Shawn Ryan Show - #132 Mike Benz - Inside the Censorship Industrial Complex
Episode Date: September 19, 2024Mike Benz is a former official with the U.S. Department of State, known for his work in international communications and digital freedom. He has played a significant role in advocating for internet fr...eedom and the protection of online expression. Benz is the founder of the Foundation for Freedom Online, an organization dedicated to promoting free speech and digital rights around the world. His work focuses on countering authoritarian censorship and supporting the rights of individuals to access and share information freely. His background includes expertise in foreign affairs and digital policy, often emphasizing the importance of a free and open internet as a fundamental human right. Through his advocacy, Benz has sought to engage policymakers and the public on issues related to digital governance, censorship, and the implications of technology for democracy. Shawn Ryan Show Sponsors: https://preparewithshawn.com https://hillsdale.edu/srs https://www.fxnetworks.com/shows/the-old-man https://ShawnLikesGold.com | 855-936-GOLD #goldcopartner Mike Benz Links: FFO Foundation - https://foundationforfreedomonline.com X - https://x.com/mikebenzcyber IG - https://www.instagram.com/MikeBenzCyber Please leave us a review on Apple & Spotify Podcasts. Vigilance Elite/Shawn Ryan Links: Website | Patreon | TikTok | Instagram | Download Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
the game. To wager Ontario-only gambling problem, call Connex Ontario at 1-866-531-2600.
BedMGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with iGaming Ontario.
How do stop losses work on Kraken?
Let's say I have a birthday party on Wednesday night, but an important meeting Thursday morning.
So sensible me, pre-book a taxi for 10 p.m. with alerts.
Voila!
I won't be getting carried away and staying out till two.
That's Stop Loss Orders on Kraken,
an easy way to plan ahead.
Go to kraken.com and see what crypto can be.
Not investment advice,
scripted trading involves risk of loss.
See kraken.com slash legal slash ca dash pru dash disclaimer
for info on Kraken's undertaking to register in Canada.
["The Last Supper"]
Mike Benz, welcome to the show. Thanks for having me.
Ben, I have been looking forward to this for a long time.
I first saw you, I think, on Glenn Beck.
Is that correct?
You may have been.
Yeah, I think I first, you first popped up on my radar on Glenn Beck
and then I saw you on Tucker a couple times
and I've been trying to get in contact with you.
And finally, we got you. So a couple times and I've been trying to get in contact with you
and finally we got you.
So thanks for coming, I really.
Thanks for having me.
You have the most epic studio I've ever seen.
Well that means a hell of a lot, thank you.
You've been around at some really cool studios
so I appreciate that.
I don't know if you ever pan it,
but everyone who's watching this yet to see this.
It's a museum here.
Only the guests get to see it.
Classified then.
Yeah, but we'll start throwing some of the stuff out
for the masses to see,
because there's some pretty historic stuff in here.
But, well, I'm dying to talk to you about the stuff that's going on in Brazil
right now and all the censorship stuff you're the guy to talk to and um so before we get before we
get into the weeds everybody gets an introduction and a gift so here we go Mike Benz, previously served as deputy assistant secretary
for international communications and information technology
at the US State Department from fall of 2020 through 2021,
served as White House speechwriter for President Trump
and advised on tech matters, served as a speechwriter
to housing and urban development secretary, Dr. Ben Ben Carson and was a policy advisor on economic development.
You're the author of the unpublished Montrosity Weapons of Mass Deletion.
Today, you seek to provide nonpartisan insights and assistance to all peoples taking a stand for freedom of speech, freedom of expression, and the free exchange of ideas online
through FFO Foundation for Freedom Online,
which you founded in 2022.
Why did you found that?
What prompted that?
Well, I think it was a natural continuation
of the spirit of what I felt our federal government
needed to do while I was in it, which was bring to light and try to educate people around
what's really driving internet censorship, the forces behind it, the abuses of government.
The fact is, is several years ago, it was a sort of unsubstantiated thing
in many people's minds that the US government
was putting pressure on the tech platforms
to censor speech.
All these open First Amendment questions about it.
And I felt like there needed to be a venue
to provide nonpartisan insights, to educate people
so that they had the language, they had the background, they had the stories,
they had the ability to understand the world around them
as it pertains to internet censorship.
Interesting.
Well, I'm glad you're doing that.
So I have a Patreon subscription account.
They've been with us since the beginning.
It's grown into quite the community
and they're the reason that I get to sit here and you.
And so one of the things that they get the opportunity to do
is ask each guest a question.
And so this is from Stephanie Jordan.
The First Amendment is quickly dying.
How much time do we as Americans have in comparison to countries like the UK and
Brazil? Well the story of what's happening in the UK and Brazil is very tightly connected to our own.
We'll get to this when we talk about some of the international issues happening right now,
but the US State Department is actually putting pressure on foreign countries to enact their
own censorship laws. So I don't really see what's happening in the UK or Brazil as being distinct from the US.
But in terms of how much time we have left,
this is one of these spaces where there's a lot of
two steps forward, one step back,
three steps back, one step forward.
You can lose and lose badly even for a number of years
and then begin to make inroads again.
There was, for the first six years of me doing this,
I've been involved in this space for eight years now,
just dedicated my whole life to it.
And for the first six years, there was no traction at all.
It was one loss after another.
And that does make you feel hopeless,
but you just keep putting one foot in front of the other
until you start to get victories.
And then we've had a lot of victories
on the free speech space in the past 18 months
and go through them if folks are interested, but.
I think it would be good to go through them
just for the positivity aspect.
Totally, totally.
So coming into the year 2022,
the censorship industry was completely invincible.
And what I mean by the censorship industry
is this whole of society framework
that our government uses for its counter misinformation work
which ties together four different stakeholder institutions,
government agencies, private sector companies,
civil society institutions like universities, NGOs, researchers,
and then media institutions.
And all four of them, government, private sector,
civil society, and media all work together
to achieve a common censorship outcome.
So they can each pull their own levers
in order to achieve the censorship of a narrative
or of an account or kill someone's advertising revenue,
whatever needs to be
done in any particular case.
And from 2016, when this was all really getting established in the U.S., until 2022, there
was never any piercing of any one of those four quadrants.
No government agencies were under scrutiny.
Most people didn't even know there was a government role.
All the social media companies were completely under this pressure, and there was no one willing. All the social media companies were completely
under this pressure and there was no one willing
to break the alliance.
You know, you had Mark Zuckerberg at Facebook
who was being threatened by the federal government
in terms of Facebook's bottom line.
Jack Dorsey was totally pliant to these.
YouTube was an avid censor in that regard.
And so in 2022, a number of things happened
that began to really change the turf of this.
So first there was this scandal
with the Disinformation Governance Board.
I don't know if folks remember this.
This was this Ministry of Truth is what people
were calling it at the Department of Homeland Security.
You know, they made the mistake for once in their lives
of publicly calling it what it actually was.
You know, when the Disinformation Governance Board
happened in April, 2022, it was the first time
that Republicans in Congress leapt to life and said,
oh my God, there's a government censorship agency.
It's the Ministry of Truth.
What they didn't know is that the Ministry of Truth
had already existed within DHS for three years before that.
It was just given a much more boring, mundane name.
It was called the Cybersecurity
and Infrastructure Security Agency.
But what they did is they said that
because their mission is critical infrastructure security,
and elections are critical infrastructure,
and COVID deals with public health, and public health are critical infrastructure and COVID deals with
public health and public health is critical infrastructure.
Any tweets that contain misinformation about elections or about COVID or about any number
of sensitive policy issues were a cyber threat actor, were a cyber attack on critical infrastructure.
And so DHS had this giant web apparatus to censor
First Amendment protected speech using a cybersecurity
predicate, but at the time that was almost too fantastical
for people to believe.
It wasn't until DHS's censorship operations became so
sprawling and so massive and had so many touch points that
they needed this dull, boring, bureaucratic management
layer, the Dis bureaucratic management layer,
the Disinformation Governance Board,
to manage what DHS, CISA, and the Intelligence Wing of DHS,
DHS, INA, was doing.
And so it was only then that you had Chuck Grassley
and Josh Hawley and all these different Republican members
of Congress say, holy, wait a second,
we've heard rumors about internet censorship
being directed by the US government.
Maybe they're true because look,
they have this Disseparation Governance Board.
That same month, Elon Musk announced
his intended acquisition of X,
and that he was spending $44 billion
to set the bird free,
you know, to get rid of the censorship policies
that had existed essentially from 2016 until 2022.
In November of 2022,
the Republicans took control over Congress.
In October of 2022, Elon Musk completed his acquisition
and Republicans in Congress began to break much of this open
as did Elon Musk through the Twitter files.
And so there began to be all these public hearings
on government pressure on Facebook, on Amazon,
on YouTube, on Twitter.
Jim Jordan, the chairman
of the House weaponization subcommittee,
got us the Facebook files,
which showed that Facebook was only censoring COVID-19
because they felt beholden to the Biden administration
and folded under that pressure
in order to be receptive to their cause to censorship
because they have bigger fish to fry
on multiple policy fronts,
meaning they needed the Biden State Department's help
to defend their rights in Europe. And they needed the Biden State Department's help to defend their rights in Europe.
And they needed the Biden administration's protection
of their data rights and their advertising revenues.
And so you start, when Elon kicked the door open
with the Twitter files and there began
to be congressional support in Congress,
many of these federal agencies started to clam up and I won't say close down,
but they had to reorganize in ways
that added a lot of friction to what they did.
And they became a lot less powerful
because now the public awareness had grown
and anytime they did something,
they would be at the subpoenas,
people would be brought in for transcribed interviews,
there'd be public hearings, there'd be lawsuits,
there've been many private sector lawsuits. We've had this major Supreme Court case
that just sort of, in my view, was wrongly decided,
but it's still a preliminary decision,
so that may still play out favorably in the future.
But there's been legal pressure,
there's been congressional pressure,
there has been the prying open of Twitter,
which is the X, it's the largest political thought incubator
of all the social media platforms,
because everyone's a content producer on there,
unlike YouTube, as soon as you hit the retweet button.
And that has also given cover to folks like Mark Zuckerberg
to lessen censorship at Facebook and on Instagram.
And this is one of the things the censorship industry
has been apoplectic about is that they accused
Mark Zuckerberg of riding Elon Musk's free speech
coattails and removing a lot of the liaison tentacles
that previously were backchanneled by US intelligence
or by political operatives involved
in the censorship industry.
And so the internet now is much freer than it was several years ago in
The US so the blob has a new strategy
involving bringing
International pressure on the platforms as well as state pressure within individual states in the US Wow
So we did get some wins
We're winning at the level the battle was being fought from 2016 to 2020.
If we had now what we, if we had then what we have now, we'd be in a totally different
world.
The issue is, is as we're winning at the current level, they've moved the battle upstream to
things that are existentially much more terrifying.
Just straight up international laws banning First Amendment speech.
We're seeing this with this new EU censorship law,
the Digital Services Act,
which adds a disinformation compliance component,
and that forces X to censor anything NATO wants to censor,
or else they lose their European market,
which is a larger market than their US market.
And so they have a whole bag of tricks
that are the new frontier for fighting this.
But if they hadn't escalated that,
we would be winning quite dramatically right now.
Interesting, interesting.
Let's get into the weeds on all of this.
I just wanted the wins to start with,
but everybody gets a gift.
All right, can I open it now? You can open it right now
Little something for the for the flight home
I'm actually a sucker for gummy bears. I just you'll love those then you'll love those
but
so let's do the
Get a couple of topics you want to cover, and that I want to hear about very much.
So let's talk about the big picture roadmap
of censorship and free speech.
The main thing for people to understand
is that free speech is caught in this proxy war
between what I call the blob,
and I didn't coin this term, I'll go over it,
the blob versus populism.
So it's not Democrats versus Republicans,
it's not right versus left or liberals versus conservatives.
It is the blob.
And what I mean by that is the foreign policy establishment
of the US, the UK and NATO.
This was a term that was coined by President Obama's
Deputy National Security Advisor, Ben Rhodes,
when the Obama administration in its final years
was frustrated with this entrenched, immutable,
alien-like, all-powerful form within Washington
that appeared to be more powerful
than the White House itself.
So this term, the blob, again, came from the Obama White House
to describe forces that the White House felt
it couldn't take on.
And I find it to be a more useful term
than something like deep state,
because it really encompasses this whole society concept,
that what the government does stretches its tentacles
into the private sector and into civil society
and into media organizations.
So the blob really has its sort of central locus within the diplomacy, defense, and intelligence
worlds.
So it's the State Department, it's the Pentagon, it's the CIA and the IC, and then sort of
spandrels out from there into all of the different
political actors on both sides of the aisle into all the different universities and NGOs and and allied media institutions and
It's transatlantic. It's it's the it's the sort of conjoined foreign policy of the US
the UK and NATO and
We have empowered this
blob apparatus to be able to do dirty tricks on the world stage to protect national interests. Right? So since World War II ended and we set up this rules-based international order,
we have needed a capacity to influence the course of events in foreign countries to make them more suitable
to U.S. interests.
Right in 1948, we had the U.N. Declaration on Human Rights,
made every country a sovereign territory.
It was forbidden by international law
to do war by military means.
You can just militarily, I'm sorry,
to do territorial acquisition
in a straight military conquest.
You can just march into Canada, take it over.
That would be just as a purely military,
Empire 1.0 type thing that was done
from the medieval period through the industrial revolution
all the way up until World War II.
We had this concept of democratic sovereignty.
So the lust for
empire never ended. After 1948, we needed a new mechanism to maintain empire, not
by military means, but by political vassalage. Now this is often supported by
military means or it's accomplished at its outset by military means.
Oftentimes we'll create a predicate for military activity
and then we will set up our political vassal state
from there.
But what I'm driving at is I'm not anti-blob
and I wanna make this totally clear at the outset.
Even though the blob, this foreign policy establishment
is the antagonist, it's sort of the villain
in the internet censorship story,
we do perhaps need it. That is, we can't make pencils in the United States
without getting the gum from trees in Malaysia,
without getting graphite from mines in South America.
What happens if Malaysia nationalizes the gum trees,
or the unions go on strike,
or the national government of Bolivia decides
to box out U.S. corporations?
Well, then Americans don't have pencils.
So we have this Department of Dirty Tricks capacity,
which spans this interagency foreign policy establishment
to influence the course of foreign events,
to support a particular political leader,
to change or get past certain laws within foreign countries.
And this is why it was often called in the 1950s,
60s, 70s, the Department of Dirty Tricks,
because we had this ability to do things to foreigners,
to foreign countries, to foreign governments,
that the Constitution forbade from doing to U.S. citizens
because it was supposed to redound to our national interest.
Even if it's not a national security threat,
if it supports U.S. national champions
on the corporate side,
or it allows Americans to have cheap gas
so they can afford middle-class homes
and middle-class lifestyle,
it's possible that our whole 20th century magic
of the American dream was only made possible
because we have this capacity
through our foreign policy establishment, the blob,
to do these dirty tricks abroad.
The issue is with the advent of populism,
really starting in 2016 with the events
of the Philippines election in 2016,
the events of Brexit, and the events of Donald Trump's election,
followed in short succession by Bolsonaro in Brazil, Matteo Salvini in Italy,
Marine Le Pen's rise in France, the Vox Party's rise in Spain, AFD's rise in Germany.
