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In this episode of Radio Ranch with Roger Sales, we delve into a variety of topics, starting with the intriguing potential of the Iteracare terahertz frequency wand, which claims to activate dormant stem cells and rejuvenate organs. We then transition to a discussion about the ongoing hiatus of Roger Sales, who is expected to return with fresh insights in January. The conversation shifts to the challenges of broadcasting across multiple platforms and the technical difficulties faced in the past.
Roger and his co-host Paul engage in a deep discussion about recent global events, including a critical analysis of a recent incident in the Southern Hemisphere, exploring the complexities of truth and fiction in media narratives. They discuss the implications of false flags and the manipulation of public perception, touching on historical events and their modern parallels.
The episode also covers the intricacies of global finance, the role of gold and cryptocurrencies, and the potential impact of the upcoming Basel III regulations on the financial system. Roger shares insights into the historical manipulation of gold markets and the strategic importance of holding physical assets.
Additionally, the hosts reflect on the cultural and historical significance of various geopolitical events, including the role of the British monarchy and the historical influence of Venice on modern financial systems. They explore the potential for societal change and the importance of preparing for economic shifts.
Throughout the episode, Roger and Paul provide a blend of historical context, personal anecdotes, and forward-thinking strategies, offering listeners a comprehensive view of current events and their potential implications for the future.
In this episode of Radio Ranch with Roger Sales, we delve into a variety of topics, starting with the intriguing potential of the Iteracare terahertz frequency wand, which claims to activate dormant stem cells and rejuvenate organs. We then transition to a discussion about the ongoing hiatus of Roger Sales, who is expected to return with fresh insights in January. The conversation shifts to the challenges of broadcasting across multiple platforms and the technical difficulties faced in the past.
Roger and his co-host Paul engage in a deep discussion about recent global events, including a critical analysis of a recent incident in the Southern Hemisphere, exploring the complexities of truth and fiction in media narratives. They discuss the implications of false flags and the manipulation of public perception, touching on historical events and their modern parallels.
The episode also covers the intricacies of global finance, the role of gold and cryptocurrencies, and the potential impact of the upcoming Basel III regulations on the financial system. Roger shares insights into the historical manipulation of gold markets and the strategic importance of holding physical assets.
Additionally, the hosts reflect on the cultural and historical significance of various geopolitical events, including the role of the British monarchy and the historical influence of Venice on modern financial systems. They explore the potential for societal change and the importance of preparing for economic shifts.
Throughout the episode, Roger and Paul provide a blend of historical context, personal anecdotes, and forward-thinking strategies, offering listeners a comprehensive view of current events and their potential implications for the future.
[00:00:08]
Unknown:
This mirror stream on the Global Voice Radio Network is brought to you in part by mymitobust dotcom for support of the mitochondria like never before.
[00:00:20] Unknown:
Also, fatfix.com,
[00:00:23] Unknown:
brand new product still in prelaunch. Check it out. Phatphix.com. It's also brought to you by iteroplanet.com and the PIEF International I TerraCare terahertz frequency wand. Here's more info about that.
[00:00:42] Unknown:
The EyeterraCare device has the ability to awaken dormant stem cells in the bone marrow. Yes. We have slipping stem cells in our bone marrows.
[00:00:54] Unknown:
As you keep blowing this on your spine, you're activating these stem cells. And guess what? You're gonna create brand new lungs, brand new kidneys. Eventually, as you keep using this over time, you will have brand new organs, glands, and tissues in your bodies. And that's a great news. You have to keep blowing this on your spine because this is what the great Hippocrates said. There's a way to hit the bones, then all diseases can be treated. Activate that. Awaken that stem cells in your bone marrows. Hit the bones using the future of medicine, which is frequency.
This is your time. Grab your one device
[00:01:37] Unknown:
right now. For more information on the Iteracare classic terahertz frequency wand, go to iteraplanet.com. That's iteraplanet.com. Forward moving and focused on freedom. You're listening to the Global Voice Radio Network. Oh, yeah. Yes. Yes. We would love to change the world, and that is exactly what we're trying to do with Radio Ranch with Roger Sales. We're still working on the hiatus, that Roger's taking until January 2nd when, he will be back in rare form, all rested up and raring to attack the topics at hand. We're on a number of platforms today. We're on a drastically, radically abbreviated list of platforms. We're on Eurofolks Radio.com, and we're on Global Voice Radio Network.
Our website is the matrixdocs.com. That is the matrix, d o c s, dot com. And, you will find more information on the topics discussed. You will find links to free conference calls so you can join us live on live days. Today, we'll be doing an archive from March 20, 2019. You can also find the links to Euro Folk Radio dotcom and Global Voice Radio Network. Normally, we're on 106.9 WBOU FM for the first hour, and Monday through Friday, we're on, radiosopox.com, but they are not with us today. So we will be powering straight through with the March 20, 2019 archive.
I'm Paul from Global Voice Network. Thank you so much for joining us. This is a Wednesday, program, and they had a little difficulty with phones. Seems to me that they had a lot of difficulty with technology back then. So, well, that was then. This is now. Welcome to the Radio Ranch with Roger Sales.
[00:04:52] Unknown:
I have to choose
[00:04:56] Unknown:
Yeah. Mister Lee, the world's changing pretty much on its own without yours or our help, but we do like to discuss it here. So, Roger's the name, Freedom's the game, Radio Ranch is the show, and the People's Patriot Network is our platform. I have my good friend and the facilitator of all this actually, 1 Mr. Paul on with us as it is our day, Wednesdays. And always happy to have you too, a selfish reason, it takes a little of the burden off me, but you always bring so much interesting stuff, Paul, in a different perspective, in a different view, in a different part of the world. And, so anyway, here we go on another one. It's the first one we've had since this debauchery down in the Southern Hemisphere last Friday. So I know you and I have exchanged a bunch of stuff on it, and I know you're pretty well up on what has happened is what's happening, so, we might as well start right there, don't you think?
[00:05:51] Unknown:
Well, why not? And and it's good to be here, Roger. Yeah. Why not? I I you know what? I've barely given it more than 5 or 10 minutes thought. I'm quite serious, actually. I I think I'm completely, I'm incidenced out. I can't actually deal with any more incidents. I don't mean I'm I'm I'm nervously at my wits end. I just think, you know, the whole slew of responses that came in over the weekend, you see them all the time, don't you? And I think it's, it's awkward. I find some of them rather awkward because people come in very, very fast to say it's a false flag, which it could be.
It could be genuine, which it could be. It could be a mix of the 2, which it could be. And how many hours and years of your life do you want to spend No. Fiddling around with all this kind of nonsense, you know? No. And I I I feel the same way. I try not to get sucked into these things where I totally
[00:06:48] Unknown:
devote all my time to the intricacies of whatever they've done, but yet it bears a lot of importance because it tells you a lot about them in a number of ways. It was clearly a false flag, all the signs are there, not only the disappearing cartridges, but even more so to me, the Goldblatt, the head of ADL's announcement where he said this is the only mass shooting in history, when he knows damn well that Barack Goldstein went in there and blew away about 45 of them in Jerusalem, I believe.
[00:07:24] Unknown:
And I think it might be just a small point that slipped his mind at the time. Yes. Especially since they just referred to it a couple of months ago from the 50th year. Yeah. He just casually forgot about Pruitt Goldstein. He just casually oh, hang on just a minute. You see it? About that. With me, what I've learned about these guys, because I know them pretty well, is I don't I look for the absences.
[00:07:45] Unknown:
I look for their reactions to things. That tells me more than whatever went on overtly. And that fact that that guy left that out, that public statement after that incident really told me what I needed to know early on. Now, subsequently, 2 other things, I don't know if you know that there was a you know, they're having another police drill. If they wouldn't have been having this drill, the article says Paul, it could have taken a long time for the cops to get there because this special squad with all this special gear and stuff, they got a they would have pleased and happy.
I
[00:08:32] Unknown:
Well, this is lovely. I'm so, so pleased, and happy. I mean, the point I'm sort of trying to get to early on, I don't want to dismiss, I think there's lots to talk about, really, with regards to it, of course, but the the way that they, mix, admix together truth and fiction in these situations is getting ever more complicated, intentionally of course, so that you can be thrown off. These things are all sort of like plotted out, and I think, it you know, having never been, shot at, I've got to tell you this, by a high powered modern assault rifle, thankfully, I haven't been shot at with any of those, nor have I nor have I been around people imminently receiving bullets on the receiving end of that. I literally have no experience of what it would be like. Now you imagine, of course, that maybe people would start shouting and jumping around and doing all sorts of things, but I don't know. It may be that people are so subdued and cowed, and they just got sort of almost like into a hypnotic state.
So I I had people saying, well, look, they're not making any noise. I'm going, well, maybe you don't if you think you're about to die. I mean, I just really don't know, particularly if you haven't got any guns. Maybe you just think, I know, I'll play possum. Maybe that was that was the way it goes. So I saw the footage, which of course, I didn't really see the footage because apparently I'm gonna spend 20 years in prison just for even knowing that the footage existed in theory. It's nuts. You know, what we're supposed to do? Don't look at it. You might die, you know. Well, even if you don't die, we'll lock you up for even thinking about looking at it. And if you know somebody who you think saw it, who looked at it, you you could be in for 2 years for that as well. I mean, it's just mad. Oh, well.
[00:10:07] Unknown:
But it's you know. As you were saying that, I was laughing, you'd never been shot at before, and I was kinda thinking about that. And back when I was in Atlanta, I had a pretty nice little gun collection when I was in the US, and, I belong to You're not offering to come over and shoot at me, are you? No. No. I don't even have my soul to model. Okay? Almost all of them. And I'm in Ecuador now. So anyway, this is a long time ago. But to be able to become proficient with those things and to be able to utilize your investment because shooting's fun, man.
And not people, but shooting is sports shooting's fun. And so, I joined a really nice gun club up north of Atlantis called Riverbend Gun Club and they've got one of the only 2 600 yard ranges on like the whole East Coast, okay? And they had a beautiful setup where they had a 300, a 400, and a 600 yard range. You could go to different hills and shoot those distances. Right? When you get to the 600, they got those pop those big pop up targets is what you're using, where it's behind a berm and you you they have to have somebody back there to man them and you they got spring loaded and you pull them down and mark the the target or change targets or whatever. That's the operation, right? Well, I was back there.
You know, somebody's got to be back there and you're out there with your buddies and it's time for them to shoot, so you get back there and do the target stuff. And, buddy, you want to see some of those 3 0 8 and 223 rounds hitting at 6 from 600 yards, and they break the sound barrier, right, as they're going over you, and they land in the berm behind you. And, I mean, it's pretty frightening. Okay? I can't even imagine. Alright?
[00:11:54] Unknown:
No. No. No. I've just I've no idea, you see, of knowing how to get a frame of reference because we get these conflicting reports, intentionally of course. The whole thing is really just set up meticulously, but to appear like a sort of spontaneous shooting. Did people die? Possibly, probably. Looks like it. Looks like it. But but was that real footage at the real time? Was it a blend of live footage with stock footage with all sorts of other things? Well Are the clues put in intentionally to get the debate going so that we all end up talking for hours and hours and hours, and
[00:12:27] Unknown:
missed the point again? No. Don't have to do all that. You didn't let me finish my litany of of over clues. And I'm looking through, I catch this story over on Mike Rivera's site, what really happened.com is a real good resource. He scours and gets a lot of obscure articles that don't show up other places, I've found. And you know, Paul, there was another member, you know, there was like 4 4 of them arrested, 3 guys and a girl, I think. And you may not know, but one of them was released and escorted personally through the airport and left the country and destination country, what do you think?
[00:13:09] Unknown:
I'm going to say,
[00:13:11] Unknown:
I think it's I'm gonna say Israel. Are you close, Roger? God almighty, you are just omnipotent.
