1 00:00:00,040 --> 00:00:02,560 Speaker 1: When you look at the Soros family and the impact 2 00:00:02,560 --> 00:00:07,440 Speaker 1: they've had on our elections, getting liberal prosecutors elected to power, 3 00:00:07,640 --> 00:00:10,799 Speaker 1: and the increase in crime we've seen as a result. 4 00:00:11,080 --> 00:00:14,080 Speaker 1: Or the World Economic Forum and Claus Schwab and its 5 00:00:14,160 --> 00:00:17,320 Speaker 1: desire for us to own nothing and to be happy. 6 00:00:17,840 --> 00:00:22,639 Speaker 1: Or Bill Gates buying up America's farmland, Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg, 7 00:00:23,120 --> 00:00:25,800 Speaker 1: all of these individuals who have an outsized role in 8 00:00:25,880 --> 00:00:28,480 Speaker 1: shaping our society and shaping the world. 9 00:00:28,240 --> 00:00:31,440 Speaker 2: That we live in. But how much control do they have. 10 00:00:31,920 --> 00:00:34,440 Speaker 1: We're going to talk to Shamus Brunner, who is the 11 00:00:34,479 --> 00:00:38,640 Speaker 1: author of a new book called Control O Garchs, exposing 12 00:00:38,640 --> 00:00:41,880 Speaker 1: the billionaire class, their secret deals, and the globalist plot 13 00:00:41,960 --> 00:00:45,760 Speaker 1: to dominate your life. Just how much control these people have, 14 00:00:46,240 --> 00:00:48,520 Speaker 1: and even some things that you wouldn't even think about 15 00:00:48,600 --> 00:00:51,360 Speaker 1: in the ways that they're trying to control us. Shamus 16 00:00:51,360 --> 00:00:54,720 Speaker 1: Bruner is also the director of research at the Government 17 00:00:54,800 --> 00:00:58,440 Speaker 1: Accountability Institute. He's worked with Peter Schweizer over the years 18 00:00:58,480 --> 00:01:01,880 Speaker 1: to bring a lot of investigations to light to call 19 00:01:01,920 --> 00:01:06,240 Speaker 1: out corruption in both government and the private sector as well. 20 00:01:06,480 --> 00:01:08,880 Speaker 1: So stay tuned for this interview about his new book, 21 00:01:09,080 --> 00:01:18,800 Speaker 1: Control of Arcs. Well, Seamus, I met you at a 22 00:01:19,400 --> 00:01:21,880 Speaker 1: Heritage event a few months ago and you were telling 23 00:01:21,880 --> 00:01:23,440 Speaker 1: me about your book, and I was like, I've got 24 00:01:23,440 --> 00:01:26,280 Speaker 1: to get you on and look at us following through. 25 00:01:27,800 --> 00:01:31,320 Speaker 3: So awesome, It's so awesome. I'm excited. This is a 26 00:01:31,360 --> 00:01:32,800 Speaker 3: podcast I love to listen to. 27 00:01:33,280 --> 00:01:35,480 Speaker 1: Well that means a lot. I really appreciate it, and 28 00:01:35,600 --> 00:01:37,480 Speaker 1: I'm so glad to have you on. This book just 29 00:01:37,520 --> 00:01:40,679 Speaker 1: seems so interesting. You and Peter Schweizer. You guys have 30 00:01:40,840 --> 00:01:43,520 Speaker 1: exposed a ton of corruption over the years through the 31 00:01:43,560 --> 00:01:47,120 Speaker 1: Government Accountability Institute as well as the best selling books 32 00:01:47,120 --> 00:01:49,160 Speaker 1: and the investigative work that you guys have been doing. 33 00:01:49,480 --> 00:01:51,200 Speaker 1: I focus on the billionaire class. 34 00:01:51,600 --> 00:01:53,720 Speaker 3: Well, you know us, we follow the money. That's kind 35 00:01:53,720 --> 00:01:56,000 Speaker 3: of our motto. We followed it to the Clinton's, to 36 00:01:56,120 --> 00:01:59,360 Speaker 3: the Bidens. I did a book on FBI corruption following 37 00:01:59,440 --> 00:02:03,600 Speaker 3: James co Me and Robert Muller's money, and now we 38 00:02:03,720 --> 00:02:05,520 Speaker 3: decided to follow it all the way to the top, 39 00:02:05,560 --> 00:02:08,519 Speaker 3: to the globalist elites. And what we found is really 40 00:02:08,560 --> 00:02:10,760 Speaker 3: shocking stuff. I mean, for the first time ever, we 41 00:02:10,840 --> 00:02:14,480 Speaker 3: crunched the numbers and found, you know how each of 42 00:02:14,520 --> 00:02:16,520 Speaker 3: the characters on the cover of the book, and about 43 00:02:16,560 --> 00:02:19,960 Speaker 3: twenty others added tens of billions of dollars to their 44 00:02:20,000 --> 00:02:23,680 Speaker 3: personal net worth over the course of the pandemic. And 45 00:02:23,760 --> 00:02:27,480 Speaker 3: that may not surprise the savvy listeners of your show, 46 00:02:27,919 --> 00:02:30,520 Speaker 3: But what really blew us away is how they sort 47 00:02:30,520 --> 00:02:34,400 Speaker 3: of leveraged the pandemic as a quote opportunity not only 48 00:02:34,440 --> 00:02:38,079 Speaker 3: to get rich, but to seize control of key industries 49 00:02:38,120 --> 00:02:41,480 Speaker 3: that dominate our lives. And we're not against making money, 50 00:02:41,520 --> 00:02:43,760 Speaker 3: of course, we're all capitalists. You know, there's plenty of 51 00:02:43,760 --> 00:02:47,120 Speaker 3: good billionaires out there, but these guys really want to 52 00:02:47,360 --> 00:02:51,200 Speaker 3: use their money and leverage the power of government to 53 00:02:51,280 --> 00:02:54,880 Speaker 3: change your behavior and control you. Yeah. 54 00:02:54,919 --> 00:02:56,680 Speaker 1: I mean, look, I'd love to be a billionaire. I'm 55 00:02:56,680 --> 00:02:59,240 Speaker 1: not going to lie. But you know that big set. 56 00:03:00,000 --> 00:03:01,359 Speaker 1: You know, you look at a lot of the damage 57 00:03:01,480 --> 00:03:04,040 Speaker 1: these guys have done, and you focus on folks like 58 00:03:04,080 --> 00:03:08,160 Speaker 1: Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg, Jeff Bezos, the Soros, Klass Schwab, 59 00:03:08,320 --> 00:03:09,480 Speaker 1: you know a lot of these individuals. 60 00:03:09,480 --> 00:03:10,640 Speaker 2: We talk a lot about if. 61 00:03:10,520 --> 00:03:14,320 Speaker 1: You had to pick one, who's the worst offender, and why. 62 00:03:14,360 --> 00:03:16,960 Speaker 3: It's so hard when you've got George Soros, Bill Gates, 63 00:03:16,960 --> 00:03:20,040 Speaker 3: and Klaus Schwab. I usually choose those three out of 64 00:03:20,040 --> 00:03:23,360 Speaker 3: the five. Mark Zuckerberg and Jeff Bezos do have a 65 00:03:23,360 --> 00:03:26,880 Speaker 3: bit of a more libertarian bent, although that is eroded 66 00:03:26,919 --> 00:03:30,720 Speaker 3: over the years. George Sorows is just, you know, the 67 00:03:30,840 --> 00:03:34,400 Speaker 3: villain that everybody knows and has heard much about his 68 00:03:34,480 --> 00:03:37,240 Speaker 3: son Alexander. So we weren't sure that George Soros was 69 00:03:37,280 --> 00:03:40,800 Speaker 3: going to make it through publication, and there was questions 70 00:03:40,800 --> 00:03:43,440 Speaker 3: of whether we should put him on the cover. He's 71 00:03:43,520 --> 00:03:46,200 Speaker 3: ninety three years old and not looking so good. But 72 00:03:46,600 --> 00:03:49,400 Speaker 3: his son Alexander, So we tracked down all five of 73 00:03:49,440 --> 00:03:52,080 Speaker 3: his children and found that actually each is more radical 74 00:03:52,640 --> 00:03:56,400 Speaker 3: than he is. And Alexander Soros, who's taken over the 75 00:03:56,480 --> 00:03:59,400 Speaker 3: sort of dark money empire, this twenty five billion dollar 76 00:04:00,000 --> 00:04:03,920 Speaker 3: mount and of philanthropic cash, is much more radical than 77 00:04:03,920 --> 00:04:06,000 Speaker 3: his father. So I think he's certainly one to look 78 00:04:06,040 --> 00:04:09,360 Speaker 3: out for. Bill Gates, of course. I mean, he was 79 00:04:09,520 --> 00:04:13,920 Speaker 3: always this cutthroat monopolist software salesman, and then once the 80 00:04:14,000 --> 00:04:18,240 Speaker 3: DOJ started looking into Microsoft and the famous anti trust 81 00:04:18,240 --> 00:04:22,320 Speaker 3: suit was opened up, that's when he became a philanthropist. 82 00:04:22,360 --> 00:04:23,880 Speaker 3: And now all of a sudden he's a darling of 83 00:04:23,920 --> 00:04:25,680 Speaker 3: the left. I mean the left didn't used to love 84 00:04:26,000 --> 00:04:29,320 Speaker 3: Bill Gates at all, but the things that he's pouring 85 00:04:29,320 --> 00:04:32,200 Speaker 3: his money into is really, really, you know, some creepy stuff. 86 00:04:32,880 --> 00:04:35,640 Speaker 3: And then klaud Schwab, I would say, I mean, he 87 00:04:36,520 --> 00:04:39,920 Speaker 3: doesn't have the power of Bill Gates in America, but 88 00:04:40,440 --> 00:04:43,520 Speaker 3: globally he certainly does. And what he represents is, you 89 00:04:43,520 --> 00:04:47,400 Speaker 3: know this, He's this frontman for this group of people 90 00:04:47,440 --> 00:04:50,000 Speaker 3: I call the control of Arcs and the things coming 91 00:04:50,000 --> 00:04:56,320 Speaker 3: out of Davos are truly terrifying. So that's probably how 92 00:04:56,320 --> 00:04:58,880 Speaker 3: I'd rank them. Cloud's at the top, only because he 93 00:04:58,960 --> 00:05:02,279 Speaker 3: represents the rest of them. Bill Gates right up there 94 00:05:02,279 --> 00:05:07,799 Speaker 3: with him and Soros and his offspring right below Gates. 