Knowledge Fight - #604: October 5, 2021

Episode Date: October 11, 2021

Today, Dan and Jordan check in on the deteriorating situation on The Alex Jones Show. In this installment, Alex makes up a giant story about a video one of his interns found on C-SPAN, interviews a me...ga-creep, and announces that he's going to have to sell his tank. Citations

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Rattler! Rattler! Rattler! Rattler! Rattler! Rattler! Rattler! Rattler! Rattler! Rattler! Rattler... No no no no no no! Knowledge Fight! Dan, and Jordan, I am sweated! Knowledge Fight! It's time to pray! I have great respect for knowledge fight! Knowledge Fight! I'm sick of them posing as if they're the good guys saying we are the bad guys. Knowledge Fight! Dan and Jordan, Knowledge Fight! Rattler! Rattler! Rattler! Rattler! Rattler! Rattler! Rattler! Rattler! Rattler! Rattler! Rattler! Andy and Kansas! Andy and... Andy! Stop it! Andy and Kansas! Andy and... Andy! It's time to pray! Andy and Kansas, you're on the earth! Thanks for holding it!
Starting point is 00:00:49 Hello Alex, I'm Mr. Tim Cullen. I'm a huge fan. I love your work! Knowledge Fight. Knowledge Fight.com. I love you. Hey everybody, welcome back to Knowledge Fight. I'm Dan. I'm Jordan. We're a couple dudes. Sit around, worship at the altar of Celine and talk a little bit about Alex Jones. Oh, indeed we are, Dan. Jordan. Jordan. Jordan. Quick question for you. What's up? What's your bright spot? My bright spot today is I was able to partake in over the weekend. I was invited over to friend of the show, friends of the show, Marty DeRosa and Sarah Shockey's house. Oh, you got an invite, huh? I got an invite to go over and watch the GCW, the Game Changer,
Starting point is 00:01:28 Wrestling, Share, Share, Pay Per View. No, no, no, that's fine. Headlined by Nick Gage versus John Moxley in a death match. Okay. Which is definitely not my thing. You don't like death matches? No. What's wrong with death matches? They're gross. Are they like real? Bloody. Oh, that's no good. Yeah. Why? Do people like that? Yeah, apparently some people enjoy that. But you know that they're not supposed to bleed because they're good. But this whole thing is like, I didn't understand this fully until kind of like watching this match and sort of putting the pieces together. It's basically like with death matches, it's like, all right, there's some glass over here. I'm going to throw you through that. Then there's a sharp thing over here. You're going to throw me through that.
Starting point is 00:02:11 Right. It's just that over and over again. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's very, it's very weird. I don't enjoy it. It's competitive running while innocent bystanders are carrying pained glass everywhere you go. Yeah. It was not, it's not my thing. I don't enjoy it in terms of the, I'm not even the biggest fan of pro wrestling, but when I am, it's not that stuff. Yeah, there's a bit of blood. The whole, the rest of the pay-per-view is kind of like tame. Like I expected there to be more death matches because that was like sort of their thing. Right. There was almost no blood or anything throughout the whole proceedings. Were they good? Like the matches were good or? There was varying quality. Some of it was all right. The audience was kind of weird. I don't know. They were a little bit low energy,
Starting point is 00:02:57 but the death match itself, here's my review, disappointing, underwhelming. Not enough death. I was expecting. Only one man should have left. It was disgusting. Like they were bleeding around and it's like, why would you do this? But like, I wasn't shocked. There was nothing like really exciting about it. No, I saw the wrestler 20 years ago. It was great. Right. But when you're doing these things and like, I know that you don't know who they are necessarily, but like Nick Gage and John Moxley are huge names in this sort of arena.
Starting point is 00:03:29 Gotcha. So the two of them competing for the championship belt in a death match, the stakes are high. Like they need to deliver something that's like, wow, someone died. Right. And I did not see that. I was very, I was very bored and grossed out and grossed out. That's not great. You don't want to be bored and grossed out. Yeah. Yeah. So one of the things that Nick Gage does is he cuts people with a pizza cutter, like a circular pizza cutters. He cuts their forehead.
Starting point is 00:03:57 No, and he can stop whenever he wants. I would enjoy it if you did. Yeah. So John Moxley got a pizza cutter early in the match and was cutting Nick Gage. Right. Right. Don't don't say those words and act like I'm supposed to act like that's fine. It was not a grown adult man went and got a pizza cutter to cut another grown adult man's face with it in a pre like they agreed to do this in a match. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:04:24 Yes, all in good fun. It's for competition for money. Nick Gage did not bleed all that much from the cuts. Right. Then later on in the match, Nick got the pizza cutter and was cutting Moxley and I noticed that his technique was different and that he used his thumb to aid. And I was like, I should not be noticing that during a death match. That's how bored I am. Yeah, that's too much awareness.
Starting point is 00:04:51 That's too much awareness. Yeah. So anyway, it's not for me, but it was a fun time and it was really nice to see Marty and Sarah. Yeah, that is great. Yeah. I hope someday they invite me somewhere to you were you couldn't come anyway. I know you were you were exposed or predisposed that evening. What's the what's the term?
Starting point is 00:05:10 Indisposed. That's it. Yes. Well, but that's what makes it more fun whenever you complain about not getting an invite that you couldn't go to anyways. Everybody knows we're having a great time and I'm an asshole. Yeah. So it's your bright spot. My bright spot, Dan, is why I was indisposed.
Starting point is 00:05:25 My partner and I celebrated her birthday at the casino. As we talked about earlier, it was very fun. Sure. Lights, casino parts, terrible. Don't like them. There's a lot of slot machines and I don't understand them whatsoever. There's so many of them and people just sitting there smoking. Oh, bananas.
Starting point is 00:05:48 Yeah, bananas. I'm walking over there and my favorite part, though, was there was there was a no smoking area, which is coming from Chicago. I was like, oh, how quaint. Yeah. There's a no smoking area that's very small and you go over there and you see those are the saddest worst slot machines they have. They're all from 1965. They look like the cash registers from 1940s, you know, like that kind of thing. And it was so clear that they're just like, we can still do this here.
Starting point is 00:06:18 There's nowhere else we can do this. This is a man with a bone to pick. Do you know what I mean? We can sit and smoke and drink really bad free cocktails. Yeah, yeah. Everywhere else we go. Everywhere else we go. People who don't smoke are like, you can't smoke here.
Starting point is 00:06:34 Here, though, you go in the corner. Yeah. Yeah, it's great. It's such a bummer, like the whole the whole vibe of a casino is a bummer. I was after you mentioned this on our last episode, my buddy Berger, who I used to go to the Isle of Capri casino with. Sure. Messaged me and it reminded me of some things and we were talking about it. It's like, yeah, the casino is really depressing, but what's worse is the dog track.
Starting point is 00:06:57 Oh, you can't go to a dog. No, no, you can't go to it. One time when Nikki Gifts was in town, I went along with him to the dog track. So it was so sad. I remember you were texted. That's how I remember how bad the dog track is. And I don't remember shit. Yeah, so for your partner's next birthday, go to the dog track.
Starting point is 00:07:18 If you really want to plumb the depths of just human desperation, listen up. My dearest heart, I want to go further down the rabbit hole. Let's see how much our say keys can take. This is going to make us stronger for the apocalypse. Yeah, I think I was texting you incessantly because I couldn't leave. Yeah. It's so far away from town. Couldn't go anywhere.
Starting point is 00:07:43 So Jordan, today we got an episode to go over. We're going to be talking about October 5th, 2021. Oh, I jumped the gun on that one. You hadn't finished the, you know, we need a photo finish on that. We need, we need to see, see who exactly. Well, this one's going to be up for review. I do like if eventually we ever get big enough, there will be people combing through the audio files, looking at it exactly like, oh, no, no, no.
Starting point is 00:08:08 On October 22nd, Dan lost. Like as a brooder film, just going back through frame by frame of our audio. We got to stay low before people can. There's going to be a saber metrics. Yeah, totally. So Jordan's value over replacement in terms of same blackjack fast. Hey, what, what can we say? It's moneyball.
Starting point is 00:08:29 Yeah. So this episode is fun. Okay. Yeah. Alex has the smoking gun of smoking guns. Is that the smoking gun that shot another smoking gun and killed it? I mean, yeah, that would make sense. It's like the gate of gates.
Starting point is 00:08:46 Sure. And it worked out well the last time. So I think you should go right back to it. It's just over hyping nonsense, but it's actually kind of fun. And I enjoyed looking into it. So I look forward to sharing some of this with you. Let's do it. But first, let's say hello to some new walks.
Starting point is 00:09:01 So first, Jordan, a deuce bungalow Yale juggalo. Thank you so much. You are now a policy walk. I'm a policy walk. Thank you very much. Thank you deuce. Next, a thankful and vaccinated disappointment to conspiracy theory and anti-vax parents.
Starting point is 00:09:13 Thank you so much. You are now a policy walk. I'm a policy walk. Thank you very much. Tom and his cats, a.k.a. Pearl Eagles. Thank you so much. You are now a policy walk.
Starting point is 00:09:22 I'm a policy walk. Thank you. Thanks, Tom. Next, conspicuous newsroom Dixie Cup. Thank you so much. You are now a policy walk. I'm a policy walk. We're really knocking it out of the park.
Starting point is 00:09:32 A lot of aliases today. A lot of really good ones today. Next, wicked fellow and smudge the cat. Leave a small donation of kibble at the altar of Celine. Thank you so much. You are now a policy walk. I'm a policy walk. Thank you.
Starting point is 00:09:43 Thank you. Next, Dungeon Master Mike. Thank you so much. You are now a policy walk. I'm a policy walk. Dungeon Master Mike. Thank you. Next, and finally, Spencer Williams loves non-structural cheese.
Starting point is 00:09:53 Thank you so much. You're now a policy walk. I'm a policy walk. Thank you very much. Thank you all. Now, Jordan. Yes. To make up for sometimes we don't have out of context drops.
Starting point is 00:10:04 To make up for it, I have two for you today. OK. And you can decide which one of these you enjoy more. Here's the first one. All right. I'm designed to be in danger. I'm designed to challenge the enemy. I'm designed to piss them off.
Starting point is 00:10:16 I'm designed to work 18 hours a day. I'm designed to have children and to cook big delicious meals and to love amazing sunsets and to hunt animals and to make love. I'm alive. So that's the first one. I feel like that's plagiarism. That's the that's the like, we want to be free to do what we want to do speech. That's the same thing.
Starting point is 00:10:42 It was a little bit longer than most of our out of context drops, but I felt like it didn't belong in any clip in the episode. I want to make love. I'm alive. I'm alive. I'm designed to fuck. So here's the second one. OK.
Starting point is 00:10:57 So Jack Spratt can eat no fat. His wife can eat no lean because the tween them. They lick the platter clean. But you're dead. Yep. See, he can't take accountability. I fucked that one up. Oh well.
Starting point is 00:11:19 Hey, hey, you got to move on. You know what? You got to move on. Sometimes you fuck up. You just keep plowing through. Yeah, Jack Spratt. Oh, shit. I forgot the rest of it.
Starting point is 00:11:28 I don't know. I don't know if you want to make a choice or if people listeners can tell us which is the better out of context drop. That's tough. I mean, the first one is grosser. Yeah. That's definitely true. Yeah, they're both appealing in different ways.
