're coming out of a turn onto the North Tower.
[1314] Right.
[1315] You've got to know what the fuck you're doing.
[1316] You've got to be good at that shit.
[1317] That's like a Formula One race driver driving through a chicane holding the perfect line.
[1318] Yeah, I was thinking that, too, like, what's to keep that fucking plane from spinning upside down now if this asshole, you know, is spinning it around a circle like that?
[1319] Well, he knows how to do that with a jet?
[1320] No. A giant jumbo jet?
[1321] These guys couldn't fly, they weren't licensed to fly a regular old Sassna.
[1322] So how many people know about it altogether?
[1323] If you had to guess, if you said, okay, there's Dick Cheney and he's the guy that you perceive as being the mastermind, and then there's a bunch of people who also have to be in on it because they have to rig these planes with remote control capability, and they have to order NATO to stand down.
[1324] They have to do all these different things that they did that day.
[1325] How many people?
[1326] It's compartmentalized intelligence.
[1327] Now, remember, I come from a spook family.
[1328] So let's say you're making an atom bomb.
[1329] Right.
[1330] So some guy in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, might be doing something to enrich uranium.
[1331] Some guy, someplace else, might be making part of a super hard steel casing to contain the blast.
[1332] for one of the bombs.
[1333] Somebody else may be working on it.
[1334] Nobody knows what the finished product looks like.
[1335] Right.
[1336] But there has to be a few at the top.
[1337] How many people do you think new?
[1338] I'm guessing.
[1339] 30, 40, 50.
[1340] That's terrifying.
[1341] It's terrifying that 40 or 50 people would be willing to do that and that they could all find each other and form a gang and actually make something like this happen.
[1342] And they just hang out at NASA all the time.
[1343] Yeah, not NASA.
[1344] Some Army Pentagon type place.
[1345] sound stage.
[1346] Do you think that the thing that hit the Pentagon was a jet or are you, was it a missile?
[1347] No, it was it, it was an airplane.
[1348] It was an airport.
[1349] Okay, again, I was a cop, right?
[1350] Right.
[1351] And so when I was another remote controlled airplane, you believe?
[1352] No, no. Yes, definitely.
[1353] That's why I was able to do something so crazy.
[1354] That was a 270 -degree loop turn coming in with the engine cowlings, probably five feet off the deck.
[1355] A human pilot can't do that.
[1356] Really?
[1357] Remote control can't.
[1358] But here's...
[1359] Because they've had...
[1360] I'm sorry, but they've had people actually try to attempt that in an aviation simulator and they weren't able to do it.
[1361] No. Is it a physical issue?
[1362] I don't understand what it is.
[1363] Skilled.
[1364] You'd have to be just some badass fucking race car driver motherfucker who knows how to get around the Nureberg ring in 719, right?
[1365] Is that what it is?
[1366] Yes.
[1367] And you must have to be.
[1368] I must have practiced that one turned 10 ,000 times.
[1369] You practice moves in martial arts.
[1370] How often do you work Akata before you, you know.
[1371] Okay, so the Pentagon sits in a bowl.
[1372] I was born in Washington, D .C. I know it, okay?
[1373] And 395 runs around the Pentagon, and you can look right down, and you see the whole Pentagon sitting down there.
[1374] It's like sitting in the Rose Bowl.
[1375] Now, there were more than 400 witnesses on I -395, truck drivers cab drivers soccer moms you name it they all saw an airplane hit the Pentagon and they would testify in court that's that's what they saw so regardless of what anybody thinks I'm not going to argue the point is the fact is is to try the case in court and to hang Dick Cheney which I can do without going down that side alley it's not important to me but I do think a lot of a jet plane at the Pentagon well they released that footage but it was like stop action, it was only a few frames, and you can't really clearly make out what the hell it is.
[1376] Why do you think they did that?
[1377] Why don't they release like some clear footage?
[1378] Because they don't want people using it for propaganda.
[1379] I mean...
[1380] In the intelligence business, there's a program called Cointel Pro and many other programs that have been used and developed by CIA and Army Intelligence on the creation of false legends and false stories.
[1381] And one of the big, biggest deals in the intelligence trade is to do a dangle.
[1382] A dangle, let's say I'm a spy, a dangle would be like a 5 '10 woman right out of my ultimate sexual fantasy, you know, blah, blah, blah, that's a dangle.
[1383] But sometimes a dangle comes in the form of information.
[1384] Sometimes a dangle comes in the form of attempting lead that looks like it's going to really take you somewhere.
[1385] Now, disinformation in order to be effective has to be 90 % true.
[1386] otherwise you won't swallow it you won't buy it so there's a poison pill that they put in you swallow the 10 % poison pill and then if you ever get enough traction they activate the poison and kill you so I do believe a plane hit the Pentagon and I and what we saw we never saw a jetliner hit in any of those films okay I think that was bait to you know to see if that action got enough traction then at some point they would come up and actually show you the video of a jetliner hitting and all of a sudden everything else you bought into as a result right is discredited he looks preposterous exactly yeah i've always thought that was fascinating like when you read someone's stories and you know you read something like that guy uh behold the pale horse guy william cooper's that was named bill cooper what was that guy's deal um because he would he was one of those guys let me just say before you even tell me yeah he was one of those guys that i would read his stuff and i go well that makes sense that makes sense always he's fucking crazy exactly it was like that was the that was that progression and so it made me think well what if this guy's like working for them like making everything else look retarded by coming up with this one idea that he tosses in about bases on the moon where they're processing fucking compound race tires for the corvette team you know what I mean it's like he would say something like that yeah like the fuck is this guy talking about you know you know there are lots of people like that and this is why I've walked a completely different path because I had to walk the path of complete credibility for 35 years.
[1387] So, do you think there's people that are embedded in that path that are there just to say stupid shit?
[1388] I think, yes, but I also think there are some people who, who are, feel moved to tell the truth because they're outraged.
[1389] That's you.
[1390] Yes, but those people would also say something that they know tells to the powers that be that they aren't a threat.
[1391] Well, what's really funny is, a lot of you guys, And I don't want to lump anybody into a category.
[1392] And I'm certainly not putting you in with anybody else because I love your work.
[1393] But a lot of you guys think that it's not you, not you, but people along those lines that are calling out the government, they think that there are people out there that are shills.
[1394] Like other guys that are successful, like their competition, oh, that motherfucker, he's a CIA, he's an operative.
[1395] Well, I wouldn't say CIA, but there are definite people out here.
[1396] For sure.
[1397] Absolutely.
[1398] Right.
[1399] How many, when you see like a guy on TV and you see him talking, like, how much time do you give him before you start, like, wondering if this guy is a plant?
[1400] Well, when you see any sort of a leader and any sort of a movement, how much time, when you watch them, how much time do you like?
[1401] Well, my rule of thumb is, is that they wouldn't be on TV unless they were already controlled anyway.
[1402] That's just the real simple way to look at it.
[1403] You don't get the air time.
[1404] See, I'm invisible to the U .S. government.
[1405] I made it the video that's had some good play called Say My Fucking Name It's up on YouTube I saw that It was crazy You know It's fascinating I've done all this shit Right And sounded a bit like a jolted lover Thank you But you know what I mean Like it was a chick That banged everybody In the Rolling Stones Real pissed off I'm sure Yeah I mean it makes sense Because I've been saying All this shit And like The U .S. government Spent State Department Spent 3 million dollars refuting every other 9 -11 theory out there But not yours They couldn't mention my name.
[1406] So do you feel like they don't have to address you because you don't have as much mainstream exposure as say, you know, any of these other guys that you, you know what I mean?
[1407] Is that what it is?
[1408] Wait a minute.
[1409] No, no. I was in this really successful movie called Collapse.
[1410] It's been seen all over the world.
[1411] That's obviously, but they've got.
[1412] But you're obviously not on these C -SPAN shows or CNN shows.
[1413] You're not being interviewed all the time.
[1414] I've been blacklisted.
[1415] Right.
[1416] But why is that?
[1417] Is it just because they can't control you?
[1418] It's 100 % truth?
[1419] They can't shut me down.
[1420] I've left a record of 3 million words.
[1421] In Rubicon, there's a thousand footnotes.
[1422] So no matter how many books this sells, no matter how many people watch collapse, they'll keep you off those other shows.
[1423] Absolutely.
[1424] And that plays out real well with Native American spirituality, which was something that I've come to understand and really appreciate I'm deeper into it.
[1425] And there's different kinds of medicine attributed to different kinds of animals.
[1426] Bear medicine.
[1427] Fox medicine has been very powerful for me. What is one that makes your penis hard?
[1428] Is that tiger medicine?
[1429] No, that's squaw medicine.
[1430] Squaw medicine.
[1431] So what do you mean by like bear medicine?
[1432] Fox medicine is very important.
[1433] I've had a couple of very powerful encounters with foxes.
[1434] Fox medicine and Native American spirituality makes you invisible.
[1435] In other words, I am invisible to the powers that be.
[1436] Do you work for the government?
[1437] Because this is what's going on here.
[1438] No, I'm just kidding.
[1439] Yeah, I know.
[1440] But you're saying crazy stuff now.
