Knowledge Fight - #625: December 5, 2021
Episode Date: December 10, 2021Today, Dan and Jordan check in on how Alex's Sunday shows are going these days. In this installment, Alex misreports every headline he attempts to read, impotently tries to intimidate Trump and Rand P...aul, and indicates that he thinks Luxembourg is part of Germany. 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. Dan and George, knowledge fight. I need money. Andy and Kansas. Andy and Kansas.
Andy and Kansas. It's time to pray. Andy and Kansas, you're on the air. Thanks for holding.
Hello, Alex and Mr. Tim Cullen. I'm a huge fan. I love your work. Knowledge fight.
No, no, no, no, no, no, knowledge fight.com. I love you. Hey, everybody. Welcome back to
Knowledge Fight. I'm Dan. I'm Jordan. We're a couple dudes like sit around, worship at the altar
of Celine and talk a little bit about Alex, June. Oh, indeed we are. Dan, Jordan, Jordan. I have a
quick question for you. What's up? What's your bright spot today, sir? My bright spot today, Jordan,
is at Mariano's. Okay. I could pronounce that more Chicago if you want. I was gonna say. Mariano's.
Where's Danny Cowes at? Did he break in here? I can only do real Chicago in one word.
Mariano's has a Nashville hot chicken finger that they sell the prepared food. Sure. So good.
So good. Always a good. I really enjoy it. Had it last night. So good. I'm surprised to hear
it consistently like it's not a restaurant, but the food of Mariano's is pretty good. Like,
I hear that a lot. It's very unfortunate. I can't vouch for everything at Mariano's,
but I can say that I am shocked by the consistency of supermarket chicken fingers.
When I was younger. It's a universal standard. I don't know if it's universal, but when I was
younger, the Gerbs, one of the grocery stores in Columbia, had great chicken fingers. They had
spicy and regular. Oh, so good. Yeah. I just go to Gerbs just for the chicken. Weird. Weird.
Schnucks on the other hand, the other grocery store in town, not as good a chicken. Yeah.
Growing up where I did, strangely, the best Chinese food in my tiny, miserable, all white
section of Illinois, the Jewel Osco. Sure. They had somebody there who was like, fuck it. This
place is a desert. Yeah. And they went for it, man. They made really good Chinese food. I think I
must have seen something on TV about like that, a great barbecue place that's in a gas station.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Anyway. Yeah. We're reminiscing. Weird food in strange places. Yeah. So what's
your breakfast? Weirdly enough, it is something a little bit different, but a little bit similar.
I took the Argyle Stop today, which I don't normally do anymore. It's been a long time since
I've taken the Argyle Stop. Sure. And right underneath that, it's under construction now,
but right underneath that was the bodega that I used to go to every time we recorded at your old
place. Yeah. I think I know the one you're talking about. Yeah. Yeah. So the first time I've been
in there in years or whatever. I'm shocked it made it. Me too. It looked like it was struggling
back when I used to live in the neighborhood a number of years back. That's why it's my
bright spot. Yeah. That goddamn place is still there. Wow. You are not taking that place down.
Good for them. The Argyle Stop is under construction and they're still going. I used to live over
near there a couple of years back and I would get on the Argyle Stop to go to work as I would work.
I worked way at the end or south on the red line and I would go into that bodega pretty
much every day before going into and I just walk around like you got nothing in here. They've got
nothing. It's furious every morning. I was like, I just want a little Debbie or something. I don't
know. There's nothing in there. It's amazing. It really is. Well, good on them surviving somehow.
Yep. So Jordan, today we are going to be talking about the Sunday episode, December 5th, 2021
project. Ooh, I was too early. I think you got that one. I jumped the gun. So this is interesting.
I think this episode will allow us to play a little bit of catch up on some of the narratives
maybe that we missed while we were taking our 2003 sabbatical. Sure. I know that we at least hit on
one of the very large ones and then one of the things in the media that people talked about
regarding Alex. So we'll get down to business on that. But first, let's say hello to some new
wonks. Oh, that's a great idea. So first, the Jim Garrow Institute for Probably Not Human
Trafficking. Thank you so much. You are now a policy wonk. I'm a policy wonk. Thank you very
much. Thank you. Next, Love U.K. Mo from Pat Elsie and Macaroni Jones. Thank you so much. You are
now a policy wonk. I'm a policy wonk. Thank you very much to that jazz band. I guess. Next,
Pavel Laerotich. Thank you so much. You are now a policy wonk. I'm a policy wonk. Thank you very
much. Thank you. And this person sent in in lieu of a policy wonk shout out. I wanted to give a
shout out to a charity. Our timing was way off because we were gone when this came in. So we're
a little late. But I'd like to give a shout out to the Find the Light Foundation. You are now a
policy wonk. I'm a policy wonk. Thank you very much. That's right. The charity is a policy wonk.
Yeah. Sure. Why not? Whatever. And we got a technocrat in the mix that we like to say hello
and thank you to Demon Feast's sous chef Aaron. Thank you so much. You are now a technocrat.
I'm a policy wonk. Crikey, mate. That's fantastic. Have yourself a brew. How's your 401k doing,
bro? All right. We got to go full tilt bugging 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. Thanks so much. Yes. Thank you very much. As soon as
that came out of my mouth, I'm like, I think we might have shouted that out already. I can't tell.
If we did, my bad. I mean, you know, it's so Sunday. Alex is, uh, is a weekend show. Uh-huh.
Maybe lower stakes. Who knows a little, little light on the light on the loafers there.
He starts off pretty hot. Now on Tuesday, after a federal court ordered the FDA to release
the first little drip of hundreds of thousands of pages of documents, we reported on the first
30 pages of documents that came out. And those first 30 pages of documents were a total criminal
admission of the FDA in just the first beginning of the so-called vaccine for COVID-19 with
Pfizer, causing thousands of deaths. And they confirmed and knew and covered it up. Well,
guess what? Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, they're all censoring even medical doctors trying to link
to those documents. I mean, they all deserve to go to prison. The executives, every single one of them.
And the word is Jack Dorsey, not saying the guy's a great guy, but he wouldn't go along with it. So
he had to step down. Right off the bat. Like it's super fun how Alex just decided to make up a
story about why Jack stepped down, uh, like at Twitter. So weird that just happens to fit in
perfectly with the dumb conspiracy theories Alex is pitching. It's so convenient that he did it at
that time. So it really helps him out. It was nice of Jack to do that. Yeah. The reality is that it's
more likely that the investors in Twitter had put pressure on Jack to decide to either step down as
the CEO of Twitter or square since they're both gigantic businesses. As NBC news reported, prior
to Jack stepping down, he was quote, the only person to be CEO of two public companies with
market valuations of greater than $5 billion. That's nuts. Oh, that's no good. Yeah. No, there
have been longstanding tensions between the investment firms that are on Twitter's board
and Jack. And this feels like a lot more kind of that sort of thing. Yeah, that would make
sense. And if I were Jack, uh, uh, like around now, uh, and I had to choose like which company to
stay the CEO of, I would totally go with square. Oh yeah. Payment processing is way better than
the load of shit people running Twitter have to deal with, uh, which is a lot of it is their own
fault and there are problems with their own creation, but still it's a headache. Yes, true.
Or maybe the globalists wanted Twitter to censor FDA documents and Jack said no. So he stepped
down as the CEO of a $5 billion company just for the principle of it. And he decided to stay mum
on the topic. Could be that that is certainly a possibility for many of the free speech warriors
lately who have quit or stood up to the censorship. Generally they've done so very quietly and often
with a kind of stayed atmosphere. Sure. You know, I can't wait for him to go on and talk about how
he was forced out of Twitter because he wouldn't allow the censorship or blah, blah, blah. So
I'm certain that these FDA documents that Alex is talking about aren't being censored on Twitter
and you can link to them just fine. I would guess that maybe Twitter could be blocking links to
blog posts about the documents on sites like natural news and other things that have been
already kicked off because of the bullshit. Yeah. So here's what's going on. A group called the
public health and medical professionals for transparency. They filed a FOIA request for the
FDA to release all documents related to the Pfizer vaccine and then sued them when the production
schedule wasn't what they had requested. This case is a little complicated though. And the FDA
have suggested that they might need a deadline of 55 years from now to fully produce the requested
documents, which is approximately 329,000 pages worth of material. Okay. That might have been
asking for too much. Yeah. The FDA has asked, can you narrow down your request? I mean, that would
make sense. Yeah. Because they want everything. Give them everything. So this is an almost
comically long amount of time, but this is a huge amount of documents. And in order to release
them to the public by way of FOIA, they need to review all of them to redact all sorts of things
like Pfizer's confidential business information and any possible identifying information about
the participants in the clinical trials. This is a huge undertaking. And I don't know if it takes
55 years to get through all that, but I can see why it wouldn't take four months, which was the
initial request length from the group bringing the suit. I like it. I want them to go ahead with
the 55-year-old. This is like the Voyager now. This is like we're sending it off into space.
