Knowledge Fight - #571: May 22-27, 2003
Episode Date: June 30, 2021Today, Dan and Jordan dip back into the past to make their way through a rough patch on Alex Jones' show. In this installment, Alex talks to two jerks about Bilderberg, and a caller describes how he... found George H.W. Bush's secret church outside Sugarland, TX.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I'm sick of them posing as if they're the good guys saying we are the bad guys knowledge
fight. Dan and George knowledge fight. I need money. Andy and Kansas, Andy and Kansas.
Andy and Kansas. It's time to pray. Andy and Kansas you're on the air. Thanks for holding.
Hello Alex. I'm a Christian color. I'm a huge fan. I love your work. Knowledge fight.
Knowledge fight.com. I love you. Hey everybody. Welcome back knowledge
fight. I'm Dan. I'm George. We're a couple dudes like sit around, drink novelty beverages and
talk a little bit about Alex Jones and also worship with the call. Auto pilot baby. Hey,
hey, it's okay. It's okay. It's okay. We got a sneaky steak episode. You don't have to nail it
perfectly. I didn't even realize that until after he had come out of my mouth. Yeah. No,
I didn't hear it at all. Wow. I heard you say worship at the altar of the saline and then
just let it I think I've been making so many buttons with saline. It's in your brain all the
time. That's that's where that lives. It's an unspoken situation. Yes, Dan, but I do have a
question for you. Sure. What's your bright spot today? My bright spot today, Jordan,
is a lot of nice messages that people have sent with the the requests for buttons. As I make
these buttons, unfortunately with there's so many that I cannot possibly respond to most of these.
Yeah. So please just know that I have read these messages and I very much appreciate them and their
buttons will be sent as they're as they're received. Also, here's your response to the
message. Some fucking buttons. That's right. I'm taking a weirdly aggressive tone. Yes,
that is how I'm feeling. And also something that has come up a number of times is people wanting to
pay for postage, particularly international wonks sure thinking like I'll pay I'll pay something
for postage. And that's a really nice thing. But I want this to be a gift for folks. So I don't
want I would I appreciate that, but I don't want to accept that. But I also don't want to be
disrespectful to that generosity. Of course not. And so if anybody feels the desire to, here's what
I would say. This is my blanket response. Feel free to give a little donation to a charity that
you support or you think that Celine would support and do it in the name of my cat. Yes,
we will all worship at the altar of Celine eventually because that is the name that will
be donating to every cause from now on. Donate donate to charity in my cat's name and that will
be good for the postage. I'll be good for everybody. Yeah. So my bright spot was thinking about
that. I was imagine if we were like as wealthy as Bill Gates and you were just like our foundation
is named the cult of Celine. Let's move on. Yeah, that wouldn't start any conspiracies at all. No
problem at all there. So it's donating three billion dollars in the name of the cult of
Celine. Oh, yeah. What's what's your bright spot Jordan? Dan, my bright spot is Wimbledon. God damn
another tennis one. No, this year because of the, I don't know if you noticed, but the past year has
been rough. Yeah. So this year, the French open in Wimbledon were only a month apart. And I will
tell you this inspiring shit, Dan. Whoa, Andy Murray, Andy Murray, the Andy Murray, former
member of the big four back when there was a big four and Andy was not kicked out of it. Former
world number one destroyed by injuries. He's old as shit now back in Wimbledon for the first time
in years, won his first match. So did Federer coming back after his injuries at Wimbledon,
my friend. This is a big deal. So anyway, that's my bright spot. I've got a lot of energy. Andy
Murray is an amazing person. I understand that, but that was like Charlie Brown's teacher to me.
That was just wah, wah, wah, wah, wah, wah, wah. I could not understand a word you were saying.
This is, this is why I keep my love for myself. Yeah. I want to care. And I want to, I want to
join you in the things that make you excited, but I could not like my eyes glazed over. I listen to
you talk about Christian Scott, a podcast on my own time. Wow. That's because I have
interesting thoughts about it. Unlike me in tennis. No, I understand. I understand completely.
I have some more thoughts about survivor if you're interested.
So Jordan, instead of some long shout outs today, one of the things I wanted to do since we're doing
a sneaky snake Wednesday episode here, I wanted to zip get into the mail bag because it's been a
little while. It has been a while. I have a little bit of catching up to do. So Steve in London,
I want to give you a thanks for the Department of Truth graphic novel. Yes. Thank you very much.
Appreciate that. Also, Jace sent some cool shirts, those Q shirts, those Q meme shirts.
Yes. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. They're from Infidel Memeware. And I went over to their website to
check out some of the designs. Yeah. They're pretty cool. I think I think there's one I may end up
getting a hoodie. Oh, so I mean, this is not sponsored. But thank you for the shirt and cool
stuff. Thank you very much. Also, Keith and Laurel sent a care package a while back and I have been
horrible about giving a thank you and I really appreciate it. Thank you, folks. Turn that horrible
into Laurel and thank you very much, Keith and Laurel. You're a basket of Laurels.
So thank you so much. Yes. Also, this is something that we forgot to do and I felt a little bit
guilty about it. And that was when we were given a thank you to Bex. Bex sent that ukulele. Yes.
The pink ukulele that we were very confused about and it turns out it was for you. Yes. Because of
Steven Universe. Steven Universe, pink lion. And then I got a green ukulele from Bex. Right.
Because of plants. Yes. But what I forgot to do was Bex requested that I give a shout out to
Quicksilver on the Discord. And I forgot to do that. And I would like to write that wrong by saying
what's up Quicksilver? Hey, Quicksilver on the Discord. I have no idea what any of this means.
This is also Charlie Brown's teachers. Yes. Yes. So, Jordan, let's get heavy. Okay.
Giving someone life is giving someone death. You could say that
life is death. You could. You could. Happy birthday, J.G. Gunner. I hope you had a good one. Also,
Dexter reached out and wanted us to wish a happy birthday to Zoe. Oh, okay. Zoe. Wow. You can't
be named Dexter and wish a happy birthday after opening with giving someone life is giving someone
death. I have never watched that show. I don't think you need to. I think you get the reference.
I do. He kills serial killers. He kills people. Yeah. Cool. I heard the ending was bad.
I never watched the show either. Also, Renee checked in and wanted to wish Rosemary a happy
birthday. And this is this is fun because Rosemary recently reached out and wanted to wish Renee a
happy birthday. Of course. Of course. So turn about his fair play. Of course. Also, Renee says
she's the best friend I could have and thanks for putting up with me. Happy birthday, Rosemary.
Unfortunately, life is death. Life is Alex Jones. Unfortunately. So Jordan, today we're in
the past. Oh, we're like the past. We're digging into the past and we're going to be talking about
May 22nd through 27th, 20. Oh, three, three. No blackjack. No. Dealer got blackjack. Yes.
And not not not great. Not a great stretch of time. If I'm going to be perfectly honest with
you, there's some funny things that happen, but in terms of like, if you're looking for anything
in depth, I am afraid you're not going to find it here. Not going to happen. No. May 22nd,
not the best day of the year. 22nd and 23rd. A lot of it is talking about Bilderberg. A lot of
it is talking about the same sort of Bilderberg conspiracies that we've discussed over and over
again. And it's very boilerplate, fairly boring. Yeah. And that's Thursday and Friday.
Alex doesn't have a Sunday show at this point. Right. Monday is a repeat of a show from the
past week. Wow. Because I think it's Memorial Day. Oh, okay. And then so Tuesday, he comes back on
the 27th and there's a little bit of interesting collars, maybe, but like there is nothing going
on. Oh man. It is a wasteland. I like how we've gotten so far into the show that a Bilderberg
conspiracy. We're like, Jesus, that's quaint back in the day. Oh, Bilderberg. Yeah. They were scary
back then. No, man. Bill Gates is killing everyone now. Bill Gates, Derberg. There's one thing about
the, the people that he has to talk about Bilderberg that I think is worth pointing out.
But in terms of the actual conspiracies, they're all just the exactly the same stuff as always.
Yeah. So I feel like a pertinent question to every opening of the show is just going to be like,
Hey, are we going to be getting into blood libel today, Dan? Yep. That's what I thought.
Do you say Bilderberg in 2003? I'm guessing anti-Semitism might come quicker than you think.
