PBD Podcast - Project Veritas: James O'Keefe | PBD Podcast | EP 120
Episode Date: January 31, 2022In this episode, Patrick Bet-David is joined by Project Veritas founder James O'Keefe. In this episode they discuss What's It Like To Be Both Loved And Hated, Why James O'Keefe Has To Think Like The E...nemy, Who Funds Project Veritas, Tom Brady Retiring From The NFL, the Canadian Freedom Convoy, How Elon Musk Can Radically Change The Political Landscape, Joe Rogan and Spotify, and James O'Keefe's Long Term Hopes For Project Veritas. Check out his book here: https://amzn.to/3s4oQC3 About Guests: James Edward O'Keefe III is an American political activist and provocateur who founded Project Veritas. Connect with him on instagram here: https://bit.ly/3rUUUIf Adam “Sos” Sosnick has lived a true rags to riches story. He hasn’t always been an authority on money. Follow Adam on Instagram: https://bit.ly/2PqllTj. You can also check out his weekly SOSCAST here: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLw4s_zB_R7I0VW88nOW4PJkyREjT7rJic Connect with Patrick on social media: https://linktr.ee/patrickbetdavid About the host: Patrick Bet-David is the founder and CEO of Valuetainment Media, the #1 YouTube channel for entrepreneurship with more than 3 million subscribers. He is the author of the #1 Wall Street Journal bestseller Your Next Five Moves (Simon & Schuster) and a father of 2 boys and 2 girls. He currently resides in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. Bet-David is passionate about shaping the next generation of leaders by teaching the fundamentals of entrepreneurship and personal development while inspiring people to break free from limiting beliefs to achieve their dreams. Follow the guests in this episode: James O'Keefe: https://bit.ly/3rUUUIf Adam Sosnick: https://bit.ly/2PqllTj To reach the Valuetainment team you can email: info@valuetainment.com Check out PBD's official website here: https://bit.ly/32tvEjH --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/pbdpodcast/support
Transcript
Discussion (0)
All right, sounds good.
So James, going back to it.
So I asked you when there was no sound, how does it feel knowing you're both loved and admired
by your core audience, but you also got a lot of people that hate what you're doing.
How does that feel?
I, it's humbling.
It's, I'm sort of, I don't really focus on the fear.
And I think that then one of the things I read
about in this book, American Mock Rakers,
is the sort of characteristics inherent
in my colleagues and myself,
is that we're sort of very tunnel vision,
so we don't really focus on those things.
We know that they're there, we take rational steps
to deal with them, but we're kind of focused
on what we do.
Some tells me it doesn't bother you, though.
Some tells me you're comfortable with
opposition. I didn't ask for the opposition. Sometimes they don't understand the opposition,
but it's there, and I don't let it affect our decision-making. So would you call yourself a whistleblower
or is it a muck raker? Muck raker is the term I think is best to find dust, and some people don't
know what that means. It means someone who publishes information that the powerful people do not want published
versus publishing information they give you to publish.
How different is that than a whistleblower?
Or is it as muck raker more somebody who goes and recruits other whistleblowers as muck
raker somebody that goes against the institution?
How would you explain the difference between the two?
Well, I think a muck raker is a term,
historically, from 100 years ago,
Teddy Roosevelt coined it.
It could be all encompassing.
The whistleblowers that we work with
are not my employees, they don't pay them salaries.
We have people on full-time staff,
but a muck raker is effectively anybody
who can expose
what's going on, the real truth, the hidden truth.
So it is an element of being a whistleblower.
It is an element of somebody who wants to expose people who, behind closed doors, are playing
essentially the game of what do you call it, the puppet masters.
You're trying to expose some of those guys.
Yes, we're trying to expose that with the powerful people in a world where the FBI and
the New York Times and pharmaceutical companies and all these, they're just acting in concert,
it takes kind of an independent citizen group of people that are just the ordinary folks
to expose it.
Yeah, and it's's the concept of citizen journalism
is on fire right now, where people are becoming the journalist
due to this one weapon and tool that we all have right here.
I don't know if you saw this guy
that plays for Manchester United, the soccer player.
What's the guy's name?
Have you seen the story with this guy?
What's been happening to him?
So this guy, pull him up Manchester United soccer player, soccer player, it should pop up.
There it is right there.
Go to the second one, Greenwood, Mason Greenwood.
There's a video of him and an audio of his girlfriend recording their conversation having
sex.
It's such a weird, and by the way, he got fired, I believe.
They just let him go, and he's being accused
for certain things.
He's saying, I don't wanna do this.
And he's saying, don't make me do this.
And then there's videos of her bleeding
with like, you know, he hit her into face
and next thing you know, they let her go.
Meaning this thing is probably one of the most
scariest or most powerful weapons that we have today.
Folks, if you don't know our yesterday, let me kind of give you an idea who it is who is James had a chance
to read your book yesterday and finish it this morning I listen to the audio of it.
New York Times best selling author you wrote your book I think was called Breakthrough
Yes Breakthrough.
He's got an organization he leads called Project Veritas which I believe you started a 2011 or maybe 2012 one of those two years is when it kind of started growing
yes and he's exposed a lot of different stories if you remember the one story
with ABC when ABC news Amy Roebuck was caught on hot mic saying network spiked
Jeffrey Epstein's bombshell and she was trying to do this story and the
story was leaked by you, the video that was one of the stories that Project
Veritas did. There's another story having to do with, I mean there's a list of them,
Google executive, recently the one you did with the federal government,
nurse I believe, that was talking about vaccines and the one video you showed
what they're sitting there saying this person took their ninth
or eight shot or seven shot or whatever.
What's you exposed?
Big pharma.
You did something with the Senator,
pro antifa high school teacher in California,
admitting communism indoctrination of students.
And the list goes on and on and on.
Senior Google manager on search engine power said,
you are just plain and simple trying to play God.
The power in the search,
Trump says,
something misalformation, you're gonna delete it.
If a democratic leader says it,
then you're gonna leave it.
So you've done so many of these things.
Going after Pfizer, going after all these guys.
And here's what I've learned about whistleblowers.
You know, everybody loves a whistleblower on their side
and everybody loves a whistleblower on the opposing side.
Because as kids, what do we raise to do?
Hey, don't...
Saddle tail.
Right, don't tattle tail, don't snitch.
But there's a different snitches get stitches.
Yes, that's the stitches.
But you grow up and you're sitting there
you're thinking you gotta protect the whistleblowers
but are they really doing good?
There is this dispute that goes back and forth with people
on both sides when it comes onto whistleblowers.
How do you view the life of a whistleblower,
the how we view whistleblower?
Should people look at them as a hero?
Should they look at them as divisive?
How do you view whistleblowers?
Well, I mean, this is book.
There's a chapter in this book,
American Muckery could called insiders. And to be whistleblowers,
to step outside the great chain of being, to join not just
another religion, but another world. And sometimes this other
world is called the margins of society. But it feels like outer
space, the metaphor that Ellsberg used, famous 20th century
whistleblower, it's like being an astronaut
and you cut your umbilical cord, you're not part of the institution you worked for, you're
not part of my institution, you're sort of floating out there.
But I think in this world today, I was just watching Joe Rogan's Instagram video as I was
coming into the studio.
What you think about that, what was going through my head is this quote from Orwell that freedom is the freedom to say
that 2 plus 2 make 4 if that is granted to all those follows.
Rogan said in his little Instagram video, he said, you know, six months ago or a year ago,
they would have banned you for saying these things and now the scientists come out and say,
it's true.
So it's just, we're living in this bizarre dystopian reality where you can't call this a bottle of water.
And they say experts say, experts say,
who are these experts?
So we have to show people the reality.
We can't tell them what to show them.
We have to allow people to trust the evidence
of their own eyes and ears.
And that's the sort of journalism that we do.
We don't ask you to trust us by virtue of the fact
that I declare myself credible.
That's what they do, experts say, experts say.
We don't ask you to trust us or trust the whistleblower.
The whistleblower shows you the evidence, right?
First person observation journalism,
such that you can see it for yourself.
And they don't want you to,
they don't want to trust your eyes and ears.
And we would ask that you do that.
And that's, that's what was going through my head as I watched that rogue and, uh,
common he made.
Got it.
Yeah. So by the way, when you mentioned Daniel Ellsberg, he was what?
He was a former, uh, uh, uh, government employee.
Pentagon capers, uh, seven thousand, uh, papers he turned in.
I think he gave it to New York Times and 20 other papers.
And he was, you know, know looked at the hero three years later
they stopped the vietnam war and then afterwards nixon came back with espionage
you know laws against them and uh... i think the same thing obama tried to use against someone as
well right obama used against uh... during the obama administration uh... president obama but
we was really putting
the screws to journalists.
I'm not sure the New York Times would publish the Pentagon papers these days.
I think things have changed in 50 years.
I mean, we released a story involving literally Pentagon papers two weeks ago, involving
DARPA documents.
And I cannot obviously disclose who the source was.
It was not Major Joe Murphy.
The author of the documents was not a source,
but those people don't, they can't go
to the Washington Post or the New York Times anymore.
They don't know who to go to.
There's not many organizations for them
to go to accept Project Veritas.
Yeah, you know, your opening of the book, you say what?
You say, I get asked two questions the most, right?
And I'll focus on one of the questions.
One of the questions is, how are you not,
you know, worried for your life?
I don't remember exactly how you posed the question,
but you know, the fact that-
You fear for your life.
Yeah, do you feel for your life?
You're going everywhere, you're pushing the envelope.
I mean, Pfizer's a pretty massive organization
to go up against, right?
You're going against ABC, mainstream media,
the institutions, you're talking about the swamp, all the politicians,
the people of power, you're essentially calling them out
and making them look like fools.
You did, you made Zucker look like a fool
when you were on his conference call.
And not Mark Zuckerberg, but I'm talking about.
Jeff Zucker, yeah.
So, you know, how safe do you feel?
I mean, you got rated by the FBI early in the morning,
would they come in with 10 people with flashlights in your eyes
and they're taking your two iPhones
and the journal that you had of Biden's,
I believe, what was a daughter's journal that it was,
how do you feel?
Do you wake up in the morning worried about your life?
Well, I'm glad that you read the book
and I appreciate you reading the book,
because a lot of people don't.
So I respect you for listening to the book and bringing up a lot of these anecdotes. So I know you read the book and I appreciate you reading the book because a lot of people don't.
So I respect you for listening to the book and bringing up a lot of these anecdotes.
So I know you read it.
The first chapter of this book called Suffering and you might say, what are you writing about
that in a journalism book?
Because it's kind of a premise here that you're going to go through some pain if you speak
the truth.
And I think people are so afraid.
I don't understand it.
I never have.
I don't think I'm a sociopath,
but I do think that one has to be a little bit
of a masochist to do this, if you think about it.
And I really try to meditate,
and I really, I've been, you five years
to write this book, I spent weeks in the mountains,
literally in a cabin, a couple weeks last year during the pandemic,
trying to answer this question.
The two most common things is, yes, do I fear for my life?
And the second most common question is, what can I do?
You probably hear that a lot.
I don't know what to do.
How do we solve the problems?
And what people mean when they say, what can I do is I think what Victor Frankl wrote
in man's quest for meaning, survivor of the Holocaust, which is, how do I find meaning in life?
And I think as we enter this weird dystopian reality, where 2 plus 2 equals 5, where this
bottle of water is not water, it's Coca-Cola, I think people are trying to, they're putting
more of an emphasis on meaning rather than their own self preservation.
That's what I see in my life. In other words, people are less concerned about materialism
and money, and they place more of a primary value
on their conscience.
And I think we have a choice to make in this life.
And I quote Alexander Solzen-Eatson,
who Jordan Peterson introduced me to through his podcast.
I read this Goulog Archipelago carefully
and I thought about it, and there's some comparisons
to what he wrote about in the Soviet Union, that you can follow your conscience and give
up your livelihood, or you can maintain your livelihood and sacrifice your conscience.
And these are the two choices we have to make.
And I think more people now than ever, right, this very moment in time, are willing to
follow their conscience into the gates
of hell. Why? Because we believe, we believe in the truth and will do anything for it. And
I wrote it right about in this chapter, uh, suffering that like any survivor of psychological
abuse, the American mock raker starts to realize a new kind of superpower reborn through
baptism by fire. He is invigorated by the knowledge that he
is no longer a slave to fear. That's what I went through. I stopped being a slave to that
because I went through these experiences.
To do this, James, there's got to be somebody that pissed you off, right? I mean, to do this,
there's got to be somebody that either offended you or
You know cuz I looked at your parents. They were conservative, but not at the levels that you are You know, I kind of saw what their beliefs were they were they were leaning right as well
But did somebody offend you? Did somebody upset you used to be a writer at your school
And then you went and decided to start your own paper instead of right? I think was called centurion
I don't know what it was maybe was called centurion
So so it's not like, you know, what was the one event?
