1 00:00:00,240 --> 00:00:02,960 Speaker 1: Thanks for listening to the best of Coast to Coast podcast. 2 00:00:03,080 --> 00:00:05,640 Speaker 1: Become a Coast Insider to hear the rest of this 3 00:00:05,760 --> 00:00:09,760 Speaker 1: fascinating conversation, and check out recent shows where we learned 4 00:00:09,760 --> 00:00:13,200 Speaker 1: about scientific efforts to revive the woolly mammoth, the latest 5 00:00:13,200 --> 00:00:16,920 Speaker 1: in military drone technology, and the mysterious Shroud of Turin. 6 00:00:17,280 --> 00:00:19,440 Speaker 1: And you can listen to those programs and many more 7 00:00:19,480 --> 00:00:22,560 Speaker 1: amazing Coast shows by heading over to Coast to Coast 8 00:00:22,560 --> 00:00:25,880 Speaker 1: a m dot com and signing up for Coast Insider. 9 00:00:26,360 --> 00:00:29,640 Speaker 1: Now here's a highlight from Coast to Coast AM on 10 00:00:29,800 --> 00:00:32,280 Speaker 1: I Heart Radio. Let's see who do we have coming 11 00:00:32,360 --> 00:00:37,080 Speaker 1: up next? We have Bruce Is in southern California on 12 00:00:37,120 --> 00:00:39,320 Speaker 1: the wild Card Line. Good morning, Bruce, Welcome to Coast. 13 00:00:40,040 --> 00:00:42,000 Speaker 1: Thank you Richard, and thank you for taking my call. 14 00:00:42,040 --> 00:00:43,480 Speaker 1: And I just want to kind of add a little 15 00:00:43,520 --> 00:00:47,160 Speaker 1: about what Don was saying. He brought up some amazing points, 16 00:00:47,200 --> 00:00:50,640 Speaker 1: But what I want to talk about is the significance today, 17 00:00:50,760 --> 00:00:54,040 Speaker 1: even though this event happened fifty four years ago. To 18 00:00:54,160 --> 00:00:58,840 Speaker 1: close our eyes to what happens then means closing our 19 00:00:58,880 --> 00:01:02,120 Speaker 1: eyes to what's happening right now and our future. There 20 00:01:02,160 --> 00:01:05,240 Speaker 1: are cover ups that are taking place right now that 21 00:01:05,319 --> 00:01:07,920 Speaker 1: most people don't even know about it. I also want 22 00:01:07,959 --> 00:01:11,240 Speaker 1: to talk about the word conspiracy theory, because that word 23 00:01:11,319 --> 00:01:14,200 Speaker 1: is always called are talked about when you ever talked 24 00:01:14,240 --> 00:01:17,199 Speaker 1: about these events or nine eleven, And you can don't 25 00:01:17,200 --> 00:01:19,200 Speaker 1: believe me, but you can look this up yourself. That 26 00:01:19,240 --> 00:01:22,560 Speaker 1: word was actually made popular and invented by the CIA 27 00:01:22,800 --> 00:01:28,360 Speaker 1: in nineteen sixty seven as a weapon to avoid investigation 28 00:01:28,520 --> 00:01:32,280 Speaker 1: for fear of truth. That's right. What happened was after 29 00:01:32,319 --> 00:01:34,280 Speaker 1: the Warrant Commission came out, they did all sorts of 30 00:01:34,319 --> 00:01:37,280 Speaker 1: polling and found that very few Americans actually believed in 31 00:01:37,280 --> 00:01:40,559 Speaker 1: the Warren Report, and so the CIA issued this memo 32 00:01:40,760 --> 00:01:43,560 Speaker 1: to go after anyone that was attacking the Warren Report 33 00:01:44,000 --> 00:01:49,960 Speaker 1: and label them with the term conspiracy theorists absolutely, which 34 00:01:50,000 --> 00:01:53,160 Speaker 1: continues to be kind of keep the population dumb. But 35 00:01:53,360 --> 00:01:57,920 Speaker 1: talking about conspiracy theories, I believe this is the biggest 36 00:01:58,080 --> 00:02:02,880 Speaker 1: lie and conspiracies there he ever posed on the American 37 00:02:03,000 --> 00:02:06,360 Speaker 1: people and the world for that matter, by our controlled 38 00:02:06,400 --> 00:02:10,200 Speaker 1: media and the fact that the nineteen radicals armed with 39 00:02:10,440 --> 00:02:13,640 Speaker 1: box cutters you know you buy for cents, defeated our 40 00:02:13,760 --> 00:02:18,360 Speaker 1: multi billion dollar air defense system while conspiring with a 41 00:02:18,440 --> 00:02:22,120 Speaker 1: diabetic bearded man in a cape in Afghanistan, not to 42 00:02:22,160 --> 00:02:25,919 Speaker 1: mention no weapons of mass destruction. And but the point 43 00:02:25,919 --> 00:02:28,160 Speaker 1: I'm trying to make is, you know, we can't look 44 00:02:28,160 --> 00:02:31,080 Speaker 1: at these past events and just shrug them off as past. 45 00:02:31,160 --> 00:02:35,040 Speaker 1: This is our future, because this is just cover ups 46 00:02:35,080 --> 00:02:38,320 Speaker 1: are happening. They're getting more sophisticated, and it's time for 47 00:02:38,360 --> 00:02:41,680 Speaker 1: American people to wake up and start learning the truth. 