Peasants Perspective

When They Came For Our Freedom, We Finally Spoke Up

Taylor Johnatakis Season 1 Episode 33

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What happens when political leaders who embrace radical movements suddenly find protesters at their own front doors? The hypocrisy is astounding and revealing.

Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan famously described the Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone (CHAZ) as the "Summer of Love" until demonstrators showed up at her home. This perfect encapsulation of political double standards reveals how those in power often support destructive movements until personally affected.

From shootings in quiet towns like Provo, Utah to the collapse of law and order in major cities, no community seems immune from the spreading chaos. Yet everyday Americans—the self-described "peasants"—are finding their voice. City council meetings across the country now feature passionate citizens challenging COVID restrictions and governmental overreach, refusing to be muzzled by policies that destroy livelihoods while failing to deliver promised safety.

When Senator Rand Paul confronted Dr. Fauci with evidence that children rarely spread coronavirus, he exposed a critical truth: "It is a fatal conceit to believe any one person or small group of people has the knowledge necessary to direct an economy or dictate public health behavior." This fundamental understanding—that central planners lack the wisdom to micromanage society—resonates with millions who simply want to live, work, and raise families without constant interference.

Tucker Carlson frames the path forward with remarkable clarity, calling for a Republican Party that vigorously defends equality under law, protects free speech, and genuinely serves middle-class families rather than offering symbolic victories while abandoning their interests.

The battle lines are drawn between a political class seeking control and everyday Americans fighting for freedom. Which side will ultimately prevail? Join us as we examine this pivotal moment in American history and explore how to preserve the principles that made America exceptional.

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Speaker 1:

And when they went to the queen To tell her Her cupcakes had no bread, do you know what she said? Let them eat cake here. You take the bomb.

Speaker 2:

We're getting screwed, man. Every time we turn around we're getting screwed. Oh, the revolution's gonna be through podcasting for sure. That's the only way we talk. It's the little guys. The little guys that take the brunt of everything. It's gotta stop. Peasants, man, we're just peasants, every one of us. You watch those old movies. You see the peasants in the background with the kings and queens walking around. We're those people. We're those people.

Speaker 1:

You dig the ramp and the ram-a-lam-a-ding-dong.

Speaker 2:

Hello peasants, welcome to another episode of the Peasants Perspective. Okay, I had a little bit too much java this morning so, yeah, I'm a little wired. Hey, you can find me at Peasants Perspective, at Twitter, peasants Pod Parler at Peasants Pod and Facebook at the Peasants Perspective. You can also email me at peasantspod at gmailcom. I have received a handful of encouraging words. I really appreciate you guys.

Speaker 2:

I wake up really early to do this. I work a 9 to 5. I'm a peasant and I take that charge very seriously. I go to work every day. I work construction, I work with my hands, I work with my body. Yesterday I worked with the rain. Don't ask me. I live in Seattle area. It's June. It's still pouring rain out here. That's life. That's how all of us are. All of us have to go to work. We have to do our jobs.

Speaker 2:

The entire point of this podcast is to put into perspective the things that affect us, the peasants, the people who just want to live here, live our lives, raise our family, you know, go to a Fourth of July barbecue without being called a white supremacist, that kind of stuff. I represent normal, everyday people and not just white people, by the way, lots of black people. I make a point right now, at this time in our country, every black person I see I want to go talk to. Now that might sound like, well, there's a lot of people to talk to. Look, I live in an area that's like 98% white, okay, and then I live across the street, from sea, across the water, from Seattle. I'm going to Seattle today to to a job site. There will be people there that I will talk to. I'm working at a high school and so there's lots of people hanging out. In fact, funny story, that's not very funny. Uh, if you go on the internet, you can find all these little videos of people that are, uh, training for like Antifa, black lives matter, protest, things like that. They're doing combative drills and things like that. Uh, when I pulled up to this school that I'm working, there was a handful of people in the front of the school that were playing, that were doing combative drills and like training. They were wearing helmets, like all dressed in all black, and I was like, oh great, that's, you know, this is my backyard.

Speaker 2:

Now, later in that day, in that neighborhood, right, like I'm at a high school, a central ground for kids, I'm working on the track. The field is still there. There it's turf field and a bunch of kids are coming. They're playing ultimate frisbee, they're doing stuff. By the end of the day we had a Polynesian girl or Mexican, I don't know. Uh, there's a tan girl, there's a white girl, there's an Asian guy, there was two or three black guys, there was two or three or four white guys. Then there was a group of Indian guys that showed up. So we had like six races on the field, all playing ultimate Frisbee, having a great time.

Speaker 2:

And I thought to myself there's no systemic racism. Look at these kids here. This is a culture. This neighborhood has a culture of inclusion. That's how most of this country is. It's inclusive. There's maybe, maybe, small pockets where it's truly not inclusive and usually it has nothing to do with race, be honest. It has to do with religion. It might have to do with like where I live, politics. It's not very inclusive if you're a conservative in a liberal area. So I'm here looking at the culture and I'm saying us peasants get along just fine. Thank you very much. Why the division? Us peasants get along just fine. Why the division? So that's what I am exploring with Peasants Podcast, peasants Perspective. I'm looking at issues that affect us. I'm looking at how things get pushed down to us. There's a lot of things coming our way, all right, for years and years.

Speaker 2:

I have a little backstory on me, right. I went to college, got a degree in political science and I was in the ROTC. I was getting ready to take a commission to become a lieutenant and go do, probably, aviation corps, which is what I was shooting for. And as I got through my degree I realized I can't fight for this country, I can't lay my life down in the sands of Iraq. For the reasons that were there. They were fully apparent to me. I mean, it was no secret, and so I decided to turn down my commission. Yeah, I did that. That's not anti-American, that's as American as it gets. Okay, I would have been one of the anti-war protesters in Vietnam if I knew the facts, because I follow the facts, I follow the logic. I don't want to be engaged in something that's not good, it's not a worthy cause. So here I am.

Speaker 2:

Here I am trying to fight back and I'm encouraging you to share this show, to spread it around. I'm already being a shadow not shadow, I don't know probably shadow band. I'm already being suppressed on all the platforms, except for parlor on all the platforms when I would use to put out a post or something like that. Most of my my accounts are turned on like a commercial setting so I can see how many people interact with my post. I can't see who interacts, but I can see how many people, and it's a drastic reduction in how many people see my posts. So I know that the algorithms got me, probably because of my hashtags or whatever, but I don't care. I don't care.