[00:13:19] Unknown:
How did I how did I do that? So many countries to pick from, and I picked the right one. Well, well, well, I was surprised even myself. So the Guggenheim lack of statement, the the, training exercise going on 10 minutes away, fully suited out for the job, and the
[00:13:40] Unknown:
time on
[00:13:44] Unknown:
No. I mean, the thing is, you know, do you wanna bury and and use a lot of time working out all the my new No. No. My my response as soon as I saw it was, whether it's real or a false flag or wherever it lies in between those two extreme points, yeah, which it will be somewhere, it'll be a blend of the 2. It it the thing's inevitable given the way that things are being orchestrated. And I also think that, what it illustrates quite simply, you know, if you if his manifesto, which I haven't readied, I mean, you know, we've only got so much time. I don't wanna keep reading people's manifestos and all that kind of stuff. But, if it's a genuine thing, the thought I had as well outside of the false flag issue is of course if these people didn't live amongst our people in Christchurch, then there's no way they would have been on the receiving end of bullets. Now that sentence I've just said could be completely mad. I do accept that. You could say, well, nobody actually got shot by any bullets, Paul, and this, that, and the other. But the fact is, I've only got so many, you know, minutes and hours a day just like we all have to sort of devote to this kind of stuff. The bottom line is that the the response from the media is telling as well. I mean, over here, as you know, there's a bloke called, Sado Khan, Sadiq Khan or something, who who runs around pretending to be the mayor of London, and lots of people go along with this ruse as well. Now according to him, when people get stabbed by Muslims, that's just part and parcel of the cost of living in a big city. But if you get blown away by some crazed white racist maniac, you know, as he's being portrayed, then that's intolerable, and we can't have any of that at all. Now Greg,
[00:15:22] Unknown:
the day the day of the event, I'll just insert this. Greg, our our own beloved, much beloved Greg, wrote me an I'm and he said, what the hell are 50 new Arabs doing in New Zealand anyway?
[00:15:35] Unknown:
Very Yeah. I like Greg. Why? Why are they doing that? Well what are they doing there? Yeah. They were set up as Well this is I mean this is just the bottom line, how do people get there? You know, and and look at the way that we can't manhandle, the the communication can't be dealt with. I mean we can here, but you can see that in the public sphere, you're not allowed to communicate about it properly. No. I mean, we can we can we can spin this,
[00:16:02] Unknown:
as we see fit. We might as well. Everybody else is having a go. Do you know what I mean? Well, I I go, if it's nice like this. I said, well, I think it's like this. I don't think we're doing any spin. I think we're looking at facts and trying to do an honest assessment. And every you can't you don't have to look at too many and the the usual suspects walk away dead guilty. Now the other things that are interesting from the event, though, that we can maybe take some lessons away from, and that is Facebook pulling a 1,000,000 and a half videos within 24 hours.
[00:16:34] Unknown:
Yeah. That guy's finger must have been really sore. Hell, hell, what was
[00:16:39] Unknown:
that? Who was that masked man? Okay? Why what do would they have taken off the JFK assassination if they if that would have been live on Facebook? No, so the need there to. As I said, how they react to stuff is so telling, see? And now, of course, I know you know because you referenced it, if you have the video, it's a 10 year in jail, if you give it to somebody, it's 14 years in jail and I believe if you have it on your website, it's a $200,000 fine. On top of that, because the questionable video about the disappearing cartridges was put on Zero Hedge, Zero Hedge was blocked in New Zealand and Australia now.
[00:17:30] Unknown:
Well, yes. I think that's the kind of 0 hedge. That means 0 hedge is a very competent outfit. I mean, come on, you know? A very competent outfit. Obviously, from that reaction they are. You wanted
[00:17:42] Unknown:
a seal of approval for 0 hedge? Kapom. Get your stamp. They got one now. So to look at our enemies and their reactions is what I really get out of this. I wouldn't I wouldn't spend all my time looking into all that minutia for nothing. I've learned that over the years. But to take the lessons and be able to obviously look at the surface, pick these little easily identifiable things out as to what happened, be able to see how they react to it, and the other thing that's pretty neat about this is the world community, they're busting them within
[00:18:16] Unknown:
a short period of time after every one of these things now. Yeah. They are. Yeah. They are. I think, it's the way that the debate is to be handled, you know, and also these instantaneous reactions which we see all the time. In other words, the reactions of what are really being cultivated here. And you know that thing we're touching on, I mentioned a few weeks ago, the, which is always worth in my mind going back to this revelation of the method that Michael Hoffman addressed in his book, secret societies and psychological warfare, which I think is an excellent thing. It's about the the programming of the mind and and I'm just gonna go back to the simple stuff which everybody knows, we know about the old problem reaction solution stuff don't we, you know, so I'm I'm basically, I think it all all tends to come down to that. And part of the great ingredients in the problem is to elicit fear.
[00:19:09] Unknown:
So that's what this is It's got to they will use that ingredient. It's got to be an ingredient in there because let's face it, you serve the one you fear.
[00:19:18] Unknown:
That's right, you know, and, people are going, oh, protect me, protect me, protect me, you must protect me, and all that kind of stuff, you know. So I think, then people plead for the very thing that's that's actually the whole goal of of what they're after. But I think we've hit sort of peak indifference. One of the things that I noticed was a lot of the comments I saw linked to Breitbart, which I don't go to. I actually don't go to Breitbart, but I saw a link to it. And, there were a lot of comments from some of the first early articles about this. I suppose that would have been during Friday afternoon and evening. Yes. Yes. It's very interesting about many of the comments, where the people actually couldn't care less.
It was very interesting. They just couldn't care. They just said, so what? Betting that was that was the impact they had on me. It's like, you know, these people run around blowing things up and everything. What do you expect? In in other words, there's a sort of the emotional, manipulation, the emotional leverage that has been attained by these events in the past, that well appears to have run dry or is beginning to run dry very, very quickly. People are just looking I mean, what whatever truth or lies are in the in the account and the supposed event, people are just looking at the way that they're supposed to absorb and go, so what? These people shouldn't be living with us. That and that's what's beginning to come to the surface, because bottom line is that's the truth. This is not about, you know, I'm gonna go back to it. It's not about hating or liking anybody. It's simply about nature wins every single time.
And Liberals don't wanna pay attention to nature. They don't like it too much because they think they need to be in charge. So, that's kind of part and parcel of the problem, I think. And, you know, their hysterical sort of solutions instantaneously are, or we must look at the gun situation in New Zealand, I think. I mean, gun ownership in New Zealand is considerably higher than it is here. There again, you could say that about just about anywhere in the world. Right? But I think it's about 20, 22 percent of households in New Zealand are armed. The police are not armed, I think not all the time, I think they still sort of conform to the idea of the English Bobby.
I mean in many ways New Zealand is is pretty much I've often thought if I was to go and live anywhere else, New Zealand would be pretty high up on my list purely because of the reserved culture that they have. They're not as reserved as Canadians. Sorry if I offended any Canadians, but I find Canadians incredibly reserved, if that's the right word. Very very different to Americans, I find, most of the time anyway. And, so there's all sorts of little connections there between New Zealand and Britain historically in terms of shared cultural values. There's a lot of Kiwis who have lived in London. I used to know quite a few of them, great guys, and, there's all that kind of connection. In fact, I found out about it from a friend whose wife or partner's a Kiwi, and she was really sort of a bit distressed about it at first, and maybe she still is, I suppose, in terms of this is going on in my home. But when you look at what's happening here, the idea of locking someone up for what we were saying 4 or 10 years for having a video, Right? Now over here, every month there is a report, they don't linger on it, of course, very much of some Muslim rape gang having been raping kids for 5 10 years. This comes up all the time. There must be tens of 1,000 of children in this country that have been suffering at their hands, but these guys don't get threatened with that. I mean, it's just you can see that the whole narrative is to be swung one particular way.
All of it is to we we are responsible and guilty for everybody else's bad behavior. Well, I'm not, and I reject them. I think in those comments sections at Breitbart, you're beginning to see it. Even normal people are beginning to become colossally indifferent How about it? And just go Is the word desensitized,
[00:23:09] Unknown:
does that work better?
[00:23:12] Unknown:
Might be that. It might be actually it might be actually getting clarified. They might be getting clear to some degree. Yes. Because, you have to think about this in very simple terms, because it is a simple problem dressed up as a tremendously complex political issue, that somehow we need all these people who earn amounts of money to sit in rooms for years years years and work out immigration policies. Well, we don't. We don't need any of that. It's it's really quite simple. We've got a cultural base a at home, and you've got cultural arrivees from base b, and the 2 don't mix, not when they're on the same bit of real estate. So if you separate it out it's fine, it's as fine as it's ever gonna get, but the idea of making an attempt to to blend oil and water is just beyond stupid. Yes. And of course that you know, and it's intentional, of course. The alchemist.
[00:24:05] Unknown:
The alchemist's dream for centuries was to convert lead into gold. Right?
[00:24:13] Unknown:
Yeah. I mean, if if you are absolutely right. If you are pretending to be in this mythical business called the problem solving business, which actually is not needed, I've said this for years, you know, governments are actually in the business of creating the very problems that they then they turn up the next day and say, oh, you need us to solve the problem.
[00:24:35] Unknown:
And, of course, it's down to people like I say, yeah, but you're the ones creating it, you. And you want more power every time. Well, what I was gonna say, well, what our buddies did was that they took the dialectic of that and they turned gold into paper.
[00:24:50] Unknown:
Yeah. They did. They did. Okay. Pretty solid. And they did that through yeah. Yeah. They did it. Well, I mean, it's all through the number one tool is fear. Fear of loss is a great motivator for many, many people. You have it less, of course, when you live in a civilized society, which is what we've sought to build. So to stop it being civilized, you have to have fear mongers, you have to have the providers of fear. I mean, I've just been listening to someone saying, well, look, there probably isn't really any genuine Islamic terrorism in the world. You know, if I found out that that was true, it wouldn't surprise me. We know that ISIS is completely a creation of the spook agencies, and all of these things are, and then they get blow back and all sorts of rubbish happens.
Why? Well, they want that. How are you supposed to justify being an intelligence agency if there's no real great societal upheavals and problems in the world? So because there there wouldn't be, they go off and create them to justify the expansion of their budgets. I mean, there's a lot more to it than just that, but that's definitely a strand to it. It's Confucius and Sun Tzu, divide and conquer,
[00:25:53] Unknown:
and, you know, the old don't know don't let your enemy know who you are, how strong you are, where you are, what you are, who you are, when you're coming to dinner, any of that. It's a combination of those two things, they use it extremely effectively, good God look what they've accomplished using them. And seek the problem reaction, solution you mentioned earlier, that's nothing but the Holy Grail. That's the triangle, you know, first a line, then another line, then a square. Problem, you set it up, reaction, do the other one, bam! You got the solution and they're done. They use it again, incredibly skillfully, because it is a cookie cutter concept.
In other words, they just come and take that same thing and apply it anywhere. Boom, boom, boom, boom, boom. Okay? Yep. They're they're they're very slick, but they got some big problems right now. Paul, I was listening to in fact, I sent you overnight. You were sleeping, I think, when I was watching it and sent it to you. I do that at nighttime. I know. I'm sorry for that. I do it. Sometimes I do. Okay. I go to bed and fall asleep. Do you not do that? You should, and I I wish I could do it more. But but one of these days, I'll do it permanently, so, you know, I like to get up still now.
[00:27:07] Unknown:
I love it. I've been doing for years now. I'm not I've got no intention of giving it up. It seems to work rather well.
[00:27:14] Unknown:
But, now, hell, I lost my train of thought there. I was going somewhere. You you You sent me something last week. Sorry about that. Did. Well, you said last week, you said something very interesting. It stuck with me. I've thought about it several times in the discussion we had, and you said, They know we're wise to them, and they do. Okay? And that even puts more intrigue on these things blowing up in their face. I see see, Webster Tarpley, who's a guy I'm familiar with for many years. I'm sure many of the audience have seen him. Very scholarly, got a lot of great pedigree, good credentials, talks pretty good stuff. I don't agree with him, you know, when he does things like praises Franklin Roosevelt and whatnot.
No. But that's a leader here and there. Well, he did a whole program, I listened to another one I didn't send you that was twice as long on Brexit. And the whole background and the intrigue of what's going on there, now this guy covered a lot of ground that you would relate to much better than like an American, and they actually showed up there some pictures, old pictures of leaves in Yorkshire, Paul. I couldn't help but think about you.
