The Colonel’s Corner Inauguration Special
1:52:45 · ▶ watch on Rumble
Transcript
0:00
Oh, this should be fun. They've already kicked me out once. Yay. I'm glad nothing's changed. Yeah, but we're going to Mars. You're so funny. All right. Oh, my God. He cracked me up. Let me get this computer part set up on Rumble. All right. Go live.
0:37
Okay, everybody, we are going to have basically an open mic segment today. So it may only run the normal hour after the formal presentation. So if that's the case, that's fine. If you guys want to go a little longer, that's fine as well, depending on how many people want to talk. I just kind of want to get everybody's opinion.
1:07
on the last couple of days over the weekend, today's activities, so much has gone on. Lots of information out there, lots of questions about how to process the information. So just kind of want to get input from everybody. If you guys have some questions, we do have resources that I can take notes and try to
1:34
find answers to any questions that we have. So without any further ado, I don't know if you guys, I just saw Gordon Sather noted that Cecile Richards, the former Planned Parenthood president, has died. Probably didn't want to live through another Trump presidency and see all of her great work.
2:04
Was it by natural causes or do you know? It just says that she died. He just cut and pasted. So there's no actual link to the article. So I do not know. But anyway. Oh, my God. Was that Trump in a cowboy hat? John Rich just posted. Well, it was maybe it was last night that he posted it. He has a picture of Trump on his profile.
2:35
with a cowboy hat on. That's hysterical. Totally hysterical. Oh, my God. Yeah. Okay. So, I see my buddy Noah's here. Thank you for joining us. And Cousin It, let's get her into the co-host. Let's get SR71 up here on a speaker.
3:06
Who else is going to come up and talk to us today? You guys need to be brave. I hear all of you guys tell me in the feedback that you listen every day, but I don't see the people that say they listen every day come up and talk to us. I'd like to get more of you guys up here talking to us so that we can get your feedback because basically this show is about you guys.
3:32
And you have done such an amazing job, especially the seaweed sally. Man, that girl goes to town when it comes to reposting stuff. She's amazing. Crazy, crazy amazing. So lots of good work here. I see Jameson Haygood has been very active in interfacing as well.
4:02
Regina, who I love corresponding with. And since we do have a lot of new followers, I thought it necessary today to kind of go over the ground rules. Because obviously, as y'all can see from some of the most recent interaction, the stuff we post isn't for everybody. Some people are just not going to be able to handle the truth.
4:32
And I will work with them. But when I give you, you know, four pages of factual data and the only thing that you can do is come back and tell me that I'm a communist sympathizer and not refute anything, you're going to get blocked. Those are just kind of the rules of engagement. I will entertain anybody's ignorance because up until a couple of years ago, I was very ignorant about all of this.
4:58
And ignorance simply means a lack of information. You don't have the knowledge because you never came across something. You can't be expected to know things that you've never actually encountered. So when someone gives you the fact and you then on purpose decide that you don't give a shit about the facts and you're not even going to do any research to validate the person's information, you're just going to come back and call them names.
5:27
you're not at the level that needs to be in this discussion and I'm not going to waste my time with you. So I will mute you or I will block you, one of the two. We are here for people who genuinely have questions and literally can't believe their government is doing this, but are willing to do their own research and form their own opinions. I have never expected everybody to agree with me. Y'all can see in my interactions with people on a daily basis that
5:56
There are intellectual conversations to be had about some of the finer details and what they mean. And I'll engage in that all day long because we all learn from that. And it's through that engagement that you really learn more about what your own opinion is because people challenge what your assumptions in forming that opinion are. And I love that. It's very stimulating intellectually. It makes you go back and do a little bit more research on how you formed your opinion.
6:26
What I can't tolerate is someone who, regardless of how many facts you throw at them, just basically resort to the name calling. So that's not going to cut it in our little tiny little piece of X because we basically are here to learn from each other. And again, I just appreciate you guys all being here.
6:56
Y'all still aren't asking for Mike. Where did SR71 go? Can he come up? Bridget, what was your takeaway from the inauguration? Oh, my God. There's just so much. Well, okay, I made notes. Hang on. I got to grab my notebook. Oh, my God. Bridget made notes. I know. I'm a nerd. I can't help it. Oh, girl after my own heart. I love it. There was a few things.
7:25
You know, a lot of people brought up, okay, a lot of people brought up the thing that he didn't have his hand on his Bible on when it happened and Melania was late and the whole thing was late. But now there's a lot of people that can get so distracted by the microscopic thing, my opinion. And I could be wrong. And I'm good with that. But here's a fun fact. Fun fact is Obama actually had to redo both.
7:54
of his swearing in he did it in a private ceremony afterwards because he botched it up both times and it is a ceremony it is um not a necessity for them to become president from what i understand but um one of the other things that there were two or three things that really hit me um in his speech afterwards
8:30
And that was the alien. He's using the Alien Enemies Act of 1798 to deal with the immigration. And from what I understand, that actually puts us in a as if we are in a state of war, from what I read it, which is just not a bad thing, because then there are certain leeways, which is the reason why they're using it to export all of these illegal immigrants.
9:03
The fact that they named the name. Hold on, Bridget. Let's talk about that for just a second. Now, what's extremely important for you guys to understand by invoking that is that basically declares the people here in a not technically equal, but similar status as an enemy combatant.
9:33
type arrangement, right? A hostile force. Of course, which some of them are, literally that, but it basically classifies them all as that. Now, the thing that they've been leading up to throughout all of this talk with Tom Homan is arresting anyone that is enabling or protecting or harboring
9:58
These people, because under that statute, you are then doing the same thing as harboring an enemy combatant. So that is huge. Go ahead. And that, you know, again, it totally changes everything about what they can do. And I just thought that was brilliant. And again, it shows how, in my opinion, based on how well just.
10:32
Look at how quickly the head of the whitehouse.gov immediately, the moment he was sworn in, it now shows a video of Donald Trump and about how we are taking America back. I mean, these are things that did not happen overnight. They've been preparing for this, my guess, for at least four years, including the appointment.
11:02
I don't believe any of these people were brief, but anyway, that's beside the point. The other thing was he talked about changing the cartels to be listed as terrorists, as specifically, I forget how you put it, international terrorists or essentially not within our government, which actually means that he is also, that changes the game.
11:34
A group, as I understand it, is put on the terrorist list that changes how you can deal with said and what resources you can put forward and so on, which again goes to he's disassembling the international cartel and he's doing it in real time. That's going to be very interesting because at the end of every one of those cartels is the CIA. Right.
12:09
And that means he's going to be able to treat them, in my opinion, or based on what I understand. But again, I need more research on it. That's going to make it very, very, very interesting. You cannot go very high in a drug organization without finding a CIA agent. And once they're listed as a terrorist organization, I wonder what it does to dealing with assets, CIA assets.
12:45
Since we are in a state of war because of the first thing, that's going to, you know what I'm saying? The way he listed these out, in my opinion, one links to the other. Well, the human trafficking RICO and all of that other stuff has already dealt with the asset part of that. They'll be able to basically confiscate the assets of those things.
13:16
Obviously, the stumbling block is finding all of the front companies, the fake banks and all of the other stuff that are hidden in plain sight. So we have to assume at this point that the mapping of these organizations has gone on and they know where they're hiding. Go ahead, Bridget.
13:46
one of the next things is the external of course the external revenue service and i did see a video of um them afterwards also talking about they are planning on benefiting on going back to the way it was and he even outlined it in his particular speech about how art it was never intended for us to have taxes forever it was a temporary measure
14:16
That was put in place and that prior to this, prior to that, our country was the wealthiest country, as he put it, in the world. Of course, I fact checked it, but, you know, I'm assuming he's right. Well, and that he is planning on abolishing the federal taxes. All right. So let's talk about that for a second.
14:44
We all know about the Fed being set up and the IRS being set up and blah, blah, blah. So prior to that, the part, as Bridget just articulated, that never gets talked about is how did the federal government collect the money necessary to pay people at the federal level? Well, the important pieces of this are, first of all,
15:13
the process of selecting state senators, the federal senators from states. That was done by the state legislature. They were not voted on like we do today. So the senators were appointed by the state legislature. And their job was to represent the interest of the state and the governor at the federal level. They were not
15:42
to be bought off by foreign people and the way it is now. Okay, so you couldn't buy them. You had to buy the state senators if you want to do influence of process. So that's number one. Number two then is the census. The census was created to determine how many people were in each state because
16:10
The state then had to pay a per person amount. So the Congress had the responsibility for producing a budget two years in advance. So in two years, I'm going to need a billion dollars. And the state had to pay the billion dollars. Now, if the state was pissed off that they didn't want to pay a billion dollars and thought it ought to be half a billion dollars, they sent their senators up there.
