Knowledge Fight - #623: July 2-3, 2003
Episode Date: December 2, 2021Today, Dan and Jordan continue looking at the past, where they find the trends of homophobia continuing on the show. Also, Alex reports erroneously on Swiss euthanasia, engages is deeply unethical s...ales practices, and warns of a 4th of July false flag terrorist attack that does not happen. Citations
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I'm sick of them posing as if they're the good guys saying we are the bad guys knowledge
fight. I need money. I love you. I love you. I love you. I love you. I love you. I love
everybody. Welcome back knowledge fight. I'm Dan Jordan workable dudes like to sit
around worship at the altar of Celine and talk a little bit about Alex Jones. Oh,
indeed we are. Dan Jordan, Jordan, quick question for you. So what's your bright spot
today? My bright spot today. And this is no question. No question. No question. No question.
Kevin the bird from up. Didn't see that coming. Did you up the movie? Yeah. Yeah. Did you
just watch up recently? No, I just thought of Kevin. There's no question. I went on
YouTube and I was watching some clips of my God. I love that bird. That bird is great.
Best character maybe ever in a movie ever. Yeah. Movies. Not just animated movies. All
of them. Yes. Kevin the bird. Anything the Britain. I mean, I would say nothing. No
Casablanca. No, nothing. I would say that maybe hey, hey from Moana comes in. Okay,
well, hey, hey is in the conversation. But Kevin, Kevin the bird. I would say I would
expand this even to literature, literature, including literature. There's something about
that bird, something about that bird. Yeah, gotta get to him. Playful. Yeah, she's playful.
And yeah, just a side joy. In fact, a bright spot to everyone. Yep. I kid you not. I was
watching the videos of little clips from up and I got a big smile on my face. Love that bird.
That's great. That's great. That's how my dad feels about the minions. Yeah, they're cute. Yeah.
Anyway, what's your bright spot? My bright spot, Dan, is I bought a knife. So we were it's a
kitchen. It's a kitchen knife. We had lunch one day and I was walking back and there was this
little boutique store that had a like cooking a cooking tray in it. What are the ovens things?
Right. I know what you're talking about. Yeah. So I went in to take a look at it and immediately
realized I didn't want it, but there was the only the guy who ran the store in there. And so he
came over immediately and I felt this pressure that I could not leave without buying something.
Yeah, that's always tough. Right. So I bought this Japanese knife. It is so sharp. Yeah,
it is so sharp. I told you that I chopped a chunk of my finger off. You can see that's not as
big as I thought. It's not a huge chunk, but it had a giant bandaid on your hand that made me
think you might have lost an inch or something. It was a gusher. Oh, I'm sure. Yeah, it bled everywhere.
That's why I had to have the giant bandaid. Otherwise it would have it would have melt. It
was either that or like super max tampons. That's the level we were talking about. My
impression of what it was based on how you described it. I was like, I don't know, maybe part of the
nail is gone. Maybe he lost the whole thing. Yeah, yeah, but that's that's good that it's not. Yeah,
it's not huge, but it is it. That is sharp. It's not thumb shape altering. No, no, that's that's
it'll grow back. Yeah, it's a good knife. It's great knife. Yeah, chop things. Oh, so smooth. I
was chopping some stuff and it's just like, you know what you should do? Chop it up broccoli. I
was chopping up broccoli. I'm chopped up some bok choy. Okay, some potatoes did it all man. That's
great. I'm happy for you. It's a good knife. So Jordan, today we're going to be in the past. We're
going to be talking about July 2nd and 3rd 2003. We continue to track Alex's incredibly
homophobic period. Yeah, there's a lot going on on that front. Yeah, so much that on our last episode
from 2003, a caller called him out on it. It's very weird to hate Harry Potter and the LGBTQ
community at the same time, right? You have to like, you know, well, in the present day,
but we'll get down to business on this episode. But before we do, let's take a little moment to
say Hi to some new wankers. Oh, it's a great idea. So first, comfrey sucks. Thank you so much.
You're now policy walk. I'm a policy Wank. Thank you. Thank you. Next Demon feast is the new
Monster Mash. Thank you so much. You're now policy wonk. I'm a policy one game. Demon feast,
uh, next need more knowledge fight crossovers. Thank you so much. You're now policy one. I'm a
well. Thank you very well. Open next Lauren. Thank you so much. You're now policy Richards,
I'm a policy, wonk thanks, Lauren and sort of saying, Hello, or thank you to this next person.
I'm going to say whoop whoop to shaggy too dope. You're now policy wonk. I'm a policy wonk. Whoop
whoop indeed. Next Rusty. Thank you so much. You're now policy wonk. I'm a policy wonk. Thank
you Rusty. And finally, we got a technocrat in the mix. So thank you so much and hello to Kirk.
You're now a technocrat. I'm a policy wonk. Crikey, mate. That's fantastic. Have yourself a brew.
How's your 401k doing, bro? We got to go full tilt buggy on this Watson. All right,
let's just get down to business. We ain't making that money off that heroin. Why are you pimp so
good? My neck is freakishly large. I declare info war on you. All right. Yes, sir. So Jordan,
we are here in the past. How do you feel being in the past? Um, I feel like maybe it's actually
shaggy too dope. Uh, who gave us like, you know, 50 cents or whatever. And it's very funny to me.
What if it's the real, I hope it is. I hope so too. I have some respect for the juggalos.
That'd be great. Not enough to get a hatchet man tattoo, but enough to
think very seriously about going to the gathering. Oh yeah, we'll be there. We'll be there someday.
One day, one sweet day, but not performing. We will not do a live podcast. Absolutely not.
I don't know. I feel about being in the past. I don't like how, uh, how much more homophobic
things are. Yeah, it's a little really explicit. Yeah, especially during this like little period.
Yeah. It hasn't been like consistently right in your face throughout some of this 2003 period,
like June. Uh, but I don't know what's going on now. He's just in a mood. I mean,
it doesn't get quite as much blood libel as the gays are stealing your children.
You know, like that's pretty intense. Well, they're stealing them to raise them as their own,
not to drink their blood. Well, yes, it's, it's a little better, I guess. Um, so anyway, Jordan,
here is an out of context drop from today's show. It is a world so nightmarish. It is
Hades on earth. Thanks for the call. You're a great day. You too. It is Hades on earth.
You have a great day. You too. It doesn't get much more obvious how serious your show is.
I love the juxtaposition of that. That's so good. That is so color sounds so sweet. You
have a nice day. You have a nice day. You too, sir. Look, just cause it's Hades doesn't mean
we can't be polite. Yeah. Okay. Yep. So Alex is concerned at the beginning of this July 2nd
episode about Tom Tom Ridge, the Homeland Security Secretary. Um, and he makes a little bit of a
prediction of what's to come and he's going to be president. No, but I don't think that Alex's
prediction has come to pass. Okay. And I've got red John tape on C span, the head of Homeland
Security saying we're going to have four levels of security clearance to have every day jobs. You're
going to have to have a hard to have a job and won't be able to go certain places. And if you've
got bad credit or ever even had a misdemeanor conviction, you will, you'll have nighttime
perfuse, but that's okay for the good citizens. They'll have their card until they don't pay their
taxes properly or something. Folks, I'm not, this is so horrible. This is right out of the running
man. I mean, it makes me want to start just giggling and insanely. I mean, it just,
this is so over the top. This is so evil. Yeah. So, uh, we, we don't, right? What? It is so over
the top. Oh, it is over the top. It's way over the top. Um, so yeah, we don't have four layers
of security clearance to have jobs. No, not curfews. True. I guess there have been sort of
circumstantial curfews like when there were protests, right? There were curfews enacted and
you know, for the beginning of COVID, when things were surging, there was businesses closed earlier.