[1441] You're saying crazy stuff about Fox's being invisible.
[1442] And so if somebody thought that you were a disinformation agent, they would say, oh, here's the evidence.
[1443] He says all this brilliant shit.
[1444] And then he starts talking about Fox is being invisible.
[1445] No, I didn't say Fox is invisible.
[1446] Fox Medicine means, I'm invisible.
[1447] Oh, okay.
[1448] And I'm invisible to mainstream media.
[1449] Right.
[1450] They all read me. They all know who I am.
[1451] They just can't say my name.
[1452] And that made me mad.
[1453] But I made that tape because.
[1454] I was so pissed off that everything was falling apart and nobody was talking about how criminal and how fucked up this was and a whole generation's being screwed.
[1455] I think a lot of people are talking about it, though, don't you think?
[1456] I mean, at this point, a lot of people are talking about it.
[1457] But if they say my name, it's game over because then they have to see the body of work.
[1458] But what you, so you're saying that all these people that are in any position of power that are, you know, saying the sky is falling, it's all falling apart, but whatever you do, don't talk about Michael Rupert?
[1459] don't give him the mic why it doesn't make any sense you seem like the perfect person to talk about this stuff but someone has to be an expert but then i'm good but then i'm going to prove that cnn that a bc that all the corporate own media is absolutely criminally corrupt and complicit in all the economic criminality that's been taking place and covering up all these other crimes every major media outlet in this country trades its chairs on wall street and they're all part of the same economic paradigm time and they can't afford to see me and it's not just me I mean it's all the people who did peak oil who do do done the work on you know they see me because I give credit to everybody else they got to see all this other body of work that they've ignored but about and so if they caught talk to you about any of this stuff then it opens up the floodgates the CIA selling drugs and all this so they're like shut the fuck up Michael rupert's not coming on a show exactly you know someone intern comes up look at there's a guy name's Michael ruper he's very articulate he's like he's the star of that movie collapsed get the fuck out here get out of my office.
[1460] No, no, he can't get on the Tonight Show.
[1461] What shows have you been on?
[1462] Who has Let Yon?
[1463] Bill Maher ever had Yon?
[1464] No. No. You got to be on that show.
[1465] You know, I would love it if he had the balls.
[1466] I don't think he has the balls.
[1467] That's crazy.
[1468] You don't think Bill Maher doesn't give a fuck.
[1469] He's got the balls.
[1470] HBO rises paychecks.
[1471] Yeah, but you think that they're going to, really, he says who owns HBO.
[1472] Time Warner.
[1473] Time water on that show.
[1474] Time.
[1475] Yeah.
[1476] And that's like one of my other favorite, whims out there, Amy Goodman.
[1477] Democracy too late.
[1478] She talks about all these great issues that don't change anything.
[1479] She's like a gatekeeper and she's syndicated by Rupert Burdock.
[1480] Do you think she works for the government as well?
[1481] Let's rephrase that.
[1482] I think she knows who butters or bread.
[1483] So it's fucked.
[1484] But the internet is the only hope, right?
[1485] But now that there's stuff like SOPA, right, is it stop online piracy act?
[1486] A lot of people who are paranoid about this, see this as a back door to possibly, you know, this is the beginning, the regulating the internet.
[1487] Trust me, I got a chapter called on Promise PROMIS software in that book, which is, talks about some of the stuff the government can do.
[1488] The government can, anything that they want to do right now.
[1489] Sopa doesn't scare me enough because Sopa is just kind of legalizing something that I are, that we know they're already doing anyway.
[1490] Right.
[1491] I mean, we've been under severe hacking at, at CollapseNet, and we got a great.
[1492] team of IT specialists and we're talking coordinated DDoS you know new servers boom boom boom getting into our emails shutting us out of this shutting it wow they even go so far as to change like the number of visitors we have on the website to make it look like nobody's looking at our website when zero make it go back you know it's stupid but they're doing all that now they've done it to occupy and of course we see anonymous doing that back so right that happens but so I'm not so much worried about SOPA because I know the bastards are going to do that.
[1493] So that to you is just like sort of confirming something that has already been in play it means nothing.
[1494] Nothing's changed it was already bought and sold.
[1495] They're going to go to another degree of difficulty or another level of intensity with that but the detention provisions in the NDAA totally violate habeas corpus, Magna Carta U .S. Constitution, that's fundamental and if that bill gets signed the United States of America no longer exists.
[1496] just so ridiculous the things the things have gotten so bad that they think they need to pass that look it's not that bad so you've got a few people protesting yeah it's really you don't need to have the military in the fucking streets all right it's really it's not that big a deal yeah well but what the problem is is they're looking at the next step they're saying this is unpredictable they never thought that they would see this they never thought they would see hundreds of thousands of people you know just ranting in the streets chanting in the streets holding signs wandering around and then camping out like what the fuck is going on so this This is why they showed their hand.
[1497] But they have also been very aware, Joe, that there are 50, 60 million hardcore, unemployed, homeless people, and the number is growing.
[1498] They're aware that now it's one in two of people in this country can be classified under the poverty line.
[1499] Half of the population.
[1500] One in every six Americans is on food stamps.
[1501] People are starving.
[1502] They're freezing.
[1503] They've lost their jobs.
[1504] they've lost their money.
[1505] They've known this was going to be coming, too.
[1506] But I think there's another reason for this with the planned attack on Iran is so that they can do a roundup of Arab Americans like they did with the Japanese right after World War II and put them in camps.
[1507] Jesus Christ.
[1508] So you think that the ultimate goal is to start locking giant groups of people up in FEMA camps?
[1509] No. And this is where I disagree strongly with some people.
[1510] Alex Jones?
[1511] Absolutely.
[1512] It takes money to feed people.
[1513] You have to pay the guards.
[1514] You have to build the camps.
[1515] You have to put gasoline.
[1516] You have to heat for the people.
[1517] And human industrial civilization is collapsing.
[1518] If you think to what the powers that be, the money people did during the Great Depression, they didn't put all the homeless starving in camps.
[1519] No, they let them drag themselves across the country from the Oklahoma Dust Bowl to California.
[1520] They starved along the way.
[1521] The government wasn't paying a penny.
[1522] It cost nothing.
[1523] It weeded out the population and the strongest made it to California to work for slave wages.
[1524] That's the evil of the beast.
[1525] They will have camps, you know, for people like me, or if there's major civil unrest in some cities or something like that.
[1526] But no long term because the resources don't exist to do that.
[1527] So the idea is just kill everybody then?
[1528] Let them starve.
[1529] Let them starve to death.
[1530] Or let them catch disease.
[1531] So intern them?
[1532] and then make them sick.
[1533] I wouldn't go that far.
[1534] No, I mean.
[1535] I mean, ultimately, if they know that that's what's got to go down, why not just poison everybody?
[1536] Well, that was...
[1537] Guyana, Jim Jones, everybody.
[1538] Yeah, no, that was the Nazi plan, and that didn't work.
[1539] Fascism has become much more sophisticated since then.
[1540] So what are the other options?
[1541] When it's completely hit the fan, what are the other options to get rid of a giant group of people?
[1542] Well, you let the cities go.
[1543] You let the people.
[1544] It's happening all over the world right now.
[1545] And you think that's unquestionably a plan?
[1546] Sure.
[1547] Who's planning to have all these cities fall apart?
[1548] Well, the bankers.
[1549] Again, nobody plans for city X or city Y to fall apart that way on a deal.
[1550] They just engineer corruption into the system to the point where.
[1551] And you believe it's engineered.
[1552] Well, is it just greed and just a, I mean, that's what I'm confused about.
[1553] Collapse is a fait accompli.
[1554] That's a simple matter of.
[1555] What is it?
[1556] that mean?
[1557] It's a done deal.
[1558] Oh, fait accompli?
[1559] Limit of resource.
[1560] What language is that?
[1561] French.
[1562] Why is it so cool when you quote something and we could just say, oh, fait ta called because it's romantic.
[1563] It is, right?
[1564] That's like a good way to get laid.
[1565] Sorry.
[1566] So the resource limitations govern collapse.
[1567] Right.
[1568] Okay.
[1569] We, six billion people.
[1570] So because of the way society set out, there's no way.
[1571] That's all going to collapse and wear out anyway.
[1572] Right.
[1573] We need a resource -based society.
[1574] We can't have the derivatives.
[1575] We can't have this nonsense economy and we can't have infinite growth.
[1576] But all the powers that be.
[1577] want to do is make money on the way up and maximize profit on the way down so they're just trying to money grab right now and just snatch up as much as possible it is more profitable to destroy things now than it is to save them and the n d aa is basically just like what we need we need to keep fucking peace in the streets where we're stealing money or scare the people and yes you know we just have crazy laws we can just lock people up yeah but you know who's locking people up though that's where it gets really ridiculous it at one point in time someone has to realize It's the structure of this this monarchy, this, this, this, this fucking kingship that's taken over the world.
[1578] It only works if people are willing to take up guns.
[1579] It only works if the common folk are willing to push around everybody else.
[1580] I mean, that's the only way it works.
[1581] Well, there are.
