Ba'al Busters Broadcast XX
[0] Gute Nachricht für alle, die jetzt ans Haus bauen denken.
[1] Das neue Wolfhaus Energiepaket ist da.
[2] Mit einer Luftwärmepumpe sowie Photovoltaikanlage gratis zu jedem belagsfertigen Haus samt Unterbau.
[3] Und dem Versprechen, vom Keller bis zum Dach alles aus einer Hand zu bekommen.
[4] Wolfhaus.
[5] Rundum wohlfühlen.
[6] Excuse me, Egon.
[7] You said crossing the streams was bad.
[8] Cross the streams.
[9] You're gonna endanger us.
[10] You're gonna endanger our client, the nice lady who paid us in advance before she became a dog.
[11] Not necessarily.
[12] There's definitely a very slim chance we'll survive.
[13] I love this plan!
[14] I'm excited to be a part of it!
[15] Let's do it!
[16] Hooray!
[17] See you on the other side, Ray.
[18] Ich bin mit dir, Dr. Mengmann.
[19] Come on!
[20] Das neue Wolfhaus Energiepaket ist da.
[21] Mit einer Photovoltaikanlage sowie Luftwärmepumpe gratis zu jedem belagsfertigen Haus samt Unterbau.
[22] Und dank der Bauherrenmithilfe können Sie zusätzlich bis zu 20 % Baukosten sparen.
[23] Alle Infos auf wolfhaus .at Wolfhaus.
[24] Rundum wohlfühlen.
[25] Gute Nachricht für alle, die jetzt ans Haus bauen denken.
[26] Das neue Wolfhaus Energiepaket ist da.
[27] Mit einer Luftwärmepumpe sowie Photovoltaikanlage gratis zu jedem belagsfertigen Haus samt Unterbau.
[28] Und dem Versprechen, vom Keller bis zum Dach alles aus einer Hand zu bekommen.
[29] Wolfhaus.
[30] Rundum wohlfühlen.
[31] Yesterday I was looking for a video that I could not find.
[32] And I found it.
[33] So, here we go.
[34] Give me a second though, because first it starts off not talking.
[35] So, you know, that'll lose.
[36] I gotta unmute it.
[37] Hello over there in Kik.
[38] For some reason, every time I tried to set up an issue, it said, no internet connection.
[39] And it did that yesterday, but the second time it worked.
[40] So I had to continue to replace the, what do they call that thing, the stream key each time.
[41] But it just spins and spins and spins and says saving, but it doesn't, a little bar comes out, like a little thing at the top and tells you that there's no internet connection.
[42] Yet I'm navigating all over the place I'm on right now, but.
[43] No internet connection, says Bitchute.
[44] Is that a way of stopping you from, you know, being out there if they don't like you?
[45] I don't know.
[46] I do know, however, that I am officially kicked off of Spotify.
[47] Someone had mentioned something yesterday, and they said they were in the middle of listening to something, and then I just, bloop!
[48] And that was that.
[49] And Spotify, months and months ago, I got a notification saying that they had removed some stuff.
[50] And I don't know if they have Strike System or not, but whatever the case may be, it has now been completely deleted.
[51] This is nada for this particular podcast.
[52] You get nada.
[53] But I checked around, and I'm still being distributed.
[54] The link for Spreaker, which is where I distribute from, is where people should be following me. Spreaker, I don't think.
[55] All those apps are free.
[56] They want you to listen and they want you to buy their crap.
[57] So they make the app free.
[58] S -P -R -E -A -K -E -R.
[59] But it's in the description.
[60] So if you want to follow me on podcast, you can do that.
[61] It's also still broadcast to Amazon Music.
[62] These are the ones I've checked so far.
[63] Like Jovian, whatever, the Jovian thing.
[64] Definitely on Apple Podcasts still.
[65] I don't know why Spotify took it off.
[66] Probably got a from some Karen or something like that.
[67] I don't know.
[68] I can only speculate.
[69] They didn't even send me an email.
[70] Usually they do that unless it's in my outlook as a...
[71] was they call it like a non -priority message maybe it's in there or something like that and it just didn't send me a mess a notification on it but uh yeah it's gone gone gone gone so yeah I do enjoy the little bit of monetization I just looked at my I just looked at my bill for spectrum and it just told me yeah 40 and then it went to 59 Now I'm looking at all the taxes and everything.
[72] It's $74 .99 for dog crap service.
[73] And they don't even have the right to be claiming that this is a service that they provide.
[74] So I can't wait until Aloe is done, the fiber optics.
[75] It's only $82.
[76] So I'm not really paying a whole lot more.
[77] And they said that's the price with the taxes.
[78] That's for $500.
[79] Ich glaube, es ist schon gut.
[80] Es ist bereits besser als was ich bekomme.
[81] Wenn ich 1 .1 GB, dann ist es etwas wie 121 oder 111.
[82] Aber ich würde haben, die beiden internets hier, wenn ich zu dieser Level habe.
[83] Ich möchte, dass das Zentralink, aber für heute, die andere Computer ist so jacked up.
[84] Du hast zu gehen, Secret Sleuth.
[85] CodeGeniusGuruHacker in order to get anything that works, because you have to actually type the IP address into this computer.
[86] It's trying to stop me, the other one, from even being online.
[87] Yep, yep, yep.
[88] Yep, yep, yep, yep, yep.
[89] All the things that other people don't have issues with, I have to deal with.
[90] Alright, so let's go into this video.
[91] This is the one I wanted to show you.
[92] Das neue Wolfhaus Energiepaket ist da.
[93] Mit einer Photovoltaikanlage sowie Luftwärmepumpe gratis zu jedem belagsfertigen Haus samt Unterbau.
[94] Und dank der Bauherrenmithilfe können Sie zusätzlich bis zu 20 % Baukosten sparen.
[95] Alle Infos auf wolfhaus .at.
[96] Wolfhaus.
[97] Rundum wohlfühlen.
[98] So, jetzt noch drei nach links und zwei nach rechts.
[99] Für diesen Preis knackt man jeden Tresor.
[100] Bühne frei und Payback -Punkte los.
[101] Gewinne zwei goldene VIP -Tickets inklusive Backstage -Führung für das Lido Sounds in Linz.
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[105] Und dann, this is the thumbnail, too.
[106] It's just very interesting to me. Okay.
[107] Who's out where?
[108] Let's see.
[109] Whoops.
[110] How come it's not showing?
[111] Seven people.
[112] Oops.
[113] There we go.
[114] Yeah.
[115] Yeah, Mike.
[116] Yep.
[117] They did.
[118] Your nose was itching.
[119] You knew something funky was in your nose and you're like, ah, it must be Bell Busters, huh?
[120] Yeah, I know that's probably not what you meant, but yeah, Spotify just tossed it.
[121] That's it.
[122] End of story.
[123] There's no arguing with them.
[124] I'm not Joe.
[125] I'm not getting paid by them.
[126] That would have been nice.
[127] Like, what's his name?
[128] William Ramsey.
[129] They picked him up.
[130] He's getting paid by Spotify to do his thing.
[131] You know, when people say they're in the top 3%, Like, that sounds really impressive, but there's like billions of podcasts.
[132] So top 3%, which is what William Ramsey mentions often, that could still be, you know, you're still 100 ,000, you know, in the top 100 ,000 on the list.
[133] It doesn't, like, it's really so many, it's saturated with everybody's got a podcast, you know, so.
[134] It sounds extremely impressive.
[135] Wow, 3%.
[136] You're in top 3%.
[137] And then you look at it and it's like, oh.
[138] I learned that from my brother because his friend was in the top 5 or top 3 too.
[139] I'm like, wow, how do you do that?
[140] And he's like, well, when you look at the rankings, it's still like, you know, he has tens of thousands of people above him.
[141] I'm like, oh, okay.
[142] Hold on, here we go.
[143] I got to try to be quick about hitting this button here.
[144] Watch this right here and tell me if this doesn't blow your mind.
[145] That's a...
[146] Blow your mind.
[147] So yeah, that's a hair.
[148] And we'll go into what these sizes actually mean.
[149] Wink, wink.
[150] After this.
[151] Human hair, right there.
[152] This is the Apple CPU.
[153] The little chip that's in your phone or your computer.
[154] Yeah.
[155] Watch it and tell me this.
[156] This is not Fallen Angel technology.
[157] I don't know what to say.
[158] Well, that's presupposing that Fallen Angels is a thing and that it wasn't.
[159] So that whole story, what's the main focus of that story?
[160] Don't intermingle with the people down the hill from you.
[161] You're up on the mountain.
[162] Don't mingle with the people down in the valley.
[163] That's basically what it's saying, right?
[164] Let's try to put it into earthly terms and not this weird bard -like superstition stuff, right?
[165] Well, that almost seems like they ripped that story directly from the Goths because they started instilling this preservation measure because of the cult that we keep talking about and how they would groom.
[166] And they would alter and remove and exchange their culture for theirs.
[167] I don't even think you could call that human -sacrificing, blood -draining thing a culture.
[168] But they would do that to their people, like the Magi and things like that would be always, what do you call it, predatorial toward the Gothic children.
[169] And they didn't want, the Goths didn't want people to mix blood anymore because of that.
[170] So that was a measure that they took pretty early on after seeing how these people operated, right?
[171] So they were trying to preserve their integrity and their nobility and not get, you know, not getting, not laying with dogs, basically.
[172] To get fleas, if you know what I mean.
[173] So that was something that could be applied.
[174] And of course, Ashkenazi or whomever, these inbreds who adopted that, it's possible that they learned it by watching you.
[175] Because GD or God, they're saying this is where God comes from, potentially, maybe.
[176] That's one of the hypotheticals that Waddell kind of tosses out there, but doesn't say definitively.