Hey, I mean at the coupon shit place that I worked at, I had a key fob to get in. That's a
level of security clearance. That's not what he's talking about. No, it's, so yeah, this is one of
the predictions that Alex is going to conveniently forget that he was pushing. He's right about
everything, Dan. Right. Uh, of the things that he remembers and this represents is a hundred percent.
100% accurate. Uh, one thing he's also pretty good at is faking, uh, being emotional and he
does a bit of that at the, at the beginning of this, this show and it's just, it's tacky.
trading. Supercomputer handing over neocon. Liar trash. Open border. Remoting.
Oh, you're destroying this country. I'm so sick of you. You lying fool. Man, I am sick of these
neocons. I don't get murder and matter at these people. They are conning and manipulating the
backbone, the bedrock, conservative Christian America. You have been so conned. I am so sick
of Sean Hannity and all these liars. Man, I tell you what, I am really, oh, oh,
you're not upset about what's happening. These traders tell you none of this is happening as
it's being set up. These traders are the ultimate liars. We'll be right back. You have a great day.
Did he just have a fake ragegasm at us? Yeah, I think so, especially with that sort of refractory
period that we ended up in. Oh, yeah. Yeah, that was a good performance. Very false. But, um, you
get that, you get that sense of like, ah, this is where the real opposition to people like George
W. Bush comes from. He thinks that they are liberals, their secret liberals. He's not above
the two far far to the right of it. Christians only. Yes. Everything else is to destroy
conservative Christians, right? Because I'm above the two parties. Above the left, right
paradigm as much as I want to burn it by going so far to the right and disproving horseshoe
theory, by the way. Uh, yeah, cool. Glad a lot of people fell for that. So, uh, Alex has a news
story that he is drastically misreporting, uh, on this episode. Here we go. Talking about the
culture of death, half of Swiss deaths dubbed suicide, half of Swiss deaths dubbed suicide,
half of their deaths, and it's assisted suicide. So, the Swiss have got it right when it comes to,
uh, having a low crime rate because their whole population is armed, but they're also
socialistic and the government is killing the people. And in many cases, even when they don't want
the, uh, euthanage, it's now happening in this country as well as Wesley Smith, uh, at the, uh,
Wall Street Journal has documented. This is weird. Point of order. Yeah. Point of order.
Super point of order listening. You cannot both have an entirely armed population and still tell
me that the government is just murdering them. Yeah, that's, that seems like it should be the
thing that protects people. Your entire fucking argument. Right. And if it were true, which it's
not the half of the deaths, uh, in, in, uh, Switzerland or suicide, then, uh, you'd have to
call into question. Hey, all of them are armed. Is that leading to a higher rate of, of suicide?
You would have to ask a lot of questions that he is specifically glossing over. But I mean,
it's just, he's just misreporting this story. Sure. From the coverage that you're hearing here,
you would think that the news story that he's talking about says half of the deaths in Switzerland
are the results of suicide. Whereas he clarifies assisted suicides, which people may or may not
want. Sure. If that were true, that would be a staggering statistic. It'd be huge, but it's not.
Okay. The reality of this story is that there was a University of Zurich, uh, study that was
conducted on Swiss attitudes towards euthanasia. The report reflected that, uh, there was a widespread
permissive stance in the country, uh, that the, the practice has generally, as long as it's done
with an altruistic motive. Right. Also, a February 2003 article in the British Journal, uh, British
medical journal found these numbers quote, according to the president of one of, uh, the
Swiss right to die societies around 1800 requests for assisted suicide are made each year. Two thirds
are rejected after screening. Half of the remaining people die of other causes, leaving about 300
suicides assisted by these societies annually. Get the fuck out. This constitutes around 0.45
of the dance in Switzerland. God damn them. Yeah. So, uh, a June 2003 survey written up in the Lancet
sought to find some data on the assisted suicide rates in the countries of Belgium, Denmark,
Italy, the Netherlands, Sweden and Switzerland. This found a 1% or less rates in Denmark, Italy,
Sweden and Switzerland. The data from Belgium and the Netherlands is a little more complicated,
and it's not really relevant to our discussion here. So I'm not even going to get into it.
Anyway, the point here is that multiple studies had come out around this time that, uh, very each
of them very clearly put the rate of assisted suicide in Switzerland at under 1% or even less
than half a percent. So where's Alex getting that number from? You, uh, heard one thing and that's
possibility that what you, what you were responding to. I think it's also possible that he just didn't
read the article that he's covering and he's just skimmed this part quote, the study examined 3350
deaths in German speaking Switzerland and found that half of them involved some form of euthanasia.
So there's that. There's half of this of these deaths in German, uh, speaking Scandinavia. And
if you were just, uh, I'm sorry, German speaking Switzerland, if you just read that, you might get
an idea of it, but this was specifically a subset of terminally ill patients in German speaking
Switzerland that the study was considering. So it's naturally a population where you'd expect
expect the rate to be higher and it isn't indicative of all the deaths in Switzerland.
Yeah. This is just outlandishly sloppy work on Alex's part and serves as yet another example
of why people who listen to him and think they're getting any kind of real information or the things
that they're saying, it's based on an ounce of study. They're all being scammed. If you believe
these things that Alex is getting into, uh, you're, you're a fool. Yeah. I mean, come on man.
Harold and mod came out 30 years before this move, this, this shit right here. We should all be fine
with somebody with terminal, uh, illness just going fuck off. I think, I think it's a tough
issue for some, especially like the discussion of it. Sure. Uh, yeah. I, I don't know why you
wouldn't let someone, uh, who's terminally ill, not be forced to be in pain, suffer because God
says so for another eight months. It's a tough, it's a tough line for me to, to think makes sense.
Um, so Alex gets some calls and oh my God, what more homophobia.
Hey, I wanted to give you more bad news about Walmart. And have you heard the story that came
out today on Walmart? About the gay right? Yes, I did. Yeah. I just thought it was very interesting
in that they were, they were saying here, uh, there, there's their, uh, vice president for
communications, Mona Williams, uh, told the times that the most important factor was a letter to
senior management from several gay employees. Apparently there was a gay right. Uh, what was
the name of this? Uh, let's see here. Uh, the pride foundation, a Seattle gay rights organization,
they invested in Walmart to get this policy changed. And, uh, they were saying here that,
uh, basically that, uh, this Mona Williams was saying, we want all of our associates to feel
they are valued and treated with respect. No, let me just stop you. Let me just stop you.
Disgusting. Why should anybody be talking about sex period at their job? Well, I'm gonna,
I'm gonna tell you something. I used to work for Walmart. Okay. And I was fired from Walmart.
Are you ready for the reason that I was fired from Walmart? Why was that Bill? Because a customer
said that she didn't like the way I looked at her. I'm absolutely certain that's not what that guy
got fired for. Oh boy. If a man says it's cause a woman didn't like the way I looked at her,
I think there's probably more to the story. The write up is going to be a more detailed. Yeah.