You had these foreign policy establishment institutions
who felt threatened that the entire rules-based international order
would collapse because everyone's pursuing their own nationalism.
And so all of these international entanglements,
these international financial relationships,
this international influence over national events
would all fall away, and it was only happening
because of free speech on the internet.
So they brought to bear this very powerful censorship
apparatus, really starting in 2014,
and it started with the military and the intelligence
and the diplomatic corps.
These same blob institutions created this architecture,
initially to stop Russian propaganda these same blob institutions created this architecture
initially to stop Russian propaganda after Crimea in 2014.
NATO developed this doctrine called from tanks to tweets that NATO was no longer primarily about tank warfare,
it was about controlling tweets
because tweets are how people get elected.
And at the time, NATO was saying that
the biggest threat to NATO was that
people would vote their way out of NATO
or would vote to not give funds for foreign wars.
That was a bigger threat than Russian aggression.
So what they did is they said anyone who supports Russia
or is NATO critical or is against
the foreign policy establishment at the domestic level
is effectively operating,
they're helping Russia.
And so even if they're not doing Russian disinformation,
we can still use our national security powers,
our national interest powers, to get them censored
because they are helping an adversary state.
And once that apparatus was put in place,
they began to apply it to everything,
to COVID, to election disinformation,
to climate disinformation.
And it grew to be this very all-powerful tool until,
as I mentioned, two years ago, the tide started to turn,
both within the US government through Congress
and the US private sector through new freedoms
on Twitter and YouTube and the rise of, I'm sorry, on Twitter and Facebook
and even the rise of a somewhat robust
YouTube alternative ecosystem like Rumble.
So now they've escalated that
and they're putting pressure on countries like Brazil
and in regions like the EU.
And all over 140 countries now,
we have these counter disinformation programs
which are purely designed to stop the rise
of domestic populace who might challenge
the foreign policy establishment.
How many countries are falling in line with this so far?
I mean, it's hard to give a rough estimate.
Certainly all of the countries in the EU,
probably about half the countries in the EU,
probably about half the countries in Latin and South America,
I don't have full vision into much of Africa.
I know that the disinformation programs are there and robust,
and they're crying for more funding.
But I would say at least one to two dozen have fallen under this.
Another one or two dozen they're frustrated by.
I'll give you an example.
So thanks to US government funding,
many of these spun out, cut out civil society institutions
who receive funding from the Pentagon
or the National Science Foundation,
the sort of DARPA civilian arm,
or through the State Department or USAID,
do these stakeholder conferences
where they will bring together their assets
in the censorship industry in all the different countries.
And a few months ago, they did a public Zoom call
that I happened to capture,
where they talked about how they brought together
their Brazil ecosystem and their Philippines ecosystem,
and they were frustrated that the folks in the Philippines
were not willing to go as far as the folks in Brazil
in terms of the counter disinformation laws
that they were lobbying for,
the different techniques that they were willing to apply.
But they brought together these multi-stakeholder players from a dozen different
countries' censorship ecosystems, all back-channeled essentially through USAID funding or through
a sort of university front, where they will literally get everyone on the same page like
a magnet so that they apply these censorship, you know, best practices to stop
the rise of populist political candidates in their region.
Wow.
And this started in 2014, you said?
2014 is when NATO began this in Central and Eastern Europe.
That was really, if you will, the sort of agent zero.
That was sort of the, you know,
if this was a sort of Ebola outbreak,
that was sort of the lab in which it was incubated
or the monkey, you know, that first bit a human.
And this was, you know, from their perspective,
the State Department, USAID, the military
pumped $5 billion into Ukrainian civil society
to topple the democratically elected government of Ukraine
in 2014, this is Viktor Yanukovych's government.
And I'm not even weighing in normatively
about whether that's a good or a bad thing.
But the plain fact is, is we did overthrow that government,
which was democratically elected by the Ukrainian people.
We did it through the same means
that were done on January 6th.
This was just a straight up riot
to take to the main parliament building square
and overrun it through violence
and seize control over government.
It's everything that was accused of January 6th protesters,
but our U.S. Embassy did it.
Victoria Nuland was handing out cookies and water bottles
to the militias
that the State Department and USAID and all these different CIA back channels
had been funding with billions of dollars, but they were not expecting what
came next, which was this countercoup. The entire eastern side of the country
declared itself to be a secessionist breakaway state. Militarily backstopped
by Russia.
Crimea voted in an independent referendum
to join the Russian Federation.
And so the State Department, the Pentagon,
NATO threw up their hands and said,
we pumped $5 billion into Ukraine,
and we still couldn't budge anyone
living in the Eastern flank, anyone in Crimea,
to side with our propaganda over Russian propaganda.
And so we needed, this is part of the issue
with winning through propaganda.
At a certain point, you can't, it starts to backfire.
You can only turn your knob up so much
in your own propaganda before people go,
that hurts my ears, I don't trust this.
So this new tool had to be developed
to turn down the opposition.
So there was no way to create a sort of robust
political thought leadership, to spread narratives,
to circulate potentially damning or humiliating
diplomatic incidents that can be exploited
for political purposes.
We needed a censorship mechanism at the technological level,
and we needed a censorship ecosystem of personnel
who could backchannel between the tech companies
and the blob, you know,
the diplomatic defense intelligence apparatus.
And so these were both developed effectively in tandem in 2014.
The Pentagon was already working on these AI censorship
super weapons to stop ISIS.
This was a technique called natural language processing,
which is this ability to basically scan
the entire internet, all tweets, all Facebook posts,
all YouTube videos, because everything we say on YouTube
since 2009 or whatnot has gone into closed captioning at YouTube.
So there's a transcript where the AI can read that transcript and it can scan for
keywords and they can do sentiment analysis to evaluate through essentially
AI pre-crime analysis whether or not you support or oppose the thing you're
talking about. And or whether you're talking about something that's sensitive
from NATO's perspective. Some Ukrainian oligarch who's on CIA payroll does something embarrassing and Russian YouTube
videos or Facebook posts or tweets are amplifying that.
Well, that can all be turned down so that nobody knows about the story because the AI
is now reading it.
They developed that in the counter-terrorism space, because if you recall, beginning in
2014 in the US, there was this threat of homegrown ISIS threats.
There began to be these terrorist attacks like the Garland attack in Texas, which turned
out to have its own quite peculiar elements.
But there was this threat that Americans may be being recruited on Facebook
and on YouTube and on Twitter by ISIS propagandists.
So we needed a technique to be able to scan the internet
for all pro-ISIS phraseology, you know, the terms they use,
the prefixes, the suffixes, the slang, the hashtags.
And so that began to be coordinated out of our,
something called a newly set up wing
of the US State Department,
really its first ever formal censorship subdivision.
It was called the Global Engagement Center.
And I bring this up
because it plays into the story later on here.
And this is set up by a guy named Rick Stengel,
who was the under secretary for public affairs,
you know, bragged that he was Obama's chief propagandist.
It's basically interstitial between state propaganda
from the US State Department and the media.
And they began to use these technologies
to scan and ban ISIS.
But then after the Crimea incident,
this began to be all sort of Russian propaganda.
But then any time a populist candidate began to win
or gain popularity in Europe,
they said Marine Le Pen is advantaging Russia
with the planks she's running on.
She wants to get rid of the U.S. sanctions on Russian energy,
so we can scan and ban for all sentiment
that supports Marine Le Pen,
as well as any U citizens who amplify Marine Le Pen
in the US and give her political support there.
So everyone get caught in the crossfire
of this effectively military complex
that was bent on achieving its goals.
Folks, you know it.
America has never been this close to collapse.
To make matters worse, we're right around the corner from an unprecedented political
powder keg.
And folks, the sparks are flying.
But smart Americans know this and are fighting back by investing in emergency preparedness
now while they still can. And I strongly urge you to do the same by going to
preparewithsean.com right now.
If my Patriot Supply you'll find the best in class survival food,
critical potentially life-saving gear like solar generators,
biomass stoves, water filters, heirloom seeds, and much, much more.
Everything you'll need to deal with what's right around the corner for this country.
My Patriot Supply is the nation's largest and most trusted emergency preparedness company
and has helped over 3 million American families prepare for the unthinkable.
Their famous Delicious Food Kits, which are packed in ultra durable heavy duty pouches, deliver
over 2000 calories a day and can last up to two and a half decades in storage.
Plus your essential supplies ship lightning fast, which frankly these days could make
all the difference.
Order by 3pm and your supplies will ship that same day in discreet unmarked boxes.
Go to preparewithsean.com right now
so you can join the ranks of the elite Americans
who are ready for what's coming.
When I was in the SEAL teams, I loved to dip.
I spent a lot of time on operations
and dipping was a ritual.
So if it's a ritual for you too, I get it.
If you're an adult, age 21 or older
and use nicotine or tobacco,
I wanna tell you about an American brand, Black Buffalo.
Black Buffalo's nicotine pouches
do not contain tobacco leaf or stem,
but they are packed with tons of flavor and nicotine.
The magic of Black Buffalo is they discovered a way
to make cured, edible green leaves
behave like the texture of tobacco
and have classic flavors. You're in good company if you roam with the black buffalo herd.
The business was built by dippers with decades of smokeless tobacco use. They manufactured their
tobacco alternatives with respect for those products that came before them. Bold flavors,
full pouches, metal lids, and a brand that stands for something, America.
Their products are also proudly endorsed
by many, myself included.
If you're 21 and older, consume nicotine or tobacco,
join the herd and head over to blackbuffalo.com
to learn more.
You can order online and they ship directly to most states
or check out their store locator to purchase pouches at
thousands of locations around the country. Black Buffalo, an American brand and pouches worth respect.
Warning, this product contains nicotine. Nicotine is an addictive chemical. Black Buffalo products are intended for
adults aged 21 and older who are consumers of nicotine or tobacco. How is the
How exactly are we influencing all these other countries to?
To jump on board with us a number of means so do they know that we're influencing them
Well, certainly the the connective touch points certainly do because I'll give you an example Brazil so
Brazil has this tyrant judge, Demores, right?
This is the current war between Ilan and this,
you know, the head of Brazil's censorship court.
It's called the TSE.
It's a sub-court of Brazil's Supreme Court, the STF.
And so, a lot of people see the actions
of this one tyrant judge who basically has this ability
to issue an edict and then anything posted online
becomes instantly criminal.
Sitting parliamentarians in Brazil call
the current president Lula a thief.
And the judge says, you're not allowed to say that.
The person faces a criminal judgment
for demeaning
the current president.
Going after journalists, going after politicians,
going after ordinary civilians by any edict.
But there's a whole censorship substructure
to what DeMorris is involved in.
There's advisory councils, there's a whole coterie
of flaggers who propose the things to be flagged,
who do the technical work of the sort of AI scanning,
who do then the narrative network mapping.
If they want to say anyone who challenges the results
of Brazil's 2022 election,
well, they need these outside institutions
to create this whole narrative network map.
Well, these are US-funded and US-backed channel institutions
who provide the entire substructure to the head of the snake.
The analogy that I've been giving on this is it's a Brazilian spider,
but the spider web was laid by the US State Department, USAID,
the National Endowment for Democracy, and go through all their roles.
And the fangs of it are star-spangled spangs.
This is the US trying to take,
the US State Department trying to take out
its political opposition in Brazil.
They went to war with Bolsonaro.
They called him Trump of the tropics.
They're waging the same campaign against Bolsonaro
that they did through this did through their own intermediaries
to take out Trump during his term,
to censor him on the internet there,
and that they're using to censor Trump today
through their work with the EU.
They're just doing that in Brazil to stop Bolsonaro.
This story goes back at least six years
to the US State Department's involvement
in censoring Brazil.
So almost all Bolsonaro supporters six years to the US State Department's involvement in censoring Brazil. So
almost all Bolsonaro supporters in the run-up to the 2018 Brazilian election
were deemed to be populists by the US State Department. Populism again
is this watchword where this Department of Dirty Tricks power that I laid out
all hinges on this word democracy.
We have this concept that democracy is this set
of democratic institutions and that if the popular will
opposes these democratic institutions,
we call that an attack on democracy
because even if the people want it,
it still violates these safeguards that are held in place.
This is how we say we don't let another
Adolf Hitler rise to power.
It's because we don't allow demagogues
appealing to the masses to take democracy
outside of the bumper cars of the bowling lane.
And so this is our sort of special set of skills
the blob has if we can't get them on
terrorism grounds or military grounds. This is part of how we waged the Cold War.
You know, communism, even if a country was mining
its own business, we said that, well,
it's a communist structure that's depriving the people
of their yearnings for democracy,
and so we get to play God, we get to use our CIA
and our State Department and our USAID
and our paramilitary back channels
to do a top-down military coup,
as we did in Brazil in 1964,
or a bottom-up color revolution
as we did in Ukraine in 2014
and dozens of other countries.
But populism is the new communism.
Populism is the new counterterrorism.
This is something I think that a lot of conservatives who may be listening really need to process
because this CIA State Department USAID military apparatus had the support of
the Republican Party throughout the entire 20th century as it was toppling
left-wing socialist left-wing communist governments. It was not until Trump won in 2016,
or Brexit four or five months before that,
and then the rise around the world
of these right-wing populist politicians,
from Abe in Japan to Modi in India to Bolsonaro in Brazil
to that whole European axis I laid out
that stretches all the way from France into the Baltics,
that there became this flip. from France into the Baltics, that there became
this flip.
The CIA, the State Department, they still oppose left-wing socialism and communism,
but the biggest threat that they see is right-wing populism.
Neoliberalism, the blobs sort of financial motto, can be flanked from either side, from
its left-wing socialist flank or from its right-wing nationalist flank. And so this is why they went after Bolsonaro and
tried to stop him from winning in 2018. Bolsonaro supporters were censored on
Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, all the major platforms between 2017 and 2018. So they
started to take two end-to-end encrypted chats in order to circumvent that censorship.
So that's WhatsApp and Telegram are the main players there.
And also for folks who are familiar with this alternative
social media platform, Gab, which was one of the sort of
early pre-parlor social media alternatives,
one of their first early demographic bases, other than people in the US,
were Brazilians, because they had nowhere to go,
because they were censored because of all this
government pressure on them in Brazil.
But they took to WhatsApp and Telegram,
and I did a report on this two and a half years ago,
my foundation published it, about this strange web
in 2018 that was
established, funded to the tune of millions of dollars,
jointly by three government and quasi-government agencies,
the US State Department, USAID, and the National
Down for Democracy.
The State Department formally sets US foreign policy
for the region.
You have USAID, which is supposed to be
this independent agency, but it's essentially
logistical support for the State Department.
It's sort of plausibly deniable support
for either the State Department, the Pentagon, or the CIA.
Many times USAID has been busted as a CIA front,
and we can go through that if your audience is curious, it's kind of an incredible
tale of how much, I'm actually curious if you in your time,
either in the SEALs or as a contractor,
ever ran into USAID as a strange player
in some of the side stories.
But the fact is, is these institutions pump millions
of dollars into, in the U.S., into Brazilian institutions.
So they pump the money into Brazilian university centers who do thought leadership on countering
disinformation, into legal scholars in Brazil who formulate policy and help develop the
legislative anti-misinformation laws or anti-fake news laws,
who serve on the advisory councils,
who essentially help make this consensus decision
about who should be censored by the Brazilian TSE.
