1 0:00:00 --> 0:00:10 So everybody welcome to today's meeting of Medical Doctors for COVID Ethics International. 2 0:00:10 --> 0:00:14 These meetings in this group were started by Stephen Frost in 2021, a British trained 3 0:00:14 --> 0:00:21 medical doctor who's based in Wales to champion truth, ethics, justice, freedom and health 4 0:00:21 --> 0:00:22 in the face of global challenges. 5 0:00:22 --> 0:00:28 At this time we remember Ryan Oformick and Arno van Kessel, two lawyers who fight for 6 0:00:28 --> 0:00:30 freedom and truth. 7 0:00:30 --> 0:00:32 Reiner is still jailed corruptly by the German government. 8 0:00:32 --> 0:00:37 Arno van Kessel is still being preceded against by the Dutch government. 9 0:00:37 --> 0:00:38 He's on bail. 10 0:00:38 --> 0:00:44 We ask you to share the news about these courageous men and note that Reiner's birthday is on 11 0:00:44 --> 0:00:50 the 9th of May and there will be a major gathering outside the jail that he is at. 12 0:00:50 --> 0:00:56 We'll share details about that but that's May the 9th, Saturday May the 9th. 13 0:00:56 --> 0:01:01 I'm Charles Covese, your moderator based in Melbourne, Australia. 14 0:01:01 --> 0:01:05 This group is a wide blend of voices from all around the world. 15 0:01:05 --> 0:01:10 The key strategy of this group in our fight is exposing medical crimes, rallying behind 16 0:01:10 --> 0:01:15 the call crafted for us by John Rappaport of Medical Truth Now. 17 0:01:15 --> 0:01:18 We want medical truth now. 18 0:01:18 --> 0:01:26 And I heard yesterday that Bobby Kennedy announced the banning of mercury in all children's 19 0:01:26 --> 0:01:29 vaccines yesterday. 20 0:01:29 --> 0:01:34 Medical truth now can unite humanity in the search for accountability of those who suppress 21 0:01:34 --> 0:01:37 the truth. 22 0:01:37 --> 0:01:38 First time is a warmly welcome. 23 0:01:38 --> 0:01:41 Introduce yourself in the chat. 24 0:01:41 --> 0:01:42 Where you're from. 25 0:01:42 --> 0:01:43 We're in the thick of a global struggle. 26 0:01:43 --> 0:01:50 We call it World War 3 with medical and scientific battles among 12 battle fronts. 27 0:01:50 --> 0:01:51 The legal battle front is another. 28 0:01:51 --> 0:01:54 The spiritual battle front is another. 29 0:01:54 --> 0:01:58 We're six years into this fight with more to come so there's no room for weariness. 30 0:01:58 --> 0:01:59 Stay strong. 31 0:01:59 --> 0:02:00 Stay healthy. 32 0:02:00 --> 0:02:02 Our meetings go for two and a half hours afterward. 33 0:02:02 --> 0:02:06 Tom Rodman hosts optional telegram video chats. 34 0:02:06 --> 0:02:08 Sometimes we stay on this platform. 35 0:02:08 --> 0:02:11 We'll hear from our guest presenter Alex Crainer. 36 0:02:11 --> 0:02:15 This is the ninth time Alex that we're hearing from you. 37 0:02:15 --> 0:02:18 So great to have you back. 38 0:02:18 --> 0:02:19 Followed by Q&A. 39 0:02:19 --> 0:02:22 Per tradition Stephen Frost opens the questioning for the first 15 minutes. 40 0:02:22 --> 0:02:26 This is a free speech haven. 41 0:02:26 --> 0:02:28 Free speech is our weapon to safeguard human liberties. 42 0:02:28 --> 0:02:31 If something offends you, own it. 43 0:02:31 --> 0:02:38 We lovingly sidestep the outrage culture and demands to silence truth because somebody may 44 0:02:38 --> 0:02:41 be offended. 45 0:02:41 --> 0:02:43 We choose love over fear. 46 0:02:43 --> 0:02:44 Fear binds and sickens. 47 0:02:44 --> 0:02:47 Love liberates, heals, inspires. 48 0:02:47 --> 0:02:49 These twice weekly gatherings are far from mere talk. 49 0:02:49 --> 0:02:54 They're birthed real world actions and alliances. 50 0:02:54 --> 0:03:04 So let me tell you a little bit about Alex Crainer for the purposes of this recording. 51 0:03:04 --> 0:03:10 And Alex, I'm sorry I'm going to make this short. 52 0:03:10 --> 0:03:14 I know you could listen to me talking about you for hours. 53 0:03:14 --> 0:03:16 Just like I love people talking about me. 54 0:03:16 --> 0:03:20 Anyway, Alex Crainer, his Twitter handle is Naked Hedgie. 55 0:03:20 --> 0:03:23 He's an author, former hedge fund manager based in Monaco. 56 0:03:23 --> 0:03:29 He was born and raised in the socialist regime of former Yugoslavia under one party communist 57 0:03:29 --> 0:03:30 rule. 58 0:03:30 --> 0:03:34 At seven he joined a student exchange program in the United States where he took up his 59 0:03:34 --> 0:03:35 university studies. 60 0:03:35 --> 0:03:37 From there his path led to Switzerland. 61 0:03:37 --> 0:03:41 On a scholarship where he completed a degree in business economics and advanced or master's 62 0:03:41 --> 0:03:45 program from Switzerland, he moved to Venezuela where he lived for a year and experienced 63 0:03:45 --> 0:03:48 his first banking crisis in 1994. 64 0:03:48 --> 0:03:53 When nine of Venezuela's 16 largest banks failed and brought the country's economy to 65 0:03:53 --> 0:03:58 a grinding halt that year, he returned to his native Croatia and joined the military 66 0:03:58 --> 0:04:05 where he served through 1995 through the last phases of Croatia's war of independence. 67 0:04:05 --> 0:04:10 In 1996 upon discharge from the military he took employment at an oil trading company 68 0:04:10 --> 0:04:17 in Monaco, one thing led to another and 29 years later he's still in Monaco. 69 0:04:17 --> 0:04:23 In 2026 years ago Alex wound up his hedge fund's career and set up Crainer Analytics 70 0:04:23 --> 0:04:31 to provide turnkey portfolio solutions and trading decisions to support third party investment 71 0:04:31 --> 0:04:34 managers. 72 0:04:34 --> 0:04:35 Alex has published three books. 73 0:04:35 --> 0:04:43 In 2015 he published his first book titled Mastering Uncertainty in Commodities Trading 74 0:04:43 --> 0:04:46 and then his second. 75 0:04:46 --> 0:04:51 In 2017 he published Grand Deception and the Truth about Bill Browder and the Magnitsky 76 0:04:51 --> 0:04:53 Act. 77 0:04:53 --> 0:05:00 And then Alex in 2021 published Trend Following Bible which are free downloads. 78 0:05:00 --> 0:05:06 Can you put the website into the chat where we download it? 79 0:05:06 --> 0:05:08 Alex, where do we download it? 80 0:05:08 --> 0:05:13 He's got two publications on Substack, iSystem Trend Compass which is daily trend following 81 0:05:13 --> 0:05:17 newsletter and Alex Crainer's Substack. 82 0:05:18 --> 0:05:25 Everything is accessible free of charge except the trading signals which are behind a paywall. 83 0:05:25 --> 0:05:28 So Alex where do we download first? 84 0:05:28 --> 0:05:31 Well Charles I should explain that's my fault. 85 0:05:31 --> 0:05:39 So I couldn't, so when I tried to send the email with hyperlinks which Alex had supplied 86 0:05:39 --> 0:05:48 in his bio for some reason BT Internet, BT email tell me that unfortunately unable to 87 0:05:48 --> 0:05:52 send the email because of content. 88 0:05:52 --> 0:05:56 And I've had this problem before with hyperlinks so I don't know why that is. 89 0:05:56 --> 0:05:58 But yeah they're censoring me essentially. 90 0:05:58 --> 0:06:05 Yeah all right we got BT Internet you're in the UK so you are in the police now the police 91 0:06:05 --> 0:06:11 In fact we should call it the communist republic of the United Kingdom or the Marxist probably 92 0:06:11 --> 0:06:12 even better. 93 0:06:12 --> 0:06:15 Yeah it's not a bad enough name. 94 0:06:15 --> 0:06:20 Alex will put that in the thing and we will find it all the downloads that Alex wants 95 0:06:20 --> 0:06:23 us to have he can multitask. 96 0:06:23 --> 0:06:28 And Alex you are a co-host you can share your screen at will. 97 0:06:28 --> 0:06:34 We are in your proverbial hands. 98 0:06:35 --> 0:06:40 You are muted Alex unfortunately. 99 0:06:40 --> 0:06:44 Thank you thank you Charles for the great introduction. 100 0:06:44 --> 0:06:50 I knew you would shorten it by skipping the best parts but that's okay. 101 0:06:50 --> 0:06:57 So I will not share the screen I was going to prepared just a photo slide at the end 102 0:06:57 --> 0:07:03 of this but I couldn't find the files I had a few weeks ago a total disk wipeout and I 103 0:07:03 --> 0:07:10 suspect that maybe I lost the pictures there but I'll tell you what they are and you'll 104 0:07:10 --> 0:07:15 forgive me and you'll take my word for what I was going to show. 105 0:07:15 --> 0:07:23 Anyway so the subject I'm going to talk about is the coming Nazification of Europe because 106 0:07:23 --> 0:07:29 I thought a light topic would be appropriate for this Sunday. 107 0:07:29 --> 0:07:40 So I'll read my remarks so that I'm quick and concise and then we can have a discussion. 108 0:07:40 --> 0:07:46 The European economies are sliding into an ever deepening economic crisis. 109 0:07:46 --> 0:07:51 At the recent EU leaders summit in Cyprus Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico attacked 110 0:07:51 --> 0:07:58 Brussels over EU's energy policies that have made energy so expensive that normal businesses 111 0:07:58 --> 0:08:01 cannot survive. 112 0:08:01 --> 0:08:05 Fico simply laid out the common sense argument that when electricity prices are three to 113 0:08:05 --> 0:08:12 five times what they should be European businesses can compete their sales decline and they have 114 0:08:12 --> 0:08:15 to idle their production capacity. 115 0:08:15 --> 0:08:19 Those who can move their operations to countries with cheap energy like the United States or 116 0:08:19 --> 0:08:20 China do. 117 0:08:20 --> 0:08:26 Those who can't small and medium sized businesses may have no other option but to shut down 118 0:08:26 --> 0:08:29 operations and go out of business. 119 0:08:29 --> 0:08:32 The result is rising unemployment. 120 0:08:32 --> 0:08:38 The fact that Europe's economy is already on that declining trajectory is not an accident. 121 0:08:38 --> 0:08:43 It's not the result of well-intentioned but misguided policies. 122 0:08:43 --> 0:08:47 It's not even the result of policymakers incompetence. 123 0:08:47 --> 0:08:53 This is a deliberate plan to destroy Europe's prosperity, erode the living standards and 124 0:08:53 --> 0:08:59 create high levels of unemployment, particularly high youth unemployment. 125 0:08:59 --> 0:09:04 Europe's energy crisis is part of those deliberate policies going back about two decades. 126 0:09:04 --> 0:09:09 At first it was justified by environmental imperatives. 127 0:09:09 --> 0:09:14 After the incident of Fukushima, Germany decided to shut down all of its nuclear power plants 128 0:09:14 --> 0:09:23 and the last one was shut down almost exactly three years ago on 15 April 2023. 129 0:09:23 --> 0:09:29 To cut CO2 emissions and save the planet from global boiling, in 2020 Germany adopted the 130 0:09:29 --> 0:09:39 Coal Phase Out Act aiming at full cessation of coal-fired electricity production at the 131 0:09:39 --> 0:09:43 latest by 2038. 132 0:09:43 --> 0:09:50 To save us from the evil Russian hydrocarbons, huge sanctions have been imposed against Russia 133 0:09:50 --> 0:09:55 phasing out imports of crude oil, diesel and natural gas. 134 0:09:55 --> 0:10:00 To steal our results and make sure that nobody could change their mind, some mysterious someone 135 0:10:00 --> 0:10:07 blew up the Nord Stream pipelines supplying inexpensive Russian gas to Germany on 26 September 136 0:10:07 --> 0:10:08 2022. 137 0:10:09 --> 0:10:14 Furthermore, German authorities actively facilitated the blocking of other pipelines providing 138 0:10:14 --> 0:10:20 Russian gas, dimming any energy coming from Russia unworthy of German values or industry. 139 0:10:22 --> 0:10:28 This all had a predictable effect, a dramatic decline in German industrial production shutting 140 0:10:28 --> 0:10:34 down of many industrial facilities and many companies moving their operations overseas. 141 0:10:35 --> 0:10:43 I won't dwell on that because people have been following the news, this is not anything 142 0:10:43 --> 0:10:46 particularly new I'm revealing. 143 0:10:46 --> 0:10:51 If these policies and their predictable results were implemented deliberately then we must 144 0:10:51 --> 0:10:53 ask why? 145 0:10:53 --> 0:10:58 The reason is that prosperous people with good future prospects aren't keen on fighting 146 0:10:58 --> 0:10:59 wars. 147 0:11:00 --> 0:11:09 In his 1993 paper titled Toward the New World Order, the Future of NATO, George Soros wrote 148 0:11:09 --> 0:11:19 that quote, if NATO has any future at all, it is to project its power and influence into 149 0:11:19 --> 0:11:26 the region, by the region he meant Eastern Europe and former Soviet republics. 150 0:11:26 --> 0:11:32 However, since NATO member nations were the world's most advanced economies with a vibrant 151 0:11:32 --> 0:11:40 middle class and prosperous populations, Soros noted that quote, the risk of body bags for 152 0:11:40 --> 0:11:46 NATO countries was the main constraint on their willingness to act. 153 0:11:46 --> 0:11:52 The solution was simple enough, quote, the combination of manpower from Eastern Europe 154 0:11:52 --> 0:11:57 with the technical capabilities of NATO would greatly enhance the military potential of 155 0:11:57 --> 0:11:59 the partnership. 156 0:11:59 --> 0:12:05 In plain English, Soros was projecting the financier class willingness to fight the Russians 157 0:12:05 --> 0:12:09 to the last Eastern European. 158 0:12:09 --> 0:12:15 Over the ensuing years, Ukraine would be steadily weaponized for that exact purpose, which precluding 159 0:12:15 --> 0:12:21 allowing Ukraine to become an economically successful nation with a vibrant middle class 160 0:12:21 --> 0:12:24 and a prosperous population. 161 0:12:24 --> 0:12:29 Ukraine had to become an economic backwater and so it was arranged. 162 0:12:29 --> 0:12:38 Between 1991 and 2014, Ukraine's economy was the world's very worst performer. 163 0:12:38 --> 0:12:44 Its real GDP declined by over 35% over those 24 years. 164 0:12:44 --> 0:12:52 She was one of only five nations in the world whose GDP had negative growth. 165 0:12:52 --> 0:12:57 The circumstantial evidence that this was not the result of chance is that the second 166 0:12:57 --> 0:13:02 and third worst performing economies in the world over that period were also being prepared 167 0:13:02 --> 0:13:05 for similar roles against Russia. 168 0:13:05 --> 0:13:13 The second worst performer was Moldova with a 29% GDP decline and Georgia was third with 169 0:13:13 --> 0:13:17 negative 15% GDP growth. 170 0:13:17 --> 0:13:22 All three of these nations had been designated as strategic beachheads or proxies for future 171 0:13:22 --> 0:13:27 conflicts against Russia and all three achieved their economic success by following the advice 172 0:13:27 --> 0:13:32 of Western financial institutions and advisors. 173 0:13:32 --> 0:13:40 The 24 years between the collapse of the USSR in 1991 and 2014 comprised nothing but interminable 174 0:13:40 --> 0:13:44 rolling crises and a series of missed opportunities. 175 0:13:44 --> 0:13:54 For perspective, consider that in 1987, during the Soviet times, Ukraine's GDP was one fourth 176 0:13:54 --> 0:13:56 of that of China. 177 0:13:56 --> 0:14:01 By early 2015, it was one 80th. 178 0:14:01 --> 0:14:07 It's only when you reach 50% youth unemployment, deprive young people of ways to fulfill their 179 0:14:07 --> 0:14:14 aspirations, embark on meaningful careers, get married, set up homesteads and raise families 180 0:14:14 --> 0:14:19 that you can begin to radicalize them and encourage them to join far-right organizations 181 0:14:19 --> 0:14:22 and armed militias. 182 0:14:22 --> 0:14:27 That process took off in earnest after the coup in 2014 following a similar process that 183 0:14:27 --> 0:14:34 unfolded in Germany during the 1930s, although history has obscured some of the most pertinent 184 0:14:34 --> 0:14:38 lessons of that history. 185 0:14:38 --> 0:14:45 As Guido Giacomo Preparata wrote in his masterpiece, Conjuring Hitler, quote, a detailed analysis 186 0:14:45 --> 0:14:53 of the emergence of Nazism is generally shunned, so it seems, for it might reveal too much. 187 0:14:53 --> 0:15:00 In truth, it might disclose that the Nazis were never a creature of chance. 188 0:15:00 --> 0:15:08 For 15 years, from 1919 to 1933, the Anglo-Saxon elites tempered with the German politics with 189 0:15:08 --> 0:15:13 the conscience intent to obtain a reactionary movement, which they could then set up as 190 0:15:13 --> 0:15:17 a pawn for their geopolitical intrigues. 191 0:15:17 --> 0:15:24 Preparata clarified, quote, the Nazi movement owed its success to a general state of instability 192 0:15:24 --> 0:15:30 in Germany, which was wholly artificial, a wreckage engineered by the Anglo-American 193 0:15:30 --> 0:15:35 clubs themselves. 194 0:15:35 --> 0:15:40 Preparata explained that by clubs and elites, he meant the established and self-perpetuating 195 0:15:40 --> 0:15:45 fraternities that ruled the Anglo-Saxon Commonwealth. 196 0:15:45 --> 0:15:51 These were and still are formed by an aggregation of dynastic groups issued from the banking 197 0:15:52 --> 0:15:57 houses, the diplomatic corps, the officer caste, and the executive aristocracy, which 198 0:15:57 --> 0:16:06 still remains solidly entrenched in the constitutional fabric of modern democracies. 199 0:16:06 --> 0:16:14 One important testimony of that time was the book, The Vampire Economy, by a German financier, 200 0:16:14 --> 0:16:17 Gunter Reimann, published in 1939. 201 0:16:17 --> 0:16:24 Reimann, whose real name was Hans Steinecke, chronicled the dramatic changes to industrial 202 0:16:24 --> 0:16:27 structures under the Nazis. 203 0:16:27 --> 0:16:33 And I believe that some of this will sound eerily familiar to you. 204 0:16:33 --> 0:16:40 Reimann lamented, quote, the decline and ruin of the genuinely independent businessman who 205 0:16:40 --> 0:16:45 was the master of his enterprise and exercised his property rights. 206 0:16:45 --> 0:16:49 This type of capitalist is disappearing. 207 0:16:49 --> 0:17:03 Between 1933 and 1939, a nation of enterprises and small shopkeepers was converted to a corporate-dominated 208 0:17:03 --> 0:17:10 machine that gutted the middle class and cartelized industry in preparation for war. 209 0:17:10 --> 0:17:15 The Nazi party made itself the central regulator of all enterprises. 210 0:17:15 --> 0:17:20 They crushed independent family-owned small and medium-sized businesses in favor of large 211 0:17:20 --> 0:17:22 politically connected corporations. 212 0:17:22 --> 0:17:28 Of course, the small and medium-sized enterprises are the main engine of growth and employment 213 0:17:28 --> 0:17:31 in any market-oriented economy. 214 0:17:31 --> 0:17:36 Their destruction swelled the ranks of unemployed Germans, creating the dry tinder for the radicalization 215 0:17:37 --> 0:17:45 of the population, which gave rise to Ernst Röhm's Nazi storm troopers or the SA or brownshirts. 216 0:17:45 --> 0:17:49 Until 1930, there were only a few hundred of them. 217 0:17:49 --> 0:17:55 But in 1933, when Hitler took power, their ranks swelled to between two and three million. 218 0:17:55 --> 0:18:02 Going from a few hundred to two to three million brownshirts takes a lot of unemployed young men. 219 0:18:02 --> 0:18:05 It also takes a lot of capital and political power. 220 0:18:05 --> 0:18:09 Someone would have to fund this and see it through. 221 0:18:09 --> 0:18:12 Our next question is why? 222 0:18:12 --> 0:18:15 What is the purpose of the SA? 223 0:18:15 --> 0:18:16 What was the purpose of SA? 224 0:18:16 --> 0:18:22 Ostensibly, it was to restore order and oppose the communist movement in Germany, but their 225 0:18:22 --> 0:18:28 real purpose was to intimidate any opposition to the Nazi party and to terrorize the German 226 0:18:28 --> 0:18:31 population into submission. 227 0:18:31 --> 0:18:37 As we saw by 2014, Ukraine's economy was eviscerated. 