Starting point is 00:11:41 They're in a certain deathmatch of their own right now. Indeed. There's a lot of blood. And it's disappointing. Yeah, that's true. So here's the first clip, Jordan. We start on October 5th. Wow.
Starting point is 00:11:50 Thank you so much for joining us on this live Tuesday, October 5th, worldwide transmission. And everything's out in the open now. Project Veritas got Pfizer executives on video admitting that they know that the vaccine is destroying people's immune system, that it's a higher rate of people that are sick, that are taking the vaccine and that it's causing a DE antibody dependent enhancement. It's a 11 minute report.
Starting point is 00:12:21 It's on info wars.com. It's on Project Veritas. And normally that would be a top story. But it's not. Is it because finally people have kind of gotten the idea that these guys are full of shit all the time? No, because Alex has a bigger story. But real quick on this Project Veritas thing, if you hear that name
Starting point is 00:12:38 and you don't immediately like, ah, boo, you're either an idiot or a conman. Yeah, it's too late. It's nonsense. Yeah. So the video that they put out is largely about the idea that natural immunity is better than the immunity one would get from vaccination. This, of course, is a false choice that's being presented where one option is getting vaccinated and the other is surviving COVID.
Starting point is 00:12:58 This conveniently ignores a whole lot of variables like the possibility of dying or having severe complications from getting COVID. Sure. These things aren't factored in because the video is arguing a stupid fake point. There's no evidence in this video that Pfizer knows the vaccines are causing a DE nor that they're wiping out immune systems. There's one secretly recorded interview with a guy who's credited as a quote senior associate scientist who says that the rise
Starting point is 00:13:23 in cases we're seeing with the Delta variant is possibly attributable to a decreased efficacy of the vaccine over time or the immunity waning. Right. This is being misrepresented by Alex to be this guy saying that over time the vaccine destroys your immune system when in reality, it's just him explaining that the protection you may have went from 95% to 70% effective. Yeah. This is a person having a loose conversation, not someone who's
Starting point is 00:13:45 citing hard information. So I don't know how much I would bank on even the specifics of this. That sounds like they finally got them nailed to the wall. A lot of the rest of the video is talking about Pfizer profiting from the vaccine. And if that's the conversation that very tough, yeah, let's start some shit. I welcome that conversation. Hell yeah.
Starting point is 00:14:02 Let's go ahead and nationalize production and distribution of the necessary medical breakthroughs that happened. So the, you know, the messy suspicion about profit motives. It just goes away. I mean, considering the fact that these are financed with federal funds, i.e. our money, how is it that then they get to make money off of the things that we paid for them to figure out? I welcome Veritas championing that position, but I suspect that they won't
Starting point is 00:14:24 because they're not actually concerned with Pfizer profiting off vaccines. They just want to use that fact that they do make a profit as a prop to attack actual vaccines. Yeah, yeah, yeah. All in all, this video is lousy with fake arguments that Project Veritas is having with itself and it's essentially meaningless. Yeah, I regret that I watched it. It's such a waste of time.
Starting point is 00:14:45 I can't believe you did, but I'm proud of you. Thank you. I yeah, but we gotta not have that. No, I know that I say every time that a Project Veritas thing happens, it's like, well, this is the last time I'm to look into any of this. Right. And then I just like, well, I'm curious. You have to.
Starting point is 00:15:00 You do. It's for you. Nobody else believes them anymore, except for people who already believe the shit that they're just justifying for them. Yeah. You're the only person who goes in there curious, wanting to find the truth. And every now and again, I think they really do impress by lying in a new way. That's true.
Starting point is 00:15:17 A creative new way. So anyway, that's not the top story. Okay. Because here is the motherfucking top story. All right. But that's our second biggest story. Ladies and gentlemen, you, you saw, you heard the broadcast title today of the Alex Jones show, October 5th, Tuesday, emergency Tuesday broadcast.
Starting point is 00:15:40 Fauci talks about staging healthcare with new virus in 2019 video. Now, our amazing crew ended up staying up here until past eight o'clock last night to bring you an emergency Monday transmission. And believe me, I didn't just come up here for fun. If this is an emergency, so is today's broadcast because this confirms they premeditatedly done this to us and Fauci on the video with the head of health and human services saying we need a new virus out of China. An avian bird flu, a SARS COVID bird flu to scare everyone into accepting the new
Starting point is 00:16:24 mRNA technology. This is just a pathetic attempt on Alex's part to grasp its straws to build up and reinforce his COVID conspiracy. Even before I get into any of the details on this, just take a moment to grasp how stupid Alex is and what nonsense he expects this audience to accept. Here he is saying that Fauci and other immune, uh, immunology experts got together and discussed how they needed a new SARS COVID bird flu in order to get people to accept vaccines.
Starting point is 00:16:50 Does Alex know that coronaviruses and influenza viruses are completely different because I think he doesn't. He absolutely does not know that. What he's saying is just gobbledygook. Yes, that's my nonsense. It's magic. Yeah. So here's what's going on.
Starting point is 00:17:03 In October, 2019, Fauci was part of a panel hosted by the Milken Institute, which was broadcast on C-SPAN. This panel was a discussion about the breakthroughs in science and technology that had made it conceivably possible to create a vaccine that actually worked universally against all strains of influenza. Right. Most of the discussion is about the frustrating reality that there's a lack of funding and thus a lack of motivation on the part of the industry to pursue
Starting point is 00:17:27 this sort of thing, which makes sense and sucks. Yeah. There is literally no discussion of staging a pandemic. This is completely made up. Alex doesn't actually get to playing this clip. Any of it? Well, I mean, it would say different. No, no, no.
Starting point is 00:17:40 He gets to playing clips, but 50 minutes into the episode, I was like, where is the fucking clip? I was furious. That's bananas. So, but here I'm going to play for you the clip of the panel that he calls the smoking gun. Okay. This is heavily edited and a lot of the things that sound suspicious make perfect
Starting point is 00:17:57 sense in the context of the talk. The only way for these dudes to have created this clip that we're about to listen to is to have actively watched the panel and edited out context. Yes. There's no other explanation for this. Yeah. Well, that's why they had to stay up until eight. Right.
Starting point is 00:18:12 Should have stayed till 10. He did. He did realize that he was like, I had to stay up late with my team, editing this down into something we can lie about. Right. Yeah. And we're going to actually take quite a while talking about this because I think that there's a valuable illustration that we can make by going
Starting point is 00:18:30 to the source material and comparing it to the way that Alex presents it. Sounds great. But here is the combined clips of the panel. Why don't we blow the system up? I mean, obviously we can't just turn off the spigot on the system we have and then say, hey, everyone in the world should get this new vaccine. We haven't given to anyone yet, but there must be some way that we grow vaccines, mostly in eggs, the way we did in 1947.
Starting point is 00:18:58 In order to make the transition from getting out of the tried and true egg growing, which we know gives us results that can be, you know, beneficial. I mean, we've done well with that to something that has to be much better. You have to prove that this works. And then you've got to go through all of the clinical trials, phase ones, phase twos, phase three, and then show that this particular product is going to be good over a period of years. That alone, if it works perfectly, is going to take a decade.
Starting point is 00:19:35 There might be a need or even an urgent call for an entity of excitement out there that's completely disruptive, that's not beholden to bureaucratic strings and processes. So we really do have a problem of how the world perceives influenza, and it's going to be very difficult to change that unless you do it from within and say, I don't care what your perception is, we're going to address the problem. In a disruptive way and in an iterative way, because you do need both. But it is not too crazy to think that an outbreak of a novel avian virus could
Starting point is 00:20:14 occur in China somewhere. We could get the RNA sequence from that, beam it to a number of regional centers, if not local, if not even in your home at some point, and print those vaccines on the patch and self-administer. So that's the entirety of the clips that he has cut together from this panel. Right. Wow. How long was the panel?
Starting point is 00:20:37 45 minutes or maybe about 50 minutes. Oh, well, they should have edited it down to just that. Uh-huh. Yeah. Seems like they didn't have anything else important to say. No, certainly not. So we're going to go through this each clip by each clip that Alex put into this compilation and discuss the context, where they come from and what
Starting point is 00:20:53 they're talking about. Because I did watch this panel and I thought it was actually really interesting. So here's the first clip that Alex plays. Why don't we blow the system up? I mean, obviously we can't just turn off the spigot on the system we have and then say, hey, everyone in the world should get this new vaccine we haven't given to anyone yet. But there must be some way that we grow vaccines, mostly in eggs, the way we
Starting point is 00:21:17 did in 1947. So this is the moderator of the discussion, Michael Spector of the New Yorker. His question was very clearly about technological innovations in the sphere of vaccines. It was a prompt that had to do with how this is not a space that is kept pace with other fields. Here is that clip in its full sentence.
Starting point is 00:21:40 So as part of my life, I teach at Stanford and people use this word in silicon valley, which I mostly hate, but I'm going to use it now. Disruption. Why don't we blow the system up? I mean, obviously we can't just turn off the spigot on the system we have and then say, hey, everyone in the world should get this new vaccine we haven't given to anyone yet. But there must be some way that we grow vaccines, mostly in eggs, the way we
Starting point is 00:22:07 did in 1947. I mean, we live in a world where I can download whatever song I want onto my phone at command and we grow vaccines the way we did 70 years ago. What is going on with that? So his conversation is about disruption in the field of technology. Yeah, obviously. It makes a whole lot of sense, but it sounds different based on the isolated portion of it that Alex played.
Starting point is 00:22:32 Sure, you edit it together and it sounds like what they're really looking for is a catalyst to make everybody exactly. So if there's not going to be one that is just going to happen naturally, we'll make one in order to blow up the system. Got it. So here's the second clip that Alex plays. That first one of Michael Specter was from eight minutes in. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:22:52 Now the next clip is Fauci from 22 minutes in. Okay. In order to make the transition from getting out of the tried and true egg growing, which we know gives us results that can be, you know, beneficial. I mean, we've done well with that to something that has to be much better. You have to prove that this works. And then you've got to go through all of the clinical trials, phase ones, phase twos, phase three, and then show that this particular product is going
Starting point is 00:23:26 to be good over a period of years. That alone, if it works perfectly, is going to take a decade. This is actually kind of fair. Like I don't think it's really all that misrepresentative. Fauci was talking about how there were breakthroughs that scientists were making in terms of a universal flu vaccine, but it would be something that would still take a long time. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:23:46 He's not talking about the timetables that it would take to make an mRNA coronavirus vaccine. No. He's talking about a universal flu vaccine. Right. It's a different conversation, but like, sure, he's saying that something would take a long time. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:24:01 That's how it works. Right. And it's not like, I don't know. This is as close to like, okay, at least it's not like maliciously out of context, but it is a completely like separate conversation. Right. Right. I mean, the obvious thing about that though is like, what they're also
Starting point is 00:24:18 describing is not just a decade of like research and development and all of that. I wouldn't be too surprised if they had something that they're building around right now that is like 30% effective against most flu, you know? And it's like, okay, they can refine that. And then eventually it's going to have to get down to, let's test it. If we're going to give it to everybody, we're going to have to test it on everybody.