So we start here on the 22nd and not much is going on until Alex takes some calls. He takes
some calls fairly early in the episode and Alex, I think he's trying. He's Mr. Brightside.
He's talking to this call. Okay. I just wanted to tell you like what I do. So like if other
people are listening, they'll do the same. Like I make like, like books with news stories and I
pass them all out and I pass out your movies and 911 is the best one. That's amazing.
Well, we're getting 90% wake up with road to charity people.
Yeah, I get a lot of people who, yeah, they wake up and stuff, but like some of my friends,
like if they even start talking to me about it, like their girlfriends or wives, you know,
like give them a look, you know, they're not allowed to talk to me. Most of my friends don't
even talk to me anymore. Man, man, don't blame the girlfriends.
Yeah, everyone's waking up and now they won't talk to me anymore because their girlfriends won't
let them. That's very sad that that that is unfortunate. That is bad. I need, I need corroborating
evidence on we're getting 90% wake up. Well, I need a survey response. I need something. I need
a rest, missing pole. You can't look. I remember back when I first started out my job, one of
the ways that we marketed was with direct mail campaigns and you get like a 0.5% response. That
was the industry average. If you're telling me, if you're telling me you're getting 90% wake up
out of this, I got to know what you're doing. Yeah, it's like, if you're getting 90% response
to something, it's got to be like heroin. Yeah, totally. Or sophisticated brainwashing.
So I actually do have a little bit of insight into this because Alex was talking to another caller
and he gives out DVDs to people and he's like, I'm getting 100% response from people 100% wake up
and they talk about it and the way that this guy is defining that is that everybody who takes the
DVD seems happy about it. But still, there's a lot of people who are not taking the DVDs.
Which also means they didn't necessarily watch it. Yeah, I don't know if there's follow up with
these people about the content of it. I don't know. But this caller in particular, this first one,
is just really bumming me out because you can really see what this looks like in real life.
You know what this looks like in real life? It's a friend telling you weird shit and then
their girlfriend's like, look, we can't have him at parties anymore. He really freaks out my
normal friends. Totally, totally. He said something incredibly rude because somebody
challenged him on this and he freaked out because you're not awake. We can't live that way. That's
not how we live. If that guy wants to be over there by himself, listen to Alex, fine. So this
behavior also apparently extends to digital stuff with this caller. Sure.
Now every seed sprouts the first year and stuff there dormant. I email stories like when people
send me them stupid emails with like, you know, it's forwarded a thousand times. I still all them
emails, I email like Post Gazette and Trib stories. And there's links with your movie on there. I
email that to people. I probably emailed like a thousand and I probably got back like 20 responses.
I got like five thank yous and most people, you know, tell me I'm crazy or where'd you get my
email from? You know, that's about a half percent. All right, sir. I appreciate the call. Yeah, he's
one of those weirdos that thinks the world is round. He's definitely a weirdo. He's getting
chain emails, saving people's email addresses. That's the one spamming them. There we are. And
then when they respond, how did you get my email? He keeps sending them info or stuff.
That's that's that's harassment. I would say that's an interesting look. I will give him this.
That is an innovation towards chain emails that I had not even considered that you could
essentially turn those into your own mailing list and just bother people for the rest of their
lives. Yeah. I mean, you could do that. You'd also have to recognize if you do the earpiece of
shit. Yes, there is that there. Not all innovations are good. I will agree with that. Yeah. So Alex
gets another call and this guy is got a bad question and Alex has a worse answer. Alex,
can I ask you a real quick question before the break there? Sure. See, someone told me that
there the 9 11 attack that there are 7000 Jews that are employed in the World Trade Center.
They were not employed at work that day. Ever hear anything about that? That is true. MSNBC
checked into it and said the urban legend was true. Also, the Jewish newspapers have reported
they were told not to go to work. That is a confirmed fact.
That's so fucked up. I don't think it needs to be said that Alex is completely wrong and
lending credibility to an explicitly anti-Semitic conspiracy theory about 9 11 here. This is lazy,
sloppy behavior that only serves to validate the complete bullshit that this caller has heard
from his bigot friends. And Alex is just using his platform as a voice of authority or certainty
on the subject in a way that is abhorrent. You can very easily find the names of many Jewish
victims of the 9 11 attack. Some were on planes. Some were firefighters who died trying to save
their fellow person's lives and many worked at the World Trade Center or at the Pentagon.
I could name specific names because I can. I can find them. And I've read biographic sketches of
these people, many, many obituaries, but I'm not going to get into specifics out of respect for
those people's memories. And it wouldn't change anybody's mind anyways. This narrative was a
baseless claim that was made to demonize the Jewish population of the United States and to
imply some kind of complicity in the attack. Alex should be deeply ashamed of this response.
I can't believe we got to the very first time in 2003 that the Jews were blamed for
something that they had nothing to do with. I don't think this is the first time even in Alex's
show 2003 that we've gotten there. But it was, I thought that that was bad on Alex's part. And I
just think that they're like this caller, they're going out to break. He's saying, Hey, is it true
that all the Jewish people were told to stay home? Yes, that is true. It costs you nothing to
just be like, no, no, actually, that is nonsense. Yeah, there's, there's no other, I mean, there's
just no interpretation of that that doesn't wind up with the Jews were involved in the planning
and the attack. That's, and it's specifically the capital, the capital J, the Jews, not like these
people, not a group of them, the entirety of Judaism. Yeah. So we're fucked. Yep.
So Alex gets to a first guest here on the 22nd, and it's a Bilderberg expert.
I remember five, six, seven, eight years ago on the radio, I'd talk about the Bilderberg group and
get calls from listeners. I heard that's a code word for terrorism. It doesn't exist. You're insane.
I heard on the news, insane people believe this exists. It doesn't exist.
Well, it does exist. And now it's public. Thanks to the work of folks out there,
like Tony Gosling of Bilderberg.org is about to join us. So I'd never heard of this dude. Tony
Gosling. Yeah, I wanted to learn a little bit more about him because he's not the Bilderberg
expert that I'm used to Alex having on. Wasn't he in the notebook? Other, it's his brother. Oh,
okay. When later time, Alex Jones is trying to look into a Bilderberg story, he pretty much always
talks to big Jim Tucker. And then in second place, if Jim's not available or had died by then,
Alex would talk to Daniel Estelit. Tony Gosling's not a super relevant name in the periods that
I've listened to of Alex's show. Tony runs a website called Bilderberg.org. And I will say that
this site pretty quickly deteriorates from being about the Bilderberg group at all. Oh, if you
scroll down his homepage, you'll soon find a picture of Jesus as Che Guevara, which is on a
shirt that he sells. Not good. And then a reprinting of the Ten Commandments and the Lord's Prayer.
Okay, okay. It's weirdly religiously centered for what appears to be a site about the Bilderberg
group, which if I'm not mistaken, and based on this interview that I'm hearing on Alex's show,
it's supposed to be a political conspiracy. Things really fall apart when you get to the
section titled, quote, my spiritual beliefs. No. This passage. That that that should be on a
everybody's wall. Things really fall apart when I say here are my personal beliefs. This passage
stood out as not sounding great. Quote, many problems have been caused by some of the Jewish
people's refusal to acknowledge Jesus as the Messiah. That does sound like the root cause
of many problems. Many Jews, for example, live in Old Testament Torah times, believing they're
still God's chosen people. It seems clear to me that God cut off the Jewish hierarchy from his
favor after they pleaded successfully for the unjust death of his only son. Why? Why? Where?
Where? When? Why? In the Bible? Do you mean the Bible where they wrote letters the rest of the New
Testament is writing writing letters to Jews about Jesus being great? There's a lot of
conversation about who are, is or is not real Jews also on the site. There we are. It's a little
convoluted and not good. Okay. The website's also just weird. If you scroll down a little bit
further, you find a list of Tony's 30 top movies. The life of Brian, Brian weirdly came in at number
24. How can the life of Brian be on there? Hey, he likes to have fun.
You know, this satire of every of my into my personal beliefs, my 24th favorite movie,
yeah, eviscerates how stupid they are. Great. So after that, there's a section about how great
Bill Hicks was as a comedian. I'm not kidding. I'm not kidding. There's a big section about Bill
Hicks. What is wrong with the humanity? It's a really poorly laid out and confusing website.