[1582] Because it can't really work if everybody goes, wait, what is it?
[1583] Fuck you.
[1584] You know, I mean, you need the cops.
[1585] You need me like a guy like you, steps out.
[1586] And, you know, when you were a cop and you saw this corruption and you stepped away, you were a regular person.
[1587] Instead of identifying yourself with this organization that was obviously sick, you identified yourself with your morals and your character and your upbringing, and you said, fuck you, the CIA selling drugs.
[1588] You know, at some point in time, doesn't, I mean, isn't that the real solution?
[1589] Is it everybody sort of realizes that they can't do that?
[1590] No, but this is like one of the coolest things that's happened to me in 30 years.
[1591] It was cooler than Fox Magic.
[1592] Yeah, yeah.
[1593] You know who killed Tupac, don't you?
[1594] Yeah, the cops did.
[1595] Yeah, there's a, you ever, you ever see that, man?
[1596] Do you want to talk about corruption?
[1597] Terrifying story.
[1598] Don't even joke or write it, right?
[1599] We can do that all night, but.
[1600] Yeah, the Rampart, the Rampart Division, right?
[1601] I was going to say, this is better than Fox Magic.
[1602] I was like, oh.
[1603] It's impossible.
[1604] Fox Magic makes you invisible.
[1605] What could be better than that?
[1606] Yeah.
[1607] It's like one of the key, if you could have a superpower, what would you take?
[1608] Yeah, but see.
[1609] Chewpox needed it.
[1610] Native American wisdom has taught me that if I am the wind, it does not matter if people see me, it only matters that the, that the leaves blow when I, when you come by oh that sounds trippy that sounds like again more shit you would tell the hippie chicks yeah so anyway i am better god you guys are gonna beat me up with that midler song bro he's quoted a bet midler song on my podcast the whole time he's been in quoting bet midler songs oh my god and it's this is a big joke well you remember when herman kane started quoting Pokemon i was like this this might be a fake this guy might not be real do you think herman kane was really was he just in a position as a spoiler i mean is heerman kane was a higher side show really I swear to God I know that sounds ridiculous I know it sounds ridiculous but when he started quoting Pokemon and using the fucking grand theft auto tax tax program you know it's like wait a minute they have to create all this drama to make you believe that there's a democracy at work out there so what do you think that was where some dude is just a super successful businessman and they co -opted him they got a hold of them I'm sure he got some great business deals to go through everything he went through and he's gonna walk away was never gonna be president to begin with.
[1611] Seems like he was just fucking everybody, huh?
[1612] Anyway, can I tell you this thing that's better than Fox Madge?
[1613] Yes, please.
[1614] Sorry.
[1615] You're really fucking with me here.
[1616] This is a great podcast, man. I'm enjoying this.
[1617] Thank you very much.
[1618] One of the coolest things that happened to me was after Oakland, when Scott Olson got shot in the head with a flight right, Army veteran, and I'm really close.
[1619] People don't know.
[1620] Elaborate on that story.
[1621] It's a horrible story.
[1622] During the Occupy Oakland demonstrations.
[1623] late at night.
[1624] Scott Olson was one of several guys that were out front.
[1625] He was a military veteran, and the cops were firing 40 -millimeter flight right projectiles out of M79 bloopers.
[1626] I've shot those.
[1627] They're little grenade launchers.
[1628] They're kind of fun.
[1629] And somebody shot him in head.
[1630] It was accidental, okay?
[1631] But after his skull was fractured and he was on the ground, you see the cops lobbying CS canisters, gas canisters, right into the group of people.
[1632] and there was so much brutality and this was after watching the white shirts in New York you know and and Shamar Thomas hadn't come up yet I don't think he had yet but we went to occupy Santa Rosa and it was like which is town close to where I live it's town of about we had the highest per capita turnout in the country so we had like 3 ,000 people turnout but we were going to put up camps and the chief of police had said we will use any means necessary to tear down the camp now what happened when I went there and I said they're going to fuck these people I'm putting my body in front of them.
[1633] I took an oath.
[1634] And when I got there, there were all these veterans.
[1635] There were Vietnam veterans, and there were Gulf One veterans, and there were one active duty guy.
[1636] There was an Army Ranger Special Forces medic.
[1637] And we had all showed up there with all, we all had the same idea.
[1638] We are going to get in front of the cops so that when they start shooting the gas, they're going to hit us.
[1639] And if they want to beat on somebody, let them beat on us.
[1640] because we know that we can take that without throwing back.
[1641] Jesus Christ.
[1642] And this groundswell from the veterans community, the honorable warriors, the Shemar Thomas's.
[1643] You know, what is so sad, and I've had a really close connection over the years from doing investigating on murders of a lot of Army, special ops personnel.
[1644] For all these years, we have had really good men go off war and never in my war has the lifetime has there been an honorable war Vietnam wasn't none of it was honorable was all crooked bullshit but there are guys who went out there who did the deed who put their lives on the line got their combat infantry badge whatever and didn't commit atrocities in really horrible wars and came home and they've never been able to shine like that and when shemar thomas did that shemar thomas was speaking for everybody who'd been to war in this country's military who served on honorably who didn't commit atrocities in wars that we all know were totally fucked up fraudulent and lying the the best teacher the most powerful teacher I've ever had I gave a talk at Portland State University right after 9 -11 became my video truth and lies of 9 -11 and a Native American showed up knocked on my hotel room door he's about five foot four and his name was Skip Mayhawk and what a presence you know have you ever looked a fighter in the and there's just some guys got to look in the eye and just, oh, fuck.
[1645] Most of them.
[1646] Yeah.
[1647] And so here's this guy I look and he's down here, you know.
[1648] I am Skip Mayhawk.
[1649] I'm here to be your cameraman, second cameraman tonight.
[1650] I didn't know, he volunteered, he showed up.
[1651] It turns out Skip had served with 101st airborne in the O'Shawe Valley in 1968 some of the bloodiest battles of the war.
[1652] The O'Shaas 'Leghous legendary.
[1653] And Skip was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor, the Medal of Honor, and he refused it because he was, fighting in an unjust war.
[1654] And he fought beside Russell Means at Wounded Knee.
[1655] And he showed up to be my cameraman and he became a teacher for me. And he was one of the great warrior teachers that I've had who taught me by the power of honor and why it's important to fight in an honorable war.
[1656] Not only to die your honorable death or, you know, to fight honorably, but to fight in an honorable war.
[1657] That's what a warrior needs.
[1658] And I think Shamar Thomas really embodies that And he was just a snapshot He's not a fluke There's lots of Shamar Thomas is out there Shemar Thomas is the guy who yelled at the New York Yeah There's no honor How do you sleep at night?
[1659] Yeah, a lot of people probably don't know What you're talking about But there's a video out there of this guy Who's a little big dude And he's got all these medals on And he's like pointing to the metals Like these aren't lies You know and he's like explaining All the shit that he's been through And it's like this is not a war zone These are your people Like how do you sleep and I And it's really powerful There is no honor in this.
[1660] There is no honor in this.
[1661] And they can't say nothing.
[1662] They just sit there and they eat it.
[1663] It's a crazy moment.
[1664] That's the power of honor.
[1665] And that's been Mike, and again, I'm not the only one who's done this.
[1666] There's a lot of us out.
[1667] We're all standing up now because the criminality and the bullshit in Washington and Wall Street is just so out of control.
[1668] Is there a way to turn it around?
[1669] Is there a way to somehow and other steer this back to the light?
[1670] Is there a way to make this culture?
[1671] wake up and snap itself out of it before we hit the wall?
[1672] Well, a lot of people are snapping out and waking up right now.
[1673] A lot of people are, and it's happening in very big numbers.
[1674] In terms of saving the system, no. We've got to get Obama high.
[1675] That's what we've got to do.
[1676] We've got to kidnap them.
[1677] Higher.
[1678] Higher.
[1679] You can't say that.
[1680] You can't even say that.
[1681] There's the guy yelling.
[1682] That was a total joke.
[1683] Here's the guy who's yelling.
[1684] That's Shemar.
[1685] Yeah, he was a guest on my radio show Really cool dude If you choose to get high with one person Wouldn't it be Barack Obama You wouldn't want to sit down with that guy And find out what the fuck's going on I mean when you get him really blasted Or you can't lie And just start asking him questions I don't think I'd want to know What would come out?
[1686] Really?
[1687] Yeah, I think I'd be fascinated I would want to see You choose him first?
[1688] What's that?
[1689] You would choose him first?
[1690] Yeah, oh man For sure Because I would he's like so close to my age I'm fascinated You know, I always looked at like these president guys as being these, you know, these old evil men with hearts of, you know, of diamonds and, you know, they fucking have blood that's coal, you know.
[1691] I mean, just evil and nasty, evil people who have gotten to a position where they can choose to start these wars.
[1692] But then I look at a guy like Barack Obama.
[1693] I was like, well, he was probably like close to my age.
[1694] When I was 10, he was probably like 14 or something.
[1695] Like that's like, that's real close.
[1696] Like that guy grew up really recently.
[1697] He grew up with the internet.
[1698] I mean, what's going on with him?
[1699] How is, how are they able to do this?