Who knows what'll come back with 55 years from now? Could be anything.
According to Alex, we'll all be dead. Yeah, see? So who cares? Go for it. 55 years is good for me.
So in a November 15th pleading, the FDA requested that they release batches of the initial documents
on November 17th and December 1st. And thereafter, they quote, proposed to process and produce the
non-exempt portions of responsive records at a rate of 500 pages per month. This is a tough
situation. And I can kind of see both sides of it. And I think that probably 500 pages a month is
fine. I don't know. So I was really interested to see what was going on here. And I needed to
learn a little bit more before I could really, you know, put my foot down somewhere. Okay.
Immediately reading over some of these court documents, the way the plaintiffs, the group of
doctors, the way they're presenting themselves, didn't sit quite right with me. It's where I was
thinking they was going to go. In their initial petition to the court, they seem to be attempting
to come off as if their concerns, they were based on a desire to provide information that
will quiet vaccine skeptics. Releasing this data should also confirm the FDA's conclusion
that the Pfizer vaccine is safe and effective, and thus increase confidence in the Pfizer vaccine.
If that were the motive that someone were following, I can totally understand that,
but there's just a tone in their second filing. The joint status report that makes
me think that this group might be a little bit anti-vaccine. And if we don't get it,
if we don't get it, we'll kill all of you. There are some strange bits like them insisting that
the FDA produced the documents in 108 days since that's how long it took from when Pfizer began
producing documents until the vaccine was licensed. It's a little snarky. Now we're getting those
assholes. There you go. Another part reads, quote, in any event, the FDA should welcome making these
documents available to the plaintiff if it's confident in the analysis and review it conducted.
The fact that it has fought tooth and nail and taken such an absurd and unconscionable position
of waiting until the year 2076 to complete the production further heightens the grave need to
have these documents produced forthwith. Oh no, they did not write forthwith. Oh god, damn it.
That just doesn't seem like a sincere position. It kind of seems like something you would say
if you were fully aware that the demand you're making is impossible. You have no expectation
that it'll be met and you're kind of just prepared to use that as proof that there's a cover up going
on. That's kind of the vibe I was getting. I mean, you're not tossing around forthwith unless you
also have a familiarity with Admiralty law and that's kind of what I'm vibing with around here.
There's like words that in college, I think it was like an English professor who was talking
about like there's words you should just never use outside of an English class. Just don't do it.
Like here to four. Yeah, exactly. No, don't do it. Don't say it out loud. Fourthwith is another
one, I think. I love writing here to four, but I'm not going to say it out loud to another human
being that would be a nightmare. I'm now dreading that I've probably said it a bunch of times on the
podcast. So there's a list of... We'll edit those out fourthwith. So there's a list of members of
this group on their website and I started scanning it and immediately an interesting name popped up.
Paul E. Alexander is in the group and he was also a scientific advisor to Michael Caputo,
Trump's assistant secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services.
Just being involved in the Trump administration alone isn't damning, but Alexander's influence
in the COVID response that happened was pretty serious and it gives me some pause about this
group given that he's a member. In December 2020, Politico released internal emails from the Trump
Health and Human Services Department and some of them were pretty fucked up. On a fourth of July
2020 email, he sent this email to Caputo where he suggested that the country needed to open up and
that, quote, infants, kids, teens, young people, young adults, middle-aged with no conditions,
have zero to little risk, so we use them to develop herd immunity. We want them infected.
In another email from that day, he suggests people spread COVID to each other intentionally,
like having measles parties. In later days, the Trump administration figures like secretary
of HHS, Alex Azar, would try to play down Alexander's involvement in the pandemic response,
but there are a number of reasons to doubt that. In another email, this one sent to CDC director
Robert Redfield, Alexander tried to stop the release of the morbidity and mortality weekly
reports because he felt that they were being used to, quote, hurt the president. He went on to demand,
nothing to go out unless I read and agree with the findings how they CDC wrote it and I tweak it
to ensure it's fair and balanced and complete. Oh boy. Yeah, nothing goes out unless I tweak it.
Hey, you know what Alan's saying is? We can't print out the QuickBooks file, okay? We have to
send it to Alexander before we can. So this doesn't stop here. In other released emails,
you can see Alexander attempting to control what Fauci was saying publicly about the pandemic,
particularly about the possibility of children being infected. He was fired shortly after these
emails were released, which makes sense. After he got fired, he seemed to strike a bit of a
combative tone, quote, in a lengthy email to the Globe and Mail on Wednesday and a subsequent
interview, Dr. Alexander accused the CDC of quote, generating pseudo scientific reports and said he
was more qualified to analyze COVID-19 data than the 1700 scientists at the agency, quote,
none of those people have my skills. Dr. Alexander said I make the judgment whether this is crap.
It's starting to feel like delusional narcissists just kind of meet at parties or something and
then overthrow governments. Well, if this guy, he met Michael Caputo when Caputo was a radio host.
There we go. He was a guest. Come on, baby. There we go. Let's give him a job in the president's
administration. That's what I want. More radio guests. And his fingerprints are behind the scenes
on a ton of things that don't look great in hindsight about the pandemic and its response.
And he was only an advisor to an assistant secretary at the HHS. And he's a member of
this group that sued the FDA. Great, great, great, great. But one sketchy apple doesn't
mean that the whole group should be seen as suspicious. So I kept looking. Another member
of the group is Dr. Ira Bernstein. He's a family doctor from Toronto who's pushed a largely supplement
and lifestyle approach to avoiding or reducing the danger of COVID. Great. He's kept a largely
low profile, but he did fly to Rome this year to speak at the International COVID Summit,
which was packed to the gills with notable anti-vax proponents and ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine
pushers like Alex's buddy, Dr. Zelenko, and past Infowars guest Pierre Corey, who was the guy who
went on Rogan's show along with Brett Weinstein to promote ivermectin. Ira Bernstein may not be as
big of a name on this as people on this lineup, but he knew what this event was about and he flew
across the world to be a part of it, which is about all I need to know about his judgment. Yeah.
Also, I watched his speech from Rome and in it Bernstein recommended ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine,
including citing both as preventative medications people can take as prophylaxis for COVID-19.
Awesome. Awesome. Also, co-signers Lex Luthor, the Joker, whoever Aquaman fought,
the guy who was a black manta, was that him? Yep. They're all in there.
There's some other people who have some real serious, maybe not as overt, but serious,
kind of like anti-vaxing, leanings. Then there's a weight loss doctor and a urologist.
Another interesting character is Dr. Lionel Bassoon, who seems to be most notable for being
deeply involved in injecting Wall Street traders with testosterone to quote,
give themselves an edge over their professional rivals. I, that's my dream job. That is my dream
job to be a nut job with the last name Bassoon, just scamming rich people with injections that
might fucking kill them. Who cares? But it could also, it could also make them real man. Oh,
they've lost their fucking minds. They're all screaming nonsense at each other.
Yeah. So after I got to Bassoon, I was like, I've decided I've seen enough. I can conclude
that these people are not above board and I do not trust their motives at all. This is a group
that I find sketchy. Come on. Hey, man, at the Goldman Sachs lunch, you guys, you guys have been
to see Dr. Bassoon recently? I have motherfucker. No, it's a trombone. I saw Dr. Trombone.
I saw Dr. Trombone. My woodwinds are a lot smaller than yours. So look, even, even with all that
said, yeah, like, even if I don't trust that group, they're still putting out real foyer requests
for real documents. So that's good. Yeah. More information is a positive thing and the documents
themselves can be assessed outside of whatever they end up using them for this group, whatever,
whatever spin they're going to put on. You guys can be dicks about it, but I'm still happy if we
get public documents and it doesn't matter to me. Trust your interpretation. But if it's how the
documents end up becoming public, that's more information. Hurrah. So at this point, there
are seven documents up on their website and two of them are text files that don't really provide
any information. I know from following the conspiracy world as I do that the document that's the most
interest to what Alex is talking about, and he ends up talking about very briefly in this episode,
though it's his top story. Sure, sure, is a document titled 5.3.6 post marketing experience
dot PDF. This document is an analysis of the quote cumulative post authorization safety data,
including us and foreign post authorization adverse events reported adverse event reports
received through the 28th of February 2021. Much like we talk about with the various data that is
consistently misused by anti vex propagandists, the data that underlies this report is also limited
in its application. The report specifically points out that this data cannot be used to determine
incidence rates of various potential adverse events, and is useful primarily just as a means of
signal detection, which is again the same thing with various right. In addition, many of the
reported adverse events come with incomplete medical information about the patients, making
it essentially impossible to gather follow up information about their specific cases. And for
these and other reasons, this kind of reporting of adverse events is unhelpful and determining if
something is caused by a particular drug. It provides information, just not that information.