And even many of the partnered flaggers
to actually target who should be censored in Brazil
are U.S. State Department and US aid funded,
or US National Down for Democracy funded institutions,
like the Atlanta Council for example,
which actually serves as one of the trusted flaggers
of the Brazilian TSE court.
Demores, his court has about 70 of these trusted flaggers
in his program.
And one of them is the Atlanta Council.
The Atlanta Council has seven CIA directors on its board.
It receives annual funding every year from the Army, the Navy,
the Air Force, and the Marines.
Annual funding from the National Endowment for Democracy,
which is a CIA cutout.
It receives millions of dollars from U.S. taxpayers.
It was also partnered with Burisma, by the way,
this NATO think tank.
It has seven CIA directors on its board,
and lo and behold, it is serving as the deputy arm
of Demores in Brazil, even creating network maps
of who to be censored.
Same thing with institutions like the Wilson Center.
Same thing with institutions like the Carnegie Endowment
for International Peace, which by the way is the institution
that was run from 2014 to 2021 by a man named Bill Burns.
You may be familiar with that name.
Bill Burns is the current director of the CIA.
He left the Carnegie Endowment to run the CIA.
And the Carnegie Endowment is, you know,
has its fingerprints all over this Brazil censorship situation.
And it gets worse than that.
We have formal government programs now
that are essentially coordinated,
quartered back by the State Department,
but are sort of run at the operational level and funded by the State Department, but are sort of run at the operational level
and funded by the State Department, USAID,
and the National Endowment for Democracy,
which is this CIA cutout, you know,
basically created in 1983 when our then CIA director
was complaining that the CIA had lost too many powers
after the Church Committee hearings in 1976.
So we needed to do CIA work through a non-CIA entity called
the National Endowment for Democracy.
Hunter Biden was on the chairman's advisory board by the way
of the DNC branch of that.
It's called the NDI, which plays a major role in the Brazil
censorship situation.
They created this network called the D4D, Design for Democracy
in Brazil, where they sprawled into a spiderweb dozens of these high-level censorship thought leaders,
advocates, activists, legal scholars.
Again, this is backed down by a CIA cutout.
In order to get these censorship laws passed
and provide the political and media support
for them to take the heavy-handed action that they did.
And again, just to put a button on some of this
because we can go a lot deeper into this,
but if folks recall, just ahead of the 2022 election
where Bolsonaro lost in a razor-close, nail-biter election,
very similar to our own in the 2020 cycle.
All three, all three wings of the blob,
the State Department, the CIA, and the Pentagon,
all went down to Brazil to intermediate that election.
The State Department pulled strings to Taiwan Semiconductor
to stop giving semiconductor supplies, stop prioritizing the United States,
and give those supplies to Brazil so that essentially Brazilian election officials could
use three to four times more voting machines than they'd ever used.
Bolsonaro said, I don't trust these voting machines.
The State Department had just spent US taxpayer dollars and deprioritized our access to semiconductors
during a semiconductor crisis shortfall.
To give it to a foreign country
so that they could have electronic voting machines
for their election?
Why is that in U.S. national interest?
Why should truck drivers making 50K a year
have to pay their income tax for electronic voting machines
that the Brazilians didn't even ask for.
Then Bill Burns, the CIA director,
went down and personally threatened Bolsonaro
not to, quote, cast doubt on the electronic voting machines
that the State Department had just rammed down their throat.
And then Lloyd Austin, the head of the Pentagon,
went down to Brazil to talk to the Brazilian military
to say if there's a disputed election result,
don't you dare side with Bolsonaro,
because there'll be military repercussions,
much of your Brazilian military supplies
and infrastructure and training comes from the US.
So that was just at the technical level of the election.
What I'm describing is all the censorship
that went into that and that happened in the aftermath
as part of this transitional justice campaign
to stop Bolsonaro's reemergence.
Who is the head of all of this?
Where does this all come from?
Well, there's a peculiar government program
that's called the...
Again, this is all intermediate through the interagency, right?
So there's going to be some National Security Council
vision for what to do in the Western Hemisphere
and what to do in Brazil in particular.
Because you have all these different elements.
You have the Pentagon elements, you have the State Department elements, you have the USAID
elements.
All these are different permanent seats on the National Security Council.
They need to be coordinated through the NSC process.
So technically I would say it's the NSC Western Hemisphere, folks.
But to make this sort of really simple,
there's a formal government program.
It's called the Consortium for Elections
and Political Process Strengthening.
Sad, again.
The Consortium for Elections
and Political Process Strengthening.
How nice, how quaint, how understated.
And this has been a US government State Department program,
which is co-funded and
largely funded by USAID, in order to help foreign countries develop more robust election
infrastructure and to make sure their own internal political systems are strengthened
democratically, which effectively means to make sure they're more
of a vassal of the U.S. State Department
so that anything that happens in that country's
internal politics do not undermine the State
Department's vision for the development of that region.
Now, starting in 2021, CEPs, the Consortium for Elections
and Political Process Strengthening,
began to really, really add this censorship,
disinformation component to its international diplomacy toolkit.
This idea that where we previously said, you know,
democracy and political process strengthening meant
providing a voice to minority, you know,
minority factions
in that country's government who were underrepresented
by the will of majority or protections for the press.
Now, of course, all these things are quite cynical.
Oftentimes the state department will be working
with those, you know, particular identity faction groups
or it will be funding, you know, USAID funded media
or US agency for global development funded media
to influence that.
So we make sure there are press protections,
there are civil society protections.
Again, all of this is to protect our own control
over that country.
But they began to say that as part of this
political process strengthening,
you have to have robust counter disinformation,
counter misinformation measures in your country
in order to be in line with best practices for democracy.
And so SEPS has this sprawling Brazil program
which coordinates with the National Endowment for Democracy,
you know, this NDI where Hunter Biden was the chairman's
advisory committee, this Design for Democracy coalition
that I was just talking about.
All these different university centers,
all these different government funded media
ecosystem players, all these different fact checkers, all these different AI-funded media ecosystem players,
all these different fact-checkers,
all these different AI scan-and-banners,
all these different disinformation flaggers,
all these different legal scholars
are all in this umbrella network under SEPs,
and this is playing out as the House Foreign Affairs Committee
has done absolutely nothing.
They had just took out a US national champion, X.
The State Department's job is to protect the welfare
of US citizen interests, US corporate interests,
and US national interests in the region.
They just see Starlink's assets,
that's a major component of our military, frankly,
in terms of its interface with telecom.
They just banned our soft power projection of X into the country,
but that is because X is caught in a proxy war
between the State Department and Bolsonaro.
You can bet if Bolsonaro had banned Twitter 1.0
because too many Lula supporters were using Twitter and were outflanking Bolsonaro
on Twitter 1.0 in 2021.
If he had banned X, how fast Brazil
would have been kicked off the dollar.
How fast international sanctions,
blockades to their trade supplies,
trade embargoes, private sector retrenchment of investments.
The whole litany of our Department of Dirty Tricks toolkit
would have been crammed down Bolsonaro so fast
if he had done that.
But that's because they wanted him to lose.
They wanted Lula to win.
It's as simple as that.
What's happening in Brazil has really much less to do with free speech as it has to do with the State Department and the blobs designs for who needs to win that election.
And they also need to do it cheaply. It's very expensive to constantly manage each new election. And so they have this policy of transitional justice and stabilization so that after the State Department
overthrows a country or runs tens of millions of dollars
to a political opposition and they barely win an election,
we have this new policy of transitional justice
where we arrest all the opposition leaders.
Bolsonaro right now is under countless indictments,
just as Trump is here.
And they censor all the forces around that
so they prevent the mobilization and the coordination
of that party's resurgence.
They can't get their messaging out, their media's all banned.
And so that way it's cheap to manage.
You might need to spend $50 million, $100 million
to rig it in 2018, but in 2020,
because after the stabilization
process plays out you might only need 10 million because they're polling so low
because all their all their media is banned and all their politicians are
arrested. This is a very nasty playbook. Do you think the US is more concerned
with with with the censorship of other countries at this particular point in time that it is on the US itself?
No, both are happening in tandem.
We're doing this with foreign countries
in order to contort the economics of the US platforms
to force them to put the pre-22 censorship mechanisms
back in place.
And so, I call this the boomerang tactic.
There's two ways that the blob can get you.
One is with a knife.
They are foreign policy institutions.
State Department's not allowed to operate at home.
CIA is not allowed to operate at home.
USAID is not allowed to operate at home.
The Pentagon is not allowed to operate at home.
They are intelligence, they're national security,
they're supposed to project outwards
for the benefit of U.S. citizens.
But they can knife you in a couple of ways.
For example, you can totally invert
this intelligence restriction
on doing intelligence work against your own citizens
simply by putting the word counter in front of it.
You say, it's counterintelligence.
This is what they did to Trump. This is the whole, you know, Peter Strzok, the head of counterintelligence. This is what they did to Trump.
This is the whole, you know, Peter Strzok,
the head of counterintelligence at the FBI,
and all the indictments and tens of millions of dollars
in legal fees that that incurred.
Is they say, well, we're not allowed to,
you know, we're not allowed to go after you
for what you say, but if you are connected to Russians,
or we think or suspect you might be,
we can open a counterintelligence probe into you
so we can spy on you, just like the CIA spies
on foreign citizens, just to see if you're working
with foreign spies.
And there's several other of these sort of knife tactics
where they can get you directly at home,
but the other weapon they have is they can fashion
a boomerang.
A boomerang is a toy, but it's also a weapon.
You can put the blade on it and you can send it out and then bring it back.
And this is what they're doing in all these foreign countries to bring X to heel and to
put pressure on Facebook to make sure they continue their censorship work.
Which is that in order to,
because we're restricted by the First Amendment here,
and there's only so much that you can do politically.
There's only so much leverage that you can actually apply
given the economics of the social media ecosystem.
And this is why, by the way, they started at this right away,
right away after the 2016 election.
And I've gone over some of these lectures
in my own subscriber lectures that I've done
where I've gone into these 2017 consensus building meetings
that were being done in early 2017
about how to stop Trump's,
how to kneecap Trump politically
and stop him from getting reelected
by changing the economics of the news industry,
by making sure that advertising revenue
can't flow to unfiltered alternative news websites,
and that tech platforms are held accountable
for misinformation so that they themselves
get hit with billions of dollars in boycotts
or advertiser withdrawals or regulatory pressure
or crisis PR
in order to ban Trump's representation in the US
on social media.
Because their whole autopsy was that Trump only won
because of social media.
He didn't get a single print media endorsement.
He was 97 to three disfavorable coverage on TV
but David Brock and Cher Blue published
this January 2017 autopsy
that they only lost the election because of
unfiltered alternative news on the internet.
And so very quickly after that,
you started to have these major blob figures.
Some of them, like one of the conferences I went over
was a conference that was held in Bratislava.
It was held in Bratislava.
It was held in Slovakia at the GLOBSEC, Global Security Conference,
and it involved Michael Chertoff
and a guy named Christopher Walker.
At the time, Walker was at the National Endowment
for Democracy, which is the CIA cutout,
and is currently at USAID,
which is CIA funding conduit
and State Department funding conduit.
And Michael Chertoff is, you know,
he was the first head of DHS.
DHS was the first government agency
to establish the censorship infrastructure,
as I mentioned at the start of this,
through CISA and then the Disadministration Governance Board,
and they played the quarterback of what the State,
you know, everything from the State Department
to the FBI to the Pentagon, there was this whole,
whole of government, whole of society
thing that DHS quarterbacked.
But you had the first full term head of DHS,
by the way, Michael Chertoff was also
the head of Freedom House, this major
State Department sort of CIA free speech NGO,
which was doing, I think, noble work
up until it switched to censorship,
because it would try to pry open foreign countries
so that US-funded media or US-supportive media
could flourish there.
But Michael Chertoff was also the chairman of BAE Systems,
the largest military contractor in NATO.
This is a major, major, major node
of the military-industrial complex,
teamed up with the soft power arm of the CIA,
and they bring into the room with them
the heads of public policy,
so that's censorship policies,
for Central and Eastern Europe,
from Google and Facebook.
And they basically threaten them in this,
in so many words, in sort of veiled cloak terms,
that US, effectively, US aid in the National
Downfall Democracy and DHS in the military complex,
and this is the pedigree they're bringing to this,
that these companies better start censoring unfiltered
alternative news.
That was the literal descriptor they used,
because it was giving rise to populism,
both in the US with Donald Trump, in the UK with Brexit, and with the rise
of right-wing populist parties in Western Europe,
and most especially at the time, in Eastern Europe,
where NATO feared that everything from Ukraine
to Georgia to Moldova to Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia,
were all falling under Russian influence,
and Russia was secretly or not secretly supporting
or it redounded to their interest
to have these populist parties rise to power
who didn't want to give the money to NATO
or who wanted to have cheap energy from Russian gas instead,
the expensive LNG from North America.
And so you have this US government plot right out the gate
explicitly to contort the economics
of the American news ecosystem,
to make it inhospitable, to make it bankrupting to the bottom line for Facebook not to play ball,
for Twitter 1.0 not to play ball, for YouTube not to play ball,
lest the full force of the U.S. government, either directly or through these cloak and dagger back channels that they represented would make it economically impossible
for them to avoid falling under the government boot heel.
And lo and behold, in 2019, Mark Zuckerberg tried to reverse a lot of this.
He was, Facebook did a lot of censorship in 2018 and 2019,
2017, 2018, and 2019, Mark Zuckerberg starts giving public speeches
that he thought censorship
on Facebook was going too far.
But then he got hit with a $60 billion advertiser boycott.
That is, Facebook lost $60 billion in market cap in 48 hours from this boycott.
So then he folded like a lawn chair and gave them everything they wanted.
That was five years before his letter just weeks ago to Chairman Jordan
that he regretted folding to government pressure. That's how long he had
misgivings about this. Real quick, how was the, so how is the government
controlling the ad spend, the advertisers? Well, part of this is known and part of
this can be, the full answer can be easily obtained by our representatives in Congress.
I'll give you one example of this.
In 2021, I believe it was February 2021,
about a month into Biden's term,
literally brand new, you know, seat barely warm
at the State Department USAID desks there,
USAID put out this 97-page disinformation primer
about how to coordinate their whole-of-society
counter-disinformation assets,
their censorship tentacles into the whole-of-society.
Again, the government tentacles into the tech
platform personnel, their tentacles into the civil society
organizations, their tentacles into the media.
And 31 times in this 97 page document,
they cite advertisers and external engagement
to advertising companies and advertiser revenue spend pools
and advertising exchanges in order to cut off the money flow
to social media platforms and independent websites who don't take the
counter, the best practices, counter disinformation codes that they lay out.
So you have a, now that was obtained through a lawsuit from America First Legal, but that's
a formal U.S. government program dedicated to killing news websites,
to killing their advertiser revenue,
and it's all there in black and white
that you have the U.S. government
contorting the private sector flow of dollars
between independent, arms-length parties,
news websites and tech platforms, and advertisers.
And by the way, all these advertisers
are almost wholly, I shouldn't say wholly dependent,
but they are hugely dependent on U.S. government contracts.
Four of the-
How so?
Well, take for example, there are four major advertising
agency conglomerates.