I mean, maybe even we can go back to high school.
If you and I were in 10th grade, 11th grade, who was James O'Keehm?
That's a great question.
I can answer it in two different ways by talking about that.
But I think as a teenager, I remember being young, young man,
and certainly in college, I read that I was very fascinated by journalism.
I would read the newspaper every day, New York Times.
I love and star ledger.
I'm from New Jersey, so that's, I don't even know.
10th career, you were reading The New York Times?
I mean, he went to Rutgers, so this guy's been...
Well, in college, particularly, I was obsessed with reading the newspaper.
Now, this is 20 years ago, or 19 years ago, and these newspapers are becoming shell of
themselves. They're basically like, you know,
exescalton, they throw AP articles in there,
but they provided a free copy in college
at Rutgers Public University, New Jersey
of the Star Ledger, US State, and New York Times.
I would sit there in the dining hall every morning
because I was a shy, introverted kid
and I had no friends my freshman year.
And I would read front-to-back all those three papers
and I considered that my education.
I was a philosophy major, but I was religious about reading
the news.
And I was fascinated by it.
As a teenager, I don't know, maybe 13, 14 years old,
I would watch local news.
So I grew up in the New York City suburbs of New Jersey.
And I would watch the broadcast.
And just I just felt intuitively
that how they were portraying things
were not as things were.
So things were not portrayed as they were
and rarely as they ought to be.
And that's the best way I can describe it.
It's just sort of a,
and I know everyone knows what I'm talking about
because now it's self-evident.
The news is not showing you how things actually are.
They're describing reality and it affected me.
I remember it affecting me and I didn't know I was ever going to do anything about it.
I didn't think that I'm going to be a journalist.
I didn't even know frankly what a journalist was or what a journalist did.
And I certainly had no inclination of going to journalism school. And I was in Boy Scouts.
I was an Eagle Scout, actually.
And when I was about 18 years old,
they had this Board of Review conference
where you go before your scout master.
And they asked me, what do you want to do with your life?
And I went on this rant about things,
because I was trying to look for guidance.
And he said, and I said, things are not what they seem,
and rarely as they should be.
And he said, have you ever thought about going into journalism?
And that was the first time anybody ever said that to me.
And I thought about that, and I didn't know what it meant
to be a journalist.
And then I went to college and I read these papers every day,
and I was literally reading The New York Times,
to run to back, and I got angry at the New York Times. I said, that's not right. That doesn't
seem, you know, this is right after 9-11 and the world events that were happening and the
op-ed pages. So I decided to write a column for what was the daily Rutgers newspaper, the
Daily Targon, it was called. And I wrote a column and I stretched, and then I researched how the ratio of Democrats to Republicans of the professors at the university
and the ratio was 104 to one, the imbalance of it. And the imbalance of it affected me
too. And I said, well, that's not right. There should be more ideological balance among
the faculty. And then we can talk more about what happened next. But that was the initial origins of that.
The reason why I asked that is, you know, Adam, you know, he's been a comedian before and
then from there he went into business and has done well for himself.
You know, when you think about comedians, you'll typically the DNA of a comedian is a
what?
Somebody that maybe lived a rough life.
So humor was a way of, you know, just what's the word?
Wait a cop or wait a cop?
Wait a cop. Yeah, so it's got a lot of comed you know, just what's the word? Just go for way to go. Yeah, yeah, a lot of
comedians have dealt with issues. Oh, tremendous. Yeah. So
then you, you think about like UFC fighters, like GSP or
some of these other guys, their lineage to want it to become
great fighters was what? They were bullied as a kid. So there
was a form of them being bullied bodybuilders. Same thing.
What, what did somebody piss you up? Did somebody bully you that somebody did you live a rough life?
Did you see somebody right in front of your eyes betray somebody and lie and they went to jail or something happened today?
We said I just don't think this is right good question
I remind you of question. I think it was Candacellans asked me what happened to you?
Or maybe it wasn't her but someone said something someone did something why does that question keep popping up though?
No, it's actually only a second time
have been asked the question, and I'm not a psychologist,
but let me attempt to answer it.
The only thing I can say about my childhood
before this teenager watching local Fox 5 New York news
was my grandfather and father I was raised.
I did have an unusual upbringing in the sense
that I was doing property maintenance
with my father and grandfather
I'm the third James will keep the third my grandfather
Would wake me up in the morning and we go do what work on the houses every morning paint and landscape and do roofing and plumbing work and
I guess it was looking back just like kind of like
Child slave labor. I don't resent it. I think it. I think it was formative and taught me values and hard work,
but I did not like the work.
I never took to it.
And we would work all weekend and every night during school.
And we, I told the story before, but since you asked,
that was very formative for me. It was a sort of
indefaticability that my grandfather and father instilled in me, very tunnel vision.
So we would work on these homes, doing everything ourselves. We didn't hire any labor. And
for years, starting at five years old, I would do manual labor with my father and grandfather
every weekend, dirty, disgusting work. And they didn't make small talk with me.
My father never, never did.
I wanted to, but we never made small talk.
We just work, work, work, work, work, and I hated doing the work.
I just, it just tested it.
I'm a very creative person.
I always have felt that and I would daydream during the work and I would think about
the things that I was forced to do this. So my only, and I'm not a psychologist, I'm speculating here, and I would daydream during the work, and I would think about things, but I was forced to do this.
So my only, and I'm not a psychologist, I'm speculating here, but I suppose that they
instilled in me something I didn't necessarily have when I was born, which is this tunnel
visioned, almost maniacal drive, although they gave me that, but my passion was different than PVC pipes and roofing.
My passion was exposing and artistic, so when you combine those two things, but I don't
know when it would be pissed me off.
It was more just the hard work that I did that I guess instilled in me.
James, Pat asked that question to quite a few people, like, who were you in high school
because I think what you do is very unique, very unique.
There's not a, like, who else is like James O'Keefe?
It's like, I don't know, not that many people.
Well, thank you.
I guess.
Yeah, I mean, it's very unique what you do, whether people, you know, love what you do or
artinally oppose what you do.
But I think the reason that he's trying to get to this is like trying to understand who
you are and use a couple terms that I want to ask you about.
You said, yeah, I guess I am a,
a masochist.
Massochist.
And then you said something that was,
it kinda caught me off guard,
and I don't wanna gloss over it.
You said as a freshman, I had no friends,
and I sat there and read the newspaper.
And for me, and even for Pat,
that's always been a person that's thrives
on camaraderie and friendship and banter and joking and having fun like that. You were,
I don't want to use a loner, but you said you had no friends and your friend was the
newspaper and you started to develop these beliefs and these thoughts. So I think that's
ultimately kind of where Pat is going is like, why did you have no friends? How did having
no friends lead to basically where you're at now?
I don't know if I'm qualified to answer that question.
Well, there's nobody else more qualified than you to answer this question.
All I can do is give you the facts.
Yeah, sure.
What my life was like in maybe some of the control conclusions.
I didn't, I was of sprawling state university.
It was, you know, 50,000 people.
I was in the dining hall every morning reading
this newspaper for hours. And then, but over time I did, I made friends. Over time I
made, I built an organization here with 70 plus employees. I've kind of started with
nothing. And now I, over the years at college, I even built a little newspaper there, a
magazine. And I built a staff.
But in the beginning there, yes, it was, I guess you could say I was a shy, introverted guy.
And were you not looking for a friend?
Like, for me, I guess the reason I'm harping on this is because I've always been a person that I don't collect toys, collectibles, watches,
clothes, I collect friends and people that I really enjoy spending time with my friend
Yeah, that's a very good question because you know how they say you know keep your
Circle tight, you know, so I have a handful of best friends, but a large network of people I could call it any minute
You clearly have developed that now, but that wasn't that case
James O'Keefe senior Irish Irishman in FOA he used to call me Irish funny enough
He'd say called you. Yes, he called me Irish. He would drag me out of bed at whatever time done godly hour
And I'd be digging some ditch with my grandfather that why you tried to cancel the lucky charm's leprechaun
That was I think there was a coincidence. I mean I was an Irish American. That was good right because I got solid respect
He would you would say you can can't we did we did it
Yeah, exactly when the dining hall with the box lucky charm said I don't look like the leprechaun the front seat
It was a form of satire was satire
Well, you tried to get Rutgers to cancel them or even you know
How to give a response as to why they were not gonna cancel him irony is now dead so people don't understand
Irony and we can get into that
But it's like I went in there with
With the box of lucky charms and I said and I was very hard to keep his straight face
I
Really struggled I said, you know, we're not all short. We have for differences of height
I don't look like this and they told me they'd removed lucky charms
I put the bureaucrats in a bind there, but my grandfather used to tell me you know
You can only count your friends on one hand.
I have people say that.
So I defined friend.
People with fraternities, people join fraternities, and that's no criticism.
But some people say you buy friends through a fraternity.
And friends, and I've been through so ups and downs in my life that I mean, it's sane
highs, insane lows.
I mean, incarceration of John Stewart, Daily Show, South Park episode about our journal.
I've seen such highs and lows that for me, it's like I've seen people come and go and
they're loyal teaser.
So I don't like phoniness.
I never, I don't know how to be phony.
I don't like politics.
I don't like politicians.
So I think that it's a meta, no, I'm definitely no.
Politics is horrible.
Really? Yeah. So okay, let's transition. So here's a, here's No, I'm definitely no. Politics is horrible. Really?
Yeah.
But you live in that.
Let's transition.
So here's my question for you.
To do what you do, you have to think like whoever the enemy and the opposition is, meaning if I'm gonna go out there and go against a dirty, manipulative,
deceptive tactics that are out there, I almost have to match them, don't I?
Because you know, a lot of times you'll talk from you'll sit down and have conversations
with the left or the right and the right will say, the left is just extremely manipulative
and what they do.
And they're willing to go and play such dirty tricks and look what they did in Chicago with
JFK and Dewey and Bill, they'll get the votes, they'll get this, they'll get that.
And then some people say, well, we have to play their games against them to beat them,
right?
And then you'll have faith-based folks who'll say, we're just not going to cross the line.
That's not what we're going to. We're gonna stick to it.
But I think there's a part of it where,
you know, the whole thing goes,
if you wanna wrestle, if you wrestle with a pig,
you know, you kinda get some mud on it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But the point is, if you're gonna wrestle with a pig,
you have to have some kind of pig tendencies.
You have to play their games against them.
Did you ever in your mind say, look,
you guys all wanna play square and you wanna play safe? I'm gonna go against these guys and I'm gonna use their strategies against them. Did you ever in your mind say, look, you guys all want to play square and you
want to play safe, I'm going to go against these guys and I'm going to use their strategies
against them. I'm on a piston off. Was that kind of a line you had to be willing to cross
or this is the line you're going to come as close to the line as possible but not cross?
So I don't know if you understand the question. I'm asking about that. I understand.
What are your thoughts on that? Well, there was a professor in college named David Nolton, and he introduced me to a
man named Saul Inski.
And David Nolton was, I don't know if he was a professor or an adjunct guy, but he was
a businessman lobbyist who taught a class and I took.
And this rule is for radicals by Saul Inski.
And like you've heard this book.
Sure.
Of course.
It was a line this book, which is called Rule Number Four.
Make them live up to their own book of rules.
Now, that sounds sort of Machiavellian and twisted, but it's just as simple.
It's really, another way of saying it is, expose their hypocrisy.
So, and Alinsky says it, I think he said in this rules radicals book,
you know, he was talking about Christians and it's hard for them to live up to their own standards.
It's hard for them to live up to the Bible, for example.
But you can apply that to anything.
And I read that line in that book Rules for Radicals
Which is now transformed into something just sort of journalistic but at the time there was on campus. They have these
Speech codes they call and you can't offend anyone for any reason
You know you can't you can't say anyone that say anything that offends anybody and for me that was a slippery slope
I just viewed it as twisted.
I said, you can't offend anybody.
Well, the whole idea of college is to exchange ideas.
So that's what led to the Lucky Charms thing, where I said,
OK, well, if I can't offend anybody,
well, then why don't I say this box of Lucky Charms is racist
against my Irish heritage?
And it was like a form of satire, I guess,
or exposing it, but now what this is involved in is,
and I want to draw a boundary,
is it absolutely not do we do what they do?
We do not lie to the people.
We do not deceive the audience.
We do not do the things that they do.
We do sometimes use deception in the sense of
a pretext with our subject. In other words, in journalism, circumstances can arise in which
deceit towards the subject is less wrong than other possible courses of action, including being
so honest with your subject such that you are dishonest with your audience. In other words,
if I come to you, let's say you work for the Pentagon,
and I say, hi, I'm a journalist.