So in their data set, there were 42,086 case reports of which 25,379 had been medically
confirmed. So almost 40% of them were not confirmed cases and don't really know if the
person actually had what they're reporting they had. And so get those, get those adding maybe,
maybe not. Yeah, maybe not. No, for sure. So the reports they received were then analyzed and
evaluated in terms of how much of a signal the data was coming in could represent, which would
then continue to guide how the monitoring would proceed. For example, they found that based on
the reports anaphylaxis was an important threat they identified. They reviewed the cases and found
that the reports coming in quote, did not reveal any significant new safety information, because
there's already an awareness that there would be some potential allergic reaction
that people could have that they have to any medication. And the vast majority of the cases
had resolved. Of the 2,958 potentially relevant events that they identified, there were nine
fatalities, but quote, although these patients experienced adverse events that are potential
symptoms of anaphylaxis, they all had serious underlying medical conditions. And one individual
appeared to also have COVID-19 pneumonia that likely contributed to their deaths. So it's very
difficult to have the number of nine fatalities within this anaphylaxis data set. And you could
look at that and say, well, people had nine people had anaphylactic responses to the shot,
and it killed them. But the reality is with the greater amount of data that they have,
there's no proof that the possible anaphylactic reaction that they had contributed to what ended
up killing them. So that's the kind of vibe of this report. Looking over the document,
if anything, I feel more confident that the folks who released the vaccine are doing due
diligence in terms of monitoring post-marketing safety issues. That's not Alex's take on it.
And I get that anytime a document gets released, he needs to find a way to make it the smoking
gun he's been looking for all along. But this isn't it. The other three documents that are
currently available on the group's website are long lists of clinical sites and the CVs of
researchers involved, which I don't think is getting nearly as much traction with folks like
Alex. So it's not fertile ground to misinterpret things. Come on, you can just grab LinkedIn
pages and put them on your website and call it documents. It's not hard. You get more than the
LinkedIn page, man. You got whole like resumes of people. You got like email addresses. You
gotta watch out. They could harass these people. Great. So I took a little longer on this one
and like got into some of the stuff because I know that this document was a big deal for Alex
and some of the time that we skipped over. So I wanted to make sure that we addressed this as
well as the group that's behind the suit. I get a sense, particularly if the FDA does end up
releasing 500 pages of documents a month, that we're going to be getting new imaginary bombshells
about this for a long time coming. I think this is going to be something we'll have to deal with.
Yeah. I mean, it's going to be a very annoying thing. My guess is, and that's only because
this is how it's almost always worked is that if the FDA does actually start releasing 500
documents a month, they will then feel obligated to work to get through those 500 documents a
month. Do you mean, do you mean Alex? Yes. And they will quit. And then we won't have to worry
about it for much longer. I don't know, man. I don't think that anybody like Alex is too plagued
by the feeling of needing to work. That's true. That is true. I think that they've made peace with
that quite a while ago. But that's also kind of what I'm saying. There's no way that they're
going to stick with it. All you have to do is read a headline and make something up. What are you
sticking with? Exactly. It's so easy. It's essentially a problem. That's true. Other people
will write a headline for you. That's fair. That's fair. That's what you got Harrison Smith for.
What an asshole. So, man, there's no debate now because all these documents are public. There's
no debate that this is meant to kill you. Wait, nine out of, hold, nine? Nine in the anaphylaxis
group. There's a little over a thousand actual fatalities or deaths that are reported in this
document. And obviously not all of them, maybe none of them can be definitively proven to have
been a result of an issue. The vaccine and this data that's available shouldn't be used in that way
anyway. And in breakdowns of the individual things like the anaphylaxis, they have the instances of
death and there's other mitigating circumstances. All of which is to say that you have confirmed
this is the smoking gun that it's going to kill. Well, for Alex, yes. And before we get to this,
he says there's no debate. I would say that. You just ended the debate. There's a little bit of
debate. But there is no debate. There is no discussion that we're being censored. There's
no debate that the government documents and their own admissions are. This doesn't protect you. It
erases your immune system. It makes you twice as likely to contract and even more likely to die
what they call COVID-19. And that it was all a premeditated plan. So we are here in the middle
of this now. How do you operate if you think that's true? I don't know. I don't know.
Like the implications of it are staggering. I mean, you'd have to feel completely unsafe at
literally every moment of your life. What can you trust anyone to do? How could you go to the DMV?
Right. How could you just get a driver's license whenever grocery store? Yeah, why? They're killing
you. You think they're going to give you a non poisoned potato? I mean, do they even make
non poisoned potatoes anymore? The level of fear you'd have to be living in is just unfathomable.
And then like if you're in that completely paranoid headspace, how do you not start thinking like,
oh, obviously, if all this is true, then Alex is clearly here to pacify me.
How do you not turn that paranoia and skepticism on the very person who's supposed to be the
only person you can trust? Right. Everyone's murdering me. Why am I still sitting here listening
to this asshole tell me not to do anything but give him money? Right. And how could he be here
as the only voice you can trust? No, no, you can't trust anybody. Nope. I think there's just
one person you can trust. No, please. That's crazy. Yeah, I just got into a weird space thinking
about that. It's gonna be horrible to live in to think this is true. Yeah, I mean, just
if you're if you're that influenced, you're either bored or you're just trapped. So Alex has a
little bit of news about Klaus Schwab and I'm going to need a citation on this.
They plan to do the bait and switch though to go. Oh, that's the US government. That was capitalism
did that. Klaus Schwab brags. They're going to blame their great reset crisis they trigger on the
existing institutions. Then they'll order those institutions they control to march out and attack
the public. The public will destroy those institutions. And now the globalists come in
to a failed state take control. That is the equation.
That is the plan. So do you do you understand the plan? I mean, first of all,
I have no idea where he's taking this from. Yeah. But do you understand the plan? So the plan is
Klaus Schwab is like, Hey, guys, this is totally capitalism's fault. And everybody's like, Hey,
man, we got to take down capitalism. So everybody takes down capitalism. And then the globalists
are like surprise. It was capitalism that was keeping globalism from killing all of you,
even though capitalism was also killing you. Now we're just going to do it better.
Maybe I think the more that's possible. That seems like what I was understanding. See, here's
here's kind of how I hear. Okay. What do you got? So Klaus Schwab is up here like a bond villain.
Sure. And absolutely. He's got the accent for it. Sure. He's saying, ha, ha, ha, great reset.
Destroy everything. Right. Right. So it destroys everything. And then he tries to pin the blame
on capitalism. Right. But this only prompts like the Patriots of people like Alex to get in the
street and start to start a shooting or something. Sure. Against the forces of the state that are
sent out to attack them or whatever. Okay. They have a little bit of a battle. And the Patriots
end up winning. But in the process, it's a failed state. So then the globalists can come in and
be like, woo, America. Now we own it. You know, it's real fun. I think the most fun part of being
a Patriot has to be the part where you assume you'd win in a fight against the state. Like as a leftist,
not once do I assume that I'm going to win in a fight against the state. I assume the state's
going to murder me twice over. If I come if I look at the state the wrong way, they're coming for
it. And you're talking about like Michael Ian Black. Yeah, exactly. The whole thing. The show
Walters. Everybody who's done wet on summer. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah, I it is. It is an interesting
aspect of their ideology that's kind of baked into so much of the literature that comes like
unintended consequences. Totally. Like a lot of the stuff that they they sort of grow up on this
this fantasy ideology has to do with like, well, the only reason we're not in charge is because
we're too nice. Yeah, exactly. Nice. We're holding back and we allow you to oppress us. The second
we stand up, you're all dead. You're all fucking dead. Yeah, every one of you. Yeah, it is. It is
a little bit of hubris. That's just a little. Yeah. So look, you could save your own life.
But okay, but then somebody got to do. Oh, are you ready? No, ready to do it? I'm not sure. You
know, I've known John Bowne. He's worked here more than 10 years, and I've never seen him put out a
report as powerful as he put out today that's on Band-Aid video. Not so powerful because of the
time we live in, just like my broadcast or more powerful they've ever been. It's not me. It's the
time we live in. That makes fair point. It's only four minutes, 55 seconds long. I suggest if you
want to fix things and you don't want to be in a collapsed civilization that you go get that to
share it like your life depends on it, because let me give you a little newsflash. It does.
That's right. Your life depends on sharing a John Bowne video. If my life depends on that,
kill me. There's a lot of people who didn't even know who John Bowne is. They're screwed.