228 0:18:37 --> 0:18:43 Its people and businesses had already been pushed to the limit and then some. 229 0:18:43 --> 0:18:53 More than 25% of Ukraine's population was living below the official poverty line, which 230 0:18:53 --> 0:19:01 corresponded to a monthly income of $127 or less, corresponding to only 52 cents per hour. 231 0:19:01 --> 0:19:07 In reality, the percentage of Ukrainians living in poverty was much higher since the average 232 0:19:07 --> 0:19:14 salary at the time was $131 or 54 cents per hour. 233 0:19:14 --> 0:19:21 Such crushing poverty is the fertile grounds for chaos, instability and radicalization. 234 0:19:21 --> 0:19:26 In a press conference on 8 March 2014, Vladimir Putin commented on the situation in Ukraine 235 0:19:26 --> 0:19:29 as follows, quote, 236 0:19:29 --> 0:19:33 You have to understand that this kind of chaos is the worst possible thing for countries 237 0:19:33 --> 0:19:38 with a shaky economy and unstable political system. 238 0:19:38 --> 0:19:44 In this kind of situation, you never know what kind of people events bring to the fore. 239 0:19:44 --> 0:19:49 Just recall, for example, the role that Erzström stormtroopers played during Hitler's rise 240 0:19:49 --> 0:19:51 to power. 241 0:19:51 --> 0:19:55 Later, these stormtroopers were liquidated, but they played their part in bringing Hitler 242 0:19:55 --> 0:19:57 to power. 243 0:19:57 --> 0:20:01 This can take all kinds of unexpected turns. 244 0:20:01 --> 0:20:06 And in fact, as late professor Stephen Cohen opined in 2018, quote, 245 0:20:06 --> 0:20:13 Kiev is semi-hostage to armed ultra-nationalist battalions whose ideology and symbols include 246 0:20:13 --> 0:20:20 proudly neo-fascist ones which hate Russia and today's Western civilizational values 247 0:20:20 --> 0:20:23 almost equally. 248 0:20:23 --> 0:20:31 These views were confirmed by Foreign Policy magazine in a March 2014 article titled Yes, 249 0:20:31 --> 0:20:34 There Are Bad Guys in the Ukrainian Government. 250 0:20:34 --> 0:20:41 Its author stated that a sizable portion of Kiev's current government are indeed fascists. 251 0:20:41 --> 0:20:48 Nazification of Ukraine was so blatant that even the supine EU parliament took notice. 252 0:20:48 --> 0:20:55 Early in December 2012, they denounced Svoboda party for its racist, anti-Semitic and xenophobic 253 0:20:55 --> 0:21:01 views which go against the EU's fundamentals, values and principles. 254 0:21:01 --> 0:21:08 In 2013, World Jewish Congress also denounced Svoboda as a neo-Nazi organization. 255 0:21:08 --> 0:21:15 The right sector party, if anything, was considered even more extremist than Svoboda. 256 0:21:15 --> 0:21:20 Unsurprisingly, an atmosphere of fear and persecution of Russian people and other minorities 257 0:21:20 --> 0:21:22 became pervasive in Ukraine. 258 0:21:22 --> 0:21:30 The media intensified a campaign of Russophobic hysteria giving ample space to sundry crusaders 259 0:21:30 --> 0:21:36 for a racially pure Ukraine who systematically dehumanized Russians calling them cockroaches, 260 0:21:36 --> 0:21:41 mosquitos, ogres, Colorado beetles and other derogatory names. 261 0:21:41 --> 0:21:49 The new Minister of Culture called the Russian speaker's imbeciles and proposed jailing them. 262 0:21:49 --> 0:21:54 Prime Minister Yatsenyuk referred to them as subhumans and his defense minister proposed 263 0:21:54 --> 0:21:57 putting them into filtration camps. 264 0:21:57 --> 0:22:03 Yatsenyuk's political patron, Yulia Tymoshenko, had a more radical solution in mind when she 265 0:22:03 --> 0:22:10 publicly mused about exterminating all Russians with nuclear weapons. 266 0:22:10 --> 0:22:18 I'm afraid that the same process we've seen in Germany in the 1930s and in Ukraine last decade 267 0:22:18 --> 0:22:22 is slowly taking shape in Europe today. 268 0:22:22 --> 0:22:26 We see steady economic decline in Europe which is hitting small and medium-sized enterprises 269 0:22:26 --> 0:22:29 and family-owned businesses the hardest. 270 0:22:29 --> 0:22:33 At the same time, hundreds of billions of dollars are being allocated to the military 271 0:22:33 --> 0:22:36 industrial complex. 272 0:22:36 --> 0:22:45 European politicians are all talking war and mobilizations and conscription is being planned in many countries. 273 0:22:45 --> 0:22:51 While the brown shirt movements are not yet on anybody's radar, they are being incubated. 274 0:22:51 --> 0:22:57 I had a few dozen photos of tiki torch marches in many European cities across Great Britain, 275 0:22:57 --> 0:23:04 the Netherlands, Germany, Poland, France, Italy, Austria, Hungary, Croatia and Spain. 276 0:23:04 --> 0:23:09 But unfortunately a few weeks ago I had a total disk wipeout and so I was not able to find them 277 0:23:09 --> 0:23:13 to share them with you today as visual proof. 278 0:23:13 --> 0:23:20 Anyway, at first when these groups are exposed to the public, their marches seem harmless and ordinary. 279 0:23:20 --> 0:23:27 The placards will say something that people can relate to, protecting Christians, dealing with the immigrants, 280 0:23:27 --> 0:23:31 restoring order or some such thing. 281 0:23:31 --> 0:23:37 But with time the most aggressive segments of these groups will deal with politicians, 282 0:23:37 --> 0:23:41 media editors, judges and anti-war activists. 283 0:23:41 --> 0:23:47 In later stages they will run the press gang groups kidnapping young men to send them to the front 284 0:23:47 --> 0:23:53 as we've seen in videos posted from Ukraine every day now. 285 0:23:53 --> 0:23:55 I believe that we must be vigilant. 286 0:23:55 --> 0:24:00 Over a million Ukrainians have been sacrificed in the occult oligarchy's war against Russia. 287 0:24:00 --> 0:24:08 In spite of the fact that the Russians did not want, that the Ukrainians did not want to fight. 288 0:24:08 --> 0:24:14 The fact that European populations aren't inclined to pick up arms should not make us complacent. 289 0:24:14 --> 0:24:22 We must watch for these developments and push back as if our children's lives were depending on it, because they do. 290 0:24:22 --> 0:24:25 And when I say that the oligarchy will never give up, 291 0:24:25 --> 0:24:31 I want to give you just a brief history about Western relations with Russia. 292 0:24:31 --> 0:24:38 So in June 1812 Napoleon led his 600,000 troops strong Grand Darmée to conquer Russia. 293 0:24:38 --> 0:24:45 It was the largest invasion force ever assembled and it was not a French invasion, only a French-led invasion. 294 0:24:45 --> 0:24:51 It brought together regiments from many European nations including France, Poland, Spain, Italy, Austria, Bavaria, 295 0:24:51 --> 0:24:56 Saxony, Westphalia, Netherlands, Croatia and Hungary. 296 0:24:56 --> 0:25:02 That didn't go so well and Napoleon's invasion disintegrated within six months. 297 0:25:02 --> 0:25:09 In June 1941 Hitler assembled a much larger invasion force, counting 3.8 million troops, 298 0:25:09 --> 0:25:16 3,600 tanks, 2,700 aircraft and tens of thousands of artillery pieces. 299 0:25:16 --> 0:25:23 Again, it was not a German invasion, but a German-led invasion, codenamed Operation Barbarossa. 300 0:25:23 --> 0:25:36 It contained troops from most European nations, Germany, Finland, Hungary, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Croatia, Spain, Italy, Austria, Romania and Bulgaria. 301 0:25:36 --> 0:25:42 Also Sweden, Netherlands and Belgium set their contingents. 302 0:25:43 --> 0:25:48 These were two of the largest invasions of Russia, but they were only two out of many. 303 0:25:50 --> 0:25:56 Other invasions took other forms and I will just give you a brief rundown from the beginning. 304 0:25:57 --> 0:26:02 Not really from the beginning, but let's say from the less controversial beginnings. 305 0:26:03 --> 0:26:09 First was the Polish-Slythuanian invasion in 1598 until 1613. 306 0:26:10 --> 0:26:15 This was during the times of troubles the invaders attempted to place a Polish king on the Russian throne. 307 0:26:16 --> 0:26:23 Polish forces managed to occupy Moscow from 1610 to 1612, but were ultimately driven out by Russian militias. 308 0:26:25 --> 0:26:30 Second, Swedish invasion of 1700 until 1721. 309 0:26:31 --> 0:26:36 The Great Northern War was led by Sweden's King Charles XII. 310 0:26:37 --> 0:26:42 His troops invaded Russia in 1708 and it ended the Battle of Poltava in 1709. 311 0:26:44 --> 0:26:51 Then there was the French invasion in 1812. Then there was Crimean War from 1853 through 1856. 312 0:26:52 --> 0:26:58 While this was not a full-scale invasion, it was another attack on Russia by a British-led coalition of the willing. 313 0:26:58 --> 0:27:01 It included French, Sardinian and Ottoman troops. 314 0:27:01 --> 0:27:08 Then there was World War I. Germany, together with Austria-Hungary, launched a major offensive against Russia on the Eastern Front. 315 0:27:10 --> 0:27:15 Then there was the Polish-Soviet War in 1919 through 1921. 316 0:27:16 --> 0:27:22 Poland once more attempted to invade Soviet Russia in an attempt to expand its territory and create a buffer zone. 317 0:27:23 --> 0:27:29 Then there was the Soviet Civil War from 1918 through 1922. 318 0:27:30 --> 0:27:37 Overlapping with World War I and the Polish invasion, Russia experienced a civil war during which tens of thousands of Western troops from Great Britain, 319 0:27:38 --> 0:27:44 United States, Poland, Czechoslovakia and Japan invaded Russia and helped stabilize the Bolshevik regime. 320 0:27:45 --> 0:27:53 To this day, Western history books falsely teach that Western troops attempted to help the Tsarist White forces against the Communist Reds, 321 0:27:54 --> 0:27:56 which was the official narrative at the time. 322 0:27:56 --> 0:28:01 In reality, Western troops consistently weakened the Whites and helped the Reds. 323 0:28:02 --> 0:28:07 Between seven and twelve million Russians died from combat famine and disease in those years. 324 0:28:09 --> 0:28:12 Then there was World War II, Operations Barbarossa. 325 0:28:12 --> 0:28:16 And then there was finally the 1990s transition to capitalism. 326 0:28:17 --> 0:28:23 This wasn't an invasion, but it was a successful insertion of a large toxic Trojan horse into Russia. 327 0:28:24 --> 0:28:30 Its effects were no different to a major war. Until Vladimir Putin took power, Russia was entirely ruled 328 0:28:31 --> 0:28:38 by Western financial interests through their appointed trustees, or as we know them today, Russia's oligarchs. 329 0:28:39 --> 0:28:44 The nation's GDP dropped by about 50 percent, even more than it did during World War II. 330 0:28:45 --> 0:28:51 According to World Bank, 74 million Russians, more than 50 percent of the population, 331 0:28:51 --> 0:28:59 lived in poverty and half of them, half of those people who lived in poverty, lived in destitute poverty. 332 0:29:00 --> 0:29:06 Russia's death rates increased by 60 percent to a level only experienced by countries at war. 333 0:29:07 --> 0:29:15 Surplus deaths during the 1990s were estimated at five to six million, between 3.4 and 4 percent 334 0:29:15 --> 0:29:20 of the total population of Russia. For perspective, consider that during the 335 0:29:20 --> 0:29:26 course of World War II, the United Kingdom lost 0.94 percent of its population, 336 0:29:27 --> 0:29:36 France lost 1.35 percent, China lost 1.89 percent, and the United States lost 0.32 percent. 337 0:29:39 --> 0:29:46 The last on this list should be the Ukraine War, which started in 2014 in reality, 338 0:29:47 --> 0:29:56 and is another attempt to destabilize and destroy Russia through a proxy of Ukraine. 339 0:29:58 --> 0:30:07 I'll end my remarks with a quote from Andrew Lobaczewski from his book, Political Ponerology, 340 0:30:07 --> 0:30:12 because it's relevant. It's a little bit lengthy, but I'll just take two minutes. 341 0:30:12 --> 0:30:14 I'll just take two minutes. 342 0:30:15 --> 0:30:23 Quote, thus, the biological, psychological, moral, and economic destruction of the majority 343 0:30:23 --> 0:30:31 of normal people becomes for the pathocrats a biological necessity. Many means serve this end, 344 0:30:31 --> 0:30:37 starting with concentration camps and including warfare with an obstinate, well-armed foe who will 345 0:30:37 --> 0:30:43 devastate and debilitate the human power thrown at him, namely the very power jeopardizing 346 0:30:43 --> 0:30:54 pathocrats rule. The sons of normal men sent out to fight an illusory noble cause. Once safely dead, 347 0:30:54 --> 0:31:01 the soldiers will then be decreed heroes to be revered in pants, useful for raising a new 348 0:31:01 --> 0:31:07 generation faithful to the pathocracy and even willing to go to their deaths to protect it. 349 0:31:09 --> 0:31:14 To encourage Britons into the ranks of cannon fodder, a certain degree of desperation, 350 0:31:14 --> 0:31:17 insecurity, and hunger will have to be engineered into the social mix. 351 0:31:18 --> 0:31:23 Thus, destruction of agriculture and food production are afoot. Tens of thousands of 352 0:31:23 --> 0:31:29 small and medium-sized businesses are on the verge of bankruptcy, and more than 1.4 million people 353 0:31:29 --> 0:31:33 in Britain have been disconnected from the energy grid in the middle of the winter 354 0:31:34 --> 0:31:39 because they can't afford to pay their bills. This is the developed nation whose government 355 0:31:39 --> 0:31:45 officials go around the world lecturing others about freedom, democracy, human rights, prosperity, 356 0:31:45 --> 0:31:54 and always our virtues. So the conclusion would be that we are now facing a social engineering 357 0:31:54 --> 0:32:02 process that might result in the populations of European nations like Great Britain, like Germany, 358 0:32:02 --> 0:32:14 Poland, France, Bulgaria, Hungary, and so forth to become weaponized again for a war against Russia, 359 0:32:15 --> 0:32:24 which is being planned for 2029-2030. This is openly being talked about. 360 0:32:31 --> 0:32:40 I will conclude with that and open for question and discussion. Thank you for your attention. 361 0:32:40 --> 0:32:48 Thank you, Alex. Good job. I point out, and you started with energy costs. 362 0:32:50 --> 0:32:56 Available and affordable electricity, Alex, as you well know, is the foundational difference 363 0:32:56 --> 0:33:02 between rich and poor countries. If you want to impoverish a country, you attack its energy supply, 364 0:33:03 --> 0:33:16 as we've heard many times in this group, that the whole climate fraud has been around restricting 365 0:33:16 --> 0:33:25 energy availability. So everyone, please understand that energy equals GDP. For those who had an audio 366 0:33:25 --> 0:33:31 problem, I discovered what my problem was, that I had my setting and just by the way, Jerry, if you 367 0:33:31 --> 0:33:36 want to play your guitar or Alex, if you want to play your guitar on Zoom, you have to change your 368 0:33:36 --> 0:33:44 audio settings. Tom, is it better now, my audio? Because on audio, if you want to play a guitar, 369 0:33:45 --> 0:33:52 you have a choice. You have a choice, everybody. When you click on audio, you have to pick 370 0:33:52 --> 0:33:58 on microphone modes. Noise removal is the normal. That's what I'm on now. But if you want to play 371 0:33:58 --> 0:34:03 musician, you click on original sound for musician. So there you are, Alex, when you want 372 0:34:03 --> 0:34:07 people to listen to you on Zoom playing your guitar, that's what you do. And I forgot to 373 0:34:07 --> 0:34:15 unclick it, Alex. So you guys didn't hear any of my guitar playing? We totally missed it. 374 0:34:17 --> 0:34:24 They were entertaining us and it wasn't there. Having met Charles up front, you know, having 375 0:34:24 --> 0:34:30 had a few points with him. Charles feels just as bad in the flesh as he does on the video, 376 0:34:30 --> 0:34:34 you know. He really does. I know it's hard to believe, but that's true. 377 0:34:36 --> 0:34:43 All right. And then last thing before we go to Stephen, Alex is home ownership. And you didn't, 378 0:34:43 --> 0:34:49 you touched on it a little bit. I was interested some months ago, JD Vance acknowledged the problem 379 0:34:49 --> 0:34:56 of youth not being able to buy homes, same problem here in Australia. And Robert Menzies 380 0:34:56 --> 0:35:03 was the Prime Minister of Australia from 1949 to 1966. And he got home ownership up to 78% 381 0:35:04 --> 0:35:10 of the population. And that was a deliberate policy, because countries that have high home ownership 382 0:35:10 --> 0:35:21 have definitely preferred success than countries with low home ownership. And the strategies that 383 0:35:21 --> 0:35:28 you raise, Alex, remind us that if young people can't buy homes and create a future, the state 384 0:35:28 --> 0:35:36 of hopelessness becomes real. One other data point that you might check. I was told by a genius, 385 0:35:36 --> 0:35:43 please write this down, Alex, and you might do some research on it. That quote everybody, 386 0:35:46 --> 0:35:58 the average age of decision makers in countries is dropping by 10 years every two years. 387 0:35:58 --> 0:35:59 In which countries? 388 0:36:00 --> 0:36:07 Every country, the average age of decision makers is dropping by 10 years every two years. So 389 0:36:07 --> 0:36:17 if it's 60 now, in 2028, it'll be 50. In 2030, it will be 40. And that ties into Alex's point. So 390 0:36:17 --> 0:36:24 this whole youth decision making age group, very interesting. And I also point out that Victor 391 0:36:24 --> 0:36:29 Orbán became Prime Minister of Hungary for the first time in 1998 when he was 37. 392 0:36:30 --> 0:36:41 1998, when he was 37 years of age, and he's 69. He was born in 1961. So he is 65 now, after 393 0:36:41 --> 0:36:48 that first four years and then 16 years. So Alex, that youth issue is a huge, huge 394 0:36:49 --> 0:36:57 demographic challenge that you bring to our attention. And I want all of you to think about 395 0:36:57 --> 0:37:03 it and think about it. And JD Vance said, we have to do something about housing affordability for 396 0:37:03 --> 0:37:09 youth. Alex, any thoughts before we go to Stephen? Yeah, Charles, this quote that you just told us, 397 0:37:09 --> 0:37:13 dropping by 10 years every two years, where's that from? Where'd you get it? 398 0:37:13 --> 0:37:19 I will give you that source. A wonderful, genius researcher in Australia, 83 year old 399 0:37:19 --> 0:37:26 futurist called Colin Benjamin. But Charles, it's been rubbish because by 2038. Stephen, 400 0:37:27 --> 0:37:32 don't tell us that something that I say is rubbish from a good resource. Do not dare do that. 401 0:37:32 --> 0:37:40 The researchers. Sorry, what is a decision maker? Only a wife. So wives are getting younger. 402 0:37:40 --> 0:37:45 Let's face it, you know that Charles. Very good. Very good. Very good. Very good. 403 0:37:47 --> 0:37:54 So Alex, that's the source of it. I will get some more for you offline. Okay. Yes. 404 0:37:56 --> 0:38:04 So and the decision, the decision makers are clearly the wives, Jerry. So we are mere puppets 405 0:38:04 --> 0:38:12 in the hands of others. Alex, anything else before we go to Stephen? Well, no, I mean, 406 0:38:13 --> 0:38:18 let's have a discussion because this is something I could go on literally forever because it's a 407 0:38:18 --> 0:38:27 huge subject. And I've gone into really minute detail about how all this has happened in Ukraine. 408 0:38:28 --> 0:38:36 And then in the less minute detail about how it happened in Germany. But, you know, the problem is 409 0:38:39 --> 0:38:44 how do you convey it in 20 minutes in a 20 minute thing? So I better not, 410 0:38:44 --> 0:38:50 we better go into questions and answers and then some of this stuff will come out. Beautiful. 411 0:38:51 --> 0:38:57 All right. So thank you for that overview. Excellent overview, Stephen, for the next 15 minutes. 