These are places like Publicis and Omnicron.
And they all have billions of dollars in government contracts for their advertising spend.
That is, so one of them has a $4 billion Pentagon contract
to do all the different advertising spend
for US Army recruiting.
They have billions of dollars in contracts for HHS
to do the government.
They have billions of dollars in programming
for the Department of Education.
If they don't play ball with the government demands
on one side of government, they can potentially lose
to a competitor advertising agency
for those contracts.
And we know that these agencies are concerned about this
because, and thank Jim Jordan for this,
Jim Jordan a few months ago got the Facebook files,
the sort of Congress subpoenaed equivalent
of the Twitter files that Elon Musk, you know,
disclosed beginning in 2022. And in the Facebook files, Elon Musk, you know, disclosed beginning in 2022.
And in the Facebook files, Nick Clegg,
who is the head of public policy at Facebook,
his internal communications with the lieutenants at Facebook
were concerned about these Biden administration demands
to censor all Facebook speech about COVID origins
or COVID orthodoxy or COVID, you know,
rollout, you know, enforcement rollout.
And Nick Clegg, the head of censorship policies,
is telling his censorship policy team,
listen, I know we don't want to do this.
I know it's ugly, but we need to be receptive.
We need to think creatively about ways to be receptive
to the Biden administration censorship pressure here,
because we have bigger fish to fry
with the Biden administration on multiple policy fronts.
Meaning, and as I mentioned,
this is because they need the state department.
I got these calls when I was running the cyber desk at state.
I got a call one day from nine Google lobbyists
who told me, nine of them on a call with me, telling me that the EU
Digital Service Act and Digital Markets Act is the number one
existential threat to Google's business model over the next
five years.
And so to represent U.S. national interests, the State
Department should consider reformulating U.S.
negotiating posture or policy asks to our EU counterparts in order to protect
Google's business model.
This happens in every region all over the world
and it is mission critical.
Again, Google said that was the number one
existential threat to their business model
and they needed big daddy government's help
to protect them.
So Facebook is quelling the internal rebellion
about losing sovereignty of their own free speech policies
to the US government, despite our first amendment.
And the head of the team is telling them,
listen, we gotta do it because we need their help
on multiple policy fronts that have nothing to do with COVID.
And those are bigger fish to fry.
So we will censor this in order to get that.
Now I don't have, for example, the USAID communications,
they actually attach as an appendix in this primer
examples of external engagement to the advertising companies.
We don't have that as a public document.
Hey, Jim Jordan, if you're listening.
Hey, James Comer at Oversight, if you're listening. Hey, James Comer at oversight, if you're listening. Hey, House Foreign
Affairs Committee who oversees U.S. aid, if you're listening.
Representative Michael McCaul. Get those documents.
Subpoena them. Bring these people in for transcribed
interviews. Hold the hearings. The American people have a
right to know about how their own news is being controlled by
their own U.S. federal government, despite what we are supposed to be told is the protection
of the First Amendment.
Do these representatives know this is all happening?
Certainly some of them know some of it.
Who knows what?
Well, there have been, I think, about three hearings in house weaponization on government's
role in censorship.
There have been, I believe, two or so hearings in house oversight.
There have been two or three hearings in house homeland security.
Those are all domestic-facing.
Those are about what DHS is doing on censorship, what FBI is doing on censorship, to some extent
what the National Science Foundation is doing on censorship, what FBI is doing on censorship, to some extent with the National
Science Foundation is doing on censorship, because that's a major funding artery of this.
But no one has yet touched the State Department or USAID or the National Endowment for Democracy
or this censorship mercenary army of soft power NGOs, our swarm army of the blob in
order to influence the course of domestic
politics in foreign countries
Doing it to our own
All right, Mike. I'm one you're going a little too fast for me to comprehend
I want to go back to the the advertisers the advertising agencies and I believe you said there's about four of them. Mm-hmm
And so I do understand do understand government contracting.
So they own, they bid on the government contract to advertise for the Army or the Navy or whoever, whatever recruiting.
What about all the other advertisers that are in there?
What kind of advertisers are we talking?
Are we talking about major corporations like Walmart, Home Depot, Lowe's, like these kind of advertisers?
Well, it's unclear the extent to which individual advertisers
are back channeling or are, or are behelm,
because these are things for the House Foreign Affairs
Committee to turn up.
What we know is that many of these blue chip corporations
play a significant part in the private sector quadrant
of the whole society.
So again, getting back to this whole society framework,
that's not my framework, by the way.
That is the US federal government framework.
Two years ago, I posted, everyone can see this
on my ex-account, it's at Mike Ben Cyber,
simply run a search for my name in the phrase whole society.
I did like a two and a half minute super cut
of just government officials
citing the whole society doctrine.
Sometimes they cite it so often they apologize
at the conference because everyone's so sick
of hearing this.
But what it means is government, private sector,
civil society, and media.
So they get private sector partners
to help the government censorship goal.
They get the universities to help the censorship goal.
And so for example, you know what?
So all these advertisers are on board
with what's happening.
Because my question is,
my question is, is the pool of,
how do I frame this?
As the pool of content,
or whatever you want to call it,
platforms, content, voices that they can advertise on,
it just gets smaller and smaller and smaller, correct?
And so you would think that some of these private sector
advertisers like some of the companies that I just
called out would be, they gotta be tired of this shit
because they're losing places to advertise.
Well, this is, yes, well, this is one of the open questions
is how many of these are willing participants
and enthusiastic, how many are completely against it
and only doing it because they feel economically beholden,
and how many are sort of neutral
and don't know.
But I'll give you some examples to sort of fill
in the gaps here.
So the State Department works with these entities
like the Global Disinformation Index,
who folks may have heard of,
which basically does ratings of all the different
independent news sites and gets them blacklisted
from the advertisers.
NewsGuard is a major player in this space.
NewsGuard developed this news nutrition labels
to sort of do for websites
what nutrition labels on milk cartons do.
They give you the breakdown of how much fat
and carbs and protein is.
And they said that they set themselves up
to do news nutrition labels for news,
so that advertisers would be able to have a sense
of how high information integrity this news site was,
and if it was a misinformation website
or a misinformation social media account,
so that, and they announced this
before they even launched
their first commercial product,
is that the intent of this was to deprive advertising revenue.
They literally created a for-profit censorship product
of vast databases, over 10,000 websites,
might even be 20,000 at this point,
websites all ranked by whether or not they are misinformation or not,
and you can guess where that falls.
Literally spin the globe and I can tell you
which country's media is going to have a low rating
by news guards simply by who the State Department
wins the election.
Literally run a Google search for threat to democracy
with the name Bolivia, Denmark, you name it,
and you can see who will be censored.
And NewsGuard, its whole business model,
is selling censorship whitelist labels
to the advertising conglomerates
to stop advertising revenue from flowing to websites
like Breitbart or OAN or any number of pro-Trump websites
here in the US or pro-Brexit websites in the UK
or pro-Vox party websites in Spain
or pro-Matteo Salvini websites in Italy.
The AFD party, you can go through the list.
It is as predictable as a clock.
History, economics,
the great works of literature, the meaning of the U.S. Constitution. Did you study these things in
school? Probably not. Or even if you did, maybe it's time for a refresher. Time and technology
have changed a lot, and that's why it's important to learn the fundamentals. That's why I'm excited
that Hillsdale College is offering more than 40 free online courses in the most important and enduring subjects.
You can learn about the works of C.S. Lewis, the stories of the Book of Genesis, the meaning of the
U.S. Constitution, the rise and fall of the Roman Republic, or the history of the ancient Christian
church with Hillsdale College's online courses, all available
for free. That's right, free. I personally recommend you sign up for Ancient Christianity.
In this 11 lecture course, you'll study the inspiring stories of Christ in the first four
centuries of Christianity. The course is self-paced, so you can start whenever and wherever. Go right now to hillsdale.edu slash SRS to enroll.
There's no cost and it's easy to get started.
That's Hillsdaleedu slash SRS to register.
Well, you might want to think about taking some of that cash
and try to protect your purchasing power
with precious metals like gold and silver.
It's simple.
Go to SeanLikesGold.com or call 855-936-GOLD.
You'll learn about top rated precious metals company, GoldCo,
and how they can help you.
They're a top rated company with over 6,000 five star reviews,
tons of awards, and they support this show.
And for my listeners,
you can get up to a 10% instant match
and bonus silver on qualified orders.
So if you're worried about your money losing value
or you just wanna buy some precious metals
that you can physically hold on to,
something that's real and been around for thousands of years,
Gold Co. can help.
So go to SeanLikesGold.com or call 855-936-GOLD. That's 855-936-GOLD.
Performance may vary. Consult with your tax attorney or financial professional before
making an investment decision.
Now, but who's on NewsGuard's board of advisors? Let me give you a list. General Michael V.
Hayden, former head of the CIA, former head of the NSA, former four-star general.
Anders Fogh Rasmussen, the former head of NATO
from 2009 until Crimea in 2014
during the Obama administration.
Rick Stengel, the guy who founded
the Global Engagement Center at the State Department
that I just mentioned earlier,
this start of the censorship spiderweb at the State
Department, and Tom Ridge, the former head of DHS.
So on the board of advisors of this key institution who
is doing the white label censorship database so
that advertisers can't provide advertising revenue to you
or to anyone who they deign effectively you know, effectively a populist,
it's being back-channeled by the head of the CIA,
the head of the NSA, a four-star general,
the head of NATO, the head of DHS,
and the head of the State Department censorship web.
Back in the day, we used to call this operation Mockingbird.
And by the way, a few years ago,
they got a $750,000 Pentagon grant.
Now, nominally, that was for foreign-facing work,
but they're Pentagon contractor.
They have the apex predators of the CIA, the NSA,
the State Department, DHS, and NATO itself,
and they are determining whether or not Breitbart
or Gateway Pundit can get access
to a arm's length independent transaction
with a random advertiser.
But again, if you understand it through the lens
of the blob, and again, just go back to what I just said
about 2017 when representatives from USAID,
National Down for Democracy, DHS, NATO military contractors were all lining this
up and saying this has to be done to preserve the liberal rules-based international order
because of populist rise in the EU.
We're going to have, Brexit's going to give rise to Frexit and Grexit and it'll exit and
Spexit so the EU is going to come undone.
So NATO is going gonna come undone. So NATO's gonna come undone. And as I've said, they described it like,
if unless this CIA, Pentagon, State Department
back-channeled sprawling censorship apparatus is set up,
it would be like the ending scene in Fight Club
where the credit card companies all come crashing down
and everything's reset to zero
because none of the international institutions
are supported by any of the countries
who were formerly a party to it.
How far along are we here?
We're in the late adolescent stage.
When I started crying about this in late 2016,
early 2017, it was the infant stage.
And there were things that could have been done now
to stop this that would prevent it
from having taken the maturity that it did.
And it grew from that infant stage
into this sprawling network
as it became funded by the Pentagon,
as it became funded more and more by NATO
and by the State Department and USAID
and by all the different domestic government agencies.
And it grew to this adolescent size,
and now it's getting pushback.
There's a little bit of arrested development
domestically right now since Elon acquired it,
since there's been congressional pressure,
since there's been civil legal pressure,
and since there's been media pressure
with more and more people being educated
about some of these drivers.
But as I said, they have these,
they're trying to usher it along to full maturity
by going beyond the four bounds
of the continental United States.
They are now bringing in their global pressure ecosystem
in order to stop these global social media platforms from being able to operate
internationally unless they bend the knee. Give an example this EU Digital Services Act which NATO has been the main thought leader behind
because NATO thought the biggest threat to NATO was the wrong people winning elections within NATO countries and so they pushed the EU to
pass this through.
They have this they have this sort of safe harbor,
if you will, to get out of the existential punishment
to X and Facebook and YouTube and TikTok
and any large social media platform that operates there.
Because the punishment is, if you do not go through with our stipulated
disinformation compliance, you either are forced
out of the EU, we will ban your app from the,
you know, from the, people won't be able to use it there,
or you have to pay 6% of your global revenue to the EU.
Global? Global revenue.
Global revenue. Yes.
Now, you know, most S&P companies don't operate at a 6% profit.
You can imagine what a, you know, barely operated that.
So you can imagine what a 6% tax on global revenue does.
It's bankrupting.
And so you either have to pay the bankruptcy,
the fee that bankrupts you,
or you have to do disinformation compliance.
Well, what does the disinformation compliance
component look like?
Well, one of the safe harbors is by providing,
essentially delegating it to these independent
experts, independent researchers, you know,
who are all counter disinformation experts in academics.
I probably don't need to tell you if folks have been
following, you know, to this point, who those people are
and who they are connected to and whose interests
they represent.
This is why you see so many CIA analysts, when they leave
the agency, there's now a brand new career track for them.
You know, they used to go on to be university professors CIA analysts, when they leave the agency, there's now a brand new career track for them.
You know, they used to go on to be university professors,
or maybe they'd, you know, maybe they'd.
Well, let's go through for the people
that haven't been following.
Well, this field of disinformation studies
is what they call it.
Because the main point that I'm driving at here is,
Elon fired, you fired, everyone said,
Elon, you fired 85% of the company.
How is it still working just as well,
in fact, even better than it worked?
Any major company fired 85% of its workforce
and actually do better than it was doing before,
let alone not suffer any setbacks or hiccups?
Well, the answer is,
because so much of the ranks of Twitter 1.0 were all of these back channels,
all of these trust and safety filter mechanisms,
all of these different touch points
to all these different stakeholder interests
for influencing the algorithm.
And it turns out, if you're just a free speech company,
you don't need them.
But the problem is, is, and in their own words,
and my foundation, FFO, published a huge report
on this a few months ago,
where five of the major censorship industry insiders
were on a Zoom call, and they complained
that when Elon took over X,
and then Zuckerberg followed to some extent
with some of the changes he made at Facebook and IG,
that they lost the relationships
it took years for them to develop.
They lost the hooks into those companies
to make sure that this narrative
about mail-in ballots gets censored.
This narrative about COVID gets censored.
This narrative about climate gets censored.
This narrative about the Ukraine war gets censored.
Personnel is policy.
Whatever a social media company says its policy is,
it doesn't matter if they don't have the personnel
to enforce it.
In fact, even the policies themselves are set by the
personnel.
And so this is why you see so many former CIA agents
or analysts in the ranks of these content moderation
because part of what the CIA does is counter disinformation.
Part of what the special forces,
why you see so many former military people
or former state department people
is controlling the information environment.
And again, that used to be primarily through propaganda,
turning up the knob.
But since this El Dorado goldmine of soft power influence through censorship has opened
up to the IC and to the State Department, to the military, this is now where the game
is because you win by default.
You don't need to worry about whether you'll win or lose because the other side can't even
print a media story, let alone get a million people to see it. So this is why you have folks like, you know,
Aaron Berman at Facebook, you know, huge CIA for you.
This is why you have, you know,
it's so much of this all across,
and you know, even all the way down to Reddit,
you have the content moderation teams
being run by Atlantic council people,
which again, seven CIA directors on its board.
DHS is disinformation flagger for both the 2020 election
and COVID-19 was the Atlantic Council,
one of these core four.
The Atlantic Council again, with seven CIA directors
and annual funding from the State Department of Pentagon.