And I don't know if it would even be helpful even if you did assume that he had evidence of
something. Listen, religion is the center of all of our problems in this life. This guy
is my favorite comedian. Anyways, here are my personal beliefs. Number four or five on his
list was they live. Oh boy. Well, that one actually tracks. I didn't recognize a lot of the names of
the movies and I'm guessing some of them were not good. It'd be funny if they were all, it was like
they live the life of Brian and then a bunch of weird seventies are like Harold and Maude is up
there. They shoot horses, don't they? Everything Lee Remick has ever been in like all of that.
Everything by like Lenny Riefenstahl. Sure. Sure.
This way, like, I don't know. It's, I didn't read over everything, but it seems like this
guy's a little bit unwell and he's a bit defensive about his positions vis a vis Judaism.
He's defensive about his movies. Yeah. So welcome to Builderberg.org top 30 movies today.
A lot of the stuff that he has to say about Builderberg is all kind of the same stuff you hear
from just about any of these, these folks, you know, just stray talk, powerful people are there.
Yeah. Yeah. Let's let's imagine what they're talking about. Sure. Although this guy, this guy
did have a little bit of a fun twist on it and that he seemed to be kind of like a bird watcher
for Builderberg members. Okay. Like, cause he seemed to get really excited when he was talking
about how one day, one day, he saw one in the wild. No, one day during the Builderberg conference,
all the people, all the riches who were attending the conference decided that they were going to
go to the palace of Versailles and they were going to just go tour around. Sure. And so he was
like gawking at rich, powerful people. He was really excited that David Rockefeller actually
answered a couple of questions from people and it didn't seem standoffish or mad. It was like,
I think you just enjoy this. There's a really, I don't see a conspiracy here. I think you like
following around like a powerful group of people. No, I feel like we're in a situation where like
the continuum is there's something, there's a very thin line between avid hater and fan boy.
You know, like there's a very thin line between like, oh, I hate the Builderberg group and I'm
going to follow them everywhere they go and hope to catch a glimpse of them. He seemed like he was
on that line. Yeah. He was riding it a little bit more than a lot of the other folks like the
Tuckers or Estolence that seemed just to be either insane or full of hate. Yeah.
But yeah, this guy, I don't know. Here's just a clip of in his own words. Let's hear what he has to
say. Interesting character, Bernhard, because he's both before and after he started the Builderberg
had some really disastrous things happen to him, which throw a lot of doubt over his integrity. First
of all, his membership before the US entered the World War Two of the of the SS, the German SS. He
then left Germany afterwards and married into the Dutch Royal Family, but he was in Hitler's
fear of SS during the war. This is the guy that started the group off. And the irony is, of course,
that they will tell us that the group is one of the reasons for the group is to stop the next
term or to stop any any other possible Hitler surfacing in the future. Now, I would have thought
one of the worst people to start an organization dedicated to that task is someone who'd been
in Hitler's SS. It is true that for a brief time before the war, Prince Barnard was a member of the
writer SS, the Mounted Division of the SS. Sure. This is definitely not cool. And I'm not making
any kind of an excuse for it. But it's usually a good idea when you're looking at a historical
figure like this to judge them based on the measure of a person's actions as opposed to
a tiny, not a tiny detail, but a specific individual detail. Barnard clearly did not support the
Nazis in World War Two, and he actively fought against them when Hitler invaded the Netherlands
in 1940. His track record is fairly clear, and he was fighting Hitler's forces before the US
even was. This is an instance of like something that's a true enough fact that's being used to
create a dishonest image in the listener's head. The goal is to portray Barnard as somebody who
fought alongside the Nazis in the war and as someone who's a part of this elite division of
Hitler's organization. And that's just not true. There's more complexity to this than that. Yeah.
Yeah, that's that's got Soros's dad written all over it. Absolutely. Like, fine. I get what, yes,
your your fundamental basic fact is correct. And by leaving out literally everything else,
you can support your narrative. But that's not the only fact. Yeah, and probably Prince Barnard's
a little bit less of a sympathetic figure than 14 year old George Soros. Totally. In as much as he
was older, and he was a member of the writing SS, but still the totality of his actions during the
war speak to somebody who was not on the side of Hitler. Yeah, it was not on the side of the
Nazis. And I think I think that at that point, you can say, All right, this was a blip on your
sustain on your history. Right. But it's not something that should be deterministic of your
character. Yeah. And that's what this guy wants to present Barnard as because, you know, he hates
the Bilderberg group. And if one of the people who co founded it can be just portrayed as, you
know, one of Hitler's higher ups, right, then there you go, right? No, it's one of the most
annoying things because you don't like I don't need help being prejudiced against a prince like
I'm fine with that. I'm not. I don't like royalty, but you can't make me hate him based on bullshit.
That's not fair. Also, I like to correct myself. His name is Bernhard. I kept saying Barnard. I
did hear Barnard. And I don't know why. Yeah. No, I mean, yeah, I don't need I don't need help.
I don't need help there. And you lying about him makes me then have to defend him, which I don't
want to do. No, I don't want to defend a prince. Fuck royalty. No, it makes it makes you need to
like be like hold on a second. Exactly. And then secondarily, it makes me very wary of
whatever information you're putting out, whatever information you have about the Bilderberg group
seems kind of sketchy. Yeah. This is if this is the level of accusation you're making. Yeah. If
you can't get a basic detail contextually right, then why would I believe the rest of what you
have to say? Yeah. Anyway, the rest of this is just, you know, standard Bilderberg conspiracy
nonsense. Sure. Gossip. Sure. And birdwatching of rich people, you know, can't can't argue with a
good birdwatching. So Alex gets back to calls and this caller was sort of relevant to my interests.
And that is of course, whether or not Alex was fighting the literal devil right in 2003. Right.
This gives us a little hint, maybe. Why in Maryland? Why you're on the air? Go ahead, sir.
Good afternoon, Alex. How you doing? Good. Good. Boy, there's there's so much to talk about and
there's a little time. But all I can say is the demons are loose and they're out and they're and
they're doing the work. I mean, Alex doesn't have a direct response to that, but they're loose.
The demons are loose. The demons are loose. I don't know what happened, but demons got loose.
Who let the demons out? We had listen, we had them in a corral in Northwestern Montana. We
had kept all the demons there. That's how we had developed this great nation of ours and
somebody tripped, ruined the summoning circle and now the demons are loose. There's just nothing
to do. Someone, someone's got to get a lasso. We got to get a drive in these weird demons.
I think we need the regulators. I think Nate dog and Warren need to mount up our IP. I think
that this is an indication of some of the like conversation that is clearly just pretty organic
and natural on Alex's show at this time talking about demons being loose and what have you,
but it still doesn't. It's still kind of a nebulous picture for me. I'm leaning more towards
like there being a real literalist religious vibe going on. I'm leaning closer to that,
but I also don't have merely the amount of information that we do from the president
that Alex legit thinks the shoot devil is there and he's pulling the strings of the enemies.
I mean, this guy sounds like he definitely believes that the literal demons are loose.
This dude. Yeah. Yeah, but they're doing work. I mean, you could still see that as a metaphor
or you could, if you're Alex and you're responding to that, you could see that as a metaphor for
the demonic impulses of the elite are given free reign now, no longer having to be corralled
or, or, you know, moderated. Who knows? Yeah. So Alex gets a lot of mileage out of people
pretending that he's been right about so many things, but so many things for 27 years. He's
right or then he is wrong and he's not. But one of the things that I thought was really fun about
this next clip is he makes a bunch of predictions about gun grabbing and stuff. Everything he says
is wrong. Okay. They're going to reauthorize Clinton's gun ban and they're going to expand it
radically. And so they're going to add a semi-automatic shotgun ban. That's the NRA telling you that
they're going to sign S 22, which is Patriot Act two in the Senate full of gun registration,
shutting down the gun shows, national ballistics databases, the most gun control, the most hard
core, draconian stuff we've ever seen. And the average conservative out there has no idea
because the neocons like Rush Limbaugh, Neil Bords, Michael Savage, Sean Hannity will not tell them.
Wow. He likes a lot of those people now. Yeah, loves them. And all those predictions are wrong.