48 00:02:41,800 --> 00:02:44,839 Speaker 1: And learning the truth of the past will open your 49 00:02:44,840 --> 00:02:47,720 Speaker 1: eyes to what's happening right now and in the future. 50 00:02:48,040 --> 00:02:51,040 Speaker 1: And well said Bruce Well, Well said, thank you for that. 51 00:02:51,760 --> 00:02:56,400 Speaker 1: Uh Yeah, the term conspiracy theory is is obviously being 52 00:02:56,520 --> 00:03:02,800 Speaker 1: used uh by many in the mainstream media or in 53 00:03:03,000 --> 00:03:07,680 Speaker 1: academia to stifle debate, to shut down a debate. Uh. 54 00:03:07,720 --> 00:03:09,560 Speaker 1: The other term that gets tossed around a lot these 55 00:03:09,639 --> 00:03:15,760 Speaker 1: days with regards to uh the whole global global warming 56 00:03:15,840 --> 00:03:18,800 Speaker 1: or climate change argument is to use that word denier, 57 00:03:18,960 --> 00:03:22,560 Speaker 1: which is is odious to use that term denier because 58 00:03:22,600 --> 00:03:25,520 Speaker 1: of the connection to Holocaust denial, which of course is 59 00:03:26,080 --> 00:03:30,680 Speaker 1: absolutely odious and evil. But so then to apply the 60 00:03:30,800 --> 00:03:37,040 Speaker 1: term denier to someone who simply questions official orthodoxy on 61 00:03:37,040 --> 00:03:40,839 Speaker 1: on global on climate change is just wrong and and 62 00:03:41,000 --> 00:03:44,880 Speaker 1: UM too often conspiracy theorist is used in much the 63 00:03:44,920 --> 00:03:48,080 Speaker 1: same way just to stop a debate. But it's not working. 64 00:03:48,920 --> 00:03:52,560 Speaker 1: I don't think it's not as effective as it once was. UM. 65 00:03:52,800 --> 00:03:54,480 Speaker 1: People just kind of shake that off and say, you know, 66 00:03:54,520 --> 00:03:57,840 Speaker 1: that doesn't work on me anymore. I just view things 67 00:03:57,880 --> 00:04:01,200 Speaker 1: like the Kennedy assassination. I think that's just the way, 68 00:04:01,240 --> 00:04:05,080 Speaker 1: by and large the world works. Uh. You know, if 69 00:04:05,080 --> 00:04:09,480 Speaker 1: we go back a thousand years when you had competing houses, 70 00:04:09,880 --> 00:04:13,680 Speaker 1: let's say in England, um, that we're vying for the throne. 71 00:04:13,800 --> 00:04:16,000 Speaker 1: You know, they had the War of the Roses, uh, 72 00:04:16,040 --> 00:04:19,279 Speaker 1: and you know a lot of blood was spilled. They 73 00:04:19,320 --> 00:04:22,120 Speaker 1: didn't try to hide it. It was all done out 74 00:04:22,160 --> 00:04:26,720 Speaker 1: in plain sight. And I think that's still the way 75 00:04:27,000 --> 00:04:30,960 Speaker 1: things operate in terms of power structures, except now they're 76 00:04:31,000 --> 00:04:33,400 Speaker 1: just more sophisticated, and all of that stuff that it 77 00:04:33,480 --> 00:04:36,400 Speaker 1: used to happen out on the main stage now happens 78 00:04:36,440 --> 00:04:39,600 Speaker 1: sort of quietly and behind closed doors. And it's not 79 00:04:39,640 --> 00:04:43,360 Speaker 1: necessarily a shiv in someone's back. Uh. It's you get 80 00:04:43,400 --> 00:04:47,440 Speaker 1: your hedge fund manager uh to or managers to to 81 00:04:47,600 --> 00:04:53,919 Speaker 1: raid someone's um uh financial system in another country. You 82 00:04:53,920 --> 00:04:56,480 Speaker 1: can bring a country down, uh, you know, by attacking 83 00:04:56,480 --> 00:05:01,320 Speaker 1: their stock market or their currency. Uh Aassinations now are 84 00:05:01,360 --> 00:05:05,040 Speaker 1: are are a little different, not always. Sometimes they pulled 85 00:05:05,080 --> 00:05:07,679 Speaker 1: the same thing off that they did in sixty three. 86 00:05:08,240 --> 00:05:10,720 Speaker 1: But there are other ways to assassinate. I think Watergate, 87 00:05:10,760 --> 00:05:13,800 Speaker 1: for example, was a form of assassination. That's how they 88 00:05:13,800 --> 00:05:16,760 Speaker 1: took Tricky Dick out. He dared to love him or 89 00:05:16,800 --> 00:05:20,200 Speaker 1: hate him, um, but he did. He dared to deviate 90 00:05:20,320 --> 00:05:25,400 Speaker 1: from the script. And when he could no longer be controlled. Um, 91 00:05:25,600 --> 00:05:27,160 Speaker 1: rather than take him out with a bullet, you take 92 00:05:27,200 --> 00:05:29,640 Speaker 1: him out with a scandal. Right. And as always, the 93 00:05:29,680 --> 00:05:32,360 Speaker 1: cover up is usually worse than the crime. That's how 94 00:05:32,360 --> 00:05:34,640 Speaker 1: they got him. Listen to more Coast to Coast a 95 00:05:34,920 --> 00:05:38,080 Speaker 1: m every weeknight at one a m. Eastern and go 96 00:05:38,200 --> 00:05:40,400 Speaker 1: to Coast to Coast am dot com for more