412 0:38:58 --> 0:39:06 So Alex, as I see it, the age of so-called decision makers is dropping, but it can't be dropping 10 413 0:39:06 --> 0:39:18 years every two years. So because then it would be 2026 is 60, 2028, 50, 2030 it'd be 40, 2032 414 0:39:18 --> 0:39:29 it'd be 30, 2034 it'd be 20, 2036 it'd be 10. And by 2038 we'd have decision makers zero years old. 415 0:39:29 --> 0:39:33 So it's just nonsense. And that's why I said it was nonsense because if you understand maths 416 0:39:33 --> 0:39:39 or arithmetic, you see that immediately. So when you said it, Charles, I thought that's crazy 417 0:39:39 --> 0:39:44 research. You know, it's nonsense anyway. So that's not against you, Charles, but it's against the 418 0:39:44 --> 0:39:51 stupid research that you're quoting. So anyway, Alex, thank you so much for speaking to us. 419 0:39:52 --> 0:39:59 I just wonder, so the whole thing about natification of Europe is a continuation 420 0:39:59 --> 0:40:07 or a parallel policy, shall we say, to COVID to kind of make people despair, essentially, 421 0:40:07 --> 0:40:14 to take them away from their possibilities as human beings and to kind of weaponize them 422 0:40:14 --> 0:40:20 for the system, for the warring system. And they're going to wage war on Russia. Can I ask you, 423 0:40:21 --> 0:40:25 what do you mean by waging war on Russia? Do you mean just kind of sending a few rockets over there 424 0:40:25 --> 0:40:34 or are they intending to invade? No, no, I mean, all out war, all out war. You know, a kind of 425 0:40:34 --> 0:40:43 exactly what's going on in Ukraine now, but on a wider front. Kind of like a big war on the European 426 0:40:43 --> 0:40:50 continent. But Alex, so I'm not very good about war, you know, but it seems to me that if you wage 427 0:40:50 --> 0:40:57 war on Russia, is your intention to invade Russia, you know, eventually take over the whole of Russia, 428 0:40:58 --> 0:41:04 six and a half million square miles? Or is it just to kind of do what Ukraine's doing, you know, 429 0:41:04 --> 0:41:10 allegedly defending its territory? But, you know, apparently some people believe that 430 0:41:11 --> 0:41:18 Ukraine can actually defeat Russia, which is nonsense, in my opinion. So can you just? 431 0:41:18 --> 0:41:29 Well, let's say that on the face of it, the whole thing would seem so idiotic and so stupid that 432 0:41:30 --> 0:41:37 reasonable people shouldn't try to do that, you know, because if they invaded Russia in 1941 with 433 0:41:37 --> 0:41:47 3.8 million troops, and you know, it wasn't just 3.8 million troops. Within a year, the number of 434 0:41:47 --> 0:41:56 troops swelled to 6 million. Today, we couldn't even dream about putting together 60,000 troops 435 0:41:56 --> 0:42:04 to invade Russia, right? So it would seem like a completely idiotic idea. But it seems to me that 436 0:42:04 --> 0:42:14 two important objectives are pursued. One of them is to slaughter as many fighting-age males of the 437 0:42:14 --> 0:42:22 European populations as possible. And two is to keep the war going as long as possible. 438 0:42:23 --> 0:42:26 Because the idea is, of course, you cannot invade Russia and conquer it. 439 0:42:28 --> 0:42:37 But what you can try to do is weaken Russia and then try to affect regime change 440 0:42:37 --> 0:42:43 so that you can install some kind of a Vladimir Zelensky in the Kremlin. 441 0:42:45 --> 0:42:51 And the reason why they need to slaughter a lot of fighting-age males of European descent 442 0:42:52 --> 0:43:04 is because our system is imploding. Our systems are falling apart. They first need an enemy for 443 0:43:05 --> 0:43:12 social cohesion. But then they also need, you know, always throughout history in these oligarchic 444 0:43:15 --> 0:43:20 colonialist regimes that emanated from European financial capitals, 445 0:43:20 --> 0:43:39 generally the rule led to mayhem abroad, misery at home. And when things get really miserable at home, 446 0:43:40 --> 0:43:46 you have social uprisings. You have risk of revolution. You have risk of civil wars. 447 0:43:46 --> 0:43:54 And of course, your most significant source of risk are fighting-age males. So what you do then, 448 0:43:54 --> 0:44:02 and this has been going on since the Roman times, is the oligarchy says, barbarians at the gate. 449 0:44:04 --> 0:44:12 And then they get all the fighting-age males to go and defend their homes, which is, you know, 450 0:44:13 --> 0:44:21 the patriotic duty that men always fall for because, you know, they tell us stories about, 451 0:44:22 --> 0:44:26 oh, they're going to come, they're going to rape our women, they're going to sack our villages and 452 0:44:26 --> 0:44:33 towns, they're going to enslave our children or kill them. So, you know, the whole propaganda 453 0:44:33 --> 0:44:42 machine ramps up and gets the men to volunteer to go to fight wars. But if they don't want to, 454 0:44:42 --> 0:44:50 then they're forced to go. And so I understand that you're asking question because the whole 455 0:44:50 --> 0:45:01 thing seems completely stupid, and it is, but I think that even this oligarchy that's ruling over 456 0:45:01 --> 0:45:07 us, I think they're quite stupid, but they're not that stupid. They understand that they can't 457 0:45:07 --> 0:45:16 conquer Russia militarily. They just need the war to keep going, get rid of the men, 458 0:45:17 --> 0:45:24 and bleed Russia dry because hopefully at some point the government will fall, 459 0:45:25 --> 0:45:34 and we're going to slip in our own Zelensky, Juan Guaidó, whoever, Shahrez Apahlavi, whoever's available. 460 0:45:37 --> 0:45:42 I think that's the point. That's the, that's the course. So, Alex, I've already had this chance in 461 0:45:42 --> 0:45:53 1991, so why did they mess it up? Well, in 1991, they went in, Stephen, they went in, they put their 462 0:45:53 --> 0:46:01 guy in the Kremlin. His name was Boris Yeltsin. Boris Yeltsin was surrounded by Western advisors, 463 0:46:02 --> 0:46:09 and virtually the whole of Russia's economy was controlled by a handful of oligarchs. 464 0:46:10 --> 0:46:19 That period was called the rule of seven bankers, and all seven were trustees of people like George 465 0:46:19 --> 0:46:35 Soros, Edmund Safra, Jacob Rothschild, and so forth. That was the period when Russia 466 0:46:35 --> 0:46:43 almost completely disintegrated. This is the period that I described in 1991, when they lost 467 0:46:43 --> 0:46:55 half of their GDP, when mortality increased by 60 percent, life expectancy for men shrank to 57 years, 468 0:46:56 --> 0:47:00 half the population was poverty, quarter of the population was in destitute poverty, 469 0:47:01 --> 0:47:08 and the whole country was a failed state. And then came Vladimir Putin. But remember, at that time, 470 0:47:08 --> 0:47:18 we were not... Western powers loved Boris Yeltsin. Clinton was there very often. He would laugh and 471 0:47:19 --> 0:47:26 joke around with Boris Yeltsin. Everybody loved him. He was the Democrat. He was reforming Russia. 472 0:47:27 --> 0:47:34 Russia was going to become a wonderful civilized state, part of the West, and so forth, 473 0:47:34 --> 0:47:40 except that was all a lie. Russia was turning into a colony of Western capital. 474 0:47:41 --> 0:47:46 When Vladimir Putin came to power, the average monthly salary in Russia was $57. 475 0:47:52 --> 0:48:02 What Putin did, which ticked off the Western oligarchs, the real ones, not the trustees in 476 0:48:02 --> 0:48:10 Russia, was that he lined up all his oligarchs almost immediately after he came to power within 477 0:48:10 --> 0:48:16 a few months, and he told them new rules of the game. Keep your businesses, make your money, 478 0:48:17 --> 0:48:22 but you have to pay your taxes correctly, and you have to stay out of politics. And they didn't like 479 0:48:22 --> 0:48:32 that. And so this fight between Putin and the oligarchs went on for a few years. And then in 2003, 480 0:48:37 --> 0:48:44 Mikhail Khodorkovsky, who was the trustee for Jacob Rothschild and the wealthiest of the Russian 481 0:48:44 --> 0:48:51 bankers, he tried to challenge Putin politically, and he ended up in prison. And he stayed in 482 0:48:51 --> 0:49:00 prison for nine years. And so from that point on, Putin became public enemy number one for the West. 483 0:49:01 --> 0:49:09 And we've been having 24-7 demonization of Vladimir Putin in the Western media. 484 0:49:09 --> 0:49:17 And this situation has kind of escalated to where we are now. They tried to take 485 0:49:18 --> 0:49:25 down Putin to regime change the country through the proxy war through Ukraine. 486 0:49:25 --> 0:49:33 That didn't really work. They're about to run out of the last Ukrainian. And so they have now 487 0:49:33 --> 0:49:42 began the process of social engineering to do with European countries what they have done with 488 0:49:42 --> 0:49:50 Ukraine before. That is to weaponize them, to destroy the economy, to create high-youth 489 0:49:50 --> 0:49:57 unemployment, to radicalize the youth. And then at some point, how do you call it? 490 0:50:00 --> 0:50:05 You start building the cause for war. And usually you might need a false flag attack of some sort, 491 0:50:05 --> 0:50:11 like some sort of a 9-11. Blame it on Russia and say, okay, now we have to all go to war because 492 0:50:11 --> 0:50:18 the Russians attacked us. Look what they did to us. Blah, blah, blah. You know, what Desmet would call 493 0:50:23 --> 0:50:30 mass formation psychosis. Mass formation, yeah. Yeah. So that is probably planned 494 0:50:30 --> 0:50:36 at some point in the future, but they can't do it quite yet because it would dissipate until 2030. 495 0:50:37 --> 0:50:44 But Alex, so I can understand that you really understand this, you know. But I think that 496 0:50:45 --> 0:50:50 I've only got a couple of minutes left to ask this question. So I just wanted to say that 497 0:50:51 --> 0:51:00 so essentially the West bled through Western interests, bled Russia dry. And it was so bad 498 0:51:00 --> 0:51:08 that they kind of, that Putin came along because he was necessary for Russia. So he came along and in 499 0:51:08 --> 0:51:16 2003, he imprisoned this guy who had loads of money and was working for the West, essentially, 500 0:51:16 --> 0:51:23 as I see it. And then the tide began to turn. They didn't like that. But it seems to me that the West 501 0:51:24 --> 0:51:31 are so damned corrupt, you know, they bleed Russia dry in 1991 and they do it throughout the 502 0:51:31 --> 0:51:38 90s and early 2000s. And then they are not happy when Putin comes along and exposes them. But the 503 0:51:38 --> 0:51:47 greed and the corruption was always going to result in someone rising up in Russia like Putin. 504 0:51:47 --> 0:51:55 So why is it of such great interest? Is it just that they want a war going on and on and on 505 0:51:55 --> 0:52:02 because that makes money for the weapons dealers or whatever, you know? Or is it because they want to 506 0:52:03 --> 0:52:10 destabilise Russia in the long term? They don't like it succeeding, if you like. So, but every 507 0:52:10 --> 0:52:19 country has a right to exist, I would say. And this policy that you say Europe is pursuing is just 508 0:52:20 --> 0:52:25 absolutely crazy. And we need to, so what do we do about it, Alex? 509 0:52:27 --> 0:52:32 Oh, what do we do about it? I think that, well, you know, that when they say price of freedom is 510 0:52:32 --> 0:52:37 eternal vigilance, I think that we have to be extremely vigilant, because these things are 511 0:52:37 --> 0:52:43 going to be happening. We're probably in the initial stages of the social engineering process. 512 0:52:44 --> 0:52:49 And what we can see now is hundreds of billions of dollars being allocated to the military industrial 513 0:52:49 --> 0:52:57 complex, economy being completely destroyed. We see our politicians talking about conscription, 514 0:52:57 --> 0:53:03 about going to war. But we have to also watch out for these brown shirt movements, because they, 515 0:53:03 --> 0:53:09 in the end, are going to lead to a radical change, meaning you're not going to be able, 516 0:53:11 --> 0:53:18 they're going to attack opposition with violence. They're going to saw terror in societies. 517 0:53:19 --> 0:53:31 You know, when this was going on in Ukraine, you had about 30 or so of these far right neo-Nazi 518 0:53:31 --> 0:53:38 battalions or groups that were formed, that were funded by private capital, almost all of them. 519 0:53:40 --> 0:53:43 And they would attack anti-war activists, they would attack peace activists. 520 0:53:45 --> 0:53:54 The activists of the members of the C14 group, one of these far right neo-Nazi groups, 521 0:53:55 --> 0:54:04 attacked at one point and tried to kill one of the anti-war activists in Ukraine. 522 0:54:05 --> 0:54:13 So you completely silence opposition to war. So I think that we need to be prepared for this. 523 0:54:14 --> 0:54:24 We need to be finding out who is funding this, because you know, the people who pull the trigger 524 0:54:24 --> 0:54:31 are the smaller problem. The bigger problem are people who are paying them. And this is not just 525 0:54:31 --> 0:54:38 Europe, you know, this is going on in the United States. And we know that it's been European 526 0:54:38 --> 0:54:43 billionaires who have been funding these no-king protests, for example, in the United States. 527 0:54:47 --> 0:54:53 There's a whole bunch of these non-government organizations that are funding 528 0:54:54 --> 0:55:02 you know, Antifa. There's a lot of these organizations, Black Lives Matter and so forth. 529 0:55:03 --> 0:55:08 So it's always coming from the financial oligarchy somehow, but it's going through NGOs. 530 0:55:09 --> 0:55:17 It's also going through international organizations because they are exempt, 531 0:55:17 --> 0:55:20 they have legal immunities in most countries. 532 0:55:24 --> 0:55:30 Organization like World Health Organization, right? They're immune. They are not, you know, 533 0:55:30 --> 0:55:38 you can do nothing against them legally. But you also have organizations to fight racism, 534 0:55:38 --> 0:55:43 to fight... They always give them these names that people say like, oh, you know, 535 0:55:44 --> 0:55:51 this is a worthy cause. But when they go out and fight racism, very often they instigate racism, 536 0:55:51 --> 0:56:00 they instigate polarization between different groups. They end up funding like armed wings 537 0:56:00 --> 0:56:08 of organizations like Black Lives Matter. And this all passes under the radar as, oh, we're just 538 0:56:08 --> 0:56:16 trying to fight racism. And so we're going to have the same thing happen among us. I think that the 539 0:56:16 --> 0:56:23 start is talking about it, paying attention to what's going on, calling out what's going on and 540 0:56:23 --> 0:56:34 not falling for, you know, when you see Tiki Torch marches with placards that say, protecting the 541 0:56:34 --> 0:56:40 family integrity or saving the Christian traditions or something like that. You have to understand 542 0:56:40 --> 0:56:49 that these Tiki Torch marches in the end end up press gangs that will kidnap men and send them to 543 0:56:49 --> 0:57:00 the front. So Alex, I think you, you know, you've spoken so fantastically tonight and previously, 544 0:57:00 --> 0:57:07 but I think you probably have the ability to write a kind of history of what you think has 545 0:57:07 --> 0:57:15 happened, you know, in the lead up to 1989 and 1991 and what has happened since. So you've kind of 546 0:57:15 --> 0:57:22 woken me up to what's going on. And it all makes sense. It's all connected. And you know, you can 547 0:57:22 --> 0:57:29 see the COVID thing. It's all about COVID was part of it. Absolutely. Yeah. And also the climate 548 0:57:29 --> 0:57:35 change nonsense, you know, and so much more. So nothing makes sense. And I think that what they're 549 0:57:35 --> 0:57:44 doing, they're deliberately creating this nothing makes sense atmosphere so that people are willing 550 0:57:44 --> 0:57:52 to join cults and essentially destroy themselves as human beings. Yes. And so I think this can be 551 0:57:52 --> 0:57:58 explained, you know, quite simply in simple words, and it needs to be explained because only by 552 0:57:58 --> 0:58:08 educating people as to the broad brush things which are going on in our lives now will people 553 0:58:08 --> 0:58:14 begin to understand that actually the fact that they can't afford a house in the UK, for example, 554 0:58:14 --> 0:58:24 young people is part of the plan. But the point that needs to be made is the people who have these 555 0:58:24 --> 0:58:31 plans have no regard for human beings. And they don't care about human beings. They don't even 556 0:58:31 --> 0:58:37 care about their own families, their own children, their own grandchildren. And it's all- 557 0:58:37 --> 0:58:43 Well, Stephen, they're saying they want to create a different species. They already talk about us 558 0:58:43 --> 0:58:48 as hackable animals. Yes, but we need to discredit these people. So people like George Soros, you know, 559 0:58:48 --> 0:58:53 a lot of people don't understand. It's not just him. There are loads of others, you know, and they 560 0:58:53 --> 0:59:00 are willing to do anything in their pursuit of money, influence, power, sex, yeah, anything. 561 0:59:01 --> 0:59:08 Yes. Thank you so much. Thank you, Stephen. All right. Well done, Stephen. We've got lots of hands up. 562 0:59:08 --> 0:59:16 So the speed with which we get through these, Alex, will depend on the speed of your responses, 563 0:59:16 --> 0:59:22 but don't cut them short because you're, you know, don't stress about that. And thank you. 564 0:59:22 --> 0:59:32 Gerry, you're next from downtown Ireland, everybody. Hi, Alex. I'm Gerry Waters. I always feel when I 565 0:59:32 --> 0:59:37 command this, I have to introduce myself because unlike you, I've never been asked to present on 566 0:59:37 --> 0:59:43 this particular forum, you know, and in spite of the fact that I feel I'm an expert, I'm the expert 567 0:59:43 --> 0:59:51 in the world on COVID. And the reason I say that is I had 40 years experience as a GP. And then when 568 0:59:51 --> 0:59:58 COVID was actually introduced as a psych op, I recognized it as a psych op. I instantly 569 0:59:59 --> 1:00:05 recognized as a psych op. And that has been proven statistically that I was right. Unfortunately, 570 1:00:05 --> 1:00:09 I was rejected by pretty much everybody, including the people on my side of the battle. 571 1:00:09 --> 1:00:17 I was ostracized by everybody, by the people who wanted to go down the road of hydroxychloroquine 572 1:00:17 --> 1:00:24 and the various miracle drugs. However, that's not what I want to complain about. That's just 573 1:00:24 --> 1:00:32 my little personal gripe. I watched you and Professor Jiang coincidentally two days ago. 574 1:00:33 --> 1:00:40 That was two hours and 10 minutes you took from my life. Unfortunately, I don't want it back 575 1:00:40 --> 1:00:48 because it was brilliant. It was truly a brilliant piece of work. He's obviously highly intelligent 576 1:00:49 --> 1:00:58 and informed, which made you bookends, you know. You obviously got on very well with him. He's 577 1:00:58 --> 1:01:06 quite a guy, isn't he? Yes, yes, yes. But what you were talking about is this war as Charles 578 1:01:06 --> 1:01:13 every week introduces this meeting about being at war. And there's a question of the question 579 1:01:13 --> 1:01:20 all of us is asked, it's asked of me, who are they? Who are they? You know, we talk about they do this 580 1:01:20 --> 1:01:30 and they do that. And as I say, who are they? They are obviously the Bill Gates, the Soros, the 581 1:01:31 --> 1:01:38 Schwab. In Ireland, we've got Leo Veradker, we've got Macron, we've got the various, the Obamas, 582 1:01:38 --> 1:01:43 the Clintons, you know, the elites. It doesn't really matter who they are. They are a group of 583 1:01:43 --> 1:01:51 people. And when I went into college in the early 70s, I started, I had a major debate with 584 1:01:51 --> 1:01:57 who personally turned out to be the Irish president, Michael D Higgins on communism 585 1:01:57 --> 1:02:02 and socialism. And the object, I was always a contrarian. It didn't really matter what 586 1:02:03 --> 1:02:09 the topic was. I was on the other side, but I was against, you know, socialism and communism. 