Speaker 2:

I'm sick and tired of videos that I pull that I think are important, that affect us, getting pulled off the internet. You know that video that I played yesterday the one where the liberal said, hey, I'm voting for Trump pulled off the internet, deleted. You can still find a copy, but you got to search. See, I listened to Devin Nunes' podcast yesterday. He's talking to Matt Schlapp, who is the he's in charge of CPAC and the conservative political action committee. He and his wife, mercedes Schlapp, and they were talking about social media, all the censorship and things like that, and they said that Republicans, if they want to get a message out by themselves, they cannot reach even 50% of the US population. They have been so censored, so restricted. The networks of conservatives on Facebook, twitter, instagram have been so censored, so restricted. The networks of conservatives on Facebook, twitter, instagram have been so suppressed and hidden from like finding new people right. Like, if new people sign up, they're not going to find conservatives, they're going to follow a lot of liberals and then they get into that ecosystem and so it's all being suppressed. So Devin Nunes was seriously concerned about this election, simply because the message can't get out. I listened to a follow-up interview with that guy that said I'm voting for Trump and he addressed that. He said you know, for years I'd watch the media and they'd tell me what Trump said, and then it was literally the first time I heard Trump give a whole speech. I thought that's not racist, that's not sexist. No-transcript.

Speaker 2:

Merida Unitas. She's on the front line fighting for our rights 1st, 4th, 14th, fighting for our rights. First 14th Amendment she's fighting for. Then we come over here. Now we're in Provo, utah. You know a little quiet Mormon town, college town, byu.

Speaker 2:

Provo is, in this city, possibly the second most conservative. You know what Mormons are becoming less and less conservative. To be honest with you, it's amazing the things that I see people on my social media. You know I've got a huge network of Mormons because I grew up Mormon. It's amazing the things they say and think it's just like man. You know, I know what you're taught in the Mormon church. I can't believe you're not making the connections here. It's really incredible. So, anyways, enough bagging on the Mormon church.

Speaker 2:

But this is down in Provo and there's no talking or anything, but just listen to what's going on. And there's no talking or anything, but just listen to what's going on. So this is an excursion. They were turning left onto the street where, or right onto the street where the protest is happening. Now, the protest isn't huge. This protest maybe has 80 people, maybe a hundred, up and down the street. It's not a huge protest. I can see all the cars. They're just in the intersection, you know. They're in the crosswalk maybe one, two, three, four, five, maybe 15 people, and then there's a handful of other people kind of spread around. Not a huge crowd, it's just not a huge crowd. Okay, so this excursion turns in, probably just trying to go home, and they turn in and they get blocked by the protesters and then just listen. Listen to what you hear the popping.

Speaker 2:

What that was was a black block is what they call them Antifa people who wear a mask and a hoodie. I said hoodie yesterday, by the way, with that guy in the video. It wasn't a hoodie, it was a beanie. So, anyways, he's wearing a hoodie and a beanie. He's pulled down real tight. All he can see is his eyes, pulls out a nice big gun and shoots into this excursion. He injures the uh one of the one of the people in the excursion. Excursion speeds off. They have caught this guy. They have charged him with a whole handful of crimes, so this individual shooter has been caught.

Speaker 2:

However, this is Provo, utah. This is a small street corner protest, not in a big, huge, major city. This is not a metropolitan. This is not an area that is not have a homogenous culture. This is a very Mormon conservative culture down there. Now it's changing right, but nonetheless it's a college town. This is supposed to be a very safe area.

Speaker 2:

This is across the street from one of our listeners, his office. Like he could see this. This is at in your back door. There is no small town. There's no part of this country that is immune from this movement. Okay, no part of this country is immune from this movement. Think about where you live. Okay, no part of this country is immune from this movement. Think about where you live. It's not Minneapolis. So why the heck are there protests going on in your town, your small town, where maybe you have a good sheriff and a good police department and maybe good politicians? But yet when these little protests break out, they are dangerous. They are dangerous because you don't know who's in them and you don't know who's radicalized.

Speaker 2:

Yesterday in my little community, my little small community right, I live on a peninsula, okay, I live on a peninsula surrounded by three sides. The county I live in has more waterfront property than any other county in the country, because it's a peninsula. It's got like 280 miles of shoreline okay, it's huge. Now, in the north part of that, we have a little. You know, we're just kind of a peninsula on a peninsula, so to speak.

Speaker 2:

And in my little Facebook community which, by the way, I got kicked out of, I can't comment on it anymore for no reason, which is amazing when I tell you what they posted. So they posted this picture with some books and I said what's on your reading list? It had Rules for Radicals, some books, and so what's on your reading list. It had rules for radicals. It had a handful of books that are like Marxist, that are books that encourage revolution, standing up against really any system, that speak ill of democracy and market economies. This is my community. If that person is reading those books and they're not also, at the same time, reading books like you know, common Sense by Mark Twain, or you know some of the other books that counter those same ideas, these people become radicalized. They're going to show up at the next protest. They think you're a bad person and they're going to pull the trigger.

Speaker 2:

I say it, people don't believe it, but, guys, open your eyes. Open your eyes. You don't have to look far to see where this stuff is coming or see what's happening here. I want to move on to Chaz. So Chaz has been in the slow, painful process of shutting down. It's been a slow process and I want to show you a little video before we get to, specifically to Jenny Durkin. But, guys, the tide has to change. The series of things I'm going to show you today has to be the tide. It has to start coming in this way. We have to start speaking up, every single one of us. Talk to your friends, talk to the people in your influence. Those are the people that vote. And, by the way, voting starts in 60 days Because everybody's going into these mail-in ballots and also absentee ballots. They start going in for the presidential election in 60 days. In two months, we start voting.

Speaker 2:

Think about where we are, think about what the media is saying, think about the fact that conservatives and Republicans can't even reach 50% of the country unless they go through the filter of the mainstream media. And there's no one on mainstream media that is speaking all the truth, except for maybe Newsmax and OAN. Okay, but those are smaller channels. There's one guy on primetime news right now that's killing it Tucker Carlson. He's the number one rated show on cable, which normally is something Hannity has. But not only is the normal Warren show on cable right now, this week he's had the highest ratings of any anchor, any cable news program, ever, ever. Okay, this is where the momentum is, but we've got to speak up because there are counter narratives pushing against us.

Speaker 2:

Okay, this right here is Jay Inslee. This is in Yakima. So Yakima, washington, is kind of being on a extra lockdown. They've had a little outbreak of coronavirus and the people aren't having it. This is Jay Inslee doing a press conference. Oh, I'm going to have to get some volume here for you. This is Jay Inslee doing a press conference in Yakima. Okay so sorry, took me a second there to figure out why I didn't have volume. Okay, so, jay Inslee, this is him in Yakima.

Speaker 1:

West Bridges. What may I get if you're not here today? It's Mr Dilden. It's talking about the job zone.

Speaker 4:

How you doing on the job zone governor. How are you doing on that job zone governor? People are dying up here. Governor.

Speaker 1:

I'm sick of this. We've had enough no leadership. We can take this inside if you want. Okay, we're going to go inside to complete this. You do that. You run, go hide, go hide. Are you sure you're not missing anything? Those who are right up there down there.