[1700] to him.
[1701] You know, how did, that's incredible.
[1702] He's one of us.
[1703] Well, he, no, he, you know what I'm saying, in my perception as a fool.
[1704] He's not one of us.
[1705] He's a, this is a government of the banks, by the banks, and for the banks.
[1706] And Barack Obama's presidential decisions, especially since 2008, all he has done was to make us pay for all of the Wall Street crime.
[1707] He's, they have, they have taken all that debt, all the money they printed, the derivatives, and the bailout shit and they put it on our backs and that's what's happening around the world in Greece the banks now run because there's a banker in charge of Greece there's a banker in charge of Italy and Barack Obama's done the same thing to us and all that debt that belonged to Wall Street is now on our backs have you seen the video where Barack Obama says that he believes he's the fourth best president have you seen it oh god no have you seen it Brian Brian find it on YouTube and which watch it because it's hilarious he talks about you know different presidents that have accomplished more, and he only lists like three that he thinks have accomplished more than they have.
[1708] There was a guy named Alexander Solzhenitsin, who was a Russian writer, a very great Russian writer.
[1709] He lived 30 years in a gulag prison camp, right?
[1710] And he came up with a great line.
[1711] He said, men in order to do evil must first believe that what they are doing is good.
[1712] Wow.
[1713] That's incredible.
[1714] So you convince yourself that we're the elite, we're the rich, we have the only way to manage things we have to do to that and they delude themselves.
[1715] That's the fetid, stale nature of a democracy that has not been ventilated and breathed and aired out for a long time.
[1716] You know, and it's, I don't want to save this system at all, as far as I'm concerned.
[1717] And especially with the end of energy, not the end of, with peak oil and collapse, the United States can't possibly hold together anyway.
[1718] So when peak oil happens and gas becomes extremely expensive and probably impossible to get, then what happens?
[1719] We branch off into little communities and make our own medicine with solar power.
[1720] I mean, what are we going to do?
[1721] Those of us who are smart enough to start moving in that direction ahead of time, yes.
[1722] But peak oil has already happened, and there are in this country with all of the tens and hundreds of millions of people who are unemployed or below the poverty line, people who can't afford gas at any price right now.
[1723] so it's going to slowly keep creeping and that really when we think about it the real big jump was the end of the Bush administration which was only a few years ago that's nothing a blink of the eye you know well they knew it was coming to think of how bad it could be three years from now thank you well that's good because again all we can claim here is progress rather than perfection there's not not ready and then ready you're not in a binary state do you subscribe I know we talked about them earlier but do you subscribe to the Mayans' ideas?
[1724] Do you think they were on to something?
[1725] I'm amazed at the coincidence.
[1726] Yeah.
[1727] It's amazing, right?
[1728] I think there is, I mean, everything else in this world we look at now is a lie.
[1729] Okay?
[1730] Come on.
[1731] It's a lie.
[1732] There's a recovery.
[1733] It's a lie.
[1734] We killed Osama bin Laden.
[1735] It's a lie.
[1736] Iran was behind 9 -11.
[1737] It's a lie.
[1738] You know, Wall Street, it's a lie.
[1739] Your pension fund, it's a lie.
[1740] Okay.
[1741] So, you know, all that stuff just needs to be seen what it is and disengage from it.
[1742] It's kind of mass destruction It's it's it's it's co -dependent to want to go in and fix that system It's a picture somebody wanting to go to the Nazis in 1938 and saying okay Let's have a campaign to organize to teach the Nazis that the Jews are really good people The smart people were just saying I'm getting the fuck out of Europe The Jews the smart Jews were getting you know getting out of the way The world knew what was coming with that and it's and it's not mentally sound to try and fix this system this system needs to be be redone.
[1743] Ron Paul's got a good end the Fed. Until you change the way money works, you change nothing.
[1744] That's the big start.
[1745] Then you've got to end fractional reserve banking, compound interest, and fiat currency.
[1746] What is the, what's the solution?
[1747] I mean, you have to do something to put something else in place.
[1748] What are you doing, Brian?
[1749] Here's the Obama thing.
[1750] I hope I'm ready for that.
[1751] Where do I look here?
[1752] Right straight ahead.
[1753] Well, there is.
[1754] I'm not going to be a list of accomplishments, as you said yourself, Steve, I would put our legislative and foreign policy accomplishments in our first two years against any president, with the possible exceptions of Johnson, FDR, and Lincoln, but, you know, just in terms of what we've gotten done in modern history.
[1755] Yeah, you raped the world.
[1756] Congratulations.
[1757] Good job.
[1758] Way to go, dude.
[1759] You got the Nobel Prize after the, and then you sent 30 ,000 more people out to Afghanistan.
[1760] He's bloody.
[1761] With guns and tanks.
[1762] He's bloodier than Cheney and Bush.
[1763] It's amazing.
[1764] It's amazing that he could actually say that, though.
[1765] What legislation, oh, you mean the ability to just start arresting people for no fucking reason?
[1766] What is it exactly that got accomplished?
[1767] Did I miss something?
[1768] Yeah.
[1769] What are these great legislation achievements?
[1770] Do you know what he's talking about?
[1771] No. What the fuck could he be talking about?
[1772] That's the Orwellian nature of this absolute crap we see on the mainstream airways.
[1773] It's probably horseshoe.
[1774] This whole time it's like some president thing.
[1775] I'm like, oh, yeah.
[1776] Never mind.
[1777] What I'll tell you, dude.
[1778] I don't know what the fuck you just said, Brian.
[1779] Never mind.
[1780] That's okay.
[1781] Yeah, he's a silly boy.
[1782] So, you know, all that stuff, it just needs to stop.
[1783] So, like I said, you predicted a lot of shit.
[1784] You, you, you've been at the, from, I mean, I forget when it was, when you, when you started predicting that our society was slowly going to collapse.
[1785] It was like way before anybody else was.
[1786] was ever doing it.
[1787] 2001 was when I first started.
[1788] What do you think is going to be?
[1789] 99.
[1790] The end point is going to be, is it going to be, we find groups of people and we hang out together and grow food?
[1791] No, that's, you know, I'm probably more grateful for that question, Joe, than any other one, because that's what we're fighting about now.
[1792] When we want to get Ron Paul elected, that's what we're fighting about.
[1793] It stops when the people wake up to the point and says, this has got to stop.
[1794] So if you can get a guy like Ron Paul in office, you think we can.
[1795] and kind of smooth everything out and still have cars?
[1796] He, well, we will still have cars even if we have bio diesel run on, or even if we have, you know, some of the criminal in the White House, you know, they're going to become harder to find.
[1797] But we're fighting to determine how far this system is going to run everything down before we put our foot down and say this has got to change.
[1798] change.
[1799] That's what's going to make the difference.
[1800] Because this system, I wrote an essay called Global Corp some years ago.
[1801] And in it, I said the way the system works, infinite growth, mergers and everything now, the last CFO of the last corporation in the world, Global Corp, when the world is in total ruins, when four, five, six billion people are dead, when one guy has acquired all the ones and zeros of wealth, and that company goes bankrupt, he's going to say, hooray, we did it.
[1802] That's where that ends until and unless.
[1803] Yes, we stop it, human beings.
[1804] Stop it.
[1805] And the consciousness is here that understands that the infinite growth economic paradigm will kill us in order to make a profit.
[1806] How much time do we have?
[1807] Well, if there's an attack launched on Iran within the next week or two or before the Iowa 3rd, excuse me, the January 3rd Iowa caucuses, and China comes in to back up Iran and the Russians have said they will back up Iran and nuclear weapons or exchange, it could be.
[1808] over in two weeks.
[1809] Jesus, fucking Christ.
[1810] I got shit to do, dude.
[1811] I have a new special to make.
[1812] I'm going to release it like Louis C .K. Look, this is very frightening stuff.
[1813] You think this is unavoidable?
[1814] You think that a nuclear war with Iran is just...
[1815] No, I don't.
[1816] And I'm seeing very strong signs that the United States is getting bitch -lapped around the world right now.
[1817] Since we kill 24 Pakistani troops, ISAF, Helos, kill 24 -packed soldiers.
[1818] all of the supplies going into the NATO forces in Afghanistan have been cut off through Pakistan.
[1819] How ridiculous was asking for the drone back from Iran?
[1820] Did that make you feel like it's a work of fiction when you saw that?
[1821] Fubar.
[1822] It's just Fubar.
[1823] It's just nuts.
[1824] They even asked him to go on TV and say that we asked for it back.
[1825] They told Obama to do that.
[1826] It's almost like they're making them out to be a buffoon towards his last couple of years.
[1827] This is your script.
[1828] This one I want you to do.
[1829] I want you to go out there.
[1830] And when they say about the drone, just say, we ask for it back.
[1831] Yeah, he's probably like, what the fuck am I going to say?
[1832] It's like a sitcom actor that doesn't want to be humiliated.
[1833] It's a bullshit line.
[1834] This is a bullshit line.
[1835] Expect it to be a lot more nonsensical all the way from here on out.
[1836] And the only way to avoid this is to have a guy like Ron Paul in office.