Yeah. And guess what? According to Alex and this guy's presumed political beliefs, he should
have no problem with the company firing him for any reason. Employment is an aggressively
voluntary agreement for Alex and his audience, freedom of association and all of that. So he
shouldn't be complaining. Anyway, this is a story about Walmart releasing a statement that
they would expand their non-discrimination rules to include gay and lesbian employees.
This was hot on the heels of the Supreme Court decision, Lawrence versus Texas,
which found that having criminal sodomy laws is unconstitutional. Tough to believe that that's
where things were in 2003. Walmart still was very clear that they weren't going to extend
benefits to same sex couples, but this decision that they made was still pretty impactful. Now,
if you were fired because you were gay or you were bullied by coworkers for your sexual orientation,
you had some recourse within the company. The New York Times article about this is
remarkable as it points out that this made it so nine of the 10 largest Fortune 500 companies
had implemented rules against sexual orientation discrimination. The only one that didn't was
ExxonMobil and even more remarkable after Exxon acquired mobile in 1999, they quote,
revoked a mobile policy that provided medical benefits to partners of gay employees,
as well as a policy that included sexual orientation as a category of prohibited
discrimination. They actively got rid of those rules. ExxonMobil, we're actually evil. Yeah.
Anyway, I'm noticing this real strong homophobia on Alex's part here in 2003, which is troubling.
Yeah, it's gross. It's so gross. Stop it. It's gross. This all happened 20 years ago,
and now it's just being transposed onto trans people. It's the same shit.
I think you're absolutely right that a lot of that attention is just being repackaged in that
direction. Yeah, but I also think that some of it is just playing the exact same song over and over
again. Like, for instance, we recently had a bunch of people trying to do a straight rights parade.
Sure. Yeah. Hurray. Yeah, and listen to this. Yeah, I just think it's quite interesting, though,
that they're going to give all these extra rights to the gays. But what about the heterosexuals?
What about heterosexual rights? Well, there's no such thing, and you know that.
Yeah. It's the stated plan of UNESCO that Bush just signed on to is to destroy
a family unit. It is called the disease that end the family. Public statement,
the manual put out by UNESCO for its diplomats. Yeah, well, just to put in a plug for the
competition on this, let's all shop at Target or somewhere else. You know what I'm saying?
I do. I do know what you're saying. Oh, why isn't there an International Men's Day, Dan?
Sure. Yeah. So here's the thing that always gets me about these bigoted shitheads. I can't handle
when they say things like what about straight rights or complain that gay people are getting
extra rights when anti-discrimination rules are put in place. They're so privileged and disconnected
from the actual reality of oppression that they don't even realize that any discrimination laws
that protect gay people protect straight people, too. If a company doesn't hire you because you're
gay, they've violated anti-discrimination laws. And if they specifically don't hire you because
you're straight, they violated the exact same anti-discrimination law. These rules are often
looked at as being extra rights for gay or lesbian employees, but it's a broader idea of
non-discrimination applied equally for all. Folks like this caller just don't understand or care
about that because he's a giant homophobe and because the very idea of people not getting a job
or being harassed by coworkers for being straight is unimaginable to him. And so it's not even
a reality in his world. Yeah. I mean, it's so simple to be like, okay, let's look at this
anti-discrimination policy. Does it protect me as well? Oh, it protects everybody. So let's say
there was a situation where I become the minority. This protects me from the majority. It's very
simple. It's so simple, but that idea of eventually I will be the one without power? Yeah. But
unreal to that. And it's just such a bizarre misinterpretation of things to be like, this
is specifically to make it so you can't make fun of gay people at work anymore. But in reality,
it's adding sexual orientation as a class of things that you can't discriminate against. Right.
Right. And, you know, the same things that protect people of ethnic minorities, also protect white
people from discrimination. It's the same thing. It's discrimination. Such nonsense.
Anyway, John Bene Ramsey died a while back. Good for him. She hurt. Oh, sorry. Sorry,
wasn't even paying attention. So this color has an interesting theory about that.
They're killing children. And that brings up another point that not many people know. And I
just found out recently also is that another name for Satan in the occult is John Bay. Take a look
at John Bene Ramsey. You know, there's something there. I believe she was a child sacrifice. No one's
ever been brought to justice for that either. We all got covered up. Right out in plain view. Thanks
for the call. All right. That is however competing. It writes a joke. There's something there.
Hey, okay. John Bene, that's the devil. John Bene, I think there's something there. Is there
something? I think I can hammer out a minute out of that. I think I can hammer a tag at least.
It's a cliche thing the comedians say is like, is that something? Is that something? Yeah.
But that's the kind of association that is required to create a very compelling theory
in the world of Alex and his very not thoughtful listeners. That sounds like something.
Is there something there? So Alex has another big story that he's promoting on this day. First,
half of the people who die in Switzerland are assisted suicides, which is not true. And the
other one is that women are becoming more pro life. They're turning against abortion. Sure.
And this just sort of a warning. This is a gross clip. The balance between pro choice women and
women who say abortion should be outlawed or severely restricted is shifting towards the
pro life side bumping that group into the majority in the debate over reproductive rights according
to a new national poll. 51% of women surveyed by the Center for the advancement of women said the
government should prohibit abortion are limited to extreme cases such as rape incest or life
threatening complications. So somebody rapes you you want to kill the child that that's real good.
Then even bigger crime. Wow, that's some barbaric shit Alex is on here. I mean, I honestly don't
think that I've ever heard him get into the specifics of his anti abortion belief. So I was
actually a little surprised that he would have that hard of a stance and that he would express
that publicly that even in cases of rape people should be forced to carry a pregnancy to term.
That's wild. I mean, it's just nuts. If somebody can't understand why explaining it isn't going
to help. So we'll move along. I mean, that's the type of when you read stories where it's like
that happens and then they get visitation rights. The rapist gets visitation rights to the kid is
like, I mean, just fucking unconscionable, unconscionable. It's that's horrifying and that's
low on the scale. No, no, no, I know, I know abuses that are no, I understand. I understand. Also,
it took me forever to track down the article he's reading, but I finally did and it's from the
Washington Times covering a survey conducted by the Center for the advancement of women.
The survey found that 51% of women surveyed quote, say abortion should be outlawed or severely
restricted. They're shifting toward the pro life side, bumping that group into the majority in
the debate over reproductive rights. There's no link to this survey and I can't find it. So I
really can't discuss too many of the specifics, but the article does say that there's a 3% margin
of error. So who knows if this is actually representative of a majority. Either way,
this is supposed to be up from 45% on the, that side in 2001. So even if I'm being a little iffy
on the specifics, because I don't have access to them, it does seem to show a trend of lowering
support for abortion access. It does appear that this trend has turned around as a Pew research
study in May, 2021 found that 59% of respondents said that abortion should be quote legal in all
or most cases, just in time for it to be illegalized. The numbers look even worse for Alex,
if you just include women, because 62% of people who were women who were surveyed said abortion
should be legal in all or most cases. Of course. If you look at Gallup's data on abortion attitudes,
it doesn't quite track with the results of this survey, because they have historical data that
goes far back on that question. Sure, sure, sure. Based on the data I can find, I'm going to guess
that this survey that's being reported on in the Washington times as an outlier in the data,
or possibly the results came from a poorly worded question or options that people could
choose. But either way, the public opinion was fairly pro-abortion access at the most of recent
history, including in 2003. I don't think that this is reflective of a tide turning.