Starting point is 00:24:41 And this, yeah. And that's a really good point. Because Fauci is also discussing how this is on the shoulders of this research that's already in the process. Totally. Yeah. And so, I mean, there's more to it, but it's close. It's not nearly as bad as the rest of this.
Starting point is 00:24:57 Here is the third clip, which Alex has cut in. This is from 32 minutes. So 10 minutes after that last clip. There might be a need or even an urgent call for an entity of excitement out there that's completely disruptive, that's not beholden to bureaucratic strings and processes. So that clip out of context makes no sense. No.
Starting point is 00:25:21 You don't know what is he talking about? I mean, I guess what he's trying to say is that the government is acting too slow. Or I guess what Alex is trying to make you think he's saying is that because the government can't act the way that we want it to right now, then there needs to be an outside entity that is not beholden to all of those laws of the evil government that keeps them from doing stuff. We need fucking Satanism.
Starting point is 00:25:45 Oh, okay. Well, here's the full context. Okay. I think also it's just not sexy anymore. I mean, it probably hasn't been for quite some time. I mean, when I was in grad school, everyone was working HIV vaccines. I was in the laboratory here at Robinson and working on DNA vaccines for HIV. And I came to the lab and everyone's working HIV.
Starting point is 00:26:07 So you can do what everyone else is doing. I got a little bit of leftover flu money on a flu grant over there and no one's interested in influenza. I took on that challenge, but to make it sexy, I think we have to, I like the concept disrupting this field. If we are just continually thinking we're going to work on another iteration or and no offense, I mean, I think we need to continue what we're doing, but another iteration or another assay or another step.
Starting point is 00:26:34 I don't know if that's enough to excite those really creative thinkers. So in addition to doing what we're doing, we're so good at, I think in parallel, there might be a need or even an urgent call for an entity of excitement out there that's completely disruptive. That's not beholden to bureaucratic strings and processes. Well, the HIV field was galvanized when we put a lot of money into it. So let's talk about this with reality. And I think that the easiest way to get a grad student really excited about
Starting point is 00:27:10 something that isn't sexy is to put a gown on it by having a lot of money. And as you well know, I mean, there has been movements among certain members of Congress. Ed Markey put a bill in for increasing the influenza for universal flu vaccine by a billion dollars over five years, which is 200 million dollars over each year for five years. When you put that kind of investment, you will get people excited not to do the same thing they're only doing.
Starting point is 00:27:39 You'll get new people to come in with new ideas that are disruptive and looking at it from different angles. So when you have an infusion of resources, that's how the field changes because that's exactly what happened with HIV. So predominantly what they're talking about and it becomes pretty clear when you listen to the full answer is and they talk about it a bit more throughout too is there needs to be some kind of dedicated flu entity that has funding for this for flu research because when you have the money, you attract creative
Starting point is 00:28:15 thinkers who can attack the problem from other angles, things you wouldn't think of. They innovate. It's disruptive to the status quo of how treatment has been modeled up till this point. Right. It's very clear. It makes total sense.
Starting point is 00:28:30 It's obvious. I mean, he's that that we need a change is it when he's talking about his grad school and all of those people doing one thing and it's like, oh, that makes perfect sense. Obviously, it is not this guy trying to steal the powers of the government in order to create a super virus that will wipe out humanity. No. So it's not that.
Starting point is 00:28:52 It's not that. Okay. So here's the fourth clip. This is Fauci and this is from 42 minutes into the. So we're jumping around 10 minutes jumping around quite a bit, quite a bit, quite a bit. So we really do have a problem of how the world perceives influenza and it's going to be very difficult to change that unless you do it from within and
Starting point is 00:29:13 say, I don't care what your perception is, we're going to address the problem in a disruptive way and in an iterative way because you do need both. So that is out of context. Yeah. Obviously. Yeah. And it sounds like, you know, people don't take the flu seriously enough. So we're going to make them take it.
Starting point is 00:29:31 Exactly. We're going to teach them a real lesson. And that's not what he was saying at all. It's the it's the diversity of what influenza means to the community for some people, they get the flu, the real flu, not like I have a stomach flu, but the real flu, they get better. So there's sort of this perception. If it's so serious, how come people get flu each year and it isn't a catastrophe
Starting point is 00:29:54 when you're dealing with a disease like HIV, if you get HIV, it's serious. Whether you're young, whether you're middle age, whether you're old, if you get cancer, that's bad. Whether you're young, whether it's intermediate, whereas with influenza, for some people, they go throughout life. It doesn't impact them at all. There isn't anybody that's afraid of influenza. You go in a focus group and you say, are you afraid of getting HIV if you're at
Starting point is 00:30:18 risk? Oh, absolutely. Are you afraid of getting cancer? Absolutely. Are you afraid of the flu? Don't bother me. That's the reality of how people perceive flu. As Rick said, we're responsible for a variety of diseases making countermeasures,
Starting point is 00:30:34 malaria, tuberculosis, Zika, Ebola on the middle of Ebola right now. So you go to the DRC where I went to a week and a half ago to visit our sites and you ask somebody, are you worried about influenza? They'll laugh at you. What are you talking about influenza? They don't vaccinate their people for influenza because they have enough problems with malaria and tuberculosis and now Ebola. So it is a perception, which is a misperception, that it is not a serious
Starting point is 00:31:04 disease. But as Casey said, hundreds of thousands of people die of it each year. And when you get a pandemic, millions and millions of people. So we really do have a problem of how the world perceives influenza. And it's going to be very difficult to change that unless you do it from within and say, I don't care what your perception is, we're going to address the problem in a disruptive way and in an iterative way because you do need both. So essentially, if you take the entire context of the clip into consideration,
Starting point is 00:31:38 what he's saying is that there's not going to be public pressure ever really to deal with this flu, the flu, the influenza vaccine that would possibly be something that could be created isn't going to come from people who are like, I'm terrified of getting the flu. No one's calling their representative being like, if you guys don't fund flu research right now. Right. Yeah. And so essentially, what he is advocating is we need to do this from within.
Starting point is 00:32:04 The people who are the researchers need to treat the problem as it is, not as people perceive it to be. Right. Right. That makes total sense too. Yeah, that's very obvious. Yep. That's not even, that's not even hard. You could have just guessed that.
Starting point is 00:32:18 You could have been like, hey, do people take the flu seriously? No. Is that bad? Probably. The end. Yeah. Got it. So what Alex is doing is taking Fauci's words and doing a magic trick with them.
Starting point is 00:32:31 Yeah, obviously. Basically. Yeah. So here's the fifth clip, which is the one that I strongly suspect is what made Alex cover this clip to begin with. Okay. But it is not too crazy to think that an outbreak of a novel avian virus could occur in China somewhere.
Starting point is 00:32:48 We could get the RNA sequence from that, beam it to a number of regional centers, if not local, if not even in your home at some point and print those vaccines on the patch and self-administer. That's a fascinating idea about technology. That is, that would be so cool. But he mentioned China and vaccines. And vaccines. And there you go.
Starting point is 00:33:11 Yeah. The end. Anyway, here's the full clip. Let's talk about the science a little bit more. Craig Venter, who is a controversial person, but interesting to me, has written that he thinks we ought to have a vaccine such that if you take off in a plane from Hong Kong and are infected by the time your plane lands in New York, there ought to be a vaccine assembled and deliverable to you.
Starting point is 00:33:37 How crazy is that? How far are we from that? Are we ever going to get there? I'm not going to say far away, but I don't think that's too crazy. I think that if we move towards the era of synthetic based vaccines, I think we remove the dependencies of thinking the vaccine has to be something that we have to grow into something else in an egg cell or an insect cell, any type of dependency on growth.
Starting point is 00:34:04 If we can move into more synthetic, the nucleic acid based, messenger RNA based, those sequences can be rapidly shared around the world. Enzymes that can synthesize the small fragments of messenger RNA necessary to go into a vaccine can be made in a shoebox size system right now, which is translatable into a 3D printer-like or inkjet printer-like thing. Now putting those in a system to print those on a patch that a self-administered vaccine could happen, the technologies are out there. We haven't demonstrated their true effectiveness and ability for a vaccine,
Starting point is 00:34:43 but it is not too crazy to think that an outbreak of a novel avian virus could occur in China somewhere. We could get the RNA sequence from that, beam it to a number of regional centers, if not local, if not even in your home at some point, and print those vaccines on a patch and self-administer. We're a ways out, but the technology is there to be adapted and assembled to put in that futuristic view of a rapid response to an emerging novel threat. That doesn't, I mean, that doesn't prove shit for Alex.
Starting point is 00:35:19 No. It's just the weakest bombshell I've seen him try to pass off. Yeah. Like, you hear that, and it's like, oh, they're discussing hypothetical... 3D printing. ...breakthroughs of technology. Yeah. And I need to make this very fully clear.
Starting point is 00:35:32 Yeah. It's very specifically in the context of universal flu vaccine. Yeah. Yeah. This is the entirety of it has nothing to do with coronavirus, the way that Alex has been... They're saying they planned it. No. It's like, nothing.
Starting point is 00:35:46 No, this is a different virus. And nothing matches like the idea that they were planning something. Yeah. Oh, he said China. Yeah. They're going to stage an outbreak in order to get us to take this new technology. No, they're discussing new technology. That's what they're doing.
Starting point is 00:36:01 I swear to you, I cannot believe that you can't sell people on this. Okay. Take $10 billion away from the military. They won't even fucking notice. They don't have an accounting process. Apparently not. Put it towards making universal flu vaccine printers that you can have in your house. That's incredible.
Starting point is 00:36:30 Yeah, Alex would have a problem with that. Everybody, everybody. But more importantly, the only people who have a problem with it now are big corporations who can't sell that. Probably. So one of the things that I think is really fascinating is that I watched this whole presentation, this whole panel, and there's stuff that was very intentionally ignored. There's one comment that's incredibly bizarre that they left out considering that they cut out clips from before and after this in the panel discussion. I wonder why they didn't include this.
Starting point is 00:37:03 I mean, we're in this room. We're probably vaccinologists. We're probably immunologists. We're probably working on some vaccine and made some vaccines at some point in our life. But we're not the chemical engineers or the other engineers or the anthropologists or others who bring critical insight and how you disrupt and deconstruct an age-old problem. And we've had these vaccines for 70 years. So this is an age-old construct that requires those creative chefs that come out of the kitchen and deconstruct the carrot cake
Starting point is 00:37:32 and make it look like something different, but the best carrot cake you've ever eaten your entire life. We need that for an influenza vaccine. And we also need to not forget that for influenza, vaccines aren't the only part of the solution. I mean, it's so easy to get caught up. If you want to get sexy and influenza, you do stay in the vaccine space. But if you go into the diagnostic space or the therapeutic space or non-pharmaceutical intervention, those are the early steps that will make a huge impact on bending that epidemic curve for seasonal and a pandemic outbreak. As we have to have that single focus entity and focus on stopping influenza, not only on making us a vaccine.
Starting point is 00:38:14 Huh, that's weird. So you're saying that they don't necessarily want to only make a vaccine. They want to use multiple treatment options. Yeah, it's almost like they're public health professionals and experts who are discussing ways of treating a problem and dealing with a problem as opposed to what Alex is presenting it as, which is they want to just put jabs in everybody. It is ironic that he is describing the antithesis to Alex. You know that like the creative chef who can come in and turn an amazing carrot cake into something that you don't think is a carrot cake and you can eat deliciously without being like, carrot cake is shit, right?