[177] So, what does that leave?
[178] It leaves the potential that they're talking about other people claiming their identity and then saying, you know, these people who are watching over the, you know, overseeing the goings -on of the society are saying, don't mess with those people.
[179] That's forbidden.
[180] Right?
[181] And then when you do, you create monsters.
[182] Right?
[183] When you intermingle with this particular group of people, it ruins your bloodline and it destroys their integrity and their character and their morality.
[184] So don't do that.
[185] But then, you know, how many thousands of years of rewriting and retelling and mistranslations do you get to the point where it's all, they're fallen angels and, you know, blah, blah, blah, right?
[186] So, there's that.
[187] I mean, just consider that, too, as a potential alternative explanation for what they're referring to in those removed stories from Enoch, who, by the way, was Cain's son.
[188] And Cain, obviously, being Miak or Archangel Michael, but the son of Thor.
[189] Odin -Thor, right?
[190] Because nobody can make something like this.
[191] Not even a laser can shoot down that far and create something like this.
[192] Laser?
[193] Yep, just keep watching.
[194] We're going way deep.
[195] Oh yeah, we're not done yet.
[196] It goes further.
[197] Yep.
[198] This is what I was saying.
[199] It's like a fractal.
[200] The closer you zoom in, And we hit the bottom, finally.
[201] It's a little gray.
[202] It's a little cubicles.
[203] See the little cubicles?
[204] Kind of reminds me of Fight Club in that other movie with Angelina Jolie where they're like the last bullet benders.
[205] Yeah.
[206] When he's working at the cubicle.
[207] The soul draining job.
[208] It blows my mind.
[209] I can't even fathom it.
[210] I can't understand it.
[211] But that's exactly what Fallen Angel Technology does.
[212] You can't even...
[213] Let's see again.
[214] I'm just saying things as if definitive statements must be true and it's just a given, right?
[215] This is what Fallen Angel Technology looks like.
[216] How many Fallen Angels do you hang out with?
[217] You know what I mean?
[218] It's like, shut up, dude.
[219] Shut up.
[220] Don't present your speculation as fact.
[221] Imagine.
[222] You can't imagine it.
[223] Can't create it.
[224] Yeah.
[225] It's almost like you're looking at a city, right?
[226] A lot of people say that the old architecture, like the Roman columns and stuff like that, look like the...
[227] Like a circuit board, like the plug -ins that you weld into, the little legs that go into the thing.
[228] So that's interesting, right?
[229] And how would somebody make a tool that tiny to be that dexterous to make something like that?
[230] How would that happen?
[231] You know, like the writing of the lines and the acid washing to keep just the copper lines that you want.
[232] Like, I don't know if you ever did circuit boards in like technology class or whatever, but we would have to draw it out with like a Sharpie and draw little tiny circles.
[233] Then we put it in the acid wash and it would remove from the silicone plate all the copper except for what you drew on.
[234] Then you would drill your little holes and put your wires in your little solder and do all that.
[235] Alright, let's get Polka in the house.
[236] Polka!
[237] Hey Daniel, this is something related exactly to what you're talking about.
[238] So, this is where I'm stumped and pulling pieces together.
[239] So, I'm seeing a lot of evidence here to support that.
[240] So, jetzt noch drei nach links und zwei nach rechts.
[241] Für diesen Preis knackt man jeden Tresor.
[242] Bühne frei und Payback -Punkte los.
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[247] You know, what he's making is the Irish for tied in with the Egyptians.
[248] Und ich weiß, dass sie beide von einem gothic background sind.
[249] Okay, so ich weiß, dass wenn du eine der Quote gesagt hast, ich bin sicher, dass du ein bisschen ein fallout hast.
[250] Ja, ich sehe ihn mixed in mit einem anderen Mann, aber er war also sehr vindictive zu Bill Cooper.
[251] Und er war, you know, sagen Dinge.
[252] about the dead.
[253] Was his name Jordan Maxwell?
[254] That guy.
[255] And that guy funded what you call it?
[256] He funded Zechariah Sitchin.
[257] So all that stuff that we get from this retelling of the actual history of the Goss now becomes Anunnaki and it's aliens.
[258] So they're diverting away from what is our culture, what is our industry, what is our roots and pulling it into this, it's aliens, everything's aliens.
[259] Instead of just saying it's a cyclical, humans go on a cyclical path of high society and then resets or catastrophic disasters that cause natural resets of some sort.
[260] So that's why I don't really like that.
[261] It's very Masonic in its manipulation.
[262] Well, I noticed you just said Jordan Maxwell, too.
[263] I have several of his.
[264] I mean, are you lumping him in the same camp as Tessari?
[265] Well, they were buddies.
[266] They traveled together.
[267] Okay.
[268] All right.
[269] So here's where I'm trying to get out here.
[270] I mean, he has several books here.
[271] Linking the Irish here with, I have yet to read here, I'm reading one of his other books right now, Linking the Irish with the Egyptian.
[272] And one of the things he's talking about in that book, citing another source, is that basically that Judaism repurposed stories or history of the Egyptian pharaohs.
[273] And he's...
[274] They're lining up here that we have Moses and Abraham, and they actually did exist, but they were Egyptian pharaohs or people here that was repurposed during the Greek time here.
[275] It wouldn't necessarily just be there, though.
[276] It could have been also from the place that they will never admit to European -style people having existed, and that would be Sumer and, you know, early.
[277] Babylonian era and Mesopotamia and all that so that's that's again like they're still trying to control the history of where our you know for the most part our ancestors would have would have been and what we would have done as far as spreading culture so yeah I'm trying to piece that together I mean I'm not I'm sure that you've gone down those rabbit holes that I'm that I'm in right now here that I'm working through and that's why I'm asking you these questions And I know that you just alluded here to this idea of the cycles.
[278] So does that mean then also that you are a proponent of Atlantis and Lemuria and that those civilizations may have proceeded and those were Scythians or the Goths?
[279] It's possible.
[280] It's possible.
[281] I mean, things happen.
[282] Unterwater, things that we see where it looks like there's a whole structure underwater and sculpture.
[283] Is that real or is that something that's thrown out there for the fantasy?
[284] I don't know.
[285] And then also, then the question becomes, what happened?
[286] Was it natural or was it not natural?
[287] And if it wasn't natural, then that just points even more toward higher technology.
[288] and a cyclical history of man rather than we're all primitive and now we're here.
[289] How many times did that actually happen in the cycle over and over again?
[290] Yeah, that's where I'm at right now.
[291] I know that you mentioned here that you believe in cycles here and I'm just kind of curious of where's your head at right now?
[292] Oh, I don't know.
[293] der Kultur kind of points to not everybody was at the same level, even in this cycle.
[294] Either something was retained, or this particular reset history didn't start 6 ,000 years ago.
[295] There was a whole lot of time that nobody has record of that took the time for people to develop and relearn.
[296] oder benutze Dinge.
[297] Denn es ist wie, wenn die Infrastruktur ist weg.
[298] Du hast ein Phone, aber die Phone nicht mehr tun.
[299] Es gibt keine Funktion, also du es weg und dann vergessen, warum es sogar da ist.
[300] Und dann kommt es wieder zurück.
[301] Es ist wie, so wie die Leute lernen die Plow wieder?
[302] Die Leute lernen die Agriculture?
[303] Ich weiß nicht, dass es noch nicht so gut ist.
[304] Ich weiß nicht, dass es noch nicht so gut ist.
[305] Ich weiß nicht, dass es noch nicht so gut ist.
[306] How does that fit into the jigsaw puzzle that you're trying to put together here?
[307] I don't like that people assume that Tartaria was some good society.
[308] That everybody was happy and everything was wonderful.
[309] Because I don't know who's telling the story and from what vantage point they're saying it.
[310] And the whole idea of the mud flood and all that.
[311] There's a lot of people out there that go off on wild tangents of speculation and say a whole lot of...
[312] The World's Fair seems like a point in history where they were reprogramming the new leading class with a history, whether it was real or not.
[313] Pretty much literally setting fire to all of the evidence of the past as best they could.
[314] And then restarting, right?
[315] I don't even know what the...
[316] I mean, if we believe the whole...
[317] You know, this place was just all...
[318] I don't believe that actually, but all Native Americans.
[319] Or was there a bunch of structures here when the colonists came?
[320] Ich glaube, es ist alles barren.
[321] Und dann 20 Jahre später, da sind all diese buildings in Northern California.
[322] Und es ist wie, wie das passiert?
[323] Wie ist all das Intricaten?
[324] Wir haben gesagt, dass sie alles aufwärts sind.
[325] Aber sie sind wirklich gut at building, scaffolding und driving all diese stuff across.
[326] Okay, so you're saying it is reasonable that when we see some of this more intricate, complex architecture, whether it's in the United States or in Europe or other places, that it's reasonable to assume that at the time the technology may not have created that it made it come from somewhere else well our what we're told about our level of understanding at periods i don't think adds up to it so either either and then again like this it's kind of like that that idea that the great majority of people might live at one level of advancement but there might be a whole other group that's And there might be a whole other group that's not even close still throwing spears at each other.
[327] Just like now.
[328] But what was the most predominant?
[329] And who are they referring to?
[330] So it's the explanations that people provide that I don't agree with.
[331] Because I still see a whole lot of problems with each one of them.
[332] So one of the things that I notice, whether it's on the calls or...
[333] Oder in your podcast or on the telegrams.
[334] You do give the pushback against the ideas of extraterrestrial.
[335] But you seem to be more sympathetic to the idea that it's, I don't know, maybe terrestrial intelligence.
[336] Something that's non -human.
[337] Maybe it's, I don't know, in the middle of the earth.