Rasmussen says Trump is up 40 points this year. Isn't that crazy? That is interesting. It's crazy.
So Alex is, you know, he's talking about this assisted suicide thing. So of course,
Kevorkian is going to come up. Sure. I'm going to need a citation on this. Okay. Oh, and by the
way, Kevorkian lost his medical license for doing things with corpses I can't mention on the air.
He lost it in two separate states by the way caught in dark rooms with dead bodies. He is a ghoul.
So don't tell me it's about somebody's rights. This isn't about you being allowed to kill yourself,
which is bad enough. This is about killing you. No. The implication here is that Dr. Kevorkian
was fucking dead bodies and that's why he lost his medical license. I can find no evidence.
You can't find any evidence that he lost his medical license because he fucked dead bodies.
Nope. Kevorkian was licensed to practice in Michigan in California and his license in Michigan
was suspended in 1991. The Michigan Board of Medicine made this decision because they tried
to file charges against him for assisting in suicides, but it turned out that there was actually
no law against that in Michigan at the time. So the board claimed it had quote acted under a state
law that gives it the power to withdraw the license of any doctor who acts in a negligent
or incompetent manner or who administers drugs for other than a lawful diagnostic
or therapeutic purposes. Some of Kevorkian's patients had had lethal medication. Right.
Administered to them and because of that, the board claimed the authority to take
his license. Of course. He lost his license in California in 1993 and this only happened
because one of his patients was far from California. He didn't actually apparently ever go to
California and so sure. Sure. I mean, he did prior to going to Michigan. Right. Right. Well,
he had his lawyer said that like he was hadn't even been there in years. Yeah. Alex can say
lured shit like this all he wants, but he can't prove any of this. And it's just disgusting.
Yeah, it did. This is a family show. It did seem like a Kevorkian had at the very least the idea
that there was an altruistic motive behind his actions. Yeah. I have seen a documentary or two
at no point in time. Did they mention him fucking dead bodies? Man, I tried so many search terms.
Trying to find at least even Kevorkian necrophilia, even like a conspiracy blog that
had something that would give me a foothold. Right. In order to find like, oh,
this is what's being talked about. I couldn't even find anything. No. Anyway, Alex has an
exciting guest coming up. And in the third hour, I'm making Mike come on my attention.
The third hour, 30 minutes into the third hour, Mike's coming on. He apprehended the three thugs.
One of them ran off, but he apprehended him and tried to rob him. He got his gun and stopped him
in his underwear. Yeah. So Mike Hansen's coming back to tell the same story. Great story. We
got to get him back on. We got to get him back. Imagine if Carson had the same person on, on the
same week and make no mistake. He tells the exact same story, exact same story. Oh yeah. Oh boy.
Oh yeah. Well, at least it's true then, I guess you'd think. I'd like to believe it's true. Yeah,
why not? Yeah. So Alex gets a call here towards the end of the show after Mike's interview. And
this caller wants a particular audio piece that Alex has played in the past, which is a Jello
Biafra spoken word thing. Yeah. This exchange is so fucking funny. How it ends is the best.
I'll play it a couple times next week or something or maybe tomorrow.
Well, I appreciate it. I got to be honest with you. I got the CD right here. Yep. And I've been
playing this for about eight years. Yep. And the CD is scratched and messed up. I don't care about
that. Well, hold on. Well, I'm not going to air a CD that skips on air. Okay. But let me finish.
I've had this thing, I don't know, seven, eight years. The CD, I spilled coffee on the table,
got on a bunch of CDs. When I cleaned them, they all worked with this one. The CD is now shot
and so I have to go out and find it and buy it again. Now, if somebody wants to go out and buy
the CD for me and mail it to me, the sale air in the next few days, I'll never get time to go to the
to go to the record store or the CD store or the music store. And even if I did, they probably
won't have it. So if people want to hear it, how about somebody overnights it to me and then you'll
hear it? Well, if I could find it. A lot of people have got it. Yeah, I'm just saying I the CDs
messed up. That's why I haven't been airing it. Okay. Well, that's no big deal. How you doing?
Everything going okay? Oh, yeah. I'm doing all right. I just
it's like the colors worried about it. Hey, man, you're doing all right. It's like a friend. Check
it in. You've got a lot of this CD stuff going on right now. It feels like a big mess. Like
that's not it's deep into the call. It's not like this is an opening, opening pleasantries. It's
kind of like, Hey, buddy, how you doing? Hey, you all right? You doing okay? I like that. I think that
like his callers at this point in history are split down the middle of horrifying monsters
and homophobes and people who have like real pleasant conversation. They do seem nice.
They do seem absurdly nice. How you doing, man? Hey, hey, listen, I want to hear that song.
How you doing? You doing all right? So we get to the third, July third. Okay. Day before July
fourth. Hey, right, right, right. Alex is singing a song that we can tell he sings a lot in the present.
There is so much folks. I've got a stack of at least 80 articles. I counted them up 82 articles.
How do I cover them all? How do I cover this? This is unbelievable. It's 10 times worse than 1984.
I can't believe this. And Patriot acts got secret arrest, secret executions for any misdemeanor.
I mean, it's unbelievable. So I think first of all, the emotions are fake.
Unbelievable. But it's so, so interesting to see he's been just overworked
his entire career. There's just been too much to cover. It's never been, there's never been a
single day where he's like, listen, against all odds. Today is kind of a light show. Yeah. I've
only got a couple of stacks here. I think I'm going to talk to that guy. He asked me how I was
doing earlier. Casual Friday. Let your hair down. Listen, hey, you know what? Let's have a fun story
today. Sure. Never. So we get to some of the news and some more fake emotions and then a real
troubling point. Folks, it's happening. It's the exact thing with added templates
overlaid with high technology. It is unbelievable. Oh, I mean, I just, oh, man. And then they've got
this Chalibis fighters, I'm pronouncing that right, accused of lawlessness, elements of a med
Chalbis, Pentagon backed army have been accused of by American troops of lawlessness. So that's the
American troops, London telegraph. It's also MSNBC on info wars.com elements of a med Karzai's. They
got all these ways to pronounce his name. I've heard of a mod Karzai or Chalibis. They've got all
these different army have been accused by American troops of lawlessness. Now he was convicted for
300 million of bank theft. Okay. So it's really embarrassing that Alex doesn't seem to know the
difference between Hamid Karzai and a mod Chalabi. There's a big difference. They are very different
people. Huge, not just different pronunciations of the same name. Hamid Karzai was the president
of Afghanistan from 2000 to 2014. Conversely, a mod Chalabi was a Iraqi politician who would go on
to become the president of the governing council of Iraq in September 2003 is the founder of the
Iraqi National Congress political party. The headline that Alex is reading is about a mod
Chalabi who played a large role in the lead up to the Iraq war and then fairly quickly was found
out to be a bit of a con man. Yeah. Through relationships he cultivated with a group of
Republican politicians over the years from the first Iraq war onward. His political party,
the INC, was the recipient over over a hundred million dollars from our government. Much of
the bad intelligence that was used to convince the public that a war in Iraq was necessary like
the ideas of mass weapons of mass destruction and Saddam's connections to terrorism came from
people associated with Chalabi and the INC. Yeah, ice pick or whatever that fucking name was. By 2004
he'd fallen out of grace with US intelligence services who had strong suspicions that he was
sharing closely held information with Iran. The CIA had actually voiced misgivings about him and
his information all along and suspicious connections to Iran, but folks like Dick Cheney didn't care.