Speaker 2:

We're going to's given a press conference. He had to cut it short. They had to go inside to finish the press conference. Every single person that's not holding a media camera is yelling, screaming. Holding a cope for governor sign. They're yelling at Jay Inslee at this press conference. Normally, in the state of Washington, when these Democratic leaders go around, the only people that show up are their supporters, their echo chamber, the people that are like yeah, take away our freedoms. Not anymore, not anymore. Get aware when your politicians are speaking in public, show up and start screaming. This is appropriate. This is good, good stuff here. Okay, all right. So that's Jay Inslee. Jay Inslee's getting pressure. Obviously, he's endorsed Chaz. He's endorsed the Black Lives Matter protests. It's gotten really ugly. Chaz has gotten quite ugly. Now I want to remind you what Jenny Durkin said about Chaz.

Speaker 3:

We've got four blocks in Seattle that you just saw pictures of. That is more like a block party atmosphere.

Speaker 4:

It's not an armed takeover. It's not a military hunt. How long do you think Seattle and those few blocks looks like this?

Speaker 2:

I don't know, we could have the summer of love. So remember that's Jenny Durkin, the mayor of Seattle. Now, who is Jenny Durkin? It's always important to remember the names and who these people are. Jenny Durkin's the mayor of Seattle. She was the US attorney for the Seattle area under Barack Obama. So this is a DOJ, department of Justice person. This is the person who, just a few years ago, if you committed a crime in this area, a federal crime, you were going to be up against her office, you were going to be up against her, her staff, her office, her attorneys. She's calling the shots, this woman. Summer of Love, the mayor of the Summer of Love. Okay, jenny Durkin.

Speaker 2:

Now in Chaz we've had a whole series of shootings, literally a shooting every day now, since last Saturday I think, and so they start once the shooting started happening, then it gets kind of serious and they got to shut it down. I told you about Gavin McGinnis, who tried to apply for a permit in that park and she freaked out because she didn't want to let Proud Boys go in there because that would be an all-out war. This is what happened yesterday night, so Sunday night in Chaz. Now I'm reading it from a concise place. I have searched all over Twitter. I've gotten onto all the Antifa pages, all the Black Lives Matter pages. This story is as accurate as I can find. This seems to be pretty much exactly what happened. There's nothing in the mainstream media and you'll know why. Because when you hear this you'll realize this went on way too long.

Speaker 2:

Okay, so teens in the Seattle area stole a Jeep inside of Chaz. So right, apparently right inside the area, right outside the area, wherever it was, and they do donuts in the field. So there's a park right when all the encampments was. They've cleared out a lot of the encampment. A lot of the people have left, people that are not homeless, so they started doing donuts in the park. Um windows closed the entire time.

Speaker 2:

Chaz security fired at the car while they were doing donuts. So remember, chaz has got their own little security team walking around with AR-15s and handguns. Everyone panics at the gunfire. Everyone wakes up, starts freaking out, screeching. White woman yells everyone who's armed to get on deck. So she's calling for everybody that's armed to come out and defend the Chaz.

Speaker 2:

Teens try to flee, but can't because the whole thing is blocked off with jersey barriers placed there by the city. Remember those concrete blocks as well as those reflective blocks that are basically blocking the roads. If you go on my social medias I think on all of them I posted the video. I went to Chaz and I drove around the outside of Chaz. I didn't want to go walk around the middle, but you can see in my video all the barriers and it is kind of a maze, the way they blocked it off. I could easily see how, once you're in there, there's only a few points where you can get out and even those have barriers and blocks and you have to squeeze through them because they were designed as checkpoints.

Speaker 2:

The Chaz car zips around through the maze of Jersey barriers but can't get out. At some point they head toward the Chaz headquarters. The Chaz headquarters what is that? The East Precinct, the police precinct that was given up, that now that they've turned into their headquarters. Who's in that headquarters? I don't know. Probably Raz Simone. I know that that Black Lives Matter woman was based out of there. I'm assuming they were there. I don't know, maybe they weren't, but I'm assuming they were. If they're still hanging on to this autonomous zone Now, remember, this might be the only place in the country where they can be without getting arrested because they've struck some kind of deal with the city. That's the importance of holding territory, by the way.

Speaker 2:

Okay, so they head towards the car, zips around the maze with Jersey Bears, at some point they head towards the Chaz headquarters, not even knowing that it was a thing. These are kids, okay, they're teenagers, in fact we're going to see here. They're young, really young, like 16 and 14, okay, and this is middle of the night, like 2 am. Chaz security. So then the Chaz security comes out and shoots through the window of the car. The driver crashes into the barrier near the front of the headquarters. They unload more bullets into the car and make it Swiss cheese. You can go see pictures of this. It looks like a Mexican cartel hit. It is terrifying. They unload more bullets into the car and make it Swiss cheese. The car is no longer drivable. Two teenagers are now bleeding out.

Speaker 2:

Eric Leal, the self-styled quote security chief of CHAZ, still thinks they were enemy forces of some-styled quote security chief of Chaz still thinks they were enemy forces of some sort. Says quote, oh, you aren't dead yet, huh. Then pistol whips the living guy for about a minute. Pistol whipping is where you take the gun in your hand and you use the gun, like the butt of the gun, to beat the person for about a minute and then shoots him execution style no weapons in the car. Literally, chaz has murdered an unarmed black child brutally and, judging by the giggles heard in the background of one of the videos, with glee, they have already become the pigs. They thought they were fighting against Chaz. Wall of science. In effect, no snitching, no one's talking. Summer of Love, jenny Durkin. So it gets even better.

Speaker 2:

So Jenny Durkin, the woman who endorsed this entire protest, endorsed this movement, endorsed the takeover of the autonomous zone, which then turned into the Occupy protest at her request. And there's a city councilwoman named Hamit Sawan. She is an Indian, she is part of the Indian Maoist Party, she came over to the United States as an immigrant and she is on the Seattle City Council. So when Jenny Durkan last week, the city would no longer support the Capitol Hill organized protest and they would seek to remove the barriers which, by the way, they just got the barriers removed this morning, just before I started the podcast, I saw a video of it. So the protesters had prevented the barriers from coming down, essentially holding their ground for days now, with a shooting every day, so, anyways. So this city councilwoman apparently gave the address of the mayor to the protesters. So the protesters went to Mayor Jenny Durkan's home to protest. These violent Chaz demonstrators went to Jenny Durkan's home. Jenny Durkan lost it again.

Speaker 2:

Now, keep in mind, keep in mind. This is the woman who said this was the summer of love, who endorsed it. She didn't feel this way when they took over the people of Chaz's property, when they invaded the residence private space and peace. But when it comes to her property, she's got a different tune. Quote she's saying this about herself. Excuse me, she's saying this about herself. This is her statement, mayor Durkin, and she's saying this about herself. Or, excuse me, she's saying this about herself. This is her statement. Mayor Durkin and her family are in the state program to keep their address confidential because of death threats, mostly related to a worker. Seattle's US attorney under President Obama. Okay, fair enough. I mean, we all know that you can look up property address records. It's not really secret if you do enough digging, but you know whatever.