[338] Or it's buried under the sea.
[339] Or it's in Antarctica.
[340] Das neue Wolfhaus Energiepaket ist da.
[341] Mit einer Photovoltaikanlage sowie Luftwärmepumpe gratis zu jedem belagsfertigen Haus samt Unterbau.
[342] Und dank der Bauherrenmithilfe können Sie zusätzlich bis zu 20 % Baukosten sparen.
[343] Alle Infos auf wolfhaus .at.
[344] Wolfhaus.
[345] Rundum wohlfühlen.
[346] Additional Land.
[347] There's definitely a possibility for that.
[348] All right.
[349] If our model of this, I mean, it's funny that, okay, this is the amount of land that we're allowed to believe.
[350] Now let's encapsulate it so that nobody thinks that there's anything beyond it and call it a ball.
[351] It's possible that they're doing that.
[352] Plus on a ball, there's nowhere to run, you know, like a hamster on a wheel.
[353] It's that sense of being trapped, right?
[354] When you have a wide open plane or a realm.
[355] Or a holographic plane, right?
[356] And the hologram being, of course, magnetic fields that give everything volume.
[357] Then there's places to explore and there is a potential way away from their power structure, right?
[358] So there might be a way to, you know, it might be a mental manipulation to pivot everybody on a ball so that they think that there's no place to run, there's no place to go.
[359] Just got to deal with it and stick with it and whatever.
[360] Be a slave and learn how to live with it.
[361] What was the other question?
[362] I don't know.
[363] I think I...
[364] You were answering it here and it's...
[365] You get a different side of you from when you have those conversations with Nish and you get into a little bit more the exoteric or the things that are not mainstream.
[366] And I know that you were kind of alluding it around to or just discussing with the idea that...
[367] I don't know if it's necessarily a flat Earth, but what you're saying here is that maybe what we're told here about this reality here of how it may not necessarily be a globe here, maybe just some type of a firmament or...
[368] Well, I think there's definitely something domed structure.
[369] So you don't need to have a flat Earth to have a capsule around it, right?
[370] You don't have to have a...
[371] Ich meine, du kannst es einen Round Earth mit einer rounden, du kannst es nur ein Glas für den sake of argumenten, unter Glas, in einem Ball -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs -Aufs Oh, there's math.
[372] But the math that you've been taught through the curriculum of the people that manipulate our minds, it's, you know what I mean?
[373] It's like, it's self, it's like, what is it that they said?
[374] Even with the knowledge that they give you, there's nothing that you would be able to do with it that would set yourself free.
[375] So there's no danger in the information that we think is real.
[376] Because no matter how we put those pieces together, it's not the right way to try to figure anything out.
[377] Am I correct in inferring that you also say the same thing about what space here, or maybe some of these bodies that we observe outside of the stone firmament, that maybe they're not real, or they're projections, or they're...
[378] I don't know if they're not real.
[379] I know you talked about space here.
[380] I kind of make jokes about that because it's one of those things where nobody can answer it.
[381] So I'll be a little bit more exaggerating just for the sake of humor.
[382] But I don't think there's any way we could say what stars are, how close they are, what the moon actually is.
[383] It may not be a projection.
[384] I don't think it's just...
[385] I don't think it's that.
[386] So what is the nature of space?
[387] Is it like some of the older writings I've alluded to?
[388] Is it just the way that they frame their way of speech, like their figure of speech?
[389] Or is it literally them saying that there's the oceans of space and time?
[390] Does that mean that there's water up there?
[391] And does that mean that maybe the ferment's keeping that water out?
[392] There was something interesting in an old Simpsons episode where the ferment cracks and water starts pouring through it.
[393] So I thought that was pretty funny.
[394] Yeah, that is.
[395] It was very humorous.
[396] They signal knowledge here.
[397] So what if there's, like with plasma, it's a different density, right?
[398] What if, you know, are fish self -aware of their water?
[399] ...
[400] ...
[401] ...
[402] ...
[403] ...
[404] ...
[405] ...
[406] ...
[407] ...
[408] If that's what the firmament's purpose is, to keep us separated, that would be interesting.
[409] Well, you could even make the argument, even just reality in general here.
[410] Are we an iceberg in the ocean here that we think we're seemingly separate from the ocean here, but yet if we melted, we are part of the ocean?
[411] Is the fact that there's so much more ocean around us an indication that we are at the bottom of another one?
[412] And that's what the firmament's keeping out?
[413] Well, I'm just speaking even more about the nature of reality or this existence here is that we all interconnected here like an iceberg within the ocean here.
[414] If we melted, we...
[415] No, I know.
[416] I was asking another question.
[417] Yeah, I agree with you on that.
[418] I mean, I'm just trying to...
[419] I try to...
[420] I like to pick your brain on these things and sometimes I'll push your button sometimes on the telegram.
[421] It's good because then I don't think about, you know, I don't think to discuss some of this stuff.
[422] So it's good that you're doing that.
[423] But what I like is that I think that you have a lot of interesting opinions or insights on this that it just doesn't necessarily always come through.
[424] Yeah, and I don't try to have too many definitive.
[425] Because there's still missing data, right?
[426] So we can say, from what I can gather, from what I know, or what I think I know, or what I feel might be accurate, then this might be the answer.
[427] But that doesn't mean that that wouldn't change.
[428] I think a lot of people lock in, especially people with channels where they're gung -ho or they're standing behind some sort of belief system.
[429] But it's a belief system nonetheless, right?
[430] So it's not...
[431] Ich denke, es ist konkret, für sicher.
[432] Und das ist, ich denke, ein paar Leute werden sich trafen in das.
[433] Oddlich genug, es war nicht in die Füße von diesen Leuten.
[434] Das ist ein guter Beispiel.
[435] Die Leute, die der ganze Channel aus der QAnon haben, da waren viele Leute, die das gemacht haben.
[436] Und sie würden einfach analysieren und versuchen, ein paar Bunche into es.
[437] Und auch wenn das fizzelt out into nothingness.
[438] He didn't have a second term that time.
[439] Everybody should have walked away from that.
[440] But they didn't.
[441] X -22 was the worst.
[442] I thought Dave from X -22 was gone a long time ago.
[443] Right.
[444] But I'll listen to him from time to time to see where the heck they are right now on this.
[445] But it keeps going.
[446] I thought the jig was up here.
[447] The game was up.
[448] And then misleading people for that long, telling them in a time where we should have been defying and at least standing up and walking away.
[449] I'm not saying fight, but remove your energy that holds up the system.
[450] Walk away from that.
[451] Don't participate anymore.
[452] But no, this whole Trump hypnosis thing drew people closer into it and gave them the impression that they were doing something different.
[453] So that was even more deceptive.
[454] And that's really shitty because they went four freaking years with that.
[455] And I think you've probably heard me say this.
[456] I've mentioned a bunch of times.
[457] I'm surprised, not only does Dave still have like 2 million followers or whatever, that he wasn't dragged out of his house and his front lawn and Harry Carried or something.
[458] It's like, after misleading people for so long, then it's just like...
[459] Oh, where's the climactic ending?
[460] Oh, there isn't one.
[461] Oh, yeah.
[462] And then just keep rattling on and on and on about the same stuff.
[463] I think one of the, and I've asked you, I've talked about this before, and I know that Nish or whatever, is that I feel like we're in the Don Quixote idea where we're fighting windmills.
[464] And I know that we'll use blanket statements or generalizations.
[465] But at the end of the day, I don't know exactly – I know that there's something that we're fighting and we're opposed to.
[466] But I don't know if we can actually definitively – I think it's energetic, man. Let's say good has a certain vibration, like the truth has a ring to it, that type of thing.
[467] I think whatever is the nature of evil is just something that's always ever -present.
[468] I'm not saying they can't be destroyed or reduced almost into nothingness.
[469] But if it's going to do that, you know, I think it's funny that a snake, you know, it goes like this along the ground, but it's like a sine curve, right?
[470] Peaks and valleys, peaks and valleys.
[471] So it's always, and like a, what do you call it, a frequency, same type of curve, right?
[472] So it's always moving through time.
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[486] Und dann ist es, wenn andere Menschen tun, was sie zu tun und tun, was sie zu tun.
[487] Aber wenn du immer unter den Impression, dass Up ist Down und Down ist Up ist, dann ist es, wenn du gut bist, dass das System of Evil ist, das macht es sogar intensiver und worse.
[488] Und sie haben sich sehr clever über Zeit, und Gott weiß, wie lange das Zeit für sie haben, um sie zu lernen.
[489] wie sie wirklich manipulieren, so wie sie nicht wissen, dass sie die Hände von der Rasse sind.
[490] Ich meine, das Problem ist, dass wir die Illusion hier haben, dass wir unsere fünf Senses hier haben, und dass wir ein Empiricist und wir denken, dass wir diese Realität können, aber diese Realität, wir können nur vielleicht nur 1 % verstehen.
[491] Oh, du bist so, die Visible Light, richtig?
[492] Das ist ein Song.
[493] I think it's actually from the album Science, from, what the hell is the name of that band?
[494] Incubus, less than one millionth of reality.
[495] Exactly.
[496] The point being, though, is that this makes it very difficult for us to be able to isolate what exactly it is here.
[497] And so many people can't even recognize that concept, that they are certain if they don't feel it, touch it, or taste it.
[498] And this is the...
[499] The Jewish materialism worldview, and this is how they put this in here.
[500] If you can't perceive it with your five senses, then it doesn't exist.
[501] And that becomes the control mechanism.
[502] Yeah, and you know, that's...
[503] And they also were clever enough to combat that right off the bat.
[504] Well, at least this time around.
[505] with this idea that they had to get away from the superstitions of religion and then Darwinism was created to take the soul and the spirit and metaphysics out of things and okay, now we're monkeys.