I mean, this is a little bit like whatever the Europeans brought Christianity over to the
new world. You know, it's like, if you don't know about Jesus, you can't be guilty of his original
sin. Right? If I don't know about John Bowne, I can't be killed for not sharing this four minutes
at 57. I regret to inform you that this is not that same kind of situation. God damn it. Yeah.
It's everyone's responsibility to know about John Bowne. In the beginning, was the bound.
In the big, in the bound, getting in the bound, getting was the word. Yeah. Also, I'm going to
dispute whether or not Alex's broadcasts are more powerful now. That's the last episode we did.
He ended his show with a half hour infomercial for his phones that he sells.
Don't know if this is hard hitting stuff. Not great. So one of the big things that happened in
the time in between our, when we were on our sabbatical in the past was that Tucker Carlson
came out and had some words about Alex. Yeah. It said very nice things. And I want to,
I want to talk about a little bit of it because Alex plays the clip on his, his show.
He seems to be wanting to do everything except his job. He plays a lot of clips.
Doing your job is very hard. I respect that. I respect that. I mean, it's a Sunday. Come on.
Yeah. It's Lord's Day. It's the bounds day. Sure. Boundsgiving just passed. So here is
the first piece of this clip of Tucker. And I got to say, like, this is amazing. Like,
there's no way he's this stupid. So whatever else this is, don't let them lie to you. This is not
a fact finding effort. This is a highly obvious attempt to punish critics of the Democratic
Party. And he's talking about the January 6th. Yeah. Yeah. Of course. And for months,
that's exactly what the committee has been doing. Using the pretext of January 6th,
the Biden's Justice Department has indicted former Trump advisor Steve Bannon. What?
What was his crime exactly? Oh, talking about election fraud on a radio show. That's illegal
now. There's legitimately no way he's that stupid. That's so intentional. That is fucking
unreal. Yeah. And it's got to be embarrassing. Yeah. Like, to imagine informed people hearing
that and being like, Oh, that's what you're reporting. Yeah. It's wild. He knows damn well
that Bannon got indicted for refusing to comply with the subpoena. Tucker also knows that the
subpoena wasn't just issued because Bannon talked about election fraud on his radio show.
The subpoena letter is publicly available and has been for months, and it's super clear why
the committee wanted to talk to him from the letter. Quote, the Senate committee has reason to
believe that you have information relevant to understanding important activities that led
to and informed the events at the Capitol on January 6th, 2021. For example, you have been
identified as present at the Willard Hotel on January 5th, 2021, during an effort to persuade
members of Congress to block the certification of the election the next day and in relation to
other activities on January 6th. It's true that the letter does also mention how Bannon made some
comments that seem a bit prescient on an episode of his podcast that was released on January 5th.
On the episode, he said, quote, all hell is going to break loose tomorrow. Just understand this,
all hell is going to break loose tomorrow. It's going to be moving. It's going to be going,
it's going to be quick. So many people said, man, if I was in a revolution, I would be in
Washington. Well, this is your time in history. It's all converging. And now we're at the point
of attack tomorrow. And all I can say is strap in. You've made this happen. And tomorrow it's
game day. Man, you know, I really don't think he knew in advance that it would go as shit as it did.
And he was just using bombastic language. Probably God, that is the wrong day to use
bombastic language. Yeah, right? Yeah, that's the wrong day to do it. He got he had to have seen
shit happen on the sixth and just go, fuck. I bet on the six that didn't remember what he said on
his body. So Tucker's bullshit act of pretending to not even know the basic details of the stories
he's talking about is way less convincing than Alex's. Like Alex seems legitimately unaware of
most every detail of the story he's covering. It just, you know, skims a headline or whatever.
But Tucker is feigning ignorance to allow himself to make incredibly stupid arguments that would
be impossible to make otherwise. And it's just embarrassing. He should like, it's more embarrassing
than the bow tie. Yeah, there's no way that you like it's come on. There's we've lived through
too much propaganda at this. The entire world has lived through so much propaganda that you
should have to at least try harder than that. Well, I mean, like, let's let's take just like the
really basic part of that clip, right? So he's saying or he's asserting that it's outrageous
that the committee would want to arrest Steve Bannon just for talking on a radio show that
would be outrageous. Now, if you're a listener of Tucker's stuff or a viewer, you're like,
is that true? I can't believe that. That's terrifying. And you went ahead and looked it up. You could
very easily find the letter and see that no, that's not the reason that they want to talk to him.
That's not an accurate portrayal of what happened. And then you'd have to ask yourself,
doesn't he have a team? This is on Fox News. There's no way that this accidentally slipped
through. No, this is a choice. Yep, especially considering that if you've been watching Tucker
show, you know exactly why he got a subpoena. Like he's gone through all of the reasons that
you would subpoena somebody like Steve Bannon for the January 6th that by his defense of Steve
Bannon, he is revealing all of the reasons. So he also defends to Roger Big, Big Roger Stone.
Wow, that's balls. That's not good. That's not a good sign if it's okay to publicly defend him.
Yeah. Well, I mean, unless you're defending his hats.
They've even subpoenaed Roger Stone yet again. Where was Stone on January 6th? He was in a hotel
room as the Capitol was being breached. He had literally nothing to do with it, but it doesn't
matter. He's criticized Joe Biden. He could be going to jail again. So again, this is arguing from a
false premise. Yeah, he's pretending that the January 6th committee wants to subpoena Roger to
get information about his direct involvement with breaking into the Capitol. Tucker's doing that so
he can brush it away with a deflection like Roger wasn't even at the Capitol, and then he can move
on. This is important to do because if he were required to face reality of what the committee
has subpoenaed Roger about, it would take a while for him to explain it and Roger would come out
looking not so innocent. Spoiler alert, they want to talk to him about his involvement and stop the
steal and how weirdly multiple members of the oathkeepers that he paid to be his personal
security guards were reportedly involved in breaking into the Capitol. Tucker would rather
not unpack that and I understand why. I wouldn't want to do that either if I were him. It's too
messy. I don't like it. I mean, defending Roger. Roger went away in the public for a good while
as far as somebody that you could even on the right defend publicly. You know, they were like,
Roger's a great guy, but then they would just let it go. You know, they would just leave that on
the side. Well, I think I think the pardon pushed things a little too much. Yeah, exactly. Yeah.
Yeah. The fact that he's now coming back up as somebody who's like, why is anybody picking on
Roger Stone? So many reasons. So many reasons. You shouldn't even be allowed to say Roger's name
without like a long list of crimes popping up next to your name scrolling down like a credits.
Decades long menace, Roger. Exactly. Yes. That should be his epithet title. That's the only way.
Now. So now we get to Alex's part in the Tucker commentary. And this is just sad.
Now the committee has decided to shut down one of the most popular journalists on the right,
Alex Jones. Yes, journalist. Jones is often mocked for his flamboyance. But the truth is,
he has been a far better guide to reality in recent years. In other words, a far better journalist
than say NBC News national security correspondent, Ken Delanian or Margaret Brennan of CBS. Alex
Jones never bought the Russia hoax, not for a second. And if Jones sat down with Tony Fauci,
he would ask him real questions just as journalists are supposed to do. He wouldn't just
slobber all over him. But Alex Jones makes fun of Joe Biden. So the January 6th committee is
threatening him with prison. That's a really interesting way for Tucker to discuss Alex's
journalistic merits. I'm going to try and take this piece by piece. Go for it. So the first
claim that he's making is that Alex is often criticized for his flamboyance. Oh, yeah. That's
not true. It's the only thing that we positively affirm him towards. If the problem with Alex was
just a matter of flamboyance, this podcast wouldn't exist. Like David Bowie or Prince or Elton John,
they could be described as flamboyant, a little flamboyant. Yes. But with Alex, it's not flamboyance,
it's insanity. The things that Tucker is passing off as flamboyance are things like Alex fake crying
on air, thinking about all the abortions that have happened in the country. It's things like
Alex discussing in great detail how he's stomped multiple people's guts in. And when they do that,
it takes a person a long time to die. This is flamboyant. Yeah. People take on him for that.
Come on, man. Also, a larger problem that people have with Alex than that, I guess you could call
it maybe showmanship, is the fact that he's constantly wrong about things and he just makes
up shit all the time. He basically just skims headlines, then improvises what he imagines
the story is about and how it connects to his larger conspiracies. It is a much bigger problem
than any kind of imagined flamboyance. Okay. So maybe we call him a journalist, maybe we call
him a guide, maybe we blur the line between the two. So we don't have to worry about that
fancy truth that you keep talking about, Dan. So the next point that's interesting is that Tucker
seems to think that the fact that Alex was super combative against the idea that Trump's campaign
in Russia had any connections is the primary variable that makes him a great journalist
story, quote, guide to reality. I feel like there's a larger picture than that one story. And even if
you just limit to that, Alex was super wrong about Trump and Russia's story constantly.