16:40
to not make it a billion dollars so they the states had a lot of say in how much growth in what the expenditures were at the federal level because their state was going to have to pay the bill right so that's an automatic check and balance of the federal purse so then once they decided it's going to be a billion dollars if there's a billion people in the united states at the time
17:09
then each state was going to be apportioned a dollar for the amount of that billion that was in their state. So if Florida had a million people, we paid a million dollars of the federal billion dollar budget. And that's the way taxes, to the extent that they were apportioned to the state, were apportioned to the state. But it was actually significantly less than that because we needed a billion dollars prior to the early 1900s.
17:39
That money was collected in tariff with trade agreements. And it was only after they instituted the federal tax and changed the way our senators were selected that all of that got blown out of the water. And we ended up becoming debt slaves to the international syndicate because now they own our senators, they own the president, and they basically...
18:08
Screwed up the entire. And then, you know, of course, we have illegal immigration where they get to do labor here like they were getting it all over the world by overthrowing government. And they win no matter what. And we're the ones that are stuck paying the bill. So you can see the implications of literally cutting that tree off at the root and not just at the root, but by going back to the tariff system that existed before and abolishing the individual income tax.
18:38
You are carving back the constitutional republic aspect of our country and putting them back into place. Now, hopefully we'll get to the point where we're appointing the senators back in the states because it's critical. And that was the beauty of the census. So if they decided that there was a million people in Florida and Florida was going to be on the dime for sending a million dollars to the federal government.
19:06
You can damn sure bet if there was a 200,000 illegals here that the governor and the Congress in the local state or the state legislatures are going to do everything in their power to get them son of a bitches out of here and not count them in a census because they're going to have to cough up another $200,000 to account for their heads. And so there would be no incentive to harbor quote unquote sanctuary people.
19:35
Because they cost you money. And you're not going to get legislation through your senators because they're appointed by the state legislature. So they don't serve you any benefit in bludgeoning out the House of Representatives with extra people to account for either because you're not going to get it past the federal senator appointed by the legislature. So there was no good way.
20:00
of sabotaging the system until they sabotage the system through amendments. The actual constitutional republic, as it was constituted, kept all of this shit from happening. And it's only after they started doing amendments that they fucked it all up. And so everyone needs to understand amendments to the Constitution are not good. As a matter of fact, the majority of them all were done for nefarious reasons.
20:30
And almost all of them. And there's very little to gain. And we lost our republic through the amendment process, in my opinion. All right. Go ahead to your next one. And the next one was, of course, he's bringing in does, which is removing a lot of the regulation.
20:55
and it was amazing that they did have melee in here who just instituted and showed the proof that it could be done in a controlled and and quick manner and and actually in his country they are no longer in a deficit so you see how these things are linked together and one of um back pay for the military because the ones that were left
21:23
are thrown out because of the vaccine mandate. In everything, you'll see also this common denominator. What he's doing, and it goes back to the 1776 theory, and not saying that everything is being reverted back, but he's just done several things that are going back to what our Constitution lined out and how our country was.
21:52
initially organized to work. So in a way, he comes as a way back machine, in my opinion, in this whole speech. The fact that the DEI is going to be dead in the military immediately. That he's going, and that was one thing, he said something about turning our military into an effective combating foreign enemy. And when he said that, now,
22:26
Again, not reading too much into it. But during the whole speech, he was facing forward, except for that moment. And during that moment, he turned around. And he was not, no longer talking to the Senate and the House. He was talking to the people in the group behind him. So something is definitely, he didn't, again, he did not do that during the entire speech, except for once. And it was when he was talking about turning our military against.
22:58
protecting us against foreign enemies um the other thing was changing it back to mount mckinley yep um and the other thing when he talked about the hostage deal again not to not to put too much into little things but recognizing certain things that do matter when he mentioned the fact that the hostages were released everyone stood up even biden even kamala but you know who didn't but
23:31
and his wife, and that speaks volumes. It was, to me, kind of a tip of the hand on the alliances. We'll just leave it there. Did you see the video that somebody had their camera focused specifically on Bush for a significant amount of time? His eyes are darting around, and he looked very nervous. Or stoned. That's just my opinion.
24:05
Okay, go ahead. Yeah, I mean, well. Did you have any more? Yeah, just China and the Panama Canal. He specifically named why. Before he'd been alluding, now he's finally saying it. I still have a problem with whoever's feeding him the facts on the Panama Canal because he's dead wrong. I'd like to know where he's getting his facts because they're wrong. Right. I agree with that.
24:37
Actually, and everything he's been saying, that's the most annoying to me right now. I mean, I understand if in the in the treaty, the only real treaty, which was the second one, the first one, Panama never signed. The Americas just told him what was going to happen because they stole it from Colombia and said, hey, here, we're going to make you a country and we're going to own it. So.
25:00
They didn't own the Panama Canal. The actual treaty that the Americans signed and didn't even care if the Panama people signed it and they didn't sign it, said that we were going to lease the property from them. We got the margins on each side so we could build the military bases to protect it. And then we use those military bases to attack all of Latin America. Not acknowledging what we did there, to me, is disingenuous, number one. Number two.
25:29
The original renegotiation of that treaty started during the Johnson administration. It went through the Johnson, Nixon, Ford. They all worked on it. Jimmy Carter signed it at the beginning of his presidency, like within the first couple of months. He didn't obviously even have enough time to do it. It was a holdover from Ford's administration, which did kind of the.
25:49
Yeoman's work on getting both of them to agree on a treaty. And that was the treaty that they both signed. It is the only treaty that they both signed. We did not lose 35,000 people. We only lost in single digit thousands, like maybe 5,000. The rest of the people that died, some 25,000 people that died were French slaves that did the 40% of the really hard work at the beginning of the project before we took it over.
26:16
thanks to Solomon and Cromwell and John Foster Dulles. So I just really don't like selling a story that's basically fictitious in order to justify any future action, because the actual treaty says that if we are not being treated fairly, that we do have recourse in the treaty. And our military is to be provided the highest priority going through there. That's in the treaty.
26:45
And so use the treaty that we agreed on to exercise your grievance rights and don't get up in front of the American people and act like we're going to be an imperialist power again and say we're going to take the ship back that never belonged to us because it didn't. Anyway, Guru, go ahead. All right. Good afternoon, people. How are you? Good morning from Australia. 8.15 a.m.
27:16
We've woken up to you guys being pretty happy about things that have gone down. What I would like, Colonel, is a few of you Americans' thoughts on where do us plebs stand? Where's Australia, Great Britain, Canada? Where do the other Western countries stand now? What do we need to do? Is there any help coming for us?
27:39
Is this the moment that the world wakes up in each country individually with no leaders, obviously, in Australia, no one to take us anywhere except the people? What goes now? What are your opinions on that, Colonel, if I could ask that question? But don't you think it has to come from Australians, Guru? Us coming to… Yes, yes, I do. Yeah, I've been telling them for bloody three years now, we've got to do it. We have no one in Australia. We have no Trump, no marketing figure.
28:08
It's got to come from the Australian people. But how do we see that happening, Colonel? We've got Stockholm syndrome over here, like Havana syndrome. They're smacking us so hard with chemtrails and radiation poisoning. You know, it's just incredible. So, yeah, you know, how do we do it? Maybe that isn't the answer. Maybe RFK Jr. getting in the health and human services and exposing that stuff.
28:37
stops it and it would have to stop it for everybody because I think that we're behind a lot of the funding of that stuff. And I have to be honest with you. I do think that while Trump's plan is focused on America, there will be, what would I call them? Almost like a talent search being done.
29:06
in order to recognize independent thought leaders in foreign countries in a good way, much like the Soros and those people did in a bad way. I think if we cleaned up our system and stopped poisoning everybody else, that you guys do have natural leaders down there and that they will be able to rise once we get our fingers out of everybody's pie.
29:38
Okay, thank you for that. Now I'd be very interested in Bridget's opinion. Actually, I echoed right at the end. Once we are no longer, you know, we have at one time brought up a map of all the military bases we have in the country where we don't have enemies. And if we stop monkeying with everybody else's...
30:09
overthrowing everybody else's leaders, it would give, like Australia, a chance to actually, and there wouldn't be the money and the weapons and all the crap that we're pouring into Australia, to fund these black ops to incite riots. And I think once that funding, once this coordinated effort, and again, it's not just us, but we are being used by the international syndicate to do that, boy, that's going to go a long way.