Speaker 2:

Instead of working to make true change so keep in mind, this is Jenny Durkin saying this to the councilwoman Instead of working to make true change, council member Sawant continues to choose political stunts, reads her office Tonight. She did so without regard for the safety of the mayor and her family. I mean, who cares about the residents of Chaz right and businesses around Chaz? Their safety doesn't matter. But the mayor? We got to have the mayor. The mayor was not even home. She was still working at city hall. Ceo can't can and should peacefully demonstrate, but should not put families and children at risk. The statement concluded.

Speaker 2:

We came down to and then one protester asked about why they targeted home. We came down to Jenny Durkin's mansion to bring the demands of the movement and the families who have been impacted by police violence to her doorstep, and she seems not to be able to hear our demands any other way. Well, guys, your demands are kind of crazy, so they're eating their own. So the mayor also sent a letter to the city council of Seattle to investigate this council. Woman, guys, they're eating themselves and this is great. This is great news for us, right? If we can divide them, awesome, because then they become weaker.

Speaker 2:

And here's where you have an example. You have a former US attorney. She knows this is wrong. She's not a dummy. She gets the law. She might not believe in it, but she understands it, she knows how to work within it. And here she is now saying oh, oh, oh, oh, not good. Notice how the tune changes in all these cities when people show up at the mayor's house. So I have a suggestion I think we should start showing up at these mayor's houses, these city council people, these people that are doing this kind of stuff. Maybe it's time. Maybe it's time to go after them and protest. Remember, things that happen around the country affect you here.

Speaker 2:

I've read to you on previous podcasts. If you're new to the podcast and you've got time, go back a dozen episodes and just start listening through. I'm trying to follow this through, kind of like a narrative. As we cover the news of the day, we go back in time, we try to examine the origins and some of the narratives and some of the things that are happening. That's what I like to do here.

Speaker 2:

I like to understand how we got to this spot, because, as peasants, as people who've got to live here, work here, raise our families that are not in seats of power, we've got to live under these people, so we've got to know what they're all about. How can you possibly fight an enemy when you have no idea they're fighting you and what they're about. So this is the mayor of Chicago. Now, keep in mind these people talk, these are partisans, these are members of a political party. The mayors that are Democrat are in cahoots with the Democrat National Convention. They're climbing up political ladders. They're in these positions because they've literally been recruited, in many cases to run, because they're pliable, because they're malleable, because they'll tow the quote, unquote party line which, in this case, is becoming more and more of a globalist bent. Now this is the mayor of Chicago. It's a war zone in Chicago.

Speaker 2:

Shootings every day, I mean every weekend. We see headlines a hundred shootings in a weekend, 28 people dead on a weekday night. This is Chicago, where they have no law and order. If you're down by the waterfront, sure, it's a great, beautiful city, but you leave that waterfront and it's scary. It's scary there. Did you know that?

Speaker 2:

The male lifespan in Englewood, chicago, the little neighborhood Englewood, do you know what the average age of life is there? Now, to understand how impactful this is, you have to understand the average age of life by the water in Chicago. If you're a resident within four blocks of the water, your lifespan is 80 plus years old as a male. 80 plus years, that's higher than the average lifespan across the country. Quality of life, all that kind of stuff. You go just a few minutes south to Inglewood and the average lifespan for a male is 30 years old. Let that sink in for a second. This area has so much crime, so much poverty, so much lack of healthcare infrastructure, all the things that go into factoring into the lifespan. The average age is 30. In a 15 minute drive from one spot to the other, you lose 60 years of lifespan. This is a problem. Now this mayor. Listen to what. Listen to how she talked about the lockdown and the shutdowns. This is the kind of stuff you're dealing with.

Speaker 3:

How it's going to be. We will shut you down, we will cite you and, if we need to, we will cite you and if we need to, we will arrest you and we will take you to jail Period. There should be nothing unambiguous about that. Don't make us treat you like a criminal.

Speaker 2:

She can't even treat the criminals in her city like a criminal. There's a theme with these people, these people that are running these inner cities for decades. All the problems we have, all the crime we have, the deterioration of our inner cities is on these people's watch. Here they are talking a big game about you and me. People that they want to force to wear masks, people that they want to force to stay in their homes under quarantine, healthy people okay, they want to tell people not to go to work and we'll take you to jail. Oh, by the way, we're letting prisoners out, we're freaking out because they might get the virus which none of the data shows is really spreading like that. So they're letting prisoners out, but they're threatening to treat you like a criminal. They can't even treat criminals like criminals. See, this is the problem here, if they can't treat criminals like criminals, but they want to take out their anger, their frustration on not being able to run their cities, on good people, because we'll comply, because we will get hauled off to jail, because we will pay our parking tickets, because we will pay our fines, because we will plead guilty in a court, in a federal court. That's why. That's why they think they have this power. Stop it. Every one of you has got to stop it. You've got to stand up, draw your line and defend it vigorously.

Speaker 2:

Okay, so, as you can see here, we've got Democrats all across the country. How much you want to bet that? The politicians in Provo where that shooting took place, how much you want to bet those politicians? If they're not Democrats, they're rhino Republicans. Go research their background a little bit. Go research their background a little bit. I bet you you'll find something a little bit disturbing. You'll find this trend these rhino Republicans. And what's a rhino Republican?

Speaker 2:

The way I look at it is this there's kind of like four political factions in the United States. There's two populist factions and there's two globalist factions. The populist factions are the populist Democrats, sometimes called the democratic socialists. These are led by Bernie Sanders. Now they're being led by AOC. Now AOC, I believe, is really more of a globalist, but she talks a populist game, right. She talks about labor, things like that. Then you've got the populist movement, which is the MAGA movement. That's led by Donald Trump and that's the movement most of us are pretty familiar with. That's the movement I believe in is the populist MAGA movement.

Speaker 2:

The next movement is the neoconservative movement. Neoconservatives are people who might have conservative values. They usually believe in American exceptionalism. However, they're globalists. They're all about big business, big corporations, big trade. This movement has its roots all the way back to World War II, if you remember people like Ford General Motors. They built ammunitions. Bit Hitler had a picture of Henry Ford hanging in his office and he said he was most inspired by Henry Ford. Henry Ford, I believe it was, once said something to the effect of he wouldn't let an international squabble get in the way of his business because he knew his business would be there after the squabble. He had factories in Germany and he even let those factories be taken over by the Nazis to build war things with his direct consent. So that group of people the international businessmen oftentimes became, basically started this neoconservative movement.