We want to start a war! None of this is to say that the war going to Iraq was all because of
Chalabi. Most of the members of Bush's cabinet were more than willing to accept whatever rationale
was put in front of them to get rid of Saddam and probably would have found someone else saying
what they wanted to hear had Chalabi not filled that role. Yeah. All this being said it's really
fucked up that Alex doesn't seem to know that Karzai and Chalabi are two different people.
Like he's presenting himself as the only person who can decode the secret messages behind the news
that the man won't tell you and it's clear that he doesn't even know elementary details about the
topics he's discussing. If I were Steve Pacenek I can definitely see how Alex would be a perfect
mark. Like exactly the sort of person that you'd be like I can use this guy. Easy. Yeah. And another
thing that I was thinking about two things. One, I'm really curious where Steve's at. Because I
know that Alex interviewed him for the first time in 2002 and so I know that they are aware of each
other and have talked, but he's not been on in the time that I've listened yet. I'm eagerly
awaiting that first time Steve pops up. He's a comet. He's not in the solar system yet. It
doesn't appear that yet. It doesn't appear that he's in regular rotation. Right. And then the
second thing that I've been thinking about is like this guy isn't a star. Alex, you know,
to use more celestial terms. Like he's not in 2003. Oh, do you mean this Alex is not a star? Yeah.
Okay. He doesn't have, like he's got these skills that are just intrinsic. Definitely. Yeah. But
he doesn't have the sort of showmanship that he does later on. Right. I can see why he wasn't
famous. Yeah. It wasn't like super famous. It wasn't 9-11 that necessarily rocketed him. He's
kind of boring. It is interesting to see him in what you would consider kind of that infancy of
his progression. Yeah. But that they have all these different ways of pronouncing their names.
Yeah. That idea of like, no, no, no, I didn't fuck up. It's that this human being has been like,
Hey, I'm going to trick people with a bunch of different ways to pronounce my name. Yeah. And
not only that, like the trying to cover up that you fucked up. Exactly. It actually reveals
a much larger unawareness or ignorance. Oh man. Yeah. So Alex has a guest other than Mike Hansen
who told the same story again. Did he win this time? Yes. No, no, no, no, the race. No, he won
in terms of the standoff with the Roberts. So Alex has another guest. It's guy named Red Beckman.
Okay. We've talked about him in the past. He is a weirdo who doesn't believe people should pay taxes.
He also is on here because he has the interesting theory about juries and how if you're on a jury
and you don't agree with the law, even if you think the person's guilty, you should just vote them
not guilty. Jury nullification of laws essentially is the, is the push that Red Beckman's got.
Yeah. Yeah. I can't imagine somebody from Texas thinking that. Certainly. So Red, Red's got an
interesting take on freedom of religion in the First Amendment. I think I disagree with him.
They told us that we have free speech that you can criticize the government. We have free press
so that the press can criticize the government without the government lashing out at the press.
Now, the same thing, the same purpose you see was the freedom of religion. The minister was to
be able to stand up in his pulpit and condemn government and public servants if they were
operating outside of the law. They have changed that completely until now. It's the freedom of
the Muslims, the freedom of the Buddhists, the freedom of everybody else, and, and you know,
they're just absolutely running roughshod over the principles of the First Amendment.
So I would guess that Red Beckman would have a slightly different position if the conversation
were about like an imam telling their mosque who to vote for, who to vote against. That's just a
prediction that I have. No, no, no. I think he's very consistent across all religious ideologies.
Pastors can do exactly what Red wants them to do and they can be as political as they want.
They just have to pay their taxes then. Advocating for or against specific politicians or policies
as a violation of their tax exempt status. There's no law against preachers doing targeted
political organizing. They just have to pay taxes if they do. Right. Red wants to be able to use
churches as political organizing entities because of course he does. Right. The political project
these folks are engaged in, even in 2003, is attempting to lead a Christian nationalist state.
One path toward that is associating voting a certain way with following your religion,
which is what Brad would like people to be forced into. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yep. Cool.
That, that is, that is so funny. Did they rewrite the First Amendment?
Yeah. I mean, how could he, he said, but they changed it. Like the First Amendment was supposed
to be this, but they changed it. Did they rewrite it? Well, the interpretation of it is no longer
that the freedom of religion is about, like originally the interpretation that the founders
wanted is that the religious leaders can lead campaigns against politicians. That's what it
was protecting. Yeah. But see, they could have written that one in there. Could have. Yeah.
I think he's just talking about like the interpretation of it has changed to include
like the separation of church and state being right. Right. Right. Right. But it's, it's very
clear. It's very clear. The government shall make no law restricting. Yeah. And it says religion.
Right. It doesn't say Christianity. And so you lose. Well, there's that. And then second,
it doesn't say like the government shall not stop religious leaders from talking shit. Yeah.
Yeah. And then no shit talk. Yeah. Come on, buddy. So Alex gets a call while red Beckman is on.
Red stays through most of the show and they take calls together. And this caller believes
that his phone is being tapped because he can hear noises on the phone. Interesting. And he
is pretty insistent about this. And here's what Alex has to say. Hank was called into a talk show
and when he was online, not this show, he said another show. And he heard buttons being pushed
and somebody breathing. Well, that's the call screener or the other caller. Sometimes they'll
air two calls. This happens a lot. Okay. I had another instance on that. Sir, what I'm telling
you is they do not physically physically. I'll get you have the personnel must be you've got
echelon would say 50,000 employees at the NSA. Most of them are on foreign desk watch. And they
got a few thousand domestically maximum. They can't listen to all of us or ever do anything with
the material. They're announcing their surveillance as a chilling effect. It also violates the fourth
amendment, but it's also as a chilling effect. Red, would you like to comment on this to Hank?
Well, you know, I always said that I would hope that they had my phone tapped.
Because it's probably the best source of truth that they're going to find to hear all the horror
stories, the abuse, the evil. And and it gives me a chance if they're listening, it gives me a
chance to talk to somebody else and explain to somebody else what's going on and to tell them
to have some humanity and not sell out their country for 20 pieces of silver. Right. So this
is fascinating. Like generally nowadays, whenever one of Alex's listeners calls in with a stupid
paranoid theory, Alex does absolutely nothing to reassure them that they're fine. And this is
it's not happening. He actively encourages their paranoia and lends credibility to their fears.
Here in 2003, though, this caller Hank is worried that the man is listening in on his phone calls,
but instead of saying that that's probably true, Alex argues with him about how it's not happening,
and it's probably not possible anyway. It's also interesting to me to hear that Alex, you know,
he's articulating this view about government surveillance programs. He doesn't actually
think that there's widespread spying going on. The government's just revealing that they have
spying capabilities in order to scare patriots into thinking that their calls could be listened to
at any point. So there's a chilling effect for many of his other comments, particularly more
recent ones. I don't think that this is a position that he's consistent on at all. Also, as the story
goes, Judas portrayed Jesus for 30 pieces of silver. So either Alex got that very well known
biblical detail wrong or the hypothetical feds that are listening in to Red Beckman's phone or
working at a cut rate, one of the two. I do like that, you know, because that's an evolution of that,
you know, oh, I don't mind if they listen to my calls, I've either got nothing to say or they're
going to hear some gross stuff, haha, that kind of thing. This is elevating it to I hope they're
listening to my calls so I can get the truth out right to the NSA. I can teach them a little lesson.