Tell me all the fraud you're committing,
and you give me some canned line.
And then I publish your line to the millions.
Well, now I'm lying to millions of people,
but if I pretend to be a telephone repairman,
and I'm in your office, and we're talking,
and I record you, right, and you don't know it,
well, I've just lied to you about who I am,
but in doing so, I've gotten some truth,
which I broadcast to the people.
And the law attack me, oh, keeps a liar,
he uses deception and undercover.
I say it's a question of relative deception.
And in this business, in journalism,
you have a choice to make.
So I wasn't so much that I was obsessed with undercover
and wanting to do these things
that seemed manipulative. I, we wanted to do whatever we needed to do to get to the truth.
We had to dig deep. We had to learn how to use disguise and pretense in these things that were
not comfortable. These are not comfortable things to do. You don't like doing them. In fact,
I could tell you in that lucky terms video,
my heart was beating 160 p.m.
It didn't, you know,
it wasn't comfortable performing in this way
to get this information.
Did it feel, did it make you feel like,
I feel like I'm being a little bit deceptive and dirty
or no, you're kind of like, listen, I'm gonna match you.
I'm gonna match you at this.
I'm not gonna lie, I'm not gonna do this,
but I'm gonna play all the games necessary
to get as close to the line as possible.
No, it felt uncomfortable.
It felt uncomfortable, but the best I can say
is it felt uncomfortable, but necessary.
I remember confronting the professors,
I had printed out these certificates,
and this is all irony in satire.
Like, think of it like Borat meets 60 minutes.
That's the best way I can describe it.
It was like Borat, okay, I'm gonna go in there. I'm gonna pretend to be this so I can expose the
reaction and expose the speech policies. I felt so uncomfortable. I forced myself to do it.
I forced myself to do it. It's like, you know, doing something you hate doing, frankly, like I had to stick
my little child arm down a sewage pipe. I just forced myself to do it because I said,
this must happen. I must do this, you know.
Do you have a family or no? No. Kids. My parents and my sister. No kids. No children.
Any plans that we're having kids? I would love to have kids. Oh, so you would. So it's
not like you don't want to put them through
what you're going through where your kids go to school
and maybe you name them after James O'Keefe.
And hey, is your dad James O'Keefe, he is.
And so you're comfortable having kids
and I would put him through.
I would like to have kids.
Okay, fantastic.
Well, that's good.
So going back to that, I asked this question because,
okay, so one, you want to prove the point about the border,
you dress like Osama bin Laden. I don't know if you can point about the border you dress like Osama bin Laden
I don't know if you can pull this up for you dress like Osama bin Laden you crossed the border to prove a point
To say here's how bad the border is if you can go to images and David if we can show this
This is James O'Keefe, okay right there to the right if he can show that
Another time I think you went in
to the right, if he can show that. Another time, I think you went in
acting like you're a pimp with a prostitute, right?
Who was that that you were trying to expose?
That was a group called Acorn.
And you expose them and you,
this is an organization that had been around since 1971,
500,000 something.
Correct.
You know, members that they had and right afterwards,
six months later, you pretty much shut down
the organization at the time when you did it, it was 07, which is 15 years ago, you were what, 23 years old,
24 years old.
24 years old.
So, this is what I mean by, like these strategies and tactics, you gotta have a creative
mind to say, I'm gonna play your game against you.
Yeah, and I think I answered that and so far as that we do whatever we need to do to
get the information.
And for the acorn story, we could spend 30 minutes talking about that story.
But in a minute, it was this young woman who messaged me on Facebook, like I get most
of these tips these days from the citizens, and she said, what if you went in there as a
prostitute?
And this is a government...
You're telling her, she's telling you.
She's giving me this idea on a Facebook message in 2009.
And we get our tips and ideas and at the time,
I was nothing, I had no money, I had no organization.
I was just a filmmaker with these ideas.
And she had seen what I did with planned parenting.
She said, what did you go in there?
As a prostitute.
And we're having this, I've never met this woman before,
we're just talking over Facebook.
I said, well, there probably should be a pimpe.
And what occurred to me is how brilliant it was
because this is an organization that was
doing illegal things squatting for closed homes.
They were accused of doing corrupt acts.
So if you went in there and said you were a criminal and you had a deviant business,
you would get a reaction.
Now, I thought that they would, I assumed, I have my hypotheses was that they would
perhaps tell us to evade the authorities or something mildly, you know, fraudulent.
When I went in there in Baltimore, and with my hidden camera embedded in my sat and tie with Hannah was dressed like a, like she was from Miami.
She was from Miami, a 20-year-old dressed like a, she had stilettos and a sarong and a leather halter top.
They told me out of disguise, the underage hookers is dependence on the tax returns.
They brought in the accountant.
This was like something out of an NSL Nell skit.
But they actually wanted to help us evade the law.
And it got quite serious.
It got quite serious very fast.
I mean, those videos prompted Congress
to defund Acorn, democratically controlled Congress.
So it wasn't me that destroyed or defunded Acorn.
It was the United States Congress.
There we are.
There's Hannah.
That's what she looked like.
She went in there, no, I did not wear that fur coat
in every office, but she wore that in Baltimore.
By the way, prostitutes do not look like that in Baltimore,
but these workers wanted to help us.
And we did this in Baltimore, DC, New York,
San Bernardino, Los Angeles.
Every office helped us but won.
Now I gotta tell you, sitting here right across from,
you don't look like a pimp.
It'd be very hard for you to pass us a pimp,
but that picture right there,
you got very close to looking like a pimp. That's true. A low budget one, but don't look like a Pimp it'd be very hard for you to pass as a Pimp But that picture right there. You got very close to looking like a Pimp
A low budget one, but he does look like a Pimp for sure his penp hand is strong regardless
Well, it was just it was so low budget people at the time
Well, this was a massive story. I don't know if people remember it, but it was it was big
And the late Andrew Breitbart described it like taking the penthouse to the glass elevator all the way at the top with
What we did and I'm I did not any money so that that for coat. It was my grandmother's coat
The hat was my grandfather's hat Hannah Akutur to herself and we drove around in my old my old Jaloppie grandmarque and
We just did it. I mean we just two kids from the cast of high school musical three.
Question for you.
So some people will say, look,
you know, if you're really gonna do
the whistleblower stuff,
why don't you go after both sides?
Because at least Sasha Baron Cohen will go and expose,
you know, maybe 10% of people he exposes
is the opposing side.
You know, he did something with Bernie,
his own side.
I think he went after Bernie.
I don't know, he did something with Bernie.
I mean, he tends to go after, especially with the last minute. There's no question about it with Bernie, his own side. I think he went after Bernie. I don't know. He did something with Bernie. He tends to go after, especially with the last few days. There's no question
about it. There's no question about it.
It's really, really hotel, all that stuff. This is to those who ask that question. Is this
a pure crusade you have against the left or is anybody that does, uses their power against
people to manipulate? I think we need to define these things.
When we say side, what do we mean?
When we say left, I'm not even sure what that means anymore,
because I have the FBI working with the New York Times.
Is that left wing?
Let's define reality.
There's only one reality.
There's only one truth.
Veritas does 24 frames per second,
or now on the iPhone with the high definition, 60,
I don't know what many frames. Truth at 24 frames per second. now it on the iPhone with the high definition is 60, I don't know what
how many frames. Truth at 24 frames per second. There's only one reality. There's only one
truth. Our medium is to film things, film people talking. And oftentimes we don't feel
any, we see their lips moving. So that happened. It's an event. Over time, you'll see us do
everything. We just did a video on Alex Stovler, is a Republican in Arizona.
He's a Republican running for Congress.
And he said one thing in private,
and another thing in public.
He contradicted himself and we exposed it.
And we were not condemned by the right.
In fact, that reaction, that story,
it seemed like people on the right appreciated it even more
because they didn't want people on their side, when I say right, Republican Party, if that's even right, wing.
So I'm not sure what I, what we, there is, Project Veritas action exposes flip-flopping
Arizona congressional candidate.
This was a guy who said privately that there wasn't enough fraud to overturn election and
publicly that there was.
So I'm not saying he was wrong by saying probably what he said.
It was the fact that he contradicted himself.
But that would still be seen as one side.
That would.
I mean, if he's against fraud for election and then he says it, that is a, that is against
the idea of many people on the right.
However many want to say that thought the election
was a fraud.
So for him to flip that, I don't necessarily think
I put him as a person who would essentially be
on the right to defend some of the philosophies.
You got to keep on mind.
This is a show where we defend capitalism.
This is a show about a person who escaped Iran to go to Germany.
I live that a refugee camp.
I'm a kid who grew up in a communist family and an imperialist family.
Mother's side, they were all communists.
That's how we're imperialists.
But it's more strong to say, listen, here's what we're doing.
We're covering up the guys on the opposite side.
I'm not a comedian.
I'm not Sasha Baron Cohen.
Here's what we're doing. This is what what we stand for this is what we're going
uh... but at the same time there is a big audience at the devil say you
target mainly once and and you know what they're gonna say that until they
stop saying it
because we have people coming to us now like like i say the dark of the the
marine quermager who wrote which by the way there's nothing wrong with that i
mean you're going against it if you're going up against the government that's
well what you say here to two two
quick responses to the here's the irony of them saying i go after the left by exposing cnn
there's an admission there you saying that cnn is left are you saying the new york times
is left is the fb i left is our federal bureau of investigation left are our pharmaceutical
companies left is this guy left so it is is certain point that argument is it over what's going to happen there's an asymptote on the on to
borrow mathematical analogy that asymptote will approach you know zero and and
people are going to come to us were they can't go anywhere else CNN the
network CNN gives a deliberate false impression daily. They say the 2 plus 2 equals 5.
We got a guy at CNN saying, quote,
where propaganda, the control room director.
He said, we're propaganda.
And he's talking about the death numbers on the screen.
His name was Chester, Charlie Chester, CH-E-S-T-E-R.
This is probably one of the biggest investigations
we ever did.
I was most proud of this one.
And he goes, why can't it be higher?
We need the deaths to be higher.
More people from COVID need to die, so we have higher death numbers.
Higher death.
This is what this guy is saying.
I didn't say it.
He's saying it.
You can see his lips moving.
He's being secretly recorded at a bar.
So these networks, there it is, quote,
if it wasn't for CNN, I don't know Trump would have gotten voted out.
Now I did not entrap him.
We did not tell him to say these things.
We asked questions.
I did not ask leading questions.
Our undercover people said, tell us about what your network is like.
We're propaganda. We get Trump out.
So if that's my question is a rhetorical one.
Why won't the people at CNN say that publicly?
Say what, say the fact that.
Quote, if it wasn't for CNN,
Trump wouldn't have gotten voted out.
Quote, we're propaganda.
Quote, why won't the death numbers be higher?
There's nothing, by the way,
I'm not making a moral judgment about that.
Right, right.
And I won't.
That's something about me that's different
than all the other journalists you see on TV. So lemme- I'm not making my only judgment is that. Right, right. And I won't. That's something about me that's different than all the other journalists you see on TV. So let me. I'm not making up where my only
judgment is this. My only rule is this. Don't say something privately if you're a powerful
man like that, that you're not willing to say publicly. Okay. So we both know that happens
in your organization, that happens in our our organization that happens in every media,
every sports team, every business, every company.
There's going to be certain things you're going to talk about, aspirational behind closed
doors where, for example, Tom Brady, every time the interview after he wins again, this
is what Tom Brady will say.
We have to respect those guys on the other side.
We have tremendous respect for the coaches.
You know, Jimmy G and the kicker for San Francisco.
What's the kicker's name?
Do you know what I'm talking about?
The kicker's a big goal.
Yeah, you know, we respect the guys on the other side.
The Green Bay Packers have a world-class organization.
And then you see the clip that they record on them.
The Packers.
You just see that one part.
So listen, who doesn't do it?
I think everybody does it partly on the other side because to compete at that level, especially media, you have an enemy.
CNN's enemy is Fox. Fox's enemy is mainstream media. MSNBC has an enemy. Everybody's got an enemy.
Quite frankly, everybody's mainstream media is enemy right now. It's Joe Rogan who is kicking
everyone's ass. So there is an enemy in every place. I think there's a part of it. Okay, I'll give
you another question. So one of the stories that goes talking about you is the fact that
James O'Keefe has made $1.9 million since 2011, right? And they show your income. Okay. Okay.
And it goes from which to me, the income is $400,000 a year income, whatever it was in 2020 or 2021.
We have the exact numbers based on the article. And it says, you're one, he raised, it was a small thing, he raised only $400,000.
And he has a job where he was working 60 hours a week or 80 hours a week making 50K year
before.
I think the article you've read before.
And it goes, he raised $1 million.