I was I was trying to keep track of my road. Nope. Nope. Nope. And also nope. Nope. None of those
happened. Yes, that is true. Yeah. Yeah. So yeah, I mean, he's right most of the time. Sure. Anyway,
this next clip, Alex goes back to calls and this dude, I tried to trace this down. I got very little
on this. But this this was I enjoyed this is going to be a big swing. Yeah, okay. Tom and Texas,
you're on the air. Go ahead, sir. Yeah, pal. You're on the air. Go ahead. Yes, sir. Alex,
I've been I was the one that first informed sex Mars in 1988, about the the church, the hidden
church over there all the way six. About there is an area in the morning. I was in work for you
all movies world. Sir, I really don't understand what you're saying. I have to give us some background.
I do not understand this. And I want to know more. Tell me about the hidden church on route six.
Well, thankfully, Alex does ask for clarification. Okay, here it comes. Okay, the background is
I went to this church. We moved cues out of and the old man walked out custom like a sailor
because we got there late. He said, you realize whose church this is? I said, no,
he says this is George Bush's church. But we walked in and had a big swastika hanging down
and up above the pulpit. Yeah, I can see that. So I said, okay, well, tell me all about he has
the Christian symbol up there, you said. And it's and he showed me all the pictures in the
offices of Bush family. So about I guess two weeks later, I went and told text Mars about it
at a convention at the hobby airport. So first of all, this dude worked for a moving company
and he was called to show up at a backwards hidden church to remove pews. But somehow the only
person there hadn't called them to move the furniture and was confused that they were there.
Correct. This is a little fishy. No, my second issue is that this was in 1988. So at this point,
George H. W. Bush was coming to the end of his second term as vice president and was about to
win the 1988 election for president. He still flew back to Texas every Sunday to go to the
hidden church on route six. Everybody knows that George W. Bush hadn't even become Texas governor
yet. And honestly, he hadn't even bought the Texas Rangers at this point. I don't see how the
either would be in either of their interests to be running a secret Nazi church in the middle
of Texas when they were spending most of their time at this point in DC and campaigning.
I am the vice president of the United States and have been for years. One of the most looked at,
observed and known where a person is at all times. Almost like there's a schedule that's public
every day. But on Sundays, flies back to Texas, heads to the hidden Nazi church. No one knows
about it. Except for this guy, the U-Haul mover who accidentally showed up there or something.
And there are hidden pictures of, okay, okay. So you're telling me, you're telling me that this
moving company shows up. The guy is cussing like a sailor says, do you know whose church this is?
This is the Bush's church. And then that aggressive attitude wipes away. And he's like,
come on back into the office. Let me show you George Bush and the Nazis. And no one will ever
find these pictures, despite the fact that this guy seems willing to show them to literally anybody
who walks in. Yeah. Yeah. It seems to be real neighborly. Hey, hey, this is the hidden church
on route six. Come on in. Let me show you the vice president's Nazi memorabilia. Well, you know,
I worked for George HW Bush and he specifically told me when he left that while I was watching
over the place, I was to tell everybody. Let everybody know. Be sure you show the pictures
of me and my family. Yes, I want this information getting out. That's why I go to this hidden church.
Ridiculous. Also, Tex Mars is a extreme anti-Semite. So yeah, it's not good that this guy felt like,
hey, first person I got to get this information to. Yeah. Yeah. Not good. No. So Alex wants to
know where this church is. Yes. Because that is an important question. Now, where is this church, sir?
He could get that. That was the problem. Now, when I told Tex Mars, he wrote he wrote about me in
his book. He didn't get into the rainbow. I'm the one that informed him about it. He didn't know
nothing about it. And he found it to be true. And where is this church, sir? Okay, it was on highway
86. Best I can remember. This is an 88. I'll have to do some more. Outside, outside where?
Right outside. It's close to, I'd say, going out past Sugarland.
Outside Houston. Right. It's on the east side of Houston. I mean, west side of Houston.
Look, man, if you find the vice president's Nazi church, you will always know where the
vice president's Nazi church is. You will drive people by. It's pretty big. Yeah. It's a pretty
big thing. No, I would find ways. I would be like, Hey, look, the main highway has been torn down.
We're going to have to take the long way through highway six. Oh, by the way, I met George Bush's
Nazi pastor and he's got pictures of George Bush with the Nazi bullshit. I find it difficult to
believe that if you did find something like this, you wouldn't go back yourself all the time. Not all
the time. At least you'd go back and be like, Did I really see what I thought? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
No, that's this is Brigadoon. It's outrageous. Yeah. So anyway, this church, what, like, I want,
I want to ask you, like, how you're picturing this. How big is it? What do you, what are you
imagining? Like, give me some, give me some, like physical attributes that you're. All right. I see
it seeding maybe 60 to 80 people. Okay. There are about there's kind of a smaller congregation,
kind of a smaller congregation. There's two rows of pews on either side with a walkway there.
There's a pulpit and directly behind it hanging is a, let's call it 20 foot tall Nazi flag is
based on his description. Do you think that it's a place that's in like good repair? Do you think
it's something that's dilapidated? What do you, what are your feelings on this? I think it has to
have that feel of being absurdly clean for the area that it's in. Like the walls are painted
absurdly white, almost as if they're immune to the nature around them. So it's like a,
an OR, like an operating room in the middle of a swamp. Yes. Absolutely. Okay. That is an
interesting picture. And I think that's probably about what I thought. We're both wrong. Okay.
How many people would you say the church would see? 7,000. It was probably
at least 800 at the least. That's a lot. That's a lot of people who know George
Bush is a Nazi. I mean, the whole family was in there.
He had the bushes, the kids off the whole nine yards in there. He says, I said, well,
I can't believe this is bushes. He said, man, this is the God, God, this is the
true church of God here. And he said it was a branch from the Abyssal Pallion.
I do remember him saying that. It broke away from the Abyssal Pallion.
Sir, I appreciate your call. Tom, appreciate it. But look,
that is not how I know the globalist to operate. It's an armored fortress at the
Skull and Bones tomb. And that kind of stuff is in there. That's confirmed.
It's guarded at Bohemian Grove. And there is that type of stuff.
I don't know that story, sir. I really, I don't like to speculate. So,
you know, I'm not saying you're a liar. It just, it just doesn't, doesn't fit.
It fits with some stuff in other areas. I'm so proud of Alex.
That's one of the few points that I've ever heard him be like, I can't accept this.
Yeah, that is, that is intense. Yeah. How great would it be to be like,
I'm on the phone with a person who found George W. Bush's Nazi church.
Yeah. And he's like, I can't make this fit. This is no good. No, sir. Look, this just doesn't
match. Yeah. Sorry. Yeah. I'm not calling you a liar, but I, I don't know about this. Yeah.
That's, that's a, that is a level of pushback I rarely see from him.
That's true. But I mean, at the same time, his pushback is not based around like,
that's ridiculous. So much of it is like, okay, I get you think there's a Nazi base on the moon,
but it's on Mars. Duh. I can't accept this Nazi base on the moon. Whatever my Nazi base is on
Mars, man. I have to actually push back on what you're saying. Okay. Because I think that that's
not fair. I think that what Alex is saying, the reason that he's, he's pushing back on this guy
is because he's saying there are little Nazi enclaves and, and, and like worship centers
or whatever. Yeah, of course. But they're heavily armed. Yes. That's like, you, you can't get into
these sculling bones area where there's the big Nazi flag. Right. Right. There's not going to be
one out in the middle of like this church that you get welcomed into. Right. It's not, it's not
that it's like, okay, it's on the moon. It's on, or on Mars. It's the context surrounding this
doesn't make sense. I understand. This would not be that easy to accidentally stumble into.
I broke into Bohemian Grove. That's how I know their thing. You didn't break into this church.
No, you were welcomed in. Right. And that would never happen. A surprisingly, neighborly Nazi.
Alex's narratives require that it's hard to find these secrets. True. True. And so that's why
he's pushing back. Well, I mean, I still think that it's at least, I mean, functionally, it serves
the same purpose as saying that this is ridiculous. Sure. No, that's, that's definitely true. That's
definitely true. And he, I mean, I assume it would feel like a bit of a personal attack on his
manhood if you just got to get secrets by walking into places and then potentially bigger
scoop than Bohemian Grove. Exactly. Just by accidentally showing up with a U-Haul truck.
I think it would just be so much easier to be like, really? See, it's 800, huh?