Can you imagine surveilling somebody and then eventually being like, you know what,
they're right about everything. That's legit what these dudes think is going on.
And I think that they have come to the conclusion that it's not smart to put people on
because when they listen to these conversations, wow, they're getting an education and and they
all they have to do is look around them and and see what's going on. And they know that we're telling
the truth. Yeah, man, they the the feds have realized that it's not a good idea to put people
on monitoring the Patriots phones because they just like, oh shit, these guys are right. That's
that is a perfect encapsulation of the shot chaser meme where I go, it would be crazy to
think this next clip. I think this. Okay, all right. Yeah. Fine. Yeah. Yep. So Alex is a guy
who famously has the documents sort of a catchphrase and a joke because he doesn't. Yes.
Oftentimes he doesn't provide these documents and this next clip is actually an interesting
instance where he's offering to give the audience a document. Sure. Now, like down for this because
there's a little bit of a catch. So if you want this report and the AP article, get out to your
friends and family. We've got a special today because it's I mean, hardly ever do this where we
send out a free document. You can just have the document if you want it. But you'll also get it
free if you get the two citizen rule books that have the Declaration of Independence,
Bill of Rights Constitution, jury nullification, the power of the jury, the grand jury,
famous quotes, a little color-covered booklet, 70-something pages, two of those two silver
dollars that are both worth $8 a piece for $24.95. Okay, that's at cost for Ted Anderson.
And you get the document for free along with it. We'll spring Ted up to three or four minutes
dragging him on the air. And I hope people will get the citizen rule books and the silver dollars
and get the free document. This is so important, especially on the eve of the Fourth of July.
How do folks do it? Well, as simple as this thought, they give us a call it.
That's fascinating. I was blown away by that twist. I mean, aren't you the tip of the spear?
Yeah. Yeah. And in order to get this document, you have to buy a couple silver dollars for Ted
Anderson. I feel like aren't you trying to get the truth out? Well, yeah, but you got to buy some
silver from Ted. Why is there a paywall behind the truth? Well, because Ted's got silver and he
wants you to buy it. What document is it? Well, I'm glad you asked. Of course. Why would I be
so stupid as to think that... Well, here is what it is. Okay, here we go. Think about this. Think
about how bad things have gotten here. And if you want the DARPA report, the declassified document,
broad, moored agency announcement, 03-15, BAA 03-15, Defense Agency Research Project,
or DARPA, run by convicted felon, Admiral Poindexter. Remember, he said last year that
everything you do, every call you make, every email you send will all be tracked by the computers
and by the government. So Alex is so like he's full of shit about this. And honestly, it's really
pathetic the way he's playing this game. It's so clearly designed to get people to order things
from Ted Anderson and Midas Resources and hopefully get them into on the phone with somebody who can
tell them all about how important it is to buy precious metals. That's the game it's being
playing. And the document is the thing that's luring them in. That's so sad. So this document
that Alex is claiming is a declassified report from DARPA is nothing of the sort. He reads off
the document identification number and that alone is a huge clue about how poorly he's covering this.
A BAA is a broad agency announcement, not a board agency announcement. The Army's
website defines them as, quote, a competitive solicitation procedure used to obtain proposals
for basic and applied research and the part of development not related to the development
of a specific system or hardware procurement. At very best, the document that Alex is selling
his audience as a declassified DARPA report is actually just a posting that a certain government
agency is taking pitches for research proposals. Yeah. Various government agencies utilize BAAs
to find people to conduct research. For instance, the Defense Logistics Agency currently has one
open to, quote, identify domestically produced materials from from possibly reliable sources
to substitute for materials produced by foreign sources or sole source producers. Sure. That's
all this is. It's DARPA posting a help wanted ad for a project that they called Combat Zones
that Sea. The posting was made on March 25th, 2003 and would close a year later. The project,
here's how they describe it. It's a project that, quote, explores concepts, develops algorithms and
delivers systems for utilizing large numbers, thousands of cameras to provide the close in
sensing demand for military operations in urban terrain. The reason for wanting to do this and
explore this research is spelled out in the BAA, quote, military operations in urban terrain are
fraught with danger. Urban canyons and abundant hide sites yield standoff sensing from airborne
and spaceporn platforms ineffective. Short lines of sight neutralize much of the standoff and
situation awareness advantages currently rendered by US forces. Large civilian populations and the
ever present risk of collateral damage preclude the use of overwhelming force. As a result,
combat in cities has long been viewed as something to avoid. However, modern asymmetric threats seek
to capitalize on these limitations by hiding in urban areas and forcing US forces to engage in
cities. We can no longer avoid the need to be prepared to fight in cities. I read over this and
I hate it, but I also understand the rationale for exploring this kind of research. It's very
specifically aimed at targeting a deployable network of sensors and cameras that can track
specific vehicles over long distances, including within urban areas. I get why it would be a valuable
thing for the government to have during the Iraq war, but I'm also not naive. And I think that the
risk associated with the potential misuse of a program like this, it's not something that's
worth the benefit that you'd get from creating it. And so I would be opposed to this. Yeah, it's
bad. Yeah, it's bad. I read a bunch of this proposal, the documents that are on the DARPA website,
and I've decided that I'm against it. However, I think that the way Alex misreports on this
proposal actually does a disservice to opposing it, because it's disconnected from reality.
If you want to take this proposal and warn people that this sort of thing has the potential to be
gravely misused in the wrong hands, and its implementation in US cities would almost certainly
violate people's personal privacy, that would be a fine thing to do. And I think it's a fine
conversation. It's just dumb to take this information and use it to insist that this is a
classified document that proves DARPA's doing this to us, because the provided evidence fails
embarrassingly short of proving that. It's counterproductive to report information this way,
but it's probably deeply unethical and exploitative to use this kind of flagrant misreporting of
this information to get people into your gold sales revenue stream. Also, I can find a ton of
speculation about this program on blogs, but for the life of me, I can't find anyone that provides
specific details about what happened past the posting of this BAA. I was able to actually
find though the project manager, Thomas Stratt, I found his LinkedIn page and weirdly, Combat Zones
that see that project is listed in his resume. So it's probably real secret stuff that he was
working on. I wouldn't put that in your CV if it was behind classifying walls.
Yeah, it's strange. Obviously, I think that this sort of program, I think that the capabilities
that you might be able to develop through it, aren't good. And they are definitely things that
could be abused. Yeah, I've seen movies. Yes. And I think that there's a valid conversation to have
around that. But I think the way Alex is doing this just is cartoon shit. I want to know what it is.
So I'm ordering silver. I'm ordering silver in order to get this free document. Well, and you're
getting an AP story about the document that proves that it's a real thing or something.
And you're also going to get like Red Beckman's weird pamphlets. Totally. Totally. What am I supposed
to do with this document then? Do I use this to win arguments with my family?
Thanksgiving? That's what it is. It's like, hey, listen, guess what? You think I'm crazy?
I bought this document from Alex Jones. And all it cost me was $25. But I also got silver.
But I also got silver. And honestly, while I was on the phone, I bought a bunch more silver.
Yeah, explain to me how that's what it's for, right? No, it's to trick people into buying more
metal from. I know. I know. But from a consumer side, that's what they must be thinking. Yeah.
Yeah. No, it's so you have the documents. You can make copies of it and distribute it.