Speaker 2:

Then you've got the neoliberals. The neoliberals are people like the Clintons. These are people that are liberal, they're progressive in general and they same thing with the international. They're down with international trade. They established the quote New World Order after the fall of the Soviet Union and in many cases the neoliberals right now are working hand-in-hand with the Communist Chinese Party, the CCP yeah, the Chinese Communist Party. So again, right, you have to understand these factions. Now in America they team up, right. You'll have a lot of neoliberals and progressive liberals in the same party. You've got Bernie Sanders as well as Hillary Clinton in the same party and they kind of have some internal divisions.

Speaker 2:

And same thing with the Republicans, the neoconservatives guys like the Mike Braun right that we played yesterday. They're incredibly damaging because they don't have American interests at mind. It's really sad to me because a lot of voters for many years, especially during Clinton and in early Bush years, they were single issue voters. If you were an American Christian, there's a good chance that you were a pro-life voter. So it didn't matter what these Republican politicians believed in, what they did or anything. Nobody cared as long as they were pro-life or you know, or maybe one other issue. Okay, the single issue voters are what allowed the neoconservatives to take over the Republican party. It's also um, anyways, that's okay. So that's that, all right, and then I want to play. I want to switch gears again.

Speaker 2:

Let's get back onto the coronavirus topic, the COVID topic. So this is a video of Dr Fauci. This is a longer video, but I'm going to let it play through. This is actually not Dr Fauci, this is Rand Paul. So yesterday there was a Senate hearing on the coronavirus response. I listened to probably two thirds of it Total drivel, okay, total drivel, especially the Democrats. The Democrats just wanted to get sound blurbs, soundbites. They wanted Fauci to say things like master necessary, there's going to be extended lockdowns. There was a lot of really weird questions. Elizabeth Warren had a real doozy. That was like a loaded question that tried to somehow tie coronavirus to race. I mean, the whole hearing was just a dog and pony show until this one line here.

Speaker 2:

This is like one of those things where this is Rand Paul confronting Dr Fauci and Rand Paul keep in mind he is a medical doctor. Rand Paul is a coronavirus survivor. He got coronavirus, went through it, tested negative. Then during the quarantine period, when the Senate was out of session, he went and volunteered in a Kentucky hospital to take care of other coronavirus patients. There's probably no one in the Senate was out of session. He went and volunteered in a Kentucky hospital to take care of other coronavirus patients. There's probably no one in the Senate that is more familiar with both the medical side of coronavirus as well as the political side of coronavirus and listen to what he says to Dr Fauci. Again, I'm having a. Why does it do that? Okay, listen to what Dr Fauci has to say, or not? Dr Fauci, rand Paul, dr Paul.

Speaker 6:

Every day, virtually every day, we seem to hear from you things we can't do.

Speaker 6:

But when you're asked, can we go back to school, I don't hear much certitude at all. I hear well, maybe it depends. I agree with you. I am completely unqualified.

Speaker 6:

It is a fatal conceit to believe any one person or small group of people has the knowledge necessary to direct an economy or dictate public health behavior. I think government health experts during this pandemic need to show caution in their prognostications. It's important to realize that if society meekly submits to an expert and that expert is wrong, a great deal of harm may occur when we allow one man's policy or one group of small men and women to be foisted on an entire nation. Take, for example, government experts who continue to call for schools and daycare to stay closed or that recommend restrictions that make it impossible for a school to function. For a time there may not have been enough information about coronavirus in children, but now there is. There are examples from all across the United States and the world that show that young children rarely spread the virus. Let's start in Europe. Rarely spread the virus. Let's start in Europe. 22 countries have reopened their schools and have seen no discernible increases in cases. These graphs behind me show no surge when schools open. The red line is where the schools opened. There is data from Austria, belgium, denmark, france, germany, netherlands. No spike when schools are opened. Contact tracing studies in China, iceland, britain and the Netherlands failed to find a single case of child to adult infection here at home. Child care for essential workers continued to be available in some states throughout the pandemic. Brown University researchers collected data on daycares that remained open during the pandemic Over 25,000 kids. In their study found that only 0.16% got COVID and when you looked at the confirmed cases for staff, there was about 1% of more than 9,000 staff. The YMCA also has put forward statistics 40,000 kids at 1,100 sites. There were no reports of coronavirus outbreaks or clusters.

Speaker 6:

Dr Joshua Sharfstein of Johns Hopkins writes there is converging evidence that the coronavirus doesn't transmit among children like the flu, that it is a lower risk. Just yesterday the American Academy of Pediatrics says we got to get kids back in school. We want them physically present in school. They even cite mounting evidence that children are less likely to contract the virus.

Speaker 6:

Ultimately, this all comes down to the fatal conceit that central planners have enough knowledge somehow to tell a nation of 330 million people what they can and can't do. Perhaps our planners might think twice before they weigh in on every subject. Perhaps our government experts might hold their tongue before expressing the opinion whether we can play NFL football or Major League Baseball not in October. Perhaps our experts might think twice before telling the whole world that a COVID vaccine likely won't provide herd immunity. We don't know why weigh in with these opinions that we have no knowledge of. These are forecasts that may well be wrong. Perhaps our experts might consider the undue fear they are instilling in teachers, who are now afraid to go back to work.

Speaker 6:

No one knows the answers to these questions. We shouldn't presume that a group of experts somehow knows what's best for everyone. Hayek had it right. It somehow knows what's best for everyone. Hayek had it right. Only decentralized power and decision-making based on millions of individualized situations can arrive at what risks and behaviors each individual should choose. That's what America was founded on, not a herd with a couple of people in Washington all telling us what to do and and we, like sheep, blindly follow this.

Speaker 6:

All begs the question what are we going to tell the people? The truth? That it's okay to take their kids back to school. Dr Fauci, every day, virtually every day, we seem to hear from you things we can't do. But when you're asked, can we go back to school, I don't hear much certitude at all. I hear well, maybe it depends. All of this body of evidence about schools around the world shows there's no surge. All of the evidence shows that it's rare. I mean, we've so politicized this and made it politically correct that the WHO releases that. It's rare. And you have a scientist up there honestly giving her opinion. What happens to her? She's blackballed and her report that she refers to is taken off the website. When you go to that scientist's speech and you try to clink on the lick, the WHO has now screened it from us because it said something that's not politically corrected. Guess what? It's rare for kids to transmit this.

Speaker 2:

Did you hear that? Did you hear how the WHO came out with a statement and now they've edited, they've censored their own statement because it's not politically popular? Guys, you can't trust, you cannot trust these institutions. You can only trust your eyes. You've got to get enough information to find truth speakers like Rand Paul and listen to what they're saying. So he keeps going, but I hear nothing of that coming from you.