Starting point is 00:38:52 Alex is the person who takes an amazing carrot cake that won't get you fucking killed by a virus and then goes that carrot cake, it's going to kill you. True. It's the same job. Yeah. He's asking for the anti-Alex. So I watched this and I saw the clips that Alex used. I just think this is one of the just weakest attempts I've seen to make a bombshell out of something.
Starting point is 00:39:15 Oh, this does not get a D grade. No, I don't think that the staff needed to stay till eight to get this kind of work done because this sucks. Yeah. I think that I also enjoyed watching the actual presentation. Yeah. So I appreciate Alex bringing that to my attention. That's nice. But this is the smoking gun.
Starting point is 00:39:36 This is the smoking gun of smoking guns. You bet. What you just played for me is the smoking gun of all smoking guns. The smoking gun of smoking guns and smoking guns. And when you add it to Peter Dazik and the Wuhan lab and Fauci and in the thousands of emails now saying gain a function, merge four viruses, then add the HIV spike protein, which is the COVID-19 virus. It is just unbelievable the open and shut that they did this. Wow.
Starting point is 00:40:04 I mean, if it's the smoking gun of smoking guns of smoking guns, then I have to edit it so hard. There's that. And then there's also a question of why do you need all of these other narratives that you have to combine all of it together for it to be even marginally persuasive? If this is the smoking gun of smoking gun of smoking guns. Yeah. Stupid. It does seem though that if that is the smoking gun of smoking guns, then we can at least be sure he's only going to talk about that narrative from here on out, because that's the one.
Starting point is 00:40:34 I mean, it's got to be the most important thing. It's got to be the only important thing. Yeah, you probably take most of the, you know, the rest of this episode. At least the rest of the segment. Well, I mean, he does talk about it for a little while. Okay. And actually, yeah, I completely agree with you. If this is the smoking gun, he's been talking about it all day.
Starting point is 00:40:50 Stop. It's the only important thing. And he should play. He has a three hour show. He could play the entire thing and still have two hours left. The point of a smoking gun is that you no longer need evidence past the gun being smoking. It's because it's smoking. It's smoking.
Starting point is 00:41:08 They just shot something. You've just shot someone. There's no, there's nobody who's like, okay, but now let's go find out where his shoes came from. No, we got him. We've got the smoking gun open and shut case. The end. Let's just go get it done. Shut up.
Starting point is 00:41:23 Keep digging. No, we've got it. Look, we make money on clues, not on solving cases here. Oh man, that does sound right for the cops though. So Alex, Alex believes that not only did Fauci do this, there was a specific target. Okay. And was it Alex? No, it's the countries that Alex thinks are white.
Starting point is 00:41:43 And they hit their primary targets. Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Europe, the UK, the U.S. Because we have a background of free market and right to self-defense and Christianity, an individualism that is against the globalist system. So we've been targeted with propaganda and abortion and Satanism and multiculturalism. I'm sorry, how? And now they're hitting us with the actual bio weapon. No one else is taking it.
Starting point is 00:42:09 That's just not true. Did he just make a slippery slope argument that the first if look, if you force people to recognize that race is a fucking social construct and has nothing to do and we're all just the same people all the time. What's next, bio weapons? Probably. Yep. So the message that Alex is trying to send is that the mRNA vaccines are a weapon and they're being deployed against the countries that he sees as Christian and white.
Starting point is 00:42:33 That's the subtext here. It's very clear. This is all just his own white persecution complex talking though, since countries all over the world have authorized the use of both the Pfizer and Moderna shots. When you get right down to it, it's really just about money. Very few countries have the ability to actually manufacture mRNA vaccines and the companies that do aren't sharing that shit because it would cut into their profits. The lower income countries can afford to buy large amounts of these vaccines for their population.
Starting point is 00:42:59 So they may go with less effective, but more affordable alternatives or maybe just not able to vaccinate a vast majority of the public. Anyway, this is just a load of bullshit. And the only real message Alex is trying to spread here is that white people are under attack because that's the theme of this show. Yeah, it did. It did go to white people a lot faster than I was expecting. I didn't. I didn't. I didn't go faster than I expected.
Starting point is 00:43:20 No, I mean, I expected to go. Right. No, no, no. I that that I understand. I meant more in the context of the sentence he was saying. I was like, we're talking about bio weapons. It's all about bio weapons. They're trying to kill all the people.
Starting point is 00:43:32 Multiculturalism. Wait, what? It's now it's race. I did that was fast. I was fast. So look, Fauci is on this fucking tape. Yeah. From 2019.
Starting point is 00:43:42 Right. He's bragging smoking gun bragging bragging about how they're going to stage this pandemic in order to bring in jabs. I didn't hear that. But that's, you know, why he did that? Because that's what villains and movies do. But wait, why do villains and movies do it? Because they're based off of people like Fauci. You bet.
Starting point is 00:44:00 No. I'm about to cover the depopulation and the admissions of the facts, the public statements of Fauci, the arrogance of these criminals hiding in plain view. Because remember, art imitates life. So why in so many movies with villains or sci-fi films or dystopic films does the villain brag about what they do? Because that happens in history. They love to monologue about what they're planning very thinly veiled in front of you before they do it. Just like the Riddler or the Joker will break in on TV or radio and tell you he's sending you a treat that'll come knocking in the night in the form of so that it makes it more fun like the Zodiac killer. So typically villains bragging in movies is done as an easy way to fill in gaps in the plot with big exposition.
Starting point is 00:45:02 Yeah, it's a huge exposition. That's what it is. That's typically the narrative function of it. Yeah, it's the movie telling you what the movie did. Yeah, it's also really convenient because it gives the writer a way to create a situation where the hero is dead to rights and the villain is all but one. But because of hubris, the hero is able to wiggle out of the situation. It's classic. Hubris is cute.
Starting point is 00:45:21 Crush. The Riddler sent out riddles because that was his whole character. He's just a dude who's obsessed with puzzles and decided the Batman was the best person to test his abilities against. Yes. The Riddler is not a good choice for Alex to use as an example. In Batman Forever, the Riddler actually worked for Bruce Wayne until Bruce Wayne neglected him or he had an accident or something and riddles everywhere. Look, there's a lot of different variations of characters, but he's he gives out riddles because he's the Riddler. He's the Riddler.
Starting point is 00:45:48 That's what he does as for the Joker. He's criminally insane. There was that. There was that anyway. This is just a ton of shit, but Alex thinks he's living in a spy movie. So it should come as no surprise that he imagines his pretend villains are taunting him like a Bond villain. Yeah. It's just really sad to see the lengths he has to go to create the impression that they're actually doing that, though.
Starting point is 00:46:08 This bombshell today is a particularly weak example of that. He just sees people taunting him at all all all corners. It's it's. Yeah, it does feel like, you know, it's movies are realer than the reality you see, you know, like to him. Because yeah, exactly. In real life, you don't monologue because that would waste time. It's not like look. I mean, they fucking they assassinated Khashoggi, you know, like they didn't fucking monologue.
Starting point is 00:46:36 You know, it'd be interesting is if you are a villain and you're about to commit your crime monologue and then you're like, that didn't feel as good as I thought. I got to do that one again. That just, you know what? I thought that would really be exciting. Yeah. To monologue my crime out. Right. Because normally I don't do it.
Starting point is 00:46:52 That only happens in movies. Yeah. Yeah. But I thought I'd like really step into those shoes. Totally. And you know what? I just left me cold. I don't feel I don't feel real bummer.
Starting point is 00:47:01 It's a real bummer. Yeah, it's like meeting your heroes. You know, you never want to meet your hairs and you ever want to perform a monologue in a non monologue situation or maybe that's a sign that you need to like check in on if you're depressed. Yeah. Oh, that's if you're a villain and you monologue and it doesn't feel good. Maybe you're not enjoying the things that you would. Oh my God. Can you imagine that on one of those Abilify commercials or whatever?
Starting point is 00:47:22 Are you a villain? Are you monologues not doing it for you these days? Yeah. I do think it's really silly that Alex believes this. That is bananas. Yep. There's other silly things that Alex believes that are actually much more fucked up and dangerous though. And then in 815, 1815 at the Battle of Waterloo, Lord Wellington defeated and his British Prussian pincer attack, Napoleon Bonaparte, and they sent carrier pigeons to the coast on fast Corvette ships across to announce that morning that Lord Wellington had lost the war and the British stock market plunged by 99%.
Starting point is 00:48:06 Rothschild, of course, began selling right up front. Everybody panicked and began selling. Then they came in with the news. Oh my God. Wellington has lost. British Army destroyed. British Empire has collapsed. Napoleon rules the earth.
Starting point is 00:48:19 And as soon as everybody started selling, he bought it all up. And now 200 plus years later, that system rules the entire planet. Except for Russia and a few other countries. Wow. So we talked about this in depth in the end game coverage. But just as a brief refresher, that story that Alex is telling about Nathan Rothschild is not true. It has its roots in a pamphlet that was distributed by a giant anti-Semite whose pen name was Satan, but it was actually named George Derenveil. Right.
Starting point is 00:48:56 The pamphlet released in French was titled The Edifying and Curious History of Rothschild the First King of the Jews. From that point forward, the story became a piece of anti-Semitic lore passed down through generations of people who swear they don't actually hate Jewish people. Sure. The story would be dramatized in the 1940 Nazi propaganda film The Rothschild's Shares in Waterloo. To put it bluntly, Alex either thinks this fake story is true or he knows it's a lie that's been historically used to incite public hatred of Jewish people. And he's passing it along to his audience as the truth anyway. I would say whichever is true, Alex is a horrible source of information and I'd really like to know what Rogan thinks about this. Yeah, that's bananas.
Starting point is 00:49:34 Yeah. Wow, if you're right in a tract with comma king of the Jews and it's not about Solomon, you have already let me know that you're an anti-Semite. Yeah, it's troubling that Alex in the year 2021 is still peddling this story because it's been thoroughly debunked. And there's every reason for him to know that this is an anti-Semitic falsehood that has lingered over the years. Yeah. And it's something that he perpetuates. It's a large part of his worldview. And congratulations to people like Joe Rogan, helping spread that message far and wide. Spread the anti-Semitism wherever you can, Joe Rogan.
Starting point is 00:50:12 So Jordan, let me ask you a question. What's up? Does Alex need money? Well, I mean, in a certain sense, he needs less money because all of it's going to go away. So he should start spending all of it now. Well, let me ask you this. What? Has he sold his house?
Starting point is 00:50:29 No, he has not. I actually can't tell you whether or not he sold his house. Okay. Although some other stuff might be going up on the block. Okay. And I really want to thank the listeners and viewers for your support because we're under such incredible attack. A lot of plans and projects in motion working with other folks, partnering with other folks to be able to circumnavigate all the platforming and during key junctures,
Starting point is 00:50:54 be able to pop up and engage the globalists with the truth into this future time we're going, which we're now entered the beginning of. So I need major wartime capital to do this. And that's why you're going to see me on air soon just because they're little side issues, but they're important. Selling the armored truck that's been great. Had a lot of great coverage with it. Got a lot of attention with it for our causes, but it's going to be sold.