He raised $2 million.
He raised $4 million.
Now he's raising $8 million.
$12 million.
And eventually it was a 20, I think you raised $21 million in 2020.
Whether it's 2020 or 2019, you raised something like $21 million, right?
And in the book, there's a part where they call you out and they say, well, who are the
backers?
Who's given the money to project veritas?
There's an article that says Koch Brothers.
There's an article that says names that comes out about you, right?
And then your position was, I think it is been by law to not release the information of the guy, the individuals who give money to our organization.
You said something like that in your book, right? And I'm sure you know what I'm talking about.
So, you know, again, do you want people to know who gives money to organization?
Do you want the public to know who you give money to the organization?
No, it's a fundamental right enshrined in the First Amendment Freedom of Association
so that there's a distinction there and that there's a chapter in this book called
Secrecy.
And I talk a lot about this.
There's three things that we can keep secret and there's no other
secrets.
And one of those is the donor donors to our nonprofit, which by the way don't tell us what
to do.
It's a freedom of association right and shriened in this case, NAACP versus Alabama, Supreme
Court Justice John Marshall, economic reprisals, loss of employment, threat of physical
coercion and manifestations of physical hostilities.
There's a quote from the United States Supreme Court, you do not want to disclose donor identities
to organizations, philanthropic news organizations, precisely because of the fear and the intimidation
and the shuriken.
Sure.
Quite different than Charlie Chester at CNN admitting what his actual and what the actual motives and agenda are.
And if I was doing that, people should expose me because these people have a tremendous
power and it's their ability to manufacture the public's consent.
You know, I think the informed consent in this country is critical in the American founding
and this sort of Jeffersonian ideal of the public's
right to know, which makes us much different than any other country in the history of the
world perhaps, right?
And the American experiment and the American ideal, that people have to have access to
actual information.
And the only way for them to do it, by the way, I'm a 501C3, the economics of Project
Veritas.
You're right, people talk about how the money we raise.
We have 100,000 donors that give us this money.
I started with nothing.
I mean, they were saying I was funded by right-wing billionaires
when I literally was broke and destitute.
Oh my God.
Where are you?
Did you ever, were you?
I was so broke with that ACORN story.
I took the Chesapeake Bay Bridge because it was $4 less.
People thought I was nuts.
So they project, it's all about...
So the story about Koch Brothers, that's a lie.
That they never participate in helping you out
with Project Veritas.
We don't disclose our donors.
I mean, for all you know Hillary Clinton is funding us.
It doesn't matter.
Well, that would change a story.
Now you got Babylon B's got a story to write about you.
But it wouldn't change the story,
because the things that were presenting are real.
And up to Ensenclair, you know, people forget that like, you know, Nellie Blie and Ensenclair But it wouldn't change the story because the things that were presenting are real.
And opt-ins in Claire, you know, people forget that like, you know, Nelly Blie and Sinclair
and Lincoln Stevens, they're all socialists.
And you know what?
More power do them.
If you have an agenda like this, but what you what you shouldn't do is you shouldn't
deliberately mislead and give a false impression to your viewers.
It's not as much the motive or your political agenda. It's that you tell a deliberate untruth to people. It doesn't matter who's funding you.
It matters whether you're deliberately telling an untruth.
Yeah, so for example, like this story, the Forbes story that was written November 11, 2011,
which was a couple of months ago, you've read this article, your guy that follows this stuff.
1.9 million since 2011. Okay, that's what, that's 10 years, 11 years.
I don't care how much money you're getting paid for that.
So you made $400,000 last year after,
you live in what state, by the way, you live.
Westchester, New York.
Okay, so your broke is what it is.
I mean, seriously, if you're making
400 grand in New York,
I mean, no.
I mean, no.
No, 200 grand left to yourself.
Well, here's an interesting thing about economics,
because I think it's a fascinating question.
We're a full and philanthropic news organization.
Now, you know, there are billionaire chairman of media companies who have settled lawsuits.
We have never settled the lawsuits.
It will cost me $2 million to get to jury verdict in the court case.
$2 million.
I could have, we could have given this someone $50,000 in settled the lawsuit.
Why would we not do that?
Well, if you're a business man, if you're
imperative is cash money. If you want to keep money in your pocket, you're a massacist.
If you look at this and say, I could spend $50,000 to make the lawsuit go away, or I could
spend $2 million, go through discovery, go to trial and I might lose. And we've never
settled a case. And that's why our legal bills at Veritas are, some years, five million dollars a year, five million.
And all proceeds from this book goes to our organization
to pay our reporter's salaries.
But the economics of journalism,
there's no business model for investigative reporting.
And it's self-evident.
All of the corporations have slashed their investigative bureaus
because it's too expensive
it's it's too painful and that's why our our model is the five one c three the
nonprofit philanthropic model i mean the story continues to well mother
jones liberal magazines pays its president only two twenty five
and they generated six but sixteen point six million the daily caller news
foundation which publishes conservative content online pes their chief
Development office or 138 and they keep going with all these other stories judicial watch another
Right-leaning group pays its treasurer
390 five thousand dollars and they go pro-bopalca anyways, they're telling all these stories here's here's kind of
Where where I'm going with this part here so somebody from your own organization went out there and listen, I work for James the other day he offended me because he made a joke that really upset me.
He made a comment about the chiefs losing
and how excited he was and how dare you say anything
about Pat my homes, right?
I have access to all the people that give.
Here's a list I give it up.
You wouldn't care.
You'd be like, okay, that's part of the whistleblower game.
Which list, the donors are to you, that would be part of...
I wrote a whole chapter in this book about this.
And I'm writing a book about journalism ethics.
I'm writing a manual because no one has really ever
done this before.
So I'm trying to define the boundaries.
And this is a very critical point.
There are only two things we keep secret.
Because really, underlying your line of questioning here,
is this notion of hypocrisy.
Like, James O'Keefe, you probably,
is your cross to bear.
You probably do things in private.
And my answer is, listen, we all make mistakes.
We're all human.
But there are two things that so help me, God.
I will not disclose.
Because it is enshrined
in the fundamental values that we hold as Americans, which is number one, the rights to protect
our sources and the right to protect our donors.
By the way, if the United States Supreme Court were to order me to reveal who released
that document from the Pentagon, I would be held in contempt of court and go to jail to
protect my source.
I would like, like, Janke Anderson, the legendary muk-rayker from the 1970s, I would be held in contempt of court and go to jail to protect my source. I would, I would, like, Janke Anderson, the legendary muck raker from the 1970s, I would,
I would submit to your honor that you're an error, and I would not, I would not oblige
with that. And I would, and I would, this is, I would, I would, I would have to face incarceration
and perpetuity rather than disclose my, my, my source. This is, this is enshrined in,
in the DNA of the first amendment, you don't disclose your source, This is enshrined in the DNA of the First Amendment.
You don't disclose your source,
and you don't disclose, if the NAACP,
to borrow an analogy, in 1958,
were ordered by the Supreme Court to disclose
who donates to the, you know, an organization
that protects the rights of African-Americans.
That's what that case was about.
So when you ask me, well, what if they published your information?
I'm sorry, but so help me God.
There are two things I will never disclose, and I cannot disclose.
Oh, by the way.
Because to do so would be anathema to the very things that give us the first amendment
in the first place, okay?
So no, no, no donor has ever been, of course, the people that are trying to
disclose these donors don't share a faith in these principles. They don't like the first
amendment. And that's the only public policy issue that I take a stance on. Anything else,
I don't believe, have political views. But on this, on this, here I stand, I can do no other.
That's why I wrote that chapter called secrecy because I meditated on this.
I realize everything else I have to have disclosure on.
By the way, we do file a tax return and we put it on our website.
Do you know any other news organization that does that?
No.
We publish that 990, we disclose everything. We go through discovery
and litigation. I've been deposed more times I can count. By the way, I like depositions.
I have a good time being deposed, you know why? Because I get nothing to hide. You know
who doesn't like being deposed? The New York Times. They're scared of that, you know why?
Because they have everything to hide. And that's the difference, really. That's the difference
between Project Aratos and anyone else.
So on those two things, I would never want to disclose them
and I will fight to the death to not disclose.
So I support your decision for doing that.
And I'm part of that understanding that,
like for example, the other day, somebody messaged me
and they say, hey, did you know Patrick Baydavi
gave to the following organizations? And he gave money to this and this. And he
was at this event. I'm like, I was. What do you want me to do? What did you get this information
from? Well, this person told me that you did this. Okay. So on one end, if somebody wants to release
it, they release it on the other end. This is privacy for who I want to give to. And that part of it
has been compromised a little bit right now. But you said something. You said, you know, never disclose the source, right? The word
never disclose the source. If you've, if, comma, if you've promised confidentiality to,
to the source of the information, but don't you think that can be abused, abused by,
both sides, meaning, hey, yeah, things that yours are mine, sometimes happens. Okay. So like the, hey, this dossier we got on Trump's meddling in the elections with Russia,
but it's a source.
We cannot tell you who the source is because we have to protect the source, right?
Isn't that something that's abused to constantly say we cannot disclose the source?
Of both sides come out and Trump will come out and say we have to find out who the whistleblowers
You know and that took place when he was coming out and then shift will come out and say you know the the history of
Protecting whistleblowers in America. We have to protect these whistleblowers
It's always protect the whistleblower when it's on their side and it's always exposed the whistleblower and the source
We say it's I again, I hear what you're saying. You don't like identity politics.
I hate identity politics.
I do too.
So my whole mission is to fight against that.
But on people, well, I hear what you're saying,
but I'm living in a normative world.
I understand that that is the current status quo.
When I was rated by the FBI, the ACLU defended me, which
was so shocking to write wingers.
It almost made their heads explode.
They couldn't fathom this.
Okay?
Like, oh, what party appointed the judge that ordered the FBI to stop?
Well, it was an Obama-appointed federal judge.
And I reject the premise that we have to live in this world of sides, because there is only
one truth.
Now, you're right.
I'm not saying you're wrong.
You're actually describing the current series of events where when the whistleblower comes out against Trump, who we want to know
who it is. But yes and no. I think there are some people that are so political that they
let their politics get in the way of these values, these primary values, Bart Nicky Vivopera,
a Supreme Court case from 2001, when you want to live in a society
which places a primary value on freedom of the press.
It's a concomitant of life.
You have to live with this notion that if a source gives you a document from inside the
Pentagon, or wherever, the White House, it could be the cleaning lady.
However, you protect the identity of that person.
And the reason some have said the reason why the ACLU defended me after the feds raided
my home in November was because they didn't want it to happen to them.
Sure.
They're under a dissantist administration.
So there still is in the Venn diagram of the, you say, side.
Integrity, lit of integrity there.
There's an overlap between the left and right in this country.
And it's that overlap, that little overlap that gives me hope. In fact, I want to expand the overlap. When
the ACLU defended this there, you have it. When the ACO defend, that was a beautiful moment. I was
probably one of the most beautiful moments of my life because I said to myself, we are finally
talking about principles. We are talking about the things that, and I'm going to sound like a hippie here, so forgive
me, but I believe I actually believe this.
The things that unite us are so much more powerful than what divides us.
They ask us to focus on our divisions, but that right there is beautiful.
That is an incredible moment.
And then you have to say, why is the ACLU defending James O'Keefe?
And that's the real conversation. That's the beautiful conversation that makes us American,
that makes this country wonderful, because we give people information, and we don't disrupt
the right of people to get the information.
So this is where Bill Mar wins, because Bill Mar says, be very careful with the censorship
game you're playing, because it can come back
and bite you in the butt when the administration changes, right?
So you see Bill Maher coming on and some people are saying, well, Bill Maher is becoming too
conservative. Bill Maher is becoming way too conservative. He went out the one time, he said,
look, I took the vaccines, I took it, and I got COVID. I don't know what to tell you. I did what
I was told to do and I still got. So you kind of start seeing some of that stuff taking place.
So you're starting to call out the people on the left
just as much as you would typically call out
the people on the right.
Yeah, he said about that this past week.
He says 30 years ago, the reason why comedians
do well making fun of the writers because that was funny.
Yeah.
He says try making fun of Pelosi.
What the hell are you gonna say about Pelosi?
He says, but today's left is making it easy
for the right to make fun of the
Left. He specifically said, I haven't changed. I'm still the pot smoking non-married making fun of everybody. You've changed. Exactly.
So the only thing I'm saying that my point only, the only point I'm making to you is, you know, again going back to the fact that the whistleblower who comes
like Snowden, remember when he came up with the 30,000 emails and people were like, well, this is not Cuomo said,
this is not the right thing to do.
You know, this is just not right.
You don't do that kind of stuff.
Some of this information doesn't protect
the level of hypocrisy on both sides against each other.