[506] You know what I mean?
[507] That is where allopathic medicine really takes its roots because now we're just a happy accident or whatever, but life doesn't really have a meaning.
[508] Our consciousness doesn't mean anything.
[509] There's no spirituality or anything.
[510] The body's no longer intelligent and we need to intervene on every goddamn thing.
[511] So that's where pharmakia slash allopathy is really the biggest evil here because it tricks everybody out of fear to follow the cult in the white coats.
[512] And from there, they can do everything else.
[513] Public Health Emergency.
[514] Oh my God, they're here to help us.
[515] In every other sense, everybody always rattles on about, don't let the government in, don't let the vampire in.
[516] When he's knocking and saying, let me in.
[517] But when it comes to health, they always open the door.
[518] Yeah, I mean, this goes back to whether we're talking about golfs or...
[519] The Egyptians who had a view that nature and spirituality, they were intimately integrated.
[520] I didn't mean to interrupt you, but I have a memory issue.
[521] Did you read Makers of Civilization and Race and History?
[522] No, I have not.
[523] That's in the queue.
[524] We need to have another discussion after you've read that and then see if that adds, enhances.
[525] It makes you question some other things you were holding on to or not.
[526] Because for me, it explained a whole lot that there was a lot of blanks in whatever framework I was working under as far as what's real and what's not.
[527] It made a lot of sense.
[528] And it resonated with me a lot.
[529] And it changed a lot of my view.
[530] And it made sense as to why a lot of things that I would hear, I would never repeat because something just didn't seem right.
[531] And I didn't want to go on with that thought.
[532] Erroneously.
[533] Because I felt like there was a lot of things wrong with it.
[534] I didn't feel it was responsible or good for me to mislead myself down a path without having something that made more sense to me. Is it fair to say though that one of the conclusions that you reach in this here with the...
[535] Whether we go to Judaism or Islam or Christianity is that the evolution of this is the distinction of removing the spirit away from the nature, you know, the material.
[536] And then you ultimately see the evolution of this into Darwin where everything is materialistic.
[537] Yeah, well, and here's the other thing too.
[538] I don't know if the Edenite cult who was practicing black magic and...
[539] Sie sind heute heute unter der guise von Judäismus und Roman Catholicismus und all das, und all das Mystismus und stuff.
[540] Ich weiß nicht, was sie glauben.
[541] Ich weiß nicht, was sie glauben.
[542] Aber das könnte nur ein subset von ihnen sein.
[543] Hier ist die Sache.
[544] Sie wollen die majority der Leute zu werden, zu werden, zu werden, zu werden, zu werden, zu werden.
[545] No sense of their ancestry, no sense of their culture, no sense of their identity.
[546] And definitely no sense of a real God.
[547] So that way you rely on the system to take care of you because you don't have, even if you pretend faith, you don't really have it because they've already beat it out of you and conditioned you not to have it through your course, through their education systems and their own churches.
[548] ...
[549] ...
[550] ...
[551] ...
[552] ...
[553] That also bends reality, too.
[554] So what is reality if you can manipulate it that way?
[555] So are they keeping us at a low enough vibration to that we're only useful as a tool to manifest the world that they want for themselves until they no longer need us anymore?
[556] Instead of us manifesting the world that we want.
[557] And as far as going far back, I'm content with, okay, the stuff that I pick up with Sumer and stuff like that, because this is kind of like our era.
[558] Whatever happened prior to that, it's interesting to know.
[559] It's interesting also to know whether or not it was forced, like a cataclysm, and by whom, and if they're still here, and if they're still carrying on uninterrupted in their own culture and in their own advancements.
[560] Because then you know that there's a really...
[561] We can expect anything because their technology over time must be amazing because...
[562] You know, and maybe that maybe the storm God literally was something that intervened.
[563] Maybe it was something that, you know, all these tunnels, you know, all these under, maybe there's an, you know, interterrestrial civilization that's actually running the show on the surface.
[564] Then does purges periodically to reset things.
[565] That's to keep it in, in the earthly balance realm and rather than saying this matrix and its computer and its, you know, mind or whatever, but.
[566] I don't know if it's really – this era is ours.
[567] So knowing at least somewhat where the beginning of it was is kind of like all we can do until we're – at least for us, we don't know that there's any other information available out there.
[568] There's lots of stuff that's probably hidden, lots of stuff that's been burned, lots of stuff that the Muslims destroyed.
[569] Maybe there was documentation in God knows what language or whatever from long ago.
[570] Or maybe it was on some kind of system.
[571] Maybe it was some kind of system, and maybe we're building something to read that stuff for them so that they have that knowledge.
[572] I don't know.
[573] Are you receptive to the Kali Yuga framework, the cycles here, the bronze, the silver, gold?
[574] Akali Yuga means that we're in the shit right now, and that could last a very long time, and we don't know from the beginning or the end of it, right?
[575] The cycle of Akali Yuga.
[576] So that, to me, if you tell somebody that they've already lost, then they're going to live like they're defeated.
[577] So I don't like that.
[578] I don't like putting that idea in your head that there's nothing you can do in this time because this time is for them.
[579] How do you get out of it then?
[580] It would be theirs forever if you always just felt like that.
[581] So we're just here to sit and wait for cosmic things and cosmic energies to change it?
[582] I think we have more of a power in that to change things.
[583] I'm not recommending here that we're helpless and we have to wait for sometimes an external savior.
[584] Well, I'm just saying because Kali Yuga puts everything in this idea that you're already stuck.
[585] You're stuck in...
[586] You were born in the wrong era, basically.
[587] Well, the thing is that maybe we weren't born in the wrong era, and that's part of the problem with why things are transpiring the way they are, and they're trying to control one of those, is that maybe there is some introduction of some cosmic energy here, or maybe changing our perception of reality, or accessing these past capabilities that we have.
[588] Okay, yeah, and that's why there's such a...
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[594] I'm all with that, but you can give the greatest instruction to your dog, and your dog isn't going to do anything about it.
[595] You know what I mean?
[596] It takes both sides.
[597] The cosmic thing can be a thing, but it's not going to change people unless they're going to take action.
[598] They could have all the potential in the fucking world, but if they're cowards, they're not going to do anything.
[599] Well, I mean, the hypothesis, though, is that if these are cycles and we go into periods where we're stupid and just above an animal here or when we reach our full potential here, that there's more of us that can actually access this.
[600] So let's say that they activate our brains or just because science doesn't understand what DNA is doesn't mean that it's junk or that it's even something that's going to change anything really one way or the other.
[601] Because I don't think they understand what the nature of DNA is either.
[602] I think they do.
[603] They tell you that they don't.
[604] And that's part of the reason why they can control this.
[605] They tell you how much of that is junk DNA and it doesn't mean anything.
[606] So now you have the public...
[607] I get all that.
[608] But also the VMAT 2G.
[609] I don't think that's a material thing.
[610] You could damage your...
[611] your uh processing unit which is probably your brain so that you can make sense of it because i think the mind is outside the body you know so but but this is more like your your uh your material processor for this for this uh state of existence right so it's it's more like it's more like uh the cpu making sense of right so yeah your your consciousness is outside Ja, es ist chemical, ja.
[612] All those things are necessary, probably, but it's not the end of the story.
[613] It's not the full nature of what happens for life.
[614] They go through human beings and mutilate them.
[615] Do all kinds of horrible things to them.
[616] As if it's meaningless.
[617] As if it doesn't mean anything.
[618] But they're also quite cowardly.
[619] So they care about something.
[620] At least some of them.
[621] Some of them are suicidal I guess.
[622] Go ahead.
[623] I also wanted to pick.
[624] Before I go.
[625] I want to pick your brain.
[626] I want to hear you.
[627] So one of the things that we're just pulling apart here, and I know that you've made some comments on Telegram, and I think it's important to fully flesh it out.
[628] Also, I just want to say – I'm glad you're here for me to say this.
[629] I just want you to understand that whenever I'm like – if you're sending me something that's from someone else and I pick it apart, I'm picking apart because what I'm doing is I'm doing my analytics the way I would anything else.
[630] It's not a reflection on you or anybody else who posts it.
[631] It's me attacking the source material.
[632] So if it sounds like I'm being aggressive, it's because I don't like people misleading other people, number one.
[633] And I find a lot of logical fallacies in people and how they present things and how they perceive it.
[634] And then also how confident they are in that presentation itself.
[635] I like to humble the people that are overly confident in some of the stuff that I don't think is anywhere near accurate.
[636] So if I'm attacking it, it's not because I'm shitting on you.
[637] It's the post itself.
[638] It's far removed from you.
[639] You know what I mean?
[640] I'm talking with you, not at you.
[641] You understand what I mean?
[642] Yeah, the thing is that I'm secure enough about my own faculties here that I'm not, hey, listen.
[643] We don't always have to agree on everything.
[644] And that's for everybody, too.
[645] Even if you get it, I just wanted to state that because I didn't want other people to get the wrong idea.
[646] If I'm tagging something, it's not because I'm trying to shit down their parade or anything.
[647] Some people haven't actually gotten into that level of intellectual development here that, hey, you're not always going to be right.
[648] And Daniel's not going to always be right.
[649] Nisha's not going to always be right.
[650] At the end of the day, we know a fraction of what is actually to be true, and I'm not even sure about that sometimes.
[651] Yeah, it's like some people, you know, you give them – it's all about the level of the integrity of the information that you're given, right?
[652] Because some people, their comprehension is phenomenal, but you can't feed them crap and expect anything.
[653] You know what I mean?
[654] So, wenn wir...
[655] And I just try to identify that from my perspective for people so that they don't go down dumb paths and waste their own time.