Starting point is 00:51:24 I'm going to sell most of my guns that I don't need. I've got too many of their extra pity cow stuff like that. Everything is going to go in to the full energy of the fight because that's a ritual for me that I need to sell my house, which is being sold right now, finally, and everything into this. Of course, I'd want to put all in on the total future of humanity and my children and your children in front of God. I mean, I mean, I could spill some blood on there. I do, but that's not that kind of ritual. But it kind of feels like it should be done because there will be blood spilled.
Starting point is 00:51:53 And so at the end of the day, which we're not looking for, but the enemy is going to bring us into that. Yikes. Yikes. That's not good. No. That's a man who's about to lose all of his money. Maybe a guy who is having buyer's remorse on that tank. I can't believe it took him this long.
Starting point is 00:52:11 But it's, you know, it's interesting to hear him say, like, when he's talking about the tank, we got a lot of attention on it. We got a lot of attention. It was obviously the goal. Yeah. That was the point. Yeah. Well, well, well done. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:52:26 This is, this is silly. That's bad. Yeah. He's basically going to have a yard sale. Yeah. Yep. 50 Cal guns, you know, stuff you want. I would people buying.
Starting point is 00:52:37 I would maybe buy another bullhorn if he has like a tyranny crusher. Yeah, I would. If he has that tiny bullhorn that he used, I would buy that. I don't know if we can find that one. Yeah, but I'd put an offer on the tiny bullhorn. I'll put an offer on the tiny bullhorn. That'd be fun. We'll be, we'll go, we'll go to an auction like in Hudson Hawk and you and I will bid against each other for the tiny buy bullhorn.
Starting point is 00:53:01 That seems counterproductive. So he's doing this plug basically where he's talking about, he's going to sell his 50 Cal's and his tank. I think this drifts into what I would describe as sacrilegious territory. Okay. Be part of that ritual in front of God. Be part of the resistance. Don't just get great products you need because they make your life better. Fund this war and make sure as we go into this fight, as I walk into that arena with my shield and my sword, I got my helmet on.
Starting point is 00:53:28 That we're all together on this because you're that gladiator on the field as well. And that we are prepared and trained and well fed and focused and not distracted to make sure we go in there in the Tom Brady zone. Politically, this is an allegory. What cut these enemies down with absolute precision. Total commitment. And so I'm in maximum push zone. I was born for this. So were you.
Starting point is 00:53:54 And we are going to see the whole nine yards now unfold. World government match extermination. You name it. But through that, we'll have victory. The greatest awakening ever and coming back to God. So get it in infowarshow.com before it sells out. It's going to sell out today. Brain force ultra discounted.
Starting point is 00:54:09 Yeah. I mean, you got to buy his products to take part in the holy ritual in front of God. Man, that's intense. This is dumb. Yeah. That reminds me of like in the in World War II when they had celebrities going around trying to get people to buy war bonds and stuff like that was, you know, like patriotism. And like, we got to defeat the Nazis and all that stuff. If they were going around being like, listen, you want to defeat the Nazis, you got to buy brain force.
Starting point is 00:54:33 People would have been turned off. It's a ritual. Yeah. It's a sort of the afterlife involved spiritual ritual to buy my down and out sleep aid. Got to get it now. It's going to sell out. So look, he has the bombshell of bombshell, smoking gun and smoking guns. Sure.
Starting point is 00:54:55 It's disgusting. You would think it would be like, well, we're going to talk about this all day. It's the only thing to talk about. Wow. Do we have personal issues to talk about? Well, yes. Ted Nugent is headed again at ladies and gentlemen. And here's a quick clip of what we're about to talk about with it.
Starting point is 00:55:10 Well, would you speak to the people who believe it is a worthwhile vaccine and it is saving lines? They just did wrong. They've been feeding a federal line from the federal government. Tim, I appreciate the opportunity to speak to the people that went ahead and got the jab. I speak their language. I would speak to them. He always starts with this. They understand that.
Starting point is 00:55:34 Good bit. Wow. Yep. So Ted Nugent. Oh, great. Well, first thing I want to say, Dan, is thank you so much for giving us the opportunity to listen to Ted Nugent. Sure.
Starting point is 00:55:45 He's bringing in a lot of different things. He's really doing it. And thank you for that. No problem. I thank Alex for getting rid of the smoking gun and smoking guns to talk to Ted Nugent. I mean, when the when the nouges around noted suspected Uber creep. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:56:04 Noted suspected confirmed guy who can't seem to stop writing songs about how he wants to fuck minors super proudly Uber creep. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So, you know, I'm going to put that song on an album. The one where I detail my crimes. You know, the narrative in the story for everyone was on the right wing.
Starting point is 00:56:27 Yeah. No one's getting this. No. Covid. Yeah. For a long time. For a long time. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:56:35 Now the sort of fever is broken and everyone can just sort of be like, yeah, everyone I know had it. Yeah. And Nugent's no exception. Yeah. The most important point I can bring out is that when my buddies and my friends and my hunting buddies and my fellow musicians and my wife's domain and I got it, we went to the frontline doctors and we did exactly the opposite of what the government told us
Starting point is 00:56:57 to do. I'm sorry. There's no, there's no treatment. Oh crap. The frontline doctors recommend across the board hydroxychloric and ivermectin steroids and zinc. I've been taking zinc since October of 2019 and I've always taken CDB 12 and I've always eaten good and taken good care of myself.
Starting point is 00:57:15 Clean and sober. I get a lot of exercise. I breathe more wild swamp air than any duck you'll ever meet. And so I was already in good shape, but we did exactly these wild swamps. Breathe. What the government told us to do and we were 100% fine within days along with everybody else that I know that took the frontline doctors recommended treatment. Absolutely.
Starting point is 00:57:37 That the government says is no good. Yeah. Everyone he knows got COVID and they all took ivermectin and got better. I would wonder if those were like PCR confirmed tests or did they even get tested? Cause I bet they didn't. Who knows? Yeah. Who cares about their dumb story?
Starting point is 00:57:54 Yeah. It's bullshit. Yeah. But it's it's now the it's shifting to everybody saying that everybody got it. That's so weird. Yeah. So weird. And it's fine.
Starting point is 00:58:06 Yeah. Everybody just moves on. Yeah. And they say that it even exists for a year and all of those people will believe them. And then they can just suddenly say, well, that year I had COVID in that year. And everybody's like, well, who didn't have COVID? Right. And nobody is just going like, so you were lying to us the whole time.
Starting point is 00:58:26 Yeah. And actively spreading. Yeah. Yeah. You know. Yeah. At your no mask rallies. Unreal stuff.
Starting point is 00:58:34 Oh my God. I hate these people so much. Yeah. They're pretty bad. So one friend of Ted Nugent's who got COVID, unfortunately, apparently didn't believe Ted about the magic of ivermectin. Oh no. And he died.
Starting point is 00:58:49 He's dead. My good friend, one of the greatest Americans that ever drove the asset column of America, Jim Brown from Indiana, just a great man, Alex, and he died two days ago and we're still mourning. We are shattered at the loss of our loved ones and our dear friends. And the reason they're dying is because the United States government is the enemy of America and they worked with the communist Chinese devils to weaponize the virus to hurt mankind. So the government of the United States and the communist Chinese devils killed my friend
Starting point is 00:59:27 Jim. Period. Okay. All right, Ted. Like now that they've admitted everybody had COVID, can't we then just, this can be settled with a simple bet, right? What's that? I bet you take the vaccine and you're fine.
Starting point is 00:59:43 You bet that I take the vaccine and I die. Okay. That's the bet. Hmm. I don't think that they would go for that. No, because then they would have to admit that they knew that it was fine. Yeah, probably. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:59:56 I just, you know, I hear this and I can't think of anything other than incitement out of what Ted Nugent's saying. Yeah. My friend died. So we should destroy the American government. Well, if you have somebody who, you know, loved one who passed away from COVID, then the government killed them too. They murdered your family member or friend.
Starting point is 01:00:15 And so they're the enemy of America and we need to take out the government. Yeah. It's a real bad, real bad thing. Wild. Yep. Absolutely wild that you can live like this. Yeah. But you know why Ted Nugent has these thoughts, why he has these positions?
Starting point is 01:00:28 Uh, because he's a lunatic. Swamp air. Yeah. That could be. That could be. A lot of ducks have problems, uh, determining reality as well. I would say that if you listen to Ted, he would tell you that it's that because he practices critical thinking.
Starting point is 01:00:46 Now, I'm thinking critically about this next clip that I'm about to play. It goes off the rails pretty fast. Watch how quickly this turns to talking about the great replacement. Sure. Critical thinking is the, uh, the DNA of freedom demanding we the people, the experiment self-government that is unique in the history of humankind here in the United States of America. The founding fathers critically thought against the king.
Starting point is 01:01:13 The founding fathers critically thought against the arbitrary, punitive and capricious and demonic rules that the king forced upon its subjects. So they wrote down what they knew instinctively to be free, to be right, the gift of individual rights from God. That's called the constitution, the bill of rights. Well, right now, if you're a critical thinker, if you're a good American, if you critically think entrepreneurs, you know, people, the people in the arena in the swirling dust of battle, the entrepreneurs that take risk and make sacrifices to start a new business and
Starting point is 01:01:45 to employ people, the economic engine of the greatest quality of life in the history of the world, those critical thinkers are being punished and ostracized. If you're a critical thinker, you're suspicious of the government, which you have to be. If you're honest, you have to be suspicious of everything about this government right now more than ever. And if you are a critical thinker, you can't shop, you can't go to work, you can't go to school. If you, if you turn down the most offensive forced medicine in the history of the world
Starting point is 01:02:16 where the government says you have to take this shot or you can't go to the movies, you can't eat, you can't have a job, can't go to school, you can't travel, you can't live. We're enforcing it upon you, but you can't have a life without it. Those critical thinkers are being punished and ostracized while we are importing desperate people from around the world. We're flying in afghan from the hellholes of their worthless lifestyle. Are you using critical thinking now? We are witnessing the orchestration of an invasion of America by the government of the
Starting point is 01:02:46 United States of America. Make that perfectly clear, the government, the entire gang of Democrat Marxists infesting our government are orchestrating the invasion of America through our southern border because those people will blindly obey the Democrats. Holy shit. Wow. That went, that, that took some turns. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:03:10 That was two minutes long and started by rambling about critical thinking. Critical thinking is what the founding fathers used as a weapon against the king. And then within two minutes we're on replacement. Yeah. Yeah. Now they're shipping in. The Democrats want to replace the Americans with, with foreigners that they can control. I wish we could get rid of the American legend so much.