[00:28:27] Unknown:
I'm sorry. Are you telling me that my old town is the epicenter of all the world's evil? Wouldn't surprise me. No. No. There's some
[00:28:39] Unknown:
border on Scotland right up there? Yep. And and that brings a whole different, different view and angle to the whole thing because Scotland's goals are sometimes adversarial to Britain's goals, evidently from what Tarpley said. Yeah. And so it was very interesting, but I just wondered if you had listened to any of it because in the second one, he got into it a little bit more and he threw a concept out there that in all the Brexit stuff, we're aware of it, we're not as affected by it by you or as conscious of it or as unconscious of it, maybe, as you are. But, he said in there that it's a a deal to hook Britain up to with China. Have you heard this concept floated?
[00:29:27] Unknown:
No.
[00:29:28] Unknown:
I thought we were gonna hook up with the Eskimos, which I'm quite keen on. No. He's he goes into a lot of detail. He says the Queen's for Brexit, and what they're wanting to do is to get out from under this oppressive EU stuff and combine over there with Canada and basically be Canada's clearing house for the world. I mean, not Canada, China. China's clearing house for the world. And when the, the Chinese Emperor Xi, the Xi, in 20 15, came over there, addressed parliament, all that stuff, had all the that has not happened in your country since the Japanese came over when they opened up Japan in the 1800s.
[00:30:11] Unknown:
Interesting. That does sound interesting. I'd probably get stuck into that. You never know what they're up to next, do you? No. I think, I mean, it's it's rich coming from the Queen, isn't it? Yes. Quite rich. She's for Brexit. She's the one that didn't stand in the way. She's the one that didn't say anything when the decision to go in came before parliament. She could have completely knocked it back. In fact, it was her job to. Yes. It was her job to do it. And the minute she she didn't do that, the minute she didn't say to the country, oh, by the way, Edward Heath is committing treason, I'm gonna have his head off, which is which would have been fine, you know. A lot of people would have quite enjoyed that even back in 1971. It would have gone down quite well. Things were pretty dull over here. So that would have been a bit of entertainment that they missed out on, and it wouldn't have done any harm, and, only to Heath, but he was a harmer of children and everything. He was a revolting individual. And I think, so, you know, I've said to people, even though it's just me saying it, I said she can't be the queen or at least she's not the monarch because the monarch is defined by as being the person who fulfills these duties in regards to her subjects.
I don't mind being a subject. I'm not bothered what words we use. I want the thing run properly. That's all we're after. We want things run right. You wanna be generalist, Emma? I don't mind. You better do a good job, though. Otherwise, I'm just gonna call you Bob like everybody else, and we'll throw you in a field. Right? You can be called whatever you want if that's if that's what lights your candle, but you've gotta do your job. And the minute she didn't do that, she in actuality, even though nobody acknowledges it, of course, in the communications sphere, she stopped being the monarch because the monarch doesn't do that. The monarch has to be the monarch of these islands, and she stopped doing it. She said, oh, I'll let this foreign entity called the European Union make decisions about how this nation's governed.
No. You won't, love. You won't do that at all. But of course we're faced with this momentum, are we not? You know, I know I'm using words here to parry a situation that's actual. I do understand that. But it seems to me that in talking to people, normal people, we have to I'm keen to find out what would occur if these ideas get transmitted properly and are taken route. They're very simple ideas that we're talking about, very very simple. And most people tend to not think that way. They tend to think of I'm at the effect of the big wide world. Well, to some degree we all are, yeah, but not to this degree. You don't need to go overboard and, and be sort of suckered into every dumb stupid thing that comes out of the mouths of these people that are pretending to be our leaders, because they're not our leaders. By definition, they couldn't be. They're not leading us. They're leading their own little gang to what they consider to be this, hellish nirvana,
[00:32:56] Unknown:
for us, and heavenly nirvana, I suppose, for them, something like that. I would encourage you to watch that web for Tarpley. I sent you the 30 minute one. I think you already have. Yeah. I will, Ben. And and and when it's finished with that over there on the right where they list the other videos, it goes into the next hour. Well, I'll tell you what, I'll, if I can find that, I know where I can get it, I'll put it on today's show description for the audience over on Castbox.
[00:33:22] Unknown:
Is it this one, Who Are the Windsors? Is it that one? Yes. Yes. Yes. That one. Yeah. Okay. Okay. And he goes into a bunch of history there that you're gonna really, I think, find fascinating. Let me throw
[00:33:29] Unknown:
gray out of gray out of that 30 minutes, he bashes the hell out of him for a bunch of it. And I wanted to throw his name at you today, and he blamed all of the catastrophes of last century on this guy, Edward the 7th.
[00:33:57] Unknown:
Yeah. Probably. That's, who's he? Is he the guy around World War 1? He ruled
[00:34:05] Unknown:
up through 1910, but he ruled in the 1800s too. And it was a lot of his intrigue that set up these things. Now they covered something else that was incredibly interesting to me in there, that at one point, the Russians, as they were trying to set up the Triple Entente and the alliances and all that stuff, and he's the one that did it. Okay? The, one of the Russians came back and kind of realized what was happening and they went to France and Germany and said, why don't we build an alliance here and you'd had Russia, Germany, and France, it would have totally sequestered Britain from getting into the continent.
And what happened was, Bismarck, the German chancellor, and as
[00:34:56] Unknown:
Tarpley says, well, he wasn't the sharpest knife in the drawer and he didn't understand the implications of it and he didn't do it, and so it opened the door for World War I.
[00:35:02] Unknown:
Of it, and he didn't do it. And so it opened the door for World War 1. And then Milner and the other bunch started scheming.
[00:35:10] Unknown:
Yeah. Edward the 7th was working for him, really. He was in on the whole gig, and he used his, he sort of went outside of the parameters of core etiquette, I believe, by by basically touting all these ideas around Europe at the end of the 1800 and early 1900.
[00:35:27] Unknown:
He went to the Jews, and he said, You want to be accepted in society. And he said, I can help you do that, but what you've got to do evidently, he had some investments, but he didn't have many and he wasn't very good at it. And he turned his investments over to the Jews, the bankers, and he said, if you make a profit, I get all of it. And if you if there's any losses, you eat them. And they took that. And that really and then that 18.50 to 18.60 range when this is going on right there. I mean, now you get enough different pieces of the puzzle from enough different angles, and it's of the puzzle from enough different angles, and it's like looking at a hologram, it becomes 3-dimensional.
[00:36:20] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah, it does. I mean, there's, yeah it's just non stop really. As I say, you know, for me I I tend to sort of, it's not that I'm not interested in the ancient stuff because it's relevant and you get the repeat cycles, but in terms of relevance to today, I had to sort of, I've I've settled on looking at everything from Henry the 8th to this point, as being mass a really good use of time in terms of research and finding out how the whole thing has fallen apart. But of course the royal family, I mean, during the sixties seventies, I think because of the ability to use television to basically sell the royal family to the British, were probably as popular during that period as they've ever been, if not more so.
And there was not much sort of criticism of them or observations of them. And and still even to this day, it's more of a sort of emotional connection that you think of, little old ladies having with the royal family and waving their flags and all that kind of stuff. That's kind of dying out though, it's been doing that for quite a while. And I think, Tarpley has done some good stuff. I mean, it's the stuff he wrote on the and I agree with you, I don't agree with him on a lot of things. I think he's mistaken, quite sharply on certain things, but the work that he did on, Venice and of the Venetian influence on England because effectively, it wasn't just him there were several other writers actually around this magazine, published in the nineties called American something or other. I think it's still online. Spectator? It was a physical print. Spectator?
May have may have been. There's a whole series of articles about it, but they were tremendously, useful about opening up the role of Venice. And you find that the the British parliamentary system, even the arrangement of the house, is effectively a mimic of the Doge system that that ruled in Venice. Oh. So, you know, this adversarial nature of things. And, of course, we would suggest rightfully that politicians are really little more than puppets. Very well trained and very well paid ones, and they're very irritating because they get in the way. And, it's it's difficult to get them out of the way because they actually think they're in control, but this is because they lack the ability to see that they obviously aren't. Otherwise, we could get all our problems sorted out very, very quickly. So, yeah, that that whole role of the Venetians, in the British system is very strong. And I, the reason why I was just even mentioning Henry the 8th again, and I know we discussed it maybe a couple of months back, is that everybody knows that apparently he had trouble having a son, but that's not the case. His first wife had 2 sons, but they both died very early on. Why is that? What's all this death going on? Loads of them. Well, I I my my view is that there were Venetian doctors in and around that court, tempering with everything. Because as we've said, they and this is either covered by Tarpley or one of his colleagues on this project.
The, the Venetians have basically taken the decision to destroy the Catholic church, because they were very cross with the Pope for putting an army together to march on them in the late 1400 to put a stop to their rampant taxation of boats amongst other things. But, basically, every time a ship or a vessel went past Venice, they'd send out a couple of men of war, and they would levy attacks on them, which is something you may recall that the Khazars. That's right. Absolutely. The Khazars' whole game right there. That's right. And in fact, I didn't I didn't I hear a threat of something who's just as as in something like that just being proposed again for shipping somewhere? Was it Chinese shipping or something by some Edomite within the administration over at your neck of the woods? I'm I'm struggling here. I'm grasping at straws, but I I'm sure I heard some sort of dozy suggestion, you know, that they've got a right to just tax stuff. And it's this sort of affrontery of what's it got to do with you, you know? Well, the reason it got to do with them is that because they can't produce any other stuff, they've got to sort of rip everybody else off. But, it's, their their sites. Yeah. So the patterns repeat. The pat repeats. It just keeps repeating and repeats and repeating. Yes. Venice, I I come to understand, there's some of those little tidbits you see reading, and this is probably
[00:40:27] Unknown:
25 or more years ago when I was doing a lot of intense reading in the early stages, and there was a comment in there, don't remember who the source, but Venice was the origin of the concept of double entry bookkeepings in about the middle 1500s, 1552 or something like that, I'm not sure the exact date. It was in the 1500s though. And now I understand that it was the advent of Double Entry Bookkeeping that allowed them to set up this system. They couldn't do it. They with that without double entry bookkeeping and discounting and notes, this system would fall on his face today.
[00:41:06] Unknown:
Yep. Yep. It would. It would. It's opened up all sorts of intrigues, and of course, to this day in London, you've got Lombardy Street and all these other streets,
[00:41:18] Unknown:
that were named from when they arrived. What about What about Threadneedle Street? That's just always intrigued me. That's right down in the city, isn't it?
[00:41:27] Unknown:
Yeah. I I think that's them taking the mickey out of the, you know, it's easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than it is for a rich man to get into heaven. Yeah. Yeah. So they're thinking, right, well, we can thread that needle.
[00:41:37] Unknown:
Sure. Now the for the people that didn't catch this, and I think it's something came out of something we've watched over you know, there's been a proliferation of this stuff here since last fall because of the 100 year anniversary of World War I. So there's been a lot of people that have brought projects that had a lot of background information in them, Corbett I and Europa and all this stuff. But I remember, and we discussed it with you, the city of London is the only spot that the Romans couldn't conquer?
[00:42:14] Unknown:
Well, I think they were probably, I don't know. I can't answer that fully. Maybe the idea of conquering it seemed a dumb idea because there was so much organized wealth taking place within there. Maybe they were induced to become partners in it, shareholders in it, or whatever the phrase was of the day, stakeholders. But, yes. I mean, I think, you know, London was found as far as we're aware, London Brutus from the Trojan wars, came to London and came to England. And, you know, this is pre Christ time, of course, and he's a pivotal figure, in the formation of the nation. And I understand that under Brutus, this is when it took place.
The the formation of this walled enclave around the Thames, which has subsequently become known as the city, which of course is the Rothschild sort of shorthand for all of their places, you know. Sure. So, this the city system is what is what they have, but, maybe it's always been the sort of tail end of a very long sort of well, let's call it a silk trade, but it was. There was a very a very long route, and I think probably Khazars or Edomites were realistically in in England even before they came with, William the Conqueror, I think it's possible because of the the trade routes that that sort of started and ended there. Sure. Right. You know, we were the farthest point west at that time.