Oh, I'm tired of looking like I'm crazy. So I'm going to tell people that I bought silver and
an innocuous document from DARPA. Yeah. Yeah. Great. Very strange. Weird. But very transparent in
terms of the intent on Alex's part. And it's just like, if you were trying to abuse your audience,
this is how you would behave. Yeah. No, the home shopping network is like, we're going to have to
put a clock on this because everybody who doesn't buy it is going to die tomorrow. You know, like
the home network is trying to sell you beef jerky. No, I know. I'm trying to sell you that
there's a worldwide conspiracy trying to kill you. Right. I'm saying that if at the end of their
clock that you were going to die, right, there's a bomb. That's exactly. Exactly. Yes. That's the
problem. Yes. So Red Beckman has some ideas about the USSR that I don't think. No, they're great.
I don't think this is. I'm sure they're great. And people just do not understand what happened.
The USSR was one of two great world powers at the point where they were dissolved overnight.
They were considered one of two great world powers and they were dissolved overnight.
And people don't understand why. And the answer is very simple. It was a false god
and it reached the point where it could no longer answer the prayers of those who pray to that false
god. Now, something that's really interesting about that is that if you were speaking metaphorically,
right, I think that there's something to that. You know, I think that there are,
governments can collapse because of inability to provide for the needs of the population. Sure.
I think if you're really generous with the metaphor, I'm fairly fine with what Red's saying.
Now, because I listen to this, I know that he's being literal. He's being very literal. Yes.
Yeah. If you wanted to say that our government worships the false god of productivity and
capitalism, totally fine. But if you want to say that the USSR broke up overnight because
they were worshiping a false god literally like fucking ball or something, then you might be
Red Beckman. You might be. You might be. So yeah, that was a little bit strange. And Alex has another
take on this and that is that like, okay, so yeah, the false god of the USSR fell and now they're
trying to do it again. Okay. Now they've moved on with it here, but they plan to have it more
sophisticated, drugging the population using propaganda that they call imperial mobilization
in the PNAC documents. Red, have you heard about the PNAC documents were Bush and Cheney
wrote public documents before 911 that they needed a terrorist attack to invade Iraq and
other countries and that they talked about imperial mobilization in a new world order?
Yes. So there's none of this is real. The PNAC document is actually titled Rebuilding America's
Defenses and it was a report released by the project for the New American Century in September
2000. It's one of the disappointing smoking guns that 911 truth folks pull out to prove that Bush
did 911. This is because this sentence appears in the text quote, the process of transformation,
even if it brings revolutionary change is likely to be a long one absent some catastrophic and
catalyzing event like a new Pearl Harbor. This doesn't prove anything, but it's super fun to
say PNAC. Now larger picture, the words imperial mobilization don't appear anywhere in the PNAC
document. They don't appear together and each word doesn't even appear in the text on its own.
Alex is mixing the PNAC document up with Zbigniew Brzezinski's book, The Great, The Grand Chest
Board, which uses an oft maligned passage, including the words imperial mobilization.
The first time the term is used, it's used three times in the text. The second time is sort of a
rephrasing of what we're going to talk about. And the second time was just saying that if Russia
was more decentralized, it would be less likely to engage in imperial mobilization. So this is
the first a good argument. The first time is the one that is often cited by conspiracy theorists
and is misused. So it's in a section about the geopolitical situation in Eurasia or the Eurasian
chess board as Brzezinski calls it. It's argued that US influence in Eurasia is exceedingly
important to world stability. Possibly more to the point and more realistically, holding the most
sway in that region is critically important to US strategic interests and the prospect of a
hostile country having more sway is really threatening to our strategic interests. Sure.
The text envisions Eurasia is split into four segments on a board. There's the west, which
includes most of Europe, where the US is said to have a foothold on the chess board. There's the
east, which is basically China, Japan, North and South Korea, as well as Southeast Asia. There's
the middle space, which is the former USSR, and then there's the south, which is mostly the Middle
East. According to Brzezinski's analysis, a situation that could be seen as a win for US
interests is one where the former USSR comes closer to the US's orbit, where the east doesn't
outright expel the United States, and where the south section doesn't end up, quote,
subjected to domination by a single player. Ooh, so close. You can kind of see the point
that's being made, and it's an interesting analysis of the sort of tensions between these
actors. Yeah, I understand. Brzezinski points out that quote, the scope of American global
hegemony is admittedly great, but its depth is shallow. That's an interesting point.
That is an interesting point. And he sees this kind of dynamic as an inevitability,
particularly in the Eurasian chessboard. Sure. Quote, the very scale and diversity of Eurasia,
as well as the power of some of its states limits the depth of American influence and the scope
of control over the course of events. That mega continent is just too large, too populous, culturally
too varied, and composed of too many historically ambitious and politically energetic states to
be compliant towards even the most economically successful and politically preeminent global
power. Yeah, I've played civilization before. They don't just like roll over, you know, it's hard
to hold. Fucking gondial Nukia. One of the large reasons this is the case is because American
influence is not based on the primary tool that has been used by empires in the past,
which is direct control. Brzezinski isn't saying that not taking over countries is a bad thing,
and that we should change it or something. That's not the case. Right. Here's the passage where
imperial mobilization comes up. Quote, it's also a fact that America is too democratic at home to
be autocratic abroad. This limits the use of America's power, especially its capacity for
military intimidation. Never before has a populist democracy attained international supremacy.
But the pursuit of power is not a goal that commands popular passion, except in conditions
of sudden threat or challenge to the public sense of domestic well being. The economic
self denial that is defense spending and the human sacrifice casualties, even among professional
soldiers required in the effort are uncongenial to democratic interests. Democracy is inimical
to imperial mobilization. Right. Anyway, Alex will often misrepresent the grant and chess board.
And I guess in this case, he got his primary sources confused, because basically the, the
imperial mobilization in the context of that quote is something that he's saying that this isn't
something that our democratic system is really compatible with, which is why it required a
far more authoritarian leaning 30 years after that to do exactly what he said a populist democracy
couldn't do. But even so, I would, I would say that the version of imperial mobilization
that's being discussed is not what we have experienced. No, true. But, but still fair enough.
Yeah. Also, this is important. George W. Bush never wrote anything that was released by the
project for a new American century. Because he was also never a member. Yeah. 10 future members
of his administration were among the 25 initial founding members of the group. And it also,
that group did include Jeb Bush, but not George W. The group did hold heavy influence in the Bush
years. But the way Alex is talking about this is just cartoonish. Also, the PNAC document ends
with a list of people who quote participated in at least one project meeting or contributed a
paper for discussion. That list does not include Dick Cheney. But what is direct attribution really
matter? Come on. Much like the case of the DARPA document, Alex does the subject he's talking about
a disservice by having no grasp of basic details and making up so much extraneous stuff as to make
his stories just more interesting. He's just trying to add a sort of flavor to it. And it's
it's changing things past the point of it even resembling reality. Right. Opposition to the
project for the new American century is impotent. If it's based on an understanding of the group
that you'd get from listening to Alex, because it's just bluster and anger leading you down a
dead end. Info wars is where healthy distrust goes to die. Right. And that's really unfortunate.
Yeah, it seems to me that so many conspiracies like boiled down to just reacting to having an
aristocracy, you know, like, of course, all of these people know each other. They're in the
aristocracy. They're connected in the same way that with World War One, that all the countries
were run by the same family, you know, like it's that kind of when you have an aristocracy, you
can easily draw parallels and connections to them because they fucking went to school together.