Starting point is 01:03:33 I wish we could get rid of the American legend because the American revolution was dumb. Like here's what happened. The king stole land from the Native Americans and then the quote founding fathers stole it from the king. Nobody's a good guy here. That's it. Yeah. I mean, I granted there's a little more nuance than that, but that is a more to the point
Starting point is 01:03:56 yeah version of the story. So look, these founding fathers, they'd be super into Alex, according to Ted Nugent, who also says that Alex has a T-Rex ball sack. Sure. And the good folks still left the Pentagon. They have their project solace run by the big AI system. It found that the majority of deaths in hospitalizations were from the vaccinated and that it's destroying their immune system and creating a syndrome called ADE that over time kills about 80 percent
Starting point is 01:04:24 of people that develop it, Ted. I mean, this is from the Pentagon's own project solace. What do you make of that? Well, number one, we the people salute you, Alex, Joe, because you got a T-Rex ball sack swinging from coast to shining coast and and you're you're what the founding fathers wanted all Americans to be suspicious of all authority and you don't do it means spirited, but you look into it. And before the government can hide their own findings, you expose the findings that support
Starting point is 01:04:59 everything you and I believe in and talk about and destroys what they call misinformation because the guaranteed misinformation on planet Earth comes from the United States of American government. So we talked about that project solace on the last episode. Alex is just lying about that. Ted Nugent has no idea what he's talking about. No clue. But look, here's the point I want to make.
Starting point is 01:05:22 It's all good and well to be suspicious, but that's not what Alex and Ted are. This isn't suspicion. This is coming to a predetermined conclusion and then being combative about anything that doesn't align with that conclusion. It just so happens that the conclusion that they've arrived at is that the government is evil. So it's easy to paint anyone who doesn't agree with them as blind sheep. But that's just a trick.
Starting point is 01:05:42 That's just a sleight of hand trick. When someone has a suspicion, the appropriate next step is to search for corroborating or disqualifying information so you can evaluate that suspicion. For instance, when I heard Alex covering that C-span clip for Fauci, I had a suspicion that he wasn't telling the truth about it. So the only way to deal with that productively was to find the raw video and assess it for myself. I feel like what you should have done is none of that and blamed the American government
Starting point is 01:06:10 for giving him those clips. Ultimately, it turned out that my suspicion was merited and that Alex was lying his ass off. It would have been probably fine for me to just hear him talking about this clip and say I'm sure he's lying, but without learning more, I would be being lazy about reaching that conclusion and it wouldn't be based on anything. This show would be really stupid if we just played clips of Alex and said nope without getting into the details of the stories.
Starting point is 01:06:33 It's good to have a healthy distrust and a level of skepticism about things that you're being told. That's, I'm not going to argue with that. The problem is that what Ted is calling suspicion is actually just him being lazy about rationalizing his knee-jerk anti-government positions. And then he's like, oh, you go out there and you find the sources that prove what we knew all along was right. No, Alex finds things and lies about them in such a way to make them reinforce the conclusions
Starting point is 01:07:00 that you came to ahead of time. That's the game that's being played. And I don't believe that Ted doesn't know that. Maybe not. Yeah. Ted cannot know things. I think Ted is more than capable of not knowing things. He did right.
Starting point is 01:07:13 Wango Tango. Yeah. He's got a real gift for not knowing what it is he's talking about, but he has adjectives and that's important. Yes, he does. Bring adjectives. You don't need knowledge. He has an annoying ass cadence.
Starting point is 01:07:25 Oh, I hate him. So look, we got the smoke and gun and smoke and guns, smoke and guns. Sure. Now we had to talk. Well, it's not that good of evidence. We had to talk to Ted. Sure. Because he's a star.
Starting point is 01:07:35 Sure. He wrote Wango Tango. Yeah. He's going to get the information out. Right. Right. Yeah. So now, now it's time to really get down to business.
Starting point is 01:07:43 Okay. Oh, no, it's not. We have another guest. So Dr. Barlow, thanks for joining us in the middle of your busy schedule. Alex, thank you. Your listeners are getting facts. They're getting science. Hashtag science.
Starting point is 01:07:55 Science matters. And what you're giving people is useful information instead of propaganda talking points. So I want to thank you for your diligence, for your tenacity, for not giving up when people have tried to destroy you over and over again. You can't keep a good man down. Alex Jones is a good man. So Dr. Bartlett is the person who Alex keeps mentioning as the guy who wrote him the prescriptions for things like ivermectin.
Starting point is 01:08:22 Right. He's made a bunch of waves by claiming that the inhalable steroid, buidesanide, is a quote silver bullet against COVID, which is not true. Oh, boy. There may be some positive effects that a patient could get from the steroid, but in terms of being a cure, which is his claim, there isn't evidence to support that. There's not a lot to say about this, dude. He's just using the same kind of game that everyone in Alex's world does.
Starting point is 01:08:45 The ones that get better with his steroids are remembered and the ones that don't conveniently get forgotten so the claim of a miracle cure can keep being made and everyone's trying to cover up the buidesanide and whatever. Hey, you know what? All you need to do is claim a miracle cure because sometimes that's how we get Kellogg's cereal. Sure. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:09:04 Yeah. You haven't thought about that. Maybe Kellogg's cereal is our original down and out. Oh, could be. Yeah. I'll think about this. Okay. Dr. Richard Bartlett is our guest.
Starting point is 01:09:17 We just had Ted Nugent on and they're both saying the same thing. We've got to educate people. We've got to warn people that if you just go and get a ventilator put on you, you're probably going to die. Or they say 92% of people in New York that got put on one died or was it 94? I had a suspicion about this, so I decided to look into it. So this is a stat that was from a study that was put out in April 2020. So it really only captured the beginning of the pandemic response.
Starting point is 01:09:44 They found that in their data set of patients, 1,151 of them needed to be put on mechanical ventilators. They only knew the medical outcomes of 320 of these patients and of these 88% had died. That number does sound really high, but there's a couple important points that you need to remember. The first is that if you're needing to go on a mechanical ventilator, you're going to tend to be in the category of more severe cases of COVID and you may have a higher likelihood of dying regardless of ventilation.
Starting point is 01:10:12 The second thing to remember is that approximately 80% of patients who get put on ventilators die regardless of the pandemic. That's how it works. 88% is a relevant jump, but it's not like a jump from 40% to 88%. This is because when mechanical ventilators are required, we're talking about a serious situation. The third thing to consider is that 72% of the total patients who are put on ventilators are not captured in this statistic since they don't have a final outcome yet, which
Starting point is 01:10:37 is to say they hadn't died or been discharged from the hospital. These 831 people were still in the hospital and depending how their cases went, the number could be a lot different. If they'd included these people in the calculation, then at that point, only approximately 25% of the people put on ventilators with COVID had died, which is a big difference. Other data sets from around this time, from places like Vanderbilt and Emory University showed death rates that are right in that ballpark of 25 to 30. The point here is that Alex should get into some critical thinking that might help him
Starting point is 01:11:09 out. Yeah, that could go a long way. Instead of reading and repeating statistics that he's not putting into a proper context. They sound nice. But I mean, why would he? Oh, it's a bad idea. But why would he when he's surrounded by experts like this Dr. Bartlett, who's playing fast and loose with fucking details?
Starting point is 01:11:26 He's one of the most prestigious doctors in the world. So prestigious. Did you know that? I did know that because Alex told me. Yeah. You need to use your brain, your training, your experience, and this is going to send a shiver down their spines right now. But if you go to the NIH guidelines for COVID treatment, you definitely is is talked about.
Starting point is 01:11:44 And they don't know that because they don't read these things. They don't educate themselves. So this is true. Actually, you just might as mentioned in the NIH is COVID treatment guidelines in the section titled quote immuno modulators under evaluation for the treatment of COVID-19. It's something that they think merits evaluation, which is a little different than Bartlett's silver bullet claim. Butesonite is mentioned 39 times in the entire 365 page document, like in this passage from
Starting point is 01:12:11 page 217, quote, there is insufficient evidence for the panel to recommend either for or against the use of inhaled butesonite for the treatment of COVID-19. Most of the other times it comes up is in the context of the guidelines discussing studies that looked at butesonite's effectiveness in treating COVID and how the studies were inconclusive and further research was required. The fact that the drug is mentioned in the guidelines means nothing. But it's the sort of thing that a con man might say if he wanted to make the audience think that even the NIH admits that this is a silver bullet, which is the game that's
Starting point is 01:12:43 being played by Dr. Bartlett here on Alex's show. I think something that they'd never consider about the way they view science, right, is if science actually worked the way that they think it does, we would get a new miracle cure for everything every few months. Every scientist would constantly be like, I saw it fix one patient. We got the miracle cure. Every single. We have a couple anecdotal stories.
Starting point is 01:13:12 It'd be nonstop. Disease is gone. Oh yeah. This one kills everybody. This one doesn't kill anybody. We've cured this. This is all. And then two weeks later, they'd be like, whoops, we didn't.
Starting point is 01:13:23 But nobody pay attention. Right. We're onto another thing already. The idea of if science works like the way they think it does, we would live a nonstop chaos life. Kind of do. Yeah. That's fair.
Starting point is 01:13:35 So look, we have the smoke and gun of smoke and gun of smoke and guns, but we have to talk to Ted Nugent because he's a celebrity. This is a big time. Right. It's a get. Right. Right. And look, we have to talk to Dr. Bartlett because he's an important doctor in the world
Starting point is 01:13:47 of Iver Mectin and Budesonite and, you know, like this is important. We have to deal with both the origins of the pandemic and the treatment of it now. It's responsible. Totally. So now that that's out of the way, we can get to talking about the smoke and gun of the smoke and gun of the smoke and gun. It's about time. Well, actually, I'm sorry.
Starting point is 01:14:03 Oh, no. I'll tell you all about what happened to him. Next segment, he's a very well-known comic and I've seen him on Latter with Crowder. Derek Richards has been banned from a comedy tour and we'll give you the details of that because, well, the online control freaks, the left said that he said some things they didn't like. It's always like talking to folks that are being censored. Oh, man.
Starting point is 01:14:23 Said some things they didn't like. Another comedian who's going to have to make a half hour special about how they aren't allowed to say things. Oh, I never get to talk. You can. Oh, you can't turn this off. I can't talk so much. So here's the situation.
Starting point is 01:14:37 There was a tour of military bases put out by the Department of Defense and the American Forces Entertainment. Apparently Derek Richards was set to perform on this tour, but then a naval officer found some of his old tweets and sent them to the DoD and AFE from an article in the Daily Dot quote. In one, Richards posted a photoshopped meme of Mike Lindell holding a pillow next to President Joe Biden in a hospital bed. The meme is captioned to make America great again.
Starting point is 01:15:03 Former President Donald Trump's 2016 campaign slogan. This is just sad. While I would be opposed to the DoD and the AFE saying that Richards cannot tweet these things, since that would be an infringement of free speech kind of thing, I also don't think that they're required to employ him as a comedian if he joked online about killing the president. It seems like a pretty clear case of behavior that'll get you kicked off a USO tour. It is really funny.
Starting point is 01:15:29 I bet it never occurred to him that the DoD would be uncomfortable with that because in his mind Trump is the president and they still work for Trump, right? Maybe. The idea of him going on a USO tour doesn't make any sense to me because they all work for the guy that you want killed. Do you realize that it changed hands? You know what I'm saying? The DoD would be mad about you tweeting out of, if a Biden supporter, if I was a comic
Starting point is 01:15:59 and I was booked to do a USO tour three years ago and I was tweeting out all the things that I was tweeting out three years ago, the DoD would have understandably been like, this is not a good idea. Sure. Yeah. And let's be totally clear. There is a bit of a difference in messaging between like, I don't like Joe Biden and this meme implying that Mike Lindell would make a better country by killing Joe Biden with
Starting point is 01:16:23 a pillow. That one's a little aggressive. Yeah. There is a difference between those things. I don't know. I don't think that it's like advocating killing the president to post that meme, but I also don't think that it's all that. Did Kathy Griffin have a head or something?