[00:43:37] Unknown:
I was watching another deal today. I've got these several videos going on, I stumbled into this one or somebody sent it to me, and it's a guy doing research on an author I've never heard of, he's the first author that observed the development of this monetary system, and actively seeing what they did to the American colonies and writing books about the banking establishment, and the money power, if you will. And he directly, in what I was watching right before the show, laid it in 16/62 when they when Charles maybe? Allowed East India Company to ship silver out of the country and then they gave them a restriction and then a year or 2 later, they totally took all lifted all the restrictions And what that allowed them to do, because silver was the coin of the realm.
And so, this king allowed and said, Sure, you can export the coin of the realm. I mean, come on. All right? And so what they were doing is the price disparity in India was so great that they could take 12 shillings over there and anyway, they'd come back with 6 as profit. And they were buying gold with it because gold was real cheap and that that really started the demise, a, of the empire and these guys getting their clutches in and it's developed all these systems all over the world and strengthened them ever since. When I stumble on that again, I'll shoot you the link, Paul.
[00:45:18] Unknown:
That's interesting. Yeah. I'd be I'm always interested in anything with military history that I'm not aware of before. I thought you were I didn't think you were gonna go back that that far. Del Mar is very good, although some of his writing's almost impenetrable. It's quite labyrinthine. That may be the guy that he's talking about. I just Well, that's in the 1800. He's one of he's one of your guys, but he's actually an Edomite as well. But he he actually writes straight about the fiscal situation, and he's very good. It's, he is very good. So I don't know quite where his heart was, I'm not really too concerned about that, but he wrote copious amounts about banking and modern sort of finance structures back in the late 1800s, from an extremely
[00:45:54] Unknown:
experienced point of view. But it's quite it would make for probably pretty dry reading for most people, I think. I don't think it's sort of Well, that's why this this video's nice because this guy did all of that dry reading for you, and he just goes through and shows you the book and pulls out the verbiage for you right there as he's explaining it. I'm only a partway into it, so I'm not very deep in it. It's only about 30 minutes, I think, or a little less. But more and more resources, more and more knowledge, more and more understanding, as to your comment last week, they know we're wise to them.
[00:46:30] Unknown:
Well, they do. I suppose they've always known that there's pockets of people, but they must take the view. I would have thought that as long as as long as we don't get too big, then they can always contain it, you know. And the way that they contain us is by getting our kith and kin, who are not quite up to speed, to almost like actors stampeding cows and run over us. That's kind of how it works, you know, they're easily spooked to the crowd, and we've got to watch out for that, because it gets very difficult. I've noticed in the recent exchange is it's almost, I wouldn't say impossible, but it's extremely you have to make a decision about how you're gonna use your time and energy in communicating to certain people at certain times. Because some people get so entrenched that you're going, well I could reach you in communication, but it looks as it's gonna take me about 3 years.
No. You're not worth it. It's too you're too far gone. I'm not gonna invest 3 years of my time trying to unpeel every consideration that you've got. And I think also people are not trained into how to undermine themselves, and they need to. People need to be not so sure of themselves, would actually be very, very useful from our point of view. People have got very entrenched views, many, you know, and they go, well I've read it in the newspapers for 40 years, so it must be true. It's like, actually, that's about the worst sort of ingredient you could put into your head.
But then, you know, they have a lot of agreement for that, because everybody around them has been doing the same thing for the last 4 or 5 decades as well, you know. Well I think that one of the barometers, if you will, as to your statement is accuracy.
[00:48:05] Unknown:
Something like 94, 96 percent of the people in the country polled didn't believe 911 happened like they said it did. So that kind of penetration on that important a topic and the other false flags because all that does is heighten people's awareness of false flags. Now, New Zealand comes along, they see these other things, boom, boom, boom, and, yeah, we're I mean, they're losing, man. They're losing, and they know it. That's why the uproar over Omar in the House of Representatives, she didn't say the word Jew, She said the word Benjamin.
[00:48:44] Unknown:
Yeah.
[00:48:45] Unknown:
All she did was reference. And then she comes back and made a listen, that chick made a masterful statement. She said, every day, I'm called anti American because I'm not pro Israel.
[00:49:06] Unknown:
That's right.
[00:49:08] Unknown:
Now that statement, they can't play with that. See? They can't touch it.
[00:49:15] Unknown:
No. But what they do do, this is not to say that we're not gonna get through, but what they do do, of course, is that they distract or deplatform these sorts of conversations as fast as possible to get them flushed down the memory hole as quickly as they can. So it's a story on Monday. By Wednesday,
[00:49:30] Unknown:
an oil tanker's blown up, and everybody's looking at something that's it well, it is okay. It is part of it. It will. Absolutely. I agree with you. Continue to do it. It'll catch up with them. The snake's eating its tail right now, and the best thing we can do is to wrap ourselves in the armor of knowledge in the Lord, and get out of her as he dictated to us, and sit back and watch the son of a bitch fall.
[00:49:52] Unknown:
Well, I think that that is the way, because I think what we're seeing is the law dynamically unfolding in their face, as it should. Yes. And, as it will to anybody. I'm not sort of picking on them, it still applies to me today. If I go in error, it'll happen to me. And because it's a law, it's a principle. It's like that, you know, the rotating door. If you if you stand there, it will swing back and smack you in the nose. In you. I wouldn't stand there if I were you. Did you hear that? So I that's the way it works. Yeah. Of course. It has to be. Otherwise, we we couldn't measure anything. I proved it here last year. You go step out of a second floor window, and your ass is gonna get into some bad problems 14 feet down. Okay? You drop an apple I think it's about a sort of excessively dramatic way to prove the law to you. I could not. But well done you for doing it, sir. Fantastic.
[00:50:41] Unknown:
I've accomplished a lot, but I could not overcome the forces of gravity,
[00:50:45] Unknown:
Okay? No. We were all a bit disappointed in you doing that. I wanted to hear you flying around the mountains of Equidel, but I wanted to do it too, but obviously that didn't happen. So,
[00:50:55] Unknown:
I did have an interesting, really pleasant experience this morning as I'm getting ready for our couple hours here together. And by the way, anybody in the audience, we haven't even had anybody call in. Chris must be filing some paperwork or getting chased or something. I don't know anybody else, about anybody's circumstances today, but, generally we have people join us and you're certainly welcome to if you want. You can call in at 404-448-1420, that's listed on the People's Patriot Network website and contact us that way and now we can even seamlessly join you into the conversation.
Well, this morning, right before the show, my Skype popped up, I was in there in the kitchen doing something and I, Who is that? So I come into the office in here and look and it's a guy, Paul. Now, you know, I spent many years of my career in the music industry, okay? And when I first started doing these shows, I didn't know I was gonna have to accept 3 shows to get this information out. And in those three shows, this guy calls me and if you've been in the record business for that long and somebody calls you by the name of James Taylor, you just don't forget it.
Okay? And so this guy's name is James Taylor, and he lives up in, Eastern Tennessee. And he he called in and says, Roger, we love what you're telling us, but, man, would you please slow down a little bit? Because I only thought I had had a couple of shows to do this.
[00:52:29] Unknown:
And so it's only
[00:52:31] Unknown:
it's odd. Now So you're running off the motor mount. Oh, man. What? I was like gatling gatling gun legal information. Oh, you didn't get that? Go back and listen to the replay. Okay? I've only got an hour here. So anyway and I I I will always remember it and it was James Taylor contacting me this morning. He said, Roger, I picked your book back up, man. I started reading it. He said, I couldn't figure out how to get you. And and and he said, I I knew we'd contact on Skype, goes back to Skype, finds me, sends a message. Boom. So I'm assuming James is listening today and normally we don't Paul and I talk about all this other stuff. I've got him once a week on Wednesdays and his perspective from across the pond, but I wanted to welcome James back to the group and I'm sure we'll hear from him and and, he's got a he tells me he's got a son who lives over in Thailand right around where I believe our Thailand listener, Don, lives. I said, This is where it is. He tells me, he said, Well, that's pretty much where my son is, so might even be we hook those guys up over there in Thailand to meet each other and have a coconut drink of some sort.
[00:53:43] Unknown:
So You've doubled the Thai listening audience. I might have. You've doubled it. I might have. Woah. This is good. I told you. I told you. A 100% boost in Thai listeners. Fantastic. I tell you, we're making progress, Paul. So, Yeah. It's good. This is good. I like these figures. This is good.
[00:54:00] Unknown:
But I thought that was really interesting. Kind of brightened my morning this morning a little bit. James is a nice guy, and so I imagine he's probably listening today and we'll probably hear from him as we go forward. Also, the Castbox thing, which is gonna be it's a very nice resource, Paul. Thank you for bringing that to our disposal.
[00:54:21] Unknown:
Is it working for you? It's not working for me, you know. I'm fed up of it. Every time I go there, well, I just sit there for sort of days going, and it just will not upload things. So It's very slow. Maybe, I don't yeah. It's it's sort of insanely slow. Maybe it's because it's got 96,000,000 users or something. I don't quite know what's going on. Or so it claims to have Between
[00:54:40] Unknown:
that and my slow upload speed on my Internet situation here, between those two combined, it takes me as long or longer to upload the program than it did to do it.
[00:54:55] Unknown:
I can understand now why you smoke a pipe. Well, you need to. And then the card You've got lots of pondering time, haven't you? But, listen The pondering time's gone through the roof now. Well, I just ignore it. I go take a nap or something, you know?
[00:55:10] Unknown:
But then what aggravates you is you come back and it's got that scroll bar on how how much of the upload's done. And when it's finished, this is for audience's sake, when it's finished, there's a little button over on the right that lights up orange, and it says publish. And you hit the publish button and it puts it in the system. Right? You sit there and wait for hours, and you hit the publish thing, and you get failed to publish. Oh, that's what I get. Oh, man. That's the one that my, yeah, my sphincter muscle tends to tighten a little bit at that point. But anyway, I've
[00:55:46] Unknown:
been getting it done. More information than we needed. I will. Thanks, Jerry. An offhand comment.
[00:55:52] Unknown:
And, so where else would you like to anything else on your mind that you wanted to discuss? I've kinda commanded the first hour here, Paul.
[00:56:03] Unknown:
I don't know what's been going on. No. I mean, look, the the main thing, I've just been really busy with I've been busy with doing stuff around the audio book, which I mentioned the other week, so I've just been very busy with that. I don't wanna talk about that today. We don't need to talk about that. I'm just sort of cracking on and Well, no. I think we need some sort of an update. You did kind of announce it here on the show last week, week before last. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, well, it's just, I suppose this little little technical update, and, we can't use basically, there's just I always knew there'd be a few more little things that would, would turn up as I rolled through the whole process.
And this has nothing to do with actually doing the the actual book itself. It's to do with basically just selling things digitally, particularly audiobooks. I I think I might have mentioned that Amazon are are actually quite good if you're an independent writer. If you're selling ebooks or you wanna get print on demand, Amazon's deal with you as an author is pretty good. If you're producing audiobooks, their deal with you is pretty bad. In fact, it's appalling, actually. It's unbelievably strange. I know I know they're leveraging their their platform as best they can, but, you're you're tied into them for 7 years if you go for an exclusive deal with them, during which time they can fix the price of your product as they see fit. Uh-oh. You have no say in that. And the most you get out of the deal is 40%.
Now I was underwhelmed with this the more I looked at it, and I thought, well, the sorts of things that I'm interested in, that you're interested in, that the audience are listening are interested in, are generally we we could easily call them niche markets, which people like you and I are seeking to expand and make them they'll still be niche markets, but we'd like them to get bigger. We still think there's a lot of people could join these niches of knowledge, and get involved. So I didn't see the point, really of of just handing over a lot of stuff to Amazon because we're not producing, a populist novel and this, that, and the other. I mean, we're just not. I I will I'll never be in that line of work. So, well, I've just sent the decision to do it all independently, which is really probably more work than producing the book, to be quite honest.
But it's it's appropriate. It's gotta be done. So the last few days, my head's just been spinning with the idea of really trying to develop a full blown publishing platform because I don't know if I mentioned it when we were talking before, this just goes back into the realm of free speech. 2018 particularly, although, you know, these sorts of actions have been going on for the last few years, but I believe in 2018, Amazon kicked off something like a 160 books off of their platform. Yikes. Yeah. That's quite a lot. So Is that equivalent to a book burning? Yeah. That well, that's what you know, I was looking for a domain name, booksamazonburned.com, which is available.