Wow. So there's, there's a, what, 768 people who know that the entire Bush family is Nazis?
No, no, no. Here's what you don't know. There's 800 Bush family members. Now that might as well be
your, your angle on it. Sure. It's an, it's the only Bush church there's ever been. Yeah. So,
um, here's, uh, here's our last clip from the 22nd. Alex is talking about the situation in Iraq
and he's, he's saying that, uh, but confiscate weapons from people.
Allies to begin seizing weapons from most Iraqis, Iraqi citizens will be required to turn over
automatic weapons and heavy weapons under a proclamation that allied authorities plan to
issue this week, allied officials of the day. The aim of the proclamation is to help stabilize
Iraq by confiscating a huge supply of 847 machine guns, black repel grenades under weapons that are
used by criminal gangs, paramilitary groups and remnants of the Saddam Hussein government.
Well, the remnants of Saddam Hussein's government, we've got the names of bath parties being put
back into control. So Alex still thinks on the 22nd of May that the bath party is being put back
into power and it's all the CIA operation. Isn't he reading about how they're confiscating the
bath party's weapons? And, uh, well, I mean, I think that I have to assume that he just thinks
that that's, uh, window dressing or something. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. That way people won't suspect
that the bath party is still running things. Right. Right. Yeah. Yeah. So I, I still think
that we have not reached a point where this is interesting. It's still sort of rising. It's
crescendoing. Um, reality, uh, and Alex just, they're on a collision head on. Yeah. Two trains
traveling directly at each other. And I'm, I'm very interested to see how that, uh, how Alex
tries to veer around that, uh, that looming accident. It does, it does have the feel of two
trains riding straight towards each other and one train is like, Ooh, I can't hit reality. So I'm
going to turn off and then it hits a bus. Yeah. You're like, way to go. So a large portion of
this episode on the 23rd is Alex talking to this, uh, Belgian doctor, Dr. Van Marder. Okay.
Marder Marder. I'm not entirely sure. That's a good name. He's a dude who, uh, witnessed crimes
being committed by our military against Iraqi civilians. And there's talk of, uh, bringing
charges against military leaders in foreign courts. Yeah. Um, that would be nice.
I have little problem with this interview as a whole. I think that this guy is bringing up some
fine points. Um, but also it's not a very good interview. Like I, I don't think that Alex really
gets to too many of the more important issues. It seems like he's, he's doing a bit of grandstanding
and what have you. Yeah. Um, and I think that I just think that the subject matter is covered
better by almost anybody else. Even in 2003, there were much better commentators that you
could find, uh, discussing, um, human rights abuses on the part of our military in Iraq.
Right. Uh, but at the same time, I'm not going to, I'm not going to sit in nitpick, uh, because
it's mostly this dude talking. Right. And his perspective is like, he saw some U S
soldiers shooting at an ambulance. Yeah. And like, yeah, that sucks. Yeah. That's a war crime. Yeah.
Yeah. So, so you'd say, would you say that this interview is Alex, like letting somebody give
legitimate criticisms of the U S military in order for him to, uh, you know, be like, see the
military and the government is all evil, despite not actually giving a shit about the war crimes
and just kind of exploiting that the government is evil. Somewhat. And then also using it to
translate into, uh, like they're going to start a police state here. Sure. Sure. And so I don't
think that his use of this stuff is, uh, great. But I also think like, yeah, the war, the U S
commits war crimes. We got it. Yeah. It's, it's, we should do something about it now soon. It's hard
to live in 2003. That's, it's really weird to me. It's really weird to remember 2003 and hear
that Alex was having a Belgian doctor on to reveal U S war crimes and was not like, cause he,
I remember how bloodthirsty everybody was. Everybody was so fucking bloodthirsty. If you
said, if you went on TV and said like, Hey, the American government is committing war crimes,
there would be another talking head being like, that's the cost of war, you know, and people
would agree. Yes. Sometimes you have to commit war crimes to fucking have to live in a world where
unfortunately, despite his exploitative nature, Alex was one of the few people putting on a,
an agreement fest about the U S committed war crimes as wild. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, it is. Um,
sorry. I just needed to observe that. That just feels like really strange to, to live in both the
present and the past at the same time. Yeah. It's, it's worth, it's worth pointing out. I don't think
it's worth discussing this interview, like actual clips of it, but it was worth bringing up that
is, that is a, that is a reality. And, and again, I think you can say hooray, uh, to an extent, uh,
to him for that. Sure. Um, but there's still other voices that exist that we're talking about
these things and they weren't doing things like the other things that Alex is doing. Totally.
Totally. Um, and one of those things is hanging out with the fucking shitheads and talking about
Bilderberg. Yeah. I mean, just in the context of that, it is, it is kind of something that I,
I think about a lot just because that's part of how Alex got to where he became, he got to. Yeah.
Is that there were shit tons of war crimes going on. And because this is correct, you are sucked
into the rest of his bullshit. Yes. Until he just gets rid of even any pretense of giving a shit
about war crimes. And then you're trapped in this place of neither do I, you know, it's weird.
Yeah. It is weird. And things that he cares about more aren't those things. They aren't,
exactly. They aren't, they aren't issues that he cares about for the sake of them. He cares about
them as a, as a means. Yeah. And it's, and it's, it's an important thing to point out that one of
the big reasons that we are here where propagandists can destroy everything is that cyclical nature
between a corrupt war crime committing government and a propaganda outlet who's creating that like,
yeah, you can't trust these war crime committing people for good reasons until it spirals out
of control. And now you can't trust anybody or anything. Yeah. I'm sorry. I got lost on a tangent
there. Apologies. Apologies. No worries. So one of the things that Alex does care more about,
one of the things that's really consistent, like I said, is that Bilderberg shit. Yeah.
And so he had that, that guy, Tony Gosling on, on the 22nd, talk about Bilderberg and
you go check out his website. He has some iffy opinions. I would like Alex to put his top 30
movies on the info wars. I don't. Okay. I think it would all just be oblivion one, three, 30 real
life movie man. So he has another expert on on the 23rd. That's big Jim Tucker, baby.
Well, I spent 20 years with the establishment press with Washington Daily News,
Akron Biggin Journal, Richmond Times, this batch of their newspapers till 1975. But I was being
interviewed by Willis Carter at Liberty Lobby for the position of editor of a newspaper is
getting ready to create called the spotlight. He asked me what I thought about Bilderberg and I
said, who are they? And he gave me a brief description. I said, that's impossible. I've been
with newspapers all my life. Such a group cannot exist without me knowing Willis Carter is a Nazi
and white supremacist. The spectator was a paper whose editorial position was anti semitism and
Holocaust denial. Jim Tucker was the editor of that paper. In case you've forgotten since we talked
about him in our end game coverage, here's one of Willis Cardo's famous quotes, quote,
if Satan himself with all of his superhuman genius and diabolical ingenuity at his command
had tried to create a permanent disintegration and force for the destruction of the nations,
he could have done no better than invent the Jews. Describing his motivation to start the spotlight,
the ADL says in a bio of Cardo quote, Cardo's chief aim was always to mobilize opinion against
Jews. Liberty Lobby was his chief instrument to bridge right wing constituencies, hard right or
paramilitary libertarians, conspiratorial anti communists, racists, by inflaming their anti
government and nativist fears and identifying Jews as the country's chief threat. Willis
Cardo is a bigot who wanted to sway public opinion against Jews with his media entities,
and Jim Tucker worked for his big media entity from its beginning in 1975 until they folded in
2001. Fuck him and fuck whatever he has to say about Bilderberg. It's even more insulting that he
didn't know about them until Willis Cardo told him about them. Goddamn. One of the worst. Fuck Jim
Tucker. Yeah, it makes you want to make you want to invent a bow and arrow that can shoot arrows into
the past. One of the things that's really funny to me though is like, Alex is like, oh yeah, Jim
Tucker, you know, he had to climb fences and get in there. He's a real intrepid journalist.
And they're like, you look at the videos of Jim Tucker and he's always drunk.
I was going to say, yeah, this is not a man. He's the guy who was wearing the hat all the time,
too. I was like, that is not a man who can jump a fence without severely injuring himself.
He seems like he's exhausted reading a paper. Or at the very least, continuing to breathe.