[1837] It's the only to avoid going to war with Iran.
[1838] No. How do we avoid it?
[1839] Because the Occupy movement is demonstrating that.
[1840] You've had 100 ,000 people out in the streets of Moscow.
[1841] There's an Occupy -related Occupy -inspired revolt in the village of Wuhan and southern China.
[1842] which has made the Chinese communist government back down.
[1843] And it's, again, it's not communist versus capitalist.
[1844] It's all money and banks and growth and all that stuff.
[1845] And this is a growing wave of consciousness that's magic.
[1846] And that's why there's a lot of days when I walk around lately and I see things happen and I'm just giggling.
[1847] So you love this.
[1848] This is fun for you.
[1849] Well, first of all, you've been, first of all, you've been predicting it for a long time.
[1850] So while it's happening, you're like, see, I fucking told you.
[1851] lot of that right I was yeah but there's also you're happy to see the system fall part not because you want people to die but because it's a fucked up system that doesn't work and it needs to die like anything that doesn't work let me make it very clear I'm doing everything I possibly can to accelerate the breakdown of the United States government and and the and the economy in the banking system and everything else now under the Patriot Act do you allow to say shit like that like can't that could be could that be interpreted as you're a threat only God determines what I'm allowed to say and nobody else has the right to do that and isn't it supposed to be enemies both foreign and domestic yes who forgot that how come everybody forgot that yeah what's the beauty of yeah of what ike and all these veterans showing up captain ray louis the philadelphia police captain who showed up in his uniform and got arrested yeah at zucati yeah you know there's there's we're stepping up by the thousands all over the country and we're making ourselves known throughout the movement and what we're discovering is there's lots of us out here and we are not going to let this go down and if The detention provisions are passed at NDAA, and they're employed.
[1852] You're going to see massive breakdowns because there's going to be soldiers in this country.
[1853] They won't fight.
[1854] There's going to be cops that will stand with the people.
[1855] Five county sheriffs in Northern California have united.
[1856] County sheriffs are the most powerful dudes in the country.
[1857] They can tell the president to stay out of the county legally, and the president can't say Jack about it.
[1858] Isn't that changed?
[1859] They probably just changed that with the NDAA.
[1860] They probably just changed that with something.
[1861] Some sneaky bill they stuck through.
[1862] It doesn't matter once they bring the military in.
[1863] It's illegal to grow food.
[1864] You guys said to plant your own food.
[1865] Did you know that one bill passed that makes it illegal to produce for your own food?
[1866] Well, no, there are some laws that restricts some people's ability in some places to grow food.
[1867] Yeah, if a dude farts a lot.
[1868] You can't be growing broccoli in your backyard.
[1869] Yeah, but the real beasts are the FDA and so forth to come in and say you can't drink raw milk, which is awesome.
[1870] I love raw milk.
[1871] raw milk is delicious did they stop that he used to get it at whole food they don't have it anymore it's spotty around the country you have to go to the farm um Senate Bill S510 Senate bill S510 what does it actually say what is the actual language it's pretty long it was not enacted it was not passed it wasn't past no that there was a senator from Montana who introduced an amendment to that bill that removed that clause from there isn't that crazy could you imagine what an yeah what I'm kind of an asshole you have to be, say, you've not allowed to grow tomatoes.
[1872] I think we're not enough, you know, we've already fixed all the problems in the world that's concentrate on people growing food.
[1873] Yeah.
[1874] Think about all the shit that we have problems with.
[1875] Prison overpopulation, war on drugs, all the different issues that we have to deal with, pollution of the environment, and someone chose to concentrate on people growing fucking food.
[1876] But our whole civilization now is predicated with the corporate control, the banking control, on us not being independent, not being able to function outside of a system that they control.
[1877] that the giant agribiz corporations, Monsanto and Cargill control.
[1878] How scary is Monsanto?
[1879] Monsanto's crazy.
[1880] It's terrifying.
[1881] Did you know that Monsanto was one of the companies that was looking into buying Blackwater when Blackwater was being?
[1882] Do you believe that?
[1883] Yeah.
[1884] Yeah, they can't tell like who bought a controlling steak.
[1885] They couldn't tell if it was like one of the people that owns Monsanto because it's, you know, there's a lot of crazy paperwork you got to go through.
[1886] But the idea that that was even thought of that the country, or a company rather that controls food growth in hundreds of countries.
[1887] And not hundreds, but a lot of countries.
[1888] But not only does that, but it's been shown that politically they force their GMO foods on these countries that don't want it, can't afford it.
[1889] They have suicides all over the world where people can't keep up.
[1890] Farmers are committing suicide.
[1891] They can't grow their own food again.
[1892] They can't reuse seeds.
[1893] They can't make their own seeds.
[1894] Okay.
[1895] So what's difficult to get about the concept that something like that is just pure fucking evil?
[1896] That's what it is.
[1897] The fact that that's not stopped.
[1898] You know, it's amazing that they want to talk about gay marriage in a time like this.
[1899] That's even discussed, you know, that any of this nonsense that gets, well, you know, what about the debt?
[1900] We've got to push the debt back.
[1901] What the fuck about this?
[1902] What about everything?
[1903] What about the whole pile of it?
[1904] It's goddamn ridiculous.
[1905] They've designed seeds to suicide itself after one season.
[1906] That is so scary.
[1907] But we've had some stories on Collapsenet recently that shows that Monsanto supposedly bulletproof seeds are producing mutations which Monsanto can't control.
[1908] Oh, my God.
[1909] I mean, it's like...
[1910] There was one that was just released on some major news source was talking about the connection between animals having tumors and they're eating some corn that Monsent genetically modified corn.
[1911] It's not for human consumption.
[1912] But it doesn't matter because you're fucking feeding it to animals.
[1913] Those animals might get eaten by people.
[1914] And you don't know what the fuck goes through.
[1915] They don't know.
[1916] They don't know what the reaction is or a human body eating 20 years of genetically modified beef because we haven't done it yet.
[1917] But now get that around the way.
[1918] world.
[1919] There are tens and hundreds of millions of people moving to be localized, to grow organic food, that's what I'm doing, and to take control where we can.
[1920] And those are the faster campers.
[1921] Those are the ones who aren't going to get eaten by the bear.
[1922] What is going to be the big difference between after the collapse and now?
[1923] What is going to be more, most inconvenient about after the collapse?
[1924] Are we going to have like crime issues?
[1925] We're going to have like roaming gangs?
[1926] That's going to be during the collapse.
[1927] During the collapse.
[1928] That's going to be.
[1929] That's all what's coming.
[1930] That's what's here now.
[1931] And that's happening all.
[1932] We had the bloody riots all over England.
[1933] We had armoured cars set on fire in Rome, the Arab Spring.
[1934] Right.
[1935] But in general, you have a few things that are like blipping up.
[1936] But if you look at the overall harmony of the earth at any given moment, most places are not in conflict, right?
[1937] Most places are just people going about their business, trying to live their life with these spotted atrocities popping up here and there.
[1938] You know, if you look at it on a, you know, as an organism and context, you know, as an organism and It's not in as much conflict.
[1939] It's not like a hundred percent conflict.
[1940] Direct correlation between that and population density.
[1941] Big cities are not sustainable.
[1942] And when you see things like Egypt, like these crazy beatings that they're doing the protesters in Egypt now, and you see like this battle to control Iraq, do you think that that was engineered, that they knew that in a vacuum, that these puppet governments they put in place would quickly fall apart?
[1943] No. No?
[1944] I really think the U .S. government was...
[1945] It's flambozled and cocky because we built, and I have this in Rubicon, three megabasys there that were meant to be permanent installations.
[1946] And I mean, some of the largest, most expensive military bases ever built.
[1947] We built an embassy compound larger than Vatican City, you know, that's going to house like 8 ,000 people.
[1948] We planned to be there forever.
[1949] So why are we getting out?
[1950] Is this too crazy?
[1951] This is the Roman Empire.
[1952] It's crumbling.
[1953] Jesus Christ.
[1954] This is the Roman Empire.
[1955] And the whole world can see that.
[1956] The world's starting to move much more closely into alignment with China.
[1957] And China is imploding also.
[1958] That's the other catch to this.
[1959] And the same thing is happening with money as it is with life and everything else, is that people are jumping to the next safest.
[1960] And all they're doing is moving up one deck on the Titanic.
[1961] To a deck that hasn't gone underwater yet.
[1962] And hoping that their kids live to miss the next big wave, that they get to stay alive and die before it all, the shit hits the fan again?
[1963] I mean, can it be held back?
[1964] Is it a wave?
[1965] Does it come and go?
[1966] I just have to completely flatline and then rebuild?
[1967] It won't be flatline across the board.
[1968] When the Roman Empire collapsed, there were some small towns that survived as pockets, you know, of wisdom and, you know, where some civilization was held for a while.
[1969] That's the way this is going to play.
[1970] There are going to be places around the world that by virtue of climate, their orientation to permaculture, sustainable economies, and the skill sets they have that will fare better than other regions.
[1971] I think basically the people in the cities are fucked, and if you stay in the big city, you're going to be fucked.
[1972] There's no one, no food here.