95 00:05:08,800 --> 00:05:12,200 Speaker 1: You talked about Bill Gates investing in some very creepy stuff. 96 00:05:12,240 --> 00:05:15,159 Speaker 1: We know he's also buying up America's farmland. You know, 97 00:05:15,240 --> 00:05:17,960 Speaker 1: first of all, get into the creepy stuff you're talking about, 98 00:05:18,000 --> 00:05:21,279 Speaker 1: and then also why is he buying up America's farmland. 99 00:05:21,680 --> 00:05:27,360 Speaker 3: There's a tactic that Bill Gates used, or Microsoft used 100 00:05:27,400 --> 00:05:32,600 Speaker 3: that is what the Anti Trust Justice Department prosecutors looked into, 101 00:05:32,640 --> 00:05:35,920 Speaker 3: and so it actually bears upon both the farmland but 102 00:05:36,000 --> 00:05:39,000 Speaker 3: all of the other stuff he has used this tactic 103 00:05:39,120 --> 00:05:44,960 Speaker 3: called embrace, extend, extinguish, where he enters the sector, you know, 104 00:05:45,320 --> 00:05:48,520 Speaker 3: acts like he's not making too many waves. He extends 105 00:05:48,560 --> 00:05:52,640 Speaker 3: his reach within that sector, and then he extinguishes the competition. 106 00:05:52,720 --> 00:05:54,680 Speaker 3: And so I mean you just you saw this in 107 00:05:54,720 --> 00:05:57,760 Speaker 3: the pandemic. I mean he enters this glo the global 108 00:05:57,800 --> 00:05:59,800 Speaker 3: health industry. I mean he's a software guy. What does 109 00:05:59,800 --> 00:06:02,359 Speaker 3: he know about health? He's certainly not a doctor, not 110 00:06:02,440 --> 00:06:06,960 Speaker 3: a scientist. He expands his reach. This happens through the 111 00:06:07,000 --> 00:06:11,600 Speaker 3: two thousands. I mean he's funded doctor Fauci programs, doctor 112 00:06:11,640 --> 00:06:15,600 Speaker 3: Burke's programs. He really bought his way in by sending 113 00:06:15,640 --> 00:06:18,680 Speaker 3: money to NIH studies and stuff like that. I mean, 114 00:06:18,720 --> 00:06:21,280 Speaker 3: three billion dollars is how much we found he had 115 00:06:21,279 --> 00:06:25,520 Speaker 3: sent towards Fauci and Burks before the pandemic and their priorities. 116 00:06:25,760 --> 00:06:30,599 Speaker 3: And then he's the one who's authoring the pandemic policies, 117 00:06:30,640 --> 00:06:33,840 Speaker 3: things like lockdowns and masks and things that we know 118 00:06:34,040 --> 00:06:38,000 Speaker 3: now and many of us knew then didn't work. He's 119 00:06:38,040 --> 00:06:42,480 Speaker 3: got a very close relationship with communist China. He's helped 120 00:06:42,720 --> 00:06:47,960 Speaker 3: the Chinese censor their own citizens using Microsoft software and 121 00:06:48,040 --> 00:06:52,360 Speaker 3: skype et cetera and outed dissident journalists. So he's got 122 00:06:52,360 --> 00:06:58,600 Speaker 3: this real proclivity towards the Chinese. And it's not just commercial. 123 00:06:59,320 --> 00:07:03,599 Speaker 3: I think hekind of craves the power that communism provides. 124 00:07:04,480 --> 00:07:08,200 Speaker 3: Of course, we get into the the GMO mosquitos that 125 00:07:08,240 --> 00:07:11,080 Speaker 3: he's released all over the country. I mean, it started 126 00:07:11,080 --> 00:07:15,720 Speaker 3: in Florida, in California. Wants to release them everywhere. Not 127 00:07:15,760 --> 00:07:19,160 Speaker 3: a scientist, but not sure genetically modified mosquitos is a 128 00:07:19,160 --> 00:07:22,800 Speaker 3: good idea. He spent over ninety million dollars doing that. 129 00:07:23,480 --> 00:07:24,560 Speaker 2: What's the goal with that? 130 00:07:24,760 --> 00:07:29,040 Speaker 3: The goal is to eradicate mosquitoes, because mosquitos are actually 131 00:07:29,080 --> 00:07:31,200 Speaker 3: the most deadly animal. 132 00:07:31,280 --> 00:07:34,080 Speaker 2: What's the real goal? Is there something more nefarious than that? 133 00:07:34,320 --> 00:07:36,600 Speaker 3: It's more I don't you know, I don't say that. 134 00:07:36,640 --> 00:07:38,720 Speaker 3: I'm not saying that there's a more nefarious goal other 135 00:07:38,760 --> 00:07:43,120 Speaker 3: than eradicating mosquitoes. However, you know a lot of things 136 00:07:43,160 --> 00:07:45,800 Speaker 3: could go wrong when you start messing with you know, 137 00:07:45,880 --> 00:07:48,880 Speaker 3: the food chain, and next thing you know, you know, 138 00:07:48,920 --> 00:07:51,800 Speaker 3: he has cascading ripple effects. So the fact that he's 139 00:07:51,840 --> 00:07:54,000 Speaker 3: able to do this without any and that's kind of 140 00:07:54,000 --> 00:07:56,320 Speaker 3: the theme of the book is did anybody get to 141 00:07:56,360 --> 00:08:00,280 Speaker 3: vote on this no. And Bill Gates is unelected for 142 00:08:00,480 --> 00:08:03,960 Speaker 3: he is unaccountable. And that's that's a big problem, is 143 00:08:04,000 --> 00:08:10,920 Speaker 3: these unelected billionaires and bureaucrats authoring our policies without any 144 00:08:10,960 --> 00:08:14,800 Speaker 3: sort of recourse for we the people. Additionally, you know, 145 00:08:14,880 --> 00:08:17,480 Speaker 3: he's got he's the one who helped get the Inflation 146 00:08:17,600 --> 00:08:21,360 Speaker 3: Reduction Act passed. There's a piece in Bloomberg that you know, 147 00:08:21,440 --> 00:08:25,720 Speaker 3: leaked communications probably from Senator Mansion staff saying that Bill 148 00:08:25,760 --> 00:08:29,760 Speaker 3: Gate calls up the Mansion and kind of threatens him. 149 00:08:29,800 --> 00:08:32,080 Speaker 3: And he's he's not a registered lobbyist, he doesn't have 150 00:08:32,120 --> 00:08:34,000 Speaker 3: to register as a lobbyist, but he's able to kind 151 00:08:34,000 --> 00:08:39,000 Speaker 3: of exert this undemocratic pressure over lawmakers to get things 152 00:08:39,040 --> 00:08:41,880 Speaker 3: like the Inflation Reduction Act pass Now, why would he 153 00:08:41,960 --> 00:08:46,439 Speaker 3: do that. There's four hundred plus billion dollars carved out 154 00:08:46,480 --> 00:08:49,720 Speaker 3: in the Inflation Reduction Act to go to green energy 155 00:08:49,760 --> 00:08:52,720 Speaker 3: priorities and you know so called green energy priorities. He's 156 00:08:52,760 --> 00:08:56,480 Speaker 3: got this nuclear power company called Tarror Power that's gotten 157 00:08:57,280 --> 00:09:00,360 Speaker 3: at least one hundred million dollars in tax payasists. That's 158 00:09:00,400 --> 00:09:02,760 Speaker 3: another thing we talk about is, you know, why do 159 00:09:02,840 --> 00:09:05,720 Speaker 3: we need to be giving welfare to oligarchs. 160 00:09:05,760 --> 00:09:08,040 Speaker 1: And then what about the farmland. What do you think 161 00:09:08,080 --> 00:09:09,080 Speaker 1: the objective is there? 162 00:09:09,320 --> 00:09:13,199 Speaker 3: So using this embrace and in like the the extinguished phase. 163 00:09:13,400 --> 00:09:15,760 Speaker 3: You know, I mentioned it with with global health and 164 00:09:15,800 --> 00:09:19,479 Speaker 3: how he kind of bought his way into that industry 165 00:09:19,520 --> 00:09:23,600 Speaker 3: and then I'll expanded his region extinguished. The competition. The 166 00:09:23,600 --> 00:09:27,160 Speaker 3: competition is generics. In the case of healthcare, I mean 167 00:09:27,200 --> 00:09:30,120 Speaker 3: generic medications. You know they Why would he put like, 168 00:09:30,120 --> 00:09:34,240 Speaker 3: you know, why would he diss or pooh pooh things 169 00:09:34,320 --> 00:09:38,680 Speaker 3: like zinc or vitamin C in favor of things like 170 00:09:39,640 --> 00:09:45,200 Speaker 3: regeneron or you know, the other patented pharmaceutical products. And 171 00:09:45,240 --> 00:09:47,680 Speaker 3: that's that's what you saw with Microsoft, and that's what 172 00:09:47,720 --> 00:09:52,120 Speaker 3: you'll see in the food industry is the the the 173 00:09:52,160 --> 00:09:55,400 Speaker 3: industries that Bill Gates wants to control. He actually owns 174 00:09:55,480 --> 00:09:59,760 Speaker 3: and has large investments in these patented technologies. And so 175 00:09:59,800 --> 00:10:04,360 Speaker 3: with food and with agriculture, he owns large chunks of 176 00:10:04,400 --> 00:10:08,400 Speaker 3: the fake meat, you know, things like beyond meat, impossible foods. 