587 1:02:09 --> 1:02:15 I was against global cooling for 10 years until they switched to global warming. I was against 588 1:02:15 --> 1:02:21 global warming for 30 years until they switched to climate change. I'm against climate change. 589 1:02:21 --> 1:02:28 And then, lo and behold, it came COVID, as I say, a psych-op. It was all run by the same people, 590 1:02:29 --> 1:02:35 by the same cartel. And this is what yourself and Prof. Jiang, as I remember, were saying, 591 1:02:36 --> 1:02:44 that it's, this is a battle. Now, the point I'm trying to make is COVID is the bridge too far. 592 1:02:45 --> 1:02:52 That is the one we can get them on, because it affects and directly affects, and can be proven 593 1:02:52 --> 1:03:00 to affect billions of people, literally tens of millions, hundreds of millions of people. 594 1:03:01 --> 1:03:08 It's very hard to get them on global warming, global cooling, climate change. It's even difficult 595 1:03:08 --> 1:03:14 to get them on, you know, many of the wars that the cause is across the world. But I firmly believe 596 1:03:14 --> 1:03:18 that we should concentrate. But, you know, again, I would do, wouldn't I, because I'm a medical doctor. 597 1:03:20 --> 1:03:25 And as I say, I'm somewhat an expert on COVID, because I've read nothing else, 598 1:03:26 --> 1:03:34 well, apart from listening to you, over the last couple of years, COVID is the bridge too far. 599 1:03:35 --> 1:03:43 And I think that should be pushed. It's coming out statistically that COVID killed nobody 600 1:03:43 --> 1:03:51 during 2020. What killed people was neglect, mandated neglect, pneumonia. We as GPs were paid 601 1:03:51 --> 1:03:59 to send people home, to do telephone consultations and send patients home, to sit in one room. 602 1:04:00 --> 1:04:06 The absolute ideal milieu for pneumonia. Sitting around doing nothing with an 603 1:04:06 --> 1:04:13 upper-aspiratory tract infection. Terrified. The fluids don't drain. You know, in a hospital, 604 1:04:13 --> 1:04:19 people get in physiotherapy. If you tell people to sit, you'll get what I refer to as mandated 605 1:04:19 --> 1:04:23 neglect pneumonia. And that's what people are dying of. And then when they went in with the 606 1:04:24 --> 1:04:32 hoax PCR test, they were treated as if they had a viral pneumonia. You don't get a viral pneumonia, 607 1:04:32 --> 1:04:40 you get a viral pneumonitis. The point really is, the major blunder they made, the bridge too far, 608 1:04:41 --> 1:04:48 was in fact COVID. And I think more people like you should be pushing that. I know you mentioned 609 1:04:48 --> 1:04:58 it on that chat two days ago. But overall, you know, as I say, I would as a doctor, push this. 610 1:04:59 --> 1:05:07 But that's really where we, more people should be pushing and more people who actually know the 611 1:05:07 --> 1:05:16 subject. Not the Paddy Cumb Lately's who got their vaccines and then suddenly turned, you know, into, 612 1:05:16 --> 1:05:26 you know, into disciples. I accept those people. But some of us in February of 2020 got it and 613 1:05:26 --> 1:05:32 argued. And I've got it documented. My arguments are documented in the Irish High Court. That in 614 1:05:33 --> 1:05:40 February, March 2020, I was arguing that in fact there was nothing there. And there was nothing 615 1:05:40 --> 1:05:47 there. So that's the point. That, you know, if we're going to go after them, whoever they are, 616 1:05:49 --> 1:05:54 that was the bridge too far. That was the mistake they made. And if we let that slip, 617 1:05:55 --> 1:05:59 if we let that slip and don't attack them on what I consider the weakest point, 618 1:06:00 --> 1:06:08 we'll be making a mistake. Sorry about all that. Why are you sorry? Well, because I keep going on. 619 1:06:08 --> 1:06:14 I can see Stephen is about to tell me to ask a question, you know. 620 1:06:16 --> 1:06:21 Well, you know, I think that COVID was brilliant because it opened many, many people's eyes. 621 1:06:21 --> 1:06:29 Yes. Yes. I also was convinced from day zero that it was a hoax because I've paid attention to 622 1:06:29 --> 1:06:37 this pandemic since about 2003. You know, we had SARS and MERS and. Yeah, that was 09. 623 1:06:39 --> 1:06:44 Swine flu in 2009 was terrible. And they came up with a stupid 624 1:06:47 --> 1:06:53 Pfizer. Yeah, I wouldn't let the vaccine into my clinic. I wouldn't allow it into my clinic. 625 1:06:53 --> 1:06:59 I told my staff to refuse it at the door. Right. It would deliver it to all clinics. 626 1:06:59 --> 1:07:04 So I think the good thing is that and I have written a few articles about that and I wrote an 627 1:07:04 --> 1:07:11 article. You know, the only important article that I wrote about it was that it's the bankers who 628 1:07:11 --> 1:07:16 are behind it. There's no doubt about that. Yeah. So, you know, I hear you mentioned 629 1:07:16 --> 1:07:26 a number of politicians and Varadkar and, you know, there's many, many, many, but they are all, 630 1:07:27 --> 1:07:30 you know, the executive class, the managerial class. 631 1:07:33 --> 1:07:41 Wherever you see you find human blood flowing in rivers, one name always comes up and that's 632 1:07:41 --> 1:07:50 the Rothschilds. Yeah. They turn up with, well, they were the employees of Jeffrey Epstein. 633 1:07:50 --> 1:07:57 So all the shit that Epstein was doing, he was the manager, but they were the people who were 634 1:07:57 --> 1:08:04 paying him. So they're up to their eyeballs in Russia. They're up to their eyeballs in 635 1:08:05 --> 1:08:12 Ukraine. They're up to their eyeballs in Iran. They're up to their eyeballs in Gaza and Lebanon. 636 1:08:13 --> 1:08:23 And the list goes on and on and on. And so, you know, I traced the problem that we are facing to 637 1:08:23 --> 1:08:30 the monetary system before I knew who was behind it. And the monetary system is exactly the shackles 638 1:08:30 --> 1:08:38 that are, because look at what they do to people. They, how do you call it? They sanction them. 639 1:08:39 --> 1:08:44 By countries? No, no, no, no, countries, people. They're now sanctioning people, 640 1:08:45 --> 1:08:53 which means that if they decide to sanction Dr. Jerry Waters, tomorrow you can go to your bank, 641 1:08:53 --> 1:08:57 you can no longer receive any money, you can no longer pay a single bill, you cannot buy food. 642 1:08:58 --> 1:09:05 You are, this is like modern form of ostracism. And that means that your life is basically ended. 643 1:09:05 --> 1:09:10 You cannot get a job, you cannot work, you cannot do anything. And even people who are dependent 644 1:09:10 --> 1:09:17 on you are screwed. You know, if you had children to raise, you would not be able to provide for 645 1:09:17 --> 1:09:24 them anymore. It's the banks who are doing it. It's not a court case. It's not a, they don't 646 1:09:24 --> 1:09:29 like accuse you of a crime, then inform you of the accusations, then give you a chance to defend 647 1:09:29 --> 1:09:36 yourself. Then a judge or a jury decides according to law. No, the Council of Europe simply puts you 648 1:09:36 --> 1:09:43 on the list and now you're done. There's no recourse. It doesn't expire. It's not for one year, 649 1:09:43 --> 1:09:48 for two years, for six months, for 10 years, you're done. You're over and you have no recourse. 650 1:09:49 --> 1:09:55 Many people have been debanked in the UK, thousands of people in fact, same thing. 651 1:09:57 --> 1:10:05 Many people have been debanked in the United States. This all directly goes to bankers because 652 1:10:05 --> 1:10:13 the fact that banks execute the punishment like that without having to ask for a legal sanction, 653 1:10:14 --> 1:10:18 why are we punishing this person? What have they done wrong? No, no, they just do it. 654 1:10:19 --> 1:10:26 It means that they've created already this matrix and we're caught. But guess what? Exit is really 655 1:10:26 --> 1:10:35 easy. If you know that your cage is your bank account, you can take your money out of the bank 656 1:10:35 --> 1:10:43 account, keep it at home in cash, or you can convert it to gold, silver or whatever seems 657 1:10:43 --> 1:10:49 to make sense. Then you can trade with your neighbors, people in your community and get 658 1:10:49 --> 1:10:56 what you need and provide them what they need and they'll pay you in cash or silver coins or 659 1:10:56 --> 1:11:03 whatever. That's the way out. What happens very spontaneously in human societies, always through 660 1:11:03 --> 1:11:10 history, is that people when they walk out, in Rome they were walking out, there were famous 661 1:11:10 --> 1:11:18 walkouts when the regime got too oppressive, people would just walk out. People form black and gray 662 1:11:18 --> 1:11:24 markets and the government will not be able to control it because if it's just a couple of guys 663 1:11:24 --> 1:11:29 breaking the law, they will try to make an example of them. Whereas there's a whole percentage of 664 1:11:29 --> 1:11:35 people trading on the black markets. They lost control and there's nothing you can do today. 665 1:11:35 --> 1:11:40 About half of the GDP of Argentina is transacted on black markets, not because the government 666 1:11:40 --> 1:11:45 likes it and allows it, but because there's nothing they can do about it. So that's the way out. 667 1:11:46 --> 1:11:53 I totally agree with you. When you talk about money, it goes back to the 15th of August 1971, 668 1:11:53 --> 1:11:59 when in effect Nixon, and that's when money started being printed and that's when the 669 1:12:01 --> 1:12:11 big money people were closest to the spigot. When the quantitative easing was opened, the people 670 1:12:11 --> 1:12:17 closest to the spigot, the people who were closest to the trough got the money, but it wasn't a matter 671 1:12:17 --> 1:12:24 of millions, it was trillions. They were in a position to blackmail and bribe. 672 1:12:25 --> 1:12:32 And buy up the media and buy up the universities. When you say the blood flowing, 673 1:12:32 --> 1:12:37 I really don't care who's going to be on the guillotine when I pull that handle. 674 1:12:39 --> 1:12:45 All right, let's move on. Now Jerry, I want to give you a tool and all of you, and Alex, 675 1:12:45 --> 1:12:49 this is very important, I'm going to share with you now before we get to Marv. 676 1:12:50 --> 1:12:59 Who are they? And here is one of the best diagrams, pictures that I have seen of who 677 1:13:00 --> 1:13:10 they are. And I'm going to put this into the chat and I really do want you all, don't tell me this 678 1:13:10 --> 1:13:17 is wrong, that's wrong. I want you to study this complicated map. Alex, can you see that now? 679 1:13:17 --> 1:13:23 Yes, yes, I can see it. Now I'm going to expand it. I just want to, this comes from 680 1:13:25 --> 1:13:30 a wall. I'll show you what the website is. You can study it. I'm going to put it into the chat, 681 1:13:30 --> 1:13:36 everybody. And I'll just make it a bit bigger so you can see what we're dealing with here. 682 1:13:37 --> 1:13:44 And you look at control where control, who's in charge, who's they, this is the world hierarchy 683 1:13:44 --> 1:13:53 pyramid. And the point is that the committee of 300 appears way down here. 684 1:13:54 --> 1:14:00 Freemasonry details here. I'll put the book into the chat, the New World Order, which we've 685 1:14:01 --> 1:14:08 previously had. BlackRock is here. International law is here. World financial control, world 686 1:14:08 --> 1:14:15 institutions are here. Corporations are here. Then you've got government here, everybody. 687 1:14:17 --> 1:14:19 And there are the peasants, that's us. 688 1:14:19 --> 1:14:31 Okay, general population and debtors down here. Now, all of the entities we have talked about, 689 1:14:31 --> 1:14:40 everybody. This picture is good enough. The website is just, I'll just point it out to you. 690 1:14:40 --> 1:14:46 Someone can put it in the chat. It's the DeepStateMappingProject.com. 691 1:14:48 --> 1:14:55 DeepStateMappingProject.com. So, in my view, from all of the meetings that we've had over the last 692 1:14:55 --> 1:14:59 five and a half years, and there's the Vatican in the middle here, there's the Jesuit Order, 693 1:14:59 --> 1:15:05 spiritual law, canon law, go high, there's Satan, Lucifer, and the New World Order book that I've 694 1:15:05 --> 1:15:13 put into the chat also talks about the Satanism, Luciferianism that goes on here. And I will please 695 1:15:13 --> 1:15:20 download this picture, study it, and let's see what we can learn from the collective minds on this call 696 1:15:21 --> 1:15:29 from what's accurate, what's correct there, what's not correct there. DeepStateMappingProject.com, 697 1:15:29 --> 1:15:37 I think, was the thing. So, Gerry, there's your answer. Thank you. And I find it very accurate 698 1:15:37 --> 1:15:42 considering all the information that's been shared in these meetings. And if you can find 699 1:15:42 --> 1:15:46 something that's not quite right, great. We say that's not in the right place. This should be here. 700 1:15:46 --> 1:15:52 These people control this. And we had a two-week, last week, Alex, we had a chat, someone put a 701 1:15:52 --> 1:15:58 chart on here that said the real people in charge, the truest wealthy people, are not publicly known. 702 1:15:58 --> 1:16:04 And there's a list of 13 families that were in the chat last week. I'll find it and share it a bit 703 1:16:04 --> 1:16:10 later. But it's very interesting names, most of whom, not one of them included the Rothschilds. 704 1:16:11 --> 1:16:15 We think the Rothschilds were running it, but these are the people behind those powers. 705 1:16:15 --> 1:16:23 Interesting. So there's they, everybody. Have a study, please, and see what we can learn, 706 1:16:23 --> 1:16:30 help each other learn about what Alex is saying. And that's why I'm in hemp, Gerry, because 707 1:16:31 --> 1:16:36 hemp enables a community literally to do what Alex said. Go gray market, black market, 708 1:16:36 --> 1:16:41 tell the rest of the world to get stuffed. Because with industrial hemp, you can produce food, 709 1:16:41 --> 1:16:46 clothing, shelter. And Alex, this is going to be crucial for Hungary and Croatia, 710 1:16:46 --> 1:16:52 right in the heart of Europe, because then local communities create local economies. You are not 711 1:16:52 --> 1:16:58 reliant on being part of a globalist banking system. There you are. That's why I'm in silver 712 1:16:58 --> 1:17:05 and gold and chickens and potatoes. They're my four principal interests. Chickens and potatoes. 713 1:17:05 --> 1:17:13 I love it. I love it. I love it. Thank you. That's right. Eggs. And Alex, one, apparently one egg a 714 1:17:13 --> 1:17:17 day. If you had one egg a day from a chicken, that's where they attack chickens all the time, 715 1:17:17 --> 1:17:23 as Gerry well knows, one egg a day and water, you could survive quite indefinitely, 716 1:17:23 --> 1:17:28 you know, quite some time. That's why they hate chickens. Marv is next. 717 1:17:30 --> 1:17:36 Hey, yeah, that was a great talk with you and the professor, Alex. Nice work. Thank you. Thank you 718 1:17:36 --> 1:17:46 very much. I think this this war is far simpler than, you know, the nuke thing is a ruse. They 719 1:17:46 --> 1:17:54 diesel in Oregon is pushing seven bucks a gallon. We're at six fifty nine. We expect it to be 720 1:17:55 --> 1:18:03 eight dollars in Oregon by summer. Anyway, you're talking about the personal restrictions that last 721 1:18:03 --> 1:18:10 week I got issued an official trespass notice from Willamette University for driving around the 722 1:18:10 --> 1:18:15 campus of my antique tractor with a Palestine flag flying off the back of it. 723 1:18:16 --> 1:18:26 Oh, this this upsets the order. They call it the orderly operation safety and the orderly operation 724 1:18:26 --> 1:18:33 of the campus. So they get rid of a Palestine flag. So anyway, I thought it was kind of an example of 725 1:18:33 --> 1:18:38 this personal restriction. But I want to ask you about this. You know, many of us have called the 726 1:18:38 --> 1:18:47 U.S. an oil company with the military for one hundred and fifty years. And now we have, 727 1:18:48 --> 1:18:54 you know, I was shocked at how quickly we abandoned our allies in the Gulf. 728 1:18:55 --> 1:19:03 We were gone in days. We picked up and left and left those. I mean, what the hell's going on there? 729 1:19:03 --> 1:19:11 Well, we acquired we think we acquired the oil of Venezuela. And now in two months, 730 1:19:11 --> 1:19:17 this oil company with the military has tripled their price and tripled their market. 731 1:19:18 --> 1:19:26 I mean, Europe is without energy. East Asia is looking at a catastrophe coming in a couple of 732 1:19:26 --> 1:19:37 months. Who cares about Africa or South America? But this just seems to be so simple that this oil 733 1:19:37 --> 1:19:46 company, you know, more than 50 percent of the cars now in China are electric vehicles. I mean, 734 1:19:46 --> 1:19:56 this electric revolution is coming and this this oil company has got to. Anyway, that's what I 735 1:19:56 --> 1:20:04 think this war is about. It's just the price of energy and with oil, we got to get all we can. 736 1:20:06 --> 1:20:13 Well, we can. And God, why we abandon our allies in the Gulf Coast so quickly just 737 1:20:14 --> 1:20:22 that that blew my mind. So anyway, I just wanted to ask you about maybe it is just as simple as 738 1:20:22 --> 1:20:29 and Russia, their resources, that huge country from eight or ten times. 739 1:20:31 --> 1:20:39 They are a challenge to this oil company with a military. And I think it's about resources. 740 1:20:39 --> 1:20:41 So anyway, I just want to ask you about that, Alex. 741 1:20:43 --> 1:20:47 Thank you, Mark. It is about the resources, but not in the way that we've been we've been 742 1:20:48 --> 1:20:56 led to believe because, you know, you can buy oil at the gas pump in any country in the world. 743 1:20:56 --> 1:20:59 You know, you can buy it in Switzerland and in Austria and in Denmark and 744 1:21:00 --> 1:21:07 in Japan, whatever. And none of them have military bases around the world and none of them go to war 745 1:21:07 --> 1:21:15 to control the oil. You know, you can just buy the oil from people who sell it because you might have 746 1:21:15 --> 1:21:22 something to trade. Right. And every country does it this way. So the whole story of controlling the 747 1:21:22 --> 1:21:34 oil doesn't make sense. Oil companies don't need to control the oil. Your ExxonMobiles and Chevrons 748 1:21:35 --> 1:21:42 could just as easily go to Tehran, make a deal with Iranian oil companies, load up the tankers, 749 1:21:42 --> 1:21:51 bring it to your market, put their margin on top and have a fantastic business on the back of it. 750 1:21:53 --> 1:21:59 They don't need to go into Iraq for that reason. The only people who need to control the oil are 751 1:21:59 --> 1:22:11 the bankers because their business is issuing loans to their clients. But in order for them to be able 752 1:22:11 --> 1:22:19 to issue the loans, they need collateral. So taking political control of a nation, 753 1:22:19 --> 1:22:27 overthrowing their regime, allows you to install your Boris Yeltsin, Vladimir Zelensky, King Saud, 754 1:22:28 --> 1:22:36 Al-Sabah, whatever. And then they give your corporations these contracts. 