When they use the tactics against each other,
that's when the American voter who I believe, James,
America's run by the 12% of voters.
After ones that, you know, they're gonna vote,
when you're saying identity politics,
those on one side that no matter what you tell them,
they're gonna vote left.
Those on one side that no matter what you tell them,
they're gonna vote right.
I think America's run by 12%.
I think you're right.
That 12% is who we have to win.
If we win the 12% over and they sit there and say,
you know what, I don't know if I like those.
Two stories, James it, but this one,
I can't have to agree with them.
Well, you're pointing about leaks.
There's a part of this book, American Mukhrieger.
I talk about this, this idea of leaks whistleblowers.
And I think the distinction, the qualifiers, if you can see the information yourself.
So Snowden, when he brought those documents, you could see the documents, right?
You weren't really relying upon Ed Snowden's credibility as a witness.
The documents were self-evident. My problem is when the anonymous sources say, people familiar
with the matter. I think you have a point. A source is familiar with the matter. We don't have
any reason to trust the Washington Post when I tell us that. We don't know who these people are.
So I agree with you if they don't show us the evidence, okay?
And an analogy I would draw is when you use
an anonymous source, which Phréard Doss doesn't really,
I don't think I've ever, ever reported something
without showing you the evidence.
I don't say, well, you have to believe me
because I say so.
When, as a journalist, when you say you have to believe me
because I say so, you're withdrawing
from the ATM of your credibility.
But you've got to make deposits sometimes into the ATM, deposits, evidence.
But the New York Times watch the most, don't actually give you any evidence.
Here's an example, the Trump tax return story, that this was a story about a year and a
half ago that was concurrent to one of our stories that we did.
The New York Times published a story about it, but they didn't print one document.
They didn't show you any pictures.
They didn't show you any evidence.
They asked you to believe them
because they are the New York Times.
When I see the New York Times for defamation,
it came out in court documents in the deposition,
in the discovery rather, in the answer to our defamation lawsuit.
It came out that they admitted they got the facts wrong
in the article, and they refused to update their article.
That means that right now on the internet there's an article.
It's on Wikipedia, Facebook uses it as the fact check that's wrong and they admitted it in court it's wrong but it has not been updated.
Now what is that if not disinformation? So when they accused Joe Morgan of disinformation, the New York Times in court saying we got it all wrong,
and they haven't fixed the article
which remains on the internet.
It's literally an Orwellian dystopia.
So when they say believe us because people are familiar
with the matter, tell us that this is so,
there's no reason for you to believe them
unless you can see it for yourself.
So again, the rule is, and I write about this book,
this is I'm creating a rules for journalism.
Don't trust the anonymous sources,
unless they show you, unless they've given you
the actual raw evidence and have a track record
of showing you raw evidence every once in a while.
Yeah, there's a rule when you go to a journalism school,
whatever school may be.
I mean, obviously Columbia's one the biggest ones, but they're pretty much politically on one side. But what's the, there's a rule when you go to journalism school, whatever school may be.
I mean, obviously Columbia is one of the biggest ones, but they're pretty much politically
on one side.
What is the level of accountability that journalists have?
None.
Now, but there is, though, they're used to be.
I mean, if you go back years ago, there were held accountable for certain things that
they were supposed to investigate the truth, then you're supposed to tell both sides.
Here's what this side is doing. Here's what this side is doing.
Here's what this side is doing.
And if you're wrong, you come out and apologize.
There was four things journalists were held accountable to.
According to the, what is the journalism, journalist organization out there?
Do you remember when we talked about this, like you're in a half ago?
Anyways, I don't remember that.
It's kind of like the Hippocratic oath for journalism.
Yeah, they have something uh... society professional
journalist has a has a code uh... i can't recall the the the rules of this code
but uh... i think the press has an important obligation to
police itself the media has no self-policing mechanism
so the press you know it there's a need for self-examination and a
and a degree of open
mind to this to the criticisms that are leveled against it. But what's happened, I think
it's about integrity. And there used to be a lot of libel lawsuits, actually people forget
in the 1980s, you know, 60 minutes was sued many times, many times. Now the rub on me is
that they attack me for being sued. I like one every lawsuit. So we can talk about that.
You want every lawsuit.
Every single one.
You have never settled lawsuit.
Personally, myself, James O'Keefe, not Project Gras,
I settled a lawsuit before Project Gras was created.
I never settle lawsuit again.
We want every case.
But media settle lawsuits all the time.
I mean, CNN or Washington Post settled with Nick Sandman.
That was the young man with the Native American
in Washington, D.C. and they're not attacked for it
they get away with it
well they were called out for that though they were definitely wrong and they
had they were held to the fire in the
do you consider yourself a journalist
yes i mean i would have to more specific specifically american muck raker
did it depends upon your definitions of these things are what you say that
you're a supporter of Donald Trump?
My supporter of Trump, I support maybe some of the things that he said are done, but I
have to remain independent and nonpartisan.
Well, the reason I ask is because you've been an advocate for journalists that you've
when you got rated by the FBI, you basically, in so many words, that this is ridiculous,
journalists should not be treated like this.
But I saw a clip of you speaking on a podium
with a big banner, Trump in the back,
it was a Trump event, a dinner of some sort,
and you said, we must go after the media.
Yes, absolutely.
So I'm just trying to understand if the...
Okay, so you're at a Trump event, you're speaking,
you're the speaker, I suppose it's a Trump event,
you're saying going after
the media so I know you've been pretty bold on saying look left right I mean who even knows at this
point you know you brought the example of 104 professors are liberal you know what is conservative
out of balance yeah but ultimately I think what Pat was asking was like, if you do 100 stories, kind of 99 of them
are against the quote unquote left.
You could easily find Trump's tax return stories,
you could easily go against Steve Bannon,
he's been held, you know, sure.
And so I guess my question is like,
you know, I don't know if this is an answer to your question,
you may not like it.
But I don't have an agenda here.
I'm asking a question.
It's self-evident.
The first moment does not protect defamation.
The New York Times versus Sullivan case establishes the actual malice for defamation.
You can't lie about a public figure.
So when I say go after the media, it is consistent with first amendment principles to expose
what the media is doing wrongly.
That's consistent with the first moment.
The first moment does not cover intentionally lying to people.
So when we say, I mean, I think one of Trump's virtues,
something I did like about the president,
was this highlighting the fact that we shouldn't necessarily
trust everything we're told by these media.
And by the way, don't take my word for it.
You can look at our stories on CNN and the New York Times.
Well, we've exposed these people that have admitted
their lying to people.
And that's not what the first amendment was designed to do when Jefferson talked about
we need newspapers more than we need government.
It goes back to this ideal.
And by the way, I've also spoken at Duquesne University.
I've spoken to groups that are hostile to me and behind me was Duquesne University and
Marty Barron and Dean Backay
and if the ACLU wants to have me speak,
I'd love to speak there.
I'll speak anywhere, I will speak
as my mother and sister once said to me,
if there's only one person who's going to listen
to the truth that you need to speak, you speak it.
So if a Key West Republican group wants to have me
or if Duquesaine wants to have you
or I don't know what we're referencing there,
but any place with a banner behind me,
PED podcast, if I can speak these principles,
I will speak them.
And I agree with certainly some of the things
that Trump has said about the media, yes.
Okay, so how about we, now that we've done a lot with you,
let's go into some tournaments,
if you're okay with that. I don't know what the protocol is, but would you mind if I take a bathroom for a with you let's go into some tournaments of your game with that
I don't know what the protocol is, but would you mind if I take a bathroom for you go for it?
You go ahead in the seconds you go. I'm you'll be the third person in history
Okay, I stand this you just ended up on the soy boy. I know go forward
Maybe this is a moment. Maybe I'm being exposed
I'm the record here
I say we follow him to the bathroom make sure he's not checking
No, no, no, I'm trying to hydrate it after my project
fairytops musical. I'll be right back. Also, so you know where the
bathroom is. Okay. All right. Sounds good. While you're doing the
third member now, you were the first time was a second. Yeah,
he's the third. Yeah. Have you done a twice or have you done a
one? Just once. Okay, here's what we're going to do when he comes
back. We're going to cover theorogin Spotify Neil Young story,
as well as Harry and Megan who are Spotify to stop.
COVID-19 misinformation will cover that.
We'll cover all the different names I came up with.
William L. Sambru Springs, Tim Barbera Stice,
Strye St. Queen, Paul McCartney, Rolling Stone,
David Groh, a bunch of guys that are going against Spotify.
We'll also talk about Canadian truckers.
But meanwhile, you and I,
why don't we talk about Brady's retirement? You know, but meanwhile you and I, what we talk about
Brady's retirement, he came out and just said, you know, he hasn't said it yet. Even his father contacted, David, if we can close that door, even his father contacted
ESPN, TMZ reported saying, look, this guy has an announced retirement.
He contacted the chief saying, listen, not the chiefs, but...
Patrick, I don't know. The box saying, look, I haven't made my decision yet.
What do you stand?
Do you think he is returned,
but he's upset that story leaked?
Yeah, well, how could you think he's not retiring at this point?
Why would that even come into the atmosphere
and people talk about?
Could you imagine if that's actually not true
and he's like, I'm actually coming back.
What made you so...
What made you so...
Brady is so maniacal that I think Brady
may have had a conversation with a few people thinking about
He's retiring and that hey, here's kind of the direction. I'm going somebody leaked it
Brady behind closed doors is so pissed off that they leaked it because he's always wanted to control the narrative
He wants to come out and say I'm retiring with a video or a message. You know how he typically does it with a video that comes out and
I'm retiring with a video or a message. You know how he typically does it with a video that comes out.
And imagine if he flips and he says,
you know what, the hell would you guys?
You did that, I'm gonna go one more year.
Well, if there's anybody that can basically flip it on us,
it's someone that's basically saying,
you're thinking you're gonna control the narrative
about me and my life.
No, I'm coming back, we're gonna run it back.
Yeah, Edelman came out and he said,
I'm on Miss U Babe or something like that,
you know, on Twitter or something.
Edelman.
Oh, Julie Edelman, yeah, he's on Miss U-Babe or something like that, you know, on Twitter or something like that. Edelman. Oh, Julie, Edelman.
Yes, I'm on Miss U-Babe.
Specifically, babe.
Well, you know, they got a little bromance going on
over there, too.
But could you imagine if this is a quote unquote
fake news story, James O'Keefe type vibe,
where, you know, we can expose the media
for getting it wrong.
Yeah.
And next thing, you know he's coming back. So ultimately the question
is do you think he is in fact retiring? I have to tell you I think the conversations took
place. I think he is so pissed off right now. I think he's so furious right now that
it leaked to anybody. I don't think he's the type of guy that would want the story to
leak. I think he's lost
his mind with being furious. He wanted to do it his way and it kind of changed it up, but
you know, there's some people that are upset saying, listen, there's one, because we were at the
birthday party. The Tico's birthday party, when we heard them announcement about 10 years old,
10 years old, he'll turn 10 tomorrow and people are like, no, he didn't, he didn't retire. Yeah,
he did. No, he didn't.
Yes, he did.
TMZ saying he didn't.
So, I don't know.
Do I think he's going to go?
I think he can play one more year.
I think he can play one more year.
Well, he led the league in yards, touchdowns.
Yeah.
But did you see the game?
Did you see his last game when he lost?
I mean, he was not going out without a fight.
No, no, but did you see it almost was, you know, you looked at his face at certain moments.
It was kind of like, do I, like afterwards, especially?
Yeah.
Do I really want to go through this one more time?
Because think about it if you're him right now.
Here's what you're thinking about.
Who are you going to put around me?
Okay.
I need a little bit more help.
I got hit a little bit too much.
Okay.
Maybe Antonio Brown nonsense.
Yeah, that's a receiver went out for the season.
He had a couple other injuries. Like, maybe he's sitting there saying,
can I do this one more time? What other record is there left for him to break?
But you actually a week ago were saying there's something about the way he did
the press conference. You were the one saying that he was writing a wall.
Yeah. No, I think, I think I've never heard him speak that language. You know when somebody speaks a language, like for example, you're sitting with your bodies
and somebody says,
I'm not gonna lie to you man,
you know, I'm just sick and tired of being married.
This is like freaking very hard
or I'm sick and tired of being single.
You're like, just guys never talk like this before.
There's something going on there.
There's something going on there.
Okay folks, we got James back here.
Okay, for you NFL fan, Tom Brady fan,
do you want to weigh in on this?
Well, retirement.
I used to be a bills fan when I was a growing up. I loved the post-soc. I was a little bit sick. There's something going on there. Okay, folks, we got James back here. Okay, for you, NFL fan Tom Brady, fan, do you want to weigh in on this retirement?
I used to be a bills fan when I was growing up.
I loved the Buffalo Burs.