Starting point is 01:16:38 We'll get to that. Oh, okay. We're about to do the whole, if it's not fair. I don't think it's as outrageous to imagine that the USO would cancel his appearance on this tour because of this and other tweets that they found totally objectionable. Totally. It's not a free speech issue. It's not.
Starting point is 01:16:57 But whatever. They're not saying he can't tweet. Now, I will say that Derek Richards is at least, he doesn't seem as mad as Alex wants him to be. And I harbor no ill feelings towards Armed Forces Entertainment or the Department of Defense. I mean, at the end of the day, they're a corporation. No, Derek, I understand all that.
Starting point is 01:17:15 We understand you're a nice guy. You're the victim here. We're all the victim here. These are lying bullies. I mean, so what if you were a serious Christian or a right wing Christian and that you thought that homosexuality was a sin? You know, you're not there attacking them at the event. You're telling comedy.
Starting point is 01:17:30 It should be what your comedy is. And the whole point is now you've got the LGBT groups attacking people that are straight. So I've always been an open, inclusive guy, but the left and they're not inclusive now. They're not inclusive of people that are pro-gun or pro-America or pro-Republican and it's wrong. Yeah. And so this is to agree. This is mind control.
Starting point is 01:17:49 And what happened to you is BS. And this is all part of the leftist takeover and purge inside the military. You're just a collateral damage of that. Hey, Derek, can you be a little madder? Yeah. Could you turn this into the biggest, most important issue? Because I do not like a conciliatory tone where you think you may be going to get booked on something again.
Starting point is 01:18:08 Yeah. I want to say, hey, fuck the DOD. Maybe a bad idea. Yeah. That doesn't play. No. We shop in anger here. That's our currency.
Starting point is 01:18:18 Yeah. Let's be important, Mr. Richards. Your career and its future, meaningless to me. Right now, important. So I want you to burn it all down. And then maybe I can kind of force you to, I'm like a drug dealer, I can force you to work at Infowars. Your career is kindling.
Starting point is 01:18:37 Yes, exactly. I'd never heard of you before. My intern told me you were on louder with Crowder, and I will never think of you again ever. Yep. Where's the, where's the guy who smashed stuff? Where's the guy? Got the hammer?
Starting point is 01:18:49 Yeah. The guy with the hammer. Is he back on? Ricky. How's he doing? He's having a great time. Man, that guy made some great memes and Alex wanted him to have a job. Anyway, the last name Richards are not having a good year.
Starting point is 01:19:02 Mark. Mark Richards. This dude. I don't know. We might as well go back to Captain Mark. That's the same guy that I said. No, though. Oh, no, Mike Richards, the Jeopardy host.
Starting point is 01:19:14 Oh, I said. Yeah. Yeah. That's who I was thinking. Okay. Yeah. So Alex is like, look, they, they, they on the left, they insist you have to be punished for telling jokes.
Starting point is 01:19:26 But what about Obama? He told jokes at the correspondence dinner. He told jokes about Trump. And then Alex plays a clip of Obama being funny at the correspondence dinner. All kidding aside, obviously we all know about your credentials and breadth of experience. Um, for example, uh, no, seriously, just recently in an episode of celebrity apprentice at the steakhouse, the men's cooking team, uh, did not impress the judges from Omaha Steaks. And there was a lot of blame to go around, but you, Mr. Trump, recognized that the real
Starting point is 01:20:07 problem was a lack of leadership. And so ultimately you didn't blame little John or meatloaf. You fired Gary music. And these are the kind of decisions that would keep me up at night. Yeah. There you go. So Derek Richards, oh, he couldn't even screen some of the evil, evil tweets that the Hollywood folks got up in arms over a guy with 4,000 Twitter followers or so.
Starting point is 01:20:37 They had to squash you because they've, they've squashed so many others and taken so many others. Such a weird choice to play that that's actually very, very funny and well delivered. Yeah. No, no, no. We were laughing. That was well done. I had heard it before and I was like, yeah, it's still very good because it is so absurd.
Starting point is 01:20:55 Yeah. And the nuance of the delivery of you did not blame little John. No, that. Yeah. He did. He even did rule of threes. This was whoever wrote that joke was really good. Yeah, definitely.
Starting point is 01:21:06 Um, so yeah, I think it's a strange decision for Alex to do that, but whatever, especially since here's the difference there. That was Obama making fun of a man for things he did. Yeah. And the reason that Trump would even come up is because he was trying to say that Obama had a fake birth certificate and he did this whole racist attack against him. Now if I were Trump, and I had led this whole charge on the fake birth certificate, Obama shouldn't be president there, I would simply not show up to the dinner where Obama's speaking.
Starting point is 01:21:38 The wildest. You're putting yourself in a position where, Hey, maybe he's going to take a shot because man, you've been really offensive to him. Oh yeah. For a while. I just not go, but Trump decided I'll go and then he got mad. And then when he became president, he decided I will not go. I do not like being made fun of.
Starting point is 01:21:55 No. Very easy to make fun of me, which is why I surround myself with people who refuse to. So you know, we're trying to frame this as like these liberal Hollywood elites are behind what happened to this guy, this Derek. Why not? And it's fair to say that people like Debra Messing, they amplified the calling out of Derek's tweets, but they didn't search it out and like try and find it just to destroy this guy.
Starting point is 01:22:20 A naval officer named Travis Akers found the tweets because he stationed in the Middle East. He heard about the upcoming tour and he decided to see who the performers coming over where because he loves stand up. He found Derek's Twitter and as he told the Daily Dot quote, the further I reviewed his field, his feed, the more concerning it became that he would be booked on a Department of Defense sponsored tour since armed forces entertainment is an official DOD office. It's fun to pretend that this is just like all fake Hollywood liberal elites being on
Starting point is 01:22:48 the warpath. But the reason that this is even being discussed is because this enlisted person was offended by what he saw on Derek's Twitter and he tagged the DOD in a tweet about it. In order for Alex's outraged machine to run properly, though, that has to be ignored entirely. I can't have that. Yeah. That detail is not real.
Starting point is 01:23:06 Yeah. And it definitely can't also be somebody who was a fan of stand up because you've also got that added. He's not funny enough for me to ignore these tweets. That is an insult. Well, yeah. That is definitely a subtext. Yeah, I would.
Starting point is 01:23:24 I would imagine that he would have been like, Oh, Dave Chappelle is coming. No need to look into that. Oh, I guess Patrice has said some horrible things. Yes. Yeah. Patrice. Yes. Oh my God.
Starting point is 01:23:36 Oh boy. So you were bringing up Kathy Griffin and this is where she enters the proceedings. Sure. But not before Derek tries to pretend that, Hey, man, they misinterpreted my meme. And this is how well this is where we see his. This is comedic. Let's hear it. Let's hear it.
Starting point is 01:23:51 Comedic chops. There was one where I was told that I was advocating murdering the president because there was a meme of Mike Lindell from my pillow, holding to my pillow, standing next to President Biden, who was lying in a bed. And so, yeah, that particular one in the upper right and sure it's like from Godfather too. It's hilarious. And it says in the headline on it's make America great again.
Starting point is 01:24:18 Now, anybody can take that anyway. They want it's obviously a joke. I see it as Mike Lindell clearly seeing that President Biden had an uncomfortable pillow and he was offering one of his good my pillows for the president to lay upon. Don't don't you see that Alex? I see that. Well, here's the deal. Kathy Griffin did a severed head of Trump and I don't I think it was protected speech.
Starting point is 01:24:39 He didn't say go kill him. I want to kill him. That was telegraphed. It didn't cross the line, but almost did yours didn't go one-tenth as far as that and is obviously good nature. I'm going to leave aside anything about that fun game that Derek's playing about the tweet. It's mostly because I don't really care about him tweeting this. No, you can do that all day and it's just a dumb, not funny joke.
Starting point is 01:25:00 It does make sense that you'd get kicked off a USO tour for making that kind of joke though. You're entitled to your free speech, but you're not entitled to be paid to go on a USO tour. Also Kathy Griffin is probably the last example Alex should be bringing up because she lost so many jobs after that picture came out. She was fired from CNN where she'd been one of the hosts of the New Year's Eve show. She got dropped from gigs and she claims that she wasn't even allowed to fly for two months. And then everybody on the left said everything is okay. The picture also apparently got Kathy Griffin on the kill list of Caesar Sayok, the Maga
Starting point is 01:25:35 Bomber. I wonder why you would put a target on someone who's relatively obscure and just released an admittedly possibly distasteful picture. I don't know if this had anything to do with it, but allow me to take you back. Jordan and my time machine to May 31st, 2017, where we can hear Alex's thoughts and Mike Sernovich's thoughts about Kathy Griffin. Here we go. And then Kathy Griffin comes out like an ISIS sympathizer and basically promotes chopping
Starting point is 01:26:01 the president's head off. There's a big terrorist connection between Hollywood and ISIS and that Kathy Griffin thing was a direct effigy. It was a direct unconscious message to ISIS to say that we love you and we worship you and that we adore you. That was the whole reason she did that. It was a tribute to ISIS. And then by having Kathy Griffin hold that head with all the blood on it, that was their
Starting point is 01:26:25 way of saying we agree with ISIS. And of course the fake news media, CNN has not fired Kathy Griffin, which tells me that CNN therefore supports ISIS. I can't reach any other conclusion, do you? CNN's who were targeting because she works for CNN. She doesn't just do the ball drop. She's routinely on CNN. She does comedy for her.
Starting point is 01:26:45 I see her on there all the time. I don't even watch much CNN. So she's a CNN worker, she's a CNN employee. And to fund this, we're going to sell a T-shirt. You also get $1,000 or 2,500. If you're seen wearing the T-shirt on national TV, C-span, your local news, if that then gets picked up nationally or goes viral, I will choose a thousand or 2,500 until it hits $200,000. Alex and Mike Sernovich were so up in arms about the Kathy Griffin picture that they
Starting point is 01:27:13 started a campaign to get people to buy shirts that said CNN is ISIS, and then they paid people to yell that on live TV. The argument, according to these idiots, was that Griffin was signaling to ISIS, and if CNN didn't fire her, that means they also support ISIS. It's very, very stupid. And I remember it very clearly. It was a sad day. And I was listening back to this, I was like, hey, where's Mike Sernovich at?
Starting point is 01:27:39 Yeah. Alex hasn't talked to him in a while. Oh, where's Ali Alexander? Oh, there. Oh. So I guess the message Alex wants to give us about free speech is that when a comedian does something that's politically distasteful, it's a travesty when that person is fired if they're on the right wing.
Starting point is 01:27:55 However, if they're left wing, you need to offer $200,000 to wage a public pressure campaign to label them as an ISIS sympathizer to get their employer to fire them lest they be labeled ISIS supporters as well. This is a coherent ideology, and totally not Alex just pretending to have principles because he's a dumb piece of shit. Yeah, I can't. Also, Oscar Sayak, he tried to bomb the CNN headquarters in Atlanta, too. So that was strange.