[656] Because I've been through them before.
[657] I've been through the whole alien thing.
[658] I've been through all this, and I'm on the other end of it now.
[659] That's why I ask you questions here.
[660] And sometimes you have to leave that person to their own devices.
[661] Right, and that's a process.
[662] Exactly.
[663] You can't tell people something.
[664] They have to experience it.
[665] Okay, so that's the point that I want to get into here, specifically here.
[666] And this is purely a thought experiment here.
[667] So it's not meant to come across as an idlogger or whatever.
[668] But let's just talk this out here.
[669] Okay.
[670] So this is what I've been pondering here.
[671] The election here in 2020, whether you like Trump or not, was clearly stolen.
[672] So the question becomes – You say clearly stolen?
[673] Fairly.
[674] I don't think it matters, honestly, because it's like the selection is made.
[675] Whatever the details that need to be made to fit it, it's not any different than any other election or selection because it's always that way.
[676] So you're already laying the groundwork for the counterargument here, but that's okay.
[677] So, what I'm saying here is that you make the point here is that people can't have to experience it rather than being told.
[678] So, I mean, I think it's pretty self -evident that the amount of corruption and just horrible and nefarious things that happen within our government and within these elite control structures, it's not unfathomable to us.
[679] And it's one thing to tell people that.
[680] It's one thing to people to actually experience that.
[681] Is that a fair?
[682] Yeah, and here's the part that stumbles mankind and society at large.
[683] Remember we were talking about source material, and if you're working with junk, you can't really make anything sound out of it, right?
[684] That's the same problem with people who haven't put their own time into themselves.
[685] Through introspection, through getting to know who they are and understanding and developing their own ability and character and mind, you can't expect them to comprehend anything.
[686] Especially if you're already at the level where you're trying to discuss things that are of this nature when they haven't figured out the little things yet.
[687] You can't have them jump from there because there's a big gap of development that they haven't gone through yet.
[688] Or maybe they can't.
[689] There are some people that just simply can't.
[690] And I think besides just whatever they're made out of genetically or whatnot, I don't like the word genes, but there's also that issue that we are in a cult, the cult of society.
[691] And some people will defend that society cult to the death and completely reject and deflect.
[692] Captain America's shield in front of their face, anything that would counter what they have grown and conditioned to believe in.
[693] Okay, so within that framework that you're putting together here, maybe there is some sense of cult or some sense of...
[694] There most certainly is, and you could call that a spell.
[695] But I mean, it's maybe not even – I don't think that anybody consciously thinks about rejecting truth.
[696] But I just don't think that they're even willing to consider certain things because it simply isn't so to them.
[697] No, but what I'm saying, there is something between not you and me here or the ordinary people that are listening to this.
[698] There is some type of a superstructure here.
[699] Ja, Doug.
[700] Ja, Doug.
[701] So, jetzt noch drei nach links und zwei nach rechts.
[702] They're not going to be uniformed.
[703] They're going to fight with each other on who's going to take over the father here.
[704] Right, but they're still going to be predatory to the underclass.
[705] So regardless of whatever that is, that's between them.
[706] You know what I mean?
[707] And they're always going to preserve their power.
[708] So if what they're doing is weakening the overall for their entire clique, it's not going to get too far.
[709] There's going to be control mechanisms in place to get rid of problems.
[710] Because the overall thing that they have to do, otherwise they lose the whole enchilada, is to make sure that they keep us suppressed.
[711] So I think the analogy would be if they are fighting with one another or if we can agitate them to do it even more, that they would just cancel each other out like they're trying to do with the Muslims and the Christians.
[712] If they're warring, I think it might be competitive, but they all have the same ideologue of that cult, regardless of one's power over the other one or not.
[713] I think they still self -preserve the system of which they are themselves, and then also the system that they're putting us in.
[714] So, but what I'm getting at, though, is within these competing factions here, okay?
[715] Hypothetically, yeah, yeah.
[716] Yeah, and assuming here that we are, in fact, here, the cattle or the goyim here, what I'm saying is that maybe, what I'm saying is that certain factions may treat us better or give us a little bit more freedom or...
[717] As I have articulated there before, having to boot off of our throat compared to other parts of these competing factions.
[718] Yeah, it doesn't mean life gets better for us overall.
[719] But if they also feel like they're in competition with somebody who can actually upset their power, then yeah, they're going to want to rally the energy of the people.
[720] in favor of them.
[721] So, okay.
[722] Here's what I'm saying here, is that there's a lot of positive things.
[723] And they will do good things, but you have to also understand what they're doing.
[724] So like the USAID and all that shit, this is just consolidation.
[725] It's just the evolution of a different new power structure.
[726] It's flipping a page.
[727] It's the same book, though.
[728] I'm not...
[729] I'm not disagreeing with you on that.
[730] What I'm saying is, though, the boot is off.
[731] I'm not being bad at my job here to get a vaccine here, which I almost lost my job over.
[732] My point being here is that there's clearly an opportunity now that the boot is off of our neck here to try.
[733] Wait until the avian flu becomes something, because like I showed you with the eggs, I mean, there's other things in play here.
[734] Just because there's a lull doesn't mean it's not going to go back up again.
[735] I'm not saying that, but what I'm saying is, is that within this, this, this short period here, we shouldn't be complacent.
[736] No, no, no, no, absolutely not.
[737] Yeah.
[738] What I'm saying is, is that.
[739] Yeah.
[740] Don't sit back on the couch.
[741] I feel good to be able to breathe for once.
[742] And I know a lot of people in that telegram are filled, but I'm not under any illusions here that we're anywhere out of the woods on this.
[743] This is, this is a brief respite to be able to, to regroup and to be able to say, you know what?
[744] No, we're not doing this.
[745] We've been through this before.
[746] Yeah, at the end of the day, the Federal Reserve still exists.
[747] The IMF still exists.
[748] The IRS and the BATF, which are IMF -controlled, still exist outside of the government, quote -unquote, of the United States.
[749] And that's our true overlord.
[750] So the little things that are happening, what we can, I guess, call locally, Because microcosm, macrocosm, doesn't really affect the power or structure or the strength of the thing that is putting that in place to keep people occupied and happy and satisfied until the next fucking big thing happens that takes more of our freedom and more of our individuality and more of our safety away.
[751] I'm not disputing you with that.
[752] What I'm telling you though.
[753] I know you're not.
[754] This is an opportunity here to recharge and to regalvanize.
[755] People don't normally do that with pressure off of them.
[756] A lot of people don't revolt unless they can perceive a physical threat.
[757] Most people don't try to amend or alter or change anything.
[758] If they feel just comfortable enough, like people who don't like their job will continue to do it because their paycheck is good.
[759] And the point being is as though that we've been through the crucible here.
[760] We've been tested here.
[761] They're not going to be able to pull this vaccine thing off again.
[762] Well, if they can do the digital part with it, if they make it so that your biometrics on your phone and everything else that they've made this accustomed to keeping with us everywhere is ratting on you.
[763] And they have the high technology.
[764] There's not going to be any argument because you're not going to have them say.
[765] But there's more of us this time that are awakened to this bullshit than it was four years, five years ago.
[766] I guess in a way they actually refined that themselves by putting those who are obedient through the filter.
[767] And a lot of them are sick or dead now.
[768] So what's left of the people that said no?
[769] So it's a bigger group of what's left, yeah.
[770] What I'm trying to say here is that I'm not trying to be a doomsdayer here.
[771] I'm trying to have some semblance of hope here that we've made it this far here.
[772] Let's galvanize here.
[773] You don't have to say what I'm trying to say is when I'm not arguing all the time.
[774] You can use different words than what I'm trying to say because I wasn't arguing with you.
[775] I wasn't countering what you were saying just now.
[776] I'm just trying to say that I have some sense of hope here.
[777] We made it through this thing.
[778] They've had to concede certain things here.
[779] Maybe this is their way of trying to maintain the control structure here.
[780] But it's like Mario getting a second or third life in the game here.
[781] And what I'm saying here is that I want to take them on.
[782] And I feel a lot more confident that we made it through this here.
[783] And I think that we can stop this.
[784] That's all I'm saying here.
[785] A thought that's shared by more than five people scattered across America, then yeah, there might be something there.
[786] But it's people like you or Nish or other people that it's how we need to try to articulate it to the stuff that I'll post here that, yeah, you and me both know this USA thing here, what's really going on here.
[787] But I'm posting this up here that I want people to see this.
[788] I get the meaning behind it.
[789] Yeah, I understand that.
[790] But people are really easy at slipping into that coma of inactivity.
[791] But it's also, in a sense here, we share this and present these things because, hey, look, we have credibility here.
[792] We said that the stuff was wrong from the very beginning here.
[793] And when it comes time for another event, whether it's another COVID event or bird flu or God knows what it is, you know, these people here have some sense of credibility.
[794] We told you this in the past here.
[795] Why can't you believe us here now?
[796] And I'm hoping that there's going to be more people that are going to listen to us.
[797] Maybe, I don't know if you're reading this or whatever, maybe you're just cynical about that.
[798] I don't know.
[799] I have to have some sense of hope.
[800] No, it's now or never, honestly.
[801] If they drop this invisible cage on us and lock the door, it's over.
[802] If these data centers are in place and they're heavily guarded and they disarm us in the same like, it's a done deal.
[803] I think the muscle flex, among other reasons, I think the drones were a bit of a...
[804] I don't disagree here, but we also had our flexes.
[805] They couldn't have gone full despot.
[806] They had to pull back a little bit here.
[807] They couldn't go the whole way.
[808] Well, at the same time, we're seeing what could very well be automation deciding things like taking people out of the air, crashing them.
[809] Fires, the floods, the hurricanes, war by different means.