Speaker 6:

All I hear, dr Fauci, is we can't do this, we can't do that. We can't play baseball. Well, even that's not based on the science. I mean, flu season peaks in February. We don't know that COVID is going to be like the flu season. It might, but we don't know that. But we wouldn't ban school in October. You might close some schools when they get the flu. We need to not be so presumptuous that we know everything. But my question to you is can't you give us a little bit more on schools that we can get back to school, that there's a great deal of evidence and it's actually good, good evidence that kids aren't transmitting this it's rare and the kids are staying healthy and that, yes, we can open our schools.

Speaker 2:

So Fauci's only response to that entire monologue. Now, the time had kind of run out and so he got to give a response, but he was given as much time as he wanted to respond to and the only thing he responded to was well, I called somebody, called me about sports and I projected and you know I'm not so definitive, I didn't mean to go on the record, but yet it put. It went out there as a quote from Dr Fauci this guy has no control over. Oh my gosh. Okay, this isn't a rag on Fauci session, necessarily, but this is what's going on with coronavirus. People are politicizing it and you're getting caught up in the middle. You're being asked to wear a mask, most likely where you're at, based on politics, not based on any science.

Speaker 2:

Now, listen to this. This is where we have to be, you and I, if we can. We got to go to these city councils. We got to talk to people. Listen to a couple of the people this last week who went to city council meetings. Listen to what they said. There's a long line of people that are starting to do this and we have to. We have to let our leaders know how we feel.

Speaker 5:

We are being lied to. Our freedoms are being taken forever.

Speaker 2:

This is a man in a city council in LA and or in St Lucie County. It might not be LA, I could be wrong on that. Either way, he's in St Lucie County. He is wearing a plaid shirt. He's got a big beard, kind of an unkept hairdo. You can just imagine by his voice what this guy looks like. He looks like the people I work with every single day. He looks like a peasant. He looks like I do Unkept hair hat head right Came off a job site. This guy probably this is probably the nicest shirt he owns this plaid shirt. This is a salt of the earth person right here. This is you and me. Listen to what he's got to say.

Speaker 5:

We are being lied to, our freedoms are being taken forever, and I will not be muzzled like a mad dog and I will not have my health destroyed because you idiots can't figure, can't read truth. You go along with the lies. That are the people who are trying to take down our freedoms and destroy our country. This is sick. You ought to be ashamed of yourself for being a part of this, and I will not be muzzled. And it's time for us to stand up for our freedom, because if we stand back and let these pieces of crap handle our freedoms, we will have nothing left. In fact, we'll end up being dead.

Speaker 2:

Truth speaker. Listen to another one. This is a journalist in California.

Speaker 4:

After waiting for two hours and now getting two minutes. I'll get right to the point. This board is pretending that for the last three months, your emperor, dr levin, has not been against a mask declaration. Now, all of a sudden, we're pretending that masks are everything, even forcing speakers to use masks. I would like the board to take a position. Was Dr Levin wrong for those three months? And if he was this wrong, why has he not been removed? Why has he not been fired for being so catastrophically wrong? Or do you not really believe he was wrong? You're just wearing these masks because it is a signal of your great virtue.

Speaker 2:

Okay, you get that right. The doctor who's running LA, the medical doctor who's on who's the board of health director, has been saying no need for mass, no need for mass. But all of a sudden, all of a sudden, now that it's a political talisman, now that it's a symbol of your compliance, we need one. Why isn't this guy fired? He was wrong. If masks are medically necessary, then why are the guys who told us not to wear masks still employed, still taking taxpayer dollars?

Speaker 4:

Because for the last three months we have not worn them, and Verduntura county has done outstandingly well and continues to do outstandingly well, because we are not Los Angeles, we are not New York City, we never were going to be any of those things. Ironically, this is one of the few things Dr Levin was actually right about. He has been wrong about everything. He is the one who told us we would have 400 to 600 hospitalizations a day. He revised that to 200 to 400 a day. We still haven't reached that. In one day. We're barely over 200.

Speaker 4:

For the entire ordeal that you guys have put us through, we now have panicked over 51 total hospitalizations in a county with eight hospitals. Can you people do math? Can you please do basic math and understand where we are on this? This is not a crisis. You, however, have created one. You, in an effort to try to prevent all death when we've had 43 deaths, have now ended all relevant life, and you should all be ashamed of yourselves, and this will never be forgotten, ever be forgotten. You will all be held accountable eventually, in this life or the next. You all better hope there is no hell, because when you die, that's where you're going, and guess what You're not gonna be dying of, covid either. Thank you.

Speaker 2:

Thug life. That's a thug right there. That's a journalist down in California who understands what's happening. He's talking to the people on the streets. You don't think life is being destroyed.

Speaker 2:

Guys, we're in the honeymoon, people, people are still getting unemployment checks. I live in a state of 8 million people. We now have a million people unemployed One in eight and I'm in a very productive economic state. What about you? What's the actual unemployment rate? Where you're at Now, everybody's still driving their cars and buying their food.

Speaker 2:

Because, why? Because they got a stimulus, because they got unemployment checks. Small businesses got PPE loans. Well, guess what? It's starting to run dry. It's starting to run dry. They wanna pass excuse me, I don't have coronavirus they wanna pass another stimulus bill to prolong this thing.

Speaker 2:

Guys, there's carnage happening economically around our country. You think carnage doesn't lead to bad health outcomes? You think that kind of carnage isn't going to lead to suicide, depression, other crime? When people get desperate, they do desperate things. This is a huge, huge tidal wave coming for us and we have to speak up. I can't say it enough. I can't say it enough. We have to speak up.

Speaker 2:

Okay, I wanted to follow up on Tucker Carlson, the number one rated news show in all of cable news ever for the history of cable news. This is his, this is his monologue and this is in response to the Mike Braun interview yesterday, and I'm cutting into this thing about halfway through. It's worth going and taking a listen to Tucker Carlson's monologue from yesterday I think it was June 30th and it's really good. I'm just jumping into the part where he talks about what it is that we demand from the Republican Party, because he makes a great point. Even though the Republican Party is flawed, not perfect, full of people like Mike Braun, they're the only thing standing in the way between us and the socialist hell that awaits on the other side of the election.

Speaker 7:

And this is just listen to Tucker monetics who mean them harm, and they do. If you want to be left alone to do your job and raise your family in this country, you will need a protector. That protector must be the Republican Party. There are no other options. But it must be a very different kind of Republican Party. Keep in mind we're getting a new Republican Party, no matter what happens. Even now, vultures wait just off stage to swoop in and claim the GOP for themselves once Donald Trump is gone. Former Governor Nikki Haley tops that list.

Speaker 2:

Remember what I said about the neocons. The neocons oppose Donald Trump. For one thing, the neocons are often involved in the overseas, foreign money and bribes and kickbacks and all that kind of stuff. Don't think that we're not going to see Republicans come down hard, probably in the next, after Trump wins election. I think he'll clean out the Republican party. I really do. He cleaned it out a lot at the midterms. I mean, think about all the Republicans that stepped down that normally wouldn't have even the speaker of the house stepped down.