Graphica is a huge player in this space,
was also partnered with DHS,
seven million dollars in Pentagon funding.
It's actually incubated in the Minerva Initiative,
which is the Psychological Operations Research Center
of the Pentagon.
So you have this whole back channel that took years
between 2016, 2014, 2016, and 2022 for the Pentagon,
for the CIA, for the State Department to all get in place
so that the right people could be trusted to censor the right narratives
or to adjust the algorithm in the right way.
And bit by bit, in the past 18 months,
they have been losing all that.
But the EU is their savior here.
And this is why, again, my foundation published
this several months ago, they said they'd be
in full-blown panic for what's happening right now between Congress
and the legal pressure and Elon Musk,
but they can panic responsibly
because they have a trick up their sleeve,
which is that the EU Digital Services Act
will force the restaffing of those fired representatives.
It will make sure that the back channel stays in place
unless the whole company gets bankrupted and shut down.
And this is what they're doing in Brazil.
The State Department, the CIA, the Pentagon,
they don't want to kill X.
This is not like Wikileaks.
They don't want to shut down the operation.
Twitter, X is an essential instrument of US statecraft
for US government, USAID, US State Department funded
proxy groups or political groups to
mobilize across the world.
But they need to destabilize it because Elon is not playing ball.
They need to existentially threaten its business model.
They need to balkanize the world and so it loses its place as this world, multinational
company.
It gets confined to the tiny island
that stretches between California and Florida,
whereas all the other platforms are international
who play ball, so they lose market share.
And the whole thing goes into crisis,
the whole thing goes into bankruptcy.
Elon is a triple digit billionaire, at least for now,
and so he's been able to sustain more vicissitudes
than Mark Zuckerberg,
who folded as soon as the first $60 billion
advertiser boycott hit him.
But they are doing this death by a thousand paper cuts,
this same destabilization strategy they do
when they want to financially bankrupt
a authoritarian government while pumping up the assets
that will take its place.
So they want a corporate regime change mosque,
they want to regionalize the conflict by going after
Starlink assets in Brazil and potentially going after
Tesla assets in Germany.
I would not be surprised if something like that comes next.
Until Elon's will is broken or until they can regime
change him and put someone else in the platform
and then just like that the advertisers will come
rushing back.
Brazil will let X back into the country.
The EU will stop sending threatening nasty grams because the back channel will have been
reestablished and all is well now in the world of the blob.
How are the people of Brazil reacting to this? Well, I think that much of this still needs to be articulated.
I have had some reticence about publishing some of this
and doing some of the video details
with the technical information,
because this is something
that the House Foreign Affairs Committee
should be taking lead on,
and I've been trying to popularize this,
drop as much as I can without sort of showing everything,
because I'm afraid that, I mean, imagine if the FBI
announced six months before they, you know,
see someone's electronic devices,
whose devices they were going to seize.
I have had this happen multiple times,
where DHS and the National Science Foundation
will delete evidence, they'll take down videos.
Now I've archived all of it.
But this is something that should be pried open
by House Foreign Affairs.
And there's a process, I think, right now,
and it could be weaponization,
it could be any number of members of Congress. This is really something Congress needs to take the lead on.
And so I have been, you know,
I flashed these network maps all over social media.
I have been describing it in general terms.
I've been naming these agencies,
and I've been sort of hoping
that this would be popularized through that.
But I think to date, a lot of people in Brazil
don't know that this is happening
because the media and the legal
and the congressional investigation
has not yet been robust.
But I believe that that will change
in the month after this episode airs.
Have you been in touch
with the House of Foreign Affairs Committee?
I have not.
Do you need contact?
I've been hoping.
I mentioned Elizabeth Bagley, the U.S. Ambassador to Brazil,
on the Tucker Carlson interview that I did.
And I did 200 tweets naming the U.S. Embassy in Brazil
as it was breaking out.
But this should not be on the civilian class
to carry this torch.
The House Foreign Affairs Committee,
the House Intelligence Committee, frankly,
needs to understand this because this is soft power.
You know, a lot of this is State Department, USAID,
but I have no doubt, I don't have a security clearance,
I can't prove this, but I know the CIA cut out outlets
who are all doing this, and I know that they have purview
to coordinate with the IC, but a lot of this is control
over the information environment.
It is this counter disinformation work
that is bread and butter of the CIA.
House intelligence should have ongoing investigations
into the role of this blowback on American free speech,
on American platforms speech, on
American platforms, House appropriations needs to get involved. The fact is is the
censorship industry would be shut down in a day if the the hundreds of millions
of dollars in government funding subsidizing this, the government funding
from the Pentagon, the government funding from the National Science
Foundation, the government funding from DHS, the government funding from the Justice Department, the government funding from the State Department, the government funding from the Pentagon, the government funding from the National Science Foundation, the government funding from DHS,
the government funding from the Justice Department,
the government funding from the State Department,
the government funding from USAID,
and about a dozen others collectively
are providing hundreds of millions of dollars
to subsidize a censorship mercenary army.
And if you don't have those mercenaries,
you don't have those operations, which, you don't have those operations,
which means you don't have that censorship,
the American people are subsidizing their silence.
And this goes away the moment our Congress,
or a court, should the Supreme Court case go up,
and all this is adequately explained to nine justices,
that so much of what we're seeing
is really not ideological.
It's just, it's operational.
And it's operated through money.
Because since, this is why I always call it
the censorship industry.
It is a censorship industrial complex.
That's true, and you can understand it as such.
Or just call it the whole society.
The whole society counter-disinformation,
the whole society censorship framework. But more than emphasizing the complex
side of it, I emphasize the industry side of it. Before 2016, you could not get a
full-time job getting paid hundreds of thousands of dollars to censor what
other people say on the internet. The content moderation jobs were about
getting rid of spam
and child porn and a little bit of compliance
for other countries that had like hate speech laws.
But it has become an industry.
It has become a career track.
And it is supplanting other career tracks
that used to be soft power influenced jobs.
If you wanted to work at the heart of the action
a generation ago, you'd go to Georgetown
and you would study political science
or international relations,
and you'd get on Job on the Hill,
and you'd work your way up through NGOs
or civil society institutions,
or you'd tag your star to a member of the House
or the Senate, and you'd quietly work your way up
the ladder until, so 10 years later you're in the action.
Well, with this new advent of disinformation studies,
and it's folded under so many different programs,
it'll make your head spin.
The communications departments have this.
The applied physics departments have this
for the AI censorship software component. The sociology departments have this. The psychology departments have this for the AI censorship software component.
The sociology departments have this.
The psychology departments have this.
The computer science programs at universities have this.
The linguistics programs have this.
This broad field of disinformation studies
is now an advanced track golden ticket
to be at the heart of the action
in terms of high level, high impact, foreign policy blob positions because it doesn't just put you at the heart of the action in terms of high level, high impact foreign policy blob positions.
Because it doesn't just put you at the heart of Washington
and in its own secular interests.
It puts you right at the heart of a big government,
big business and big tech.
Big tech is surpassed big oil a decade ago
in terms of the most monied lobbying interests in Washington.
Google is the largest lobbying firm.
The wealthiest companies in the world
are all what Trump called MAGA,
something I had to fight against
when I was in the Trump White House.
I was saying these,
they're censoring the people who voted for this government.
How can this government continue to support
these private sector companies with all these contracts
and just no accountability?
Well, at the time, Trump was calling,
and I'm not knocking,
this could have just been not knowing what's going on,
but MAGA was Microsoft, Apple, Google, and Amazon,
because that was driving the stock market,
that was a lot of what Trump, I think, was re-electing on.
I don't know, I'm just sort of saying this from the outside
that I suspect maybe that was one of the reasons
there was less pressure on them.
But the fact is, is you get fast-tracked
right at the heart of this.
Right at the heart of the Pentagon,
the State Department, the CIA, the Washington, D.C.,
Beltway Insider, and Google, and Facebook,
which is number five or seven by market cap,
and YouTube, second most trafficked website
on the entire internet, and Twitter, and Amazon,
and Twitch, you get fast track right at the heart of it.
So this is now something that is a career track,
and you invest your career in it, You get fast-tracked right at the heart of it. So this is now something that is a career track.
And you invest your career in it,
which means it's unique.
You want it to be an expanding pie.
You want more and more power to counter disinformation work.
More and more funding.
Because, hey, how are you going to afford a mortgage?
You want to advocate for more funding.
You want to advocate for more delegated functions
of these outside civil society institutions.
You want to advocate for more of these CIA cutouts
and State Department grantees and Pentagon contractors
doing counter disinformation work to do it.
You hitch your star to the future of the field.
And so a message has to be sent now.
It should have been sent six or seven years ago.
Because if this field reaches full maturity,
it will become a lobbying arm as powerful as the military
industrial complex itself, where you need war.
Or else, how are you going to afford private school?
Wow.
If you had any headway on this in Congress? Yes.
Yes.
On many aspects of it.
Who's helping you?
Well.
Who are the good guys?
You know, what I would say is places like House Weaponization and House oversight and House Homeland Security have done very good,
honest efforts within their own secular fiefdoms
about abuses from DHS
or the National Science Foundation or whatnot.
They've done, now weaponization is a very,
very noble committee. You know, it was set up to,
from what I've heard is sort of a church committee 2.0,
you know, abuses by the government, but you know,
that was the church committee in 1975, 1976,
went after the CIA, the FBI, the NSA, and the IRS,
those are the four main, but it was, you know,
it was mostly set up because the CIA was busted
doing things like infiltrating left-wing student movements
to stop the domestic anti-war movement.
That's exactly what's happening right now
on the other side of the political aisle.
It was left-wing populists who the CIA
and the Pentagon and the State Department wanted to quell
because they were undermining Vietnam War funding,
they were changing the minds of representatives
who were getting skittish on the Vietnam War.
And so in order to avoid losing the political domain of war,
we subverted those political populist factions
from the left wing who undermined that war effort.
And now this is just happening
from the other side of the equation.
It's not political.
If, I mean, you can bet,
if Donald Trump gave him everything they wanted
on foreign policy, how quickly so much of this would dry up.
You know, it's, and this is why I think, for example,
Ron DeSantis does not get tarred with the same,
the same icy Pentagon,
dirty diplomat fervor that Donald Trump does,
because even though Ron DeSantis goes harder than Trump
in many ways on certain domestic left-wing issues,
going after wokeness and DEI and all these
sort of somewhat partisan issues,
his foreign policy vision, as he's articulated,
is much more in line with the blob.
So it really does come down to that,
but this is where I'm getting at with weaponization
has its hands somewhat full, I think,
with everything it's taking on with the Justice Department,
which by the way, there's this whole Justice Department
element to this blob activity,
if we have time for, can touch on.
But what I'm getting at is, you know,
weaponization is taking on everything from,
you know, this ongoing COVID inquiry
to abuses by the FBI, to abuses by the Justice Department,
to abuses by a dozen different government agencies.
And they all have to be educated on the layout,
the constellation architecture of the dark heart of it all,
which is the foreign policy establishment.
So this is really something that we should have had
a dedicated committee on six years ago.
But the issue is, is, you know,
I do think that there could be an element of capture here.
If you've seen the movie Big Short,
you're familiar with that scene
where, you know, the person is talking in the pool to someone from Moody's
or SMP, you know, the bond rating agencies
and the person's saying, hey, have you looked
at these AAA ratings being given by the banks
on these mortgage backed securities?
And the person who's supposed to,
who's tasked with oversight and accountability,
I guess at the SEC, of those debt instruments,
is saying, we don't really look at those anymore,
actually I'm floating my resume to these banks.
And the person says, shouldn't this be illegal?
You're supposed to be oversight and accountability
of the banks.
So it's sort of, are you rubber stamping
these garbage mortgage backed securities
and giving them a perfect AAA rating?
Because your own financial future is hitched to the star of this financial network. I have concerns
about that relationship between the people who are supposed to be overseeing the blob and the
people who are funded by the blob and who are invited to the blob cocktail parties and who do their Aspen ski retreats
with fellow blob compatriots.
I understand it is a delicate tango dance
because what you're talking about is something
that has potential huge diplomatic blowback.
So much of US diplomacy hinges on free speech
because this is our cudgel to pry other countries
countries open with.
This is our open society doctrine.
One of the reasons that George Soros
and the Open Society Foundation is such an active
and effective co-sponsor of State Department
or USAID activity.
This notion of open society is what allows
our U.S. national interests to penetrate the region
and influence the internal politics.
And I'm not even saying, I don't,
there's different schools of thought on that.
I'm not weighing in on whether that's good or bad.
I want free speech on the internet
and I want Americans to be able to determine
our own elections and our own social and cultural
and political discourse.
And I don't want to be caught in a proxy war any longer
between this foreign facing department of dirty tricks
and our domestic speech at home.
But what I'm getting at here is,
I think what needs to be offered to people
who meanwhile on both sides of the political aisle,
I'm not just talking about Republicans,
although they happen to be predominantly the ones
who have taken this issue up,
is you have to be able to articulate a firewall
between the capacity to do this in other countries and its blowback on American
citizens here and American platforms that are used internationally because I
don't think you can get the political will to do heavy surgery to this, at least in the beginning, because we have this Moody's, SMP, Goldman Sachs problem,
where the people who are tasked with accountability
and oversight are all in good standing
with these institutions.
They don't want to embarrass their friends.
They don't want to cause a diplomatic incident
that prevents us from, you know,
overthrowing a dictator in Belarus
or stopping infringements on women's rights
in Iran or Afghanistan.
I'm not trying to have the elephant trample
the whole wheat field here.
But this specific network has to be stopped.
This specific aspect, I mean, isn't propaganda enough?
What really changed in 2016?
Brexit happened.
Trump won the election.
What else called for such a dramatic change in our diplomatic toolkit to tack on censorship
as an entire subfield of democracy promotion?
That can be taken out now without too much structural
damage to our soft power work.
That's not going to dramatically undercut,
for the time being, what Special Forces is doing.
Dramatically undercut what Voice of America is doing,
or Internews, or any of these other giant spiderwebs
of US propaganda.
But it is getting to that point,
as these censorship institutions develop the tree root
of linkages with all the different university centers.
We have over 60 U.S. university centers
getting $100 million from the U.S. government
funding their disinformation studies programs.
So already this tree root is vast.
You cut off the National Science Foundation funding,
60 universities are going to have people saying,
oh my God, what am I going to do about my mortgage?
Oh my God, what about my college fund for my kids?
I've hitched my career to this.
And it's tied into our computer science program and our applied physics program, our communications
and our sociology programs.
And this is going to make it difficult for judges to want to rule in favor of the First
Amendment because they're going to be peripherally aware of the collateral damage they're doing
economically.
I saw this, again, when I was at state and I remember seeing a stakeholder memo arguing
at the time Trump was, you know, not even really peripherally aware of all this censorship
industry ecosystem, but he was aware of censorship generally and he was trying to pass through reforms
to Section 230, if you remember this.
This is this liability safe harbor for tech platforms
where if you are a neutral platform instead of a publisher
like the New York Times, you're not subject to defamation
or libel lawsuits so that you're not responsible
for what every person does.
Basically the thing that Pavel Durov,
the Telegram founder got arrested for,
they said he's liable for everything on the platform.
This Section 230 protection
has protected Facebook and YouTube.
It's what allows us to have social media.
And Trump was trying to get changes done through that.