Some sharp operator is gonna go out there and get it right now, I suppose. But, well, why it is. It's I mean, why would you burn it? Why would you I mean, you know, metaphorically speaking, why would you do that? In many cases, they they've been selling these things. I'm sure they're not their top sellers, but they've been selling them quite steadily for 12, 15 years in some cases, even longer than that. And many of them are extremely rational, calm analyses of things that you and I probably would be quite interested in. So do you know? You know? You can access the titles of the books that they've banned, kicked off, in essence? I'm titles of the books that they've banned, kicked off in essence? I don't know. Someone's actually put it together. Yeah. I think there is a list. There's about a 160, and there is a list somewhere. You I'm sure if you went to a search engine, you'd find another website that's kind of collated, most of them, that have been nuked.
Have you seen the list? In fact, they even took Kevin you know Kevin McDonald? Sure. Sure. Of course. Well, last week, I think it was, or within the last 2 weeks, Culture of Critique, which they've been selling ever since he wrote it, they they've been that. I mean, this is sort of like so what are we supposed to say here? This is just nothing ever changes. Nothing ever changes. They they used to physically burn books in the past. Now they're basically, you know, burning your ability to connect with the books. It's all about the control of ideas that people up there don't like.
And, of course, you and I, I would say, are genetically disposed to only liking those sorts of ideas. Those are the only ideas that interest me, you know.
[01:00:21] Unknown:
Certainly, as compared to their euphoric crap, that you answered the kind of the question as to that being one book, was there a was there a trend in in the type of books there? Was it in other words, Amazon just saying, okay, whatever, I'm gonna take this off, it doesn't sell, or is it specific stuff like Kevin McDonald's,
[01:00:44] Unknown:
book? And that Yeah. Yeah. Really, that that's yeah. Well, that that seemed to be the thread. You've got this an Italian guy called Carlo Matogno, who's written some very scholarly books, about really analyzing the Holocaust situation. And, they've they've they've got rid of all those. These are extremely calm, almost professorial books. Yes? Yes. Which of course is the reason why they're so effective. Of course. But of course they weren't designed to let's pretend to be a professor. No. This is just the approach that the writers have taken, correctly of course, to kind of, take the emotion and stress out of the whole thing and say, you know, calmly, there's something wrong with this account. This account that you're giving, that everybody's swallowing down, it really doesn't stack up. There's a substantial lack of evidence to support, well, anything that you claim. Here, have a look at what I've written to actually show you this. And of course, it's still one of the great awkward communications to for people to enter into.
So, those books were assisting people to get to grips with it. But they they will still get through, and I do think that, you know, the point is for all of us, in depending on what aspect of this that you're involved with, you know, whether you're actually a sort of writer or whatever you may be, is that we need our to develop our own publishing platforms fully. And I've kind of resisted that, but I'm really looking into it quite seriously now. I think it may be a blessing. It may be a blessing. Yeah. Yeah. It could be. I mean, you know, the whole of the crypto cryptocurrency thing, as I said, I'm not I'm not gung ho about cryptocurrency, not because, I would be if if the if the bad guys were involved. I maintain, and my my view is this, I don't care what we use for money, but the problem is it's the certain sorts of character types that get involved
[01:02:28] Unknown:
who lack a thing called trust and integrity. If they're involved, it doesn't matter what you use Well it tends to get bent out of whack, you know, that's that's But but you wanna use something that's positive and not based on debt, and and all those things seem to work here. So interesting, I just saw the story. You know, Venezuela has been under severe attack from our government and all their little tricks, how they've caused this huge power outage over there for the last couple of weeks rolling, I guess. Right? Mhmm. The banks didn't work, but Bitcoin did. A lot of people some people would set up generators and have a little generator connected. The phone lines evidently still worked, and they'd stick a Wi Fi up and people could do Bitcoin transactions and cyber coin transactions even when the power was down and all the banks were closed. Pretty interesting, pretty interesting.
[01:03:21] Unknown:
Yeah. It is. I mean, I think if if we were looking at a situation where people had their own generators on their property, and we know that these generator designs exist, we just can't get our hands on them for now, or maybe we don't have a rich sugar daddy individual amongst us who could organize a team to provide these things, which I think would be great. But the idea of an independent network does appeal to me, of course, very much. We wouldn't be talking if it weren't for all these technologies and so on, and blah blah blah blah blah. And I I don't expect them to go away unless, of course, they do start dropping sort of pulse bombs everywhere, in which case the whole of the network gets wiped out anyway and we're all doomed. So that that's kind of a little bit excessive. I I think it may well be that the the biblical requirement to use gold and silver, will still prove to be probably the best situation.
Because I don't think it's I mean, it's very difficult, of course, to be duplicitous around gold, as long as the person as everybody's understands how you can test gold. And of course that requires quite a, people used to just test it with their teeth, didn't they? Yes. And the fact they were shiny, and it looked great, and that was enough for everybody, and rightly so in most cases until coin clipping came along, and then you find out that people are mixing in pure metals with it, and then they're gold coatings, then you find out all those tungsten bars covered in gold down in the Bank of England, they're pretending to be gold, and blah blah blah. I mean I remember, because I'm I'm looking at gold, I've just started looking over the last 4 or 5 days, I've just there's something just gone off in my head thinking, well, the Brexit situation's nuts. This is all orchestrated. Everything is nutty.
Each week's nuttier than the previous one. This is obviously, you know, the not so hidden hand at work now, really sort of ramping things up. What what would be a good situation to be in? I mean, ultimately, you wanna be in a situation where you've got plenty of food and water. Yeah. But gold may well be an extremely strong thing to hold because,
[01:05:16] Unknown:
you know, it just could be. I've got a lot of feelings on this, I've been studying gold and the metals and its relationship to this stuff for close to 30 years now, and, my feelings are that gold and silver, the physical metals are going to hit a bigger percentage of the population as we move into this calamity that we're moving into, that those are going to get a higher percentage of people's attention than the cyber's, let me add this word, initially. Okay? Because of the familiarity and the historical history of it. But, it's interesting to me that 5 years it's been about 5 years now since I found out about Karatbars and got involved in Karatbars and I can literally, with what I understand and know Paul, the Karatbars may be one of the only places in the world where people can find gold as we get into the throes of this thing.
Okay, there's a lot of really valid reasons behind that and for one is, you know, in less than 2 weeks, you know what happens April 1st or a day or so before that, is the Basel III accords take firm effect on everybody. You understand what that is,
[01:06:38] Unknown:
the moving of No, go over that with me. Tell me what's happening with the lovely
[01:06:43] Unknown:
creatures from Baal. Okay, well, no, this is really interesting and it's gonna buttress what your thoughts are on this. Banks have 3 level tiers of assets, and the asset is Tier 1, Tier 2, and Tier 3 and the variables on the requirements of that are Tier 1 assets, cash, bonds, currency, etcetera, are all counted as 100% on their balance sheet. Tier 2 assets I believe are counted 75% and Tier 3 assets are counted 50% and gold has always been a Tier 3 asset. And as of in less than 2 weeks, according to the BIS, it's going to move up to Tier 1. So now bankers that why would bankers not want to hold gold? Because if they held it, it was only counted 50%.
So now they know that's coming and what's been happening is any of the supply between Russia, China, and institutions and banks with this change coming, man, the background of any kind of big supply, not at your local coin dealer, but at the the guy that could do tonnage, they're just it ain't out there. That's why you're seeing them go, steal 40 tons from the Ukraine in the middle of the night, 50 tons out of Syria within the last couple of weeks. Okay? And so as this breaks, they've left enough in some of the local your little pawn shop on the corner and some of your coin dealers got a little bit access to product because they don't wanna cause a concern of people going and all of a sudden all the coins have dried up at the pawnshop.
But that's gonna happen, okay? And when it does, the backing supply is already gone. Okay? Because the way this has been engineered. And I honestly think Carabars, man, ain't Carabars ain't running out of gold. I believe it's gonna be one of the only places on the Earth that people can get a certified, guaranteed, high quality 24 four nines in small sizes that are affordable, a, and that can be used for commercial transactions, b.
[01:09:08] Unknown:
Yeah. What's the yeah. You could be right, really. I mean, it's just you never know. It's always circumstances. I mean, certain assets appear to be more or less attractive depending on what's going on with the society at the time, doesn't it? And, I remember there was I I may have mentioned this before. In the past, what time would this be? 14 years or so ago, 2,004, 2005, right about that time. Right. I was doing quite a bit of research into gold at the time, I wanted to know how much there was in the world and this that and the other. I came across a very interesting website, which may still be up, called deepblacklies.co.uk.
Deepblacklies, written by a guy called David Guyatt, g u y a t t. I think I exchanged a couple of emails with him at the time. Anyway, the site's rather intriguing if it's still up, because, it details, the hidden the vast hidden reserves of gold that there are in the world. Basically, making the case that there's colossal amounts of it, absolutely tons of it all over the place. And, one of the interesting, one of the interesting or the core of the stories there, were to do with the Philippines Mhmm. Which you may be familiar with because, there were photographs of these mines on the Philippines that had been dug out these shafts. And the story behind it was that, almost immediately, that Japan ended up in hostilities with America, which were, as you probably know, absolutely unavoidable for Japan because Japan was being intentionally squeezed to bring it to that point.
And the whole of the Pearl Harbor thing is likely to be an immense false flag, I'm not saying that people didn't die, but what I am saying is that,
[01:10:56] Unknown:
the way was cleared to allow it to happen Yeah. Intentionally because of positive reasons. Yeah. They had they knew it was coming and didn't alert the people. Oh, yeah. They were surprised. It was a reverse false flag.
[01:11:07] Unknown:
Well, it it was. They needed a positive reason, you know, to go into war with Japan, so they set it up. And I I think that many of the ships that were destroyed were very old. They actually took the modern fleet and sent it away, didn't they, to Hawaii or somewhere like that? Or they they bunged it off somewhere else. They took all the aircraft carriers out of Pearl. They were all at sea. Yeah. Yeah. So they were trashing, basically, a lot of old things, which were gonna get trashed anyway, but, of course, they were also trashing 3,000 human lives as well, which is not good. So it shows you how much, of course, that the US government care about their people. You know, are we surprised? No. We're not. Same goes here as well, by the way. It's not just confined to the US.
But, the the Japanese knew almost from the minute that they started that they'd lost, you know, because they weren't stupid. They just, you know, someone comes down and says, well, look at the level of resources and land and manpower, we're done. So if you start this, We can't win. Okay? So they went okay, and they decided that they were gonna win the peace. So the way that they were gonna do it is that they were going to, effectively secrete, hide all the gold that they had amassed, much of it, of course, from the rape of Nanking, and the war that they waged against the Chinese in the 19 thirties.
And so they had these boats, ships, frigates, destroyers, whatever you want to call them, a whole, on their way back to Japan to bury this stuff around Japanese islands. But the, 6th or 7th fleet, whatever it is, I've probably got me my terminology wrong, but they stepped up patrols. The American Navy stepped up patrols in the Pacific and around that stretch of waters. So they couldn't get to Japan, so they basically went to the Philippines. And they took with them or had with them many prisoners of war. This is rather gruesome and awful, I'm afraid, but these things do come up. And so they dug over a 100 mines there, about a 110, I think it is. Guyat lists these mines. And even you've even got photographs of these, stones, around the island with this sort of strange Japanese coded language on them, which has given you directions to where the entrance to the next mine is.
And what they did was they got the prisoners of war to dig these mines. They put gold in the mines, then they blew them up, burying the prisoners of war with the gold so that they couldn't reveal to anybody where it was. That's the rather unpleasant bit. And, however, whilst this is all going on, according to Guyatt, whilst this is all going on, officers from the OSS, that's the forerunner of, the CIA, I think it is. Yep. They've got their agents on the island, but they're not informing the US government. They're not doing that.