[1973] There's only a three -day food supply in Los Angeles.
[1974] I graduated from Venice High School.
[1975] I went to UCLA, you know, and there's only a three -day food supply in this city, and there's not enough fresh water here.
[1976] We steal the water from Northern California.
[1977] Las Vegas shouldn't even exist, and Phoenix is going to go under.
[1978] I mean, those cities...
[1979] Well, I love the story of the Salt and Sea.
[1980] This is one of my favorites.
[1981] I've watched several documentaries, read a bunch of things on it.
[1982] I've got a whole coffee table book at home of photos from the Salt and Sea.
[1983] That's an amazing story in and of itself.
[1984] We just decided to get crazy and create a civilization out there in the middle of the desert.
[1985] That's what's going to happen to Vegas easily.
[1986] Yeah, I think so.
[1987] Yeah.
[1988] Well, they're going to keep Vegas alive as long as they can because this weekend it's Brock Lesder versus Alistair Overeem, bitch.
[1989] Oh!
[1990] I mean, you could live on stripper.
[1991] milk for a couple of days extra I guess and you could kill small animals with their heels and if you know use their heels like projectiles listen there's going to be some bizarre Darwinian evolutions and adaptations as this thing falls apart you're going to make it through how much how much longer do you think it's going to be before everything is it is a 50 year process is it 100 year are we going to see this am I going to be alive to see this new I'm seeing this happen much much faster than I thought it would especially with the deterioration and the quality of U .S. government and the legality or, you know, honorable nature of the U .S. government and the economic situation.
[1992] Does it disturb you when you see Obama looking confident and talking about his legacy as a president and disturb you to see, like, this unaware motherfucker?
[1993] Like, what are you doing?
[1994] Why are you sitting there calm and congratulatory, you know, about your administration and the accomplishments that you've achieved?
[1995] Do you not see that the fucking sky is falling?
[1996] Do you not see it?
[1997] Look at you sitting there.
[1998] You're sitting there like a demure gentleman.
[1999] I've been so calm and so accustomed to be in front of the camera.
[2000] I mean, it's like, and everybody in Washington does the same thing.
[2001] It's ridiculous.
[2002] You know, those people, and that's why, again, why Ron Paul is so important.
[2003] Solar power, yes or no?
[2004] Should we get solar power?
[2005] So if you can get it, it won't solve all the world's problems.
[2006] And we need to stop buying that trap that we have to solve the problem for the whole world before we take care of ourselves.
[2007] We need to take care of ourselves.
[2008] We need to take care of ourselves.
[2009] Put your own oxygen mask on first.
[2010] Yeah, it's not like we were rushing out to fix Liberia, right?
[2011] We know how bad it is over there.
[2012] I know how bad it is in Somalia.
[2013] We're not running over there to fix that.
[2014] No. We take care of ourselves here first.
[2015] And those of us who work to build community, there's a great movement transition to U .S. There's transition initiatives There's about 111, I think, all over the country now, in cities all over the country, where people are forming communities.
[2016] They're growing food locally.
[2017] They're networking with each other.
[2018] They're working outside of the economic system.
[2019] They're learning skills that they're going to need, that we're all going to need at some point, to learn how to live with less power and things like that.
[2020] And this movement is, we have a directory on CollapseNet, the Lighthouse Director, absolutely free.
[2021] 1 ,600 hand -picked entries.
[2022] And you go in and you look around this directory.
[2023] And you realize that all over the world, there's all kinds of people working really hard and have been for quite some time to prepare to transit, to live outside of the infinite growth paradigm after peak oil.
[2024] And it can be done, but you have to do it in small groups.
[2025] But then you have to be worried about being raided by mad hordes of fucking scoundrels and zombies.
[2026] It depends upon where you are.
[2027] Zombie apocalypse.
[2028] It's real, right?
[2029] Most of the zombies, I don't think, will ever get out of the big cities because so many people are so out of touch.
[2030] So the big cities would just be like die -offs, giant die -offs, just like they were for the Mayans, right?
[2031] The Mayans left the giant temples behind, and when they discovered them hundreds of years later, they're covered in trees.
[2032] And there are people who are, have been putting a lot of time into thinking about how to defend what they have if people come and try to take it.
[2033] So what do you think about the, I guess it was the ATF saying that they were going to stop people with medical marijuana prescriptions from buying new guns?
[2034] They weren't going to allow you if you a prescription for medical marijuana to own a gun which is hilarious i mean i live in sonoma county where which is a a legal grow county and i have you don't have to get a uh i i i have a letter because i really bad i this my thumb socket was shattered i mean that the socket was in eight pieces and that's where all the nerves in the hand come together oh wow and uh that happened and uh horse horseback riding accident and uh and i'm a horseman i've been a horseman a long time but uh so And that works for me. But I don't grow because I own guns.
[2035] And see, that's a federal issue as opposed to the state issue.
[2036] But, you know, all that stuff.
[2037] But I don't even think it's a matter of growing.
[2038] I think you're not even allowed to have a license for it.
[2039] No, no. Is that what it is?
[2040] They don't care.
[2041] They don't care.
[2042] So you can have a license.
[2043] You just can't grow.
[2044] Is that what it is?
[2045] Well, or, you know, or the feds would know that if I was growing and own guns, which I obviously do, you know, then they would come on some federal.
[2046] pretext, you know, but...
[2047] How crazy is that that you could have a prescription for oxycontin but you can't grow a plant?
[2048] That's amazing.
[2049] You could have a gun and have a prescription for oxies.
[2050] How absurd is it to make a plant that God created illegal?
[2051] To begin with.
[2052] It's amazing.
[2053] Not only that, one that's killed nobody.
[2054] Yeah.
[2055] You know, nobody.
[2056] I mean, maybe some people have had a few wacky ideas while they were high and it caused a few deaths.
[2057] But listen, that's just people with wacky ideas.
[2058] You can't blame pot for that.
[2059] It's like Bill Hicks joke about a guy, young man in ass that thought he could fly, jumped off a building.
[2060] What a tragedy.
[2061] goes, what an idiot.
[2062] If you thought he could fly, what did he test it off in the ground first?
[2063] Yeah.
[2064] You know?
[2065] No one told him to jump off the fucking room.
[2066] You know, I was a narc and I've seen bad drugs, but the worst drug that has ever been out there is angel dust.
[2067] Yeah.
[2068] I had to fight people on angel dust, and it was the most ridiculous.
[2069] It was stupid.
[2070] Buddy mine got his finger bitten off when he was on angel dust.
[2071] You didn't even realize it until the next morning.
[2072] They have special purpose strength.
[2073] Yeah.
[2074] I'm the only guy in the history of LAPD to have been bitten in the left testicle in the way.
[2075] Oh.
[2076] Oh, snap.
[2077] Wow, was it from the sham wild guy?
[2078] Did it burst hit?
[2079] No. Didn't get it?
[2080] Imagine if it was.
[2081] So it just really hurt real bad.
[2082] It was, yeah.
[2083] It was a little bitty five -foot -eight guy on angel dust.
[2084] Oh, my God, on angel dust.
[2085] He went for the balls.
[2086] Well, he was holding a 35 -inch color console TV set above his head.
[2087] Oh, my God.
[2088] And five of us controlled him, and he was strapped on a gurney.
[2089] You know the thick canvas straps on a gurney?
[2090] Right.
[2091] He broke the canvas strap over his leg, gave himself a compound fracture.
[2092] Oh, my God.
[2093] And everybody went back to his leg.
[2094] and I was at the head and he just went oh and spit your balls holy shit you stomped him out is your ball okay yeah that's fine good for you yeah you got to stomp that worked fine all these years since yeah guy biting your balls you got to stomp him my nickname was inspector clues though you got to go you got to go pride rules on that dude holy shit what's the most fucked up thing you ever saw while you were working as a cop probably a homicide uh I was a training officer I had It was a two -striper P -3 here in L -A.
[2095] And I was working in L -Car on a Sunday in the south end of Wilshire.
[2096] I worked in the jungle.
[2097] That's where I came up as a cop.
[2098] And it was a homicide, and the RA unit had gone there and opened the door, and this guy had been dead for three days.
[2099] Every window in the house closed, and the heat was on to 90.
[2100] Oh, my God.
[2101] And the inside of the windows were covered with maggots.
[2102] Oh, my God.
[2103] And I was the first officer on the scene, and it was a Sunday, and I had to sit with this stinker for five hours.
[2104] Just me. Yeah, I was the crime scene.
[2105] I had to protect the crime scene.
[2106] Okay, so when you protect the crime scene, do you have to be on top of the body?
[2107] How close do you have to lay on top of it?
[2108] You have to see it within your...
[2109] No, I had control of the premises.
[2110] I was standing right at the front door, but the house was at me, and I had to keep the door open.
[2111] And I was stuck with that for about five hours.
[2112] It was only three days, and it got that bad in three days.
[2113] Oh, with the heat, yeah.
[2114] And what course is the summer?
[2115] Yeah.
[2116] So somebody just decided to do that to accelerate the deterioration process?
[2117] Yeah, who knows?
[2118] The guy was dead on the floor, and he had a marble lamp base embedded in his skull.