Yeah. So anyway, Alex talks to Jim Tucker and it's all just the same shit, except without the
excitement at seeing David Rockefeller. Yeah, we don't have the fanboy moment. No,
but one of the things that I think is is is worth pointing out about both of these interviews
is that Jim Tucker is somebody who I don't know and I don't care what his personal positions are.
He was the editor of a fucking white supremacist Holocaust denial paper for 25 years.
And Tony Gosling has a lot of questions about who is or is not Jewish
and thinks a lot of the problems in the world come from Jews not accepting Jesus as the Messiah.
Seems like it. You wouldn't know that from listening to their interviews. You wouldn't know
that. You would think that these guys are concerned about politics and really powerful
people getting together and talking behind closed doors. You would think that, hey, you know,
these are just guys who have a political position that maybe is anathema with what the media wants
to report. Yeah, you wouldn't know that maybe a lot of anti-Semitism is what drives. Yeah,
you know, a lot of people don't a lot of people don't sympathize with, you know, Nazis as much.
But what you got to understand is you used to be able to just tell people that you hated the
Jews all the time. And now you have to hide behind all of these things, you know, like that's hard.
Let's just think about the Nazis for a second. Now they can't even say
openly on the radio that everyone should kill the Jews because it's their fault. It's brutal.
Poor Willis. Poor Willis. Anyway, we go to the 27th because most of this show is just that
interview with Jim Tucker and then the interview with the Belgian doctor. And like I said, the
discussion of mistreatment of Iraqis and, you know, all that is fine. And it's good. It's
something that there was probably, I don't even know if probably is the right word, I would say
definitely, there should have been more space for in public conversation. But one of the reasons
that I find it kind of not that interesting or not that relevant to give Alex too much of a pat on
the head about it is he takes these stories and he discusses or reads headlines about mistreatment
of people in Iraq, the civilians. And then he just makes it about himself and the United States.
Naturally. This is so horrible. And it's only going to get worse. And MSNBC reported before the war
plans for reeducation centers, reeducation centers, movie screens, blaring propaganda,
machine gun nests, everything. This is so embarrassing. But again, Europe controls America
is using us as the bad cop right now. They own our full reserve. They've ordered the dollar
to be imploded. So again, none of that came to pass here as he's as he's suggesting.
He's covering here. This is on the 27th. Now we've jumped to that Tuesday. And he's covering
conversation about Guantanamo, about the possibility of like military tribunals taking
place there. Yeah. And now he's saying that, you know, they had plans before the war for,
you know, here in America to have these, you know, detention centers and machine gun nests.
And, you know, it's all the conversation about the wrongs of the war. Right.
Exist in order to facilitate his narratives about his fears about what's going to happen here.
It's not on its own merits. The people there, their pain and what's being done isn't wrong
because it's wrong. And I have a difficulty with that. Yeah. I mean, you know, it's tough. The good
thing is that if I recall correctly, in 2008, Obama fulfilled his campaign promise to close
Guantanamo Bay, right? That was like one of the first things he did.
What? Dan, I'm so Alex goes to calls and one of the things that he's been pretty upset about is
seatbelt checks. I really, really don't know. Yep. He's not in fan of. He's not a fan of clicketer
ticket. The devil with all of his might is arrayed against us and I can't stand a $70 ticket.
So he's talking here another, another instance of him being totally right about his predictions of
what would, so the seatbelt checks. Yes. It's going to get out of control. It's going to get out of
control. Okay. It was, we then learned the name of it. It was the National Seatbelt Use Initiative
funded by Clinton to the tune of over $4 billion a year started at 2.4 and then it
phased in over the $4 billion a year. Bush is funding it. It's going to build internal
checkpoints that will also service toll booths to fund it. It will be the equivalent of airport
screening. You'll be harassed. You'll be searched. That's why they don't care if you refuse to fly.
You're going to go through it at the checkpoints and it says citizens will wear gray uniforms,
part three of the four part plan. Citizens will wear gray uniforms. That will be a national draft,
compulsory draft. You will have to serve in Homeland Security. It will be high school students
to be able to graduate. They will be searching you at checkpoints. The Philadelphia Inquirer
reported last year that the kids are training with M16s. They're training in warrants service
checkpoints, fugitive apprehension, building clearing. It is going to be throngs of power
tripping citizens with sub machine guns. It's a nightmare world, sir. How does it sound to you?
I don't know. I don't think this happened. But you know, one of the things that's wild is like
you go back to 2003 and the world was so like topsy-turvy because of the aftermath of 9-11
and the Iraq war that I think a lot of people probably could hear something like that and be
like, fuck, I don't know. Maybe. No, I mean, the only thing that like the main argument I would
have against that is just like that seems like biting off more than the government can chew.
You know, like there's not the infrastructure in place to get everybody to wear gray uniforms.
That's going to take a monumental effort of manufacturing. I think he was talking about
the conscripted youth wearing gray uniforms. All right. Well, still, you got to outfit all these
kids with sub machine guns. That's going to be that's going to be noticed. I mean, the gun
manufacturers and the gun sellers are all used to exploiting fears about the people having
to, you know, like, I don't think it's going to happen. No, but I mean, like the kernels of some
of this stuff is stuff that I remember like not sounding that crazy. The National Draft,
you could totally. That's what I'm talking about. The National Draft, you totally. I remember not
saying people having that conversation about like, is there a possibility that a draft may come back
because of the world circumstances? And so I think you can take that level of like, okay,
that's not that nuts, right? And then attach all this nuts stuff on it, right? And get someone to,
I don't know, accept the nuts stuff because of the if I can buy something that is ostensibly
nuts, which is the reinstatement of the draft, then it's not that much bigger of a step to assume
that there will be gray clad children with submachine guns patrolling my neighborhood. Yeah.
All of this because of seat belts? Sure. Okay. So another thing that Alex talks about a bit is
there's a mad cow situation in Canada. And the Canadian beef market is taking a hit because of
there's at least a few cases of mad cow have been discovered and there's a fear of an outbreak. Yes.
And so Alex is complaining a bunch about how, you know, you need to, you can't be feeding animals,
other animals, dead animals, especially sick animals, you can't be feeding herbivores,
animal products and stuff like, and fine, I agree. Yeah. But I don't know what the answer is other
than regulation. Well, we can't do a regulation. I don't, it's, it's nuts. He just yell or just
complains about like how people can't be allowed to do these things. I'm like, how do you deal with
this from a functional standpoint? He never brings up a solution other than people shouldn't do it.
It's the free market system. If everybody wakes up, if he's got a 90% wake up rate,
then the free market will, I assume, account for the fact that people know that these businesses
shouldn't be doing that. So all of these people won't patronize these businesses. Well, it'll be too
late because they'll have mad cow. They will have mad cow by then. That is unfortunate. That is
unfortunate. Seems like government regulation might be the only way to really boy. It could work.
Yeah. Anyway, I thought that was really stupid. Very. Alex has a call from a guy and he says Jesus
a couple of times, like just to be like, Oh, Jesus Christ, you know, like, Oh, is it as an
epithet? No. Well, sort of as an exclamation. Gotcha. Alex ends the call and this is because
he's taken to the Lord's name in vain. Well, not because of that, but it's definitely what's on
his mind. John, great to hear from you. I appreciate the call, sir. Great points from the United
Kingdom. Please though, I'm a Christian and we're on many Christian stations. I know we have a
worldly audience to be very careful about using the Lord's name in vain because I don't want
repercussions of that, not from stations, but from God. So I'm not mad at you, John, but be careful
about, you know, being like the rest of the world. I'm not trying to chastise you. I just
please folks. We have a lot of homeschoolers listening as well and no and what and not
and what did you say? And not use the Lord's name in vain. I don't want to divert people off,
but that's an important point. That is an important point. Wow. Cut to 2021 and Jesus
sales. You got to buy my products. I got a trick, Dick. Yep. Yep. Oh, boy.
What a fucking ridiculous thing to say. I worry about God's vengeance when a caller says Jesus
Christ on my show. Yeah, I think that's performative. Maybe just a 10. Yeah, I think that's
a little bit hair. So Alex, thanks the audience here for putting his content out into the world,
make copies of his videos and stuff because those things aren't going to spread themselves
and 90% success rate. 90% wake up. Pretty impressive. We've got to research that because
whatever he's doing, I can only commend you. Thank you so much for what you've done. In fact,
I never think the listeners enough, the people that have gotten my films, the people that have
made copies and are still making copies, those that have aired them on local community TV stations,
those that have rented out the movie theaters and shown it, those that have
rented out the local gym or ample theater and shown it on a big screen TV. I want to commend
everybody. God bless you. It's really having an effect because we could back the globalist off.