30:40
And you're going to see natural leaders rise to the top that right now I think are just being beaten down. And you don't see them because they're being beaten down. But that's just happening. Go ahead, Cousinette. So whole pardon thing. Right now, I know. OK, so I'm going to try to not lose my shit. I know the states can still prosecute, particularly the genocidal psychopath that Fauci is.
31:15
I know that he can still be prosecuted at a state level, as can all the others. My question is Miley. Now, he accepted the pardon, which is essentially accepting his guilt. Miley? Right? Yeah. So, dog, stop it. Now, he can still be court-martialed, right? No. No?
31:45
The military. So like nothing from the military courts can happen to him. Not if he's gotten a presidential pardon. I've seen the way it's worded. But was Biden the president or is this a big movie? You know, was he a president? Well, we're going I'm not speculating. I know there's a lot of people that believe that. Given the facts as we know them today, the answer to our question is no.
32:11
If tomorrow we found out that the 2020 election was invalidated and Biden was never president, then none of the pardons stand. So there's always that possibility. But that would actually have to be revealed. It would have to be adjudicated as far as, you know, basically acknowledging through a judicial system that Biden and there there are.
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people talking about the fact that there will be some type of procedure that questions when exactly he went senile on us and who exactly is running the country because if it was in fact the investigation where her H.R. said that he declined prosecution of
33:08
Biden and the crime family, and we know it wasn't because he can't charge Biden because he was the sitting president, but he referred charges to be pending at the end of that because he made a direct statement, which was very unusual and maybe very significant, that he was not cognitive able to stand trial, which again is not something a prosecutor
33:37
would normally say, because that's something that has to, again, be adjudicated in a criminal court. You have to actually have a hearing on that. So he put that in writing. So there is at least one legal document that says he's incoherent. If you're incoherent, you can't be given pardons. So there's several avenues in which all of those pardons can be challenged.
34:07
Outside of, you know, saying that he's a fake president. Let's see. Set up. Go ahead. Yeah, exactly. It's going figuring out the angles on this. And like I said, the other angle I would go after is if I was Kash Patel and Pam Bondi.
34:35
Day one, I would pull every document he signed, especially in the last six months, and have his signature forensically tested and verified against previous examples of his signature. Because there's, who knows if he's the one who's actually been signing anything. Well, let me tell you something about that process because I'm very familiar with it. I had to use it. There is a thing called an auto pin.
34:59
And only certain things like military operations requires a wet signature. Most of those things are on auto pin and signed as a matter of formality. So the signature thing may or may not work. Go ahead. I have a question. What about the fifth? Since supposedly there's nothing to incriminate them.
35:23
per se, and they go up and they testify or, you know, say for whatever reason they can go. I don't know if you have to, but they don't have to hide behind the Fifth Amendment. But if there's fraud shown in there or maybe this documentation where stuff is coming out, well, no, because if they get a presidential, even a fraud, they get away with that, right? So what Deller is saying is if you receive a pardon.
35:52
You basically are giving up the right to plead the fifth and not incriminate yourself because anything that you say that incriminates yourself has already been pardoned. So, for example, if I'm Millie and I committed treason and I did, in fact, disobey a lawful order from the president of the United States and basically participated in a coup.
36:18
to attempt the overthrow of President Trump that resulted in that second impeachment. He has been pardoned from the crime. Therefore, he has to, if subpoenaed in a court of law or in front of Congress, appear and tell everything he knows. If he doesn't, he's held in contempt and thrown in jail for contempt, not the original crimes. And as a result of that, could you in fact...
36:48
I mean, that's the equivalent of saying that they're going to turn state's evidence under a forceful way of doing it by giving them a pardon. But honestly, that would fucking piss me off. I don't want those people testimony. I want their fat asses in jail. Any chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff that commits treason, that son of a bitch needs to go to Leavenworth or Gitmo. And I'm not even kidding.
37:16
And I'll be fucking pissed off if they don't. Because then every other person that's serving in the military that's guilty of that shit is going to think they can get away with it too. His ass better go to jail. That's my personal opinion.
37:29
What does the presidential pardon go over? Everything like treason and crimes against humanity would be the other two questions that I had. Well, it doesn't keep them from an international thing. Crime against humanity is more of a like an international court. And I don't know that I'm not an attorney. I'm not going to pretend to know that. But these if you if you participate in the overthrow of a government, you're you need to go to jail.
38:00
I'm not interested in state witnesses. SR-71, go ahead. Thank you, Colonel. On the deal with treason, there are certain crimes that the president cannot pardon. And one of those is treason. He cannot pardon treasonous acts. He cannot pardon an impeachment either. What he can do is he can give a reprieve for up to 30 days in a capital treason case.
38:31
But that's not a pardon. OK, so other than that, he can't do that if he he cannot be pardoned for treason. He can be pardoned for other crimes and he cannot be pardoned in cases of impeachment either. So so that's why I think every single one of these pardons is going to be challenged on multiple levels. They're going to be challenged on the senile.
39:02
Incapacitation level, they're going to be challenged on the criminal statute that the people are actually guilty of, as SR-71 just articulated. So I do think there's many different levels. Miles, go ahead. Colonel, sorry for coming in late. I'm still watching all the pomp and circumstance in D.C. If you touched on this, I'm sorry for bringing it up again.
39:31
Have you talked about the certain executive order 13961? You faded out. Can you say that again? Have you talked about the executive order 13961? In a roundabout way. Okay. Go ahead. Well, I just think it was kind of opportune that Biden made some changes with that. Kind of like, okay, now we're in.
40:05
re-enconstitutional phase of bringing back our government. You know, I was talking about this so long ago in spaces, and everybody thought it was nuts. But something changed for me when I was following the series, when they got to, you know, part 13 of Devolution. I went, wait a minute, something's changing here.
40:35
So, look, I'm happy for John that, I don't know if it was a little tip of the hat, whatever. But still, look, it still doesn't prove anything. If anything like that was done, which I know that it's real because I studied, you know, when that was actually formed after World War II because of what happened in the Philippines.
41:02
So it's a real thing, but I don't know if we'll ever know what exactly was put in place. But I think something was put in place after 2020 because it happened on December 7th. So let me explain to everyone what he's talking about. Under continuity of government, there are many different options that are contained in DOD directives that can be instituted.
41:30
If there is a threat to the stability of the federal government, like kind of the head of the snake type thing. And so if, for example, there we get into a nuclear exchange and there is the real possibility of decapitation of our command and control structure, they will implement under emergency measures one of the forms of continuity of government.
42:00
because there's several. There's ones that are actually not classified as far as the DOD directive in describing what they are, but there are a couple that are not even known to the public. And of the ones that are known, devolution, devolving the federal government, and for certain aspects of the federal government, the administration goes to regional heads.
42:28
in a chain of command for them to assume the responsibilities of those functions until the government is reconstituted. And again, it is one of many forms of continuity of government. Some of the other forms is just basically relocating to different pre-designated areas that are classified.
42:53
Most of them are known now because of leaks and other things, but they are still locations like SIDAR and some of the other ones that are around the eastern seaboard. You also have the aircraft that's like a 747 that flies in from Offutt that gives you the survivability capability. So all of those things.
43:21
are exercised on an annual or semi-annual basis at the Pentagon. Every element of the Pentagon has to submit their annexes of the war plan for those things in the different scenarios. I worked on one while I was there when I worked in plans and programs. And you don't know anything about the entire plan. You know your little piece of the plan and you're not allowed to know all of the rest.
43:49
You just submit your shit based on the scenario they give you. And it's one of many. Believe me. So with that in mind, Miles is talking about John Harold, who stumbled across several of the executive orders that Trump did during his administration. And he thought they looked a little weird. And so he did a lot of research. And for something that was new for him.
44:18
was the continuity of government and devolution. And he crafted a series of presentations that outlined the possibility that of the continuity of government options, you can create an argument that would suggest devolution actually occurred. Now, he will be the first to admit.
44:42
that he has no idea whether it did because it's classified and it's likely, as Miles pointed out, never to be unclassified if it was actually used. And so there may or may not ever be any confirmation of it being used or not being used because, again, it's classified. But it is interesting to follow his theories because it does teach you a lot about civics and how your government operates.
45:13
Is that up? Yeah, a couple things. On the treason part, I'm not sure where people keep getting this that treason can't be pardoned. It has been pardoned before in the past. And some people say it's because it got moved to the military court. But pardons work in the military court. They're federal courts. Court marshals can be pardoned. All this has been ruled on. So that stuff's not an angle to look at that.