He would do these all caps tweets, repeal section 230.
And I remember seeing a stakeholder memo arguing
that there were about 100,000 jobs in content moderation
at that time in 2020 in the content moderation space.
And the economic impact of repealing section 230
or doing dramatic changes to the content moderation
industry ecosystem would be like shutting down
a coal mine in West Virginia.
You know, even if you're trying to switch to green energy,
look what you're going to do to Appalachia.
That's the argument they were making in 2020,
four years ago, about the censorship industry.
So it's a lot worse now.
And so, but you have to sunset these programs.
Fine, you want to pass something that's say,
all right, it's already so vast,
we already have so many in process regulations.
Okay, you got 18 months.
Find a new career in 18 months, we're phasing it out.
There's any number of solutions that can be pitched,
but this education process has to start,
and I'm grateful to being able to talk to you
and your audience to help advance that,
because this is gonna take a long time
for those interests to all be represented
within the Republican Party,
within the elements of the Democrat Party
that are amenable to this.
I think Robert F. Kennedy and the Democrat faction
he represents is very much on board with this.
But they all are going to have, you know,
one faction is gonna say, well listen,
my donors are primarily coming from military contractors
and you know, we love our military, we do.
We don't want the military to be handcuffed
because the counter disinformation work it does there
is essential to shaping the information
environment.
Okay, so there might be some concessions you need to make
there around the sunset period or the funding or the firewalls.
The State Department, the IC, the private sector companies
are all going to have their own stakeholder input.
But these talks, the strategic imperative has to be airtight agreed to in the process
that may take months or, you know, a year and a half or something for it to finally,
you know, get ironed out because it's everywhere now.
The roots are in all these government agencies, all these civil society institutions.
So it's a huge task that we have before us,
but if I can offer a sort of white pill,
a sort of good news on this is,
I remember so vividly in early 2017
when this tone that I have now is the tone that they had
when they set this up.
When you had these USAID administrators
and these National Endowment for Democracy folks
and these major NATO military contractors
and these US ambassadors and all their private sector
and financial stakeholders all in rooms saying,
how are we going to put this censorship apparatus in place?
What we're up against is so big.
These tech companies are so powerful.
They're practically their own private empire.
They have this culture of free speech.
They have this culture of libertarianism.
We're helpless.
And you would have these US ambassadors
talking to people in Greece and in Spain and in Germany,
and these German regulators and these Greek regulators
are saying, Google's bigger than us.
We can't stop them.
The US ambassadors are reassuring them to say listen it's gonna be a
long road it's not gonna happen overnight but we need to begin to take
the steps we're building our consensus we're doing it multi-stakeholder it's
whole society it's you know we don't need to you know win the war in a day
but there's but everyone can do their part pull their lever secure the buy-in
and we can bring these tech companies
to heel, they will fold to us with our powers combined.
We just need to start the process of combining them,
and the rest will fall into place,
or we will call an audible as we go.
And I watched that process, and they were doing that
in 2017, talking about how they might not be able to,
and we really need to make this urgent,
we need to pour all our effort into it.
And it did take years.
It did take three years for them to put in place
between 2017 and 2020, the apparatus they would use
for the 2020 election.
And it didn't all happen at once.
A little bit of it in 2017, a lot of it in 2018,
the 2019 stuff was built lot of it in 2018.
The 2019 stuff was built on that architecture from 2018.
It's the same process for dismembering it.
We need to do the same thing they did to put it in drive
to put it in reverse.
And it can be done, but it will be slow and painful.
Do you have any idea who you need to talk to?
I've never seen anybody unveil it like this before. I do. Who do you need to talk to? I've never seen anybody unveil it like this before.
I do.
Who do you need to talk to?
I can perhaps, uh, let's go for a beer after this,
and I'll give you the full list of names.
Perfect.
Let's take a quick break.
Who's the man who's gonna be the man
who's gonna be the man who's gonna be the man
who's gonna be the man who's gonna be the man who's gonna be the man who's gonna be the man Thank you for listening to The Sean Ryan Show. If you haven't already, please take a minute,
head over to iTunes and leave The Sean Ryan Show a review. We read every review that comes
through and we really appreciate the support. Thank you. Let's get back to the show.
All right, Mike, we're back from the break.
We're, I can't even remember where we left off, man.
It was like drinking from the fire hose here.
But what I do want to ask,
are you, how many people are going to lose internet
in Brazil due to this attack on free speech?
It sounds like you're here.
Brazil has 200 million people
and X is the most popular news app in the country,
even now, after the ban came down,
because of how many people are using a VPN,
despite the threat of fines if you speak misinformation
while using the VPN.
Well, the reason I'm asking is because,
I mean, part of the problem that Starlink was trying
to solve was all the people that live in rural communities
throughout the world that don't have internet, correct?
Well, so what's gonna happen when all these people
lose internet and there's no other provider?
Well, there's a very strange ominous case scenario, which I've talked about a little
bit just on my ex-account, which is that China has just launched this new SpaceX competitor that just recently put its first
constellation of its of its satellite mega project in play and
This starlink
Competitor starlink, you know market killer
Is something that I would not be surprised if Brazil pursues as a starlink substitute
Lula Hitched his star to China.
Bolsonaro was very hostile to Chinese soft power and Chinese investment in Brazil.
And Lula, who again was backed by the US State Department,
they wanted him to win, the State Department,
the CIA and the DOD on Bolsonaro to warn you know, to warn him against questioning the election.
They didn't do that to Lula.
And again, this whole censorship apparatus was set up
by the State Department and USAID
to kill Bolsonaro's political support.
So they wanted Lula to win,
and Lula has reversed decades of China hostilities,
and immediately, as soon as he got into office, declared that,
effectively, China is the linchpin
of Brazil's new economic development plan,
that they're gonna be a long-distance part
of China's Belt and Road Initiative.
So they are now hitching their start at China,
which means they're going to need China's,
they're gonna need to do favors for for China for China to do favors in kind
I would not be surprised if part of what's happening right now with
Tack with taking out Starlink is an attempt to do
either a favor
directly or indirectly for
Their their new Chinese partners and or to supplant Starlink altogether
with this new Chinese competitor
who is looking to get market reach
and capturing the 10th largest economy in the world
would be incredible as a beachhead,
not just in Brazil, but also in all of South America.
But this also begs very strange questions
about why it is the U.S. State Department
so vociferously backed Lula,
when Lula so vociferously backs China.
I mean, that's just...
Wow.
That's even...
That makes this even more alarming than it already is if...
I mean, with China and all the data collection that they're doing and...
So do you think we're going to start to see this...
the Chinese... What's the name of the company?
I forget. Everyone can look it up.
If you just literally Google China Starlink competitor,
you'll see... I don't want to butcher it,
but I think it actually even sounds similar to Starlink competitor, you'll see, I don't want to butcher it, but I think it actually
even sounds similar to Starlink.
So if they get more countries to do this,
they're all going to start using Chinese internet.
Yeah, it's the Huawei strategy, you know,
which, you know, with capturing the IT and the 5G market.
So that's how bad the US wants to censor us,
is our number, they would rather have the entire world
on Chinese internet, our number, they would rather have the entire world
on Chinese internet, our number one adversary.
Rather than let people have free speech
and use Starlink and Axe.
It's very strange in a moment when Tim Walz
was just selected as the vice presidential candidate
of our current vice president running for office,
meaning if Kamala were to win
and something were to happen to her,
Tim Walz would be the president of the United States,
the commander in chief,
and Tim Walz has been to China over 30 times.
He's been, you know, there's an article from him in college
where he said he brought so many gifts home from China,
he couldn't carry them all.
Frequently speaking at these Friends of China events
and his whole, since college has been tied
to these Chinese networks seven ways from Sunday.
And then you have the State Department
literally sickening the CIA, the State Department,
USAID, the Pentagon, and a hundred US government-funded
soft power swarm army influence institutions
in order to pull the strings to soft rig the election
for Lula.
When Lula pre-announced how China was going to be
the linchpin of the strategy,
has completely reversed Brazil's diplomatic posture
and giving them everything,
and is now kicking out Starlink at the exact moment
that Starlink's Chinese competitor comes online,
it makes you wonder if the blobs diplomatic apparatus
that we use both
to influence foreign countries and also as a department of dirty tricks against our own citizens,
if that is, if there's an element of it not being
just organic evil.
Very interesting.
Let's talk about the Atlantic Council
Cooperative Agreement.
Yeah, so this institution we've now mentioned
a couple times, the Atlantic Council is NATO's think tank,
is what it's known as.
But that's really the best way to understand it,
is it's sort of the plausibly deniable
civilian consensus building apparatus
for NATO's geopolitical agenda.
So if the U.S. military and the UK Foreign Office
and Brussels and the CIA want to do something in a certain region,
but the civilians there need to pass laws
to make that happen, or it would help the effort,
or the different civil society players
can help in some way.
It's intermediated by the Atlantic Council.
This is why the Atlanta Council gets annual funding
every year from 11 different US government agencies,
including the US Department of State,
the Department of Defense,
including separate allocations from the Army,
the Marines, and the Navy.
And CIA cutouts like the National Down for Democracy,
and it has seven CIA directors currently, as we speak,
on its board of directors.
You know, I say this a lot, but a lot of people
don't even know that seven former number one heads
of the CIA are still alive, let alone all clustered
on the board of a single entity that also happens
to be this primary coordinator of internet censorship in all over the world,
effectively from the US to Brazil to the EU.
But another strange aspect of this is
you have to understand how this
diplomatic defense intelligence apparatus
interacts with chamber of commerce companies
and energy companies in particular.
Energy companies are highly dependent
on the battering ram of the Pentagon
to secure and protect gas pipelines or oil resources,
wars for oil, folks may be familiar with that
sort of theme song that Democrats complained about
during the Bush era.
So the Pentagon often is this sort of battering ram
of oil and gas companies.
The State Department often has to play a role
in negotiating or brokering energy deals.
And the CIA plays a highly active role
in order to do this sort of political subversive work
or the soft power and plausibly deniable
soft power influence work that goes into
shaping those political outcomes in terms of
conceding to the state department's demands
or potentially destabilizing a country
so that the military can secure those energy resources.
And so it's not unusual for the Atlantic Council
to have these relationships with energy companies.
In fact, they are funded by many energy companies.
But what you're referring to here is on January 19th, 2017, one day before Donald Trump took
the oath of office in 2017, there was a very peculiar partnership inked between the Atlantic
Council and an energy company because that energy company was Burisma,
the famous private,
the largest private gas company in Ukraine.
And I've been making the point now for many years
that the reason Hunter Biden is untouchable
and the Burisma scandal could not be brought to light
and the FBI interfered
in the 2020 election and told Mark Zuckerberg not to publish anything about a leaked story
about Hunter Biden and Burisma.
Remember, the FBI specifically mentioned Burisma to Mark Zuckerberg in the context of that
laptop story.
It's because Burisma is at the dark heart of the grand Ukraine energy play.
I mean, we could go really deep on this. The Dark Heart of the Grand Ukraine Energy Play.
I mean, we could go really deep on this. I mean, the short version of it is
it has been a central plank of US statecraft
in seizing Eurasia, which has trillions of dollars
in natural resource.
Russia alone, it sits on $75 trillion worth
of natural resources. For context, the sits on $75 trillion worth of natural resources.
For context, the US only sits on 45 trillion gross.
So, and then you have Uzbekistan,
you have the whole Caspian Sea,
you have the whole central and eastern Europe
arc of Eurasia.
It is the, where most of the world's resources are.
And so that has been the long-range plan since the Cold War
of politically acquiring those companies, those countries.
And the expansion of NATO has solidified that,
you know, since 1990, you know, and the early 90s
when we told Gorbachev NATO wouldn't expand one inch
to the east, but we've acquired all those territories over time.
Sorry, I'm going with the long version now
just because we're just going to do it.
But stop me at any time.
In the 1990s, Russia was basically a U.S. vassal state.
It was like greater Alaska.
Boris Yeltsin was our puppet.
He was literally giving real-time updates
to the National Endowment for Democracy, our
big CIA cutout, in 1993 when he was bombing his own parliament building who were filled
with nationalists who were opposing Yeltsin for going through with the shock therapy privatization
to Western stakeholders.
You had $2 trillion worth of wealth held by the government of the Soviet Union when they turn into a capitalist state,
when they transition from the communist government
to a democratic one with elections of Yeltsin and Putin.
As part of that becoming a democracy,
the State Department, the Harvard Endowment,
Wall Street banks, the George Soros financial firms,
the Bill Browder financial firms, all of these different
whole of society, you know, international financiers
and business interests descended on Russia to buy up
at fire sale prices all of these previously state-owned assets.
This is a big part of our diplomatic toolkit.
When we transition an authoritarian government,
we will privatize their gas companies,
their oil companies, their diamond mines, their copper,
whatever it is that's being held in trust for the people
so that whatever grows out of their soil,
whatever flows from their Nile,
whatever is in their caves and mountains,
it's no longer for those people,
it belongs to Exxon Mobil,
it belongs to De Beers,
it belongs to Monsanto.
And so those companies work with the State Department,
they are part of these stakeholder negotiations
within the blob.
And so privatization is always, always, always on the table
whenever we topple the government.
And we work many back channels to accomplish that.
Might be a little bit outside the scope
unless you're super interested.
But effectively in the 1990s, Russia was our vassal.
In fact, we even, you can watch a movie called
Spinning Boris, it's a Hollywood movie
with Jeff Goldblum,
you know, from Jurassic Park, but it was,
this movie was about basically the US efforts,
and the US government efforts to rig the 1996 election
for Boris Yeltsin, because his own people hated him so much
for giving their country to the United States
and selling them out and handing it all over to,
you know, George Soros and the Harvard Endowment and Wall Street
and London banks that they wanted him out.
So the US had to send in a Hollywood team,
had to send in political consultants,
had to send in TV advertisements,
had to fund all these civil society institutions
to astroturf some sort of political semblance
for their puppet.
This is a problem we ran into in Afghanistan,
for example, with people upset at Hamid Karzai.
This is a very common thing, is we invade a country,
or we take over political control,
the people have nothing, and they're unhappy.
This is why we want people to have nothing but be happy.
When they're unhappy, they go against us,
and they might depose us from power.
But effectively, when the Russian stock market crashed
and finally there was no gas left in Yeltsin,
Putin rose to power.
And the big way that he reasserted Russia's emergence,
reemergence on the world stage was through
what our State Department called energy diplomacy.
Or basically soft power influence using Europe's
dependency on Russian oil and gas, particularly the gas.
Because a couple decades ago, 100% of Europe's natural gas,
practically 100% of it almost, came from Russia.
And this is just the natural result of the economics of gas.
Natural gas is very cheap.
You take it out of the ground, you put it in a pipeline,
you take it to the other point,
and the other country is gas.