I have no doubt that if we wouldn't have been fighting them on 911 and exposing their involvement,
the globalist would have already carried out more chair. Fuck you. Yeah.
Wow. I'm a fan of that kind of framing of things. That's always really fun. If we
hadn't been doing this, actually, you're supporting my show and spreading my materials
has actually made it so the globalists can't pull off another 911. That's so great.
That's why Mark, but that's why Mark Wahlberg flies on every flight he can all day, every day,
because he's trying to make sure that no more 911s will happen. And the only way to stop it is to
put a Mark Wahlberg on your plane and have an Alex tell you how to stop it. I guess. Right.
There we go. We did it. I think we've just fixed terrorism. Yeah. I mean, can you imagine what kind
of a shithead you'd have to be to act like this? Like we could be like, okay, hey, thanks everyone
for supporting our podcast. And actually, I'm certain that there would have been another Oklahoma
City bombing. So there would have been another Patriot federal building bombing if you hadn't
been supporting our what the fuck list. Listen, your support for our show made it so January
6th was not as bad as it could have been. Well, could have been worse, but here's the problem.
But we did it. Here's the problem. That is something that did happen. Alex is making up
imaginary things that didn't happen right because his show is right. So what you're saying is we
successfully stopped the attack on January 7th. That would be how you'd have to frame. Okay.
Then we did it. Okay. So there's some people who are saying that
the war is kind of like a holy war. Yeah, that's not good. No. And Alex thinks that's bullshit.
Good. However. Oh, no. When they came out and they said,
this is a holy war and you're with the devil of your against it. That was a fraud. But when they
said that God has taken his protection away from America and allowed these attacks to take place
because we have become a corrupt and decadent nation on average. That was true. It's a scientific
fact. What? Okay. All right. Okay. It is a scientific fact that God removed his protection
over the United States in order to allow 911 to happen. Yep. And that is why it's not a holy war.
No. Because it's divine retribution. Also, Alex does say now the people who are against him are
with the devil. Yes, 100%. So I guess it's a holy war now. Well, now it's a holy war. Right.
Okay. But back then it was. I'd like him to scientifically prove that God's protection
is removed and that's what made 911 happen. Yeah. What exactly is God's protection doing
around the United States prior to that area? Did we never have any terrorist attacks prior
to that? None. None. Okay, good. So Alex takes another call from a guy and he brings up scripture
in a kind of clunky way. I just found this to be amusing. Bill in New Jersey, you're up next.
Howard, go ahead. Yes, sir. Mr. Alex Jones. I have recently been reading in Second Chronicles 2311
and, you know, they anointed the son of a king, you know, they said God saved the king, you know.
2311 wasn't long. So I don't know if you're familiar with Second Chronicles 2311.
Okay. Okay. All right. Okay. Got a weird vibe going on. Yep. Don't know what's happening.
Well, this guy's talking about kings. Well, the chronicles are about the, I mean,
they're literal chronicles of all the cool shit that the kings did. Sure. Sure. So easy caller,
easy. What do you want to talk about? Let's hear it. But the idea is I've got a book here. This is
the true story of the seventh in line to the British crown in a course. Oh no. And that book
gives pictures of the mother and the queen mother and they all kind of look like bush family, you
know. And of course I know that the Constitution was... You're talking about British israelism.
Well, that's possible. No, he's not. But that's interesting because that implies that Alex knows
very clearly what British isrealism is. Or at least he knows of it. Yes. It doesn't imply that it
proves that Alex is aware of it as a concept. He knows it's a thing. It's not something that he can
feign complete ignorance about, which is a problem. Yeah. But this caller, what he's talking about
is a book that is about Prince Charles' brother, his younger brother, the seventh in line for the...
It's not Andrew. It's the other, I think Edward is the other brother. Sure. Yeah, whatever. I don't
like royals. Yeah. It's just some biography about him. Sure. I don't think it has anything to do
with British isrealism. And it sounds like where he's going is that the bushes are related to the
British royal family. Well, I don't know where he's going exactly. Well, that's fair. And I've
listened to this. That's fair. That is fair. So the caller brought up the scripture and he's talking
about anointing of kings is in the Bible. Right. And he's saying he read this book about the royals
and they look like bushes or whatever. Right. And so I... Mike down for this, because I want you
to help me out here. Okay. I can't tell if what this caller is bringing up is a satirical suggestion
or if it's sincere. Okay. I'm not sure. All right. You know, in the Bible, it talks about
how they anointed the king and gave him the testimony. Then they were the Constitution. You
know how they're tearing up a Constitution and manipulating it? Maybe we should first state
the Constitution and go with the king in this country. And we should say, God save George W.
Bush, you know, King George, you know. So we say that, will we say that if Hitler was in Germany,
let's go ahead. The Bible says follow Hitler. A lot of people like Hitler. You know, in Germany
they did. I don't know why. He was a complete bad. I'll tell you what I think. Yeah, that's another
story about the, I think Deuteronomy 232 about, you know, how illegitimate children were allowed
into the congregation of God for 10 generations. It was a Jewish law, you know, Deuteronomy 232.
But that's the Old Testament. We have the New Testament. Right. I don't know what's going on here.
I can't tell, like, I think this is a sincere suggestion that the caller is making. I agree.
But I can also see a way that he's really poorly expressing sort of a point of satire, like,
hey, you know, it's in the Bible that we have King. So why shouldn't we have King George?
Like being like presenting that as like an over the top argument. But then again, I don't know
what the point of that would be. Like what would be underneath that satire? Is he satirizing the
Bible? No, no, I view this as him being 100 percent sincere. It kind of feels that way.
And I think the main reason for that is he's been reading about how great kings have been
and how a philosopher king is perhaps the best type of government that there possibly could be
and has decided that democracy has failed us. The Constitution is meaningless and we should have a
king also. And Alex, after a little while, is going to agree with him. True. Yeah. Yes. I do
think that Alex has come around on the idea of monarchy, at least a specific sort of monarchy.
Seems like it. Yeah, weird, weird that this guy's rebuttal to Alex being like,
a lot of people like titler. A lot of people like titler. A lot of people didn't.
A lot of people didn't. I would say probably a significantly larger number.
So this is something that kind of has a problem for Alex, much like the Republic of Texas callers.
Yeah. This is something that sticks in Alex's craw. And so he goes to another call and he's
got to bring it up. He's got to bring up this idea of making Bush king. Hey, what do you think of
these people that say it's Christian to worship your leader and not criticize your leader? Yeah,
that's another important thing. You know, don't put down a king just because he's king.
What? He's a good king. He's a bad king. In my family, I have two lines of royal blood dating
back. I don't know. I'm sorry. What now? The one I'm not going to say the name, but he was,
he was elected by the people. The people held him up. And this whole thing of getting rid of
the Constitution and making Bush king. George Washington fought in the backyard of the house
I was grew up in. This didn't go away. Alex wanted it. Yeah, this is spiraled out of control pretty
quickly. This is spiraled out of control real quick. Hey, buddy, I kind of got the sense that maybe
you'd back me up on this whole making kings thing is bad. Hey, some kings are good. Actually,
I have two royal bloodlines. Yeah. Yeah, that's that's definitely not what you would be expecting.
I mean, if you're Alex with your Alex audience, I can't imagine you would get two pro monarchy
people in a row. That would be a surprise to me as well. Yeah. I mean, at a certain point,
it's just like, wow, this is bad luck. It's full moon or something. I don't know. Don't I mean,
his his his fucking description of kings is literally don't hate the player hate the game.
Some things are good. Some kings are good. Some things are good. Like, like the two bloodlines
I come from. I won't say which no, no, no, no. But George Washington fought in my backyard.
I wouldn't want to dox my blood.