45:45
kind of ironclad in the Supreme Court throughout its history has kind of held up the broad powers of the president. The only thing that he cannot impeach for federally is impeachment. And people have talked about the blanket pardons. Jimmy Carter blanket pardoned every draft dodger in one fell swoop with an executive order pardon. Let me just
46:13
Say something real quick, because I think there's a distinction. It's a very good point. There's a distinction between it actually having a crime, which all of the examples that people have been using to say that there have been blanket pardons, the blanket applies to the people, not the crime. Because they were actually guilty of a crime, even though they weren't individually, and many of them were individually charged, by the way, they weren't convicted, to your point.
46:42
Because a lot of them didn't live in the United States, so they had never been actually served a subpoena or whatever. But they were in a legal process for a particular crime. And it was that crime that was basically, this is a blanket pardon for a person without any stated crime at all. And I do think that that's quite unusual. But go ahead. Oh, it's definitely unusual.
47:13
I would be highly surprised, especially when you look at this Supreme Court's deference when it came to the elections, deference to a few other things, to rein in the powers of the president on pardons. Maybe they could limit the scope to where, kind of like you're saying, where it has to be.
47:39
blanket for a specific at least type of crime or something like that maybe um but you know we have it's one of those you know probably worth the fight to get that defined especially on this one absolutely you know because either way it's it's good to have that defined in law it is especially with the court that we have now because it is possible to eke it out and
48:07
With everybody in the places that they're in right now to do it. It's the perfect time to do it. But go ahead. Correct. Correct. Because we could we could maybe eke out a 5-4. Roberts is probably a lost cause on something like this because he is not big on changing precedent and changing stuff like that. Or 5-4 or a 5-3 and kind of like he did with Roe. So.
48:38
You know, so that that would be a way to argue it to to at least get that definition. And maybe we get a win, you know, to curtail it some. But, you know, I still think the with any of these like Millie would be harder, but maybe there's some things they could do. But especially the ones like Fauci, I think the state courts is where to where to go. The one, you know, the one that really rubs me the wrong way is.
49:07
Because it sounded like the way he did the J6 committee, it's the J6 committee and the people that testified, which means that would give a pardon to Michael Byrd. And that just disgusts me to just freaking no end. I agree. If that's the case. I agree. 100% agree to include Adam Schiff and all the rest of them son of a bitches. But yeah, I agree. Carrie, go ahead. Hey, Colonel, back to the amendments thing.
49:38
I don't know that much about it, but I have studied what Brady has put out about it, Warhamster. And the way that they were able to change that was unconstitutional. I mean, they were totally going against the Constitution. Totally, totally, totally.
50:06
And my data is that amendments make the Constitution a living document. I haven't studied every amendment. I have no clue whether they are working or not. I would love to do that. But the framers had a double lock on.
50:36
the way the Senate is voted in. And so the criminals, the psychopaths knew where to go. They knew where the hole was. And, you know, I'm not sure that amendments are the enemy there. I think the criminals will just, you know, the international syndicate will try to find the holes.
51:08
I don't know. Eliminating amendments is a patch. You know what I mean? The amendment process, not the process itself, but amending the Constitution to remove its protection of the republic aspect was a problem. It is the amendment that destroyed the protection that we, the people, had.
51:38
So, well, I think they weren't allowed to make that amendment, but they did it anyway. There was a double lock on that. The way that they made that amendment was through Congress. This is Brady's like, I know, but it's not just an amendment. There are several, the birthright citizenship one. There are several amendments that have basically destroyed the very aspect of our republic.
52:08
that basically, in my opinion, needs to be thrown out. They need to be undone because they are a, it was a process to remove the shielding that was provided and the kind of the, it was just a chicken shit way of destroying the Republic under the guise of doing something that they basically sold the people a bill of goods and they were too stupid to realize what was going on.
52:38
Well, I would love for you to talk about that because I don't know all the amendments and how they fucked everything. For certain, I don't. Maybe you could talk about that sometime. Just look at the birthright citizenship. That amendment specifically, if you read the documentation in the federal papers, not the federalist papers, but every paper.
53:06
Every amendment has the justification recorded like in the Federal Register as to what the reasoning is behind doing it. That amendment was passed specifically to recognize African-American children because it specifically talks about people being brought here involuntarily.
53:36
Enslaved states refused to look at them as citizens. The birthright citizenship came from the amendment that was to quote unquote clarify that their children were citizens because they were brought here involuntarily. And it went so far as to say that everybody, basically everybody else.
54:02
To include people that were here like on diplomatic missions and stuff like that. Their children born here were birthright. Citizenship was not conveyed to them. The only person that that covered was people whose children were brought here involuntarily. And that then has been bastardized into because of a legal system that again fucked up by saying.
54:32
Our legal system is no longer actually based on the Constitution. It's based on precedent. So all you have to do is get a shithead Supreme Court that goes against all of the constitutional things and set a quote unquote precedent like Dred Scott. And you for the next time until like Roe v. Wade, everybody knew that that was an abomination.
55:00
You have it for another 50 years until you get a Supreme Court with the balls to overchange it and create a new precedent. So, again, they've just incrementally destroyed our republic and are refusing to acknowledge that it is no longer functioning as a republic as it was originally intended should be fairly obvious to everybody. We've got a bunch of crooks that are 90 years old sitting in Congress.
55:27
It's very obvious our republic doesn't function the way it was intended to. Yeah, I totally agree. And I have one question to posit to you. How do you make, which was so important to the framers, how do you make this fucking document living? How do you do that? I would suggest to you that we don't need to make it living. The Constitution is the Constitution.
55:59
The whole job of the House and Senate was to pass laws that provided for any new nuance to the basic intent within the confines of the Constitution. So the Constitution said our federal government has three functions. Three, defend against foreign enemies, provide for interstate and intrastate,
56:30
commerce, and make treaties, like foreign policy stuff. Those are the three things that they call out that we're supposed to be doing at the federal level. Provide for the common defense, do foreign relations, and settle disputes for trade between the states and between the U.S. and other states. That's it. That's all they're allowed to do.
56:59
And it also says that because it's an enumerated document, if it's not actually said that you do it, you don't do it. So if you actually looked at the things that said it was supposed to do and you put a piece of tape with a constitution on the wall, and these are the three things it says you're allowed to do.
57:23
Then put the entire organizational chart of the federal government on a wall. And you start like the Argentine president did. If it's not with those three things, you throw it in the trash. You throw it in the trash. You throw it in the trash. And you go down and disassemble the entire fucking federal government. Then you tell me what laws Congress needs to pass to make those three things work based on the original intent of the Constitution.
57:53
which was basically we're the people in power and you work for us. I would argue other than a few tweaks along the way based on technology improvement or the creation of a new state or a country around the world or whatever, there's very little.
58:16
shit that the federal government is supposed to be doing on an annual basis. Their real job was to make a budget to do those three things and then take their fucking ass home. It wasn't meant to be a full-time job. It wasn't meant for them to live in Washington. That shit's all been created in the last hundred years since we created the federal income tax and the damn thing blew up. That's never the way Congress acted before.
58:47
So this is a crazy, crazy place that we're at. People don't even recognize what it is our federal government is supposed to do. They don't recognize the fact that all of this shit has been glommed on. They're not supposed to be in health care. They're not supposed to be in flood insurance. They're not supposed to be in electrical co-ops. They're not supposed to be. We're sure as hell not supposed to be paying the people.
59:15
put satellites up in the air. That's not our job. Those were jobs that were supposed to be done by corporations, and the corporations were the ones that were supposed to be taking the risk, and the government does not put their finger on the scale to help or prefer one versus the other. They innovate, and look at what it got us. I mean,
59:41
Look at all the innovation that that got us where the federal government was not involved in that shit. As soon as we started putting our fingers on the scale, everything got fucked up. And you have all of these oligarchs because the fingers were always put on their scale. And all of the middle America eventually goes away because the fingers always put on their side of the scale. And then that wasn't good enough for them. Now we're going to export that tyranny all over the world.
1:00:10
We are going to go to every other country and we're going to pretend like we like labor unions here. So the people in America, fat, dumb and happy, thinks that because someone has what's called a union down in Chile or wherever, that it's actually a union that actually represents workers' rights. When in fact, those people were being paid 87 cents a day to pick bananas because they weren't actually allowed to have a real labor union. And if they tried, they were called a communist.