Speaker 2:

Paul Ryan, which, by the way, is now a board member at Fox news, which is one of the reasons why Fox news is kind of anti-Trump sometimes, except for the nighttime anchors. Now, the reason Paul Ryan stepped down is in Paul Ryan's. So when Trump won the election and Paul Ryan also won his seat because he's in the House it's a two-year cycle Paul Ryan's corrupt. I mean Paul Ryan was Mitt Romney's running mate. Paul Ryan's got some decent economic ideas, but the guy's corrupt. I mean. It's just a fact. They had the Russian evidence right in front of us. They knew exactly what the Democrats were doing and Paul Ryan turned down subpoenas to go digging into this.

Speaker 2:

And he and Trey Gowdy, who's also a traitor. Don't be fooled by him. Don't be fooled by his talk. He's a traitor. He saw the evidence. He saw the FBI malfeasance. He saw the actual emails that have been declassified now with regards to the General Flynn case. He got on national TV and he said when I saw the FBI do, every American should take trust that the FBI did the right thing, made the right choice, that the investigation was predicated. Well, now we know Trey Gowdy after seeing that evidence lied through his teeth.

Speaker 2:

Some people have said Trey Gowdy went to work for the DOJ because he was a prosecutor before he was a congressman and he never stopped working for him. The DOJ is corrupt. That's what that statement is telling you. And Trey Gowdy is a DOJ man and he was covering for the DOJ, which the FBI falls under the DOJ. That's the truth. That is the truth. That's why Trey Gowdy had to resign and he's still kind of an advocate for the president because, yeah, he's conservative but he's a neocon. Okay, paul Ryan is a neocon and they will swoop up the Republican Party when Trump's gone unless we, the people, force them to change it. And how do we force them to change it? Through elections and showing up.

Speaker 7:

So keep listening Any others on it. The moment Trump leaves, they will attack him. They'll tell you that Republicans lost power because they were mean and intolerant, just like Donald Trump, and if you listen carefully, you can hear them say that even now.

Speaker 2:

Do you remember what Mike Braun said yesterday about? Well, we have to be in the conversation because otherwise Chuck Schumer will just run shod. Chuck Schumer's in the minority. Why are you taking hints from Chuck Schumer? That's the current Republican Party. Spineless Jellyfish.

Speaker 7:

It's a lie. Republicans are failing for a much more obvious reason, a more fundamental reason. They're failing because they haven't done much that is worth doing. They haven't tried very hard to improve your life. When the crisis came, they fled. They did nothing to defend you. They did nothing to defend the country. They were paralyzed. Their so-called principles turned out to be bumper stickers they wrote 40 years ago. They had no clue what to do. So from this day forward, it's very simple we're going to have to tell them what to do, and that will work, no matter what they may believe privately.

Speaker 7:

Politicians respond to organized groups of voters. They want to win, above all, so they head to where the votes are Going forward. Republican voters should demand three things from their candidates, and if they don't provide them, don't vote for them. Here they are. First is vigorous defense of total equality under the law. We are equal because we are citizens. Every American has precisely the same rights as every other American. Period. That is the promise of America. It's why millions of people move here. For a long time, we knew that. No one questioned it. It was obvious. But it no longer is obvious and there are many who are working in the opposite direction. Republicans must counterbalance this. They must work as hard as they can to make America fair again. Wealth appearance ancestry can play no role whatsoever in the eyes of the law. That means that criminals like Jeffrey Epstein must go to jail the first time they're caught molesting children.

Speaker 2:

I have been pounding on this point right, justice, justice. Go back into the earlier episodes and the titles that have justice in it. Tightest turning things like that. This is critical. We can't watch our institutions fail. The populist movement on the left, the Bernie bros and the MAGA folk, see the same problems. They see our institutions failing us. They see lack of you know. The left's populist side sees lack of justice for black people, lack of justice for our inner cities, lack of justice for all these other reasons. The rich right Republicans. They see all the lack of justice at the top of the FBI. The seventh floor of the FBI is corrupt. The DOJ is corrupt, the Department of State's corrupt, the CDC's corrupt, it's all corrupt. It's all corrupt. It's all corrupt. So we all see it so, as a populist, because we're America, first time to take it back, so first we've got to demand.

Speaker 7:

Demand that our politicians defend equal rights. It means your children must have precisely the same chances of getting into college or getting a job as anyone else's children. It means fighting to—.

Speaker 2:

Do you remember the Varsity Blues case where Lori Loughlin and a whole bunch of other famous people got caught basically cheating to get their kids into different universities? Now Harvard has said we are no longer taking ACT and SAT scores. You know why? Because it was exposed that that whole system's corrupt. You can just buy it off. You can get proctors to take the test for you. You can get extra time to take it if you're a child of a wealthy donor Totally corrupt. Tucker hit it. He mentioned it. Why would you send your kids to school if they're not getting a fair shot? Better make it fair.

Speaker 7:

Make this a colorblind meritocracy a colorblind meritocracy.

Speaker 2:

Say it again. We can't be afraid. We can't be afraid to say things like that. It's a meritocracy. Well, meritocracy is not equal rights. There's not equality, no, no, no, life's not fair. Winners win, losers lose. There's haves and have-nots, it's just reality. Some people are affected by tragedy. Some people are affected by bad luck. They're born with. Some people are born with a silver spoon in their mouth. Some people are born with a spike in their leg. Everybody's a little bit different. The promise of America is equal opportunity, that every single person, no matter your background, creed, color, race, religion, dogma, belief system, will be treated equally. That's the promise of America.

Speaker 7:

Gotta defend it. Alternative to that is disaster. Slavery and Jim Crow were immoral precisely because they punished people for how they were born. Any system that punishes people for how they were born is immoral. Always, republicans must say that loudly. Don't get caught in pointless debates about whether or not this is a racist country. Clearly it isn't. Prove it by making it less racist, by making it a colorblind meritocracy. That's our promise. Second, republicans must defend our freedom of speech. We are not a free society without that.

Speaker 7:

This is not simply a debate about the First Amendment and its limits. It's bigger than that and more important. If you can't articulate something, if you're not allowed, you can't think it, and that's precisely why authoritarians try to control language. They're trying to control your mind. Republicans should lead the fight against this without shame. Americans have the absolute right to tell the truth. This is not negotiable. Nor, by the way, is it a theoretical concern of interest only to intellectuals. Everything depends on it. If you can't think freely, you can't solve problems. Try to build a hydro plant or fly a commercial airplane. If certain categories of thought are off limits to you, it doesn't work. The power grid collapses, planes crash, society degrades. No speech means no science, no art, no civilization.