They're just, keeping a record of it all because they went, oh, hang on. We've got some black budget stuff coming up here after World War 2. That's what they're thinking. Don't let anybody know about that. So, many of those minds, some of them have still not even been open to this day because a, they were booby trapped, but b, they also lost record of where they all were. It's quite a few, you know, to go down. And of course, everybody will be familiar with Marcus becoming rather a prominent, spontaneously worldwide figure in the seventies. Remember that? Yes. Well, that's that's because they were getting the gold out. And he was he'd actually knew where it was, so they actually did a deal with him. And he got to get a bit fame and a bit more influence and power, and they were controlling him, but they were getting getting at this gold. And there are some amazing photographs, genuine photographs of these of these ingots, these colossal lumps of gold. There's one that that it shows you, there's a photograph of a tunnel, it would be about 3 feet high, 2 feet wide, that's it. It's like a little channel. And it goes down about a 100 meters. And it's got gold ingots in it all the way down. The ingots must weigh something like 200 kilos apiece. That's like £400 of gold. They're absolutely colossal. They've got 2 big handles molded into the ingots so that men could carry them. They're absolutely enormous stuff, colossal amounts of gold.
So, and then there's a lot of other paperwork from a guy, I think it was, Kurt Waldheim, you remember him? I I remember him. Kurt Waldheim was an Yeah. He was an Austrian, he was in the SS, but after World War 2 he became Prime Minister of Austria, which is kind of interesting really when you've been in the SS in World War 2 and everybody's been chewed up. And then you think, well, how did he get away with that? Well the reason he got away with it is that he was heavily involved up to his neck with the control of all this gold, and had a lot of records, which had he revealed would have blown the world gold market to bits because of his knowledge. And some of the documents that are in this account that Gaius put together are astonishing, when they're actually listing the total tonnage of gold that they were aware of at the time, which dwarfed what was being declared publicly. Because if everybody knew how much there was, the price would have fallen out the market. There was that much of it floating around. There's just tons of this stuff. It's all over the place, you know, because people don't wanna throw it away. For millennia, they don't wanna throw it away. So it's all it's all accrued. It's well, it's too valuable. It's almost indestructible,
[01:16:19] Unknown:
even in smaller amounts like in circuit boards and stuff. You can go through processes and get that stuff out. Mhmm. That's not even mentioned. The rumor Bix Weir has been on this one for as long as I've been listening to him. It was one of his original deals that gave him a status. His, Road to Rouda is his website, is the gold that's buried in, the Grand Canyon. And the fact that there's still part of down there, the Grand Canyon is armed by military, you can't go down there, and if you do, they'll shoot your ass, you know.
[01:16:55] Unknown:
If you say, can I have some gold, please?
[01:16:58] Unknown:
Oh, please. Just a I'm just wondering if I could have a pound or 2. What do you think? I don't know, but it's gonna be very interesting as we roll forward and see. We may never know some of that stuff, but, we're going into a financial crunch. The world economy is about to hit a wall. Okay? And, in fact, it probably, according to a lot of people that know Jim Sinclair and those folks, who I tend to listen to, say it's already happened. Rob Kirby did an interview. He's back. He had almost a near death experience, some kind of hospital health situation, but he's pulled out of it and he's back. I've gotten about a third of the way through this morning, one of your fellow Brits, a guy that I really admire named Andrew McGuire, who I'm sure you're familiar with, is the interview on Greg Hunter's USA Watchdog here on Wednesday today. And he's going over some of this stuff too.
We're very close. The Federal Open Market Committee makes an announcement this afternoon. You've got 13 countries in the world with negative interest rates on their bonds. I mean, you know, this situation is just tenuous and it should have gone down a long time ago and it probably would have had not there possibly been some of these things like Marcos' Gold or the Grand Canyon Gold, but certainly the $21,000,000,000,000 that they found just through 2 agencies that they manufactured. You can kick the can pretty far down the road for 21 trillion.
[01:18:42] Unknown:
Yeah. I guess you can. I guess you can. They can keep doing it. I mean, I suppose when people talk about losses and things, though, it's all a bit meaningless. You're just we're still all buying in Well to a sort of a fictional world in which value is is measured in that way. I mean, the whole thing about the system, of course, is to to me I mean, this is just my take on it. People think they're motivated by the acquisition of wealth, but I I really don't think they are. I think a few are. I think that they're the they're the great disturbers of the world. I don't think it's the acquisition of wealth that really does light people's candle. I think, you know, to reverse it, for me anyway, it's the absence of being pestered for bills.
That's what's really required. You'd recover 98% of your sanity if you didn't have to deal with this, continual encroachment and pestering Yep. From the world of builds. Yep. And all the communication and laser printers have been, oh, good grief. Now they've got battalions of administrators with laser printers who send these colossal reports through thinking that it signifies intelligence whereas in fact it signifies the complete opposite. There's no brevity, there's no clarity, there's just, oh, you've got to read this clause. You've got no. I mean, look at things like, terms of service and these terms of agreements and things that you get on software and everything. Have you read that? You're going, what?
If I if I read it, I'll never get around to reusing the software. Right. I won't have any life left, you know? What's the point of this? Well, this one is evidently gonna get instituted a little bit differently, because it shapes up as a credit crunch this time.
[01:20:17] Unknown:
Alright. Okay. Okay. Well, they're gonna stop, there won't be any credit, is that what they're saying? All of a sudden, everything's gonna freeze on the credit front. And now, the effect on commerce, because almost all commerce is short term, floated on credit. Okay? All commerce, all the people getting loans, everything else, so that appears to be one of the real crucial points where it's gonna show its ugly head first, but we're real close, I mean, I've been following it for many years and we thought we were close before, but they're backing into it. When you got to take 13 countries and put them in bonds and negative interest rate.
[01:20:56] Unknown:
I guess.
[01:20:57] Unknown:
I mean, you know, that's like saying, here, I'm gonna give you I'm gonna give you this $1,000, Paul, and at the end of a year, you're gonna give me back 900.
[01:21:10] Unknown:
Yep. That's, it's gonna be a little bit awkward for the for the accountants, but remember, they can always come up with triple entry bookkeeping to cover that one. It's about time we went to triple. We had doubled 500 years ago. I can't wait for quadruple entry bookkeeping. That's gonna be great fun, isn't it? I remember speaking years ago, actually, around about this time, to a guy, he's probably still alive, actually. I can't he probably in his fifties then, and I can't even remember his name, but he worked in, his family ran a very long established gold selling business, selling Krugerrand, sovereigns, American Eagles, that kind of stuff here in the UK.
And I was doing a bit of research on the amount of I wanted to know how many sovereigns that that had ever been minted. I was just interested to know. There's a bunch. Yes. Hundreds of thousands of them, you know, they've been minting some every year for over a 100 years or whatever it is. Some of them go back to 16, 1500,
[01:22:01] Unknown:
don't they?
[01:22:02] Unknown:
Yeah. If you can get them, if you're lucky enough. They'll be worth a lot more, obviously because of their ancient value, as it were. But I remember speaking to him about, gold, and he was very helpful, and, had been involved for a long time, and we were just talking about, you know, ingots and, you know, these bars when they get stamped and everything. And he said, he said, well you should, the gist of the conversation was, he said, you should always buy physical. I said I said yeah? And he said absolutely, he said, I wouldn't trust any of them. He said I don't trust any of them.
You know, made a situation over here with Johnson Matthey in the early seventies, lying about what they had, Right? He said none of them, he said, nobody in this business is trustworthy. The only thing you can trust is to have it in your hand. And if you haven't got it in your hand, you haven't got it. I went, okay, he said, you need it in your hand. He said, that's why this business doesn't fall over. We've been selling coins and having it in our hand for, I think it was over 50 years by then, it was a family business that his father had passed down to him. And it just made a lot of simple sense. Of course, you know, they're dealing I suppose in I mean, sovereigns are great. They're about a quarter there's just under quarter of an ounce of gold in the sovereign. I think it's about 0.22 of a of an ounce of actual gold in it. They're nice looking coins. They're very tough. And they last a long time. The Krugerrand, of course, is immensely tough. I think it shot with about 2 or 3 percent copper, or something to harden it up. It makes it it's got a reddish it's got a very reddish color to it. Yeah. It does got a reddish color, it's not particularly handsome, but it's very tough and durable, and it's not, you know, it's not particularly attractive, but there are an awful lot of them.
So, and I remember, I don't know if I told you, years ago, if I haven't I'll tell you now. So at that time we ended up minting gold coins. I ended up minting them. You did. I was doing all sorts of oh, aye, we used the we use the yeah, me personally, no, not really, with a hammer out in the backyard. No. But you were involved with some people that did.
[01:24:04] Unknown:
Yeah, yeah. Well, we used a thing called do you remember that thing with, what's it, Herbert von Notthaus? Is that his name? Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. Oh, yeah. They got put up the Ron Paul dollar and did a little time in club fed for it.
[01:24:17] Unknown:
Yeah. I mean, his ideas were great. I actually quite liked him. He's a very interesting guy. Mhmm. Anyway, he they were minting coins. What was it called? Was it the Liberty Dollar or something? I think it's called. It was. Okay. And that was their mistake, calling it a dollar. Of course. That's what did him in. You just should have called it that. It's just don't call it that. This is the sort of thing, like, we've got to appeal to what everybody knows. I mean, this is the thing, the great challenge is education and getting people comfortable with a new idea. It's tricky, because the Internet helps us do that much more quickly than we could have done in the past. Yes. But, yeah, they had a mint for their coins called the sunshine mint in Idaho, I think if I remember correctly. Oh, I'm very familiar with that.
So we had somebody working over there as part of the team, and I contacted them and said, could you mint us a 1 ounce gold coin? And they said, yes. Now the thing was, shows how stupid we were. The thing was pure gold. There was not any alloy in it at all. And, boy did it glitter. I got some over here. I got at one point I had about 5. I had 5 ounces of gold in these things. The thing was, I noticed that the edges weren't beveled, so you'd get a little bit of flakes of gold coming off the corner of the coin. I'm going, bit of a design flaw this. Yeah. Let's hope that nobody actually points it out. It was. But I I I'd only just moved down here, this would be 2003, 4, 5, I'd only been here a couple of years. And I was in the local pub, the one that I go to still to this day, and, didn't really know anybody there. But I I bumped into someone who was who'd lived there all his life and knew many people in the pub, and he said, yeah, let me take these off you. I said, of course. He took he took 4 of them off me, he's got 4 ounces, and, if anybody it's quite an interesting thing when people hold gold, because they don't usually. Most people have never ever held it. Very true. So he went around the pub with his mates, and he steer, and he put urine out, and he put urine out, and he just dropped it in the hand. Of course, it's quite a weight. It's heavier than it looks, isn't it? You go, oh, that's gonna be a light, oh, wow, where's that weight come from? And, I was sort of like 30 feet away over in the corner room because nobody knew me, just watching everybody.
Nobody nicked it, thankfully. I would have had them. There was near the door. But, so And it was only about 250 back then, go ahead. Those wet days, it were grand. So, yeah. It was, but it was very interesting, and the look on people's faces, they was kind of fascinated with it. In other words, being re, you know, being reacquainted with the ancient coin of the realm as it were. We should get back. Silver, of course, is still very, very useful, even though it's used massively, of course, in industrial processes. But it was just watching people's faces. And the reason I was sort of spending all this time inordinately looking at this was that I was trying to figure out a way to mobilize gold. I just use this word mobilize. The idea was so I would look at the grammage weight in every single coin made. All the Krugerrands, all the American Eagles, all the sovereigns, those are the big ones, right, the ones in vast numbers. And you you look at the amount of grams of gold, and I go, oh, there's this amount of grams of gold out there in the world in spendable quantities.
Alright. Okay. So, you know, you couldn't go off and just spend 1 ounce of gold. What is it now? What is it these days? Is it 8 or 9 equips, $1200?
[01:27:34] Unknown:
I don't even know what it is. Thanks for the setup. I'm gonna read this or this headline right out from New Zero Hedge. Gold tumbles back below 1300 as someone suddenly dumps $1,000,000,000 of quote unquote precious paper.
[01:27:51] Unknown:
Oh, time to buy then. Kick dumping. It's
[01:27:57] Unknown:
if if you're in it's it's a good time to buy. If you hadn't bought previously, it's a good time to buy. I mean, you know, I can remember Robbie Noel. Did you ever hear him, Paul? Robbie Noel. No. He's not. It didn't ring a bell. He's one of the real icons. I'm not gonna hear from him then. Well, he no. You're not gonna. He was, South African, and he had your colonial accent and just a really good guy. And he was one of the metal specialists. And, I can remember Robbie Noel, when the gold went over 400, and get on this program every night and go, you'll never see $400 gold again the rest of your lifetime.