755 1:22:37 --> 1:22:42 And then your corporations finance this development by taking their loans from 756 1:22:42 --> 1:22:49 Citigroup and JP Morgan and Goldman Sachs and so forth. And then the second JP Morgan 757 1:22:50 --> 1:22:57 issues a billion dollar loan to Chevron, that second, that loan becomes an asset on 758 1:22:58 --> 1:23:08 JP Morgan's balance sheet. So the conquest of a nation or taking control of their regime 759 1:23:09 --> 1:23:15 almost instantly translates into enormous wealth appearing on your balance sheet. 760 1:23:16 --> 1:23:22 And then these loans perform because when Chevron digs up the oil, extracts the oil, 761 1:23:23 --> 1:23:29 loads them on the ships and sells them, they generate the cash with which they repay these 762 1:23:29 --> 1:23:36 loans to you. So it's like a constant flow of money to you. And you've done nothing. The money 763 1:23:36 --> 1:23:42 you loaned them, you conjured it out of thin air. You didn't fight the war. You didn't build the 764 1:23:42 --> 1:23:47 rigs. You didn't transport the oil. You didn't refine it. You didn't do anything. But you took 765 1:23:47 --> 1:23:53 the biggest chunk of that wealth for yourself. So you're the one with the biggest incentive for 766 1:23:53 --> 1:24:02 war. And it doesn't just have to be oil. If you control the guy in Tehran, you're going to get 767 1:24:02 --> 1:24:09 Iran to no longer buy medicines from China or India or produce your own. You're going to be 768 1:24:09 --> 1:24:16 bringing Pfizer and Moderna and Johnson and Johnson and all of these people. So that's the game. 769 1:24:16 --> 1:24:23 Alex, why are we destroying the Gulf Coast, our allies? Why are we destroying those countries? 770 1:24:25 --> 1:24:30 Those are not allies. Those are countries that bought protection from you. Those are protection 771 1:24:30 --> 1:24:36 record clients. They're not allies. They're nothing. They're peep squeaks. If they needed 772 1:24:36 --> 1:24:44 to go to war to save their lives, they'd be dead tomorrow. They've been living there with the 773 1:24:44 --> 1:24:49 protection of the United States who couldn't really protect them. And they knew that they 774 1:24:49 --> 1:24:53 couldn't protect them. But they could make, you know, when you have your guy in the government, 775 1:24:53 --> 1:25:00 you can make a deal with them. You bring them the Patriots and the THADs and the radars and you go 776 1:25:00 --> 1:25:05 and you know that it all looks good. But if push comes to shove, you're going to have to high tail 777 1:25:05 --> 1:25:14 it. And this was understood by the Pentagon officials way back in 1988. They wrote papers 778 1:25:14 --> 1:25:21 and documents about it. It was just a question of time when somebody was going to really challenge 779 1:25:21 --> 1:25:30 them. They knew that. All right. Thank you, Marv. Good thinking. Thanks. Yeah, good thinking. 780 1:25:31 --> 1:25:33 All right. John Day, good to see you. 781 1:25:39 --> 1:25:47 Am I live? Thank you, Charles. Thank you, Alex. Hi, John. Thank you. Okay. Thank you. 782 1:25:52 --> 1:26:00 Let me present a context in which all of this makes sense. 783 1:26:00 --> 1:26:12 And that that pyramid, our owners, if you would, as George Carlin called them, our owners are 784 1:26:12 --> 1:26:20 managing us as human herds. And so the hundreds they needed to maintain control of the human 785 1:26:20 --> 1:26:27 herds and to cull them by having them kill each other. So their essential function is ecosystem 786 1:26:28 --> 1:26:33 control. So we've all seen how if you take the wolves away from Yellowstone, the deer overgraze 787 1:26:33 --> 1:26:42 and the ecosystem goes bad. But we're the same. Humans are no longer apex predators. We've become 788 1:26:42 --> 1:26:50 grazing animals since we took up farming. And our apex predators are these elites in that pyramid. 789 1:26:50 --> 1:26:58 And it's true that they don't care for us. We're just an asset to manage. And at the point that we 790 1:26:58 --> 1:27:10 overgraze, as now, you know, we've been getting these visions of too many people since the 1960s. 791 1:27:10 --> 1:27:17 And it's easy to understand. And there was the oil crisis in the 1970s. And we all got that. But it 792 1:27:17 --> 1:27:24 appears that now industrial civilization, which does run on oil, has peaked out. There was a peak 793 1:27:24 --> 1:27:33 in November of 2018 of oil. And then after that was the repo crisis in 2019 and the going direct 794 1:27:33 --> 1:27:44 bailout during COVID lockdowns. And then there was another peak last October in oil plus 795 1:27:44 --> 1:27:51 natural gas liquids. But it really looks like, you know, it's a finite planet. And the whole 796 1:27:51 --> 1:28:04 limits to growth thing from 1972 were there. And so the function of our owners, these elites, 797 1:28:04 --> 1:28:12 is to cull us, maintain control of us, and maintain control of industrial economy. Because 798 1:28:14 --> 1:28:23 they need industrial economies. So it's really complicated, this world war, 799 1:28:25 --> 1:28:33 to accomplish all of the calls of people. They can, of course, eliminate all of their debts to us. 800 1:28:34 --> 1:28:41 And yet to maintain industrial 801 1:28:41 --> 1:28:53 economies. It's complicated. But right now, the 802 1:28:56 --> 1:28:58 Charles John needs to turn his video off. 803 1:28:58 --> 1:28:59 ... function of... 804 1:28:59 --> 1:29:08 Oh, hang on. John, John, I had to mute you. Your video, you got enough, not enough bandwidth. So 805 1:29:08 --> 1:29:16 turn your video off and ask a question because I understand what you're saying. But get to the 806 1:29:16 --> 1:29:23 question, please. You'll need to unmute yourself. Although it looks like he's frozen there, Alex. 807 1:29:25 --> 1:29:26 Yeah, he does. 808 1:29:28 --> 1:29:29 Okay, unmute yourself, John. 809 1:29:33 --> 1:29:34 See if we can hear you. 810 1:29:35 --> 1:29:37 He could still lose contact. 811 1:29:37 --> 1:29:41 Yeah, wait a minute. 812 1:29:41 --> 1:29:47 And I know, Alex, you've had some things to say about assets in Ukraine. I'll stop it. 813 1:29:50 --> 1:29:57 Thank you. Alex, is it necessary to hold assets in order to maintain 814 1:29:57 --> 1:30:03 this financial paradigm and control all us heard? 815 1:30:07 --> 1:30:13 John, thank you. Unfortunately, your line was so bad that I didn't understand what the question was. 816 1:30:15 --> 1:30:18 Can you restate your question quickly? 817 1:30:19 --> 1:30:29 Yes. You've made it clear in essays of yours that I've read that the control of assets of which 818 1:30:29 --> 1:30:38 Russia is full is essential to the owner class who I'm presenting as being the apex predators 819 1:30:38 --> 1:30:40 of the rest of us humans. 820 1:30:45 --> 1:30:52 Okay, yes. But you see assets don't go anywhere by themselves. You need labor force 821 1:30:52 --> 1:30:59 for anything to happen. So you need control basically over resources and the population. 822 1:31:00 --> 1:31:09 And then you kind of manipulate them as like termite working colonies to move it and to create 823 1:31:09 --> 1:31:17 wealth that you enjoy. But these people have more money than they could spend in 100 generations. 824 1:31:17 --> 1:31:25 It's not about money for them. I think it's some kind of a perverse enjoyment of power over people 825 1:31:25 --> 1:31:33 for the sake of that power. And it's come to the point where it seems to me that they believe that 826 1:31:33 --> 1:31:41 they have replaced God and that they are in a position to manipulate biology to the point of 827 1:31:42 --> 1:31:49 turning themselves into a higher race over us. And this is what they're trying to do, it seems to me. 828 1:31:52 --> 1:31:59 And they were, I mean, in many places they were openly talking about this exact thing. 829 1:32:00 --> 1:32:05 And then when you look at everything that they're doing, it seems that they are doing this. 830 1:32:05 --> 1:32:14 Well, thank you. I believe that that's their function in the world and that they control our 831 1:32:14 --> 1:32:21 numbers when we overgraze their nice planet and that it's natural for them to see themselves as 832 1:32:21 --> 1:32:29 our owners. But we have to supersede that, make them redundant. The only way I see to do that 833 1:32:29 --> 1:32:38 is through following divine guidance myself. I absolutely agree with that, John. And I think that 834 1:32:41 --> 1:32:48 faith, religion is going to be probably one of the most important elements of our emancipation. 835 1:32:48 --> 1:32:51 I think we won't be able to emancipate ourselves without it. 836 1:32:52 --> 1:33:02 Like a really strict adherence to a faith. And I don't know which faith that is. I'm Catholic, 837 1:33:02 --> 1:33:11 but I'm kind of over it. Yeah, I would wholeheartedly agree with that. But, you know, 838 1:33:11 --> 1:33:18 in practical terms, there's already a lot we can do today. And, you know, it's going to the bank 839 1:33:18 --> 1:33:27 and slowly, quietly withdraw as much cash as possible. And the banks can't fall apart. 840 1:33:28 --> 1:33:35 Yeah, well said. Thank you, John. Excellent thinking. And I remember the words of Scott 841 1:33:35 --> 1:33:41 Shara, Grace's dad, who fought the big case about the murder of his Down's Syndrome daughter, Grace. 842 1:33:41 --> 1:33:48 Scott Shara has presented to us twice, Alex. He said, without God's help, we can't handle 843 1:33:48 --> 1:33:53 what we have to handle. So I just remind people, go back and look at the recording for those of 844 1:33:53 --> 1:34:06 you who might be interested. Heddy, welcome. Yes, thank you. And, Alex, I feel that I know you, 845 1:34:06 --> 1:34:11 because I listen to you at least two or three times a week. Oh, that's sweet. Thank you. 846 1:34:12 --> 1:34:17 I'm a great believer that when money talks, bullshit walks. And there's so many people out 847 1:34:17 --> 1:34:22 there talking about all sorts of stuff. And so you're one of the very few, what I consider 848 1:34:22 --> 1:34:29 reliable sources of information and also your knowledge of history, and also the Balkans and 849 1:34:29 --> 1:34:36 Russian politics, etc. But I'm particularly interested in your view of Bill Browder, 850 1:34:36 --> 1:34:43 because in fact, I read his book back in, well, I think it was 2016. And shortly after that, 851 1:34:43 --> 1:34:52 I was invited to hear him speak at the Special Forces Club in London. So, and I understand that 852 1:34:53 --> 1:35:01 you're a very outspoken critic of Bill. And I think with all the geopolitics that's going on 853 1:35:01 --> 1:35:07 at the moment in the world with Russia, of course, there's a lot of geopolitical pressure from the 854 1:35:07 --> 1:35:13 West to make out that Russia is the bad guy. And I'm not saying that they're the good guys. I mean, 855 1:35:13 --> 1:35:22 I think they're all pretty bad guys. But I'm interested to actually understand a little bit 856 1:35:22 --> 1:35:31 more about how you see the Magnitsky narrative shaping today's Western politics towards Russia, 857 1:35:31 --> 1:35:37 especially in the context of current geopolitical tensions. 858 1:35:40 --> 1:35:52 So Bill Browder is a liar and a fraud. And I read Red Notice twice. And then I wrote a book 859 1:35:52 --> 1:36:01 in which I debunked Red Notice completely with Bill Browder's own words, because his story is so 860 1:36:01 --> 1:36:08 hollow and so inconsistent that it's almost ridiculous. It's extraordinarily well written, 861 1:36:08 --> 1:36:14 because I think it was written, a ghost written by Lee Child. So it kind of reads like a spy 862 1:36:14 --> 1:36:19 thriller and it strings you along. You know, every time they're going to sell you a bill of goods, 863 1:36:20 --> 1:36:29 they give you like an emotional story. Okay, give you a perfect example. At one point in the story, 864 1:36:30 --> 1:36:34 Bill Browder tells you how all the oligarchs went to Vladimir Putin and say like, 865 1:36:35 --> 1:36:41 Volodya, what do we do to not end up in prison? Please don't imprison us. And then Vladimir Putin 866 1:36:41 --> 1:36:51 says like, hey, you give me 50%. And in that same story, Browder says, well, maybe it was 30, 867 1:36:51 --> 1:36:55 or maybe it was 60. I don't know what it was because I wasn't there. In other words, 868 1:36:56 --> 1:37:02 he's pulling the whole story out of his own back end. But what did he, you know, you probably 869 1:37:02 --> 1:37:07 didn't even notice that because just before he told you that story, he told you the story about 870 1:37:07 --> 1:37:14 how he was driving to a tennis and he was holding hands with his mistress. And then he saw like a 871 1:37:14 --> 1:37:19 dark object of the road and all these evil Russians were just like winding around it. And it was a man 872 1:37:19 --> 1:37:27 having a, how do you call it, epileptic attack. And he fell into the snow. And all these heartless 873 1:37:27 --> 1:37:33 Russians were just practically running, driving around him. And then he had his driver stop, 874 1:37:34 --> 1:37:40 and he got out of the car and he pulled the man over to the sidewalk and they gave him the 875 1:37:40 --> 1:37:46 first aid and they saved his life. So you think like, oh my God, this Bill Browder, he's such 876 1:37:46 --> 1:37:53 a wonderful guy. So brave. So, you know, and then the next thing he tells you a really, 877 1:37:53 --> 1:37:58 really shitty story about Vladimir Putin. That's how the whole story, the whole book is strung up 878 1:37:58 --> 1:38:06 like that. Anyway, when I published my book, six weeks later, it was banned. Okay. By the orders 879 1:38:06 --> 1:38:12 of Jonathan Weiner from the State Department in the United States who received the complaint from 880 1:38:12 --> 1:38:19 Bill Browder himself. And then when another publisher picked up my book, republished it with 881 1:38:19 --> 1:38:26 a different title, it was banned five weeks later again. So it was banned twice. And all I've done 882 1:38:26 --> 1:38:34 is I've used Bill Browder's own bullshit to debunk Bill Browder's story. The Magnitsky Act 883 1:38:35 --> 1:38:40 was passed in December of 2012 and is deemed the opening salvo in the new Cold War between 884 1:38:40 --> 1:38:45 the West and Russia. And Bill Browder and the people who are backing him, because it's not him, 885 1:38:45 --> 1:38:54 he's not, he's just a guy, they were leading us into the Third World War between the West and 886 1:38:54 --> 1:39:00 Russia. That was their intent. That was their objective from the start. So this is why I felt 887 1:39:01 --> 1:39:07 that I needed to unmask him because he was presenting himself as some kind of a hero, 888 1:39:08 --> 1:39:16 a fighter for human rights, anti-corruption crusader. He's a criminal. He's guilty of a lot 889 1:39:16 --> 1:39:22 of things that he's accusing other people of. He's probably the greediest man that ever walked the 890 1:39:22 --> 1:39:28 face of the earth. And I know people who, I met him twice, I know people who know him well, 891 1:39:28 --> 1:39:33 who have dined with him, who have flown on airplanes with him, traveled around the world with 892 1:39:33 --> 1:39:40 him. They say that he's absolutely pathologically obsessed with money. And to the point where he 893 1:39:40 --> 1:39:48 will sell his family for money. That's who Bill Browder is. So in this sort of era of huge 894 1:39:48 --> 1:39:54 disclosure on so many different fronts, I mean, if your interpretation is closer to the truth, 895 1:39:54 --> 1:40:00 what do you think the consequences are for today's policymakers? Because clearly they have been 896 1:40:00 --> 1:40:08 spinning a lie using Bill Browder as one of their characters to, you know, to sort of justify the 897 1:40:08 --> 1:40:15 geopolitical pressure on Russia. Well, yeah, but I think that Bill Browder's story unraveled to the 898 1:40:15 --> 1:40:23 point that he has completely destroyed his own credibility. And so he's still making the rounds, 899 1:40:23 --> 1:40:30 I think. He gets invited on Times Radio from time to time, makes some speeches here and there. But 900 1:40:31 --> 1:40:35 you know, he was going to become a household name. They were preparing to shoot a Hollywood 901 1:40:35 --> 1:40:41 movie based on the Red Notice. And it all fell apart because his story just, do you know, have 902 1:40:42 --> 1:40:49 you heard of the documentary film Red Notice behind the scenes? No, Magnitsky Act behind the scenes. 903 1:40:49 --> 1:40:56 No, I haven't seen that one. Yeah. So he commissioned this Russian documentary filmmaker 904 1:40:56 --> 1:41:02 to make a documentary film about this whole story. And this guy was, this would have been his third 905 1:41:02 --> 1:41:10 anti-Putin movie. So he was Andrey Nekrasov. He was a fixture in the West. He was in London. He 906 1:41:10 --> 1:41:16 was in Berlin. He was living in Berlin for a long time. He was being funded by Western European 907 1:41:16 --> 1:41:27 NGOs. And so Bill Browder had him shoot a documentary film about this. And the film was 908 1:41:27 --> 1:41:32 completed. But you see that in the film, like right in the middle of the film, as Nekrasov is 909 1:41:32 --> 1:41:39 shooting a scene that was key to the film, it doesn't work. The scene doesn't work. He was, 910 1:41:39 --> 1:41:48 Magnitsky was supposed to be beat up by eight or nine Russian counter-terror police in full riot 911 1:41:48 --> 1:41:55 gear in his prison cell. So they were going to film that scene. And then Nekrasov went to that 912 1:41:55 --> 1:42:05 prison and to that cell. And then he was, there's no way that a man and another eight police can 913 1:42:05 --> 1:42:10 fit into this cell. They wouldn't be able to move. This couldn't have happened. 914 1:42:10 --> 1:42:17 So he thinks about it. He goes back to London. He sits at a meeting with Browder and he tells him, 915 1:42:18 --> 1:42:23 you have to explain to me how this happened because I'm not able to make the ends meet of 916 1:42:23 --> 1:42:32 this story. And so Browder gives him another layer of bullshit and then another. And every time he 917 1:42:32 --> 1:42:40 asked another question, Browder's explanations derail. And then at one point Browder gets up, 918 1:42:41 --> 1:42:47 accuses his documentary filmmaker of spouting Vladimir Putin's propaganda points and walks out. 919 1:42:49 --> 1:42:57 Nekrasov completed the film, but he continued to pursue his own findings, his own research. 920 1:42:58 --> 1:43:05 And so the film ends up being completely against Bill Browder. And so Bill Browder has spent his 921 1:43:05 --> 1:43:11 time ever since making sure that nobody can show that film. It was going to be shown in the Council 922 1:43:11 --> 1:43:18 of Europe, I think, or one of those European institutions. And then they banned it at the last 923 1:43:18 --> 1:43:24 moment. And then everywhere where it was going to be shown, Browder's lawyers would go and make sure 924 1:43:24 --> 1:43:32 that it's not shown. And then once, you know, there was a news museum in Washington, D.C., who 925 1:43:32 --> 1:43:41 refused to cancel the screening of the film. So it was seen by a whole bunch of people in the United 926 1:43:41 --> 1:43:53 States. The Magnitsky Act is a complete abomination of a legal code because it provides for 927 1:43:55 --> 1:44:01 any bureaucrat from the, for not any bureaucrat, but some bureaucrats from the U.S. Treasury 928 1:44:01 --> 1:44:07 Department to put people on the sanctions list with absolutely no due process, no recourse, no 929 1:44:09 --> 1:44:17 nothing. So the whole thing is, the whole thing was a very, very ugly affair. And it was a step in 930 1:44:17 --> 1:44:23 the direction of confrontation between the West and Russia. And who do you think is actually behind 931 1:44:23 --> 1:44:29 it? Because as you say, Bill Browder, you know, he's clearly not sort of influential to do that. 932 1:44:29 --> 1:44:35 Would it be sort of like... Bill Browder was initially backed by Edmund Safra. His affair in 933 1:44:35 --> 1:44:43 Moscow was backed by Edmund Safra. But before Edmund Safra, he used to work for Robert Maxwell, 934 1:44:43 --> 1:44:50 you know, the former employer of, no, he wasn't the employer of Jeffrey Epstein, but you know, 935 1:44:50 --> 1:44:59 the story anyway. Jelaine's dead, yes. Jelaine's dead, yeah. So, and then Edmund Safra was killed 936 1:44:59 --> 1:45:07 in 1999 here in Monaco. And his whole business was taken over by HSBC, which is dominated by the 937 1:45:07 --> 1:45:14 Rothschilds, Jacob Rothschilds. Now it's Matt Rothschild. So this is who's keeping him alive. 