177 00:10:08,679 --> 00:10:11,880 Speaker 3: He's also owns a large chunk of these new synthetic 178 00:10:12,160 --> 00:10:16,200 Speaker 3: patented fertilizers. And so once he's secured investments in the 179 00:10:16,240 --> 00:10:20,440 Speaker 3: patented technology and he's expanded his reach far enough within 180 00:10:20,440 --> 00:10:23,040 Speaker 3: an industry. That's when he comes in and exerts the 181 00:10:23,080 --> 00:10:28,120 Speaker 3: pressure over the politicians to do things like ban certain 182 00:10:28,160 --> 00:10:31,720 Speaker 3: types of fertilizers which would be his competition, and ban 183 00:10:32,679 --> 00:10:35,839 Speaker 3: you know, types of meat. So I meane Alexandria Acasio 184 00:10:35,880 --> 00:10:40,680 Speaker 3: Cortes when she starts scriping about cal flatulence and you 185 00:10:40,720 --> 00:10:44,240 Speaker 3: know how that's going to end the earth, she doesn't 186 00:10:44,280 --> 00:10:46,520 Speaker 3: get these ideas and she didn't just make up this idea, 187 00:10:46,600 --> 00:10:48,800 Speaker 3: and a lot of politicians talk about, you know how 188 00:10:48,840 --> 00:10:51,640 Speaker 3: cattle are terrible. I mean, Ireland is actually a little 189 00:10:51,640 --> 00:10:54,199 Speaker 3: further ahead than the United States and their efforts to 190 00:10:54,280 --> 00:10:58,400 Speaker 3: ban cattle. They're going to be sending anywhere from forty 191 00:10:58,480 --> 00:11:02,560 Speaker 3: thousand to two hundred thousd and cows to slaughter on 192 00:11:02,679 --> 00:11:07,040 Speaker 3: the altar of climate change that just so happens to 193 00:11:07,080 --> 00:11:11,000 Speaker 3: benefit people like Bill Gates's investments in these alternative proteins. 194 00:11:11,040 --> 00:11:12,920 Speaker 2: Do you think Peter would be a little bit upset 195 00:11:12,960 --> 00:11:13,800 Speaker 2: about that? 196 00:11:14,000 --> 00:11:18,400 Speaker 1: Seriously, although they'll probably be silent because it's you know, 197 00:11:18,480 --> 00:11:23,360 Speaker 1: leftists doing it. You know, the Soros family, clearly, I 198 00:11:23,400 --> 00:11:27,199 Speaker 1: don't know if I mean any other family has done 199 00:11:27,360 --> 00:11:31,680 Speaker 1: more damage to America in like modern history. They've done 200 00:11:31,679 --> 00:11:35,280 Speaker 1: this through elections, you know, even more localized elections, like 201 00:11:35,360 --> 00:11:39,400 Speaker 1: liberal prosecutors. The amount of crime that they've increased. What 202 00:11:39,760 --> 00:11:43,280 Speaker 1: motivates them to want to destroy so much? You know, 203 00:11:43,360 --> 00:11:45,959 Speaker 1: what did you learn about them? What should people know? 204 00:11:46,640 --> 00:11:49,400 Speaker 2: Why are they so invested in destroying America? 205 00:11:49,480 --> 00:11:53,560 Speaker 3: Sure so, George Soros. I mean many of your listeners 206 00:11:53,559 --> 00:11:56,360 Speaker 3: have probably heard that his network is called the Open 207 00:11:56,440 --> 00:12:00,000 Speaker 3: Society Network, and that term open society it comes from 208 00:12:00,080 --> 00:12:04,320 Speaker 3: his mentor, Carl Popper. And the idea behind an open 209 00:12:04,440 --> 00:12:09,040 Speaker 3: society is that there are no borders. And so that's 210 00:12:09,120 --> 00:12:12,520 Speaker 3: you know, you see the erosion of our border. That's 211 00:12:12,520 --> 00:12:15,240 Speaker 3: a huge source. Priority is to eliminate the border. There's 212 00:12:15,280 --> 00:12:19,600 Speaker 3: not strong you know, strong countries, the United States being 213 00:12:19,640 --> 00:12:22,320 Speaker 3: the strongest. They don't want a strong United States. They 214 00:12:22,320 --> 00:12:25,600 Speaker 3: want this multipolar world of kind of like everybody, you know, 215 00:12:25,640 --> 00:12:29,000 Speaker 3: all globalists. And so I totally agree with you that 216 00:12:29,040 --> 00:12:33,080 Speaker 3: he has done probably the most damage, certainly being the 217 00:12:33,080 --> 00:12:36,360 Speaker 3: oldest on the cover there and he's been at it 218 00:12:36,400 --> 00:12:39,160 Speaker 3: for a long time. And the problem is is that 219 00:12:39,240 --> 00:12:42,280 Speaker 3: his his offspring are just as radical, if not more 220 00:12:42,360 --> 00:12:45,160 Speaker 3: radical than he is. They're not just I mean they've 221 00:12:45,200 --> 00:12:48,320 Speaker 3: already placed their thumbs on the scales for twenty twenty four. 222 00:12:48,480 --> 00:12:51,040 Speaker 3: You've got all of the you know, the prosecutors who 223 00:12:51,040 --> 00:12:54,360 Speaker 3: are trumping up these charges and like against a political opponent, 224 00:12:54,679 --> 00:12:58,920 Speaker 3: but then also the efforts to remove Donald Trump from 225 00:12:58,960 --> 00:13:01,240 Speaker 3: the ballot across the county. This is being pushed by 226 00:13:01,240 --> 00:13:05,800 Speaker 3: an organization called Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington. 227 00:13:05,960 --> 00:13:10,360 Speaker 3: CREW that's a Soros funded organization. And he always names 228 00:13:10,400 --> 00:13:14,120 Speaker 3: I mean, he's really good at naming his uh dark 229 00:13:14,200 --> 00:13:20,960 Speaker 3: money network organizations like the Democracy Initiative or Open Society Initiative, 230 00:13:21,440 --> 00:13:24,840 Speaker 3: and they sound really good. The only problem is is 231 00:13:24,840 --> 00:13:27,280 Speaker 3: Soros is unelected and so we have no way of 232 00:13:27,360 --> 00:13:33,199 Speaker 3: pushing back against his influence. And it's you know, that's 233 00:13:33,240 --> 00:13:36,040 Speaker 3: not very democratic at all. And something we get into 234 00:13:36,040 --> 00:13:39,720 Speaker 3: too is, you know, he's funding the prosecutors, which that's 235 00:13:39,960 --> 00:13:42,480 Speaker 3: just uh, you know, these are these these are tiny 236 00:13:42,559 --> 00:13:44,640 Speaker 3: races where you know, it doesn't cost a lot of 237 00:13:44,679 --> 00:13:48,440 Speaker 3: money to buy the race. Local sheriffs are next. I mean, 238 00:13:48,440 --> 00:13:49,960 Speaker 3: he's now funding local sheriffs. 239 00:13:49,960 --> 00:13:53,280 Speaker 1: It's pretty terrifying. Let's take a quick commercial break. More 240 00:13:53,360 --> 00:13:58,720 Speaker 1: on control of arcs. On the other side. Why do 241 00:13:58,760 --> 00:14:01,920 Speaker 1: you think the left and brain globalism so much? You know, what, 242 00:14:02,240 --> 00:14:05,719 Speaker 1: do these billionaires want globalism? Why does the left want globalism? 243 00:14:06,040 --> 00:14:07,000 Speaker 1: What's the aim of it? 244 00:14:07,120 --> 00:14:09,640 Speaker 3: Well, that's a great question, and it's talked about a 245 00:14:09,720 --> 00:14:14,240 Speaker 3: lot in the book. How there are these Well, so 246 00:14:14,320 --> 00:14:17,480 Speaker 3: chapter one gets into this organization called the Club of Rome, 247 00:14:17,760 --> 00:14:21,000 Speaker 3: and it's really the precursor to Davos in the World 248 00:14:21,040 --> 00:14:24,760 Speaker 3: Economic Forum. They're very tight with the United Nations and 249 00:14:24,880 --> 00:14:28,720 Speaker 3: with you know, reading through their thousands of pages of manifestos, 250 00:14:29,560 --> 00:14:31,840 Speaker 3: you kind of come to the realization that there are 251 00:14:31,880 --> 00:14:35,360 Speaker 3: these problems and crises, and in every crisis there's a 252 00:14:35,440 --> 00:14:38,680 Speaker 3: huge opportunity for them. Of course, there are these problems 253 00:14:38,680 --> 00:14:41,800 Speaker 3: in crises that are just too big for anyone country 254 00:14:41,840 --> 00:14:45,240 Speaker 3: to solve, and so that's why they these kind of 255 00:14:45,280 --> 00:14:50,640 Speaker 3: plutocrats who are again not elected, get together in places 256 00:14:50,680 --> 00:14:54,480 Speaker 3: like Davos, but also like Aspen and very very fancy places, 257 00:14:54,960 --> 00:14:59,680 Speaker 3: and they get together and brainstorm how they can use 258 00:14:59,720 --> 00:15:04,240 Speaker 3: tag payer resources to solve crises, things like climate change, 259 00:15:04,320 --> 00:15:07,840 Speaker 3: things like global pandemics. I mean, back in the sixties 260 00:15:07,880 --> 00:15:10,000 Speaker 3: when a lot of these organizations were getting started, the 261 00:15:10,040 --> 00:15:13,400 Speaker 3: big problem was overpopulation and They certainly still to this day, 262 00:15:13,800 --> 00:15:19,600 Speaker 3: think that there's too many peasants on planet Earth, you know, 263 00:15:20,120 --> 00:15:22,760 Speaker 3: using up their resources in air. So Bill Gates is 264 00:15:22,760 --> 00:15:27,320 Speaker 3: a big overpopulation type guy, and the way they want 265 00:15:27,360 --> 00:15:30,240 Speaker 3: to bring it down is largely through lowering the birth rate. 266 00:15:30,280 --> 00:15:32,040 Speaker 3: They've they've done a pretty good job. I feel like 267 00:15:32,080 --> 00:15:35,040 Speaker 3: they should take take a victory lap because birth rates 268 00:15:35,040 --> 00:15:37,000 Speaker 3: are at sixty year lows. 269 00:15:37,400 --> 00:15:38,560 Speaker 2: Now are these crises? 