1:00:36
And that's kind of the irony of all of this. They set up this utopia looking thing and fed us baby formula to keep us all fat, dumb and happy and fluoride. And, you know, like Guru said, spraying the shit all over the skies, thinking that, you know, we're all fat, dumb and happy so we can go and exploit the rest of the world. And oh, by the way, we're going to take your jobs there, too. And so we're going to put you on the government dime so that you're going to vote us in, as Johnson said.
1:01:06
In perpetuity, because you now owe your livelihood to the federal government will destroy your families. We're going to experiment on you with LSD and we're going to use the military for experimentation, blah, blah, blah. So anyway, thanks for getting me fired up, Carrie. Miles. Hey, one second, though. I just want to I love you for one thing. The other thing is the Supreme Court gave itself.
1:01:37
the job of making decisions about the Constitution. That's not in the fucking Constitution. I know. That's a total fucking fraud. Right. Miles, go ahead. Interesting conversation, Colonel. Yeah, let's go back to the deep state and what they didn't get their hands on. They tried their damnedest to get their hands on certain things. One of the things I think the POs
1:02:08
These presidential papers that they wanted so bad to see what Trump had. So do you have any thoughts on how maybe Kash Patel knows what's in the papers? Look, guys, I don't know where we're going from this point, but it's going to be interesting. That's all I can say. So you bring this shit up, Miles, and you don't explain to anybody what it actually means. Not everybody knows what you're talking about. I'm sorry, Colonel.
1:02:39
I just do that. I guess I do that because I want people to do their research. No, that's not what we're going to do here. If you're going to bring it up, you need to tell people what it is so they know what to search on. You didn't even pronounce it properly. So tell them what it is so they can research it. All right. So I think the raid on Mar-a-Lago. Explain to them what a presidential emergency action document is, a PED.
1:03:10
Explain to them what that is. Well, some people call it peeves or peeves. Yeah. It's P-E-A-V. Okay, peeves. Every president has these papers that, because of declassification, and they can classify stuff, they can declass stuff, and they can take these papers.
1:03:41
They were going after Biden because he had all these papers in his garage behind his Corvette. They have to be secured. And I don't know if I can explain this correctly. You're better at this. But there is a department that maintains all this stuff, too, that they make sure that the—
1:04:10
The presidential papers are not going to fall into the wrong hands because they are classified and they can be declassified. Maybe you want to help me with this. I don't know. I don't know what that department that they're talking about, but that was even something was going on there. FEMA. It's FEMA.
1:04:36
Well, no, isn't it this other department? FEMA is the one that is responsible for the final draft of those messages. And Trump did not want to give them to FEMA because FEMA is a piece of shit. So there is a lot of controversy with this whole process because of that. He did not trust the internal. It's the same thing that Trump did not want to take any CIA. So most presidents get a daily brief. Trump said he didn't want a daily brief from the CIA because he knows they lied to him.
1:05:05
So he was not going to be caught getting quote unquote intel that's bullshit and then not act on the bullshit and let them do a false flag and come back and use that against him. So he refused the CIA briefings because the CIA briefings in the past have been used to set up presidents in order to coerce them into doing what they wanted them to do. So he headed that off.
1:05:31
He was very, very smart in some very, very strategic ways that most people don't even know exist. So the presidential emergency action document, as I just explained to you guys with a continuity of government scenarios, the president has a role in all of those scenarios. And I'm just going to use one, okay, to give you guys an example. It will help. So for all of the federal government,
1:06:01
You have to have based on scenarios. Let's just say scenario one was the there's a bomb that goes off in the White House. Now, we know that there have been television programs and movies that articulated that. Right. So it's not like I'm just making up stuff. So even though that was just made up shit, supposedly, let's just say that's the scenario.
1:06:28
We don't know temporarily whether the president survived or the vice president. Immediately, there are plans, part of continuity of government, on the shelf that you go in and you pull off the shelf that says status of president and vice president unknown. Here's the plan. Everybody goes to work. As it is.
1:06:58
discovered that maybe the vice president is alive. We're still not sure about the president. Maybe he's incapacitated. That's all planned out. We have a plan for everything. As part of that plan, the president has presidential emergency action documents that articulate what he wants done based on his preference on all of those scenarios. So let's move to another one.
1:07:27
Let's move to the one where the president and vice president are fine, but something took out the majority of Congress. That's a federal emergency. There are plans in place because, of course, the Speaker of the House is the number three. So that's a chain of command issue. And so now if you're under attack or something like that happened, now you're in a critical position where the president and vice president have to be secured, blah, blah, blah.
1:07:57
writes, PEADs, P-E-A-D is what the acronym stands for, Presidential Emergency Action Documents. He writes them and they are supposed to be on a final draft so that all he has to do is sign them. There's changes to laws that can be in there.
1:08:19
There are messages that go out to everybody saying what he wants said based on that scenario. And there's a lot of scenarios, guys. That's not just I'm just making that shit up out of thin air. There's lots of scenarios. And obviously, some of these would have to be done on the fly because you're never going to be able to cover every scenario. But they do a lot of war planning on things like this. All right. So these documents and cover sheets.
1:08:46
which is what that shit was laying all over the floor at Mar-a-Lago that Miles referenced. That's what they wanted it to look like anyway. It was, a lot of people believe that because Trump would not allow his feeds to be in the normal places so that people could not anticipate what he was going to do in some of those different scenarios, that
1:09:14
There was an all-out war to get those documents. And that's why there's always been so much speculation of people talking about the quote-unquote red folder that he's been seen carrying around. A lot of people assume that red folder had the peds in them of how he would, had defolution or something like that actually been implemented, what there was going to be as far as pending.
1:09:45
Because he did not allow the normal people to hold on to them so that they could pre-know what he was going to do, they were scared shitless to do anything that he may have outsmarted them. So they wanted their hands on those papers really, really bad. And he wouldn't give them to them. And so they assumed that they were at Mar-a-Lago, which is why they had the raid.
1:10:12
I'm just telling you what people speculate. That they speculate that the entire search of Melania's underwear drawer and everything else was they did it under the false pretense that there was quote unquote classified documents, which was bullshit the entire time because he has declass authority simply by taking them out. They're therefore declassified. That was a bullshit story.
1:10:41
the entire time. That was just the cover story for the mad search to find the Peds because if in fact he did invoke devolution, they wanted to know what was hanging over them as far as contingency plans so they didn't get tripped. And so they come up dry on the Mar-a-Lago raid. They did not discover.
1:11:09
the quote unquote red folder or any of the presidential action directives. Does that help, Miles? Thanks, Colonel. I know it's a little complicated for, you know, the average person to understand how all this stuff works. So you did a great job. Thanks. Yeah, no. And it is good information to know because they're not done.
1:11:37
They are they they have a resistance already set up. Obviously, I think Trump's going to be much better prepared to address the resistance. So, yeah, all good. Yeah. A couple of things. One, I put down in the bubble kind of to your point about the Supreme Court rulings.
1:12:10
cases. It was a book that the Cato Institute put out many years ago that I actually went to a talk about called The Dirty Dozen, and it's about 12 cases that ruined America. And it also has sub-cases on a lot of them, kind of building up to when they made the decision. Funnily enough, about half of them were from the FDR court. Surprise, surprise. Since he had so long to build it, disgustingly left his court.
1:12:39
And it's a real interesting read because it breaks down what the traditions were that the court was upholding and then how it changed over time. One of the big ones it goes into heavily is the Commerce Clause and how that was expanded and the doors just blown open to where now the government regulates pretty much anything using the Commerce Clause, right?
1:13:05
And there's a lot of these cases that I think with the current court, because they've already shown multiple times now that they will overturn precedent because they overturned Roe, they overturned Chevron. And there's quite a number of these cases that need brought forward. The one Miles has heard me, I will bring up ad nauseum because so many people don't even know is this is the freaking Kelo case that took our personal property, our private property rights away. When they, you know.
1:13:34
The Supreme Court ruled 5-4 that the government could take away your private property to increase the tax base. Since that was a public interest, they determined. Now the case is going on 20, actually it's 20 years old this year. It's 2005.
1:13:59
So there's a lot of these cases that we need to get back in front of the Supreme Court with the makeup. But you are right. There's a lot of these amendments that we need to go after and overturn. 17th Amendment is a huge one. We were talking about that one earlier, how that just crushed our state's rights changing and proved how crappy democracy is. It's like, let's take our senators away from...