And he was pretty right. That's what he said. And, you know, I was fortuitous enough. I had been hit with I got probably the best cash flow situation in my whole life right in those years, and I was in a situation where I had gotten out of the tax system and I married a gal and moved in with her and her mother and they paid all the bills. So I had a couple of years of just this tremendous cash flow situation with literally no outgo.
[01:29:12] Unknown:
Okay? And a very enviable citizen Where did it all go wrong, Rocha? Where did it all go wrong?
[01:29:18] Unknown:
Well, it didn't go too wrong because at least I was smart enough to take all that gold right around Brown's bottom and all that money and buy gold. And that's why I can do that's one of the reasons I've been able to accomplish what I've been able to accomplish is to put the time and the research into this project because I didn't have that nagging crap of bills all over me. Okay?
[01:29:42] Unknown:
And I I was just gonna wait for you. That's it. That's the point, isn't it? It's not the equity I don't want tons of stuff. I mean, people go, oh, I want this. I'm I'm going, seriously? You want a yacht? You've gotta clean it. You know what it costs to insure? Then you've gotta organize all that kind of stuff. What do you want one for? Nobody wants one. Less. You don't want one. I mean, what do you want one for? It's just bad. Less is more. It gets
[01:30:04] Unknown:
you where you're not spending time worried about those pesky bills that you know were sitting there, and now you can focus a 100% of your conscious thinking on what you're trying to accomplish. That's one of the reasons I've been able to accomplish this. And I know it. And see, here's what the backlash is on me, is last year, when I thought I could overcome the laws of gravity, now for the first time in 20 years, I've been put in debt and I don't like it. Okay? I understand now even more vividly now because I hadn't been in that situation in so many years.
[01:30:38] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. I think that you see when the when the bill thing disappears out of people's lives, and this is all part of this pressure of the system, of coming out of her, right, as it were, is that not only are you denied, and most people are denied, the opportunity of possibly pursuing an interest and developing it into something that not only contributes back to themselves but to others. That's what it must do, No man is an island, right? You have to you have to share your passions with others for them to be valuable, and for them to sustain and grow. But also, you can possibly become what you are, you can actually grow into and actually become what you really are, which most people never ever really find out, in the sense that we are distracted permanently, you know, we are continually running around fulfilling somebody else's goals, as it were, in this system, which is a Yep.
[01:31:42] Unknown:
So it's, but that's one of the reasons and that's the thing why I jumped on the cyber stuff and see it so plainly for our people, because listen, just like gold, you get to a point, Bitcoin was across $4 yesterday, I hadn't checked it since, there's going to be a point you're never going to see $4,000 Bitcoin again or $250 Ethereum or whatever it is. These things have got great viability down the line and particularly with the cyber coins, it gives us a sword to beat our enemies with, and while we're beating them at the same time, we're stealing their power. It's a simultaneous deal.
So, that's why I say, let's get ready, whatever you can do to get yourself ready in those areas because here's why. I mean, it's not just a pipe dream. People listen to people with money. It doesn't matter if they they like them or or or whatever. They they respect people with money even if it's a per perverse respect. Okay? And people generally you know, when EF Hutton speaks, people listen. You'll get back to that basic. So, if our people can get in a situation where we prepare ahead of time and on the other side of this, we're the ones with a little bit of financial wherewithal and we know the political message, now we got people's ears.
And so part of my reasoning for doing this is for down the line when that situation unfolds. Because listen, after this thing goes down, people are already looking for answers and a bigger percentage every day. And after that happens and it gets more acute and life gets harder, people are gonna be looking for more answers. And I think we can put ourselves in a position we're not gonna overturn this thing. We're not gonna stop it. We ain't gonna take the country back. It's gotta fall on its own. Then we step into the spotlight for action. My thinking.
[01:33:46] Unknown:
Our minds pretty similar to that. I think if you'd asked me 20 years ago, no, come on, we can blah blah blah blah blah, and it's difficult to let go of that as a sort of motivational thing. I I found it difficult at times to let go of that, but I think sometimes you just have to look and say, okay, the situation is so deep, it's so long term, this disease, that it's gonna have to come out the way it's gonna come out. Exactly. And after that, after that, if I'm still around, depending on how things go, then there may be a chance to actually, you know, get a glimpse of recovery for everybody. I'm not a spring chicken anymore, but my sons are. And you would like we would all like to think those of us that have got sons and daughters, that they're gonna be able to at least have an opportunity to recover back some dignity into their lives, you know, much of which has been destroyed and chewed out of Western Christian culture over the last 40 or 50 years, you know, an accelerated raid.
By the way, you mentioned earlier as well the, the Europa videos, and, I've watched a couple of them, I think, and they are good, but not that I've got a criticism of it, because I'd need to work, I mean, I probably would have a few, but I mean overall I think it looks, a cracking good use of time, if people are into grazing videos. I'm not always I'm not always disposed to watching videos, I I get fidgety for some reason, I want to sort of like listen to something, and read, and or do something at the same time, then I'm quite happy. But there's a chap, over here called Dennis Wise, who you may have heard of, he's the guy that made Adolf Hitler the greatest story never told.
And, me and Andy, I was on with Andrew Carrington Hitchcock, we, in fact it probably got broadcast yesterday, we we interviewed, or we had an hour or so with Dennis on, earlier in the week, and it got broadcast yesterday. And since he did, that series, he went on to do another one called Communism by the Back Door, which is excellent, which touches on more, I suppose, of the psychological and social engineering background to much of the, builders that we have to deal with day to day, you know, putting it into the light. But then he's also, and I was completely sure how much I'm out of the loop, he's also been doing another one, the name of which he escaped me. No, it's about freemasonry.
Oh, okay. It's actually about freemasonry. Freemasonry's, victory in World War 2. It's not called that literally, but they it's that's what it's about. And I there's about 18 episodes of it out so far, so I went on to I went on to you, each one's about 15 minutes long, and so I hopped on to YouTube, and managed to scramble them together from multiple sorts of accounts where people had hosted it, maybe it got pinned off. Anyway, I've watched the first 2 or 3 and it's really very very very good. In fact, Greg would like it. It's tremendous. And, Dennis I was talking to, he he called me up last week because I don't know him, well I do kind of know him well, even though we've only been talking for the last couple of weeks really. But I kind of know him culturally because he's from the same neck of the woods as me, so we kind of talk the same the same sort of language and understand where we're at. And, he was he was talking to me about something that he had observed with regards to the funding of National Socialist Germany in the early thirties. And of course there are these debates that go on that say, oh no he was getting money from the Western banks, and oh no he was getting money from Henry Ford, which of course he was, and that's what recovered Germany. Well it's not, you know, I don't think there's any one particular bow. I think it's a combination of things that they made use of there, rightfully in my view, considering the situation that they were in.
And, anyway, I'm talking to Dennis and, we start talking or he starts talking about Samuel Untermyer. This is the, man who was responsible for the the meeting, I think it was in Holland in 1933, which resulted in the declaration of Judea
[01:37:48] Unknown:
declaring war on Germany, you may recall. He was a real kingpin from World War 1 all the way through World War 2. He had his bunch of of of synagogue buddies over there in the US, and when World War 2 came along, he got them together, he said, I made you millionaires in the First World War, I'll make you billionaires in this one. Is that him or is that Baruch? No. That's undermine. No. You might Well, I might be confusing, but but were you gonna say, Barak,
[01:38:18] Unknown:
Bernard Baruch, yeah, him. Yep. Yeah. He was he he became Churchill's handler, for most of Churchill's life at a certain point. But just going back to this little exchange, which is a good little thing. I like this. So as we are all aware, Germany was inordinately punished, at the Treaty of Versailles for a war which it didn't even really start. I mean, it's just a ridiculous sort of situation, but it shows you that the fix was in to destroy Germany. That's what it's absolutely about. Right? Absolutely. Because it was the heartland Christian country of Europe, so the idea was to chew it over so that Bolshevism, you know, could, could wade on through. Anyway, as we are all aware, under under the Weimar Republic in the 19 twenties, Germany was a bit strapped, videntially, you know, wheelbarrows of cash to get a loaf of bread and all that kind of stuff.
And they had this massive reparations bill to pay, which was 100 of 1,000,000, which I don't know what it would be in today's money, but it was a lot, you know, it was a sort of inordinately stupid amount, which of course was suppressing them and and stopping their ability to lead a decent life and to and to grow as a good people. So, turns out that the the American banks, now I don't know which one specifically, but some, always on the lookout for a good business opportunity, being aware that Germany couldn't pay its reparations, were lending the money to Germany for Germany to pay its reparations back, at interest, of course.
And, and Adolf wasn't using all the money to pay the reparations back. According to Dennis's report, he was basically getting this money in from the US banks, which was supposed to be used then to pay the reparations off, but it wasn't being used for that, it was being used for him to restructure the country and to get it back on his feet, which of course it did, and, was by far and away the best thing for it to do because of course it became massively productive, as it, you know, slowly built up strength ready to run headlong into the arranged fisticuffs that had been arranged a long, long time before, which was, you know, this foul thing called World War 2. But I found that quite interesting actually, it's just another it's another string to the bow. Yeah. It's an interesting
[01:40:30] Unknown:
tidbit I had not heard, but let's see if we can piece a few things together. When did he split with the Zionists? Evidently, early on in his political career, he was befriended and financed by the Zionists and at some point turned on him, and that's when I think they turned on him and he started taking and putting the financial system from that terrible hyperinflation and it did cover a little bit of that in Europa, and I remember them saying what he did was monetize labor. And every Well, he did. Yeah. He did. Every mark, we did a couple hours of labor and that's how he went in and financed it and took a couple of years probably a combination of all that. But what he did in 5 years was totally created an economic miracle.
And if they weren't scared of the white Christian Germans before that, when they saw what he did with that economy and threatened to spread it to every other country in Europe, they were they were real concerned then.
[01:41:32] Unknown:
Well, they knew that from 33, and apparently Untermyer was very cross with the American banks. He was very cross with them. He said, you're lending him money, but he's not using it to pay the thing off. He used it to rebuild his country up. Oh, they said. Probably aware of that anyway, but knowing that they were off to a good deal long term. I mean, that's why Ford invested, but not until about 35. And, of course, I've seen these accounts saying, you know, Wall Street and Hitler, so what? Big deal. You know? I mean, what's this? That Wall Street is well, certain aspects of Wall Street, yes. Of course. Yes. But others would have just said, hey, there's there's an economy that's recovering. I mean, if you go back to 34 and 35, you know, it's difficult for us to do that because we've got this huge thing called World War 2 in the middle of our minds before we can propel ourselves back to that time. But it hadn't happened then, even though obviously people were stupid in the sense that something was gonna come along. Well, you still see the repercussions. I'm watching a video this morning on James Corbin over
[01:42:27] Unknown:
there, your guy. Mhmm. And his right hand black lady that's, out there politicking for the Palestinians is getting totally demonized. I can't remember her name. And she's sitting there talking. They closed they got meetings. She's supposed to talk. She goes to the building. They got the doors closed. That kind of subtle stuff. But she's up there talking and she started what about Hitler and the I mean, Hitler is so demonized and they've done such a thorough job of painting him in this demon and you start getting facts and the the man wasn't a demon. I mean, you know, and I as I told you, my personal experience was this was this German couple and he had fought in the Third Reich on the Eastern Front and after the war, they migrated to Milwaukee and they were some of my Silver Line customers. It's how we originally got connected. I've still got I've printed her emails, I've got them with me, and I've got Ecuador, okay?
And her last name was Adler, a d l e r, which can be a Jewish name but with them it wasn't, okay it wasn't. Okay? And Mhmm. And, she told me, she said, everybody loved Adolf. We loved him.
[01:43:43] Unknown:
Who wouldn't? Who wouldn't? You'd they'd have to demonize him because everything he did contradicts all of the control mechanisms and systems that they want to implement, and shows the the real bounty that's available to a people that are organized and racially pure with one another. Now that has to be demonized, of course. You have to why do you have to demonize race? Because when you get, people racially consonant with one another, they can perform like a team, like an orchestra. It just goes. There's still ruckuses at the back. You know, maybe the timpani department doesn't like the trombones and so on and so forth, but overall the music is improved considerably when everybody is genetically on the same part of the hymn sheet. It goes for whatever group you say, for what ever group you say. It is true. And, and that's why they had to hammer it because they, as a as a divisive force, thrive better when there is discord in the home market.