270 00:15:38,600 --> 00:15:42,120 Speaker 1: Are these manufactured crises? When you talk about climate change 271 00:15:42,200 --> 00:15:44,920 Speaker 1: and COVID which ended up being as deadly as the flu. 272 00:15:45,160 --> 00:15:48,120 Speaker 3: Well, when you read through like this organization is a 273 00:15:48,280 --> 00:15:50,400 Speaker 3: very it's not well known, the Club of Rome, but 274 00:15:50,440 --> 00:15:52,440 Speaker 3: I would encourage people to go read some of the 275 00:15:52,560 --> 00:15:55,520 Speaker 3: Club of Rome's reports. They're still you know, cranking out 276 00:15:55,560 --> 00:15:59,760 Speaker 3: reports to this day. Their first, their first big production 277 00:16:00,160 --> 00:16:02,440 Speaker 3: was called the Limits to Growth, and that was like, 278 00:16:03,560 --> 00:16:07,200 Speaker 3: how the Earth is overpopulated. We really need to you know, 279 00:16:07,920 --> 00:16:09,560 Speaker 3: a lot of these people think a billion people now. 280 00:16:09,560 --> 00:16:11,040 Speaker 3: They never tell you how they want to get to 281 00:16:11,080 --> 00:16:14,200 Speaker 3: a billion people. They think that's like the ideal planetary size. 282 00:16:14,280 --> 00:16:16,040 Speaker 3: They don't, you know, they don't tell you how they 283 00:16:16,080 --> 00:16:18,760 Speaker 3: want to get to it. I don't allege that there's 284 00:16:18,800 --> 00:16:21,240 Speaker 3: like some large genocide going on or anything like that. 285 00:16:21,320 --> 00:16:25,240 Speaker 3: But the thing that they openly talk about is just 286 00:16:25,320 --> 00:16:28,080 Speaker 3: lowering birth rates. That was the first crisis, is this 287 00:16:28,160 --> 00:16:31,280 Speaker 3: crisis of overpopulation. I think they realized because you can 288 00:16:31,360 --> 00:16:34,120 Speaker 3: kind of see over time, you know, report after report 289 00:16:34,120 --> 00:16:37,360 Speaker 3: each year that comes out. What grew out of the 290 00:16:37,400 --> 00:16:41,080 Speaker 3: overpopulation was global cooling. Well, the Earth is going to freeze. 291 00:16:41,160 --> 00:16:44,880 Speaker 3: I mean this is now into the seventies, and these 292 00:16:44,920 --> 00:16:46,560 Speaker 3: are the people who are authoring things that where you 293 00:16:46,600 --> 00:16:49,120 Speaker 3: eventually arrive at climate change. The thing about climate change 294 00:16:49,160 --> 00:16:51,560 Speaker 3: that's so perfect. I mean they got to global warming. 295 00:16:51,640 --> 00:16:54,840 Speaker 3: There was holes in the ozone layer and you know 296 00:16:55,040 --> 00:16:58,000 Speaker 3: every year the or you know every year they're like ten, 297 00:16:58,200 --> 00:17:00,600 Speaker 3: in ten years, the Earth is going to end if 298 00:17:00,600 --> 00:17:02,360 Speaker 3: we don't do something about it. And then you get 299 00:17:02,360 --> 00:17:04,360 Speaker 3: to that ten years, like well wait a second's like no, no, no, 300 00:17:04,359 --> 00:17:07,520 Speaker 3: it's ten it's ten more years ahead. I mean, like 301 00:17:08,040 --> 00:17:11,320 Speaker 3: Greta Thunberg said twenty twenty three would be the year 302 00:17:11,359 --> 00:17:13,720 Speaker 3: that the Earth would end back in twenty sixteen. 303 00:17:14,080 --> 00:17:14,800 Speaker 2: She had to delete that. 304 00:17:14,840 --> 00:17:16,520 Speaker 3: Tee had to delete the tweet. So they all and 305 00:17:16,560 --> 00:17:18,760 Speaker 3: they kind of they kind of just they paper over 306 00:17:18,840 --> 00:17:22,280 Speaker 3: their past predictions, but there's like fifty to sixty years 307 00:17:22,720 --> 00:17:26,800 Speaker 3: of failed predictions. And this is why the pandemic was 308 00:17:26,800 --> 00:17:30,320 Speaker 3: such a aga, in Klaus Schwab's words, great opportunity. I mean, 309 00:17:30,320 --> 00:17:33,280 Speaker 3: they said, there's there's some great clips I wish I'll 310 00:17:33,320 --> 00:17:36,040 Speaker 3: send them to you of people at the World Economic 311 00:17:36,080 --> 00:17:39,679 Speaker 3: Forum saying climate changes doesn't really scare people enough. So 312 00:17:39,680 --> 00:17:42,360 Speaker 3: that's why the pandemic has been such a great opportunity 313 00:17:42,400 --> 00:17:46,360 Speaker 3: because it's actually real. It's not you know, this hypothetical 314 00:17:46,440 --> 00:17:51,320 Speaker 3: ten year away event. And so that and so the 315 00:17:51,320 --> 00:17:54,200 Speaker 3: great reset is you know, talked about extensively in the book. 316 00:17:54,240 --> 00:17:58,280 Speaker 3: I mean, Klaus Schwab got up in July of twenty 317 00:17:58,400 --> 00:18:01,040 Speaker 3: twenty and said, this pandemic is a great opportunity for 318 00:18:01,160 --> 00:18:07,280 Speaker 3: a reset, a great reset of capitalism, of rebuilding ours, 319 00:18:07,320 --> 00:18:10,000 Speaker 3: you know, we build back better in a greener way. 320 00:18:10,040 --> 00:18:11,679 Speaker 3: And everybody, you know, if you saw that clip, you 321 00:18:11,680 --> 00:18:13,400 Speaker 3: were kind of wondering, in the middle of a pandemic, 322 00:18:13,400 --> 00:18:15,680 Speaker 3: when you're lockdown and wearing a mask, what the heck 323 00:18:15,760 --> 00:18:18,119 Speaker 3: does a virus have to do with climate change? And 324 00:18:18,160 --> 00:18:22,480 Speaker 3: we're we're starting to see that they as they rebuild 325 00:18:22,520 --> 00:18:25,320 Speaker 3: and build back better and these infrastructure bills, they're pouring 326 00:18:26,000 --> 00:18:28,800 Speaker 3: hundreds of billions, actually over a trillion dollars is going 327 00:18:28,800 --> 00:18:34,320 Speaker 3: into like saving the planet, which is such an ambitious goal, 328 00:18:35,240 --> 00:18:39,320 Speaker 3: but it's it's really a heist of taxpayer money. And 329 00:18:39,400 --> 00:18:44,239 Speaker 3: what is it building. It's building these climate friendly you know, 330 00:18:44,800 --> 00:18:48,560 Speaker 3: programs and initiatives. Then really actually aren't all that climate friendly. 331 00:18:48,600 --> 00:18:51,159 Speaker 3: I mean you look at the fake meats, which is 332 00:18:51,200 --> 00:18:53,720 Speaker 3: all done to save the planet, you know, climate change. 333 00:18:53,880 --> 00:18:56,240 Speaker 3: The fake meats use more you know, growing meats in 334 00:18:56,280 --> 00:19:01,280 Speaker 3: a lab uses more carbon than cattle emit method, so 335 00:19:01,320 --> 00:19:04,639 Speaker 3: it's that's not greener than the tried and true method 336 00:19:04,720 --> 00:19:08,960 Speaker 3: of just growing beef. Same thing with the electric vehicles, 337 00:19:09,280 --> 00:19:12,040 Speaker 3: I mean, the batteries and just like the number of 338 00:19:12,800 --> 00:19:16,360 Speaker 3: elements and materials that go into the production of electric 339 00:19:16,480 --> 00:19:20,840 Speaker 3: vehicle is ultimately more carbon emitting than a gas powered 340 00:19:20,880 --> 00:19:23,560 Speaker 3: vehicle would emit in its lifetime. And so then if 341 00:19:23,560 --> 00:19:26,440 Speaker 3: it's not about saving the planet, what is it about? 342 00:19:26,520 --> 00:19:29,520 Speaker 3: And you kind of can see, I mean, just you know, 343 00:19:29,760 --> 00:19:32,879 Speaker 3: have your listeners. Imagine a scenario. You wake up in 344 00:19:32,920 --> 00:19:34,480 Speaker 3: the middle of the night, it's in the middle of 345 00:19:34,520 --> 00:19:36,680 Speaker 3: the summer, it's a it's a heat wave and you're 346 00:19:36,760 --> 00:19:40,240 Speaker 3: drenched in sweat. So you go to your thermostat and 347 00:19:40,400 --> 00:19:44,440 Speaker 3: you try to turn the temperature down and you can't. 348 00:19:44,440 --> 00:19:46,639 Speaker 3: You've been locked out. You don't have control over the 349 00:19:46,920 --> 00:19:50,600 Speaker 3: temperature in your home. That sounds maybe a conspiracy, like 350 00:19:50,640 --> 00:19:54,600 Speaker 3: a conspiracy conspiracy theory. It's it's not. As the residence 351 00:19:54,640 --> 00:19:59,040 Speaker 3: in Denver, Colorado, in California, and in Texas, they've all 352 00:19:59,080 --> 00:20:02,200 Speaker 3: experienced this area where they signed up for the new 353 00:20:02,520 --> 00:20:05,720 Speaker 3: smart thermostat, they didn't realize when they checked the box. 354 00:20:06,119 --> 00:20:09,639 Speaker 3: I agree that they were agreeing to have their smart 355 00:20:09,640 --> 00:20:14,880 Speaker 3: thermostat remotely controlled based on you know, the energy consumption 356 00:20:15,000 --> 00:20:16,879 Speaker 3: of their city. This is kind of what the smart 357 00:20:16,920 --> 00:20:20,760 Speaker 3: cities are all about. This is this technology that Gates 358 00:20:20,800 --> 00:20:25,240 Speaker 3: is funding, invested in, built, Jeff Bezos with Amazon, and 359 00:20:25,960 --> 00:20:27,560 Speaker 3: you know a bunch of other characters in the book. 360 00:20:27,880 --> 00:20:30,400 Speaker 1: Well, and it also pushes us, you know, for instance, 361 00:20:30,400 --> 00:20:33,480 Speaker 1: with electric vehicles, I think it's just so that people 362 00:20:33,520 --> 00:20:37,800 Speaker 1: stop owning private car ownership, you know, to to reduce 363 00:20:37,960 --> 00:20:41,080 Speaker 1: that because you know, there there are questions about if 364 00:20:41,080 --> 00:20:44,720 Speaker 1: the electrical grid could even support this vast expansion to 365 00:20:44,760 --> 00:20:47,600 Speaker 1: electric vehicles, if there's even enough raw materials, and so 366 00:20:47,640 --> 00:20:49,800 Speaker 1: I think the end goal is so that we don't 367 00:20:49,840 --> 00:20:53,160 Speaker 1: have private you know, car ownership, right, And that's part 368 00:20:53,160 --> 00:20:56,120 Speaker 1: of what you know, Klaus Schwab and the World Economic 369 00:20:56,160 --> 00:20:57,880 Speaker 1: Forum has been saying, is that, you know, they want 370 00:20:57,960 --> 00:21:01,119 Speaker 1: us to own nothing and be happy, be you know, 371 00:21:01,240 --> 00:21:03,360 Speaker 1: talk about some examples. 