[810] We're seeing all that happen, too.
[811] So just because the nature of the assault is not troops on the ground, to make it as obvious as it could possibly be, doesn't mean that they're not going full bore on us and actively at war with us.
[812] But how many people will take notice of that now and be able to point this out?
[813] I think there's a lot more of us pointing it out than it was.
[814] Two years, four years, six years ago.
[815] I mean, you have to have some sense of hope.
[816] Well, I mean, you could point at it all day.
[817] What are you going to do about it?
[818] Well, I think change happens here when you get a certain percentage of the population that the herd will end up following.
[819] That might have been in the past.
[820] I think with the tech and with other things, it's not going to be as simple as that anymore because we waited too long.
[821] I'm not saying that it's hopeless by any means.
[822] I'm just saying this idea that the 100th monkey thing, it's not as strong of a resistance as it may have been before because it's not going to matter what we think or what we care about or what we believe in.
[823] If we get it all right, if the overwhelming force that we're up against...
[824] We would have to have some of these advancements in technology on our side as well.
[825] And it's to counter it or to at least not be a victim of theirs.
[826] And it's going to be kind of difficult the longer we wait as they roll out things that we never even heard of before that they've had for 30, 40, 50, 100, 110, 20 ,000 years.
[827] Who knows?
[828] I'm not disagreeing with you that the odds are not good.
[829] Let's be frank, they are not good.
[830] But the sense here is that at the end of the day, am I just going to go give up?
[831] No, no. And that's not our role to do that.
[832] But it might not be our role to win either.
[833] It might be our role just to never give in and to never be obedient.
[834] It might be our purpose is maybe this test ground if it is such a thing.
[835] is to simply, no matter what the odds are, not ever giving yourself over to it.
[836] And neither of us are going to do that.
[837] The thing is, until I'm presented with a more viable way of taking this on, I'm kind of left with that.
[838] We're not going to run outside with our 9mm and change the world.
[839] I know that when you post on Telegram that...
[840] Ich denke, dass du etwas, was jemand zu tun ist, und niemand macht das nichts.
[841] Ich weiß nicht, ob es passiert.
[842] Ich weiß nicht, dass ich mich bewusst bin.
[843] Ich weiß nicht, dass ich mich bewusst bin.
[844] Ich weiß nicht, dass ich mich bewusst bin.
[845] Ich weiß nicht, dass ich mich bewusst bin.
[846] Ich weiß nicht, dass ich mich bewusst bin.
[847] Ich weiß nicht, dass ich mich bewusst bin.
[848] Ich weiß nicht, dass ich mich bewusst bin.
[849] It's very similar to the Q thing that you were alluding to.
[850] Right, well, you know, how they were apologetics, you know, the apologetics for him.
[851] When they're talking about, oh, he had to do this because that prevented this, and it's like, it's all presumptuous, right?
[852] Presumptuous.
[853] So, okay, so roll out something that's poisonous because you don't want them to lock us down for five years or however long it was.
[854] So how many children's lives was it worth for that?
[855] Like, how many innocent lives, how many innocent and innocent lives was it worth for that to happen?
[856] Why not just tell the people the truth and have them on your side like that?
[857] If that was really the goal, things could have been stopped a whole lot differently and things could have been changed a whole lot differently if any leader in their position just took the risk that they were going to get Blown away the moment the words came out of their mouth and just told the people the truth that they're being poisoned, that this is an attempt on your lives.
[858] Do not let your children get this.
[859] Do not let them get any shots.
[860] This is an active attempt to cull the population or that certain things that they tell you don't even exist and they're just filling you with poison.
[861] The food, water, and air is deadly.
[862] They're doing this.
[863] We need to do something about it.
[864] If any person with that level of influence and trust ever said anything like that, a whole lot of things would click immediately for people that never would anyway because they're being told by their big guy, rest assured, everyone, rest assured, straight around the corner, I got this.
[865] So that's not the answer.
[866] That's not the way to get to the people to understand what's really going on.
[867] So you just articulated a thought process that I have gone through.
[868] I can't tell you how many times I've gone through this thought process.
[869] So the kind of argument that you would make is that, well, he kind of tried to do that here when he was talking about hydroxychloroquine and he had the whole apparatus come down on him.
[870] Du bist bleaching Menschen von der inside.
[871] Und was du gesagt hast.
[872] Ja, das war Chlorine Dioxide, ich glaube, das ist auch die andere, die sie waren.
[873] Ja.
[874] So, was du gesagt hast, was du gesagt hast, was du gesagt hast.
[875] Ich komme zurück zu dem, was du gesagt hast, dass du gesagt hast, dass Leute einfach nur zu experience es.
[876] But not be lied to by the people that...
[877] His position is different because it's a responsibility.
[878] It'll keep more people asleep because they're not going to even engage that type of development or that type of personal growth if they think that their guy is going to take care of everything.
[879] But if you are in war...
[880] We still have been.
[881] Undeclared war hier.
[882] But I mean, can the vast majority, maybe this is pretentious, probably is here, but can the vast majority of the public here actually understand that?
[883] I don't think they can.
[884] They couldn't at least understand that.
[885] The people that were patriots will understand that their government and the people that run it are...
[886] Ja, aber es ist die percentage der Bevölkerung, sie waren nicht...
[887] Ich denke, das ist ein Logical Fallacy in und of itself.
[888] Es ist 3 % der Bevölkerung für die Revolution, right?
[889] Anyway, let's see.
[890] Was ist das Polish -Guy?
[891] Ist es Braun?
[892] The one that's been flat out telling – he went and he smashed the microphone at the Holocaust, blah, blah, blah thing.
[893] He sprayed people with a – He used a fire extinguisher on.
[894] Yeah, fire extinguisher, yeah.
[895] And he said your overall control or your absolute control over us is over.
[896] Now that's the type of person that – if Trump was that, think about how many people would rally behind that.
[897] Oder der Mann aus New Zealand.
[898] Ich weiß nicht, was der Politiker.
[899] Ich weiß nicht, ob er war ein Kontrolldopp oder nicht.
[900] Aber...
[901] Ich weiß nicht, dass ich...
[902] Ich weiß nicht, dass ich hier...
[903] Ich weiß nicht, dass ich hier...
[904] Ich weiß nicht, dass ich hier...
[905] Ich weiß nicht, dass ich hier...
[906] Ich weiß nicht, dass ich hier...
[907] The angles, or at least look for the angles of where they're going to fuck us.
[908] And that's where I'm trying to be at here.
[909] I didn't even open up the chat.
[910] So, but I will, hey, it was great talking to you.
[911] I'm going to let you go on, but I just, you know, thanks for taking time to talk.
[912] I really appreciate it.
[913] Joseph, it was great.
[914] Thank you for coming on.
[915] I think Archangel...
[916] Ich weiß nicht, dass ich das.
[917] Ich weiß nicht, dass ich das.
[918] Ich weiß nicht, dass ich das.
[919] Ich weiß nicht, dass ich das.
[920] Ich weiß nicht, dass ich das.
[921] Ich weiß nicht, dass ich das.
[922] Ich weiß nicht, dass ich das.
[923] Ich weiß nicht, dass ich das.
[924] Ich weiß nicht, dass ich das.
[925] Ich weiß nicht, dass ich das.
[926] Wie geht es, wie viele Menschen auf Rumble kommen, oder wie viele Menschen auf Rumble kommen, oder wie viele Menschen auf der Finanzierungspurt.
[927] Es ist gerade wo es supposed zu sein.
[928] Die Unterschiede ist, dass die meisten Menschen, die die Abilität haben, die nicht bezahlt werden, in einer nefariousen Weise.
[929] There are 150 ,000, 200 ,000 subscribers, which makes 20 ,000, 30 ,000 viewers, which makes a whole lot more support from the people as it trickles down through each filter.
[930] So it's actually a great word.
[931] It would be natural, but it's still not a lot because here we are.
[932] If I was still on YouTube and I didn't have all those interruptions, I'd have to restart a channel all over again four times.
[933] I could probably be in 30 ,000, 40 ,000 subscriber range.
[934] I don't think that would have been too crazy to believe.
[935] Well, that should give you some confidence that you were actually effective at what you were doing.
[936] You wouldn't have been throttled.
[937] I mean, you have like a Ben Shapiro or something.
[938] I wasn't that great in the beginning.
[939] Here's what's funny.
[940] A lot of the stuff that I did in the very, very beginning was good stuff because I was commenting on books and reading and stuff like that.
[941] But then there would be Times where I would just show that I...
[942] All kinds of technical difficulties, but that was mostly the computer fucking me. But there was a level I needed to get to where it wasn't just musing.
[943] I needed to have more data.
[944] And I was reading a ton.
[945] It's just there was too many gaps.
[946] To where I don't want to fill it in because I don't want to be inaccurate.
[947] So it kind of left me to just talk about other crap that wasn't necessary.
[948] So I think I've refined since then.
[949] Well, the point being is that if you would have had those setbacks, I really believe that you would have a lot more influence and your audience would be a lot bigger.
[950] Oh, yeah.
[951] All it is telling me is that they...
[952] They thought that there were some stuff that you were saying that was dangerous to what they believed.
[953] Why do you have somebody like Tim Pool that can ascend here?
[954] Dude, and here's the thing that really gets me. I look at these people and they're basically famous for being famous because it's artificial.
[955] I look at their delivery, I listen to them, and they're not Ich glaube, es ist eine der Leute, ich denke, dass sie mich retarded ist.
[956] And they also have a production team.
[957] It's you as a one -man show here.
[958] Whether it's Candace Owens or Tim Pool.
[959] They've got people behind them that are helping them.
[960] Look at Stewie.