A lot of Ls in that bill.
And that was eight, nine years old and they lost their fourth straight
Super Bowl. I cried. My dad had to say it's just a game son.
What? 1994? They lost four Scott Norwood, man.
Scott Norwood, Doug Flutey.
Remember Doug Flutey?
Of course. He was my hero in a high school. I loved Boston College. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, and they're like throwing floaty flakes at me. And, but I love Doug Flutey. He was my favorite growing up.
And I'm sad to see Brady retired.
So when I came to the States in 1990, November 28th,
the football teams you had was Cowboys,
you had a few different teams.
I was a diehard Bills fan, Thurmond Times.
Really?
Oh, BB, Bryce Pa.
Wow.
Andre Rie.
Bruce, Andre Rie.
I mean, I'm just telling you,
from Coach.
There was something unique about these guys.
Mark leaving every, I was a bills fan when I came to the States and I was a Lakers fan.
So for the first six years, I was in bad shape.
As a 13 year old kid, I had therapy sessions twice a week, you know, going through a little
time.
Do you remember the game in 1999 with the, the music city miracle, with the Titans and
the bills, but there was a course that crushed me.
Right. I don't know if, and I think it crushed a lot of the fans.
Kevin Dyson.
Yes.
That cr- they benched Doug Flutey and put in Rob Johnson.
He lost his shoe.
Remember that game?
That was my moment.
I never- I used to love the game.
We just figured out with the Euler's game.
Do you remember the Euler's game?
I was in a-
What did he make this game?
I was in Frank Reich or someone. Yeah, exactly. The third and third and third and third. That was at the bar and it turned in. But there wasn'ters game. I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was,
I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was,
I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was,
I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was,
I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was,
I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, I was, and says, the greatest comeback of all, I'm like, you're right, great.
It was the comeback.
1994, I was just like that.
Maybe this is the Seperadian moment you wanna know.
This 1999, I remember this game.
I was obsessed with the Buffalo Bills in the 90s.
After this game, it crushed me.
And I know it crushed a lot of people.
They benched my hero, Doug Flutey,
and they put in Rob Johnson.
Anyway, so I think we figured out a few things here.
Now, the truth has been reviewed.
We've been trying to figure out.
You've been listening to the truth.
Exactly.
We've been trying to make out what makes O'Keefe take.
That's what pissed them off. It's the Buffalo Bill's Pelt B-I-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L-L- your dad or your brother or your sibling. Do you want to tell or keep the truth? Absolutely, come on in. We brought Dr.
if you're watching, Doug.
All right, so let's talk about what's going on with the Freedom
Convoy in Canada, which is going viral.
It's being talked about everywhere except for mainstream media.
I don't know if you've been following this story or not.
Let's kind of go through a couple things that's going on there, folks.
Hundreds of truckers block Ottawa in Freedom Convoi
to protest vaccine mandates.
It's a French 24 story.
Hundreds of truckers have blocked the streets
of a central Ottawa and Saturday as part of the self-titled
Freedom Convoi to protest vaccine mandates
required to cross the US border,
flantican AD and flag, wave and banners,
demanding freedom and chanting slogans against
prime minister, just in true though,
the truckers were joined
by thousands of other protesters,
angered not only by the COVID-19 restrictions,
but by brother, this content with the government
and enormous clamor ring out of hundreds of big trucks,
their engines rumbling sound at their horns.
Anyways, I'm gonna tell you this other story from Al Jazeer.
Why are anti-vaccine Canadian truckers covering a converging in Ottawa?
I like that title right there, anti-vaccine Canadian
truckers.
So convoy of anti-vaccine Canadian truckers and their
supporters making its way to the country's capital Ottawa,
starting on January 15, Canada has required essential
service providers previously exempt from vaccination
inquirers, including truck drivers to be fully vaccinated
across the land, brought from the US unvaccinated Canadian truck drivers to be fully vaccinated across the land brought from
the U.S. Unvaccinated Canadian truck drivers
entering the Canada, entering Canada
will need to meet requirements for pre-entry
arrival and they ate testing as well as
quarantine requirement. I keep a mind 90% of
this truckers are vaccinated. 77% of the
country is vaccinated.
And this freedom convoy co-fund,
if you can go to it, as of last night,
it was at 8.78 million.
If you just type in Freedom Convoy, go fund me.
They may be over $9 million.
James, I'm assuming you're following the story.
What are your thoughts on what's going on right now
with these truckers?
9.2 million. 9.2 million people. 9.2 million dollars raised.
They haven't taken it down yet. They've taken it down. No, they haven't.
113,000 owners. My first surprise is that GoFundMe has not taken this down.
But I guess that it goes to show you the difference between how the media portrays things and how
things actually are because so many of these people in Canada believe in this and it's self-evident in the
pictures you're seeing.
Like I said, pictures, evidence.
You can see the trucks, you can see the, so they say it's fringe, but that's a characterization
that doesn't seem accurate.
That doesn't seem based upon reality.
It does not seem fringe.
It seems mainstream.
It seems there's a substantial minority, if if not majority of people that agree with these people
So what what I draw from from this you know, this sort of the Orwell 2 plus duke was for quote is that how things are portrayed by the Canadian leadership and the media
Are not as they actually are in in in terms of the grassroots support for this Adam do you have thoughts on this?
Well, what's the ultimate story here?
They're just not, they're protesting mandates.
They're protesting mandates.
That's what I come down to.
Peaks, some people that are protesting against a mandate
are fully vaccinated and took the boosters.
And Dr. Starrer, and I'm fully vaccinated.
I just don't want mandates.
Okay, so walking through that mindset,
they're basically saying, look, I did it.
I support it.
I mean, Dr. Robert Malone, who you interviewed,
is vaccinated. Yeah, he basically said, I almost got crushed by COVID. Yeah, if. I mean, who, Dr. Robert Malone, who you interviewed, is vaccinated.
Yeah, he basically said I almost got crushed by COVID. Yeah, if you can show that video, David,
if you can pull up that video so people can see, however, I don't believe in the mandate.
Ultimately, isn't that what is this picture of here? This is Ottawa, Canada.
Those are the true countries. This is about a day ago. There you go.
Are they wearing masks? I don't mean there's a judgemental question.
Are they wearing masks?
Are they willing to violate the so city protocol?
I don't know, it's crazy.
So, I'm in it.
So guys, the border is 5,500 miles long.
Canada and US border.
It's 5,500 miles long, okay?
You got these truck drivers, which the strangest thing is,
if anybody, their job is to quarantine, it's truck drivers.
They're by themselves driving.
Like, it's not like they're around anybody else.
They're driving.
Unless there's 99% of the time.
Unless if you got another person with you,
but you're driving by yourself,
maybe with another person to do your job generally,
it's by yourself.
And they're saying, if you don't do this by the 15th,
to cross the border to, this is not just the Canada thing
Exactly, not crossing the border. So that's another question the Canada to you. You're crossing the international borders
Just make a populist comment too. I something my friend Laura Logan always says to me
Which I think is very poignant and this is a visualization of this is really amazing visuals. We're looking here
Instagram videos is that they have tremendous power and we're nothing.
That's the common I see people say,
we're nothing, we're insignificant, we're nothing.
But what Lara says to me, we're not alone.
She says we're not alone and we, the people,
it's a cliche, it's a tale as all this time,
but we are so insignificant compared to the powers
that have the power of coercion and the power cliche it's a tale is all this time but we are so insignificant compared to the powers that be
that have the power of coercion and the power of the you know the the
legislatures but
this is a very amazing moment
you know that that we the people and even Canadians we the people by the way
go go to Elon Musk's tweak as Elon Musk's tweeted about the truckers and what
he said
Canadian truckers rule yeah Canadian truckers rule is what he said yeah some
like that
uh... it's so think about it this way who would have thought?
Kyry Irving okay
truck drivers in Canada
You got Elon Musk you got Joe Rogan you got the strangest camps that are sitting there saying dude
Can we just not be forced to do what you're telling us to do?
I'll take the vaccine. I just don't want to be forced
So at a couple people over at the house for the birthday party and you know some of the guys from the community force to do what you're telling us to do. I'll take the vaccine. I just don't want it before. So
I had a couple people over at the house for the birthday party and you know some of the guys from
the community, very successful business people and the conversation my vaccine came up from them.
And I said, did you hear about Tom Brady? What Tom Brady? I'm like, did you hear about truckers?
What truckers? I'm like, you're not following the story? No, I'm not following the. I read New
York Times in Wall Street Journal, journal every day and I've seen nothing about truckter. I'm not following. I read New York Times in Wall Street Journal every day and I've seen nothing about truck truck.
I'm like, you gotta be kidding me, zero.
So they're in front of me kind of going through it.
These are two professionals.
Both of them are C-suite executives
running their companies, living in beautiful property,
legit, legit people.
They know nothing about what's going on
and it says, so tell me about,
what are your thoughts on vaccinations?
What are your thoughts on this?
I said, listen, I think to each a zone,
I think it's something that probably helps minimize
for certain people might that had COVID.
And he had pneumonia simultaneously,
and he had the COVID shot,
and he was able to go through it at the age of 79.
And he just took the booster and he's glad to have it, right?
And then he says, how about yourself?
How about your employees?
How about this? What percentage of home offices vaccinated, they're in the health industry.
I have to get everybody vaccinated. One of my friends got all their doctors and nurses
and LA to get them vaccinated. 20 of their employees and doctors just resigned. They said,
you can't force us to do this. So there is a community out there and they're finding each
other and they're sitting there saying, look, man, I just want you to believe me alone.
Don't bother me.
Let me do this.
By the way, in Canada, things are so strange in Canada
because one of the reporters, I don't know if you saw that,
James, he said, look, if we have to choose between keeping you
alive and feeding you, we're going to lean towards keeping you
alive.
Like what did he just say?
You know what he just said?
If we have to choose between us not letting these truck drivers
do their job, so food is not being delivered to you.
These are thousand, these are 15,000 truck drivers, so food doesn't come and you don't have
enough food for a week or two or three weeks.
For us, it's more important to keep you alive from COVID than feed you.
And we have to kind of go through that.
And Quebec is saying they're going to start opening up movie theaters with one rule
You cancel popcorn because they don't want you to go and without a mask on because they want nobody eating popcorn in movie theaters
Yeah, yeah, so it's a very strange dynamic. Well, this is what we talked about last time
This is more than just a health problem. There's an economic problem. There's a
Social societal problem. You're staying at home, you're the depression problem.
How many people are not getting out of the house,
being able to exercise?
You know, the quote, I mean, James has been busting out quotes all day.
I don't know who said this, but he said,
wars too important to be left to just the generals.
Just like a pandemic is too important to be left to just the scientists.
There's a lot of business people.
There's a lot of just regular, there's a lot of just regular
people who have a voice and have a say and it's not just one, you know, one size fits
all type of cure to this. And look what's happening here.
And look at the other Elon Musk.
I can't get up with this.
Quote, CB radios, those are the radios that use for the trucks are free from censorship.
Control zoom in so we can be audience can see what they're doing. CB radios. CB radios are free from censorship control zoom in so we can be audience can see what they do.
The CBA radios are free.
They reply Elon Musk there, CBA radios,
the truck radios are free for media control.
Those are the old radios.
We grew up in as his kids, you know, even them.
It's a very amazing one.
For me, this is all about,
I go back to the power of the image.
I'm gonna speak from a journalistic perspective
on this matter, not as a public policy health issue. It's the idea that those are profoundly moving images of a
convoy of trucks and thousands to hundreds of thousands of people, tens of thousands of people.
And then the Wall Street Journal, New York Times, you wouldn't even know about it if you lived in
Manhattan. That's strange. That's strange. If you only read The New York Times, if you only, you would not see it. That's actually
really an amazing observation there. You wouldn't even know about it if you only read certain
publications, and that's not right. They don't want you to see, why don't they want you to
see the images? Because they want a specialized class of men, as Edward Bernays said, and
Dean Lippmann said, we need to interpret the data.
We don't want you to have the images because you might draw wrong conclusions from the images
that you see.
Well, that's not right.
That's not right.
James, other than Project Veritas, obviously, what new sources do you trust?
Any source that I can see the evidence myself?
Would your name names?
No, because it's like,
because of broken clock is right twice a day.
I mean, anyone can do this.
Any, New York Times can and has done good journalism.
But you gotta be able to see it.
Like we're doing right now.
Like we're looking at the image,
assuming those images are not doctored.
Right there, go to what Dinesh said.
When Dinesh was on with us and I did the interview,
this is exactly what I said.
I don't know why the right is in doing this.
We talked about this on our interview, maybe a year and a half ago.