372 00:21:02,680 --> 00:21:05,800 Speaker 2: About what they're encouraging to push us in that direction. 373 00:21:06,040 --> 00:21:08,440 Speaker 3: Yeah, certainly it sounds sort of like a threat. Actually 374 00:21:08,480 --> 00:21:10,320 Speaker 3: when you when you think a lot about it, like I. 375 00:21:10,240 --> 00:21:12,320 Speaker 2: Have, Yeah, like that's not going to make me happy, right, 376 00:21:12,359 --> 00:21:12,760 Speaker 2: I could. 377 00:21:12,600 --> 00:21:14,160 Speaker 3: Tell you you will own nothing. 378 00:21:15,800 --> 00:21:19,520 Speaker 1: Luck, Yeah, with this biding economy, you're really already pushing 379 00:21:19,560 --> 00:21:21,800 Speaker 1: me in the you know, but like that will not 380 00:21:21,880 --> 00:21:22,919 Speaker 1: make me I promise you have. 381 00:21:23,160 --> 00:21:24,520 Speaker 3: Well, the way to think about it is they want 382 00:21:24,560 --> 00:21:27,359 Speaker 3: to put a paywall around everything in your life that 383 00:21:27,440 --> 00:21:29,600 Speaker 3: you enjoy, and they want to make it a subscription 384 00:21:29,720 --> 00:21:33,199 Speaker 3: based everything you rent everything. They act like it's going 385 00:21:33,240 --> 00:21:35,919 Speaker 3: to be this utopia, But I mean, do you like 386 00:21:36,160 --> 00:21:38,600 Speaker 3: having to subscribe to a number? You know, like I 387 00:21:38,600 --> 00:21:41,959 Speaker 3: mean BMW's and Mercedes Now, like in order to have 388 00:21:42,040 --> 00:21:45,040 Speaker 3: your heated seats you need and to have maybe this 389 00:21:45,280 --> 00:21:48,159 Speaker 3: the safety sensors on the car, the features are in 390 00:21:48,200 --> 00:21:51,280 Speaker 3: the vehicle. You've paid for the vehicle, but in order 391 00:21:51,320 --> 00:21:53,720 Speaker 3: to use those features, you've got to pay ten bucks 392 00:21:53,720 --> 00:21:56,399 Speaker 3: a month. If you want the remote start feature on 393 00:21:56,480 --> 00:22:00,280 Speaker 3: your keyfob, that's an extra five bucks a month. And 394 00:22:00,320 --> 00:22:02,760 Speaker 3: this is something that Bill Gates actually really pioneered with. 395 00:22:02,880 --> 00:22:04,560 Speaker 2: It's like flying Spirit airlines. 396 00:22:05,280 --> 00:22:06,600 Speaker 3: It really no, it really isn't. 397 00:22:07,640 --> 00:22:09,280 Speaker 1: It's something you want to bring a carry on and 398 00:22:09,359 --> 00:22:11,959 Speaker 1: that's another hundred You're like, what the yeah? 399 00:22:12,000 --> 00:22:15,320 Speaker 3: And you see it in every industry that's like highly consolidated. 400 00:22:15,320 --> 00:22:19,080 Speaker 3: When the consumers don't have options and choices, then the 401 00:22:19,200 --> 00:22:23,240 Speaker 3: few market players, especially in the airline industry. But Bill 402 00:22:23,280 --> 00:22:26,160 Speaker 3: Gates and these other guys, they want to consolidate every industry. 403 00:22:26,200 --> 00:22:29,160 Speaker 3: I mean there's a great Goldman Sachs report that talks 404 00:22:29,160 --> 00:22:33,359 Speaker 3: about how a consolidated industry meaning fewer and fewer market 405 00:22:33,359 --> 00:22:37,160 Speaker 3: players in that industry, is the ideal. I mean, it's 406 00:22:37,200 --> 00:22:42,200 Speaker 3: a utopia for corporatist types because there's no competition. That's 407 00:22:42,280 --> 00:22:45,119 Speaker 3: the thing that unites all these guys. They hate competition, 408 00:22:45,240 --> 00:22:48,800 Speaker 3: Bill Gates especially, that's why he got into trouble with 409 00:22:48,800 --> 00:22:51,440 Speaker 3: anti trust with Microsoft. They want to put the competitors 410 00:22:51,680 --> 00:22:54,760 Speaker 3: out of business. This is why the lockdowns were so good. 411 00:22:54,760 --> 00:22:58,399 Speaker 3: It crushed local and small business competition, and it really 412 00:22:58,440 --> 00:23:03,919 Speaker 3: boosted the big bog big retail Amazon type players. And 413 00:23:04,000 --> 00:23:06,240 Speaker 3: so when there's no competition, yeah, they can get away 414 00:23:06,240 --> 00:23:08,600 Speaker 3: with charging you extra for a carry on. It's the same. 415 00:23:08,640 --> 00:23:13,200 Speaker 3: I mean, the cellular provider industry is a highly consolidated industry. 416 00:23:13,240 --> 00:23:16,400 Speaker 3: There's just a few options your home internet. There's only 417 00:23:16,440 --> 00:23:19,360 Speaker 3: like two options maybe in your area to get fast internet, 418 00:23:20,119 --> 00:23:21,639 Speaker 3: and that's why they can really stick it to you. 419 00:23:21,720 --> 00:23:24,560 Speaker 3: And that's really what these guys are the Davost crowd 420 00:23:24,680 --> 00:23:29,000 Speaker 3: really enjoy. So that's kind of where things are headed, 421 00:23:29,080 --> 00:23:31,639 Speaker 3: is very few options. And when there's few options, you know, 422 00:23:31,680 --> 00:23:34,520 Speaker 3: I actually lined it up to the University of Michigan 423 00:23:34,560 --> 00:23:39,320 Speaker 3: does this consumer satisfaction survey every year, and you find 424 00:23:39,320 --> 00:23:43,960 Speaker 3: that the industries with few players are the most hated. Industries, 425 00:23:44,000 --> 00:23:46,560 Speaker 3: Like you will not be happy. That's why you don't 426 00:23:46,600 --> 00:23:49,880 Speaker 3: like flying on airlines. That's why you're frustrated with comcasts. 427 00:23:51,160 --> 00:23:54,800 Speaker 3: And the industries where there's abundant choices. I mean, interestingly, 428 00:23:54,840 --> 00:23:58,119 Speaker 3: the craft beer industry, for example, or the food industry 429 00:23:59,000 --> 00:24:01,359 Speaker 3: are the favored industry of consumers. There are so many 430 00:24:01,359 --> 00:24:03,960 Speaker 3: options that you can I mean, and it drives down 431 00:24:04,000 --> 00:24:06,480 Speaker 3: prices and so you get the best value with the 432 00:24:06,520 --> 00:24:09,359 Speaker 3: most choices. And these guys don't like that. 433 00:24:09,920 --> 00:24:12,119 Speaker 1: Well, I can tell you I just recently got the 434 00:24:12,160 --> 00:24:15,600 Speaker 1: iPhone fifteen like an idiot, and now I get awful service. 435 00:24:15,920 --> 00:24:17,840 Speaker 1: And I called the AT and T about it, and 436 00:24:17,840 --> 00:24:19,520 Speaker 1: I've talked to them multiple times and one of the 437 00:24:19,520 --> 00:24:22,080 Speaker 1: people they're like, oh, just upgrade your plan. I'm like, well, 438 00:24:22,280 --> 00:24:25,040 Speaker 1: it worked just fine with the thirteen, So like, what 439 00:24:26,440 --> 00:24:29,080 Speaker 1: sense does that make? You know? But it's probably just 440 00:24:29,119 --> 00:24:32,000 Speaker 1: another reason to try to drive up prices and stick 441 00:24:32,000 --> 00:24:34,520 Speaker 1: it to us when you know they're already doing enough 442 00:24:34,600 --> 00:24:35,960 Speaker 1: job of that in this economy. 443 00:24:36,080 --> 00:24:41,840 Speaker 2: Quick break more with Seamus Brunner. You know, I wanted 444 00:24:41,840 --> 00:24:42,880 Speaker 2: to ask you because you luded. 445 00:24:42,960 --> 00:24:47,359 Speaker 1: You talked about the lockdowns and this massive transfer of 446 00:24:47,520 --> 00:24:51,359 Speaker 1: wealth that happened during it. You know, you had players 447 00:24:51,400 --> 00:24:54,160 Speaker 1: like Bill Gates in the World Economic Forum really encouraging 448 00:24:54,400 --> 00:24:59,840 Speaker 1: you know, lockdowns kind of talk about how COVID enabled 449 00:25:00,520 --> 00:25:04,160 Speaker 1: some of these you know globalists, these billionaires, these control 450 00:25:04,200 --> 00:25:06,520 Speaker 1: of arcs, you know, talk about the role COVID plate 451 00:25:06,600 --> 00:25:07,000 Speaker 1: and all of this. 452 00:25:07,440 --> 00:25:10,720 Speaker 3: Yeah, certainly. I mean we so like the the net 453 00:25:10,720 --> 00:25:14,040 Speaker 3: worth of all of these guys skyrocketed. I mean mostly 454 00:25:14,200 --> 00:25:16,359 Speaker 3: a lot of the big tech guys. I mean everybody. 