[961] 500 ,000 people just on Rumble.
[962] You know what I mean?
[963] I saw him talk at the Reawakened Tour outside of Vegas.
[964] Und, ja, ich war nicht interessiert.
[965] Ich war nicht interessiert.
[966] Ich war nicht interessiert.
[967] Es war gut zu sprechen, Daniel.
[968] Und ich sage, ich freue mich, was du put auf da.
[969] Und ich hoffe, dass mehr Leute, dass sie oder hören, die andere Seite von dir.
[970] Ja, es wäre cool, dass mehr Leute, die Patreon, für sicher.
[971] Das ist was ich, was ich zu machen.
[972] Thanks für mich für das.
[973] Ich werde das kleine Banner auf dem, da.
[974] All right, we'll talk to you later, Daniel.
[975] Thanks.
[976] Thank you, bud.
[977] Good talking to you.
[978] All right, let's see.
[979] I should put this on.
[980] So, where is it?
[981] Scroll, scroll, scroll.
[982] This is still here.
[983] Oh, there it is.
[984] I'm going on ticker style.
[985] This was on yesterday, but I didn't leave it on the whole time.
[986] I'm losing frames.
[987] too, because of this shit internet.
[988] And I don't like restarting it every single time before I go on a stream.
[989] It just happened again.
[990] Oh my god, this is so terrible.
[991] I pay nearly $80 for crap.
[992] And I have to do that until I get the, until Allo is finished.
[993] I already put my request in.
[994] Daisy, you're awesome.
[995] Thank you so much.
[996] And Joseph, thank you for calling in.
[997] Archangel, if you're out there, Josh, give me a second because I got to get up and I have to process some coffee, if you know what I mean.
[998] And I'll be back.
[999] Let me go ahead and put this on while we're at it, though.
[1000] We were in the middle of looking at Robert Maxwell's rear end.
[1001] No, just kidding.
[1002] But the Sex Satan and Babylon's Boulay, episode six of the POP.
[1003] I'm not sure what it even stands for.
[1004] um from in pursuit of truth sir patrick mac i want to put that on there i'm just checking to see if there's anything else that i want to not forget to look at today is that why i hope that's not why i had another bit shoot open up maybe that's why so apparently it didn't take the thumbnail right like it's supposed to but it says i was on live for 46 seconds before i decided i'm not gonna waste Oh, okay.
[1005] Oh, so maybe it's Maybe it's one of those bots.
[1006] Thanks.
[1007] Awesome.
[1008] Yeah, Kick is kind of interesting.
[1009] I'm just going to put this in the chats here.
[1010] If you have a thing, just go ahead and subscribe to it so it'll get some more traction.
[1011] If you don't, then don't do what you want.
[1012] I don't care.
[1013] Let's do this real quick.
[1014] I want to share also a small portion of a video that I made almost two years ago now.
[1015] It's me talking to Dr. Monzo and it leads into health benefits of capsicum or capsaicin peppers.
[1016] Of course, I run a hot sauce business, but it's all It's all very well organized in that video.
[1017] Some of the details as far as the coupon code has obviously changed, and so has the link for Dr. Glidden, but that's also in my video description, so it doesn't need to be correct in the video as long as you just look in the description for it.
[1018] So, you see the Spreaker here, right?
[1019] This is it.
[1020] If you were listening to me on Spotify before, just click the Spreaker link.
[1021] If you have to install that as a phone app, I don't even know how that works, but you don't really have to.
[1022] You can just go here.
[1023] I listen to stuff on Spreaker.
[1024] Very seldom, because I don't do podcasts.
[1025] And then the StreamYard link to be actually in the show is just underneath it.
[1026] The call number is right beneath that.
[1027] And then Dr. Glidden's membership site, you can go there from here.
[1028] Or you can click on my website itself.
[1029] Semper Fry.
[1030] S -E -M -P -E -R -F -R -Y.
[1031] I'm going to say that again.
[1032] S -E -M -P -E -R -F -R -Y -L -L -C .com.
[1033] The coupon code for my stuff is the number one.
[1034] S -T -O -P -S -H -O -P.
[1035] I did it in all caps.
[1036] I'm not sure if it's case sensitive or not.
[1037] And that should say 11, almost 12 now.
[1038] It says family run and in business for.
[1039] Yes, we're in the double digits now.
[1040] But that's Dr. Glenn's thing.
[1041] You can just click it and then Ball Busters right here is the 50 % off.
[1042] Dr. Monzo, in the old video that I'm about to show you later, is saying that you click the link and then use a code.
[1043] You don't even have to do that anymore.
[1044] You just click this.
[1045] It's this new website.
[1046] 15 % off is already applied.
[1047] Over here is the TriBlue.
[1048] Click for 70 % off.
[1049] Try blue.
[1050] When you click it, it should pop up a little window.
[1051] And then you copy whatever code they give you.
[1052] And then when you go to checkout, it'll apply it once you paste it or whatever.
[1053] And then Dr. Monzo's, I showed you yesterday, and I'll do it again later.
[1054] But actually right in the front here, it shows the IP6, the copper, and the cod liver oil.
[1055] That would be a portion of...
[1056] How you would do your 90 essential, right?
[1057] So the cod liver would be like your EFAs.
[1058] The copper is something that you would want as like an add -on.
[1059] The IP6 is like your magnesium, all that stuff, kind of like the osteo in a sense.
[1060] And then you would get the multivitamin, the whole food multivitamin.
[1061] And if you wanted to add the additional C, whole food C, then you could do that too.
[1062] And then the fulvicumic acid.
[1063] I just bought a tincture of fulvic acid.
[1064] in those little cobalt blue things, and I got one of selenium as well.
[1065] So that's that.
[1066] This was just because I happened to be at Sprouts.
[1067] And then also, so thyroid, right?
[1068] L -tyrosine.
[1069] And this is stuff I learned from doing the gym and working out and stuff like that.
[1070] So L -tyrosine, something I was already taking.
[1071] But then the iodine, which Dr. Monzo also has, energy iodine, should be on his site over here.
[1072] Let's see if I can find it.
[1073] Therapy supplies, education.
[1074] Let's see.
[1075] Let's see if it's in this area.
[1076] I clicked it.
[1077] Hold on.
[1078] No, that's not in that one, but I know he has it.
[1079] I just have to ask him.
[1080] Oh, you know what?
[1081] I think on the homepage it was really great.
[1082] At one point it was something that you clicked right from the beginning.
[1083] And it said something about it.
[1084] Shop.
[1085] Let's see if it's just in shop.
[1086] Shop.
[1087] Shop.
[1088] Shop, wasn't it?
[1089] Shop's clicking.
[1090] What's going on?
[1091] Alright.
[1092] Refresh.
[1093] Okay, something's up.
[1094] I don't know if it's my internet or not.
[1095] Is my internet looking okay?
[1096] That's weird.
[1097] Here, let's try that again.
[1098] Go to store.
[1099] Yeah, there's the energy iodine right there.
[1100] So you click this.
[1101] No picture for it, but...
[1102] Yeah, the...
[1103] It's mineral iodine, not plant -based.
[1104] So kale, or kelp, I think, is usually where you get most iodine from.
[1105] So this one's mineral iodine, not plant -based.
[1106] Yeah, so just use three drops under the tongue once daily.
[1107] So don't eat forehand.
[1108] Don't let your stomach food absorb it, right?
[1109] Colloidal ingestible iodine.
[1110] That's a good thing to have.
[1111] And then you have my coupon code, right?
[1112] So there you have it.
[1113] Boom, bing.
[1114] And yeah, that would complete it.
[1115] So iodine, selenium, and L -tyrosine, if you're looking for thyroid health, that trio, if you want to add additional of those three things, that would be a good idea.
[1116] Okay, now let's go to...
[1117] Oh, let me go back to the tincture one.
[1118] I want to show you what...
[1119] Did I just screw that up?
[1120] Yeah, let's do that.
[1121] Let's go to Tribaloo real quick.
[1122] I don't think this thing will pop up on me. Yeah, it did.
[1123] See, Daniel sent you 17 % off.
[1124] Then you just click this thing right there.
[1125] And then you go continue shopping.
[1126] Ta -da -da.
[1127] Oh, Colorado Copper?
[1128] Is that new?
[1129] It is new.
[1130] Look at that.
[1131] Due to the fact that most people are not always keen on you.
[1132] I wonder what...
[1133] I gotta see it.
[1134] I gotta see it.
[1135] So, it's the most abundant essential trace element after iron and zinc present in different organs of the body with greater quantities in the liver and brain.
[1136] It can be found in some foods including shellfish, oysters, and legumes.
[1137] It's presence in the body facilitates absorption of iron.
[1138] So in summary, the integration of colloidal copper is particularly useful in the case of anemia, osteoporosis, bone demineralization, arthritis, hypercholesterolemia, neurological disorders, reduced efficiency of the immune system, weakness and hair loss, difficulty of wound sealing, Insomnia and irritability.
[1139] Now I want to make sure that I'm correct.
[1140] I want to make sure which one am I thinking of.
[1141] The copper is for the ATP energy of the mitochondria too.
[1142] And we'll get into that.
[1143] We'll get into that with the other video that I'm about to talk about.
[1144] But I want to see.
[1145] Let's see.
[1146] What type of copper is it?
[1147] So immunosystem copper helps keep you healthy, important for brain development, brain function, for energy too, right?
[1148] Yeah, Daisy, you should get with Dr. Monzo and talk with him.
[1149] Because he could add more detail to your write -up here as far as what it's good for.
[1150] und wie wichtig es ist.
[1151] Und er kann auch re -Emphasise das.
[1152] Man kann auch ein bisschen ein Video -Clip machen.
[1153] Ich denke, das wäre gut, für sicher.