[2119] Oh, shit.
[2120] So he's on the floor flat, and the lamp is sticking up like this.
[2121] Oh, my God.
[2122] So I'm stuck with Sky, and I was talking to him for three or four hours until it.
[2123] Embedded in his skull.
[2124] Who killed him?
[2125] Did you ever find out?
[2126] A lover.
[2127] It was a homosexual killing.
[2128] Hala!
[2129] Yeah.
[2130] Look at that.
[2131] Dude.
[2132] That's the best kind.
[2133] It's a safety and gayness.
[2134] No. It's a dude.
[2135] It's a dude looking to kill you if you fuck other dudes.
[2136] Yeah.
[2137] Yeah, so that's one that really stands out.
[2138] I was in two shootings and a lot of fights.
[2139] Two shootings where you got shot at?
[2140] No. First shooting was a guy trying to run me down, chasing me across the street with a car.
[2141] I mean, the wrong side of the street.
[2142] Oh, my God.
[2143] And we were using Smith & Weston 38s with 158 grain lead ball ammo.
[2144] It's terrible bullet.
[2145] It's soft lead.
[2146] It ricocheted and bounced off the guy's windshield.
[2147] Oh, my God.
[2148] Second shooting was a drug dealer sick, two attack dogs.
[2149] on my partner and oh and and and I killed the dogs Jesus I didn't hesitate I just you know shot the shit out of the dogs my my partner was grateful yeah you've had a crazy life dude oh yeah man I've done it's you never finished telling us about why you went to Venezuela was that about the Pat Tillman story yeah that was um not only Pat Tillman but I was you were one of the first people to break the fact that Pat Tillman was not killed in in combat was in fact killed by friendly fire.
[2150] Pat Tillman's mom, Danny, is what she goes by.
[2151] Mary Tillman sent me an email.
[2152] Trying to get in touch with my military affairs editor, Stan Goff.
[2153] Stan Goff is a retired master sergeant from U .S. Army Special Forces, Delta, who taught at West Point.
[2154] Stan's a great friend.
[2155] He's a brilliant writer, one of the best writers.
[2156] Wonderful human being.
[2157] I love the guy.
[2158] And she was trying to get in touch with Stan through from the wilderness, and we had done a lot of exposés.
[2159] I went down to San Jose and met with Danny, and she gave me like 2 ,000 -plus pages of Army records redacted, you know, with all the black sparts.
[2160] And so I spent the night copying those, every one of them in perfect order.
[2161] Jesus Christ.
[2162] 2 ,000.
[2163] How long did that take?
[2164] You do what you got to do.
[2165] And so I copied them, took them back to our offices in Ashland, Oregon, and I flew Stan Goff out.
[2166] And Stan did most of the work, but we totally broke down the art. me story.
[2167] And we published a seven -part series, which was the basis of Henry Waxman's hearings in the House Governmental Affairs Committee over the cover -up.
[2168] And we brought, we got six senior officers, three general officers disciplined, and we forced Donald Rumsfeld to resign.
[2169] But we were, that's why Donald Rumsfeld resigned?
[2170] Oh, yeah.
[2171] He resigned right when he was about to be called before the Tillman hearings, very suddenly.
[2172] So then he can't be called because he resigned?
[2173] Is that how he avoided it?
[2174] Yeah, I'm sorry.
[2175] Isn't it amazing when they have weird rules like that, like Congress, like they can insider trade?
[2176] It's not illegal for Congress to be insider trading.
[2177] His resignation was the quid pro quo.
[2178] You know, he fell on his sort because it went to Bush.
[2179] It went to Cheney and to Bush.
[2180] And a lot of crimes were covered with that.
[2181] That was just a horrendous miscarriage.
[2182] Did you believe that it was an accident or do you believe that they killed them on purpose because he was being very outspoken about his?
[2183] No. What I believe is, and I think enough time has passed where I can say this.
[2184] And again, I know great many people in the service, and I know special forces, I know Rangers, and I know a lot of guys.
[2185] Pat Tillman had a very large ego.
[2186] He was very outspoken, and he had all the right ideas.
[2187] He knew the war was bullshit.
[2188] He was talking out about it, but he was...
[2189] You think they fragged him?
[2190] I think that Pat Tillman became a ranger before he became a soldier, if that means anything to you.
[2191] It's like putting on a black belt before you earned the green.
[2192] Uh -huh.
[2193] You know, and it was definitely a really Fubar situation.
[2194] I don't think it was a planned premeditated murder.
[2195] But I do kind of suspect that his last words were, I'm Pat fucking Tillman.
[2196] And that's one of three -round bursts hit him in the head.
[2197] You know, and so very sad, very tragic.
[2198] And the people shooting had this communication?
[2199] The guy that shot him was a sarah.
[2200] sergeant in his own serial shooting a three -round burst out of a saw squad automatic weapon 30 yards of course he knew what was going on so you think he killed them yeah wow holy shit yeah and you think he killed them just because he was too outspoken too cocky they didn't want it they didn't like them fuck you that's too much speculation who knows right but they you think they killed them yeah but not premeditated murder in in in that sense but what we do know is that what the army did after that They destroyed evidence.
[2201] They burned his clothing.
[2202] They immediately started the write -up for a silver star, and all of that criminality that followed rather than admit that he was killed in a friendly fire accident by his own people.
[2203] So were you the catalyst that forced them to admit that it was friendly fire?
[2204] Well, let's give the credit where it's due to Stan Gough.
[2205] I was the publisher and the editor.
[2206] In other words, I put my money and my balls on the line and gave Stan Gough everything he needed to write a seven -part series that tore the U .S. Army.
[2207] and Donald Rumsfeld, new assholes.
[2208] So you publish it in, from the wilderness?
[2209] It's still on the website to this day, all seven parts.
[2210] And when we were in just ready to publish Part 5, my offices were burglarized, all seven of my computers were smashed.
[2211] One of my employees turned out, a woman turned out to be trying to set me up on a sexual harassment charge.
[2212] There was a forged police report, falsified police report connected to this.
[2213] You weren't trying to show her your boss.
[2214] No. So the girl, when you think that they came to her and offered her, or something cool together to do that I think she was a plant yeah well you know they have plants man it sounds ridiculous but there was a bunch of growers in northern California and they had a guy who would like sit in on their meetings you know they would talk about like you know growing for the community it found out the guy was a cop because he died in a motorcycle accident the guy died and then they said that's that's our buddy what the fuck and then it's sergeant fuck face he's been spying on you the whole time yeah well he's embedded in a bunch of pot growers like like you know talk about a waste of resources back to back to Venezuela.
[2215] When computers were smashed, my life was in danger and it was obvious.
[2216] The only thing that could have prevented us from finishing the Tillman series would have been my death.
[2217] Okay.
[2218] So, and I knew that they were coming after me. And so I went to Venezuela because Hugo Chavez had spent like the last four years going like that to George Bush and Dick Cheney.
[2219] And did you actually hang out with Hugo Chavez?
[2220] No, no, I never met him.
[2221] That was a really, really hard, difficult time.
[2222] I was poisoned down there.
[2223] Foreign Ministry knew I was, you know I was in the country.
[2224] I asked for help, but they wouldn't touch me. They didn't want to contaminate me. What were you poison with?
[2225] Once was a drug called Burundanga, which is the root drug of scopolamine.
[2226] You can look it up.
[2227] There was another unknown ideology.
[2228] The Cuban doctors helped, but it was shutting down all of my glandular systems.
[2229] My adrenals were shutting down.
[2230] My limbs were shutting down.
[2231] So you're ready to die?
[2232] Yeah.
[2233] Yeah.
[2234] So I came back.
[2235] How did they fix it?
[2236] I came back to the U .S. in, actually, to Canada first.
[2237] I was so hoping you're going to say Fox Medicine.
[2238] I became invisible to the reasons.
[2239] Imagine that's who us?
[2240] I'm going to hear Fox Medicine forever.
[2241] I know.
[2242] Yeah, that's a meme right now, son.
[2243] Okay.
[2244] That's right out there with Georgia O'Suclos's hair.
[2245] So, and, but I got it, I was sick for probably a full year after I came.
[2246] Holy shit.
[2247] And I did holistic and as much as I could, but I was hospitalized.
[2248] So you get, you got to death's door, essentially.
[2249] And there was nothing they could do to save you.
[2250] Then nobody knew what the fuck.
[2251] The Cuban doctor says, we don't know what's causing this.
[2252] Wow.
[2253] That's incredible.
[2254] That's so terrifying.
[2255] But we got Tillman out, and Tillman was published, and right after Donald Rumsfeld resigned, I flew back to Canada, then I came back to New York and stayed in Brooklyn for 14 months before I came back out to Venice.
[2256] So were you just moving around just because you were worried about someone finding where you were?
[2257] No, I, you know, Venezuela was a very specific purpose because, you know, I was, we had something huge with Tillman, and I was firmly convinced they were going to kill me. How long did you stay in Vazwell?
[2258] Four months.
[2259] Four months.
[2260] And then I was basically out of it.
[2261] You know, I was done.