455 00:25:16,440 --> 00:25:18,760 Speaker 3: You know, when you're locked at home, you got to 456 00:25:18,800 --> 00:25:22,960 Speaker 3: shop on Amazon, Facebook, which is now topping about four 457 00:25:23,040 --> 00:25:25,720 Speaker 3: billion users worldwide, but not all of those people are 458 00:25:25,720 --> 00:25:30,160 Speaker 3: on Facebook all the time. During during the lockdowns, they 459 00:25:30,200 --> 00:25:34,320 Speaker 3: had two billion people worldwide every single day checking their 460 00:25:34,359 --> 00:25:36,639 Speaker 3: news feeds. That's that's a lot of money. I mean, 461 00:25:36,720 --> 00:25:40,399 Speaker 3: Jeff Mark Zuckerberg almost almost doubled up in networth. He 462 00:25:40,480 --> 00:25:44,040 Speaker 3: was around sixty billion. Now he hovers around twenty billion. 463 00:25:45,080 --> 00:25:47,840 Speaker 3: Over the course of the pandemic. That, you know, that's 464 00:25:47,880 --> 00:25:50,800 Speaker 3: not that there's some conspiracy you know about you know 465 00:25:50,880 --> 00:25:53,640 Speaker 3: that they plant I don't say that they planned the pandemic, 466 00:25:53,680 --> 00:25:55,399 Speaker 3: but I do say that they that Bill Gates and 467 00:25:55,440 --> 00:25:57,800 Speaker 3: others planned for a pandemic that go through all of 468 00:25:57,840 --> 00:26:02,359 Speaker 3: the pandemic planning exercise. Is there have been many prior 469 00:26:02,400 --> 00:26:04,360 Speaker 3: to you know, there was one just three weeks or 470 00:26:04,600 --> 00:26:09,040 Speaker 3: whatever before the virus started spreading in China in October 471 00:26:09,080 --> 00:26:11,920 Speaker 3: twenty nineteen. The World Economic Forum and the Bill will 472 00:26:11,920 --> 00:26:14,639 Speaker 3: ind the Gates Foundation, we're planning for a specifically at 473 00:26:14,640 --> 00:26:18,280 Speaker 3: coronavirus pandemic, so it was on their minds, and during 474 00:26:18,320 --> 00:26:21,639 Speaker 3: these exercises they plan out like, well, here's how we 475 00:26:21,720 --> 00:26:26,320 Speaker 3: respond to. What you kind of notice is that the 476 00:26:27,280 --> 00:26:29,720 Speaker 3: it wasn't really about health, it was about control. I 477 00:26:29,720 --> 00:26:33,280 Speaker 3: mean there's a big information control element to the pandemic, 478 00:26:33,320 --> 00:26:35,440 Speaker 3: and that's what you know why, you know there needed 479 00:26:35,440 --> 00:26:40,640 Speaker 3: to be this unified figure, unified voice in doctor Anthony Fauci. 480 00:26:40,720 --> 00:26:44,280 Speaker 3: Now i'd play put yeah, yeah, And it was it 481 00:26:44,320 --> 00:26:46,160 Speaker 3: was a really interesting I mean, if you really track 482 00:26:46,240 --> 00:26:49,280 Speaker 3: Bill Gates's you know, he appears on the scene in 483 00:26:49,320 --> 00:26:52,320 Speaker 3: February of twenty twenty. I mean, nobody, most people don't 484 00:26:52,320 --> 00:26:54,520 Speaker 3: even know that there is a pandemic during that at 485 00:26:54,520 --> 00:26:57,440 Speaker 3: that point. I mean, the World Health Organization doesn't announce 486 00:26:57,520 --> 00:27:00,760 Speaker 3: that it is a global pandemic until mid March. But 487 00:27:00,880 --> 00:27:04,159 Speaker 3: Bill Gates he puts out an op ed and a 488 00:27:04,240 --> 00:27:07,720 Speaker 3: Bill Gates byline, and it's pushed by Washington Post. Jeff 489 00:27:07,720 --> 00:27:11,679 Speaker 3: Bezos is Washington Post, and it's everywhere before you know it, 490 00:27:11,680 --> 00:27:14,160 Speaker 3: and he says, the only way we can get back 491 00:27:14,200 --> 00:27:17,080 Speaker 3: to normal is if everybody takes the vaccine. And so 492 00:27:17,160 --> 00:27:19,280 Speaker 3: you kind of wonder, like, what vaccine there is. There's 493 00:27:19,280 --> 00:27:22,399 Speaker 3: not a vaccine. The vaccine didn't come till later, and 494 00:27:22,480 --> 00:27:26,680 Speaker 3: so they kind of had pre pre planning for a pandemic. 495 00:27:26,760 --> 00:27:28,560 Speaker 3: I don't, you know, I don't say that it's intentionally 496 00:27:28,600 --> 00:27:32,480 Speaker 3: released or anything like that. But in addition to controlling 497 00:27:32,480 --> 00:27:35,879 Speaker 3: the information, yeah, controlling the pharmaceuticals. And this is why 498 00:27:36,280 --> 00:27:40,080 Speaker 3: competing COVID protocols were just not allowed. I mean, you 499 00:27:40,080 --> 00:27:42,800 Speaker 3: were censored if you suggested any other thing other than 500 00:27:42,800 --> 00:27:46,359 Speaker 3: a vaccine. Now we've seen that the vaccines don't exactly work. 501 00:27:47,280 --> 00:27:49,119 Speaker 3: You know. The promise was that it was one hundred 502 00:27:49,160 --> 00:27:52,679 Speaker 3: percent safe and effective. You know, Joe Biden says, if 503 00:27:52,680 --> 00:27:54,800 Speaker 3: you get the vaccine, you're not going to get COVID. 504 00:27:56,200 --> 00:27:59,600 Speaker 3: That was obviously not true. It slowly went down to well, 505 00:27:59,640 --> 00:28:02,720 Speaker 3: if you know, you might have less symptoms, but you know, 506 00:28:02,920 --> 00:28:05,320 Speaker 3: you ask anybody, you know. I mean, the symptoms are 507 00:28:05,400 --> 00:28:09,480 Speaker 3: roughly the same amongst the vaccinated and unvaccinated. So I mean, 508 00:28:09,520 --> 00:28:12,440 Speaker 3: what was it all about. I mean money, For one thing, 509 00:28:12,480 --> 00:28:14,960 Speaker 3: it was a huge huge boost in money to the 510 00:28:15,000 --> 00:28:18,880 Speaker 3: companies like Pfizer and Maderna. Everybody knows that I mean 511 00:28:19,040 --> 00:28:21,760 Speaker 3: over you know, a trillion dollars. I believe Moderna was 512 00:28:22,119 --> 00:28:24,440 Speaker 3: at one point estimated to be the first trillion dollar 513 00:28:24,440 --> 00:28:30,040 Speaker 3: pharmaceutical company, which is just an unfathomable sum. But Bill 514 00:28:30,040 --> 00:28:33,520 Speaker 3: Gates helped develop all these technologies. He was developing m 515 00:28:33,640 --> 00:28:36,600 Speaker 3: RNA therapies, and ultimately the m RNA is not about COVID. 516 00:28:37,680 --> 00:28:40,000 Speaker 3: You know, they talk about what mRNA like it's it's 517 00:28:40,040 --> 00:28:45,120 Speaker 3: this medical breakthrough, which it is certainly, but Elon Musk 518 00:28:45,160 --> 00:28:48,959 Speaker 3: actually kind of talks about what what mRNA can do, 519 00:28:49,040 --> 00:28:50,880 Speaker 3: and it you know, they talk about with COVID, it 520 00:28:50,920 --> 00:28:53,760 Speaker 3: turns your body into like its own little pharmaceutical factory 521 00:28:53,760 --> 00:28:57,280 Speaker 3: where it can produce these spike proteins and it's just magic. 522 00:28:58,040 --> 00:29:01,440 Speaker 3: But what they really see m RNA is being able 523 00:29:01,440 --> 00:29:03,840 Speaker 3: to do is like life extension and anti aging. I 524 00:29:03,840 --> 00:29:06,080 Speaker 3: mean Elon Musket, he's got a great comment about this. 525 00:29:06,120 --> 00:29:08,240 Speaker 3: He's like, with m RNA, you could turn someone into 526 00:29:08,240 --> 00:29:10,880 Speaker 3: a butterfly. I mean, that's not obviously true. He's being 527 00:29:10,880 --> 00:29:13,440 Speaker 3: a little hyperbolic, but he does say there's some great 528 00:29:13,480 --> 00:29:16,200 Speaker 3: anti aging elements to it, and so you see that 529 00:29:16,280 --> 00:29:19,880 Speaker 3: these guys kind of have like this god complex on 530 00:29:20,040 --> 00:29:24,800 Speaker 3: steroids where whether it's the meats or the pharmaceuticals where 531 00:29:24,800 --> 00:29:27,800 Speaker 3: they you know, they think that they can tinker with genetics. 