[1154] Und Mineral Copper ist Blue.
[1155] Metallicopper ist, you know, your standard Penny Color.
[1156] Just trying to see if it shows.
[1157] Oh, diese sind cool, too, Black Human.
[1158] I hope that Daisy gets a chance to look at, I don't know if it would be worth it for you, but see if there's anything, because you would be the chincter guru, if you think there's, because tell me if you don't think so, if there's anything to the whole Rhodiola Rosea, R -H -O -D -O.
[1159] Rodeo.
[1160] L .A. Yeah, Rodeola Rosea.
[1161] I just had lost my place in what I was like.
[1162] New product is colloidal copper.
[1163] Yep.
[1164] Bam.
[1165] Pretty cool.
[1166] Pretty cool.
[1167] All right, so I'm going to put this video on now after doing all that.
[1168] And I'll be back in just a moment with some more coffee.
[1169] Okay.
[1170] See what I mean?
[1171] It only went backward a little bit, so you're just going to see it again.
[1172] It's just weird.
[1173] YouTube does a weird refresh in the middle of it.
[1174] Oh, by the way, if you don't like seeing the scrolling thing at the bottom, I will stop putting it up there if five more people get on the Patreon.
[1175] Otherwise you're going to be stuck with it until five people do.
[1176] How about that?
[1177] That's Ransom.
[1178] Maxwell left England and brought with him a message from Thatcher, an unofficial one.
[1179] He left Gorbachev to go to America and tried to bring with him a message from Gorbachev.
[1180] Like Maxwell, Sorokin used publishing and copyright as a cover for other various activities.
[1181] In 1973, the Soviet Union became a signatory to the Universal Copyright Convention, or UCC.
[1182] But certain firms entered into exclusive translation rights contracts with the Soviet Copyright Office, or VAAP.
[1183] The VAAP grew to become a monopoly until its abolition in 1989.
[1184] The Copyright Agency also appeared to be a vehicle for capital flight outside of Russia and to approve translations for publications sold outside of the country.
[1185] Former G .R .U. Colonel Yevgeny Solybar, who worked under the cover of the VAAP agency, said of Maxwell's death, I think that was probably a so -called murder on order.
[1186] It was all professionally done and was covered up as a suicide.
[1187] The importance of publishing in regard to movement of money, and perhaps even more important, the control of information and spreading of misinformation cannot be overstated.
[1188] The VAAP was a crucial element to KGB operations, and Maxwell, a key figure in the publishing world, knew this all too well.
[1189] From 1973 to 1982, the VAAP was in the hands of Soviet diplomat Boris Pankin, the Soviet Union's longest serving Swedish diplomat.
[1190] Pankin resisted the 1991 coup attempt by the Soviet Union's hardline Communist Party to overthrow then -President Mikhail Gorbachev.
[1191] These hardliners were made up of KGB agents who detained Gorbachev, but were unable to detain newly elected President Boris Yeltsin.
[1192] The failed coup led to the fall of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.
[1193] The Soviet Union itself would dissolve only a few months later.
[1194] For a brief period, Gorbachev called Pankin to serve as foreign minister.
[1195] During this 82 -day period, Pankin established diplomatic relations with the State of Israel, purged the foreign ministry of its KGB agents, and began the U .S.-Soviet disarmament process.
[1196] Pankin was ambassador to Sweden at the time of the assassination of Olaf Palm, popular Swedish statesman and leader of the Social Democratic Party.
[1197] A critic of Soviet and American policy, Palm was killed on February 28, 1986 by gunshot in a case that would lead back to the Soviets and the State of Israel.
[1198] The assassin was never found.
[1199] An international investigation lingered for years involving multiple sex.
[1200] It appeared that the Swedish government had covered up important aspects of the investigation.
[1201] At first, local Christopher Peterson was convicted of the murder.
[1202] But his conviction was soon overturned.
[1203] Another suspect, Victor Gunnarsson, was taken in for questioning, released, and brought back a few days later, and released again.
[1204] As a member of the European Workers' Party, Gunnarsson was vilified in the media, and much of the blame was put upon the movement's leader, Lyndon LaRouche, American political activist and perennial presidential candidate.
[1205] And at the time...
[1206] Only declared candidate for the Democratic Party presidential nomination in 1988, LaRouche was regarded in the media as a conspiracy theorist, claiming that he was a target for assassination by Queen Elizabeth, the Zionist Mafia, and that he and associates had been drugged and brainwashed by the CIA and MI6.
[1207] Leading the charge against the character of LaRouche and the suspicion of his associates and his involvement of Palm's murder, Jewish -American socialist and fact -finding director of the ADL, Erwin Sewell, as well as former KGB agent and VAAP head, Boris Pankin.
[1208] The ADL and the KGB appeared to be involved in a disinformation campaign surrounding the case and defaming Gunnarsson, LaRouche, and anyone connected was top priority.
[1209] The ADL had already been implicated in the 1985 case of John Walker, convicted of spying for the Soviet Union.
[1210] Untertitelung des ZDF für funk, 2017 Levy had been involved in the 1981 firebombing of a Nigerian diplomat's car at a Soviet UN mission and later charged with attempted murder of JDL leader Irv Rubin, a man who would be suspected of running a protection racket against LA rappers Tupac Shakur and Eazy -E.
[1211] According to journalist Robert I. Friedman, who published a lengthy dossier on the JDL.
[1212] The New York -area JDL was heavily influenced by the Soviet KGB, in particular Brighton Beach.
[1213] This cell was responsible for the murder of CIA operative Skerim Soobzikov, thanks to information from Mordecai Levy.
[1214] The same JDL -KGB relationship surfaced during the 1984 Temple Mount plot, when 27 members of a Jewish underground group attempted to destroy the Dome of the Rock.
[1215] Later that same year, Erwin Sewell and the ADL...
[1216] The 1980 Gunnarsson arrest provided reason for the international media to paint the European Labour Party as a criminal organization and frame its leader Lyndon LaRouche as a violent lunatic fringe candidate.
[1217] He was deemed a far -right anti -Semite, even though his ideas were originally Marxist.
[1218] Gunnarsson had been released.
[1219] But the media kept on with stories related to the now old charges, and LaRouche would be defamed in the media for years to come.
[1220] The lack of evidence against the EAP would have been made up for by the journalists, who would not have hesitated to find the proofs.
[1221] It's likely that Olaf Palm was murdered because of his knowledge of the weapons trafficking between Sweden and Iran, and his willingness to investigate.
[1222] Former President of Iran, Abu Hassan Banisabr.
[1223] I know this from two different and credible sources.
[1224] Palm was killed as the direct consequence of what he knew about Sweden -Iran arms trafficking.
[1225] This theory aligns with the multinational Arms for Hostages effort spearheaded by Oliver North under President George Bush, but the CIA and the media were after LaRouche.
[1226] He was imprisoned for tax evasion under the Bush administration.
[1227] Soon after, Swedish paper extrablavet.
[1228] Berlin's Tageseitung and the Berliner Ekstredienst announced that Swedish police were investigating extreme right -wing groups.
[1229] Soviet ambassador to Sweden and former head of the Copyright Office Boris Pankin would later be sitting at the top of the KGB.
[1230] ADL fact finder Erwin Sewell traveled to Sweden in 1986 to denounce LaRouche and the EAP, calling him a small -time Hitler.
[1231] prompting LaRouche to sue for defamation, unsuccessfully.
[1232] LaRouche organized a group to combat the ADL, called the Provisional Committee to Clean Up B 'nai B 'rith, the Freemasonic group precursor to the ADL.
[1233] He often referred to sinister plans and conspiracies emanating from the Jews, in particular, Russian communists and New Age Aquarians.
[1234] This conspiracy traced men like Henry Kissinger and Walter Mondale, Back to the days of ancient Babylon.
[1235] He and his associates were denounced as neo -Nazis.
[1236] Mondale is not simply a KGB agent of the ordinary sense, of course.
[1237] Mondale is jointly owned by the left wing of the Socialist International and the grain cartel interests.
[1238] If both these owners tell Mondale to lick the floor before a nationwide TV audience...
[1239] I sincerely believe he would do just that.
[1240] Watch Lyndon LaRouche, Independent Democrat for President, Tuesday, October 23rd.
[1241] His second wife, German Helge Zepp LaRouche, authored the 1984 The Hitler Book and founded the Schiller Institute think tank, which argued for the abolition of the World Trade Organization.
[1242] In 2015, Zepp LaRouche wrote an article calling climate change.
[1243] I like him already.
[1244] who believed that HIV may have been created in a germ warfare laboratory by gene editing process and was released deliberately, similar to the Visna virus.
[1245] This theory was backed by Russian Jewish biology professor Jacob Siegel, later revealed to be a Soviet KGB agent working on Operation Infection, an information or disinformation campaign, depending on who you ask.
[1246] It claims that the U .S. had invented the AIDS virus as part of a project at Fort Detrick, Maryland.
[1247] Ironic, seeing that at the time, Soviet scientists were looking for American help with their own AIDS problem in the Soviet Union.
[1248] The U .S. refused help until the campaign ceased.
[1249] In 1992, Ukrainian Jewish diplomat and director of Russia's Foreign Intelligence Service, Yevgeny Primakov, Oktober 1986.
[1250] LaRouche's offices are raided by federal officers in Virginia and Massachusetts.
[1251] LaRouche und 12 others waren indicted on charges of credit card fraud and obstruction.
[1252] People who were stealing from the federal banking system, right?
[1253] The federally insured, right?
[1254] They had to make their...
[1255] I just had creative and it stuck in my throat.
[1256] They had to make their presence and their power felt through public display, shooting down all these bank robbers and stuff like that.