938 1:45:14 --> 1:45:21 This is who's his new partner in crime. And this is who is behind everything he's doing. He's not, 939 1:45:21 --> 1:45:24 he doesn't go to the toilet without them telling them to do so. 940 1:45:25 --> 1:45:28 Interesting. Thank you. Thank you for your take on that. 941 1:45:28 --> 1:45:34 Thank you, Hadi. Well done, Hedy. Being a secret admirer of Alex and catching up with him three 942 1:45:34 --> 1:45:40 times a week, there you are, Alex. Before we go to Lars, Stephen and everybody, I thought 943 1:45:41 --> 1:45:44 you would like to know that I spoke to Warner Mendenhall, who rang me 944 1:45:45 --> 1:45:53 last week. And Warner is an Ohio lawyer who's had a, we all know, a major cancer battle. 945 1:45:54 --> 1:46:00 And Stephen, everybody sends his regards. And Stephen, he's happy to come and he can do a 946 1:46:00 --> 1:46:05 presentation for an hour on his journey. So Stephen, if you could get in touch with him, 947 1:46:05 --> 1:46:10 he's happy to come, but he can't last more than an hour during his recovery. And, you know, 948 1:46:10 --> 1:46:13 he might not make it, but he's in pretty good shape at the moment. 949 1:46:14 --> 1:46:20 Charles, I heard you say that a couple of meetings ago, and I've already made a note of it. So, 950 1:46:21 --> 1:46:28 Well done. Good. Anyway, so, by the way, I think it's Hadi, which is, isn't it Hadi? 951 1:46:28 --> 1:46:31 It's actually pronounced H-E-D-I. 952 1:46:32 --> 1:46:33 Oh, is it right? 953 1:46:33 --> 1:46:37 H-E-D-I. It's named after my grandmother, who was a Hidvig. 954 1:46:37 --> 1:46:39 Oh, so how is it spelled? 955 1:46:39 --> 1:46:41 H-E-D-I. 956 1:46:41 --> 1:46:43 Oh, sorry. I thought there was an I in it. Yes. Okay. 957 1:46:43 --> 1:46:43 Don't worry. 958 1:46:43 --> 1:46:45 Before the D. Yeah. 959 1:46:45 --> 1:46:48 There's no I. Correct. Thanks, Hadi. 960 1:46:48 --> 1:46:49 Hadi, Lars. 961 1:46:51 --> 1:46:56 Yes. Thank you, Alex, for everything you do. I think everything is brilliant. 962 1:46:57 --> 1:46:59 Thank you, Lars. Thank you. That's very kind. 963 1:47:00 --> 1:47:03 Now, I think I may have asked you this before, but I'll do it again. 964 1:47:04 --> 1:47:14 Are you familiar with the book published by two Ukrainian brothers called Vitaly and Dmitry 965 1:47:15 --> 1:47:17 No, I'm not. 966 1:47:17 --> 1:47:29 Okay. It's called My Done, The Secret Files. And it's Professor Ivan Kachanovsky in Canada 967 1:47:29 --> 1:47:37 who has brought the attention to this book, because they're two of the key leaders in 968 1:47:37 --> 1:47:47 Svoboda, the far-right party in Ukraine, Oleg Tjarnybok and Ruslan Koshelinsky. They were both 969 1:47:47 --> 1:47:54 in discussions in a meeting with what I think is Victoria Nuland. They call it a Western 970 1:47:54 --> 1:48:03 government representative. And I put some three slides on this in the chat. You can look at it. 971 1:48:03 --> 1:48:12 But the Western representative, Victoria Nuland, demanded that 100 people had to be killed 972 1:48:13 --> 1:48:24 on My Done. And so, Oleg, for example, he said when I asked why we already have four victims, 973 1:48:25 --> 1:48:32 is that not enough for Western leaders to react? This is not enough. We will be able to react when 974 1:48:32 --> 1:48:46 there are 100 victims. And then Ruslan asked similar questions. And again, they said, 975 1:48:46 --> 1:48:54 we have to wait until 100 people are dead. Now, if people in the West knew that they were instructed 976 1:48:55 --> 1:49:05 to murder 100 people in the My Done, and they actually didn't manage to do that. They managed to 977 1:49:06 --> 1:49:15 murder 74. And then they murdered 17 policemen. And to get to 100, they added people who committed 978 1:49:15 --> 1:49:23 suicide and were ill. And these people are now called the heavenly hundreds. And visitors, 979 1:49:23 --> 1:49:29 tourists are being walked through this park with pictures of the heavenly hundreds. 980 1:49:29 --> 1:49:37 These are Victoria Nuland's murder orders. And somebody with a good, 981 1:49:38 --> 1:49:43 people like you who have a good audience, you need to bring this up. And I can send you the book 982 1:49:43 --> 1:49:50 if you want me. Do you read Russian? Unfortunately, I do not. But I have read 983 1:49:50 --> 1:49:57 Kaczanowski's book. Okay, so it was mentioned in Kaczanowski. Yes, yes. I'm very familiar with this, 984 1:49:57 --> 1:50:04 but my guess would not be that that was Nuland. My guess would be that this was either John Brennan 985 1:50:06 --> 1:50:13 or it may have been Carl Bildt, actually, because Carl Bildt was very, very closely involved with 986 1:50:13 --> 1:50:24 this. And he is, he appears like almost a respectable politician and a diplomat, 987 1:50:25 --> 1:50:35 but he's a very pro-fascistic intelligence asset. And he has been 988 1:50:36 --> 1:50:48 at various times advocating for massacres in a very, how do you call it, 989 1:50:50 --> 1:50:59 kind of shockingly crude tones, you know, undiplomatic. So I suspect, you know, 990 1:50:59 --> 1:51:07 John Brennan was there a lot. And John Brennan actually was one of the organizers of the anti-terror 991 1:51:07 --> 1:51:19 operation that took off in April. And then Carl Bildt was in and out of Kiev a lot in that period. 992 1:51:22 --> 1:51:27 Lars, did you know about this? I hear what you're saying. I still believe it was Victoria Nuland, 993 1:51:27 --> 1:51:34 because everybody listened to her. She was the boss in the Ukraine project. I happen to know 994 1:51:34 --> 1:51:43 Carl Bildt very, very well. He was sitting in my office for four and a half years. We were sharing 995 1:51:43 --> 1:51:50 secretary. Really? I know him extremely well. So do you think it could have been him? 996 1:51:51 --> 1:51:59 I disagree with him enormously. I have since, this was in the early 2000s, 997 1:52:01 --> 1:52:10 for four and a half years until 2004, I have asked him questions about some of the important 998 1:52:10 --> 1:52:19 documents that are driving the wars in Syria, in the whole Middle East, etc. He has no idea about 999 1:52:19 --> 1:52:26 these documents. I asked him a lot of things, and he has no clue. He did write the, he did sign 1000 1:52:27 --> 1:52:34 the association agreement, Ukraine, European, but it was the Poles that wrote it. 1001 1:52:38 --> 1:52:46 I have so much negative to say about his views. I liked him very much when we worked together, 1002 1:52:46 --> 1:52:52 but I doubt very much that he would be the person who was driving this thing. 1003 1:52:54 --> 1:53:01 Okay, that was my suspicion, because he was in and out a lot, and he made some very crude statements. 1004 1:53:02 --> 1:53:10 I also knew, I never met him personally, but he had a role in the events that took place in 1005 1:53:11 --> 1:53:22 Yugoslavia in the early 1990s. We all took him initially for a Swedish diplomat who's coming to 1006 1:53:22 --> 1:53:29 help us sort out the things, and then it turned out that he played a very, very dark role. 1007 1:53:31 --> 1:53:38 So for those people watching this, he absolutely hates Russia and Russians. 1008 1:53:39 --> 1:53:45 Yes, yes, I know that. I know that. Yeah, yeah. And so, you know, my suspicion is, 1009 1:53:45 --> 1:53:50 because it doesn't surprise me what you say, that he had no idea about these documents, 1010 1:53:50 --> 1:53:56 because I think he had different assignments. He didn't have to know that. 1011 1:53:57 --> 1:54:03 That was his job, ostensibly. His real job was something else, and I think that he was an 1012 1:54:03 --> 1:54:11 intelligence asset. Oh, he has definitely been passing information to the CIA since teenage 1013 1:54:12 --> 1:54:18 years. Yeah, yeah. So CIA assets. Yeah, but he's not as important as a lot of people think. 1014 1:54:18 --> 1:54:24 Well, he is important because he's a former prime minister of Sweden, so that makes him important, 1015 1:54:25 --> 1:54:30 you know, in the context, similar context to Olof Palme. I don't know what the truth about 1016 1:54:30 --> 1:54:38 that was, but Carl Bildt is a very, how shall I say, personable guy, you know, so a lot of 1017 1:54:38 --> 1:54:42 some people would be attracted to him. So he's able to take people 1018 1:54:42 --> 1:54:45 astray. And the question is, is he taking people astray? 1019 1:54:47 --> 1:54:51 Well, Jeffrey Epstein was a very personable guy. Oh, absolutely. Yeah. 1020 1:54:53 --> 1:55:00 Yeah, but Carl is a different cattle of fish. He's been lying a lot about Estonia, and that 1021 1:55:00 --> 1:55:08 is absolutely terrible. The ship, Estonia? Yeah, yeah. Or the country? No, the sinking. 1022 1:55:08 --> 1:55:13 The sinking of the ship, yeah. Christopher Bullin, who's a friend of mine, has written 1023 1:55:15 --> 1:55:22 very much about it, including Carl's role, which is actually terrible. So, 1024 1:55:22 --> 1:55:31 well, I can go on about this for hours, but I don't think he was the Western representative in that case. 1025 1:55:31 --> 1:55:36 That they were talking about, okay. But Lars, is it possible that he took you astray as well? 1026 1:55:36 --> 1:55:41 Even though your guard was down because you knew him so well, and you were sharing an office with 1027 1:55:41 --> 1:55:47 him, your office, you graciously offered him office space when he ceased to be prime minister 1028 1:55:48 --> 1:55:55 of Sweden. So is it possible that he, you know, some people are weird and they can take people 1029 1:55:55 --> 1:56:01 astray. And so he maybe claimed that he didn't know about documents which he did know about. 1030 1:56:02 --> 1:56:09 No, no, no, no, no. I know him so well. I spent so much time with him. 1031 1:56:09 --> 1:56:12 I understand it. All right, thank you. 1032 1:56:12 --> 1:56:13 Thank you, Lars. 1033 1:56:13 --> 1:56:19 But I'm very, very critical. And I think he's basically a traitor to Sweden. 1034 1:56:19 --> 1:56:21 Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. 1035 1:56:21 --> 1:56:23 Well, thank you, Lars. And thank you for the... 1036 1:56:23 --> 1:56:25 So, Alex, why was he going to Ukraine all the time? 1037 1:56:27 --> 1:56:34 Probably was on assignment. You know, as soon as the government, the new government, was formed 1038 1:56:34 --> 1:56:41 after the coup, he was one of the people who was providing them advice about how to set up the 1039 1:56:41 --> 1:56:49 government, how to run things and how to defend the junta from, you know, getting overthrown in turn. 1040 1:56:50 --> 1:56:54 But it's actually worse than that because if you have read, and most people haven't, 1041 1:56:55 --> 1:57:05 but if you have read the Ukraine-EU association agreement that the Polish foreign minister 1042 1:57:05 --> 1:57:08 actually wrote, or his team wrote it... 1043 1:57:08 --> 1:57:11 Are you talking about Radek Sikorski? 1044 1:57:11 --> 1:57:12 Radek, yeah. 1045 1:57:12 --> 1:57:13 Yeah. 1046 1:57:13 --> 1:57:19 And so he wrote it and Karl signed it because Karl would never write something like that. 1047 1:57:19 --> 1:57:27 And, but then he was pushing it. And if you read it, Ukraine could never sign it because they 1048 1:57:27 --> 1:57:34 basically demanded that you should not have any trade with Russia anymore, just with the EU. 1049 1:57:34 --> 1:57:42 But the EU doesn't buy anything from Ukraine. All the sales went to Russia, Egypt, and some other 1050 1:57:42 --> 1:57:47 Turkey, maybe something like that. So the whole economy would collapse. 1051 1:57:47 --> 1:57:55 It would have been... That association agreement would have turned Ukraine into a colony of Europe. 1052 1:57:55 --> 1:57:55 Yes. 1053 1:57:55 --> 1:58:01 And Radek Sikorski never wrote that. He wouldn't be capable. It was the British who wrote that 1054 1:58:01 --> 1:58:06 association agreement because he was through and through a British man and he is to this day. 1055 1:58:07 --> 1:58:16 And his wife, yeah. But Karl pushed that political process and that is terrible. 1056 1:58:18 --> 1:58:19 Yeah. Yeah. 1057 1:58:20 --> 1:58:23 All right. Thank you, Lars. Wonderful. And thank you for the... 1058 1:58:23 --> 1:58:26 what the information you've also put into the chat. Most helpful. 1059 1:58:27 --> 1:58:29 All right, everybody keep studying, keep learning. 1060 1:58:31 --> 1:58:38 Now we have Chuck and then Tom and then Stephen and we'll be finishing the formalities in 25... 1061 1:58:38 --> 1:58:39 Are you okay for another 20 minutes, Alex? 1062 1:58:40 --> 1:58:41 Yes. Yes. 1063 1:58:41 --> 1:58:43 Excellent. Thank you, Lars. Chuck. 1064 1:58:48 --> 1:58:49 You muted, Chuck. 1065 1:58:50 --> 1:59:01 I unmuted. So I put at eight minutes past the top of the start on chat a link for Charles Kovas 1066 1:59:01 --> 1:59:07 at a Tap Talk coming up. So Charles, I'm really looking forward to you being our special guest 1067 1:59:07 --> 1:59:13 and us coming up on Tuesday. Go to the eight minute mark in the chat. You can find information. 1068 1:59:13 --> 1:59:20 But Alex, you're describing what I accept as a kind of World War III of, call it the Anglo-Saxon 1069 1:59:20 --> 1:59:32 Empire against those that are not in that empire, Bricks Company countries, for example. So, and I 1070 1:59:32 --> 1:59:38 watched a guy, I think it's Richard Medhurst. He's a journalist and he did a video titled 1071 1:59:39 --> 1:59:48 Pirate State and he makes an argument for basically empire building and it's about 1072 1:59:48 --> 2:00:00 controlling for Petrodollar and more, obviously. But I follow David Hughes and he advanced the 1073 2:00:00 --> 2:00:12 term Omni-War, which is a code for a war, essentially class war, by the plutocrats 1074 2:00:13 --> 2:00:17 or by those in that pyramid. And these are people we don't know about and they're hidden, 1075 2:00:18 --> 2:00:26 but they are waging war on the populace. And I think I accept that this war in Iran is going 1076 2:00:26 --> 2:00:32 to induce a global depression. And I posted a Substack link. I highlighted a New York Times 1077 2:00:32 --> 2:00:42 article, which makes this case. So I also invite people in the freedom movement, people on this 1078 2:00:42 --> 2:00:51 call, people that are grappling with this power structure. And I know a number of us, we get, 1079 2:00:52 --> 2:01:00 I mean, I have a lot of hope for humanity through entrepreneurship, the free markets, as it were, 1080 2:01:01 --> 2:01:12 but that capitalism as a kind of technology of an economic class structure has unfortunately 1081 2:01:12 --> 2:01:19 been involved in a lot of nefarious, wicked evil activities. And I accept that many things we 1082 2:01:19 --> 2:01:26 complain about COVID was essentially a state crime against democracy. And Lance dehaven-Smith 1083 2:01:26 --> 2:01:32 is a scholar who coined this term in 2006. So I'm an advocate for people in the freedom movement to 1084 2:01:32 --> 2:01:41 explicitly call out the plutocratic class and say, they've got to go. Just like the slave institution 1085 2:01:42 --> 2:01:49 ended in Russia in 1865, like it ended in the USA after the civil war, but ending slavery as 1086 2:01:49 --> 2:01:56 an institution didn't solve the problem of the plutocracy ruling over. So I'm a small D Democrat, 1087 2:01:56 --> 2:02:03 and I know for some people the word democracy actually infers negative connotation, which I, 1088 2:02:03 --> 2:02:08 you know, and I'm even an advocate for an egalitarian society. And I met other people 1089 2:02:08 --> 2:02:13 for whom the word egalitarian has negative connotation. One of the things that we're all 1090 2:02:13 --> 2:02:19 in the midst of is a fog of war, the pollution of language. And one of our struggles is to find 1091 2:02:19 --> 2:02:26 language that we can agree on that would galvanize everyone and closing the people in the Five Eyes 1092 2:02:26 --> 2:02:35 nations who are all kind of subject to the NATO deployment of the COVID. To Jerry's point, if 1093 2:02:35 --> 2:02:43 that's going to be the idea that could galvanize into liberation from these plutocrats, so be it. 1094 2:02:43 --> 2:02:50 But I think the warmongering is the most obvious and the overhand play of genocide in Gaza, 1095 2:02:50 --> 2:02:55 absolutely cruel and wicked evil. And we need to call this stuff out and make the demand for the 1096 2:02:55 --> 2:03:00 better society. And I look forward to talking about how hemp can be instrumental in that 1097 2:03:00 --> 2:03:05 possibility, Charles. So hey, peace out, everyone. Have a great week. Great to be on this, Alex. 1098 2:03:05 --> 2:03:07 Thank you. Thank you, Chuck. 1099 2:03:11 --> 2:03:17 Thank you, Chuck. Lovely to hear those perspectives. All right, Tom, you're on. 1100 2:03:25 --> 2:03:25 Tom's muted. 1101 2:03:26 --> 2:03:27 We can't hear you, Tom. 1102 2:03:28 --> 2:03:36 Yeah, that's my double mute. I'm sorry, Alex. I hear you on NEMA, a fair amount. I'm not able 1103 2:03:36 --> 2:03:44 to hear everyone, but I definitely appreciate your work. So yeah, I wanted to hit on a couple 1104 2:03:44 --> 2:03:53 things. One is just the opening up of the Iran conflict and the Starlink technology, the 1105 2:03:53 --> 2:04:01 demonstrations, the Time magazine, the person that leaked from the Ministry of Health to Time 1106 2:04:01 --> 2:04:09 magazine, the figures for the number of people killed. And then another major topic, which is 1107 2:04:10 --> 2:04:17 very dependent on reopening up the Straits of Hormuz. It's the India Middle East economic 1108 2:04:17 --> 2:04:27 corridor that Kushner under Trump largely engineered along with USA, European Economic 1109 2:04:27 --> 2:04:37 Union and Saudi Arabia. So those are the two things. And then maybe the where Israel's going 1110 2:04:37 --> 2:04:43 to, how Israel's going to fear and the whole Greater Israel project, you know, the expansion 1111 2:04:43 --> 2:04:53 into Syria and so forth, how that's working out. So on the demonstrators, what I understand 1112 2:04:54 --> 2:05:04 is the figures range from, I've heard some people say as high as 145,000, but the more popular 1113 2:05:04 --> 2:05:12 figure is around 30,000 demonstrators killed. And then some of the humanitarian organizations say 1114 2:05:12 --> 2:05:20 only 6,000. And it also begs the question, you know, what really did happen there? And then 1115 2:05:21 --> 2:05:29 to give you the background on this India Middle East economic corridor, Patrick Wood on his website 1116 2:05:29 --> 2:05:35 covers it. It was started, the project was started in 2023. I knew nothing about this. 1117 2:05:35 --> 2:05:42 They want to set up a fiber optic corridor going basically from 1118 2:05:45 --> 2:05:55 India, through Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, up into Haifa, Israel, and then all the way over 1119 2:05:55 --> 2:06:02 to Greece. So it's a trading corridor and along there, there'd be, I guess, a whole bunch of 1120 2:06:02 --> 2:06:08 data centers. And obviously you'd need to get, I guess you'd need to get those bases back 1121 2:06:08 --> 2:06:16 functional on Qatar and UAE, Kuwait, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, and Iraq. But it doesn't look like, 1122 2:06:16 --> 2:06:23 you know, so I've got a problem. I mean, is this going to happen or not? So those are 1123 2:06:24 --> 2:06:29 those three things. Thank you. Okay, so I'll start with Israel. I think Israel is finished. 