532 00:29:27,880 --> 00:29:30,040 Speaker 3: They you know, the food is like a really i 533 00:29:30,040 --> 00:29:32,480 Speaker 3: mean kind of bizarre stuff with the it's not just 534 00:29:32,520 --> 00:29:35,479 Speaker 3: eat the bugs, but some of the lab grown meats, 535 00:29:35,560 --> 00:29:38,480 Speaker 3: and you know it's like cows are just fine. You know, 536 00:29:38,560 --> 00:29:43,920 Speaker 3: the you know, Mother Nature or God created everything just fine. 537 00:29:44,040 --> 00:29:46,680 Speaker 3: You don't need to be making new meats, you don't 538 00:29:46,680 --> 00:29:49,440 Speaker 3: need to be extending your life, and ultimately you get 539 00:29:49,440 --> 00:29:51,120 Speaker 3: to you know, the bookend, you know, gets towards the 540 00:29:51,240 --> 00:29:55,080 Speaker 3: end is you know, the transhumanist ambitions of these guys 541 00:29:55,120 --> 00:29:59,840 Speaker 3: and uploading brains to clouds and you know, plugging in 542 00:30:00,360 --> 00:30:03,360 Speaker 3: neuralink to your brain stem. It all sounds like science fiction, 543 00:30:03,840 --> 00:30:08,400 Speaker 3: it's not. I mean, Biden's FDA just approved neuralink for 544 00:30:09,080 --> 00:30:12,880 Speaker 3: human trials this past spring. In the book we Do, 545 00:30:13,000 --> 00:30:14,840 Speaker 3: you know, at the time of writing, there's over ten 546 00:30:14,880 --> 00:30:18,200 Speaker 3: thousand people who have already hooked their brains up to 547 00:30:19,080 --> 00:30:23,480 Speaker 3: microchips and it's kind of terrifying stuff. You know, you think, 548 00:30:23,520 --> 00:30:25,800 Speaker 3: I'm not going to be I'm not going to do 549 00:30:25,840 --> 00:30:29,600 Speaker 3: that to myself, and that's probably true. But with the 550 00:30:29,640 --> 00:30:33,040 Speaker 3: AI revolution, I mean Sam Altman and open ai and 551 00:30:33,120 --> 00:30:37,360 Speaker 3: chat GPT's like always in the news these days. You know, 552 00:30:37,400 --> 00:30:40,160 Speaker 3: there's a very close relationship with Microsoft. Microsoft is the 553 00:30:40,160 --> 00:30:44,120 Speaker 3: biggest investor in open ai. And according to Sam Altman, 554 00:30:44,160 --> 00:30:47,800 Speaker 3: i mean, jobs are going away and estimates range from 555 00:30:48,120 --> 00:30:50,800 Speaker 3: you know, forty percent of the workforce on the lower 556 00:30:50,920 --> 00:30:55,440 Speaker 3: end to maybe eighty percent as an extreme. That was 557 00:30:55,680 --> 00:30:58,040 Speaker 3: you know that those are according to Google's AI people. 558 00:30:59,360 --> 00:31:01,240 Speaker 3: And so if you lose your job and you're kind 559 00:31:01,280 --> 00:31:03,480 Speaker 3: of just struggling to get by as many people are 560 00:31:03,480 --> 00:31:05,800 Speaker 3: struggling to get by right now, just you know, there's 561 00:31:05,800 --> 00:31:09,640 Speaker 3: no telling what you might do when forced to. We 562 00:31:09,680 --> 00:31:11,400 Speaker 3: saw it and that's what we saw during the pandemic. 563 00:31:11,400 --> 00:31:12,640 Speaker 3: I mean that was a kind of a good test 564 00:31:12,720 --> 00:31:16,080 Speaker 3: rune of like what are people willing to do in 565 00:31:16,120 --> 00:31:17,120 Speaker 3: an extreme scenario. 566 00:31:17,480 --> 00:31:20,360 Speaker 1: It's interesting that MR and A, you know, connecting it 567 00:31:20,480 --> 00:31:23,800 Speaker 1: to keeping people, you know young when it's killing people, 568 00:31:24,040 --> 00:31:26,160 Speaker 1: you know, when you look at what it's doing to 569 00:31:26,280 --> 00:31:29,520 Speaker 1: people's hearts and uh, you know the rest of it. 570 00:31:29,600 --> 00:31:33,080 Speaker 1: But regarding this push for you know, artificial intelligence, and 571 00:31:33,160 --> 00:31:37,000 Speaker 1: you know, this continued walk we have towards you know, 572 00:31:37,000 --> 00:31:39,920 Speaker 1: additional technology in the country. You know, my concern for 573 00:31:40,040 --> 00:31:41,800 Speaker 1: it is that we're just going to have more and 574 00:31:41,840 --> 00:31:45,200 Speaker 1: more broken people because you know, one with job loss. 575 00:31:45,200 --> 00:31:47,280 Speaker 2: Obviously, jobs give people a purpose. 576 00:31:47,400 --> 00:31:49,960 Speaker 1: But even just looking at COVID, I mean, the more 577 00:31:49,960 --> 00:31:54,000 Speaker 1: impersonal and disconnected we become as humans, the more unhappy 578 00:31:54,080 --> 00:31:56,400 Speaker 1: we become. You know, you look at all these overdoses 579 00:31:56,640 --> 00:32:00,560 Speaker 1: during COVID, the isolation and the more online, the more 580 00:32:00,600 --> 00:32:04,120 Speaker 1: technologically driven we are, the further driven apart we are 581 00:32:04,160 --> 00:32:07,040 Speaker 1: as humans, and the less human connectivity we're going to have. 582 00:32:08,000 --> 00:32:10,160 Speaker 1: And so I just I worry that that is going 583 00:32:10,200 --> 00:32:15,600 Speaker 1: to drive us further towards division, you know, anger, hopelessness, 584 00:32:15,760 --> 00:32:17,680 Speaker 1: and just a more unhappy society. 585 00:32:17,800 --> 00:32:19,880 Speaker 3: I completely agree with you. I think you're totally right. 586 00:32:19,960 --> 00:32:22,880 Speaker 3: I mean, you see this with I mean, you know, 587 00:32:23,000 --> 00:32:27,000 Speaker 3: over forty I think forty three state attorneys general across 588 00:32:27,040 --> 00:32:31,560 Speaker 3: the country file suit against meta Facebook and Instagram maker 589 00:32:32,960 --> 00:32:38,000 Speaker 3: for it's addictive business model. I mean, and there's you know, 590 00:32:38,040 --> 00:32:41,719 Speaker 3: going back to the founding of Facebook, they used addiction 591 00:32:41,800 --> 00:32:45,360 Speaker 3: as a business model. But the attorney's general goes step further. 592 00:32:45,400 --> 00:32:48,440 Speaker 3: It's not just that Bill Gates, I mean Mark Zuckerberg 593 00:32:48,520 --> 00:32:51,320 Speaker 3: is profiting from an addictive business model, but it's the 594 00:32:51,360 --> 00:32:54,480 Speaker 3: effects that that business model has on people, especially young people, 595 00:32:54,560 --> 00:32:58,520 Speaker 3: young young women, you know, feelings of depression and suicide 596 00:32:58,760 --> 00:33:02,280 Speaker 3: and so yeah, you like during the pandemic, you're locked 597 00:33:02,320 --> 00:33:05,240 Speaker 3: down and you're just like scrolling Facebook all day. That's 598 00:33:05,400 --> 00:33:08,200 Speaker 3: you saw tons of depress you know, depression surged, and 599 00:33:08,320 --> 00:33:11,560 Speaker 3: so it's a it's a big problem. I mean, this guy, 600 00:33:11,680 --> 00:33:14,560 Speaker 3: the WEF visionary. You've all know a Harari And if 601 00:33:14,760 --> 00:33:17,800 Speaker 3: your listeners haven't heard of Harari, you know, I recommend 602 00:33:17,840 --> 00:33:20,640 Speaker 3: you go just cruise YouTube and watch some videos of 603 00:33:20,640 --> 00:33:23,560 Speaker 3: this guy. This is a guy who he kind of 604 00:33:23,600 --> 00:33:27,600 Speaker 3: speaks with authority. I mean, Barack Obama is a big fan. 605 00:33:27,720 --> 00:33:29,760 Speaker 3: Mark Zuckerberg is a big fan. Bill Gates is a 606 00:33:29,800 --> 00:33:32,920 Speaker 3: big fan of Hurrari. Klaus Schwab cites him in his 607 00:33:33,000 --> 00:33:35,400 Speaker 3: books and he talks about like what what does the 608 00:33:35,400 --> 00:33:39,080 Speaker 3: future look like? And he says, you know, there's going 609 00:33:39,120 --> 00:33:42,800 Speaker 3: to be a lot of useless people AI and you know, 610 00:33:42,880 --> 00:33:46,479 Speaker 3: the robot in the Fourth Industrial Revolution, as Klaus Schwab 611 00:33:46,560 --> 00:33:49,200 Speaker 3: calls it, is going to lead to a lot of 612 00:33:49,280 --> 00:33:51,800 Speaker 3: useless people. And what are those people going to do. 613 00:33:51,920 --> 00:33:56,760 Speaker 3: They're going to be on drugs, playing video games. It's 614 00:33:56,840 --> 00:34:00,280 Speaker 3: really dystopian. But also you kind of see, you know, 615 00:34:00,640 --> 00:34:02,360 Speaker 3: you see it right now in a lot of ways 616 00:34:02,360 --> 00:34:05,920 Speaker 3: with the social media addiction and stuff, and drug addiction 617 00:34:06,040 --> 00:34:09,920 Speaker 3: on the increase, and fentanyl deaths are always up. So 618 00:34:10,480 --> 00:34:12,880 Speaker 3: we're kind of you know, we've got time, and I 619 00:34:13,200 --> 00:34:16,480 Speaker 3: do have some hope that we'll fight back against it, 620 00:34:16,560 --> 00:34:19,080 Speaker 3: but it is looking pretty grim right now, you know. 621 00:34:19,080 --> 00:34:21,479 Speaker 1: Before we go, let's also talk about the central bank 622 00:34:21,560 --> 00:34:25,640 Speaker 1: digital currency. You had talked before about even just with 623 00:34:25,800 --> 00:34:27,840 Speaker 1: you know, like thermostats and sort of some of this 624 00:34:28,000 --> 00:34:31,400 Speaker 1: technological shifts of them being able to control you know, 625 00:34:31,480 --> 00:34:34,040 Speaker 1: heating and air conditioning. I mean, the central bank digital 626 00:34:34,080 --> 00:34:38,600 Speaker 1: currency would mean that they control our financial transactions as well. 627 00:34:38,640 --> 00:34:41,440 Speaker 1: And you know, obviously we're probably not on the popular 628 00:34:41,560 --> 00:34:44,919 Speaker 1: side of things, so I you know, like good luck, 629 00:34:45,200 --> 00:34:47,759 Speaker 1: you know, like good luck Shamus and Lisa trying to 630 00:34:47,800 --> 00:34:50,000 Speaker 1: go buy the things we want to buy right right. 