The only real alternative to that is something called
liquefied natural gas, LNG, something folks may have heard
a lot about because it's a major, major part,
it's this much more new technique than simply gas pipelines, but essentially what it involves
is you can do it over much longer distances,
you can do pipelines over whole oceans,
because, or not pipelines, because it doesn't require
a pipeline, you liquefy the gas when it comes out
of the ground, you store it in a container,
you ship it to any point on Earth,
or to Mars hypothetically, and then
you deliquify it, but that's very expensive. It's much, much more expensive
and so countries naturally wanted to buy Russian gas rather than much more
expensive North American LNG and because of their dependency on Russia for that,
when Putin took power and began to rest himself off
of the sort of Yeltsinite, sort of NATO friendly relations, he used Europe's
dependence on Russian gas to trade that for favors to get more
Russian political influence over Central and eastern Europe, to increase trade ties, to increase political ties, to create this sort of Russian
soft power influence over the internal politics of countries stretching from Germany all the
way into the Baltics.
And around 2005, 2006, this begins to be a problem
for the State Department because at that point,
Russia was using a lot of hardball tactics.
In Georgia, they turned off the gas.
There was gonna be a cold winter
in these Central and European countries
unless they gave Russia what it wanted
on its trade terms and its security terms
and its political influence terms
because they were dependent on Russia for gas.
And so when this started happening time and again,
the State Department developed a counter strategy.
Again, this is 16 years ago.
The State Department with assistance from CIA
and the Pentagon and the whole diplomatic toolkit
of energy NGOs and things like this. And in order to get off of, get Europe
to get off primarily hydrocarbons,
at the time that was the main advantage that Europe had
is sort of before the fracking revolution really took off,
but also to go through what it called
energy diversification, which meant that
as part of America's security guarantees
for Europe, as part of our diplomatic and financial support
and guarantees for Europe, they would have to
buy more expensive gas from the West
than gas from the East.
Now, you can only do so much before a country goes broke,
unless they have an alternative gas supplier, and this is where Burisma will come back into the East. Now, you can only do so much before a country goes broke, unless they have an alternative gas supplier,
and this is where Bresma will come back into the picture.
But, so these countries went through about a decade
of diversification milestoneing.
You know, they went from 100% to 80% to 70% to 60%
Russian gas, as the State Department continually applied
pressure for them to give their taxpayer dollars to Americans
and British companies like Shell,
instead of from the Russian Federation via Gazprom.
So the State Department has seen Gazprom
as an instrument of statecraft for Russia,
again for 16 years now.
And there was a time when Gazprom was the largest company
in the world in the early 2000s,
just to get perspective for how influential this was before this energy diversification program cut back on a lot
of their profits.
But the key to this was Ukraine, because all of this gas pipeline architecture is already
pre-existing.
There's the natural gas pipelines that go directly
from Russia into Ukraine and then on into Europe.
And then there's an alternate pathway that was established
years ago called Nord Stream 1, which was directly into Germany.
And then Germany, you know, as folks know the tale,
tried to develop Nord Stream 2 with Russia.
And what happened to that happened to that.
But this State Department CIA Pentagon strategy of killing Gazprom and replacing the gas market
with Americans, Canadians, Brits has been this long-range plan that has been the bane
of American statecraft because their inability
to get it down to zero, their inability,
you know, it's two steps forward, one step back,
three steps back, as different rising politicians
in Central and Eastern Europe want what's best
for their people, they are responsible
to their constituents, their people want cheaper energy.
Russia's offering want cheaper energy. Russia's
offering the cheaper energy. So absent the ability to provide a cheaper
commodity product, the people organically have wanted that Russian gas and so
they had to constantly suppress populist political groups in Central and Eastern
Europe who might run on a platform or who are running on a platform of buying
energy from Russia as, you know,
countless of these have.
And so this has been part of the State Department manipulation of all these different elections
in order to kill the right-wing populist party who's running on buying Russian energy.
Now where Burisma comes into the picture is, actually if I can lay out one quick thing
first, which is you have to also understand
was the John McCain quote about how Russia is just a gas station with a standing army
or just a gas station with a military.
It's this famous quote that Russia doesn't have a robust technology sector or retail
sector or they're basically just a giant economy built on the fact that the world's number
two and three,
respectively, resource for oil and gas,
they export that for profit,
and they use that profit to build up a giant military
that can rival NATO.
And so they're a gas station with a military.
Well, what happens if you kill the gas?
There's no military.
Which means all of Eurasia falls, bit by bit.
Take Ukraine, take the whole Caspian Sea,
take the whole Black Sea, take Tajikistan, Uzbekistan.
Take Africa.
I mean, Russia and the United States,
and as well as France, are locked in this proxy war.
China's also a player over Africa.
This is a point that I made on Tucker Carlson recently,
is that you have, just in the past year,
you've had the Ivory Coast, Mali, Chad, Nigeria,
all of these francophone countries
that have been split the baby between US interests
and French interests in those colonial regions
have all been toppled in coups, military coups,
backed by the Russian army,
where they are burning French flags
and raising Russian flags.
And Russia is providing the small arms munitions.
If you remember, Obama tried to invade Syria.
Why did he get repelled?
Because Russia militarily backstopped Assad and gave them the anti-aircraft missile defense
systems that prevented us from doing a bombs over Baghdad strategy.
So all over the world, Russia is militarily backstopping the folks in the crosshairs of the Pentagon, and all
of that comes crumbling down if you kill Gazprom and Rosnev, the oil company.
But all of this can be done by simply killing the Nord Stream pipelines in Germany and killing
Russia's control over two regions in Ukraine, the Donbass and the Crimea Black Sea region.
And this is what they were doing in the years before the 2014 coup that our embassy did
in Ukraine.
Between 2011 and 2013, Chevron signed a $10 billion deal with the other major player in
this with Burisma.
And apologies for the long version,
but I think it'll all make sense at the end.
Burisma is the largest private sector gas company in Ukraine.
NAFTA gas is the big state-owned one.
And NAFTA gas collects all the transits
from all the Russian gas that goes through
into the rest of Europe.
So NAFTA gas has this spider-like gas pipe architecture that goes all into the rest of Europe. So, NAFTA gas has this spider-like gas pipe architecture
that goes all into Europe,
and Burisma essentially feeds then into NAFTA gas.
It's the easiest simplified way of thinking about it.
Now, Burisma held these mining rights in the Donbass
and these mining rights in the Black Sea, Crimea region.
This is important because those are the precise two places
that fell to Russian control in the post-2014 coup.
But in the run-up to that,
all of these NATO energy stakeholders bet the farm
on this grand Ukraine energy play of kicking Russia out.
That was part of what the coup in 2014 was
because Yanukovych was
dragging his feet on privatizing NAFTA gas and dragging his feet over signing this trade
deal with the US and the IMF, and he went with this Russian customs deal.
And you had all of these US and British energy companies in the two, three year span before that,
sign multi-billion dollar deals with the, with NAFTA gas, what Burisma feeds into,
because they were skating to where the puck was going.
Chevron signed a ten billion dollar deal with NAFTA gas.
Shell, which used to be Royal Dutch Shell,
but now it's just London based,
so it's Shell signed a matching $10 billion deal
with NAFTA gas.
Halliburton, Dick Cheney's company,
where he was the chairman and CEO,
owns the refining rights to it all.
And if all of these major stakeholders
were set to make huge windfall profits,
the moment NAFTA gas was privatized,
so they got all the profits coming through, and to extract all of the shale that was sitting
in the mountains of the Donbass and in offshore in the Black Sea.
So we overthrew the government of Ukraine, but then in the counter-coup all of those
assets were lost.
So these billions of dollars of investments were now sitting
in Russian territory. So the only way to
get them back is to have US taxpayers
pay the CIA and the Pentagon and
Ukrainian paramilitaries to take
that military territory back by force.
And if I can just say, you know, one more
thing on this is, Burisma was part of this,
one of the reasons Hunter described
what he was doing with Burisma is a patriotic,
he was serving his country by making what,
50 grand, 60 grand a month on the board
of a Ukrainian private gas company
is because he was pitching,
we now know as of a few months ago,
this came out in documents
that were publicly published,
that Hunter Biden's own law firm
was pitching to the State Department
that barismo was an essential instrument of US statecraft.
And so the State Department should take action
to secure its licenses, to protect it from prosecutors,
to basically bulk it up because it was a beachhead
against Russian gas.
And we know that Hunter Biden was putting pressure,
or that he, the State Department actually published this
a few weeks ago, it was having conversations
with the US ambassador in Italy,
so that the US ambassador in Italy could put pressure
on the Italian government for rights that are shared
between Italy and Greece.
What I'm saying is there was this Pentagon CIA plan
to kill Gazprom and put the substitute supply
of the gas supply coming from two different sources.
LNG from North America and from Britain,
so like Houston is one of the reasons
that the Dick Cheney, George Bush mafia hated Trump.
Part of this was this Houston LNG was gonna ship out
and it was going to be a NAFTA gas,
it was going to basically be the new supply chain for Europe
as we're seeing it now is in the past few years.
It was just why they've all made record profits
as this war has gone on.
But Donald Trump's neutrality
and threatening to withhold military support,
remember that's what he was impeached over in 2019,
threatened to throw a monkey wrench
in this private prophet, Kabbal.
So there are only two ways to get that gas supply
to where Europe needed it.
One is LNG coming from North America, but the other one is building up Ukraine's endogenous gas supply to where Europe needed it. One is LNG coming from North America, but the other one is building up Ukraine's endogenous
gas supply because Ukraine sits on Europe's third largest unexploited volume of shale.
And then add to that all that in the Black Sea.
So Ukraine could have a very robust independent, sort of Ukrainian version of Gazprom if they could simply be weaned off of it
and the expensive investments were all made by the companies
to get it off the ground and rolling.
But that means you need to make sure the Ukrainian government
does not do this, you know, this is a hard process
that's much more expensive than simply going with Russia
because you have to set up this new infrastructure, you have to transfer all the ownership.
Ukrainians don't make money from it.
These are not going to be held by Ukrainian companies.
They're held by American stakeholders
and Wall Street and London.
So they're the ones mining the gas,
but their people are not the ones
who are getting the profits.
I mean, this is like, you know, if you,
I mean, this was the problem people had
in the Panama Canal in the 90s, you know,
the Panamanians, we have this Panama Canal,
but you know, it's owned by,
this is just a common problem people have.
Is it good, is it,
this makes a lot of sense.
Well, so the goal was to build up Burisma,
and at the same time you're privatizing NAFTA
gas because that alleviates the otherwise diplomatic torture you need to do to countries
from buying all this expensive LNG from North America.
You have an endogenous cheap gas supply that you can just take out of the Donbass and Crimea.
And so it's a very elegant solution to the diplomatic problem.
But the problem is, is you need a diplomatic department of dirty tricks to kick Russia
out to make half of Ukraine's population, which is, which are Russian ethnics and Russian-speaking,
go along with it.
So you need to overthrow the Ukrainian government if Yanukovych equivocates, which he did and
which they did.
And it, when Russia backstops it with little green men,
you need the Pentagon, you need NATO,
you need British special forces,
you need Canadian special forces to take the country back.
And if Russia then doubles down by militarily invading,
well, now you need basically a full-scale proxy war.
And the problem is, this is a trillion dollardollar market, and these are companies that have already made
multi-billion-dollar investments,
and neutrality with Russia, as Trump was talking about,
throws a monkey wrench in all of it.
It's already a fragile, sensitive operation
that only has a 50% chance of working.
Trump could ruin the Bush dynasty.
Wow.
This makes a lot more sense than I did.
And the Soros dynasty.
Soros is an investor in Halliburton
and a major part of this NAFTA gas privatization effort.
This is one of the reasons that foreign policy synchronized in 2014
with, um, on Russia after the Crimean
annexation. So I just want to for the audience so basically the portion that
everybody's fighting over is the big gas. Yeah that's the main
that's the main already. Now look there's there's you know trillions of dollars in
other sort of critical minerals.
There's a whole sort of wheat agriculture element of it.
But the main...
But it disrupts Russia's pipeline into Europe.
Because now it would be coming from...
Right.
We can retake Chad in Nigeria.
We can invade Syria.
You know, the world is ours if you simply...
Now, of course, this is part of where China comes back into this.
Because everyone expected
Russia to die when we did this.
When we started this process of kicking them out and sanctioning everything, but they're
evading the sanctions by going through India, and now they just set up this giant power
of Siberia pipeline with China.
So they're rerouting from Europe to China, so it doesn't solve this military objective,
but you know, which again gets back to the strange question of why are they not trying
to stop the power of Siberia pipeline?
Are they beholden to the, you know,
are there other conversations being had with the Chinese?
Why is China not being threatened with sanctions
if they really mean, you know, what they say
about sanctions of Asians on Russia.
Well, why do you think?
I mean, probably because we can go after Ukraine or China.
What's the easier target?
Well, that's the best case scenario.
The worst case scenario is that there are financial interlinkages between our political class
and the incredible economic lever that China has that is influencing policy.
But I do want to say a few more things about Burisma because I feel remiss if I didn't.
It's important to keep in mind that Hunter Biden, as I mentioned, was on the Chairman's Advisory Board
of the NDI, the National Democratic Institute,
which is the DNC branch of this prolific CIA cutout,
the National Endowment for Democracy,
which again was created in 1983
because the CIA wanted an NGO constellation
to do the kinds of soft power influence work
that it used to do as a clandestine operation.
But by doing it as a public facing democracy
promotion operation, you can scale it much better.
It doesn't seem like it's a big infraction
on civil liberties.
It's not a diplomatic incident if someone gets caught
because the US just straight up announces,
we're promoting democracy in the region.
And that may mean funding the political opposition.
That may mean funding media that, you know,
goes against one candidate for another.
So this is a CIA cutout that Hunter Biden
was on the Chairman's Advisory Board
while he was doing this barrisme work.
You don't get on the Chairman's Advisory Board of NDI
unless you have some sort of at least informal relationship
with or linkages to intelligence.
Because you are doing intelligence work
through this intelligence back-channeled NGO.
And literally both the founders
of the National Noun for Democracy
have outright come and said that they formally do now
what the CIA used to do and lost its license to do.
Then you have the fact that we have the CIA interfering
in Hunter Biden's IRS case.
If you remember when the DOJ tried to talk to the guy
who paid Hunter Biden's taxes for the past five years,
the entertainment lawyer in LA,
at least according to the congressional whistleblower,
with a formal sworn
affidavit, the CIA intervened and told the Justice Department not to question Hunter
Biden's chief financier.
So you have these CIA interlinkages directly with that affiliation.
You have the CIA waving the Justice Department off of who's funding Hunter Biden, who was on the board of directors
at Parisma right next to Hunter Biden.
If you recall, there was another person
from the United States.
It was Kofor Black.
Kofor Black spent 30 years in the CIA,
and also on a State Department
Distinguished Medal Award.
But he was 30 years in the CIA, and in fact,
you can read all about this, he was Mitt Romney's Sherpa
to the CIA, to the intelligence community,
when Mitt Romney ran for president
against Barack Obama in 2012.
So he was the guy that the presidential nominee in 2012
turned to to get the support of the CIA from the inside.
And by the way, who's Mitt Romney
on the board of directors of?
The IRI, the International Republican Institute, the GOP branch of the National Endowment for
Democracy, the GOP branch of the CIA.
So you have this one-two punch of the Democrat wing of the CIA and the Republican wing of
the CIA, both represented on this tiny little board of directors of the exact private gas company
that is literally being pitched to the State Department
as an instrument of statecraft against Russia.
Well, by the way, what is the CIA's job?
It's to do plausibly deniable soft power influence work
that advances the State Department agenda.