He is right, though, that the hyperbolic claim that Trump was an agent of Russia wasn't correct.
And I guess Alex, knowing that makes him an awesome journalist. Wait, so does that mean that
Alex was also correct about Trump being a frontman for consortiums on the East?
East Coast? Yeah, yeah, maybe. Well, I guess, I guess Tucker will report on that next too.
I would be interested to hear his take. Yeah, yeah. The other thing that qualifies Alex as a
real good journalist is that Tucker thinks that if he sat down with Fauci, he would ask him real
questions instead of being a sycophant. I have some terrible news for Tucker about what would
happen if Alex interviewed Fauci. It would begin and end with Alex accusing Fauci of crimes against
humanity, and he probably tried to put Fauci under citizen's arrest at some point. I'm sure
the devil would come up and as opposed to asking questions, Alex would yell tidbits of conspiracy
memes he remembers at Fauci and try and plug his website. He would also make fun of Fauci using
Fauci's voice. Yeah, probably. Do an impression. He would do an impression for sure. You'd accuse
him of his last name, meaning the sickle. Yeah, he would call him Mengele all the time. At least
a few times. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I've seen Alex in interview settings enough times with folks like
Pierce Morgan or Andrew Neil on the BBC to know that Alex would treat this less like an opportunity
to ask real questions and more of an opportunity to do a publicity stunt. That's what he does. And
he would treat Fauci so obsequiously while not on air. Probably. Yeah, he would be like, man,
I can't believe that you came to do my show. This is great. I can't wait to talk all the time.
Anyway, you're the devil. You're making a lot of money. Let's do a tour of the country. Do
the debate. Let's just go across. We'll just fill out theaters, man. We'll just fill up theaters.
I know a guy with a caravan. Listen, you're famous and I'm not at all sycophantic.
Finally, Tucker asserts that the committee is threatening Alex with prison because he makes
fun of Joe Biden. That's dumb. And it's not true. But really, what all this screams to me is that
Tucker doesn't watch Alex's actual work and is kind of banking on the hope that not many people
in his audience do either. What he's saying is laughable to me because I know what Alex's show
is like, how he interacts with information, how he's flamboyant to times. But if you know, like,
if all you know about Alex is the little glimpses you get from times he's on like
Rogan's podcast, you might get tricked by this kind of bullshit. But anybody who knows, like,
has listened to his show at length, not just little clips or whatever. You know,
boy, this is not accurate. No, no, Christofascist theocracy is not is not flamboyance.
So Alex, we get back to him. And there's some news out of Luxembourg that there's some people who
are having a bit of a protest against COVID restrictions, mask rules. This is one thing
that bothers me about the far right news media. I don't care if anybody in Luxembourg is doing
fucking anything. Wow. That's harsh harsh, but it's true. I don't agree with you. Why are you
grabbing it? Why are you grabbing an article from Luxembourg at me? I'm just not air today.
I don't. I don't agree with you. I think people around the world, they're all their concerns
are all valid. But well, yes, I mean, yeah, Alex doesn't really know what Luxembourg is. Okay.
You're a TV viewer. We're showing you footage of Luxembourg, Germany, where thousands of people
live in Luxembourg, Germany. This is why this is why we can't do this. We can't even have Luxembourg.
He's a guide to reality. You know, this Alex Jones, Luxembourg. Yeah, Luxembourg is a country.
Okay. It's not a city of Germany. All right. It's an easy mistake to make, though. You know,
it's a tiny country and maybe Alex just misspoke or whatever. Interestingly, though, Luxembourg
was occupied by Germany in both World War One and two. So it's entirely possible that Alex just
thinks that the country is still part of the Reich. Sure. Like he's called Zimbabwe Rhodesia a number
of times. Why not? It's not impossible that he actually just thinks. No, I'm sure that Nazi
third Reich is still in action. I'm sure Armenia is still in the Soviet Union. I have no doubt.
And he, I swear to God, he says Czechoslovakia still probably. Yeah. So Alex has an interesting
source to get to. There is a guy who's an archbishop who's come up on the show before and
he's got a new letter that he's written and a new interview that's who, who, who boy. Okay. So here's
a gateway pundit article that I'm going to ask Jamie White, our great writer that's out there
right now to add the live show feed article today so that you can all go read it. Those who resist
the new world order will have the help and protection of God. Italian Archbishop Vagano says
you say which one of the Catholic Church or the institutions, but this guy's telling the truth
and Christ said you judge a free by a tree by its fruits. You judge a free by its toots. You judge
a free by its toots. So this dude's a retired archbishop who I guess has decided to create a
late life career in sending letters out to talk shit. He's written a few that Alex has talked
about in the past and we've discussed them when he has and now I guess he's back on his bullshit.
This new letter starts off sounding like it's an appeal to all people in the world to band
together to fight off the new world order in their evil COVID power grab. That's great.
Quote this global coup d'etat deprives citizens of any possibility of defense since the legislative,
executive and judicial powers are complicit in the violation of law justice and the purpose for
which they exist. It's a global coup d'etat because this criminal attack against citizens
extends to the whole world with very rare exceptions. It's a world war where the enemies
are all of us, even those who unwittingly have not yet understood the significance of what is
happening. At least that sounds unifying. I shrug. It's based on dumb conspiracy theories,
but at least there's the hope of humanity banding together to fight off a common enemy
because everyone's under threat. And like at least like this is kind of a little bit. Sure,
it's a little bit Independence Day, but whatever. Yeah, by the end of the letter, though, he's
proposing a worldwide anti-globalist alliance. And unfortunately, if you read it, it's really
just Christian nationalism. There we go. Quote, I invite all those who want to defend traditional
Christian society to meet together in an international forum to be held as soon as possible.
I call the Christian nations together from east to west, inviting heads of state and the healthy
forces of institutions, the economy, labor, universities, healthcare and information to
join a common project, disrupting the old systems and putting aside the hostilities that are desired
by the enemies of humanity in the name of divide and conquer. How great! He's trying to overcome
the evil people who are dividing and conquering everybody by dividing the world into Christian
and non-Christian countries. Yeah, and then conquering the non-Christian ones. See? Well,
I think that's implied. Yeah. This honestly seems less like an attempt at fighting something real
as it sounds like a new version of the Crusades. Quote, I call upon nations and their citizens
to ally themselves under the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, the only King and Savior, the Prince
of Peace, in this sign thou shall conquer. Saladin rises once more in the east! We must gather our
troops together and take them down the merry road to defeat them in the name of our Lord God!
It does seem like Crusades. Any man who kills a Muslim shall receive twice that many slaves in
heaven! I guarantee thee in this the way of our Lord! Neighbors. Sorry. Sorry. I got carried away
by the spirit of the Crusades, Dan. I understand. So in his post on life site, he cites inaccurate
quotes about the New World Order that are actually identical to the ones that are cited in Endgame,
and even points to the lockstep document as some kind of proof of premeditation on the part of
the Rockefellers. I wasn't really impressed with the information coming out of this dude last time
we talked about him, and it turns out that has not changed. Man, I just hate how these dicks always
write letters for posterity as if anybody in the future is going to give a fuck with me.
You know what? I kind of enjoy it. It's old-timey. You too. Yeah, it's... Yeah, I just... They all
start out like they're writing the Declaration of Family Independence. I am serious about the New
World Order because I took pen to paper. Right, exactly. Yes. Anybody can sit at a PC and type.
I used a quote. Sir, sir, this is written in blood. Do you even have an inkwell?
So Alex, like, you know, he's got to... He's got to get to the news. Sure. But he hasn't yet.
No. Maybe not. Maybe not quite yet. Well, sorry. I'm going to play part of a Tucker Carlson breakdown
on the fraud of this whole covered rollout. We're going to start the second hour, and then I'm going
to cover these five stacks of news you see right here that are government documents and admissions
that they know the vaccine isn't a vaccine that erases your immune system and gives you cancer
and heart attacks and blood clots. No. So Alex is going to play another Tucker Carlson piece.
I found this disappointing. I found this was yet another instance of Alex not getting to the point.
Yeah. But there is another point that he wants to get to before he gets to the point.
And that is that people are pretty excited about a statement that he made recently that he's going
to declare war on Trump. Sure. If Trump doesn't get on the right side of vaccine stuff. Great,
great, great. Unless Trump puts all his power behind getting rid of vaccines. Yes. Alex is going
to declare war on him. Ooh, what a threat. Yeah. So he talks about that a little bit here.