631 00:34:50,080 --> 00:34:52,840 Speaker 3: I mean, it's it's absolute total control that according to 632 00:34:52,960 --> 00:34:56,640 Speaker 3: the head, a central bank digital currency is absolute total 633 00:34:56,680 --> 00:34:59,399 Speaker 3: control over finances in a way that we've never seen 634 00:34:59,440 --> 00:35:01,400 Speaker 3: people hear here, like a digital currency it's like, well, 635 00:35:01,440 --> 00:35:03,919 Speaker 3: I use my credit card and I tap to pay 636 00:35:03,960 --> 00:35:07,120 Speaker 3: at the register, Like, are not using digital currency? No, no, no, 637 00:35:07,160 --> 00:35:09,640 Speaker 3: this is different. It's it's a removal of the cash 638 00:35:09,680 --> 00:35:12,960 Speaker 3: based system. And so the head of the Bureau of 639 00:35:13,040 --> 00:35:17,799 Speaker 3: International Settlements the BIS, that's like the central banker's central bank, 640 00:35:17,880 --> 00:35:20,520 Speaker 3: it's like the biggest, most powerful bank in the world 641 00:35:21,880 --> 00:35:24,879 Speaker 3: that's based in Switzerland. The head of that bank has 642 00:35:24,960 --> 00:35:27,719 Speaker 3: this video where he talks about CBDC and he says, 643 00:35:27,800 --> 00:35:30,560 Speaker 3: you know, the problem with cash is you don't know 644 00:35:30,640 --> 00:35:33,200 Speaker 3: who's spending one hundred dollars. You know, the one hundred dollars 645 00:35:33,400 --> 00:35:35,719 Speaker 3: just kind of drifts through the financial system and you 646 00:35:35,760 --> 00:35:38,520 Speaker 3: don't know who spent it or what they spent it on. 647 00:35:39,080 --> 00:35:40,920 Speaker 3: And so even if you you know, even if you're 648 00:35:41,040 --> 00:35:43,120 Speaker 3: using tap to pay and your you know, your card 649 00:35:43,120 --> 00:35:45,239 Speaker 3: all the time, and if you never use cash, just 650 00:35:45,280 --> 00:35:48,520 Speaker 3: having that element of cash and that uncertainty floating through 651 00:35:48,560 --> 00:35:53,239 Speaker 3: the financial system as our current system does, that confounds 652 00:35:53,280 --> 00:35:56,400 Speaker 3: their you know, AI ambitions where they can really like 653 00:35:56,880 --> 00:36:00,399 Speaker 3: analyze every single transaction. And so with a set bank 654 00:36:00,440 --> 00:36:04,759 Speaker 3: digital currency, this guy Augustin Karsten's who's the head of 655 00:36:04,760 --> 00:36:07,560 Speaker 3: the BIS, he says that's much better because it gives 656 00:36:07,640 --> 00:36:11,240 Speaker 3: us absolute total control. And what that control he's talking 657 00:36:11,280 --> 00:36:15,120 Speaker 3: about is how they will be able to completely d 658 00:36:15,200 --> 00:36:18,279 Speaker 3: bank Like they can deplatform you with the flick of 659 00:36:18,320 --> 00:36:21,120 Speaker 3: a switch on social media. Uh, they will be able 660 00:36:21,160 --> 00:36:23,719 Speaker 3: to de bank you. And they could depend de bank 661 00:36:23,760 --> 00:36:26,320 Speaker 3: you to the person. They could debank your entire family, 662 00:36:26,400 --> 00:36:30,120 Speaker 3: your community, your business, uh, your entire town, I mean 663 00:36:30,400 --> 00:36:33,239 Speaker 3: an entire country, you know, if they wanted to. If 664 00:36:33,280 --> 00:36:36,200 Speaker 3: everybody's on the Global Central Bank digital currency, it's like 665 00:36:36,239 --> 00:36:39,440 Speaker 3: a flick of a switch, money gone. And so that's 666 00:36:39,440 --> 00:36:41,279 Speaker 3: a big problem. I mean, you know, a lot of 667 00:36:41,280 --> 00:36:44,040 Speaker 3: people listening may have been may feel like their shadow band, 668 00:36:44,160 --> 00:36:48,040 Speaker 3: or may have been actually shadow band, probably for telling 669 00:36:48,080 --> 00:36:51,080 Speaker 3: the truth about something. And so when you bring in 670 00:36:51,120 --> 00:36:53,520 Speaker 3: the element of your finances and the type of control 671 00:36:53,560 --> 00:36:57,959 Speaker 3: that a CBDC would allow, that's that's really a huge problem. 672 00:36:58,040 --> 00:37:00,680 Speaker 3: That's like game over in my view. And just just 673 00:37:00,719 --> 00:37:04,759 Speaker 3: today the IMF UH called for governments around the world 674 00:37:04,760 --> 00:37:09,040 Speaker 3: to replace cash with c CBDC. This. You know, someone 675 00:37:09,120 --> 00:37:10,600 Speaker 3: sent me this link like did you see this? I 676 00:37:10,640 --> 00:37:12,960 Speaker 3: was like no, But now the IMF is pushing for it. 677 00:37:14,440 --> 00:37:17,880 Speaker 3: The Atlantic Council reported about two weeks ago that the 678 00:37:17,960 --> 00:37:24,359 Speaker 3: quote momentum behind cbdc's remains strong heading into twenty twenty four. 679 00:37:24,800 --> 00:37:27,160 Speaker 3: The World Economic Forum says the same. So there's this 680 00:37:27,239 --> 00:37:30,359 Speaker 3: push happening in the background our federal reserve, and it's 681 00:37:30,560 --> 00:37:32,920 Speaker 3: all of the central banks around the world, but our 682 00:37:32,960 --> 00:37:36,879 Speaker 3: Federal Reserve is is you know, working on it right now. 683 00:37:37,080 --> 00:37:39,759 Speaker 1: Well, Seamus Bruner, thank you for making it so I 684 00:37:39,760 --> 00:37:40,840 Speaker 1: can't sleep tonight. 685 00:37:43,800 --> 00:37:46,319 Speaker 3: Well I could, I could let me. I'll give you 686 00:37:46,320 --> 00:37:47,240 Speaker 3: like a thirty seconds. 687 00:37:47,280 --> 00:37:53,400 Speaker 1: Agay, I guess I have Well agree, Okay, get us, 688 00:37:53,520 --> 00:37:55,040 Speaker 1: get us, hopeus, give us home. 689 00:37:55,800 --> 00:37:59,200 Speaker 3: It's a little yeah. No, people are waking up. I 690 00:37:59,200 --> 00:38:01,719 Speaker 3: mean it's critical that this information. It's critical to share 691 00:38:01,760 --> 00:38:03,520 Speaker 3: it with each other, you know, with your friends and 692 00:38:03,600 --> 00:38:05,960 Speaker 3: family and neighbors. You need the facts when you go 693 00:38:06,040 --> 00:38:08,799 Speaker 3: into you know, Thanksgiving and holiday dinners. You need to 694 00:38:08,840 --> 00:38:12,640 Speaker 3: be able to talk about it convincingly. But also the 695 00:38:12,719 --> 00:38:14,640 Speaker 3: thing I see just and this isn't really a fact 696 00:38:14,680 --> 00:38:17,920 Speaker 3: based thing, but I feel it is. You mentioned it earlier. 697 00:38:17,960 --> 00:38:22,280 Speaker 3: I mean, people I think, like are craving authenticity, whether 698 00:38:22,360 --> 00:38:24,520 Speaker 3: you know it's whether it's the food you see, the 699 00:38:24,840 --> 00:38:27,839 Speaker 3: fake meats are sort of flopping with consumers. That's why 700 00:38:27,920 --> 00:38:30,160 Speaker 3: they need to ban cows because it didn't take off 701 00:38:30,160 --> 00:38:33,359 Speaker 3: on its own. You see it with like when AI 702 00:38:33,480 --> 00:38:35,880 Speaker 3: videos get posted. You see this really cool AI video. 703 00:38:35,880 --> 00:38:38,319 Speaker 3: I guess it looks cool, but and then you think 704 00:38:38,360 --> 00:38:40,319 Speaker 3: to yourself, well that's actually kind of creepy, whether it's 705 00:38:40,320 --> 00:38:43,000 Speaker 3: a deep fake type thing or whatever. And you go 706 00:38:43,080 --> 00:38:45,279 Speaker 3: through the comments. It's just comment after comments saying this 707 00:38:45,360 --> 00:38:48,480 Speaker 3: is creepy, this is weird, And ultimately I think, you know, 708 00:38:49,040 --> 00:38:52,280 Speaker 3: go spend some time outside and you know, you'll realize 709 00:38:52,320 --> 00:38:53,240 Speaker 3: it's a beautiful place. 710 00:38:53,440 --> 00:38:56,040 Speaker 2: I appreciate that. All right, there you go some hope, 711 00:38:56,080 --> 00:38:56,520 Speaker 2: some hope. 712 00:38:56,760 --> 00:38:59,720 Speaker 1: Shamas Router. Control of Arcs is the name of the book. 713 00:39:00,040 --> 00:39:02,320 Speaker 1: Everyone't go get it. You can tell how well researched 714 00:39:02,360 --> 00:39:06,120 Speaker 1: it is important information. Seamus, thanks so much for joining us. 715 00:39:06,200 --> 00:39:06,960 Speaker 1: We appreciate it. 716 00:39:07,000 --> 00:39:10,840 Speaker 3: Thank you, Lisa. 717 00:39:13,120 --> 00:39:17,759 Speaker 1: I was Seamus Brunner, author of Controllo GARCS really interesting, 718 00:39:18,080 --> 00:39:21,319 Speaker 1: deeply disturbing stuff. Glad he's doing the research to bring 719 00:39:21,320 --> 00:39:23,960 Speaker 1: it to light. And for joining the show. I want 720 00:39:24,000 --> 00:39:26,000 Speaker 1: to thank you guys at home for listening every Monday 721 00:39:26,000 --> 00:39:27,640 Speaker 1: and Thursday, but you can listen throughout the week. I 722 00:39:27,680 --> 00:39:30,240 Speaker 1: want to thank John Cassio and my producer for putting 723 00:39:30,239 --> 00:39:30,920 Speaker 1: the show together. 724 00:39:31,080 --> 00:39:31,799 Speaker 2: Until next time,