1:14:26
being the appointed representative of the state as they're supposed to be and have them elected by a popularity contest. Gee, and that hasn't done nothing to the Senate. You know, it's turned the Senate into a job for old fogies that stay in there for 30 plus years, right? And just build power and money. Where if it was at the state the way it was supposed to be, we could yank those jerks. And, you know, you could go to your local representative.
1:14:54
When I go to my Republican meeting on Thursday, my state representatives will probably be there, or they're there at least every other meeting. I have face-to-face with them, and those are the people that we used to appoint your senator, so you had some control. Now I'm one vote in a 12 million person state, and it just completely diluted the power of the Senate and made it so corrupt.
1:15:23
Like to your point, you can trace to a whole bunch of these that it's just completely screwed up the country, these amendments. One other thing I wanted to add real quick because I'm seeing a lot of people harping about this, talking about Trump didn't put his hand on the Bible and going into whole things because of that. Putting your hand on the Bible is not a requirement for the oath of office. All that is required is the oath. Teddy Roosevelt didn't even use a Bible.
1:15:51
One of the Adams has used a law text. It is not required at all. All that's required is the oath. So before going down that rabbit hole, because I've been seeing that rabbit hole being traipsed all over, means nothing because it's not a requirement. SR-71, go ahead. Thank you, Colonel. I appreciate that. I took today off just for you. I want you to know that. Thank you. You're welcome. I wouldn't have missed this show for the world.
1:16:44
What I'm looking at, there are a couple of other things that President Trump talked about in his speech. One of the things I want to say up front is for those who thought or think that he's not prepared, inside of two hours that border will shut down. He's prepared. There is no doubt about it.
1:17:14
Yeah, we're definitely seeing a completely different administration. I agree. Hitting the ground running. It's going to be completely phenomenal. So just FYI, guys, the reason why we had a minute of silence there is because the groomer lady is at the door bringing back the dogs. And my husband happened to pay her. And the schnauzer is very, very loud. And he really doesn't like it.
1:17:43
That I made of him being pissed off. Once he found out she was here. And the other dog went first. If you haven't seen that picture. Go look at it. It's hysterical. And so she was bringing him back in. And he was expressing how disgusted he was. With having to get his hair cut. And he does it very very loudly. So anyway. Anyway there's that. The other thing that he talked about. That I loved. Right off the top. Was.
1:18:14
This whole business of spying on Americans and doing all this stuff now comes to a halt. But when he also said that he was, the cartels are now classified as terrorists. To me, that was a heads up to every ambassador in the U.S. to say assets are targets. End of story.
1:18:48
We'll see what happens on the foreign policy side of this now in the way that he approaches this. But I'm waiting to see how all this plays out. So what do you anticipate? All right. So you make an excellent point, SR71. So, for example, what he's articulating here is every country that has illegal aliens in the United States right now.
1:19:16
pretty much, has an ambassador here, right? And it's going to get real awkward real fast when we're trying to get rid of the illegal aliens with an embassy in Washington, D.C., and they try to say, yeah, we don't want them back. That's what you're talking about, right, SR-71? That's part of it. Yeah.
1:19:49
So that's going to be very, very interesting because then you have the trade issue. So all of the tariffs that Trump is talking about leveraging on all of these people. Well, do you think that he's going to stand for one second for someone who I don't know, like maybe Mexico?
1:20:14
That depends on their almost their entire livelihood on the United States trade, not taking back illegal aliens. The leverage there is huge, but obviously there's some downfalls to that, too, because now you have this competitive network called BRICS out there where people have the ability to go elsewhere. Now, keep in mind.
1:20:44
One of the things that we've learned that's been very, very important in the past is how our federal government manipulated free trade, right? Because you weren't allowed to free trade. You could only trade with us, the West. If you tried to trade with anybody they didn't like, you either got assassinated or overthrown. And you absolutely was never allowed to be neutral. So it's going to get very interesting.
1:21:14
under the guise of we are respecting other countries' freedom while walking a tightrope of saying you're going to take your illegal aliens back, and if you want to trade with us, which is why you have to have a large industrial base and the ability to manufacture stuff, because if you don't have...
1:21:42
exportable stuff and the stuff to maintain your own viability. If tomorrow people decided they didn't want to trade with us, if we had our own manufacturing, who gives a crap? You can make beneficial trade deals with people for resources, but you need to manufacture them here. So if we ever needed to, we could survive on our own. The dynamics that are going on is huge.
1:22:13
Miles, go ahead. So I agree with you that I think they're hitting the ground running. But Trump also said that we're going to have a celebration, a year-long celebration. Now, I think in the first hundred days, a lot of things can be done. So I want to ask you your opinion. Do you think that we can make the general population feel that we can celebrate?
1:22:42
for our 250th, because we can turn things around quickly. So that's an interesting point. First of all, we have to have something to celebrate. Right now, with the January 6th people still in jail and our judicial system destroyed and criminals being pardoned, there's not a lot to celebrate.
1:23:12
So saying that we're going to have a year long celebration and also doing under the radar all of the really tough stuff that needs to be done is going to be probably a Ringling Brothers juggling act that has never been seen before. So I do think it's kind of the carrot and stick that.
1:23:41
there's going to be a lot of crap done. And a lot of the crap getting done isn't going to be pleasant. But I think the homework has been done in order for people now to understand having 20 million illegal aliens in our country is not doable. And if at the same time you are promoting the...
1:24:10
good aspects of being American citizens and that there are rewards for being an American citizen over illegal aliens, I think that's the right balancing act. And God knows if anybody can do it, it's Trump. So he definitely has his work cut out for him. But for the most part, and let me tell you guys, I do think having
1:24:44
Everybody's complained about the people that Trump has put in the Department of Education. I do think there's some irony if he actually does away with it to have the people that destroyed education be the ones in the federal positions responsible for getting rid of it. I do think the irony there cannot be stated loudly enough.
1:25:11
And if those people who destroyed the education system are stupid enough to take jobs, knowing that they're going to be the guys getting rid of the system that they destroyed. God love them. SR-71. Thank you, Colonel. The other aspect to that that I was looking at with the two that I tied together concerning the CIA and concerning our.
1:25:41
for policy options here and him declaring war on the cartels. We all know that the CIA is involved in practically every, well, I won't say practically, they are involved in every coup that takes place. And we know that it's drug running that funds all of the stuff that goes on. So when you start seeing CIA assets of the United States all of a sudden disappear,
1:26:13
Don't be alarmed. That's the other part of this I'm getting at. All right. I'm not going to touch that one. Miles, go ahead. Yeah, this morning when we're watching the inauguration on the front porch, we got kind of an argument with a couple people, and I brought up who is the head of the snake, and there was some disagreement on that. But FedUp did kind of agree with me that it is the Federal Reserve.
1:26:47
From their inception, all this stuff escalated, all this crap that was spent because of that. And so I said, you know, we have to get rid of the Federal Reserve. And then, you know, other people are making other arguments. Well, you can't do that. And you can't get rid of the CIA. And, you know, what about all these government programs? We have to get rid of the Fed. We have to go back to stable money through the Treasury.
1:27:17
And I'm just going to keep harping on that. I could be wrong, but I think I'm right. So I love the fact that the country operated for 150 years without it. And somebody has the mental capacity to say that we can't live without it. OK. And I do know that we had two other versions of a central bank. So the fact that we can live without it mutes that conversation altogether.
1:27:45
The problem that I have, Miles, in going in most of these spaces is they're not very well regulated. You know, we have the one guy who came in here. I had to laugh. I had to mute myself because I was laughing so hard that he says that he can't raise his hand because he can't function that way. Most people's spaces are not, they don't have any, I guess, I'm just going to fall back on military discipline.
1:28:14
to be able to allow people to have a conversation and say their point without them trying to run all over each other, which I can't. As soon as the host allows that to happen, I just end the session for me because I can't tolerate that because you can't actually have a conversation if you can't talk.
1:28:36
I'm going to disagree with you on the head of the snake is not the Federal Reserve. Do I believe it's a member of the snake or an appendage of the snake? Yes. But prior to the Federal Reserve, our government and the other governments were doing all of the same thing. They just did it in a more crafty way. The Federal Reserve made it a lot easier for them to do, but it was still being done. It was all being done out of England.
1:29:03
So the Federal Reserve made England's job easier by having an appendage of the banking system of London in America. It basically recolonized us, for lack of a better word. That's kind of a lazy way of saying it, but that is in effect what it did. And it basically makes all of the people.