So just here's some from Tucker on this, but here's the deal. Joe's almost there. He's basically
there. I know probably he gets it all. Tucker's there. So's Viago. And we need to get Rand Paul
and others there. And I'm going to talk some about that next hour because there's a video that's
gone viral. Jones declares war on Trump. I'm not sure it went viral, but Viago is Vagano. That's
okay. I was like, Jesus, are we, where, where are we at?
I was going to say what is happening. Yeah. He doesn't say he was misled because now with this
FDA stuff, I mean, I'm going to go to Marlago and Bullhorn the place. I've already made calls
through. I know Trump knows this stuff. His, his chief of staff, you know, Meadows has been
confronted about it. If Trump doesn't start coming out against this, then he's hating and
abetting and he signed on to it. I just, I'm fascinated by like how much this has been like a
I'm leaving. You can't stop me. I'm leaving. I just don't, I'm so disgusted. I'm so disgusted.
I'm only going to give you a hundred more chances. Oh man. 16 or 17 more times you do the exact
opposite of what I tell people you're doing and I'm going to be mad. This is difficult for me to
string along. Yeah. So I guess one more chance, Trump. Give one more chance. So now we're going
to get to the news or maybe, maybe not. Okay. Maybe not. Okay. Ladies and gentlemen,
I mean, I'll just be honest with you. I get in here and re-research all this stuff and see all
the new stuff coming in. And I've got a problem where this is all just overwhelming. I mean,
I know it's overwhelming to you as well. We have articles coming up next segment where
the government and the corporations know they're killing us and it's on purpose.
And I know that's the message of this show, but it's not even debated. It's like
something you've all seen in front of the world happen. Like we don't know if O.J. Simpson really
killed his wife. What? And Ron Goldman. Why are we, what? We know he ran from police in a white Bronco.
Or this shirt I'm wearing is navy blue. And the watch I'm wearing has got a
army green strap on it. I mean, it's, it's not debatable that this is going on.
So I love the idea that Alex is somehow magically overwhelmed by the gravity of the news just
immediately at the point where he's committed to buckle up and get to the information.
Gotta get to this. Gonna get down, gonna do it. It's weird how that always happens. So
when it's time to get serious and get to the specifics, it's all just too much to handle.
How real and serious everything is. This is like a kid who didn't do his homework kind of shit.
You know, you get to the office at around 8.39. You spend your little time dicking around and
then you're about to get right to work and you're like, I need a cup of coffee before I can really
tackle what's going on here. So I'm just going to step away. Yeah. So also as it relates to Alex's
shirt being blue, I'm sure that Alex's new hypnotist friend, Jake Ducey would be really
disappointed to hear that Alex thinks that's a certainty and that it's not debatable.
It's entirely debatable. Not only the color of the strap on Alex's watch, but whether that
watch even exists at all on a subatomic level. That watch is not solid and your mind can change
not only what color it is, but what it is to begin with. If your bank account is an observer
effect, I can't imagine how your watch wouldn't be. Alex is going off script with reset wars here.
I'm starting to think you're using their own words against them. I'm starting just to build
up a little bit of a theory that I'm working on that Alex, his heart isn't in recent words.
That might be the case. That might be the case. That might explain why it's completely counter to
literally the entire worldview that he espouses. Yeah. All that new agey bullshit seems to disappear
off a quick. Certainly. Yeah. Certainly does. Yeah. So look, you're going to get to the news,
except we're not because Alex, like it's uncomfortable to talk about the news, but
something else is way more comfortable. And that's just yelling about how people want to kill you.
Oh, okay. We'll be two years into this in a month.
It'll be three years, four years, five years, 10 years, 20 years, a thousand years. This is never
going to end till we're all dead. And they're already saying it's the unvaccinated on all the
late night comedy shows and on all the so-called new shows. It's the people that didn't take the
shots. They're the villains. Anthony Fauci's not the villains at Jimmy Kimmel Friday night.
It's the unvaccinated. They're murderers. It doesn't matter. It's not a vaccine. Does it matter
or race your communism? Does it matter? It makes you transmit it more. Does it matter? Because
that's what it's designed to do. It doesn't matter. There's way more deaths worldwide this year than
there were last year from the shots. These people have signed on to kill us.
Because that's the response of these globalist bankers.
And now they're saying, oh, the hospitals are all full of dead and dying from Omnicron. That's
all made up. It's from the vaccine. Omnicron. No one's saying Omnicron first off. Sure. And no
one's even saying that there are tons of people dead of Omnicron. I kind of like Omnicron though.
You do too. It sounds much more menacing. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Oh, you've got that Omnicron variant?
Who knows what that can do? Yeah. I mean, like there's a certain point when I'm listening to this
these shows, especially in the present day, it's just like, this is filling time. Yeah. Like,
do you have so much news you claim you need to go over? I'm going to get through these five stacks.
And then it's just like these people premeditated. They want to kill you with Omnicron.
Omnicron. Omnicron. Omnicron. Yeah. Every time. So I was, I was like thinking, you know what I
say, Dan? Women are from Omnicron Persiai seven, whereas men are from Omnicron Persiai nine.
So Alex gets back to talking about the situation in Germany, but he's also talking about Luxembourg.
So I think he does think that Luxembourg is in Germany. There we go. Okay.
That show the footage we showed earlier for TV viewers in Germany today, people breaking through
the vaccine checkpoint to be able to go to the Christmas fair. Unbelievable. That's the same
story about Luxembourg. He definitely thinks that's in Germany. Yeah, that was not a slip of the tongue.
Nope. That's really sad. Luxembourg, Germany. You know the place. Sure. Yeah. It's great city.
It's got a fountain. The reason that Alex is doing that, whether it's probably because he doesn't
know the difference, but also the whole thing about the Australians being like under a tyranny
in Australia. There was a German politician who spoke out and was like, we have solidarity with
the people in Australia. And so like apparently, like Germany is also under a complete police state,
according to Alex. So anything that's kind of close to Germany, I guess he's just going to say
as a part of Germany. Just a little bit all in there. Yeah, because it's easier then because it
relates to these other narratives that he's already building as opposed to having to be like, oh,
also there's a small country called Luxembourg. Yeah, that would be too much to introduce to his
audience this late in the game. Yeah. You can't, you can't just suddenly invent new countries for
them. It's not a new country. So Alex gets to the stories finally. Yeah. This time I'm not joking.
He actually does. Okay. Okay. And here's the first one. All right. German data analyst
with German data from the government, the higher the vaccination rate, the higher the excess
mortality, a doubling in those dying who've been vaccinated. I was worried that this was out of
Luxembourg, but it is not. It's actually out of Germany, straight out of Germany. So this was a
paper that was initially released in mid November and then immediately picked up by Alex's buddy,
Steve Kirsch, who posted it on his substack and then it went around in conspiracy circles from
there. Upon the release of this paper, which made the claims that Alex is repeating, tons of researchers
started examining the data and found that the methodology that was used to reach the conclusions
was useless. With one statistics professor calling it the equivalent of proving a correlation
between storks and births. That's a good line. That is a pretty solid burn. That's a science burn.
So after they received all this backlash, the two statisticians who authored the paper had to make
a very sad retraction, essentially admitting that this was supposed to be a private note that was
commissioned by an anti-vax politician in Germany named Uta Bergner. It was meant to be used at
a parliamentary session on COVID policies. It's basically propaganda. Wow. From their retraction.
Wow. Quote, the reported and surprising correlation was intended to spark further discussions and
analyses. We regret that this note has been so widely distributed. Wow. Wow. They went on to say,
quote, for clarification, the note is neither a scientific publication nor a sound scientific
study, which meets our own standards for quality. Our note does not prove in any way that a higher
vaccination rate leads to higher mortality. We do not want this study to be falsely interpreted as
such this way. They also ask that wherever people cite this study, they also mention this
retraction, which you'll note Alex has not done. I am amazed that you can do that without also
having to say, look, we take money to tell politicians bullshit that they want to hear.
Do you get it? That's what we do. We took money to tell this guy bullshit that he wanted to hear,
so he apologies. So they could sell it and try and ruin the world. We're morally bankrupt. That's
what we are fundamentally because we took money to give lies. I understand why you'd want a more
accounting possibly of the act, but I think they may have suffered some professional consequences
as well. I'm not entirely sure, but that retraction speaks volumes. And Alex, it would be available
to him at the point of doing this episode. He does not know anything. So here's the second story.
Same thing in the UK. Vaccinated English adults under 60 or dying at twice the rate of unvaccinated
people the same age. And then there's the articles and the statistics for listeners and viewers.
But don't worry. Fauci says they're coming for the babies now in the new year. Good, good stuff.
Good coverage and good coverage. Wow. That's that's the way you dense. Yeah. Informational.