Yeah. And whether or not they're an actual criminal conspiracy working together, they know
each other. Sure. You know, it's another thing to where you have a greater
possibility to make persuasive appearing conspiracy theories. The greater the differences,
the gap between exactly social classes, like the gap increases, the number at the top decrease
and the distance between them increases to a point where people are just completely out of
touch with people in different social strata. And the ability to believe various things about
people that you're so disconnected from becomes much easier. You could believe that they're
eating people or whatever. In a certain in a certain sense, the same impetus that gets rich
people in trouble for saying like a milk milk is what how many is it $1,000 per gallon or four?
How much is a milk? How much is a milk? Do you give me a milk or do I ask for one?
Exactly the same as being like, oh, well, billionaires obviously drink blood.
Otherwise, why would they be billionaires? Right. You know?
Yeah. Anyway, Red Beckman has some thoughts about 9-11 that are dumb.
Okay. It's just mind boggling for the American people to hear the story of 9-1-1 and how those
airplanes were controlled by remote control. And it wasn't the hijackers that flew those
airplanes. They found the hijackers alive. Their houses and cars and credit cards paid for by the
FBI. They didn't find the hijackers alive. And I find this really interesting. The way that this
theory of the remote controlled planes, it seems very popular on info wars at this point,
which I don't think is something that he Alex would want to own. Oh, yeah. In the present.
Yeah. I don't think he would like that because it's silly and they changed. Didn't they change
the main like that one is gone from even the most I think so. Yeah. They let that one go after a
while because they were like this. Yeah. No, I don't. It's really hard for me to know what is like
still within the 9-11 conspiracy canon because a lot of stuff came and went. It's got to be the
beams. I think that's the thing that I think it's just building seven. Yeah. Yeah. That's probably
that's about it. So you've won last clip here. And I think one of the things that's really,
really challenging when you're listening to this stuff is like earlier in this episode,
we were talking about Alex trying to tell this caller, Hey, look, no one's listening to your
phone. Right. But at the same time, he's really trying to scare them. Like this is how the show
ends. And it's like, this is, this is irresponsible. What do you think would happen if New York was
like under killer bomb? Oh, if the globalist carry out a terrorist attack and then poses our
saviors, red, what do you think will happen after the next big terror attack that the military
industrial complex is going to launch? What do you think will happen? Well, I think it'll be
bigger than the last one. You go back and you, you watch the progression, you know, Ruby Ridge
and World Trade Center, Oklahoma City and 911. Everyone gets a little bigger than the last one.
But train us to accept the tyranny. Well, the CFR just said on Monday, we will be attacked again.
They say maybe on 4th of July, I hope not. Keep your eyes out for feds, folks. Yeah,
maybe tomorrow on the 4th of July, maybe there'll be a big nuke or something. Maybe there'll be
something bigger than 911 that happens. Now, you got to be paying attention. Maybe not all that
closely. But you might notice how this caller asked what would happen if New York was nuked.
Alex immediately recontextualized that as the globalists attacking us. Yeah. It doesn't even
leave room for air. Couldn't even be an actual terrorist. That possibility is not even in the
consideration. Terrorists don't exist. It's just the globalists. Right. Yeah. That's interesting.
It kind of speaks to his unwillingness to recognize events is actually having happened,
right? Which certainly has bit him in the behind. Right. Much like Kevin, the bird might.
He likes to eat the chocolate out of the out of the bush with his little beak. Yes. Yes. Kevin's
so great. But I think that Alex has gotten into trouble, obviously with the Sandy Hook. Right.
Knee jerk reaction of thinking, oh, this must be fake. Right. It's just super consistent with him.
Everything must fit into the storyline and the overarching narrative that he believes.
You can see Red reinforcing that with putting everything on a certain trajectory. Ruby Ridge,
the bombing of the World Trade Center, Oklahoma City 9 11. It's all part of a progression to him
as as a like all of these things are being done by the globalists against right the Patriots.
Right. And more specifically him. Yes. Because he is the Patriots. Yes. And that's
dumb. But it's it's definitely indicative of their their worldview is all of this
shit is intrinsically connected as opposed to like, well, there's a bunch of separate incidents of
bad stuff. You know, it's weird. I almost, I don't understand being afraid of a nuke. I almost,
like in the same way that I don't understand really being afraid of an asteroid in a like
fear sense. Like, obviously, like the reason is because the next nuke is the last one, you know,
like it's for everything. It's for the world. The human race is over. Maybe just like if we get hit
by a meteor, the human race is over. Like why worry about an extinction event? You know, you got
shit to I would be I'm worried about a cruise missile hitting Chicago because then there's
shit to deal with. People are going to have to fall. There's going to be a whole fallout. Right.
If a nuke hits Chicago, an automated automated system happens and everyone's dead. Maybe, you
know, maybe. I think that in the past, there have been discussions of absorbing a nuclear attack
or something because of this very concern of just turning into the end of the world, right
situation. And even if an asteroid hit, you wouldn't necessarily die immediately.
You might have some stuff to deal with. Sure. But what I'm saying is you might have some bad
stuff to deal with. But what I'm saying is if that happened, I'm not dealing with any of that.
I'm calling Dr. Kravorkian, baby. I'm done for assisted suicide all over. I'm not going to
melt from radiation poisoning. Well, all right. Personally, I don't understand why people fear
the Reaper. Oh, nice. Never bothered me before. So yeah, we get to the end of this and I think
Alex is a shit. That's my summation. The end. This trend of homophobia is really troubling. Yeah.
It's intensely more overt than it has been at other periods in the past. Yeah, I'm having.
I'm having very serious, like immediate flashbacks to because 2003 was when I was in
high school. I was a sophomore and junior in high school in my small Christian conservative town.
And the homophobia I remember is so intense. Yeah. And then to think about, like,
my little sister is a teacher now. And the next generation of kids that she's teaching,
she's almost a resentful of them. Like, how dare you be so accepting of people? And it's like,
I cannot believe how fucked up it was just that, just that short time ago. Yeah. I think that's
probably true a lot of times, in terms of generational gaps. And you just hope that
the progress that's being made is progress in the right direction. And it seems like,
at least on that front, it's a little better. But yeah, the other thing that I think
just sticks out to me is like, these collars are polite. They are. How are you doing? They are.
And then the, it's a hellscape. You take care. You have a good day. Yeah.
Just absurdly so, to the point where it sticks out. There's something to be said about how
a polite society enjoyed their hatred, but they were still polite about it. Well,
but the people who were calling in and were polite weren't the people who were expressing the horrible
opinions. Yeah. One guy just wanted a Jello Biafra clip. Yeah. Alex hadn't turned those people away
yet. Right. Right. Yeah. Hopefully they found greener pastors. Yeah. Anyway, we'll be back,
but until then, we have a website. We do. It's knowledgefight.com. Yeah. We're also on Twitter.
We are on Twitter. Is that knowledge? I'm just gonna fight and I go to bed, Jordan. Yes,
we will be back. But until then, I'm Neil. I'm Leo. I'm DZX Clark. I'm Darrell Rundis.
And now here comes the sex robots, Andy and Kansas. You're on the air. Thanks for holding.
Hello, Alex. I'm a first time caller. I'm a huge fan. I love your work. I love you.