1124 2:06:30 --> 2:06:34 It's not going to disappear tomorrow, but I think it's going to disappear. 1125 2:06:36 --> 2:06:43 I don't see how they can reverse that. And it was kind of expected, you know, Henry Kissinger was 1126 2:06:43 --> 2:06:51 saying already in 2012 that Israel will cease to exist in the next 10 years, where it's been more 1127 2:06:51 --> 2:06:59 than 10 years, but you know, he did understand certain things that are now actually coming to 1128 2:06:59 --> 2:07:07 pass. With regards to victims in Iran, that was an obvious attempt to overthrow the government. 1129 2:07:07 --> 2:07:13 And Trump himself said that, you know, as they were negotiating, he was arming, 1130 2:07:15 --> 2:07:21 he was sending the weapons to the demonstrators through the Kurds. So that was an organized 1131 2:07:21 --> 2:07:30 insurrection. According to the Iranians, about 3200 people were killed. And to my mind, that's 1132 2:07:30 --> 2:07:40 the only credible figure because all these other figures like 40,000, 150,000, 1133 2:07:42 --> 2:07:49 that is just highly, highly unlikely. How on earth would they have killed 30 or 40,000 people 1134 2:07:49 --> 2:08:00 in what, the space of two days, three days? You know, as we just discussed about the Maidan, 1135 2:08:03 --> 2:08:09 they tried to get 100 people killed. And they were shooting there for hours into the crowds, 1136 2:08:09 --> 2:08:15 into the naked crowds from more than 20 sniper positions, and they couldn't kill 100 people. 1137 2:08:15 --> 2:08:22 It's not that easy, you know. 42,000 people got arrested. That's an official 1138 2:08:24 --> 2:08:29 data point from the Iranian government. And I think that that number just got turned into 1139 2:08:29 --> 2:08:41 killed. They just, I think it's a PsyOP, it's a propaganda thing. And then with regards to 1140 2:08:41 --> 2:08:48 the data centers and the military bases, I don't think that that's happening. 1141 2:08:49 --> 2:08:56 I don't think that's coming back. The Iranians will not, you know, Iranians have been harassed 1142 2:08:56 --> 2:09:04 by Western colonial powers for over 120 years now. They've been, you know, the country has been 1143 2:09:04 --> 2:09:14 surrounded by bases. They have been attacked, sabotaged. They have been under maximum pressure 1144 2:09:14 --> 2:09:22 sanctions, which has suffocated their economic growth. And they are constantly infiltrated by 1145 2:09:22 --> 2:09:31 Western intelligence assets from Mossad, CIA, MI6, and so forth. You know, when you're under 1146 2:09:31 --> 2:09:37 siege like that, obviously your society cannot develop in a normal way. You're going to end up 1147 2:09:37 --> 2:09:43 having a repressive government because they are under attack all the time. They can't just say, 1148 2:09:43 --> 2:09:48 like, oh, free society, let everybody say what they want, let everybody do what they want. 1149 2:09:50 --> 2:09:57 So all of these things have been distorted in Iran because they've been under siege for so long. 1150 2:09:57 --> 2:10:05 And part of that siege have been the military bases. And now there's this, 1151 2:10:08 --> 2:10:10 well, very widely 1152 2:10:12 --> 2:10:19 spread understanding, whether it's correct or not, I don't know, that it was the American radars 1153 2:10:20 --> 2:10:26 that have kept their country in conditions of drought for decades. 1154 2:10:27 --> 2:10:32 Because as soon as they destroyed those radars, suddenly there's rain everywhere. 1155 2:10:34 --> 2:10:40 And people on the ground in Tehran say that the sky has changed completely, 1156 2:10:41 --> 2:10:52 that it used to be stale, stagnant, murky, hazy. And now they have clear blue skies and 1157 2:10:52 --> 2:10:57 clean air. People are reporting a very notable change. So it's not going to be difficult for 1158 2:10:57 --> 2:11:02 them to convince themselves that these military bases were messing with their weather. 1159 2:11:03 --> 2:11:12 And so I think that the Iranians will not allow for the military bases to be repaired and restaffed 1160 2:11:12 --> 2:11:19 and brought back to normal operation as before. Why should they? I mean, you know, if you look at 1161 2:11:19 --> 2:11:25 the United States was surrounded by Iranian military bases, that wouldn't be so good. 1162 2:11:25 --> 2:11:30 People wouldn't like it. They wouldn't appreciate it. They would object. So why should American 1163 2:11:30 --> 2:11:32 military bases be surrounding Iran? 1164 2:11:35 --> 2:11:44 So there's a plan for Gaza. There's this board of peace only costs a billion dollars to get on the 1165 2:11:44 --> 2:11:51 board. I think they've raised 12 billion. The plan is to tokenize. This is what I'm getting from 1166 2:11:51 --> 2:12:00 Patrick Wood's work. They're going to tokenize all the assets in Gaza and no one will have any 1167 2:12:00 --> 2:12:09 private property. So you don't think that's going to happen? And what do you think is going to happen 1168 2:12:09 --> 2:12:10 in Syria long term? 1169 2:12:10 --> 2:12:16 I very much doubt that that's going to happen because they're making these plans without asking 1170 2:12:17 --> 2:12:25 Palestinians anything. And Palestinians are still the population of that area. Whatever Trump and 1171 2:12:25 --> 2:12:31 Kushner and Witkov might think about it. And then the whole thing doesn't make any sense at all. 1172 2:12:31 --> 2:12:33 It's just dumb, honestly. 1173 2:12:33 --> 2:12:37 The whole thing doesn't make any sense at all. It's just dumb, honestly. 1174 2:12:39 --> 2:12:45 Why would you do that if somebody has a valid legal claim on that land? 1175 2:12:48 --> 2:12:57 I think it's crazy too, but just one wrinkle on it. Supposedly there's already negotiations to 1176 2:12:57 --> 2:13:06 bring in Arab forces and the Palestinians would not leave and IDF would leave and Israel would 1177 2:13:06 --> 2:13:15 continue to exist. But they benefit, presumably, I don't know. Everything is going to be rebuilt, 1178 2:13:15 --> 2:13:22 all these high rises and so forth. But yeah, thanks so much. That should do it for me. 1179 2:13:23 --> 2:13:26 Thank you, Tom. 1180 2:13:27 --> 2:13:35 Do we have Charles? 1181 2:13:36 --> 2:13:40 I don't know where he's gone. So anyway, are you there, Charles? 1182 2:13:43 --> 2:13:44 Yep, he's fallen asleep. 1183 2:13:47 --> 2:13:48 Is it okay if I ask? 1184 2:13:48 --> 2:13:51 Oh, sorry, Jim. Go ahead, Jim. 1185 2:13:51 --> 2:13:51 You first. 1186 2:13:55 --> 2:14:03 Is it possible? I heard some discussions about Victoria Newland earlier. And I'm wondering if 1187 2:14:05 --> 2:14:13 Hagen wrote about a SKINAC document that said genetically specific virus or pathogen could be 1188 2:14:13 --> 2:14:20 a politically useful tool. And that's her husband's family. Could you address that? 1189 2:14:20 --> 2:14:30 And could you address the possibility of using energy as something that Jeffrey Edskeen was 1190 2:14:31 --> 2:14:37 documenting that he is suppressing, but may take us out of this energy crisis with oil? 1191 2:14:37 --> 2:14:42 These aren't topics that you kind of talked about, but there seem to be critical pieces 1192 2:14:43 --> 2:14:45 of this overall fight. 1193 2:14:45 --> 2:14:50 Well, okay. Thank you, Jim. Look, regarding the energy, I don't really know. I wouldn't be able 1194 2:14:50 --> 2:15:00 to give you an answer regarding this other question. The United States Defense Department 1195 2:15:00 --> 2:15:07 and the CIA set up 48 different biolabs in Ukraine, and they had many more in 1196 2:15:07 --> 2:15:14 places like Georgia and other countries in the region. And they were doing all kinds of research. 1197 2:15:14 --> 2:15:22 We don't necessarily know all the details, but they were collecting samples of the Russian 1198 2:15:22 --> 2:15:29 population and Ukrainian population. And they were doing this presumably with the view of developing 1199 2:15:30 --> 2:15:36 they were doing this presumably with the view of developing pathogens that might target 1200 2:15:38 --> 2:15:46 one population while leaving others unharmed. So I don't know, to me that sounds absolutely crazy. 1201 2:15:47 --> 2:15:52 I mean, not that somebody would have the idea of doing that, but that they would actually be able 1202 2:15:52 --> 2:16:02 to pull it off. That just strikes me as fantasy. But they did develop all kinds of insect. Oh, 1203 2:16:02 --> 2:16:07 by the way, I have to share this with the group because I learned it from practically from first 1204 2:16:07 --> 2:16:19 hand. But there seems to be very abundant exports of insects from Israel. The company is called BioB 1205 2:16:20 --> 2:16:26 and they have BioB Israel, BioB United States, BioB Germany, BioB Canada, and so forth. 1206 2:16:27 --> 2:16:34 And it seems to me that these exports have started very, very recently in large amounts. 1207 2:16:35 --> 2:16:42 And this kind of overlaps this appearance, a sudden appearance of ticks on people's farms 1208 2:16:43 --> 2:16:51 in boxes, like boxes of ticks are appearing. So anyway, I thought I'd mention then the reason 1209 2:16:51 --> 2:16:57 why I mentioned what reminded me is your question, because they've done a lot of research 1210 2:16:57 --> 2:17:04 in these bio labs in Georgia and Ukraine on insects, insects that would carry a pathogen. 1211 2:17:04 --> 2:17:11 And then maybe that insect would fly off to Russia and infect the population or livestock there. 1212 2:17:12 --> 2:17:24 Right. And one of the effects of this was that they had an escape or release of a mosquito species 1213 2:17:24 --> 2:17:31 that they were working on. And that I felt in person because what happened is that this mosquito 1214 2:17:31 --> 2:17:40 spread westward along the Mediterranean coast everywhere. And I remember around 2014, 1215 2:17:40 --> 2:17:48 up until the time where I come from, we never had any mosquitoes. And then they started appearing 1216 2:17:48 --> 2:17:54 suddenly in very large numbers. And then much, much later, I read from investigative work by 1217 2:17:54 --> 2:18:05 Deliana Gaetangieva, that's a Bulgarian journalist. She got all these documentations from some of these 1218 2:18:05 --> 2:18:12 bio labs. And it turns out that that particular species of mosquito escaped from a US 1219 2:18:13 --> 2:18:20 DOD bio lab in Georgia. And now we have it. It's a gift that keeps on giving. They're extremely annoying. 1220 2:18:23 --> 2:18:30 Wow, that's great information. I just tried to look up BioB and could not find it. It's B-I-O-B? 1221 2:18:31 --> 2:18:34 Is that the company? Yeah, I don't have any documents, but I will. 1222 2:18:35 --> 2:18:48 If you could, I'd appreciate it. Well, okay. I've asked people who are, because my contact is in a 1223 2:18:48 --> 2:18:56 shipping business. And I asked them to get me the documents, but I asked them not to scan anything, 1224 2:18:56 --> 2:19:02 not to send me anything by email. I asked them to just make photocopies and to give them to me when 1225 2:19:03 --> 2:19:07 I see them in person. I don't want to be sending this around. 1226 2:19:09 --> 2:19:14 Yes, I understand. This could also be a preparation of something that we'll learn about 1227 2:19:14 --> 2:19:21 in the future. Yes. And by the way, when I was talking to some people about taking 1228 2:19:21 --> 2:19:27 hydroxychloroquine early, some high level people in the United States, they said we were told to 1229 2:19:27 --> 2:19:33 take chloroquine, which has a longer shelf life of 55 days, and to build bat houses. And it turns out 1230 2:19:33 --> 2:19:42 that bats eat mosquitoes at a very high rate. So building bat houses and keeping bats may protect 1231 2:19:43 --> 2:19:50 your family from the mosquitoes. Just keep that in mind. Also, there is a researcher in 1232 2:19:51 --> 2:19:58 North Carolina in the research triangle named Dr. Dennis Brown, B-R-O-W-N, who researches this 1233 2:19:58 --> 2:20:05 syndibus, S-I-N-D-B-I-S virus, and puts it in mosquitoes and can transfer 1234 2:20:07 --> 2:20:14 pathogens that can kill vertebrates like humans, but not affect the mosquito. And that syndibus 1235 2:20:14 --> 2:20:21 virus may be neutralized by certain antiparasitic medications like nitrozoxanide. So just keep in 1236 2:20:21 --> 2:20:26 mind that the antiparasitic may be needed for those who are genetically targeted. 1237 2:20:27 --> 2:20:31 Okay. But not needed by those who are not genetically targeted. 1238 2:20:33 --> 2:20:38 And the genetic targeting, I can go give you some information about that this year. 1239 2:20:38 --> 2:20:41 Do you think it works? 1240 2:20:41 --> 2:20:50 Absolutely. The ACE2 receptor that the COVID uses is genetically targeted. The urine cleavage site 1241 2:20:50 --> 2:20:56 is genetically targeted, and certain people don't have high levels of urine in their bodies. The 1242 2:20:56 --> 2:21:07 TMPRSS2 cleavage site is genetically targeted. The CCR5, or the GP120, that is HIV-like, 1243 2:21:07 --> 2:21:15 inside the COVID is genetically targeted and does not harm people with the CCR5 variant. 1244 2:21:16 --> 2:21:21 So yes, COVID has four mechanisms at least of genetically targeting. 1245 2:21:21 --> 2:21:26 And as R.F. Clayton said, it does not affect certain people. 1246 2:21:31 --> 2:21:40 Here would be my question. If they wanted to say target Iranians, Persians, or if they wanted to 1247 2:21:40 --> 2:21:44 target Russians, why haven't they done it? Why didn't we see a... 1248 2:21:45 --> 2:21:52 I believe they have, and here's what we will see. If you check your CD3, CD4, and CD8 counts, 1249 2:21:52 --> 2:21:59 they will be low in the targeted people. And physicians who have written for that test 1250 2:22:00 --> 2:22:07 have been refused. They're not allowed to check that test on their patients. CD3, CD4, and CD8 1251 2:22:08 --> 2:22:15 e-lymphocyte counts. So there have been pre-crimes to have increased infestation with parasites, 1252 2:22:16 --> 2:22:26 pre-crimes to have increased infections, but it's a very slow pre-cell damage. And the cancer, 1253 2:22:26 --> 2:22:35 the increased risk in cancer is also genetically specific. So this is very sophisticated damage to 1254 2:22:35 --> 2:22:42 what I would call the goyum, as outlined by Jeffrey Edgstein. And if you want to find out 1255 2:22:42 --> 2:22:49 if you're goyum, you check your CD3, CD4, and CD8 counts, and they might be low. Or low normal, 1256 2:22:49 --> 2:22:55 if predisposed to people with a parasite infestation. And COVID could be considered 1257 2:22:55 --> 2:23:03 to be a parasite. Intracelular replicating in Paris. Okay, thank you. Thank you, Jim. 1258 2:23:05 --> 2:23:17 Lars Johansson again. Go ahead, Lars. Yes, I just remembered that I saw a lot of flows of people from 1259 2:23:17 --> 2:23:25 Israel to Cyprus. We have the fires in Argentina, where they've made a decision that 300,000 1260 2:23:25 --> 2:23:33 Israelis should move to Argentina. We have special cities in Ukraine where Israelis are setting up. 1261 2:23:33 --> 2:23:39 We have the same thing in Thailand, and so forth. So have you noticed this? Have you 1262 2:23:41 --> 2:23:48 on conclusions? What do you think about all that? It strikes me like a little bit crazy. I don't 1263 2:23:48 --> 2:23:58 understand where they're going with that. I think they are basically inculcating countries 1264 2:23:58 --> 2:24:02 with the Zionists. That's what it seems. Yes, yes, yes. No, no, that's clear. But 1265 2:24:03 --> 2:24:11 where does it go? What if people... I mean, I don't know. They have suffered so much through 1266 2:24:11 --> 2:24:18 history kind of exactly for these reasons. Why don't they look at the way Jews live in Iran, 1267 2:24:19 --> 2:24:23 where they're part of the society, they're integrated, they're not oppressed, 1268 2:24:23 --> 2:24:29 and they're not trying to take over the country, at least as far as I know. And so wouldn't they 1269 2:24:29 --> 2:24:34 want their families to live in peace and not be afraid of people surrounding them and not be 1270 2:24:34 --> 2:24:44 crazy freaking fanatics constantly at war? I don't understand it. I have to say to me, it's like 1271 2:24:44 --> 2:25:00 a tribe that's gone insane. I don't know how... Oh, by the way, Lars, while I have you on the line, 1272 2:25:00 --> 2:25:05 I wanted to ask, so this book, Maidan, the Secret Files, that's only available in Russian? 1273 2:25:05 --> 2:25:11 In Ukrainian. Oh, in Ukrainian. That's too bad. The authors are... 1274 2:25:11 --> 2:25:19 Vitaly and... The two brothers, they are called, let me see, 1275 2:25:22 --> 2:25:31 Vitaly and Dmitry Kapranov. They are twins and they're quite well known having TV programs and 1276 2:25:31 --> 2:25:37 things in Ukraine. One of them recently died in 2023, I think. But the other brother is still 1277 2:25:37 --> 2:25:46 there, Kapranov. It is called Brati Kapranov. They're called the Kapranov brothers. 1278 2:25:47 --> 2:25:54 The Kapranov brothers and it's Maidan, Taimi Faliye, which is Secret Files. 1279 2:25:55 --> 2:26:05 Okay. Thank you. Thank you very much. Very good. So thank you, Lars. And do you think 1280 2:26:05 --> 2:26:11 Carl Bildt would come to talk to us Lars? And then we could install Alex in the background, you know, and... 1281 2:26:14 --> 2:26:24 I think that would probably be one of the last things he did. He was organizing the European 1282 2:26:24 --> 2:26:33 supply of COVID-19 vaccines. He got a position, the WHO gave him a position to be 1283 2:26:34 --> 2:26:42 in some bullshit organization, organizing vaccines. So I doubt that he would come to medical 1284 2:26:42 --> 2:26:50 doctors for COVID ethics. What about if we just changed it to medical doctors for bad COVID ethics? 1285 2:26:50 --> 2:26:57 Temporarily. We could just drop the COVID ethics maybe. But anyway, Alex, thank you. 1286 2:26:57 --> 2:27:05 Yes, unfortunately not, I think. I have thought we need to change the name because it sounds a 1287 2:27:05 --> 2:27:10 little bit like, you know, we're virtue signaling and of course virtue signaling was part of the 1288 2:27:10 --> 2:27:18 problem in 2020 and 2021. Everybody trying to be, you know, you know, you know, you know, 1289 2:27:18 --> 2:27:27 2021. Everybody trying to be good people by wearing a mask. Anyway, Alex, it's great to 1290 2:27:27 --> 2:27:34 hear from you. And I thought you described it very well today, much better than others when they 1291 2:27:34 --> 2:27:39 tried to kind of explain what's going on with Russia, the Soviet Union, you know, what happened 1292 2:27:39 --> 2:27:49 in 89 and 91. So you explained it very, I may have understood this partly previously, but I think I 1293 2:27:49 --> 2:27:56 I've got it now and essentially doesn't make any sense. But if people understood that, you know, 1294 2:27:56 --> 2:28:02 the people who are moving things at the moment, then maybe that would be very useful, you know, 1295 2:28:02 --> 2:28:07 and you have the ability, as we've discussed previously, you're very good at telling stories 1296 2:28:07 --> 2:28:12 in such a way that people not only read your words, but they actually remember them and 1297 2:28:13 --> 2:28:20 a bit like the Greek myths, you know. So if you could write like Homer, you know, 1298 2:28:21 --> 2:28:28 the Odyssey and the Iliad, that would be great about Russian history, you know, and so how do 1299 2:28:28 --> 2:28:37 we get to this crazy place we are now with Europe? Well, you know, Stephen, I wrote a book about the 1300 2:28:37 --> 2:28:45 about the war in Ukraine. And then I never published it, because I basically shit myself 1301 2:28:45 --> 2:28:53 after they sanctioned Colonel Jacques Beaux, because no one would publish it. Sorry. No, no, 1302 2:28:53 --> 2:28:59 no, I didn't even try to publish it because I don't want to get sanctioned. I see what I think 1303 2:28:59 --> 2:29:05 I will do in the end, I'm going to publish the whole thing piece by piece on my sub stack. 