Speaker 7:

Most of us were taught that this debate was settled conclusively during the Enlightenment, hundreds of years ago in reason-vanquished dogma. But it wasn't settled. The forces of superstition remain. They are stronger than ever. In fact, they are growing in strength. The Republican Party must fight them or it's not a party worth having. And finally, we must never forget that, in the end, the Republican Party exists to serve the interests of normal people, ordinary people.

Speaker 7:

Middle-class families are the core of this country. They are our hope for the future, our only hope. And yet both parties have shamelessly abandoned them. Middle-class families have no national spokesman. They have no lobby in Washington. Republicans pretend to be their champion. You know by now that they are not. Instead of improving the lives of their voters, the party feeds them a steady diet of mindless symbolic victories, partisan junk food designed to make them feel full even as they waste away. Who cares how many Benghazi hearings we have? We're supposed to care. Why should we? How did Peter Strzok's text messages become more important than saving American jobs from foreign nationals who are taking them? It is lunacy. We fall for it every time and to the extent this show has participated in it, we apologize with deepest sincerity, because meanwhile, as we're talking about things that don't matter, life for the dwindling American middle class has become steadily worse.

Speaker 2:

If you've known me for a long time, I've often said single issue voters get distracted by the smoke screen right, using the example of Republicans who voted for these neocons for years, even though they did things completely not in their interest. They never looked at their platforms, they never looked at their voting record, they never looked at their background or their history. It's astonishing to me George Bush Jr got elected. I mean, the guy's been a complete, utter failure. His entire life, nothing he's ever touched has gone well. Even the baseball team he owned had to kick him out because he ran it into the ground.

Speaker 2:

But yet we elected him. And then we're surprised. We're surprised when we get bailout, because if you've never learned how to create anything, then the only solution is just to go get a bigger line of credit. That's these guys thinking oh, I'll be fine, I'll be fine because I'll just cut some foreign deal. The Bushes are one of the most corrupt families in the history of the United States and if you don't believe that, if you've got some sentimentality for George Bush, I'm sorry. I'm sorry You're not. You're living in a fantasy land. Okay, there's a whole part of the Republican Party that has not served America's interests.

Speaker 7:

There are junkies living in your park. Your nephew just died of a fentanyl overdose and, saddest of all, and who hasn't thought this? You've realized that your children will never be as successful as you are. The American dream died with your generation.

Speaker 2:

I'm fighting. I'm fighting because I know on the other side of this, on the other side of this election, on the other side of this culture war, it's the ideas that will last. I don't know if the American constitution will be preserved. I have no idea. I mean, we are, we are at that point, we're at a tipping point of breakdown If the lawlessness and the law and order continues. You heard those people screaming at the council moment right, whether in this life or the next, and I've got probably 10 more videos of people who've unloaded on councils, whether in this life or the next. Okay, the reason they say that is because they don't know if they can take justice in their own hands. But if it, if the opportunity comes, don't think that the mob that showed up at Jenny Durkin's house, not the next time, not the next time after that, but you know it's going to keep happening all across the country. It's going to keep happening. Pretty soon, these mobs, these populist mobs, are going to be united and who knows what's going to end up on the other side, because we will unite with the Bernie bros to take down the globalists. It's just naturally going to happen at some point and then we're going to have to fight it out and in the marketplace of ideas, our ideas must be heard.

Speaker 2:

The people who want to live here, who just want to raise their family, who want to go about their lives, worship their God the way they want, must have law and order. They must have politicians who work in our interests. One of my big things is I want to live in a Western society. I want to live in a Christian society. I don't care how you believe dogmatically I could care less but I want to live in a society where we live by the golden rule. We treat others the way we want to be treated. That's one of the foundation principles of all of Christianity. It's one of the foundation principles of Western society. It's one of the foundations of decency. Even agnostics and atheists understand that. That is the golden rule. We need to live in that society. As you can see today, I've shown you politicians, what's good for you is not good for me. Jenny Durkin called Chaz the summer of love, until they showed up at her doorstep. Do you see how this happens, right, until it affects them personally? They just don't see it.

Speaker 2:

Here's a little poem. This is by Ella Wheeler Wilcox, and we'll end on this. Well, let me let me just plug my Twitter. You can find me on Twitter at PeasantsPod Parler, at PeasantsPod, facebook at the Peasants Perspective, and email at peasantspod, at gmailcom, and I do appreciate everyone reaching out to me, sending me videos. It's a, it's very helpful and I appreciate the words of encouragement as well. And please share the show. This is, I think, is a really critical show for people to see, that it shows you in your face what our politicians have been doing and how we got to where we got, and I think Tucker Carlson really wraps it up. I really do so.

Speaker 2:

I want to read this poem. It's titled Not Mine but Thine, and this kind of goes along with that golden rule law All those who journey sooner, late, must pass within the garden's gate, must kneel alone in darkness there and battle with some fierce despair. God pity those who cannot say not mine but thine, who only pray Let this cup pass and cannot see the purpose of Gethsemane. The foundation principles of Christianity are the idea that you won't do to someone else something that you wouldn't want done to you. Why do our politicians continue to let things happen to us, the peasants, the people who just want to live here quietly and decently. Why do they let things happen to us that they won't let happen to them? You've got to ask yourself that question.

Speaker 1:

Thanks, I'll see you tomorrow yourself. We're living in a dictatorship, a self-perpetuating autocracy, in which the working classes oh, there you go, bringing class into the gang. That's what it's all about. If only people would Please, please, good people, I am in haste. Who lives in that castle? No one lives there. Then who is your lord? We don't have a lord. What I told you? We're an anarcho-syndicalist commune.

Speaker 1:

We take it in turns to act as a sort of executive officer for the week. Yes, but all the decisions of that officer have to be ratified at a special bi-weekly meeting. Yes, I see, by a simple majority in the case of purely internal affairs, be quiet. But by a two-thirds majority in the case of more major, be quiet. I order you to be quiet. All the lads who think he is, I'm your king. Well, I didn't vote for you. You don't vote for kings. Well, I can become king.

Speaker 1:

Then the lady of the lake, her arm clad in the purest, shimmering samite, held aloft Excalibur from the bosom of the water, signifying by divine providence that I, arthur, was to carry Excalibur. That is why I'm your king. Listen, strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government. Supreme executive power derives from a mandate from the masses, not from some farcical aquatic ceremony. Be quiet. You can't expect to wield supreme executive power just because some watery tart threw a sword at you. Shut up. I mean, if I went round saying I was an emperor just because some moistened bint had loved a scimitar at me, they'd put me away, shut up, will you? Shut up? Ah, now we see the violence inherent in the system. Shut up. Come and see the violence inherent in the system. Help, help. I'm being repressed, bloody peasant. Oh, what a giveaway. Did you hear that? Did you hear that? Eh, that's what I'm on about. Do you see him repressing me? You saw it, didn't you?

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