I'd hate it if the tutors heard I was badmouthing them behind their backs. Alex has said that he's
related to the tutors. Yes, maybe they're related. It could be could be. So we're coming into the
end of this here and on the 27th, Alex gets into talking a little bit about some new news stories
about some SSRI issues that are that are becoming conversations. Gotta one of them is about
dangers of withdrawal for some SSRI medications. Sure. And that is a that is a real thing,
although Alex is trying to portray it as just being on these drugs will make you kill people
and whatever you. I thought this was bizarre because Alex hasn't updated any of these talking
points for 18 years. These are all the same things that he says just word for word. By the way,
when they did these studies in the early 80s of project, they found a large percentage around 14
percent at suicidal tendencies. You see, it puts you into a dream state. So you're happily
bumbling around kind of an a mesmerized, mind controlled state. Literally. Then you have a
bad day or a bad trip. It's a these drugs are more associated with hallucinogens and they are with
other type drug families. And some people just have a snap. I've talked to psychologists and
people that know what's happening and they said that, you know, they've had patients who were on
it and they're dancing around naked with butcher knives on top of their houses. They killed their
kids. Most these women who killed their kids were on multiple drugs, almost all the shooters. In fact,
we haven't found one yet who wasn't on these drugs. Yes, we have. It also makes you very open to
suggestion. It puts you into a subconscious state, folks. These people are sleepwalking.
So this is this is just exactly the same sort of stuff that he says all the time. And the thing
that I think is really interesting is that story about the butcher knife on top of a roof is also
the specific example that he uses for years and years. This one image that he has of a case of
somebody with a butcher knife on a roof. I think this is just deeply irresponsible. I think this is
the definition of an unnuanced take on psychiatric meds. Yeah, I mean, there's,
there's, you know, there's not much to say whenever it's like, man, when I was in 2003,
I was unmedicated, just coming into my own as a type one bipolar person. But you could see reality,
man. And like, you know, you weren't just reading about it back then. It was legitimately like in
the literature of bipolar type one was just straight up like one fifth of you don't make it for whatever
reason. And it's related to your mental illness. And like that idea of somebody being like, well,
you know what, that's better than SSRIs and feeling is just like, I just don't know how you can,
how you can talk to somebody who's aware of the death toll that just being alive gives them.
Yeah, yeah, it's, it's real shitty. In a way, you could say that giving someone life is in fact
giving someone death. Yeah, there's a lot of factors and variables that Alex isn't taking
into account here. And obviously, any medication that people take isn't without risk. Living without
medications for some people is also a great risk. Yeah. And it's unfair to attack medication because
of the risk, while not accepting that there is a great risk to not taking medication.
And the fucked up part of it, the fucked up part of it is what one of the biggest contributors to
that is let's say you were on an SSRI and then you listen to a fucking radio show and suddenly
decided to stop taking your medication and then your withdrawals fucking light you up and you
become part of the statistics that Alex is going to use the next year to say that people who are
on SSRI should immediately stop them as part of his evidence for I have to correct you because
it is that Alex does bring up that just stopping taking meds is dangerous. Well, that's good. Yeah.
I don't know if it's enough to dissuade his listeners who hear him say the taking meds
make you have a bad trip or you're just brain washed and sleepwalking through life. But he does
actually say that like you need to take a like decreasing dose right dangerous just to stop.
That's very good. Yeah, I mean, credit where credits do at least he's at the very least he's
doing the absolute bare minimum. Yeah, while fear mongering about the meds. I just couldn't let it
that not be said because he does actually it's good to say it's good to point out.
Now, unfortunately, well, he also says things like this. And that's his last year more than 22
million prescriptions for antidepressants were written out by British patients. Most of them
for SSRIs, these drugs work by allowing the hormone serotonin to act properly in the brain
controlling mood swings over act properly. How about you go for a jog? How about you splash
some cold water on your face? How about you get on your knees and ask God to heal you? Because
believe me, folks, the their their their vaccines, their drugs are a bunch of trash. Yeah, so apparently
you should just pray. Well, you know, I feel like I'm worthless and like I'm a drain on every
single human being around me and that every part of life would be improved if I were no longer here
for it. But actually, you know what I should have just done? Jog gone for a run. Yeah, my bad. My bad.
While I was running, I definitely wouldn't fixate on those very same repetitive thoughts that I
can't get out of my mind. You should just pray that God heals you. Pray. Man, that advice really
worked for me when I was growing up. You know, I got that one a lot. Yeah, fixed everything. Yeah,
it solved a lot of problems. I mean, look, I don't want to like give any credence to what Alex is
saying. But you know, exercise can help people feel better. Exercise and meditation are great
ways to they absolutely are. Yeah, but that is not a full of health regimen necessarily. Yeah. And
I think that this is just kind of dangerous, kind of bad. And I think, you know, obviously, it's not
what I'm looking for in terms of figuring out if Alex believes he's fighting the literal devil.
There's a corollary here that Alex does seem to think that health can be achieved by God
giving it to us. Yeah. So there is at least some kind of weird religiosity here. Yeah, I mean,
there's there's definitely a an escalation from metaphorical to Jesus and God having a literal
effect on curing you, which suggests that they are real, literally. Yeah. And if they are real
literally, then his cosmology suggests that the devil is real, literally. I'm not positive that
that is an assumption that you can make because I think I think that a lot of people can believe
in literalness of God's existence without believing literally in an antagonist.
Sure. Sure. That's I agree with you. That's true. I think the evidence presented so far in 2003 of
Alex, though, is such that you can't be like, I'm guessing his
belief in the Bible is it does not include Satan. But I also think that you can believe
in the literalness of God and not necessarily believe in the literalness of
prayer is a health care plan. True. You know, like I think that I think that there is a difference
between those kinds of engagement with religion. Absolutely. And I think that I think you're
seeing that Alex is at least clearly in the God is better than single payer. Yes. Yes.
2003. But I still haven't single payer more like single prayer. That's what we do. I still haven't
found enough evidence of literal Satan. So we will keep looking. Although this episode was just
bizarre. I mean, beyond just the boringness of it. It's very boring. Just standard ass,
Bilderberg shit. Yeah. But behind that, you have two guys who are a lot of appearances of
anti Semitism, who are the experts that Alex has on to talk about the Bilderberg stuff. Yeah,
which I think is a problem and it definitely merits attention. Yeah. Next, the other thing that I'm
seeing here, bizarrely, 22nd to 27th of May, 2003. Alex isn't talking about Putin. No,
it was conspicuous in its absence. I don't think it means anything. No, but it's like he would
talk about the fucking apartments and Putin constantly. Yeah. And on these episodes, it doesn't
come up. It might just be that he had other things to talk about. But I mean, I would get
distracted too. If my guests were notorious anti Semites and my callers were oddly pro monarchy,
I would get tossed out of my regular and one guy found an 800 seat Nazi church in the middle
of nowhere. That would toss me from my regular Putin stuff. Yeah. Got other other fish to
fry or at the very least I'm distracted by those jangling keys. Sure. Yeah. So Jordan, we'll be back
on Friday. But until then, we have a website and we have a show on Thursday. Yes, we do Thursday,
July 1st. It's at 9 p.m. at the Lincoln Lodge. There are still some tickets available. I will
have buttons there. Oh, probably not the new buttons, but I have some holdover buttons. Nice.
If anybody wants to come out, I'll throw about. We'll get buttons. You will get, but I guarantee
buttons will be tossed. There will be some buttons. Yeah, it'll be a good time. So if you're
in Chicago, obviously, it's not going to be a live show of our show, right? But it is something that
I think that we will have a feeling of is there an interest for a show based on like if no one
comes to this, we'll continue recording in my apartment. It does seem like that might be the
way to go. I don't want that to be a threat, but no, that was very good. That was a very good
plug. Well done. Thanks. We're also on Twitter. We are on Twitter. It's that knowledge. Those who
are fighting that go to bed, Jordan. We're on Facebook. We are on Facebook. If you would like
to download a show, go to apologies. iTunes. I tuned the book. I lost my mind there for a second.
iTunes and then find a local charity or bail fund in your area.
We'll be back. But until then, I'm Neo. I'm Leo. I'm DZX. Clark. I'm Daryl Rundis. I actually found
Barack Obama's secret Baha'i church in Evanston. It's actually just the Baha'i temple in Evanston.
It's not secret. I don't think Obama ever went there. I just found this really cool building.
Andy in Kansas. You're on the air. Thanks for holding.
Hello, Alex. I'm a first-time caller. I'm a huge fan. I love your work. I love you.