1304 2:29:05 --> 2:29:13 And then maybe, you know, once the European Commission disintegrates, I'll publish the book, 1305 2:29:13 --> 2:29:19 but I can't I can't be sanctioned. You know, I have two I have two young boys that I have to raise, 1306 2:29:19 --> 2:29:25 you know, if you think they would sanction you. Well, you know, Colonel Jacques Beaux and I 1307 2:29:26 --> 2:29:34 appeared on many of the same podcasts. And I get similar traction like him. 1308 2:29:35 --> 2:29:40 So I wouldn't be surprised if I found myself on the list. And this book would definitely 1309 2:29:41 --> 2:29:47 put me closer to that list. Because, you know, so you know, the two books which were most of the 1310 2:29:47 --> 2:29:55 same book, actually was banned twice. And it seems that Bill Browder was behind censoring you there. 1311 2:29:55 --> 2:30:01 But also he was responsible for censoring a film, I think somebody mentioned tonight, 1312 2:30:02 --> 2:30:08 which he didn't want seen. So where does he get his protection from Bill Browder? What? So why did 1313 2:30:08 --> 2:30:17 the State Department essentially protect him or try to? He's an operator. He's an operator for 1314 2:30:17 --> 2:30:26 exactly the the top level people who are in charge of the world. You know, he well, 1315 2:30:27 --> 2:30:34 what you can find out is that his biggest investor is HSBC. So he works in but you know, 1316 2:30:34 --> 2:30:39 when he when he got in trouble in Russia, when he when they when they yanked his visa, 1317 2:30:39 --> 2:30:46 so he couldn't go back to Moscow, Tony Blair went to St. Petersburg. And he was going to intervene 1318 2:30:47 --> 2:30:52 on Bill Browder's behalf with Vladimir Putin. So he was going to bring up Bill Browder 1319 2:30:54 --> 2:31:05 in in a meeting with Vladimir Putin in 2006. You know, a hedge fund guy who gets the prime minister 1320 2:31:05 --> 2:31:11 to intervene on your behalf so that you can get your visa to go back to Russia. That's not a that's 1321 2:31:11 --> 2:31:18 not an ordinary operator. And you know, at that he wasn't a particularly you know, his fund was 1322 2:31:18 --> 2:31:23 at top four billion dollars. That's not a particularly big hedge fund. That's not 1323 2:31:23 --> 2:31:31 significant enough for a prime minister to go and intervene on your behalf. But somehow, in this case, 1324 2:31:31 --> 2:31:37 this happened in India in the end, it didn't happen because just when Blair and Putin were supposed 1325 2:31:37 --> 2:31:47 to meet, Israel attacked Lebanon. So then that all got derailed. But he has very, very top level 1326 2:31:48 --> 2:31:58 protection. He gets doors open, he got like that, John McCain to cooperate with him. 1327 2:31:59 --> 2:32:06 Cornyn, a whole bunch of these people, these gatekeepers in the US Congress. 1328 2:32:07 --> 2:32:11 So was Blair prime minister at the time that he went to Moscow? 1329 2:32:11 --> 2:32:17 Yes. When when when who went to Moscow? When he went to intervene with Russia on 1330 2:32:17 --> 2:32:20 St. Petersburg? Yes, yes, he was the prime minister at the time. 1331 2:32:21 --> 2:32:29 Yes, of course, I know that the prime minister, him, Tony Blair, he has a criminal record for 1332 2:32:29 --> 2:32:33 costaging under a different name. Did you know that his middle names? 1333 2:32:34 --> 2:32:42 Like some gay business? Well, costaging is, I'm not an expert on it, because essentially it's 1334 2:32:43 --> 2:32:52 it's males, you know, with a homosexual tendency, should we say, to frequent public toilets and 1335 2:32:52 --> 2:33:01 solicit. Is that is that for real? Or is that like? No, that's real. That's real? Yes, you need to 1336 2:33:01 --> 2:33:08 write about it. I can put you in touch with people who know about it. No, I mean, I've read this 1337 2:33:08 --> 2:33:14 somewhere. Charles Linton Blair, Charles Linton. Yes, yes. He's got four Christian names. 1338 2:33:15 --> 2:33:19 Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. No, no, I know about that. But I thought like maybe it was a BS story, 1339 2:33:19 --> 2:33:25 you know. Well, no, I think, you know, so, you know, he's compromised. But so many politicians, 1340 2:33:25 --> 2:33:35 you know, they they deliberately compromised in weird ways, you know. So I heard at once I heard 1341 2:33:35 --> 2:33:40 from someone who was authentic, should we say, or I thought was authentic, you know, that some. 1342 2:33:40 --> 2:33:45 But he's he's the knight companion of the most noble order of the guarder. 1343 2:33:46 --> 2:33:53 He's beyond reproach. Oh, no, he he's got a terrible reputation in the UK. So he probably 1344 2:33:53 --> 2:34:00 was behind the murder of David Kelly. That's how I know about Blair. And I also knew about Mandelson 1345 2:34:00 --> 2:34:07 way before he was appointed to the British Ambassador post in. Yeah. And who is 1346 2:34:07 --> 2:34:15 watching with Mandelson BFF with Jacob Rothschild? It's his. Mandelson was always bad news, you know, 1347 2:34:15 --> 2:34:22 and and and there was no way, in my opinion, that he could ever pass a security check. No, no, 1348 2:34:22 --> 2:34:27 absolutely. And of course, that's what they've been going on now on Earth. Sure. Well, you know. 1349 2:34:28 --> 2:34:37 But did you know that Keir Starmer has a trans child? And so does Angela Rayner and no, I had 1350 2:34:37 --> 2:34:43 no idea. And one other who's really top of the British government at the moment. And the Daily 1351 2:34:43 --> 2:34:48 Mail, the one of the top journalists at the Daily Mail, Sue Reed, told me this. She's a friend of 1352 2:34:48 --> 2:34:54 mine because we were working together on David Kelly. And she told me out of the blue, she said, 1353 2:34:54 --> 2:35:04 Steve, did you know that Keir Starmer, there were two females, Angela Rainer's one, you know, who 1354 2:35:04 --> 2:35:13 wears the frocks literally, the childish frocks, you could say. And I think was it Yvette Cooper, 1355 2:35:14 --> 2:35:23 who's kind of vice chairman of the Labour Party or something. Sorry, the deputy prime minister. 1356 2:35:23 --> 2:35:31 That's right. So these three, the top three in the Labour Party, such as it is, they all have trans 1357 2:35:31 --> 2:35:38 children. That wouldn't matter were it not for the fact that they're also pushing the trans agenda. 1358 2:35:39 --> 2:35:48 And Alex, the British public don't know about it. And I said to, so Sue Reed told me, you know, 1359 2:35:48 --> 2:35:54 a journalist, shall we say, told me, a top journalist who knows everything in the UK. 1360 2:35:55 --> 2:36:00 And she told me, Steve, did you know these people? And the Daily Mail has known this for years. 1361 2:36:00 --> 2:36:06 I said, why haven't they published it? So the British people know that these people at the top 1362 2:36:06 --> 2:36:13 of the Labour Party are compromised on that issue and probably on many others. And she said, it's, 1363 2:36:13 --> 2:36:20 I can't do it. I've tried. But also I got the impression that she even she didn't understand 1364 2:36:20 --> 2:36:28 why it was important. Are all three of these Jewish Yvette Cooper, Angela Rainer and Keir Starmer? 1365 2:36:29 --> 2:36:32 I think Yvette Cooper, I'm not quite sure about whether it's Yvette Cooper, but 1366 2:36:33 --> 2:36:40 the one who's deputy, the Home Secretary, I think it was, that's Angela Rainer, I think. 1367 2:36:41 --> 2:36:48 The deputy prime minister and the prime minister all have trans children. But that wouldn't matter 1368 2:36:48 --> 2:36:54 were it not for the fact that they were also in the background pushing for the trans agenda, you 1369 2:36:54 --> 2:37:01 know. And also you could argue, I would argue, that anyone who has a trans child and has gone 1370 2:37:01 --> 2:37:07 down that road, you know, they failed as a parent, so they shouldn't be leading the country. 1371 2:37:08 --> 2:37:12 But also what are the odds? What are the odds that three government ministers have 1372 2:37:13 --> 2:37:17 trans children? Absolutely. Like all these Hollywood celebrities. 1373 2:37:18 --> 2:37:23 It's like a few dozen of them have trans children. Well, yes, but this is the UK. 1374 2:37:24 --> 2:37:30 And the top three people in the UK have trans children. And the British public don't know about 1375 2:37:30 --> 2:37:39 it. But the Daily Mail does and has done for years. So that's a great thing for you to write 1376 2:37:39 --> 2:37:47 about, Alex. No, but it's not my thing, you know. I don't, you know, like if Tony Blair had gay sex 1377 2:37:47 --> 2:37:51 in public restrooms, I don't particularly care about that, you know. No public toilets. 1378 2:37:53 --> 2:37:59 What did I say? Restaurants. No, no, restrooms. I meant restrooms. Sorry. Yeah. 1379 2:38:00 --> 2:38:08 I don't particularly care. It's his business. But, you know, I'm a lot more interested. 1380 2:38:08 --> 2:38:13 Nobody has a criminal record. How these... He has a criminal record. 1381 2:38:13 --> 2:38:16 Nothing's going to happen to him. You know, nothing's going to happen to him. 1382 2:38:18 --> 2:38:24 It's not about him. It's about the system, you know. And the thing I'm most interested in, 1383 2:38:25 --> 2:38:31 it's not because people are flawed that we are in this situation. It's that the system incentivizes 1384 2:38:31 --> 2:38:40 certain kinds of behavior and leads us to certain outcomes. And so I'm very interested in 1385 2:38:40 --> 2:38:45 understanding these incentives and trying to understand whether we can change those incentives. 1386 2:38:45 --> 2:38:51 We can remove them or turn them around completely towards ends that we actually do desire. 1387 2:38:52 --> 2:38:54 Like, you know, peace and prosperity would be nice. 1388 2:38:55 --> 2:39:00 Well, I think they're deliberately compromised so that they can be blackmailed. And essentially, 1389 2:39:00 --> 2:39:06 they become putty. You know, they can be manipulated by others in the future. 1390 2:39:07 --> 2:39:13 So I have also heard, Alex, I don't know whether it's true, that British MPs, when they go to the 1391 2:39:13 --> 2:39:19 House of Commons for the first time, within the first couple of weeks that they're the, 1392 2:39:19 --> 2:39:25 you know, the new MPs, they're compromised. And for example, I was told that they go into a public 1393 2:39:25 --> 2:39:30 toilet, they're not doing anything wrong. And all of a sudden a child appears and someone 1394 2:39:30 --> 2:39:36 takes a photograph. And from that moment, they're captured. Really? Yeah. And they also get invited 1395 2:39:36 --> 2:39:43 to Israel. All of the... Yes, yes, yes. That part I know, yes. But they can't say no, but they get 1396 2:39:43 --> 2:39:51 invited. Yeah, yeah, yeah. That's weird, isn't it? Yes, yes, yes. Anyway, sorry about that. So, Alex, 1397 2:39:51 --> 2:39:57 thank you so much for speaking to us. Thank you very much. One last question, Alex. Yes. So, 1398 2:39:57 --> 2:40:03 Lars says that what you're saying about Carl Bildt is not true. And that may be the case. He knows 1399 2:40:03 --> 2:40:09 him very well. So I can understand why he says that. No, no, I... I'm saying it's very unlikely 1400 2:40:09 --> 2:40:17 based on... But Alex, whose opinion I also respect, says the opposite. So, Alex? No, 1401 2:40:17 --> 2:40:25 I'm not saying the opposite. I was just... I had the suspicion of him and John Brennan, the CIA guy. 1402 2:40:27 --> 2:40:31 Yes, but what I'm trying to say, Alex, you could be right. Your intuition could be right, you know. 1403 2:40:32 --> 2:40:38 Anyway. Yeah, but you know... Carl has enough on his balance sheet. He doesn't need another one. 1404 2:40:39 --> 2:40:47 Well... There's a lot of things that are bad. I would say not that one. Another... Yeah, and another 1405 2:40:47 --> 2:40:52 candidate is Sikorski himself. Well, yes, but Lars, the point I'm trying to make is that Alex has 1406 2:40:52 --> 2:41:00 a thought about that for a reason. And Alex is often right in the face of everybody. So anyway, 1407 2:41:00 --> 2:41:05 that's all I'm saying. Yeah, it's a... It's going to be a 50-50 thing. Either it's true or it's not. 1408 2:41:06 --> 2:41:12 Absolutely, yes. But you're right about Bill Browder, it seems. Yeah, yeah, I think, well, 1409 2:41:12 --> 2:41:18 they wouldn't have banned my book if I wasn't really. Well, exactly. Oh, there's one other thing. I 1410 2:41:18 --> 2:41:25 can't quite remember what Victoria Newlands... She's famous for giving testimony to the Senate, 1411 2:41:25 --> 2:41:32 was it? And she let something out as if, you know, everybody knew about it, but they didn't know about 1412 2:41:32 --> 2:41:38 it until Victoria... Well, about the bio... She let out the cat out of the bag about the biolabs. 1413 2:41:38 --> 2:41:45 Yes, that's right, yes. She was handpicking the government in Kiev after the coup. 1414 2:41:47 --> 2:41:55 She was very famous for saying, fuck the EU, on an intercepted call with Jeffrey Pyatt, the ambassador. 1415 2:41:56 --> 2:42:01 Oh, so was she behind the Nord Stream pipeline explosions? No, no, no, no, no. 1416 2:42:02 --> 2:42:12 No, I mean, she was probably in the loop, but she... She actually had a presentation on the 18th 1417 2:42:12 --> 2:42:23 of December, 2013, which was sponsored by Chevron, where she went through that the US State Department 1418 2:42:23 --> 2:42:34 had spent five billion dollars on democracy in Ukraine, and later in a different video, she said 1419 2:42:35 --> 2:42:42 that the Nord Stream will not happen. Yes, yes, correct, correct. Yeah, so she was in the loop, 1420 2:42:43 --> 2:42:50 but I don't think she was the decision maker there. Oh, I also heard that... I didn't know this, 1421 2:42:50 --> 2:42:55 but apparently there were four pipelines. Well, one of them hadn't been completed, 1422 2:42:56 --> 2:43:01 so it wasn't in use, but so there were four. There were four and three were destroyed. 1423 2:43:02 --> 2:43:08 Well, actually one wasn't completed at the time, so two were destroyed, and one is still operational. 1424 2:43:08 --> 2:43:16 Yes, correct. I think they were finished, but they only destroyed three. Yes, correct, they were all 1425 2:43:16 --> 2:43:24 completed, but only three were destroyed. And the Swedish government made a survey just after the 1426 2:43:24 --> 2:43:32 explosion, and they came up with nothing. Lars, so why don't you submit a Freedom of Information Act 1427 2:43:32 --> 2:43:40 request to the Swedish authorities, the people who measure the radiation from nuclear explosions, 1428 2:43:40 --> 2:43:47 and ask them whether they have any information around the time, you know, because the Swedish 1429 2:43:49 --> 2:43:53 authority I'm thinking of, I don't know what they called, they were responsible for 1430 2:43:55 --> 2:44:01 telling the world that Chernobyl had happened. So what I'm trying to say is they should have been, 1431 2:44:01 --> 2:44:09 you know, if what our physicist told us, you know, was true, and I think it may have been true 1432 2:44:09 --> 2:44:15 that they used a mini nuke or whatever in the in the center of Europe, and the Swedish, as far as 1433 2:44:15 --> 2:44:23 I understand, there was no mention of nuclear radiation fallout, which they were measuring, 1434 2:44:23 --> 2:44:32 you know, for Chernobyl, but didn't for Nord Stream. Why, you know, I don't know how you'd ask the 1435 2:44:32 --> 2:44:39 question. I like Hans Benjamin Brown very much, okay. I've been in his kitchen, I've been in his 1436 2:44:39 --> 2:44:47 apartment. We spent hours and hours on what happened. I took that information to a Swedish 1437 2:44:47 --> 2:44:55 professor. What's his name? What's the Swedish professor's name? Professor Hedberg. Yeah. And he 1438 2:44:55 --> 2:45:04 wrote, he did a description job, he wrote a report on it, on the six claims that Hans Benjamin has, 1439 2:45:05 --> 2:45:12 and he absolutely destroyed all of them. I have asked him to come on to medical doctors. 1440 2:45:12 --> 2:45:18 And he wouldn't come. Maybe debate. He said, and I asked him, why hasn't anyone else said this? 1441 2:45:19 --> 2:45:29 Because when they read his report, they see that this is just bullshit. Nobody would spend any time on it. 1442 2:45:29 --> 2:45:34 He did spend time on it. Well, yes, but that's one man's opinion. And essentially, he was... 1443 2:45:34 --> 2:45:39 I can send you the report, if I can find it somewhere. I have it in one of my hard disks. 1444 2:45:39 --> 2:45:46 But when I saw his response, I decided not to spend any time on it. I still like Hans Benjamin 1445 2:45:46 --> 2:45:52 very much. On the opinion of one man, Lars, he could have had a reason for saying that. 1446 2:45:52 --> 2:46:00 He had reasons for saying it. It might not have been the correct reasons. That's what I'm trying to say. 1447 2:46:01 --> 2:46:06 It's a 10 page report. I think it's very good, actually. I've never seen the report. 1448 2:46:06 --> 2:46:13 No, of course you haven't. But I can send it to you. I didn't want to talk to Hans Benjamin, did he? 1449 2:46:14 --> 2:46:18 I remember now we discussed this previously. He thinks it's a waste of time. 1450 2:46:18 --> 2:46:21 Ah, well, you can't say that. I could say that about... 1451 2:46:22 --> 2:46:29 His question is, who paid Hans Benjamin to do this? Because this is such crap. 1452 2:46:31 --> 2:46:39 He can't understand how a scientist would come up with what he came up with. That's his attitude. 1453 2:46:39 --> 2:46:45 Well, Hans Benjamin Braun came from Zurich, the famous physics laboratories there. 1454 2:46:46 --> 2:46:49 And he was trained there. And he's a professor. 1455 2:46:49 --> 2:46:52 I know. I have spent more time with Hans Benjamin than you have. 1456 2:46:55 --> 2:46:57 So it's one man against another. 1457 2:46:57 --> 2:47:02 Tell me what I should do. And I will do that. Tell me what I should do. 1458 2:47:03 --> 2:47:08 Well, I did say that why didn't this guy come and talk to Hans Benjamin and we could just 1459 2:47:08 --> 2:47:11 hear the arguments and make our own minds up. But you wouldn't do that. 1460 2:47:12 --> 2:47:15 Because he thinks he has spent enough time on Hans Benjamin. 1461 2:47:15 --> 2:47:21 Ah, right. OK. Yeah, yeah. OK. Well, so he's right, is he? I don't accept that. 1462 2:47:21 --> 2:47:28 I found Hans Benjamin OK. And I didn't think he made... I'm not a theoretical physicist, obviously. 1463 2:47:28 --> 2:47:31 But I don't like someone coming along... 1464 2:47:31 --> 2:47:33 Charles Hedberg is. 1465 2:47:33 --> 2:47:37 ...and trying to discredit and successfully discrediting in your eyes 1466 2:47:39 --> 2:47:45 with no information imparted to anyone other than you. That's not right. OK, then. 1467 2:47:45 --> 2:47:47 Thank you, Lars. 1468 2:47:50 --> 2:47:53 Stephen, everyone, I'm afraid I have to go. 1469 2:47:53 --> 2:47:57 Yes. OK. Sorry. Anyway, very interesting. Thank you. 1470 2:47:57 --> 2:48:00 Thank you very much for the invite. It was a pleasure. 1471 2:48:00 --> 2:48:03 Alex, Alex, can I ask you... 1472 2:48:03 --> 2:48:06 No, we're going now, we're going now, Marv. Sorry. 1473 2:48:06 --> 2:48:09 No, no, no. I'm OK. 1474 2:48:09 --> 2:48:19 I wanted to ask if you looked at the DC Hilton shooting last night. It looked to me like a 1475 2:48:19 --> 2:48:22 stinky put-up job. Have you looked at that? 1476 2:48:23 --> 2:48:24 No, I haven't. 1477 2:48:25 --> 2:48:26 OK, thanks. 1478 2:48:28 --> 2:48:29 All right. Bye, everyone. 1479 2:48:30 --> 2:48:32 Thank you, Alex. And thank you, Lars. 1480 2:48:35 --> 2:48:36 Very good. 1481 2:48:39 --> 2:48:47 I have a comment, Stephen, about last night's debacle at the White House.