1:29:30
that have central banks, an appendage of the Bank of International Settlements, which was its intended purpose, which didn't happen until after World War I. But they were setting up a global apparatus to institute the one world government. You can't even argue that point. The idea to do that because it happened, you know, and you can go back to the 70s, 76 with
1:29:58
Weisskopf over in Germany coming up with the New World Order. It's an idea that's been around for a long time. The Fabian Society famously also said that. But they're the ones that actually had the money to do it, though. When Weisskopf first talked about it, they lacked the network and the money to do it. It was not until the Fabians decided in the late 1800s.
1:30:24
with Cecil Rhodes' money that he had stole from resources from stealing from Africa, that they actually had the resources to do that. And then, of course, they just continued the massive amount of resource acquisition through wars. And so you don't get the Federal Reserve until 1913. By that time, the snowball was already headed down the hill.
1:30:49
It was going to happen whether we had a Federal Reserve or not, as far as this one world government. It would have been easier. They wouldn't have got as rich as quick because that obviously by paying them interest on fake money and stealing our wealth in the process and then allowing them to orchestrate wars, they were still going to manipulate us. They manipulated us into World War I.
1:31:20
So and they bought off people like FDR in order and Woodrow Wilson in order to get us into those wars. So we were always vulnerable because we were so successful. So I agree with you. I agree with you. But I didn't want to go back to pressure gate. I'm not going back to pressure gate. I'm going back to.
1:31:47
The Fabian Society and the fact that there was a stated one world government goal and they set up the tactics and the infrastructure to do it at that point, because that's the same time that they created the Zionism arm of the movement. They basically was going to do a full out press. They even started with the stay behind concept, all of that stuff.
1:32:17
So you have to put that into context. I do think that that's a good place recognizing that in the current use of the structures that exist today, you can clearly see the pivot point after World War II. But the only pivot point between World War II
1:32:47
Earlier, to me, is the late 1800s when they set up the Fabian Society. I don't see a pivot point between the Fabian Society because it was just a long downhill snowball rolling from that point until you get to World War II. Because World War II was forever changing in the fact that they set up all of the infrastructure necessary to create an even bigger snowball.
1:33:15
that's been rolling downhill ever since with the UN, the IMF, the World Bank, all of the world structures, the WWE, all of those, or excuse me, the WWF, and all of those things that came along in the redrawing of the map, they literally changed the world after World War II so that there was no going back to something absent the strategy of tension.
1:33:44
And the manipulation that occurred after that. I just see those. That's my personal opinion. I see those as the two pivot points. The setting up of the Fabian Society and the creation of the Bolshevik Revolution took us down the path to where we knew we were. And they planned them. They said right up front, the Fabian Society, there's going to be three world wars. They were very clear and that we're going to kill a whole bunch of people because they were all eugenicists.
1:34:14
I see that as a clear pivot. I see World War Two as a the second major pivot in that that gave it. I mean, it's like you're coasting downhill and then all of a sudden you pop the clutch and you're in like going 70 miles an hour then at World War Two forward. Trump, Trump wrong. Yeah, I'm here. Just that was a long answer. A very good one.
1:34:50
I want to circle back. So got to listen to timing and the way that things are said and what Trump said yesterday. How quickly did crypto come up in his conversation? That was one of the first topics he brought up. If you don't think that's going after the Federal Reserve and going back to the Treasury and taking back our economy, I don't know why people aren't seeing that because he brought that up so quickly.
1:35:17
It kind of fell out of place, except for if you know what's going on, right? And Stellar's talked about it a lot and explained what's going on and what the banking systems are doing and what countries are doing. I think that part is going to be covered pretty quickly. He's the crypto president, and they put a Bitcoin-friendly, even though I'm not a Bitcoin person, people need to learn the difference between Bitcoin and digital assets and actual utility. I think they'll use Bitcoin to liquidate our debt.
1:35:47
and then roll into the others. But I do think that one of our biggest threats is the Federal Reserve and it's using the CIA. It's a combination, like Colonel Tanner said, I'll definitely agree with that because it's a tool to blackmail and control people. And you can't have those things if you don't have both of them in conjunction. Absolutely. But I want to bring up, did you guys watch what happened today? Did you see the looks on the faces of people?
1:36:14
Do you look at how Donald Trump greets certain people? I certainly don't understand why people sit here and say the weird things they say and everyone's trying to blackpill because I think they're looking for conversation more than anything. Donald Trump was sworn in before the ceremony today. What he did when he went to the thing yesterday where he did the commander-in-chief's duty.
1:36:40
He wouldn't be doing that. That would be breaking the law until he was sworn in. That was supposed to be Joe Biden. I'm not going into any other conspiracies about any of the other stuff. But I think it's really interesting that you're seeing a bunch of MAGA people trying to poke holes, like the clown. And I'm going to say it. He's a fucking clown. Patrick Byrne. Oh, yeah. Well, CBS said that Vivek is not going to be, you know, and this was after Trump literally said it in his.
1:37:08
speech yesterday that Vivek is going to be working with Doge. And Vivek was in the room yesterday and today. I saw Colonel Teller comment on that. And I just had to be like, what's wrong with people? Why do people pay attention to these people? They're clickbait losers. I don't know him personally, but if you're quoting CBS and you didn't watch Donald Trump yesterday, then stay out of this game. Just sit back and watch. And I'll just leave it there. I'm just, all the drama you're going to see from these.
1:37:37
influencers is hilarious to me, and I'm over it. Enough said. Yeah, too much said, but I just had to get it off my chest because it's ridiculous. We're here for you, Trumpfrog. Oh, I'm going to start doing spaces again. Are you kidding me? I mean, I've been in the middle of moving, but I'm going to definitely start doing spaces. Now that the election's over, it's fucking on. I'm taking it to you. Is there going to be a space tonight, Froggy Frog? There might be.
1:38:05
Because I'm fired up. Just look at all your favorite MAG influencers and what they're doing and what they're saying and all these other fake insiders like Raw News. They're just clickbait. So I'm just going to start. I'm going to go back to start calling people out and start bringing the positivity to spaces because the other thing I'm saying.
1:38:24
I miss you too, Cousinette. The other thing I want to say is, Colonel Turner, when you're talking about military professionalism, it's called professional courtesy. Anyone who's ever been on a Zoom call doesn't speak over people, but that tells you that people that act the way they do in spaces, they're not worth listening to. And I'll just leave it at that. Thank you. Sure. Are you going to be on the space tonight, Colonel? If we're having one, I'll be there.
1:38:52
Oh, I'm probably going to have one. I'm moving, so I'm just trying to get my life put back together. That's all. I took the day off to watch the inauguration, and I'm waiting for the rest of the festivities to begin because it's the greatest moment on earth, people. Do you realize what's going to be happening in the next hundred days, let alone in the next four years? It's going to be glorious. So have y'all seen the advertisement for Mr. Truth Bomb's new series?
1:39:21
Oh, yeah. You mean you're talking about bringing up Q to light because everyone in Trump's cabinet's been dropping Q bombs. So people will say it out loud like Doug Billingsley that attack you people all the time for no reason. You're not a Trump fan. You don't follow Dan Scavino because Scavino has been queuing like a motherfucker lately. So anyway, go ahead. I just wanted to make sure everybody had seen that. I'm a big fan of his and he does such awesome videos that.
1:39:50
I wanted to give him a shout out and tell everybody he released a trailer. And I do believe that he will do a great job in illustrating the importance of it and what it actually is for people who are not familiar with it and for those who are. So I'm very interested in seeing what he does with it.
1:40:21
I check it up in the pill. He got some new toys, too, because it really does look pretty cool. I checked it out last night, and I'm like, yes. And for all those people that don't know, there's a bunch of spaces that I've done, and I'm not even self-promoting myself. We've been explaining what it is and not being these weird decoder people, but just explaining what the news is and if a drop happens, what it references. I can't wait for his.
1:40:49
to break down the story and history of how this all unfolded. It is a plan. You don't have what's happening right now and get hit the ground running with who he picked if there wasn't a plan. Even General Flynn has been tweeting Q stuff. So he did reach out to me and say that after he got done with this project that he wanted to do a Gladio project as well. So that will be very interesting.
1:41:21
occurrence, if it ever does come to fruition. Bridget, go ahead. Okay, not going totally down the rabbit hole, but you know, when Trump, after Trump's speech, he went down and he gave another speech down for the people that weren't able to be inside the rotunda. And during that speech, he did say, you know,
1:41:51
He said, I've been, I forget how exactly specifically he said it, but it was something along the lines of he had planned on running for president. He said, well, you know, they approached him about 20 years ago and asked him to run. And he said, but I didn't until now or until 2016. And anyway.