He says, tweets are fine, Elon Musk, but you can dramatically change political and cultural
landscapes this way by and take over a major social media platform, acquire or create
a TV network like ABC, NBC or CBS, create a world class online university and offer degrees
for free.
That's exactly what we talked about in the interview
I pull up that short clip and you replied with
It's time to pull up that short clip with the Danish and I because I fully agree with that
I would like to reply to that tweet
I'm banned on Twitter so I cannot do so, but I can make a comment right now go for my comment is that if you're a business man
You'd have to you'd have to do it as a philanthropic thing. If your job is to generate a profit, it will not help.
If you want to tell the truth, if you want to be a news organization, the commercial imperative,
if Elon Musk is listening, the commercial imperative, that is to say, poor, for-profit
capitalism, is incompatible with investigative journalism.
You have to be philanthropic.
And by the way, this is the way it used to be.
You talked about journalism in in 70s and 80s
from what I've read.
Those organizations, it was a loss leader
on the company's balance sheet.
So ABC News would do these things,
says by ABC and all these, they would do it,
but they would do it as a loss leader.
They would, they would almost donate money
on their balance sheet profit and loss to do the work.
It didn't generate a profit per se,
but they donated it.
And if you're gonna buy these companies,
it's not gonna help unless the person
is willing to be philanthropic.
The billionaire would have to donate.
You don't think so.
You don't think so.
I believe this, yes, I know so.
I don't think, and it's self-evident.
I mean, these billionaires settle losses.
I don't know if I agree with that because then you're saying then what you just said is that
the current mainstream media has zero influence and they do. Mark Benninghoff bought Time magazine.
That's a pretty legit one to buy. Well, you know, you got the Peter guy about L.A. Times.
You got Amazon Jeff Bezos bought WAPO. If it doesn't work, why are they buying?
Well, maybe we're talking about different things. I mean, to say, if you want to do investigative
journalism, if you just want to people opine and speak opinion and project their political,
if I don't know if that's what the Neshtas is, it means I don't want to put words in his mouth,
but if the idea is you just want to buy a network so that you can project your political views
onto your audience, that's not what I'm talking about.
I'm talking about doing real information finding and truth gathering, investigative reporting.
Do those networks even do investigative reporting anymore?
I guess maybe NBC catches the predators or does what would you do?
I don't know.
But I mean, really, real journalism requires philanthropy as well.
Let's transition into the next story.
So Spotify in the last 12 months, they've lost 25% of its value.
Okay, in the last 12 months, those Spotify stock has lost.
Can you go to that?
Okay, right there.
Spotify stock has lost nearly 25% of its value in 2022.
And 40, I was wrong, 45% over the past year.
What's going on?
So what's the date you see right there?
From 20, 21 to today, it went from being 240,
$250 a share to now being what, 190 a share,
184 a share as of, can you go to what it is today?
Just go to what the stock is today,
so we can find out.
And during this time,
can we find out when they signed Joe Rogan?
Put down when they signed Joe Rogan.
Spotify signed Joe Rogan on what day?
May of 2020, I wanna say.
So it's been a year and a half.
June of 2020.
June of 2020,
because December 7th was when he was leaving YouTube,
some like that when he said he's leaving YouTube.
What's the date?
May 2020, you're right. Okay, may of 2020, They sound good memory out. I'm very proud of memory of you
So so then here's what happens Joe
Respond yesterday. Did you see what you said? I did and I'm assuming you also saw what he said
I just want to as I was coming here commenting on it
So let me kind of read a few these things on what's going on and then we'll get into it. So Spotify
Joe Rogan and
Spotify, let me see if it's this one. Yeah, Joe Rogan and Spotify. Spotify removes Neil
Young's music over Rogan's dispute. This is an NBC News story. Spotify said it has agreed
to remove Neil Young's music after the famed singer-writer said he wouldn't share the
platform with podcasts of Joe Rogan who has been criticized for spreading vaccine
disinformation. They can have Rogan or young, not both.
Young 76 said, the heart of gold singers solo catalogs span more than five decades from
his 1969 self titled album to his most recent record, 2021 barn.
Young called out the Rogan experience in his letter and the danger of Spotify enabling
the distribution of potentially fatal misinformation with an estimated 11 million listeners per episode JRE
which is hosted exclusively on Spotify has tremendous influence, Spotify has
responsibility to mitigate the spread of misinformation on its platform
and in Harry and Megan Merkel decided to comment as well. They are Spotify to stop
COVID-19 misinformation from spreading on its platform. This is an inside
the story. A spokesperson for Archwell, Harry and Megan's foundation said in the
statement, Sunday last April, our co-founders began expressing concerns to our partners
at Spotify about the all two real consequences of COVID-19 misinformation on its platform.
Spotify shares dropped 12%, following Neil Young's request and removing music from the
platform. Harry and Megan comments follow the decision by young
and johnny michael to request their songs be taken off the platform in some
case of podcast host saying
they won't release new episodes now by the way here's other names that have come
up willian elson brusprings to which i think he sold
his catalog to sony for half a billion dollars i don't even know if you can say
that
so needy says whether they want to take it off i think
barra stris and queen paul mccartney, Rolling Stones, David Grohl, Johnny Mitchell,
Pearl Jam are removing their music from Spotify and Solidarity.
It's all a dirty and keep in mind that 30% of all the buys of music is on Spotify.
So if people want to buy a song by Snoop, 30% of it is bought on Spotify.
So it's not like it's a small amount of Spotify.
So you can keep the fascists.
That will, let's just, let's know.
There's no proof to this comment right here, these artists.
There's a hundred percent proof to Neil Young and Johnny Mitchell.
Well, if you go, I don't know if this is true or not.
No, no, no, go type in Bruce Springsteen Spotify.
If you type in Bruce Springsteen and Spotify,
that's all you gotta do.
So that's what I did yesterday. Type in Bruce Springsteston and Spotify. If you type in Bruce Springston and Spotify, that's all you gotta do. That's what I did yesterday.
Type in Bruce Springsteen and Spotify.
Okay.
Right there.
It's an NBC story.
C.M. is right there.
It's a tariff. It's not him.
Yeah.
So, okay, so these stories are coming out.
What are your thoughts on this, James?
I've got, I've got many thoughts.
I mean, it goes back to, I'm sorry to get philosophical
again, but it goes back to this concept about what is misinformation because I watched
the Rogan reaction on Instagram as I was driving to your studio this morning. I'm glad
I did. And he said this. And it totally said, well, things a year ago or six months ago,
the cloth mask, you would be banned if you said it. Now it comes out as true from the experts.
So it goes back to this definition of why are they censoring, why are they wanting him
off because of misinformation?
What does that even mean?
And what it means is it goes back to the authorized experts say business.
So the government, the CDC, the experts, the pharmaceutical companies, it goes back to what
the experts say, but who are these experts?
And it goes back to the very idea of what we're talking about this whole, these two-hour
segment, which is the unauthorized information.
Our world is becoming such.
You are only allowed to think and say what the authorized knowers and the presumed credible
sources permit you to say, which is
so it's so anathema to what journalism and the media is supposed to be. And Rogan said
he said, you couldn't even say these things a year ago that now you're allowed to say,
you know, I'm on a tell a dirty joke, not too dirty though. And by the way, I'm happy
to say this publicly and privately. You're I'm I'm I'm I'm in my I'm not a tell a dirty joke, not too dirty though. And by the way, I'm happy to say this publicly and privately.
You're, I'm in my, I'm not married,
but for this joke, let's say that I am.
And I'm in my bedroom and I'm having an affair
with this beautiful woman and one night,
this woman comes into my bedroom and she goes,
oh my God, how could you do this?
How could you do this?
We've been married for 10 years
and she's looking at me having this affair and the next morning, and she said, how could you do this? We've been married for 10 years, and she'd look in at me having this affair,
and the next morning, and she said,
how could you do that to me?
And I said, well, honey, that's actually been debunked
by experts familiar with the matter.
Experts say that you never saw that happen, right?
So my question is, disinformation,
this is a rhetorical question,
disinformation is based upon experts and credible sources.
And that's the problem with our modern ecosystem
is that you can't say anything contrary
to what those experts tell you.
What do you think is going to happen with Spotify
and Joe long-term?
Do you see, is there any chance that Spotify is
going to make a big decision?
Daniel, like, do you see anything happening
there? The only thing that they've come out and said was that they're going to add content
advisories to basically Joe Rogan's podcast. He said, he said, I had to say yesterday,
Daniel, I came in and made an announcement. He says, I don't agree with plenty of individuals
on Spotify. Some I strongly disagree with. We know we have a critical role to play in supporting creator expression while balancing
it with the safety of our users.
Quarantone quote, we don't want to play content sensor, but we are putting rules in play.
Well, this is section 230.
This is a central issue here.
This is the White House quote, you shouldn't be banned from one platform or another.
So these companies can't have it both ways.
They can either be platforms or they can be be platforms or they can make editorial judgments.
And once these start, well, I saw Daniel Eccles's name.
Yes, see you.
Once you start making decisions to ban certain things, not others, and you start crossing
that threshold, now you're effectively a new, you're effectively a, you're not protected
by those immunities and you should be sued for liability.
These are tough issues.
We've never crossed this rubicon before.
This is a today.
He's sitting here today.
We've never gone this far, so I don't know what the future holds, but I don't know.
The only thing is these CEOs of these companies, these four profit people like ECH, I don't
know what his values are, but if your value is money and profit
uh... they're kind what ends up happening is they're always going to fold
they're not going to be able to stand firm that's what i think is going to happen
they're going to fold and
is going to be more censorship and i i think it's bigger than just daniel
ec look at look at uh...
twitter and uh... jack dorsi
you know people have their thoughts on jack dorsi but but people who know jack
say that the whole reason he started Twitter was for a free speech
ecosystem and he got pushed out by the board by executives, etc., etc
So now there's talk of him starting his own platform
But what happens was Spotify can can Daniel Eck hold strong or will the executives come in the board members come in and say no
We're done with you. Thank you very much. That's a that's a great question because listen
and say, no, we're done with you. Thank you very much.
That's a great question, because listen, 45%.
You know how much is 45%?
You're not talking, they lost $16 million.
You're not talking, they lost $100 million,
or $400 million.
So 45%, you're talking about billions of dollars, okay?
Billions of dollars.
They're market cap right there.
If you look at their market cap right now.
What's the market cap of Spotify?
36.4 billion dollars.
Do you see it?
Do you see the market cap of Spotify?
36.4 billion dollars.
Yes.
If you talk in 45%, what is a drop off to go to 36 billion dollars?
That's 70 billion dollar valuation.
You talk about, they lost nearly 22 to 24 billion dollars in 12 months. We're not talking a little bit of money
So imagine the conference calls where investors are on a saying how are you handling
Joe Rogan? What are you gonna do about imagine a board board is sitting there saying hey like I remember my board
We had a meeting. It was a tough conversation. They had with me
What are you doing to get a hundred percent to what are you doing to get your agents to get vaccinated?
It's a conversation out with me
am i board meeting
so i'm sitting on having a conversation with them
they've had to have a conversation with daniel saying what are we doing about
you're also you are also giving a great lecture for your audience about why i
am a five one c three non-profit organization which protects the freedom of
association rights for donors to the first amendment
because we don't have this problem.
We don't have to disclose the Supreme Court
has protected our rights.
They can't boycott our donors,
because they don't know their names.
And this is the problem, I mean, I'm going to go back
to my argument.
This is the problem with these four-profit news,
because Joe Rogan is technically a man
who's disseminating information and news is that
they'll invariably fold, you know?
And that's why we have them.
I don't, I've seen it.
The first chapter in my book is called Suffering,
because the amount of pain that this man is going to,
that Echa is going to have to endure to go through this.
I mean, I think the only way forward is philip philim throppy
non-profit sort of uh...
the model
to get information out there where they can't boycott
and target
the people that support you so i as soon as the uh... the hundred million dollar
contracts happen
i will see what happens see what happens
i think so i i don't think rogan's going anywhere i think rogan's going to be in
demand for a long time to come.
I don't think Rogan's going to have a problem because yesterday, when he posted a video,
did you guys see the commentary of what people said to him?
Did you guys, did you look at the commentary?
That's the question.
Let me ask you a question.
If you go to Rogan's Instagram post, go to Instagram post, just tap in and Google Instagram
Joe Rogan.
I want to show you a couple of people that commented that says who Joe is.
So when you think about the rock, what do you think about the rock?
Type in right there, click on that.
What do you think the rock is?
Left, right center, what do you put the rock?
I don't know.
I don't know.
Center-ish.
Well, he protected, he defended what he called it.
Well, Keith doesn't see left, right center.
He can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can,
he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he can, he't see left right so he can make it but you know he
went out there and he had the
by none come all her son but he didn't have trump on right so he supported
one side now what while you look at that i'll read it okay if you can find it i'll
read it here
so when he posted this video here's a commentary
uh... it got four million views
k million likes, okay.