[2262] I came into an inheritance for my father that I had to fight for for three years, but in 2008.
[2263] And I had this time, this first time in like 30 fucking years of fighting to breathe and catch my breath where I didn't have to worry about shit.
[2264] And so I kind of caught up with myself.
[2265] You know, it's like you stop long enough and then all your shit you did for like the last three catches up and you absorb it.
[2266] And then was right about then that Cynthia McKinney, my friend, former black congresswoman from Georgia, Atlanta, very dear friend.
[2267] She was the Green Party nominee, and she mentioned that she might like to have me be a running mate in 2008.
[2268] I said, are you out of your mind?
[2269] But that's when I decided, well, we need a presidential energy policy.
[2270] This needs to get put into the peak oil and all the issues about this.
[2271] And that became my book, Confronting Collapse.
[2272] But then Chris Smith showed up from Blue Mark Films also in February of 09 and said, hey, we'd kind of like to make a movie.
[2273] What's going on?
[2274] Very compelling movie.
[2275] I mean, you think about it, man. When the last time you saw a movie where a dude just talks for 90 minutes, pretty fucking amazing that you can carry a movie like that?
[2276] And not just carry it, but it was really entertaining as well as fucking terrifying, you know?
[2277] There were five shoots.
[2278] Each shoot was about 12 to 14 hours on set.
[2279] It was a full Hollywood shoot.
[2280] So you just drink coffee?
[2281] smoke cigarettes and rant.
[2282] And they were feeding me the energy drinks and they'd have them.
[2283] It was so cold when we first started shooting.
[2284] You know, I'm in that blue suit.
[2285] Right.
[2286] I would be sitting there and I would just cut.
[2287] They'd bring in a blanket, put two butane heaters next to me until the color came back.
[2288] And then pull it out and then they start shooting again.
[2289] I did that once when I was working for Dave Chappelle.
[2290] We did the Dave Chappelle show.
[2291] We filmed this Fear Factor parody with Tyrone Biggams is the crackhead that he used to do, the character.
[2292] He was on Fear Factor.
[2293] And we were doing this in a warehouse in Brooklyn.
[2294] and it was fucking freezing man and we all like huddled in front of these blast furnaces and then I would have to get out there in a short sleeve shirt and you know or whatever the fuck I was wearing at the time and be like I was on Fear Factor and we were freezing man I mean yeah let me tell you something about Joe Rogan that's not good Brian that's a bad impression um that's a that's a credible man so you you you've really uh you've seen a lot of crazy shit in your life from from the LA police time to now to having a movie made about you just sitting there talking like Like, what a crazy ride it's been from being a cop to this.
[2295] How the fuck, how did you get to this point, man?
[2296] Is this your destiny?
[2297] Do you feel at a certain point in time obligated to disseminate this information?
[2298] Oh, this is the Three Stooges School of Spiritual Evolution.
[2299] I mean, it's like I have no doubt that something larger than me tapped me and...
[2300] Gave you the ball.
[2301] Yeah.
[2302] and has kept me and sustained me and really kind of made jokes of any other plans that I had along the way for what I thought I wanted to do with my life.
[2303] And I'm really aware of that now and I'm living that, you know, spiritually connected to the fact that, you know, there is something really good out here.
[2304] There is something that's showing itself on this planet now that's just and that it's fair and that it's loving and it does have power.
[2305] I'm seeing crack.
[2306] It's like watching the Matrix, you know, when the matrix starts and the little bits of light start coming through, and all these people out here in the world right now, they're living in a matrix that's falling apart exactly like it did in the movie.
[2307] It's like, oh, wait a minute, there's a big hole in that building over there, and that's metaphorically what we're seeing happen all around us.
[2308] And there's a lot of people who really get that they're in a matrix and are starting to move out, and there's others who are equally moved to try and go back and reinforce it.
[2309] And those are people making their own choices, I think, about which way they're going to go.
[2310] so you're not pessimistic you're optimistic a lot of people might think that you're a doom and gloom guy but you're no you're let's be happy we're gonna get rid of the bad system we're gonna get rid of the bad guys there is a balancing that is taking place it's long overdue it's a it's as a doc holiday would say it's a reckoning what amazing times to be alive yeah it really is it's an amazing time to be uh at the point in human history and the history of this planet and the history of you know It's just, it's all very strange that it's all taking place in our lifetime right now.
[2311] And this is, really, it's an amazing moment, you know.
[2312] I hope we get through it cool.
[2313] I hope we all keep our eyes open because even though these are the darkest of times, this is also an age of miracles.
[2314] And we need to just keep ourselves open to the expectation that good things can happen without our permission.
[2315] And there's wisdoms, you know, there's a lot of other wisdom out here.
[2316] And there's a lot of light showing, and that's one of the reasons why Occupy.
[2317] Just, you know, makes my toes away.
[2318] There's never been a time in human history where the access to information is easier.
[2319] And when the access to information is easy, people can get the truth out.
[2320] When people can get the truth out and they can get the truth out and they can get an ideology of happiness and of sustaining your environment and of subsistence and of a community and of love and friendship, it's very possible to foster that and grow.
[2321] You know, we don't have to all be conquerors.
[2322] We don't have to be all cunts rape in the world.
[2323] It doesn't have to be that way.
[2324] That's right.
[2325] We can just be human beings and enjoy our time.
[2326] here because it is in fact temporary and like all sort of patterns of behavior that people get stuck in whether it's fucking gambling or excessive masturbation or whatever the fuck you get hooked on yeah you can also get hooked on running the world you can also get hooked on fucking over the world so these people are sick yes they're sick need to wake up need to pay attention to Michael Ruper bitches because he just drops some science thank you sir that was awesome that was a great time man that was one of my favorite podcasts ever I said some awesome shit.
[2327] Are we done already?
[2328] Yeah, man. We've been doing it for two hours and 40 minutes.
[2329] I just, you know, I just got so into this.
[2330] Well, you could sit for 16 hours of the freezing fucking cold and belt out a movie, sir.
[2331] All right?
[2332] Five times.
[2333] Yeah, but thank you very much, man. This is awesome.
[2334] Thank you.
[2335] Thank you to The Flashlight for sponsoring the podcast.
[2336] Go to Joe Rogan .com.
[2337] And click on the link for the Flashlight, and you get 15 % off number one.
[2338] And thank you to Onet .com.
[2339] That's OnN -N -I -T -com.
[2340] Makers of Alpha Brain, makers of Shroom Tech Sport, the cordyceps mushrooms supplement for endurance shroom tech immune which is a different kind of mushroom that's great for your immune system and we also have new mood which is a 5 htp supplement as always there's a hundred percent money back guarantee on anything from onit dot com thanks for tuning in chicago theater almost sold out freaks we had to open up the top balcony the bottom is done kid that is february no excuse me january 27th it's duncan trusel joey dyes and me we're coming to the chicago theater.
[2341] Strap yourself in, Hookers, because we're bringing thunder!
[2342] Michael Rupert.
[2343] You're the fucking man. Thank you very much, sir.
[2344] I appreciate it greatly.
[2345] How can people follow you?
[2346] Do you have a Twitter?
[2347] You don't have a Twitter, do you?
[2348] We got everything, yeah, but you can find everything at Collapsnetnet .com.
[2349] Collapsenet.
[2350] What is your Twitter?
[2351] I want to follow you on Twitter.
[2352] Max, what is my Twitter?
[2353] Collapse net.
[2354] Collapse net.
[2355] What about Michael Rupert?
[2356] Was that taken?
[2357] Michael C. Rupert on Twitter?
[2358] Wouldn't that be better than Collapse Net?
[2359] So that way people could look you up?
[2360] Too late.
[2361] I don't try to get.
[2362] Somebody just janked it right now.
[2363] As we said that, some little hack circadian.
[2364] I got it.
[2365] Ha!
[2366] Well, there's an actor named Michael Rupert and there's a photog name, Michael Rupert.
[2367] That's why I used the seat because they used to get, you know, people calling them up saying you're a crazy conspiracy theory.
[2368] Hallow.
[2369] Conspiracy theory and it's a scene.
[2370] What are the odds?
[2371] I got a show this Friday at the Ice House here with some people I can't talk about, but tickets are on sale right now.
[2372] How can we can't talk about the people?
[2373] Yeah.
[2374] Because it's a surprise.
[2375] Oh, you don't know who the first.
[2376] fuck's going to be on the show no i do you got to say that's how you advertise you fuck well i'll be announcing a few of them on twitter in the next couple of days are you trying to get people to follow your twitter is that what you're doing this no no no no no there's people who's on the goddamn show i can't i can't because there's a reason why i can't because you but explain the reason um because there's other bigger shows around the same day can't advertise yeah and they don't want to be like oh you they can see me 15 bucks here well it'd be a good show folks get in that's why i just do it i mean i have those shows i just do it him anyway here yeah tell people to stop being pussies tell people where the fuck you're gonna be right right michael rubert but god damn it icehouse comedy dot com for tickets everlast from the house of pain we're gonna try to get him in this week yeah he's awesome and uh well we'll do at least two podcasts this week all right love you freaks see you soon bye thank you michael rubert you were awesome