There's some stats here. If you want to see them, Fauci said we're going to kill the kids, whatever
Spear tip. We're always being killed by somebody. So unsprisingly, this also isn't true. It's a claim
that was making the rounds tracing back to anti-vax, sub-stack enthusiast, Alex Berenson. Basically,
what happened here is that Berenson took some actual death statistics from the UK, but then
represented them out of context entirely. Essentially, he was taking data that reflected
the entire population of people aged 10 to 59 and not considering any of the other variables
that might make differences. There's differences among smaller age brackets and groups within
that larger set that aren't being taken into consideration. They're very clear footnotes
on the statistics report that he is using. One of them says, quote, age standardized mortality rates
can be affected by differing characteristics of the population in the vaccine status groups
and the changing COVID-19 infection rate. Therefore, the ASMRs do not show causal links
between vaccine and risk of mortality. Great, great. Berenson forgot to parse the data and use
it how it's supposed to be used. Different kinds of data are good for different things, and this
report even stresses some of the limitations that people making the opposite argument from Berenson
might want to use it to say. Quote, while the ASMRs provide evidence that vaccinated individuals
have a lower risk of dying from coronavirus than unvaccinated individuals, they cannot be
used to determine vaccine effectiveness. This is because the populations in each vaccine status
group are likely to differ in ways other than the population size and age because of the selective
rollout of vaccine programs and differences in vaccine uptake. Basically, this is just another
flashy anti-vax headline that's based on a complete misuse of data. Alex hasn't looked into any of
these stories at all. He's just dispassionately reading headlines. I have no idea how it could
possibly be overwhelmed. He didn't do anything. Yeah, this is not good. This is not good. I wanted
a little bit more. I feel like he's deflated. There's a little deflation. There's a little
deflation. He's really avoiding saying anything other than playing Tucker saying nice things about
him. Sure. And going to the John Bowne most important report ever. Oh, the most important
Bowne report ever. And he's going to go to another report here. Get the fuck out. He's going to talk
about a gray grease report. The people that don't take the shots, they need to be rounded up. Oh,
wait, your own numbers say you're twice lucky to dive, you take it, you still transmit it. We're
going to arrest you. That's what's happening all over the world. Not in America yet, though they're
trying in New York and LA and San Francisco, but we had founders that tried to enshrine liberties
that were already there, but tried to protect them, enshrine them, make them off limits to
tyrants and point out to the public that these are things you should defend. And now that's all
going out the window. And so is all of our prosperity. Such an important Gregory's report
that band audio go to the left hand corner of band audio and click that and go to the Gregory
section. You'll see his last report. Fauci's dead babies and mass graves from the past.
You know, there's mass graves that he ran. So you got two headlines, some rambling, and then
we're going to talk about a special report from Gregory's. Yeah, just bad work. Yeah, this is
terrible. Not good. So it's probably no surprise that this Gregory's report about Fauci having mass
graves is another misrepresentation. This has to do with studies that were done between 1985 and
2005, which were funded by the NIAID, which Fauci is the head of. These were trials and
observational studies where the participants were children from the New York City foster care system
who had HIV AIDS. The investigation found that 532 children participated in these studies,
and of them, quote, 25 died while enrolled in a medication trial. That piece of information
is being used by conspiracy theorists to claim that Fauci killed all these children. And there's a
mass grave. Wow. In reality, the report that the figure comes from was written by the Vera
Institute of Justice. The lead author on that very report told the Associated Press that claiming
that these deaths were related to the study is, quote, completely misleading. The AP was able to
review some files and found that, quote, of the 25 deaths of foster children who were in the clinical
trials, the report says that a, quote, detailed review found that 22 of these 25 children had
developed multiple AIDS related complications prior to their enrollment in a clinical trial.
Several had been enrolled in trials designed for those with multiple AIDS related complications
who had exhausted other treatment opportunities or options. Excuse me.
This Reese report is trash, and it honestly feels more like an advertisement for Robert Kennedy
Jr.'s new book about how evil Fauci is. Yeah. I think it's kind of that. It's like spawn con or
something. Yeah. So I mean, this is really, it's obviously a very sad thing, but it's very unfair
to use this in the way that they're using it. Yeah. You know, it's great that the right is using a
pandemic that they exacerbated to exacerbate a pandemic that they exacerbated. That's great.
It's Ouroboros. Yeah. If there, if the snake was all tail. Yeah. Yeah. There's no head at all.
Why would there be? So Alex gets to another headline, sort of. So let's start going through
these headlines. Okay. Poll majority of voters concerned about potential of harmful side effects.
That's a big national poll out that 74% are concerned about it. You can read all that
for yourself. So this is a headline that Alex is reading for Breitbart. You can kind of tell
that he's even a little confused about what the context is. Like what's the connection between
voters and COVID side effects? Good question. Is this like a midterm thing? Like you can tell
it kind of doesn't know what to do with it. No. I know for a fact that Alex either didn't read
this story or he's intentionally lying about it because the 74% figure he cites as the people
who are concerned about side effects. That's actually a different stat. Quote, the survey
found that nearly three quarters of respondents, 74% have been vaccinated. That's the first line
of the article. So what's going on here is that Alex just skimmed over the text, saw a number
and decided to report it based on whatever he felt like it might be. That's not the act of
someone who's a great guide of for reality. Tucker, that's a great guide for reality,
not a great guide for reading about reality. Oh, I still, my point stands. I think it does too.
The actual figure is 54% that are concerned about potential side effects, but only 27%
are very concerned. Also, this is a Rasmussen poll being reported in Breitbart. So who knows
what's going on here? Yeah. Anyway, the point is that Alex just saw the number 74 and decided to
label it however he wanted to, which is that's criminal negligence. I saw 74. That's the number
of heartbeats you have before you die. Everybody knows that if you just see a number, you can say
whatever happens after that and it's true. What's fascinating is honestly what you said is as true
as well. So look, he's kind of tired of news and work. Well, news sucks.
Get into the news business. I don't know. He seems to hate it. I've been and listen,
nobody agrees more than me. So he decides like, look, I'm not doing that anymore. It's time for
me to cut a pro wrestling problem. Sure. Sure. That's good. Rand Paul. I'm coming for you. Hey,
why not? But you still supported it early on. Now you need to come out against the whole thing and
admit it's a fraud because now they admit it doesn't give you immunity and erase your immune
system. Dr. Paul, I know you're not on the enemy's team. I know you got bamboozled. Don't be arrogant.
Don't listen to you, Senator Paul, Dr. Paul. He's one of the main reasons you went with warp
speed. Admit you were conned. Rand Paul, your father needs to come out as well. So does Donald
Trump. And I'm going to keep hammering this for months. And if you don't, you're going to stay
in trial at Nuremberg too as well. But I'm not going to sit here and risk my life doing this
and not watch you put your skin in the game. And I know they broke your ribs. I know they shot at
you. I know you're good, Rand Paul. I know you, the past vaccines, most of them were okay. Some
were tainted, but you know, it's a real science. You thought, Hey, give it to people will save lives.
You were conned, but you're not conned now. So yes, we love you calling for Fauci to spend five
years in prison and we love you exposing Wuhan, but go all the way. Go all the way. Go all the way,
Rand. Debate me, Rand. Tell everybody that it's bullshit or tell me that it's true. I think,
look, honestly, I think there's no chance that this is going to this wrestling shoot promo
is going to have any effect on Rand Paul's behavior, but I still think it's more likely
than him debating you. I do like the idea that Alex is like, listen, I am going to be real mad
about this for the next couple of months. And if you don't do anything in the next couple of months,
few months from now, eventually, if you don't do anything, you will be on Nuremberg. I'm going to
put you on. Listen, 500 times a month for the next 55 years, I will be very mad at you. Also,
Alex should not be in favor of Nuremberg type trials. International law doesn't exist here. No,
no. So look, it's fun to shoot on Rand Paul, you know, fun. It's fun. Yeah. But you know what?
Let's spread it out a little. Let's talk some shit about some other people. Yeah, come on.
This Greg Abbott, get with the program more. Come on, Greg, become a hero into the right thing.
DeSantis trying to make people take shots. That's not enough. It was a bad product. It was a fraud.
It was a lie. Now a third shot, a fourth shot. Let me tell DeSantis and Paul and Trump and Matt
Gates and all of them something right now. Let me get this through your heads because you'll
Glenn Beck even gets it now. And I'm like, great, Glenn Beck, we love you. This is the real test
of are you evil or are you good? Maybe Glenn Beck thought I was nuts years ago because it sounded
extreme. He said that now he knows I'm right. So you see what's happening. You want to join
Tucker Carlson? Glenn Beck, Alex Jones, all of our ancestors have stood up against evil that
we're good. Are you from a good family or a bad family? What? I want to tell Rand Paul and all
the ones still, someone on the fence and Paul's doing a lot of great work. Okay. He's picked his
battles and I respect him. But the point is you can't know all this and do all these other good
things and they're not attacking the injection itself and say, okay, we were lied to. It's all
a fraud and Paul, you and Trump and all of you are losing support with your constituents and
they're getting mad at you. I'm not the only one. So we're trying to help you trying to help you.