Here's what the rock said, the rock,
Dwayne Johnson said in the comment section.
He commented and he said something about,
hey man, you know, I obviously told
she gathered commented, I'm trying to find the rocks comments,
jewel commented, sure, but there is one from the rock,
man, if you can't find it, I hope he didn't delete it.
I mean, this thing was up yesterday and something about,
hey, I can't wait to come on one of these days and be on the podcast.
That's crazy that he hasn't been on yet.
He said that.
Yeah, he said, I'd love to one of these.
Okay, there you go.
Great stuff here, brother.
Perfectly articulated.
Look forward to coming on one day and breaking out the tequila with you.
Got 60,000. A comment got 60,000 likes
So he's protected Joe is gonna be in demand no matter where he goes
You're saying he's uncancellable. I don't know if I'm gonna say he's uncancellable
I when I sat down with Joe my suggestion to him was the only way you can protect yourself a hundred percent long term
It's to do what consider opening up your own thing for example if he and
Musk teamed up together
Imagine if him and Musk teamed up together to start something right yeah, I agree with you. That was that was profound
You have to be the chairman of your own company. You have to be the owner and can chairman to be a journalist
Yeah, even even let's take that to the thing. I'm not like what you're doing.
To be a journalist, that's a very astute point.
I want to comment on this.
I didn't start out thinking, I'm gonna create a business
with 75 employees and $20 million, budget.
I, of course, I never thought I'm gonna do that.
I said, I need to tell this truth,
and I need to expose this thing.
And then along the way, I realized, okay,
in order to not settle the lawsuit,
I have to have the autonomy, the power to make that decision.
No one would ever allowed me to make these decisions unless I was in control of making those decisions.
So you're right, I think he has to be the owner and the controller.
And right now he's, I guess he's in contract with Spotify, is that correct? He's not on the board of Spotify. He's not.
No, he's not.
No, he's here.
But I tell you, think about it this way.
The other day, I was invited to a party that was going to be in Miami the same night, and
I don't know if you remember who the party was by.
Do you remember when I told you who the party was?
Okay, I'll tell you afterwards.
It's one of the biggest guys in technology world who was having a party with everyone
that's going to be there.
Some big names that were going to be there. I'm going to kind of show you who this was.
And the reason why I'm saying this because I think this guy right here needs to be involved
in this conversation with Joe and in the conversation with Elon Musk.
I think if they do it together, I think there is some damage that can be done if those guys
were able to team up together.
Because when you need somebody understands technology
very well, too, you have to have somebody that has a lot of,
no, it's a little bit more than most technology.
Too, you need somebody that has to know,
has access to unlimited amount of resources,
which you have, most has.
And then through, you have to have somebody
that's a loved, admired, adored,
and it's as much in the center as possible,
and this is the guy.
If you can't get Trump involved,
because it wouldn't work out if you get a personality
like that involved.
But there's three people I think if they team up,
some damage can be made on this side.
Would you own some of these names?
So, anyways, last question for you here,
is what's the story with you still being on YouTube?
Well, why is YouTube bothering you?
Because I was looking at your stuff.
I'm like, let me get to straight.
This guy's still on YouTube.
Doing well on YouTube.
Yeah, you're still on YouTube
and no one is saying anything about you on YouTube.
Because we tell the truth.
Because we've won every loss it
because we're very careful and diligent.
And I mean, that's the only explanation.
We haven't lied about anything to the people.
We use undercover techniques,
but there we are with 1.46 million subs.
I still haven't gotten our gold Google,
what do they call it, the YouTube Gold plaque.
Plac, that we got the silver one of 100,000.
They won't send us the plaque.
Oh, that's a conscious decision.
I don't know, I mean, we haven't gotten it.
When did you, when did you,
we've been over a million subs for about a year. When did you apply to get the gold? Well, they sent a conscious decision. I don't know. I mean, we haven't gotten it. When did you... We've been over a million subs for about a year.
When did you apply to get the gold?
Well, they sent it to you.
They sent us the silver on asked for when we get 100,000.
But I know that Tim Poole showed me the gold plaque that he got multiple...
And I think he used it as a door stop for his door.
He puts the gold plaque under the door, I think.
But I don't know.
The reality is that we are very diligent and extremely careful.
If you watch our news reports on the Project Veritas YouTube
channel, they are extremely professional, very serious,
and very diligent.
So I think they're going to try to find an excuse.
At some point, it might be like a copyright violation.
Or you're on the
street and you hear a song in the radio of a car.
They'll take you off.
They'll find some bizarre.
Like, they did take us off.
One of the videos, because we were doing a report out in the street in California and
you could see in the corner of the screen a lamp post with a number for one of the houses.
This is absurd.
Like, these journalists do this all the time.
So we're now we blur every license plate.
We're so tediously careful.
The stairs we are applied to
is above any journalism standard in the history of the media.
And for that reason, at least so far,
they have not taken down our news reports.
Go to videos, go to videos,
and type in a solve for most views.
Go to the right, sort by views.
The COVID world.
Go to the top one.
The COVID one, don't click on it, but the COVID one, which was four months ago, 5.2 million
views.
And by the way, if you've never seen it, folks, you got to watch that.
Here's the thing.
I can't believe that's still up.
I cannot believe that's still up because you know
Prager you went and sued YouTube and they went back and forth and they took a lot of their videos down
I am surprised that video has been left out. Here's another thing as you're talking these are thoughts are occurring to me
We sue people and we win and
To a certain degree I can I think it's a fair state and say that they fear us more than we fear them
What does that mean?
I see the New York Times for defamation.
I got past motion to dismiss.
Can you name anybody else that's, I mean Sarah Palin did, but that was in an opinion section.
I did it with the news section.
So there are very few human beings that are able to accomplish that.
It's like sort of being in the boss phase of the video game, you know, like when you play
Nintendo.
Like we've gotten to the boss level. And I think that there's to a certain degree, there's an incentive
for them not to do this sort of thing where they ban me for some bullshit reason, because
I'm the sort of man that will sue them and win. Now you might say, well, there's no legal
theory to do that with you too, but they don't know that. And frankly, maybe there is a legal
theory under section 230 or a defamation law.
So what I mean to say is I actually believe that these companies might be afraid to ban
me because if they were to do that, they would have to create some pretext, some erroneous
rule that applies to me, but doesn't apply to the other guy who breaks the rules all the
time.
I don't.
And they're actually afraid of being exposed for violating their own rule.
This is an interesting psychological thing.
And that's probably the reason why
they haven't taken that down.
Because of course, our journalism is correct
and those things actually occurred.
And if the third video there,
Pfizer-Whisubler leaks exact emails,
that was a Pfizer-Whisubler who released emails
of the director of one of the senior executives at Pfizer Pharmaceutical
saying in an email, these are her words, not mine, and she's saying, we don't want our
customers to know that we use fetal cells in the development of the vaccine.
And that's what that video was, 3.5 million views, and actual emails, real evidence, they
haven't banned it.
So why were you taking off Twitter then?
Great question.
They said that Twitter's excuse was I was, quote, creating fake accounts.
Now, I've never created a fake account, so I sued them for defamation.
And that matters on going.
They just seemingly made up an excuse.
It wasn't because my reporting was false.
No, it's because I quote, made fake and excuse. It wasn't because my reporting was false. No, it's because I quote,
made fake Twitter accounts.
I'm not sure what they mean by that.
Who came up with the word provocator?
Was that something that they used to describe you?
I suppose people.
But you know when you go on Wikipedia,
like you have a reputation.
Oh, Wikipedia, it evoke audible gasps
from people who read it.
That you think I'm a a monster reading the Wikipedia page.
And it's all just, it's all just circularly sourced nonsense.
What's your long term aspirations? What's long term?
I think the ultimate vision, the vision of Aritas is now evolved into effectively being the
answer to the question, what can I do? So we are a catalyst for citizen empowerment. So
we have, as I sit here on my iPad right now in front of you, we have a team of people that get tips from DMs from people, Instagram DMs and people
call our hotline hundreds of people a day, Massachusetts, and people from all society, you know,
military people, school nurses, cops, honest firefighters, everyone, and it's effectively creating
a mass movement of these people on the inside of these institutions
to blow the whistle.
I would love to get more federal government people to do that.
The challenge we're going to have with people inside the federal government like Ed Snowden
and Julian Assange have shown us that I think people are going to be persecuted and I think
that people are going to have to deal with that persecution and prosecution.
So long term, the answer to your question is we want to create a mass movement of whistleblowers.
Mass movement of whistleblowers.
Mass movement of these whistleblowers.
Yes.
You and Snowden have you guys ever done anything together or no?
Well, funny enough, I was walking into your studio, literally through that massive bank heavy ass door.
It's gonna be ass door.
You open it, you can't do together.
It's gonna creepy, my security detail was like,
I can't move the door.
Oh, okay, if you think you're leaving it in there,
I feel like I feel like I got you now.
I feel more unsafe in this room.
Okay, all right, we don't wanna see the guy.
Okay, this guy's out.
Oh, he's been half asleep the whole time. Now he's boss world. Okay, all right, we don't want to see the guy. This guy's out.
Alan's been half asleep the whole time.
Now he's bossing out of.
All right, so what were you asking?
You were talking about when you were walking in.
When I was walking through the Snowden,
incredible entrance to your studio here with the bank door.
Snowden tweeted, Ed Snowden tweeted a video
of our performance in Miami the other night.
Ed Snowden was treating about the performance.
And I have to say about Ed Snowden,
I, this is an example of this both sides issue,
is that is he a hero, is he a villain?
And I said when this happened eight years ago,
I thought about this because I don't,
I think he defies characterization.
You know, he defies characterization. You know, he defies characterization.
He, what he exposed was true.
James Clapper lied under oath.
The NSA director said we do not
wittingly spy on people.
It was the worst liar ever for a spook.
He was giving away all the gestures
who was rubbing his brow.
He's not supposed to do that, bad spy.
But he defies characters, but the amount of pain and persecution he's had to deal with.
He's in Russia. He's a, he's a, he's a, he can't live in the United States otherwise he'll,
he's going to be in solitary confinement somewhere. It's going to require that level of sacrifice
and service. And you might say, well, who will ever do that? Well, our service
members go overseas and die for their country. They do that. Is there someone in Washington,
DC willing to make willing to live in solitary confinement for the rest of their life? For
bringing disclosures to the public, showing what's actually happening inside of an organization like the Department of Justice.
Is that someone, is there a human being willing to do that?
Because I can show you, history is replete with millions of people who get killed for this
country.
So I have a dream where there are people that come out and hopefully they are not prosecuted.
Hopefully the disclosures are to such a degree that the people of this country say, you
know what, we're going to have their back no matter what.
And we're going to elect you out of office if you go after those people.
That's my vision for the future of this organization.
And you know what, sitting here right now today, I think it's going to happen.
Could you seem determined to do it, folks?
If you enjoyed today's podcast with James O'Keefe from Project Veritas, hit the subscribe
button if you're here for the first time.
And secondly, we're going to put the link below to his book.
I read this.
I listen to it.
I highly recommend you go do the same as well.
We're going to put the link to Amazon.
Is that the main link you want us to drive it to?
Yeah.
It was number four on Amazon.
I saw that. And you want to go Barnes and Noble wherever you want us to drive it to? Yeah, it was number four on Amazon. I saw that.
And you want to go Barnes and Noble wherever you want to buy it, please.
Thank you.
Yeah, highly recommended.
And it all proceeds from this book.
Go to our nonprofit organization.
This book is sold a lot of copies.
It'll probably generate a few hundred thousand dollars revenue for us.
So we appreciate it.
It goes to pay our reporter salaries.
Tyler, can you do me a favor and put that in the chat box as well as in a comment section
on the bottom so people can find a book having said that James, appreciate you for coming
on.
And this was a blast.
Thank you.
Having said that folks this week, I think we're doing a podcast four times, right?
Tomorrow, tomorrow's podcast is with you.
Tomorrow you are in Hari.
You are in Hari, which we're going to talk about mental anxiety, mental issues, you know, people are going through the
depression, we'll talk about that tomorrow. I think we got Jordan Peterson on Friday or
Saturday, stay tuned. And I think Thursday, who do we have on Thursday?
Mr. Mike Rittland. Mike Rittland is going to be here. Mike Rittland, the man is going to
be here as well. So having said that, stay tuned folks, we're going to do this. This is
going to be the first week we're doing a podcast four times. Having said that, have a great
day, everybody. Take care. Bye bye.
This is going to be the first week we're doing a podcast four times.
Having said that, have a great day, everybody.
Take care.
Bye-bye, bye-bye, bye-bye.