So the moment the State Department agrees,
yeah, it is an instrument of statecraft. You bless all of these CIA activities
to do the corporate espionage, to broker deals,
to do money laundering in order to make these things happen.
CIA calling people off of the Justice Department
to avoid looking into the sources of those funding.
This is why Hunter has been protected,
at least until now,
is he was a where's Waldo figure in this web of intrigues
around the perception of Russia
as an instrument of statecraft
and the serendipitous windfall profits
that comes from using the battering ram of our Pentagon
and CIA and State Department
to secure lucrative energy deals
for Chamber of Commerce energy companies.
On the Atlantic Council signed a deal with them the day before Trump was sworn into office.
So you can imagine how those seven CIA directors felt, you know, when Donald Trump was making
that phone call to Zelensky about potentially holding up military aid, and of course,
they played a very active role in setting up
the censorship industry in the first place.
It was actually Atlantic Council meetings
where many of the very first global disinformation
conferences were run out of.
It was the Eurasia Center, out of the Atlantic Council,
specifically, and the Brent Scrocroft Center,
as well as what was called the Digital Forensics
Research Lab. The Digital Forensics Research Lab.
The Digital Forensics Research Lab at the Atlantic Council
was actually one of the first movers
in the whole censorship industry,
before the 2016 election even.
It was NATO's sort of one of their first spawn
of architecture censorship institutions
after Crimea in 2014.
I think they were set up in like 2015 essentially
and began sort of doing this network mapping
of pro-Russia political movements and these sorts of things
and then all of this was added on.
But again, what is an institution getting Pentagon funding
and State Department funding with seven CIA directors
doing, intermediating this whole network?
I do have a question.
And this could obviously go really bad and take us into World War
Three which we'll get into in just a second but I'm trying to think this
through but I've I've I gotta be honest I've with the way
I gotta be honest, with the way...
As messed up as it is, it seems like if that plan would have actually worked,
it would have been in our best interest.
Because we're selling...
What was it? Liquid natural gas?
Liquified natural gas, yeah. Liquified natural gas, we would be exporting it to Europe,
in conjunction with Europe no longer getting their gas from Russia.
Which, if I remember correctly, Trump actually warned Europe
about getting all of their gas from Russia.
So, which would potentially, maybe not destabilize, but it would be a major punch
to Russia's bottom line.
And so why is this a bad thing?
I don't get into the question of whether it's a good or a bad thing because I can see both sides.
You know, I can see people saying, well, this is great for US interests.
In theory, our major oil and gas companies, you know, make these big profits, you know,
that's going to spill into our economy. It's going to trickle down, you know,
economy impacts so that people will be able to buy more homes and afford, make college more affordable
and have 401Ks and pensions.
And that's one argument.
The other argument is you are,
the sort of left-wing anti-imperialist argument
is this is NATO playing God
over the democratic sovereign states
in Central and Eastern Europe.
You're not achieving this plan
because you're offering a better gas product.
You're not offering to sell Europe the energy,
the commodity energy, meaning it doesn't matter really
the quality of the product, gas is gas.
You're not offering it at a cheaper price.
These companies aren't taking a haircut
on the profit margins, they're selling to them.
In fact, if they're forcing Russia off,
they can hike the price way up, which they've done.
Because now they're completely dependent.
So their argument is this is basically US imperialism
and it renders American democracy promotion
a total hypocritical joke
because you don't believe in democracy
if anyone challenges you
in enacting the grand Ukraine energy play.
You coup them out of office just like you did
to Yanukovych in Ukraine in 2014
and just like you're threatening to do in Slovakia
and Serbia and all these other countries.
So it-
Well then on top of that, you also have all of Europe,
because you had mentioned that it would be
under US companies control.
Right.
Crimea.
So then you have all of Europe beholden
to US companies natural gas.
Right.
On top of our own exports.
Right.
Which does it, so.
So I avoid the question of whether it's a good or a bad thing to pursue the Grand Ukraine Energy Play, because I can see both sides of it, and that's not my fight.
My mission is free speech on the internet.
And the problem is, is they believed, because of how sensitive this was,
because of how much money was at stake,
because of how much was at stake geopolitically
and militarily and diplomatically
and in terms of intelligence work,
and how it impacted reconstruction banks
and major chamber of commerce companies.
And because there was already so much resistance
from the Central and
European countries and from Russia, it was already a plan that did not have a
guaranteed certainty of success. So you have to stack the deck in its favor as
much as possible. And they believed, beginning in 2016, and you can go back
and listen to Anders Fogh Rasmussen, the former head of NATO, or Michael Chertoff,
or any of these other folks who were involved
in this whole thing.
And the way they were talking about in 2016,
just go back and run a Boolean search to Timebox,
this to the contemporaneous YouTube searches
or Google results from this time.
And they were complaining that the problem was
is people were not believing NATO propaganda,
they were believing Russian propaganda,
all over from Germany to Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia,
Georgia, Moldova.
The whole region was falling under the ambit
of Russian propaganda, they weren't believing NATO.
And also, it's not just Russian propaganda,
anyone who supports the political party in power
or opposition party who wanted Russian gas
could also be contextualized as being a Russian puppet.
So free speech got caught in this proxy war
because in order to stack the deck,
to increase the odds of this thing
being able to be pulled off,
they had to censor the internet.
They had to censor the internet first in Central
and Eastern Europe, which if it had been confined to there,
you may have never heard my name.
When this started off in Riga, Latvia,
with these centers, NATO STRATCOM Centers of Excellence
and these NATO censorship centers that sprawled out
from there into Lithuania and Germany,
I would have been state of corporate lawyer.
But the fact is, is when Brexit happened in 2016,
they said, oh my God, it's hit Western Europe.
We need to, the State Department has to start funding
London-based censorship firms.
We have to start funding a sprawling web of London NGOs
and London universities from Oxford and Sheffield
and Cambridge.
We need to start funding these censorship mercenary firms
in London.
We need to start working with London members of parliament
in order to censor misinformation, anything that supports
the Brexit party or supports any sort of detente with Russia
after the sanctions push in the UK.
And then the Trump election happened in the US
in November 2016, a few months later.
And the idea that this was just a sort of military operation
confined to controlling the information environment
all the way out in central Eastern Europe,
everything dropped out.
US citizens, US news companiesS. social media platforms, we all got caught in the
crossfire.
And now how much is the Grand Ukraine energy play worth?
Is it worth the First Amendment?
Is it worth having the government control the art?
Why weren't they just honest?
Honest to who?
You're the only one I've heard talk about this.
Oh, you should go to their YouTube channel.
They talk about it more plainly than I do.
This is one of the things that was so funny
when I was getting involved in this in 2016, 2017,
is I would be watching eight hours worth
of these censorship industry conferences.
No, no, no, no, no, I'm not talking about.
And they'd be laced between energy conferences.
I'm not talking about the censorship.
I'm talking about the gas.
I'm talking about the reason we're there.
I've not heard this.
Everybody, it's never discussed.
Well, if you spend a minute in their world,
in their own conferences, at their own meetings,
I mean, you can go to their YouTube page right now.
Just go to the Atlantic Council's YouTube page.
Go to Globseck's YouTube page.
You know, go to the Carnegie Endowment
for International Peace's YouTube page.
Go to the Wilson Center's YouTube page.
I don't think he's got any of,
even in Putin's statements,
he's not talking about the gas, is he?
He was.
He's talking about the US taking Crimea for gas.
He talks about that stuff.
He talks about this play of them trying to go through with this energy diversification
somewhat frequently, I feel.
They said that we are the ones who blew up
the Nord Stream pipelines,
but then I believe he told Tucker Carlson,
because Tucker Carlson asked,
hey, why don't you talk about the Nord Stream pipeline
if you think we blew it up?
Why don't you make your case on the world stage?
And if you remember what he said is,
he said the US owns the propaganda apparatus.
It's basically futile.
You know, we have diplomatic communications and everyone knows what's up, but we can't
compete with the media.
So you know, what can we say?
That you know, they, the US did it.
We said that.
Yeah.
With what infrastructure, you know, can we amplify that message other than Russia Today, which is under sanctions
and has the register in Farah and all this?
And so they do.
But part of the issue is there's less hollering about it
from Russia than you might expect
because Russia has actually recently,
and this is another bane of the blobs existence, is
that Russia has actually gotten around these sanctions and some of these
cloak-and-dagger moves by our foreign policy establishment by rerouting the
the gas into Europe through places like India. This is one of the reasons the
State Department has such a big censorship operation against Modi in India.
If you may remember from the Twitter files,
why it was that the Atlantic Council was flagging
like 35,000 accounts of pro-Modi accounts on Twitter.
What was that about?
They wanna get rid of Modi.
They consider Modi to be a sort of economic lifeline
to Russia, among a few other reasons
involving nationalism, populism.
But so Russia is still, in fact, I don't know if this
is still the case, but a couple months ago,
they actually retook the U.S. as the largest
natural gas exporter to Europe, because of,
because all these different countries that were
rerouting the gas and that the sanctions weren't
being enforced about.
That's why there's this constant sanctions
whack-a-mole
against countries, but the problem is they're doing it
with large countries like India and China,
who we don't have the kind of sanctions clout we do
against a country like Iran or Venezuela,
because these are large, huge economy,
huge population, huge forces on the world stage
alongside us.
So part of the reason that you may not have heard
as much about it from Russia's side is because they are,
it hasn't hurt them all that much.
They have to pay a markup when they go to China.
They have to pay a markup having to go to India
because you're rerouting it.
But they've been offered a deal that they can live with.
And it's mostly the countries
that are getting hurt are actually the ones now
that are NATO countries who are funding Russia's war.
This play to kill Nord Stream
and to kill cheap Russian gas to Germany
has killed Germany's economy,
has killed Germany's industrial sector,
has killed their ability to even fund the war.
But remember, a lot of this started before the invasion.
This has been in play now for a long time.
So, yeah, if that's helpful.
Wow.
Put a lot of things into a new perspective for me,
but what do you think the
probability of this is going to turn into World War III?
It's hard to say because I think we may flirt with World War III ever more in a deliberate
attempt to avoid World War III.
And what I mean by that is we have this technique called destabilization.
When we're trying to negotiate with the foreign government
and they're being uncooperative,
or we sense they're willing to make a deal,
but we don't have leverage,
and so you can only get leverage through carrots
or through sticks, offering them something,
or hurting them with something, and threatening to make the pain go away.
And I suspect that what's happening right now with Ukraine's escalation against Russia,
you know, this new incursion into Russian territory and long-range missile attacks against
targets hundreds of miles into Russia proper, is one way to look at it is it puts us on the path
to World War III.
I actually suspect there's something a little bit
more moderate happening in the background,
which is that my sense of it,
and I don't have any insider knowledge whatsoever,
this is just my speculation based on public things I read,
is that the NATO senses that we are, that Ukraine is losing
by more and more by the day inside of Ukraine and the political frailties around sustaining
the funding level are very difficult.
But the problem is, is they don't want to strike a peace deal that includes giving the
Donbass or Crimea back to Russia. They would be
okay if the war ended and we simply reset back to early 2014 and just wound back the clock.
But the problem is, is Russia will not agree to that given how much they are winning by on the battlefield and the perception that in the long run,
time is on their side when it comes to consolidating
that political control over Eastern Ukraine and Crimea.
And so, in order to bring Russia to the negotiating table
to have a peace, I call it a peace fire.
It's sort of a combination of a peace deal and a cease fire,
but the emphasis is on fire,
because I believe that even after the State Department
strikes this hypothetical deal,
we will continue to do CIA or plausibly deniable
special operations work to take Eastern Ukraine back
and take Crimea back just by having rogue paramilitaries do it
who happen to be trained by Pentagon advisors.
The same thing we were doing from 2014 onward
where it was Ukrainian paramilitaries from Kiev
who were going into Eastern Ukraine
and taking back these shale regions,
but they were funded by the US,
they were trained by the Canadians. It were trained by the Canadians. Yeah.
It's a face.
Right, but we want to reset it to that,
to this sort of Minsk peace period,
but Russia won't agree to it.
So we are trying to present the threat
that World War III might happen,
that the daughters of your high-level officials
may be assassinated as they're riding
in their car.
We will be striking at your infrastructure inside Russia.
If 100,000 Russians die in Moscow or St. Petersburg, that could foam an anti-war movement within
Russia to strike that peace deal on favorable terms to U.S. interests. And so I think they have felt that simply playing defense
and grinding down Russia's economy has not worked
as Russia has done the sanctions evasion that we just talked about.
So now they are trying to do it the other way,
which is by causing enough Russian casualties
that this, heading back to 2014, will happen
because Russia will want to make the blood flow stop.
Wow.
I could talk to you all day, Mike.
I'm having fun.
Me too.
Well, I hate to close it out,
but you've got a flight to catch.
We've got about eight minutes before you got a jet.
So, man, do you have any closing remarks
or anything that you wanna get out there?
I would just encourage people to be optimistic in this
in a lot of ways, because as much as it feels
like we're up against the weight of the world,
and some of these forces are so dark
and powerful and nefarious in so many ways,
this was the world before you could read about it.
You know, this was the United States in the 20th century,
too, you just, you know, didn't have access
to Twitter accounts or Facebook posts
or YouTube videos to learn about it.
And we have a level of freedom currently
because of Elon Musk and X,
because of what the folks over at Rumble are doing,
because of some of our champions in Congress
and in the legal world and the new sort of media architecture
who's able to amplify all of this, there is a moment to truly have
the will of the people respected in this,
but you just, so don't get depressed
when you read about this.
If you're new to this, you will go through
your five stages of grief.
You will have your denial and your anger
and your bargaining and then your depression and then you will finally
get to the point of acceptance
and things might still piss you off
but you can sort of see this as our inheritance.
You pointed this out when you said,
well, maybe some of this is a good thing.
Maybe it's the reason we had cheap gas
and affordable homes because this is,
so this is our inheritance.
So it's more like getting to know an uncle
than it is about trying to vanquish some arch enemy.
But you can follow my work online.
I'm on X at Mike Ben Cyber.
My foundation is Foundation for Freedom Online.
It's the same name, foundationforfreedomonline.com.
And Sean, you're doing the Lord's work
and I appreciate you taking the time to talk to me today.
Thank you, brother.
All those links will be below.
And one last thing,
if you had three recommendations for the show,
who would they be?
Oh, man.
Have you talked to Chris Pavlowski from Rumble?
No.
I would say Chris Pavlowski from Rumble.
Linda Iaccarino would be really interesting from X.
And I would say a member of Congress like Dan Bishop or Jim Jordan if you haven't had
him on, from my perspective, all three of those people would be really interesting for
their take on what they're doing against and about censorship issues,
you know, from the independent platform side, from the sort of, you know, ex-leadership
side and from the congressional side, because we need these stakeholder conversations on
the side of freedom.
They can't just be on the censorship side.
We'll reach out.
Mike, that was a fascinating interview and a ton of information and I really hope
to see you again here. Likewise. Thank you. I'll come back to the museum anytime. Alright.
Cheers. This episode is brought to you by FX is the old man starring Jeff Bridges and John Lithgow.
The hit show returns as the stakes get higher and more secrets are uncovered.
The former CIA agent sets off on his most important mission to date to recover his daughter after she is kidnapped.
FX is the Old Man. All new Thursdays on FX. Stream on Hulu.