I actually think you might be right on this. No, I kind of do too. Yeah. I think you might have
really nailed the head on what's going on here that these guys are not understanding. You will
lose your crazy base. Yeah, exactly. Yeah. You guys don't get it. You guys think that you made
us crazy, buddy? No, no, no, no, no. Yeah. This is just more fun than his show. I mean,
this is his show because doing work, actually getting into any of these topics is exhausting.
It's hard. You have to think. You have to know where Luxembourg is. Yeah. You have to know it's a
country. Very hard to do. So yeah, it's just more fun to be like Rand Paul. Go fuck yourself.
Absolutely. Absolutely. I'm coming for you on Sunday. I will be at the Coliseum. I don't like
this. I don't like this, though. Is he trying to go back to being the guy who's above it all by
being so far right that he can say he's not part of a political party? Because I'm getting real
pissed off about this. I'm seeing this Red Scare bullshit. I'm seeing those two dumb, dumb talk
to him. I'm seeing the Rogan bullshit. I'm seeing him all over places. And now he's trying to start
talking shit about Trump and Paul and all of this stuff. I'm not liking where this is going.
Maybe a little bit. I think that the situation with him going on Red Scare, which I haven't
listened to, and I will admit, I don't know enough about that podcast to speak about it in any way
with any kind of actual information. I think that that is more an instance of like,
you know, he sent out feelers to wherever anybody would have him on. Appearance laundering.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I think that's less about trying to be above the left, right thing.
I don't think he could launder that now. Yeah. I think it's too, too. He's too Trump. Yeah. He's
too associated with Trump and he spent so much time with the last couple of years just being like
all Democrats are evil. Right. You know, I think he always tries to maintain a little bit of that.
I hate both sides. Yeah, that's true. But no, I don't, I don't. I can see where you're concerned.
But I wouldn't be, I wouldn't be that worried about it. Okay. Good. That sales pitch. I don't
think, I don't think it's going to sell. I don't think so either. But every time I think people
aren't going to buy something that becomes the most popular product in the world. Maybe. I don't,
I don't know. So at this point, we get to another headline. What? Another headline.
And now the evil, wicked, sick, big tech corporate combine is suppressing even mainline science,
even the American Heart Association has had their tweets blocked and have been threatened to be
suspended for publishing what is on the Pfizer and Moderna injections that now it can cause a
heart attack or myocarditis. That's premeditated evil. That's not true. Okay. So the American
Heart Association wasn't blocked on Twitter. Twitter gave a warning to people who tried to
click on a link to this abstract that was on the American Heart Association's website
that the link that they were clicking might be unsafe. You could still go ahead and click on it
if you wanted to share. The reason Twitter does this generally is when some, something is being
mass posted by accounts that are often kind of spammy in nature. They usually are like just in
case this might be right, right, right. This could be a phishing attack or whatever it is. Yeah.
As for this abstract itself, it was retracted a couple of days before Alex is on air here.
The American Heart Association was having a meeting and there was like presentations that
people were giving and one of them that was given at the meeting was titled quote,
MRNA COVID vaccines dramatically increase endothelial inflammation markers and ACS risk
as measured by the PULS cardiac test. A warning. What a great title. Sure. This title and abstract
were posted online in their publication called circulation and conspiracy theorists ran with
it as proof that the American Heart Association was saying that the vaccine can cause heart attacks.
Also is written by a dude who's deep in the supplement game. So there we go. It might be
sketchy. Okay. So once it was noticed that this was published in their publication,
the editors of circulation posted a clarification quote, soon after publication of the above
abstract and circulation, it was brought to the American Heart Association Committee on
scientific sessions, programs attention that there are potential errors in the abstract.
Specifically, there are several typographical errors. There's no data in the abstract regarding
myocardial T cell infiltration. And there are no statistical analyses for significance provided.
And the author is not clear that only anecdotal data was used. So nothing scientific at all.
This was written in crayon. Yeah. I am confused as to why this made it into our journal. Yeah.
There's spelling errors and this guy is talking about anecdotal stuff pretending
it's scientific. I heard from a guy who knew a guy, did I mean to say duck or did I want to say
fuck? I can't remember. The reality though, too, is these abstracts that they publish oftentimes
are prospective studies that are going to happen in the future. Right. Right. It's the beginning
of a process of something that could be a study that ends up finding a testable hypothesis that
could get a grant or that we need to. But even so, it's misrepresented. I mean, that's incredible.
That's just incredible that you. And again, this clarification was public two days before Alex's
own air talking about it. He has every reason to know if he actually does the work that he claims
he does. Yeah. And I got to a point where I was realizing that a lot of the headlines that Alex
reads outside of these just rank misuse of information, just, you know, some shit blog.
A lot of it is kind of like a gossip. You see legend. Connor McGregor calls for Ireland to
lead the EU over COVID restrictions as it's a police state, not a free country anymore.
Provaxxers triggered after country music legend reveals he won't get the Vax joins Eric Clapton
and many others saying I won't play any venue that makes everybody have the vaccine. That's
Dale Watson. This is kind of like a anti Vax weirdo entertainment tonight. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
It's a little bit. Listen, we caught this guy outside of his beachfront property and he's telling
us that the vaccine's bad. Yeah. Pro vaccine people furious at country musician. We're so mad.
All right. Cool. Yeah. So if I understand the definition of trivial, if I understand correctly,
I should be listening to Connor McGregor, Connor McGregor, Eric Clapton and other country music
stars. Right. Alex said the dude's name and I don't even remember it. Yeah. Those are the three
people that I should be taking COVID advice as well as apparently international law advice about
whether or not Ireland stays in the EU. Yeah. That's an important thing that I should listen to
Connor McGregor on. And look, I mean, it sounds silly, but Connor McGregor will beat up anybody
who stands in the way of Ireland leaving. Yeah. I feel like if we just really buckled down on domestic
violence people, the anti Vaxers would go away a lot too. I'm just saying that maybe there's a lot
going on over overlap there. Who knows? Yeah. So we have one last clip here and it's how Alex
ends the show. He's just going on about how the globalists are going to hurt and kill your kids.
Sure. He's getting pretty extreme and it sounds like he's kind of saying that he's going to have
to save the world. Oh, they don't want to just rape your children. They want to poison them and
erase their immune system and give them blood clots and prion disease. Yeah. It's crazy. It's wild.
And it's all here, ladies and gentlemen, and we tried to warn everybody. So
stand up, speak out against it and be prepared. Just thank God you live in areas that aren't as
bad off as places like Germany and Australia. But once they make them fall, they're coming here.
Let's save them over there to save ourselves over here. Plus they're humans made by God and we
should love them and support them. Same thing with the new lockdowns in Africa. It's caused
more mass starvation and death as well. We don't stand up for them. God won't stand up for us separately.
Tomorrow is the last day of store-wide free shipping and double patriot points on things like
DNA Force Plus and vitamin mineral fusion and all of it. So when you hear a clip like that,
if you might be inclined to think that I cut out space in between him talking about God's protection
and separately free shipping, I did not. He does. He does that on a dime. Oh, man. That separately is
carrying a lot of weight. So much weight separately. Completely unrelated. This commerce and my
religious beliefs. I think, I think separately is one of the things he says the most on the show.
I wish it was. I'm not mad at the crew because he does say that a bit, but that doesn't come up as
often as separately. That should be on his, his tombstone. The adverb that keeps you from going
to hell. The family crest, Jones family separately. So I think, I think you get a good sense of what's
going on. I think we got it. A bunch of nonsense. Yeah. Very surface level, anti-vax storylines
that mean nothing. All kinds of bullshit. A desperate attempt to do some work, I think,
and then an abdication of any interest in that. Very hard. And then a fun shoot promo on all the
people on the right. Yeah. Yeah. That's, that's, you know, when your heart's just not in anything,
but shoot promos, maybe take a step back and just do some shoot promos. He did. You know,
but I mean, like, for good. Anyway, Jordan, we'll be back. Indeed, we will. But until then,
we got a website. We do. It's knowledgefight.com. Yep. We're also on Twitter. We are on Twitter.
It's at knowledge underscore fight and I go to bed Jordan. Yep. We'll be back. But until then,
I'm Leo. I'm Leo. I'm DZX Clark. I'm Daryl 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.