Starting point is 01:28:23 Who could have seen that coming? Very weird. Yeah. I have not given a fuck about any right wing cancel culture bullshit, mainly because I was alive when the Dixie Chicks said war is bad, and then everyone on every side went apeshit for no reason. I think that what she said was Natalie Main said that she was ashamed that the president was from Texas.
Starting point is 01:28:47 Yeah. That was it's not war is bad. Wow. It's a slightly different, but I get what you're saying. I mean, it's sorry. It's even less innocuous or it's even it's even more innocuous. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:29:00 Yep. Yep. Canceled. The Dixie Chicks burning party. Yeah. Burning those CDs. Unreal. Unreal.
Starting point is 01:29:08 They're just full of shit. Yep. So Alex, look, he's got the smoke and gun of smoke and gun of smoke and guns, but he needed to talk to Ted Nugent because he's a big star needed to talk to Dr. Bartlett because he's a guy who's got medical solutions. And then he needed to talk to this comedian because he got canceled or something. This guy I've never heard of is on a tour that I would have never known happened. Wouldn't have cared either way.
Starting point is 01:29:29 Nope. Now, now it's time to get down to the smoke and gun of smoke and gun of smoke and guns. Okay. It's about time. So this isn't a game. It's very serious. And it makes me angry that the system is trying to suppress us and trying to cherry pick things we've said are done out of context to try to silence us.
Starting point is 01:29:50 I'm sorry. What? When we're fighting this corrupt murderous system for all of our futures collectively. So I got a bunch of new breaking news I want to hit. And I want to just say this right now. I salute and I commend and I thank all of our affiliates. The great crew that puts up with me, both the production crew and the rest of crew here at Info Wars because I'm an intense person, especially these days.
Starting point is 01:30:13 And I want to thank my family. And I want to thank God, of course, most importantly for a hedge of protection. If God deems that that needs to be done. I just went an Oscar. What is happening? I want you to know how serious this time is and how thankful I've been knowing. For twenty seven, twenty eight years being on air. Some of you have been listening that long.
Starting point is 01:30:31 It doesn't matter whether you tune in today for the first time or you tuned in a month ago or you tuned in five years ago or twenty seven years ago. I appreciate all of you. This has been one hell of a fight. Would be what? This really sounds like that's a retirement, right? I mean, it sounds like two things. One, saying goodbye.
Starting point is 01:30:47 Yeah, although I remember like a year ago, he recorded his fake last show. Yeah. Yeah, I'm looking forward to going back and visiting that one. Yeah. So he he's he's sort of pretending he's saying goodbye because it's really dramatic. But it's also like, I know this is a plug. Yeah, I know this is a totally. I was listening to that and I was like, just get to the fucking.
Starting point is 01:31:05 I know nobody is listening to your thank yous and going. That's genuine. No one. No one cares. This is going to weave. Yes. And so here I'm going to start fast forward about two minutes of him. Two minutes. Yeah. They did this on purpose.
Starting point is 01:31:20 You understand Fauci cooked it up. It's all confirmed. You understand they bragged on TV. How they did it. And that's not the featured video at Bandai video. And so, yeah, great. It'll get a couple of million views. The globalists see that and go, oh, my God, this guy is reaching out.
Starting point is 01:31:33 He's busting through the blockade. We got to silence him. And I morally. Cannot stop what I'm doing. I morally am over the target and I'm hitting the enemy hard. We're all hitting them together and I can't pull off. I can't pull off this bombing run. I've got to just stay here and keep dropping the bombs, even though
Starting point is 01:31:52 they got their spotlights on me and they're they're shooting and they're hitting me because they're going to get everybody. If we don't stay in this position and just keep attacking with the truth. This isn't like attack a little and then disappear back like a gorilla operation. This is information warfare. This is the truth. And if I went away tomorrow and backed off, they would demonize me, lie about me and use me as a tool of evil.
Starting point is 01:32:14 So I can't do that. But the only way I'm able to get our articles and videos and the truth of what we've said out is you. I'm banned on all these platforms, but you can take clips. You can share them. You can get them out and understand that it's not just about saving Info Wars or Alex Jones. It's about holding up the truth and defending it and celebrating it together.
Starting point is 01:32:36 So I need you to support the show. I need you to pray for the show. I need you to buy products that are already great for you and your family. Somebody just say this. We've got the big sale going. Oh, yeah. It's the Info Wars emergency supply chain breakdown sale. And it's up to 50% off across the board.
Starting point is 01:32:52 It's the emergency. I'm going to have to pay out these lawsuits. Yep. Yeah. It's the unfucked sale. I mean, like it's so shocking to me that like he wouldn't recognize how transparent his tone is when it's like, I need to really over dramatize what is going to end up in a plug.
Starting point is 01:33:12 Yeah. It's it takes minutes. It takes minutes for the preamble of the plug. Unfair. Yes. Unfair. I mean, I was thinking just like, God, if I was there, I would have some sort of like playoff, you know, like Oscars.
Starting point is 01:33:27 I would just immediately he's going on too long. It's just you can feel it. Oh, yeah. You can taste it. And then it gradually gets louder. He's like, OK, we got to sell some shit. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:33:39 I just I think that there are times when you can get a smoothly done ad pitch and I could be sitting there and be like, this guy's got the goods. Yes. You know, but this is not that. I mean, I remember back in the day, I was sometimes duly impressed by his throws to ads. Yeah. And I think some of it is just like being worn down over time.
Starting point is 01:34:06 Yeah. Like for us, we just see it over and over again. But also this is worse. Yeah. No, that one's too obvious. Yeah. So he rambles a bit more and this is this is boof. There's a lot going on.
Starting point is 01:34:16 You've got my commitment to burn the midnight oil because I understand we're in the zeitgeist. We're in the window of change. The enemy knows it and the devil sends the beast with wrath because he knows the time is short and our time is short as well. And I'm not risking my life and putting it on the line to lose this thing and losing means losing humanity. I'm not worried about me.
Starting point is 01:34:35 Seriously, folks, you've got to get in that zone and then they can do nothing to you. I can. Veefer Vendetta, when she's ready to die and he goes, now you're free. That's what this is about. Separately, I would get prepared. You know, the satellite phones are great to have. You get all the free calls. What are we doing?
Starting point is 01:34:52 Phone. It's only the calls out that cost you and the phone is a six hundred plus dollar value. One of the best phones they've got. Yeah. So you do plugs, the satellite phone. This is outrageous. Look, this satellite phone's too good.
Starting point is 01:35:04 We're going to have to put a clock on this one. Oh, yeah. I just, I mean, it's depressing. Wow. Yeah, that's real sad. Look. Okay. We have to smoke and gun or smoke and gun or smoke and guns.
Starting point is 01:35:16 But we need it to talk to Ted Nugent because he's a star. We need to talk to Dr. Bartlett because he's a doctor. Totally. Need to talk to a comic because he's canceled. Yeah. And then we needed to do some ads because we got to keep the lights on. Right, right. Losing the lawsuit.
Starting point is 01:35:28 But now, finally, with a couple minutes left in the show. Don't you do this. Don't you do this. Oh, God. There's so many cases of Antiva just shooting people randomly. Oh, you're an anti-vax parade. We'll just shoot you because you're white. And it's weirdo, white devil works for methads.
Starting point is 01:35:46 Nine times out of 10 that are doing it. Absolutely disgusting little rodents. Usually they're professors or assistant professors. Shooting people. In fact, I meant to get to that footage last week of the weird woman with a shaved head and like the goat beard. She's like, I'm ugly. I love, you know, I love being gross.
Starting point is 01:36:05 Eh, maybe find that for the next segment. We can't remember what I'm talking about. I was in the air like last Friday and maybe last Thursday. But it's just that they're just the other it is. Yeah, let's hear from her. Go ahead and pipe the audio in. Here she is. This thing called a little cork if you will.
Starting point is 01:36:20 I have hair in my armpit. I have it there for a few reasons. One, lazy. Two, the patriarchy. And three, your response to them tells me everything I need to know about you. My response to this is I hope you find happiness. But the chances of that are very, very, very low.
Starting point is 01:36:44 And I pity you. I do. I mean, there you go, ladies and gentlemen, very if you're not a radio listener, you are a radio listener and you're a TV viewer. You're very lucky that you're a radio listener and did not have to look at her because she is as disgusting as she can be. Wow.
Starting point is 01:37:01 She accentuates the word little role. Holy shit, man. Shaved except for like a Genghis Khan ponytail in the back. She's got giant disgusting sideburns. What the fuck are we doing, man? I mean, I thought that we had the bombshell. I thought we had the smoking gun. He decides to take up the end of the show complaining about a woman
Starting point is 01:37:22 that I guess he's decided is unattractive. I I don't know. This is so stupid. The show is the worst unreal. They could not have been like they couldn't. They couldn't resist. Her last line is literally how you react to it. Tells me everything I need to know about you.
Starting point is 01:37:41 Yeah. And you guys told her everything you need to know about her. I mean, it's amazing. It's amazing how you couldn't. It was like she teed it up through time itself for them to pay it off. Yeah. Yeah, basically wild. Yep.
Starting point is 01:37:55 I mean, it's just it's just armpits. Yeah, it's just hair, man. And I would imagine that someone who has armpit hair is very capable of finding whatever happiness and who shapes their armpits would not hard. Nope. It's very easy. A lot of people and I'm going to throw this out to you. What and Alex and whoever that guy was. Was that still the comic?
Starting point is 01:38:16 I have no idea. I think that was in the clip that Alex was playing. Oh, man. I think he took it from somebody else's commentary about this woman. Oh, fuck me. Yeah. Oh, my God. So yeah, I mean, we just can't not shame her for not conforming
Starting point is 01:38:33 to your appearance expectations. Yep. I don't even know how you can live like that. It's it seems exhausting. Somebody has hairy armpits somewhere. You know what? That's probably more emotionally exhausting than the time that it took me to assess the claims that he was making about that C-span video.
Starting point is 01:38:51 You know, it would have been easier for Alex. Maybe what? Well, actually, it wouldn't have been infinitely harder for him because he would have had to fire us. Yeah, covered the actual stuff you are supposed to cover. Give it a shot. Yeah, I think that would have been good. Hey, let's do two bets.
Starting point is 01:39:06 Yeah. All right, first bet. You take the vaccine. You die. I take the vaccine. I live. We're fine. All right.
Starting point is 01:39:12 Second bet. Try doing your job one day. See how it goes. I think it would be a disaster. I just I don't know. I'd love to see him try to be serious and actually cover something. Bridal. Look, we didn't learn a lot.
Starting point is 01:39:30 No. No, we didn't. Proudly. Yeah, we already knew that Ted Nugent sucks. He sucks so bad. Yeah. So anyway, Jordan, that's our episode. We will be back, though.
Starting point is 01:39:43 But until then, we have a website. We do. It's knowledgefight.com. Yep. We're also on Twitter. We are on Twitter. It's that Knowledge on the Shore fight and I go to bed, Jordan. That is correct.
Starting point is 01:39:50 We will be back. But until then, I'm Neo. I'm Leo. I'm DZX Clark. I'm Daryl Rundis. And now here comes the sex robot. Andy and Kansas, you're on the air. Thanks for holding.
Starting point is 01:40:01 Hello, Alex. I'm a first-time caller. I'm a huge fan. I love your work. I love you.

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