1:42:19
He was alluding to a lot of different things in that speech. Again, not to make a lot out of a whole lot, because it doesn't matter. It really doesn't, in the long, in the big, in the short of it. But yeah, I agree with Frog. There's too much detail, and this is such an elaborate and beautifully orchestrated thing that's going on right now.
1:42:48
that it couldn't have possibly been thrown together. Even in four years, it would have been difficult for him to have this pulled together the way it just seems to be going on already. And the woman from Planned Parenthood died of cancer, supposedly. And he alluded to the fact that, you know, it may have been a good thing that he wasn't in office for the last four years so people can see how messed up the country is. You can't tell people you've got to show them.
1:43:18
Just beautiful. I mean, Elena Haba, absolute dying. 17 hours to the inauguration. Who picks that number? I mean, there's so many. It's ridiculous from people in the inner circle. It's amazing. I'm just excited. We couldn't tell. Lots of popcorn, don't you think? Yes, and yesterday was National Popcorn Day. How ironic. Can't make it up. All right, everybody. I think we've kind of covered the important.
1:43:58
pieces. Thanks for everybody that participated. I appreciate you guys being part of this journey with all of us. We will be back to our regularly scheduled program tomorrow in our book review. And stay tuned for, I've got a couple other shows towards the end of the week that I will talk about tomorrow.
1:44:24
Um, once I get a couple of the other details, um, worked out, um, some new people, um, because we think, and I, again, I just cannot thank you guys enough. I, I did mention at the beginning of the show, for those of you who joined us late, um, several of the people that have been doing Yeoman's work and reposting, um, our post.
1:44:47
about Operation Gladio and about going through other people's feeds and finding things and putting at Colonel Towner so that I see it. I could not have done near what we have accomplished without each and every one of you for being here every day, reposting the spaces. I have people.
1:45:16
either through DMs or whatever, when we have the get-togethers here in Central Florida, comment about, you know, this particular aspect or that particular aspect. And most of the stuff that they talk about is stuff I have found through you guys, with you kind of, again, that Sally Seary girl, she does yeoman's work of tagging everybody, every official.
1:45:46
um, with the stuff that we're talking about. Um, so I just, I can't thank you guys enough. Um, you guys know how important I think this information is and that it's obvious to me that those who know about it, hide it. And unfortunately a lot of our, um, officials don't know about it. Um, and, um, thanks to you guys, the word's getting out. So everybody, um, we're,
1:46:16
And again, I think it's going to be all the more important for people to know, because I do think there's going to be some big things that happen that's going to seem a little odd if you don't know about Operation Gladio. And I think the role that you guys are going to play in your immediate circles and in your own little sphere on social media is going to be critically important. And I see you guys out there every day fighting the fight, telling people, taking them on.
1:46:44
With information that you've got from our disclosures of Operation Gladio. And you guys can see people give a shit all the time. Why do you only focus on Operation Gladio? Why don't you say this? Why don't you say that? It's just beyond ridiculous. I think the rabbit hole of Operation Gladio is so huge.
1:47:12
that you could literally spend the rest of your life digging up all the details of it. And I am dead serious. If there was ever a declassification project, I honestly think that most people who don't understand Operation Gladio would totally not do a good job. And I'm not saying I'm the only one that knows that. Please don't misunderstand me.
1:47:39
Hopefully everybody that he's putting in positions know this, but I know none of us do or did before we started talking about it for the most part. But I honestly don't think you would be able to understand the importance of some of the material that is classified without understanding Operation Gladio and why some of the things that would ordinarily appear kind of not important would be hugely significant.
1:48:09
If you understand how Operation Gladio works and who all was involved in it at what level because of all of the front companies, the fake banks and all of that other stuff. If you go into the CIA thinking that all you have to do is take care of the agents that you have on your personnel file, that's official agents, you know, obviously that misses probably 99 percent of.
1:48:37
the um network that's out there and i'm not suggesting they don't know don't misunderstand me um but there is so much to this just like what we were just talking about bridget mentioned it and a couple other people did about the cartels um the the cartels all have a cia tail to them um and it's very interesting if they actually do it saying you're going to do it's one thing
1:49:07
And God bless him. I love Trump. But he did say that he was going to declassify JFK and didn't do it. And he did say that he was going to identify people as terrorist organizations and didn't do it. So I need to see the actual action. And when it occurs, designating them as a terrorist organization is going to be freaking huge. So hopefully it does happen. And once you do that.
1:49:34
Anybody associated with that becomes an enemy combatant. And I did for that clip of Lindsey Graham talking to Kavanaugh about the fact that if you are operating as an American citizen with an enemy combatant, you can, in fact, be tried as an enemy combatant, which would then preclude you from ever getting.
1:50:02
a pardon or anything else because you're an enemy combatant at that point. And your answer was the penalty for being an enemy combatant is treason. That's part of the video. Yeah, exactly. Cousinette? I forgot. I completely forgot. Oh, Trump has got everything, all the executive orders stacked up at the Capital One Arena. He hasn't gotten there yet, but that's what they're starting to stack all the executive orders.
1:50:37
onto the stage if anybody's interested. Does anybody know what time he's supposed to show up there? I have not heard. Carrie, go ahead. I got nothing. Yeah, I just wanted to point out that it's really interesting. I could hear you all day today. No breakups, nothing. Everything was clear. Well, that's interesting. Maybe it's because I'm not actually doing the book review talking about the CIA.
1:51:11
Changing the name up. I'm telling you, we might just have to change the name up every week. Yeah, but then they won't be able to find the continuity of it if they're actually following by chapter. So I don't know. Anyway. All right. I'm out of here. I need to go eat. Thank you again, everybody, for being here. I appreciate it. Oh, Sharon, go ahead. Thanks, Colonel. President Ed and Bridget, President Trump is at the arena.
1:51:40
They are having the parade indoors that they were supposed to have had outdoors. So they have the high schoolers, the fire departments, and everyone that was supposed to be in the parade is getting their parade indoors. That's it. Is the garbage truck there? I'm sorry, who? The garbage truck. Is the garbage truck there? I haven't seen the garbage truck yet. Well, shoot. It's not a parade without a garbage truck. It may be on display outside.
1:52:15
I mean, they can get a Zamboni in there, so they might be able to get the garbage truck in there. And they get monster trucks in there, too. So just saying. All right, guys, have a good evening. We may do 815 if Trump frogs in a place where he can break into his movie. And we will definitely be back here at four o'clock tomorrow. See you then.
Entities here
Donald Trump24World War II7Operation Gladio7Federal Reserve7Fabian Society5U.S. Supreme Court4Mar-a-Lago3Franklin D. Roosevelt2Vivek Ramaswamy2Bank for International Settlements2John Maynard Keynes2Kelo v. City of New London2Cato Institute1U.S. State Department1The Dirty Dozen1Joe Biden1Michael Flynn1Cecil Rhodes1Bolshevik Revolution1Theodore Roosevelt1Woodrow Wilson1Department of Government Efficiency1Brett Kavanaugh1Lindsey Graham1Mexican Drug Cartels1Federal Emergency Management Agency1
Claims made here
U.S. Supreme Court ruled_in
Kelo v. City of New London documented
▶ 1:13:34
“The Supreme Court ruled 5-4 that the government could take away your private property to increase the tax base. Since that was a public interest, they determined. Now the case is going on 20, actually…”
Federal Reserve appendage_of
Bank for International Settlements host_asserted
▶ 1:29:03
“So the Federal Reserve made England's job easier by having an appendage of the banking system of London in America. It basically recolonized us, for lack of a better word. That's kind of a lazy way of…”
Fabian Society funded_by
Cecil Rhodes host_asserted
▶ 1:30:24
“with Cecil Rhodes' money that he had stole from resources from stealing from Africa, that they actually had the resources to do that. And then, of course, they just continued the massive amount of res…”
Franklin D. Roosevelt bought_off_by
Federal Reserve host_asserted
▶ 1:31:20
“So and they bought off people like FDR in order and Woodrow Wilson in order to get us into those wars. So we were always vulnerable because we were so successful. So I agree with you. I agree with you…”
Woodrow Wilson bought_off_by
Federal Reserve host_asserted
▶ 1:31:20
“So and they bought off people like FDR in order and Woodrow Wilson in order to get us into those wars. So we were always vulnerable because we were so successful. So I agree with you. I agree with you…”
Michael Flynn proposed
Operation Gladio host_asserted
▶ 1:40:49
“to break down the story and history of how this all unfolded. It is a plan. You don't have what's happening right now and get hit the ground running with who he picked if there wasn't a plan. Even Gen…”