It creates all these nooks and crannies and these positions for government authorities to sort out these problems. Whereas a huge number of supposed problems are basically, bogusly, and artificially created by this situation which is simply not, you know, it's like saying, hey, I'm a seal, and I've got this real problem with killer whales. Oh, yeah. Really? Yeah. Every time I go swimming, they, you know, they wanna eat me. Well, Doug, go swim where the killer whales are. Oh, yeah. I never thought of that. Yeah. He's he's just really it's really simple stuff. Why do you not swim there? What? You go swim somewhere else.
Go where they're not. Oh, yeah. I never thought about that. It's so easy. But, of course, then it takes all the drama out of life, which we would like, or a lot of it. A lot of the unnecessary pointless. And the ideology that's been injected into people's heads that this is a good thing is never questioned. It's an idiotic thing. I'm come I'm bringing it all the way back to where we started up with the Christchurch thing. You know, irrespective of whether it's kinda true or not, that's what it tends to illustrate. And the other thing as well, just hopping back onto the gold thing as well, is that, you know, he did achieve that without using gold at all. That's right. Now, because he said you don't need any gold, and he's right, but you kind of do, but not in the way of you need it because you can't trust human beings Insurance. Ultimately. Insurance? That what do you do? Yeah. Abs there's no there's nothing wrong with having a bit of it put by. Right? Because it acts as a recovery point for things. And, you know, if we're all if everybody's devoid of personal greed and lust, and there'll always be a little bit of that because you could say that that's a little bit like the mustard that goes in a ham sandwich, it gives it a bit of pop. And we all got, particularly when we're young, we tend to have a yearning for things that we don't have, which which I've found as I've got older falls away. I'm not really interested, you know, everybody I wanted a Ferrari when I was 25, if I got one now I'd be one of those dophy middle aged idiots that's tools around in those things. It's like estate agents. You go, you sad, sad old fool. Get out of that thing.
Right? You know?
[01:46:43] Unknown:
Yeah. Was that Coleman's mustard that you put on that ham sandwich? Yeah. Okay. Now then I got a I got a question to ask you. Did did old man Coleman really make his money on all the mustard that was thrown away?
[01:46:59] Unknown:
I don't. You should sit we eat it over here. Why can't you there's some fire in that stuff, isn't there? Yeah. You see, listen, I would have never known what this was, and most
[01:47:09] Unknown:
people in the audience don't know what we're talking about. But when I was on the And when I was in Argentina, one of my very good friends down there was Scottish, actually. And, I went out and ate with them a few times, and that's where I had Coleman Mustard. And it's a powder. It comes in a yellow tin, and you take that stuff out and mix, and, boy, it is stout. And that's where the joke, did mister Coleman Coleman make his money with all the mustard that's thrown away? Because boy, that stuff is stout.
[01:47:44] Unknown:
Yeah. It's rocket it's rocket fuel. He he was obsessed with mustard seeds. He was obsessed with mustard seeds. He used to take baths, mustard baths and everything. He thought it was the you know, he was one of those Victorian guys that said, you do this, you'll live forever. I don't know whether he did. Well, obviously, he didn't. Otherwise, he'd be here on the call with us telling us all about the great history of Coleman's mother. I couldn't stand it as a kid. I gotta tell you. It was just my mom used to stick it on her ham sandwiches. Go, hey. Have a bite of this. Go, what? What? Why have you ruined it? But then as I got older, I went, this is quite good. And it's just, I'd tell you, pork pies. I shouldn't eat pork pie. And I don't eat pork pies, but or sausage rolls every now and again. Oh, I'm revealing everything. I'm a wicked person. But every now and again every now and again I just have to do I mean I love the French's sort of American mustard. It's great on hot dogs. It's great mixed with a bit of ketchup. It's soft. It's a fruity sort of taste. It's great. I used to love quaffing, wrong word, but I used to love gulping down hot dogs when I was in New York watching baseball games back in the eighties nineties when I came over a few times. That was great fun. I know they kind of pureed stuff in in tinfoil,
[01:48:48] Unknown:
but I thought they were great. But, yeah, English mustard is a completely different proposition. It really is. At those ballpark, those are Nathan's hot dogs, and those are the kosher hot dogs. And I can remember that. I can remember listen, back when I was younger, and they they'd have commercials for Nathan's hot dogs, you know? Yeah. And their little tagline at the end was this big deep voice, and he said, we answer to a higher authority.
[01:49:17] Unknown:
Okay. It's a bit of a claim. It's only a hotdog, but still, thanks for letting us know.
[01:49:21] Unknown:
Coal and mustard on Nathan's hotdogs. Oh, my lord. And listen, audience, if you're in the store, and and you like spicy things, and you see it, it's in a tin. It's not it's not made up or anything. It's you got a bad water or whatever you put in there is a meal. Well you can get it made up these days, we've kind of moved on a bit, they've actually someone decided to put the water in.
[01:49:43] Unknown:
Yeah you can you can get jars of it now, but back in the day, yeah, it was powdered because I think probably you were in some people liked it ferociously hot, so it's just all powdered in a little bit of water. That's right. It's making it so so concentrated. But, yeah, I remember my dad making it on the kitchen table, but here we go, we'll have a bit of this. I'm going, I'm not having any of that. Be about 8. And, my once we were at when we moved down here about 50, this would be about 15, 16 years ago, when my youngest son was about 2, we're at this restaurant, and he's in a highchair.
And there are all these condiments, ketchup and everything, and there's this bright yellow mustard, which he thought was custard. Right? We're talking away, and he'd reached over and got the spoon and stuck a milk in his mouth. And we turned around, his face was red, and he just had his tongue out. And he was just, like, like, get this off my tongue. And we said, you thought that was custard? He went, his tongue was
[01:50:42] Unknown:
oh, those are the days. I will let you know, and I'm pretty innocent. I go out to Michael's house. We're having a nice dinner down there. And, you know, here, you would like some mustard dryer? Sure. I'll take a little. Yapo. I like your son. See? Well, you only do it once.
[01:51:00] Unknown:
Yeah. You'd only do it once with that stuff. You would. You would only do it once because it's it's very, very fiery. It really it really is. It really is. I don't know if they had it in Germany. Maybe it would have helped back in the thirties or something. I don't know. They they probably had better taste, really. I mean, even that you know, when I when I knew these guys over in Europe, they'd come over and say, you guys, you put vinegar on your chips. I'm going, yeah. I put it on loads of things, and they go, you can't put vinegar on chips. They go, soggy. I go, that's the whole point. What's the way you're doing? Because over over there, they put mayonnaise. They have mayonnaise with the chips. So over here, we still do mayonnaise, which makes it slightly more evolved than we used to be, but, vinegar is a standard thing. Yeah. Vinegar on your chips. How about that? It's quite good, actually.
[01:51:42] Unknown:
Great. I've been in some English fish and chip places and and done that whole routine and enjoyed it, you know.
[01:51:50] Unknown:
It's alright. You don't need to talk it up. I know it's rather basic fare, but
[01:51:54] Unknown:
when it's done right when it's done right, it's fantastic. Absolutely fantastic. I'm a big fish eater, so I always like that kind of stuff. As we tail off here, we got about 10 minutes left in the program. It's been you and I today, Paul. Unusual when nobody joins us, but that's okay.
[01:52:14] Unknown:
So anything else that we hadn't touched on that you had thought? Here's something that would be interesting. It's alright. Look, that's a series out. The Secret Masonic Victory of World War 2. That's what it's called. Sorry to that I I fumbled it earlier on, but I didn't have it to hand. The secret masonic victory of world war 2. There's 18 parts, I think part 19 will be out soon. Each one's about 14, 15 minutes long. It's fantastic. It's absolutely brilliant. Great music, and very steady pacing, and a good combination of factors, there's some really really good stuff. It might not be new if you are well versed in, you know, the the unfolding of communism throughout the 20th century, which is basically what we were living in, and basically shows you the role of of Masonry, higher level Masonry at that, you know.
I think that's the situation with Masonry, is that the vast
[01:53:07] Unknown:
Should Greg and I, shoot Greg and I both a link to that, to the first ones, I can take it from there.
[01:53:13] Unknown:
Yeah. What I actually did was, personally, I've downloaded every single bit, and I stuck it on a USB stick, and I've got a smart TV, which is like a 50 inch TV, which is an awful confession, isn't it? I don't watch much TV, but I thought, well, I'm gonna watch it and make sure it's big. So, and it's got a USB stick socket in it. I just stick it in there. I can play the movie straight off the USB stick, straight onto the TV. It's fantastic. A bit of work. Yeah. And, better at these things, you know, so the pacing's good, and, I'll leave you another there's another thing he he said to me the other day, what was it? I've got to do, I want to do a show with him just on this one sentence. He said to me, how many armadas do you think there were? Right, you've heard of the Spanish armada? I'm assuming you might have. Sure. Okay, so I'm, I'm starting laughing, I'm going, well, one, he said, uh-uh.
I'm going, okay, I'm interested, don't tell me anymore, right? I don't know what you saw, but quite a few armadas, he said, more than 1, more than 2. I said, ah, cool, this is interesting.
[01:54:13] Unknown:
You know, you find out that just about everything that we've been told is bent out of whack. It's not one whole you know, I used to tell people as I got into this early on, I'd say, my line was this, if they told me the sky was Carolina blue, I'd go by Sherman Williams and get a damn color chart and check it.
[01:54:33] Unknown:
Yep. You'd have to do something like that because it's, I think it's found you see, it's not that they're even lying, it's that an agenda at at work and that this way of communicating is completely okay with them, and it's not okay with us. That's the fundamental difference I would suggest. I think it's really you know, if everybody went around being transparent and doing their damnedest to be truthful and honorable to the truth,
[01:55:01] Unknown:
the amount of relief in the world would be considerable. It'd be a whole different man. It'd be a beautiful world instead of having these people who were there deliberately taught from birth and weaned on that trash in the Talmud about you're better than everybody else, you can steal from the Jew, you can steal from the Jew, you can marry, you can murder them, all the all the crap that's in there that they're literally leaned on, and you can see the you can see the extrapolation of those messages in our world today.
[01:55:32] Unknown:
You can. You can, and so I I mean it's a level of I noticed this when I'm running these ideas past people who are not particularly well versed in any of this. Right? And they I have I I stopped not because I'm angry or anything, but because I see they literally don't have a frame of reference to plug anything in that I'm saying, they can't plug it into anything, it's like you immediately I realize that, it's like we've got so far down the mine shaft working at the coal face so deeply, so deep and away from the top people on the top surface up at the ground there. When we talk back to them it just all comes back as an echo. Yeah. What we're talking about? Yeah. We've gone a long way away from them. But it is happening. I mean, I'm not trying to I don't think it's what it says. It's the as bleak as it possibly was, say, 20 or 30 years ago, in fact, it most definitely is not, and things are definitely going in the right direction as we've touched upon several times in this, in this exchange today.
There are more and more people getting clearer and clearer that something is is happening, and you know I don't think it's fatigue, I think it's just that people are getting clearer about the fact that the solutions to nearly all of our problems are simple ones. Oh, and there was a point I was gonna mention which, we still got a couple of minutes, haven't we? Yeah. So Brexit, which I like to leave alone because, you know, you can only sort of cope with so much fuss in your life. Correct. And then you you can't even laugh anymore because the jokes have been repeated so many times, but the, the decision to leave with no agreement is supposed to still take place on March 29th, which they are still squabbling around because it's all about just creating as long a delay as they possibly can.
On March 30th, the day after, there is a military exercise taking place in this country with 10,000 troops from around the world. Hey, so it's an exercise, Roger. I mean don't think that it would possibly be a backup in case things kick off. That that would be wrong thinking, don't you start thinking that? Don't think that they're sort of, you know, keeping their, bases covered with that. It's a joke, isn't it? You know, this is I'm looking at this thing, and I'm going, does everybody realize now that the people that are running this country are not British? And if they are, they gave it up a long, long time ago, and you need to stop listening to them completely.
I'm just asking people to make me king recently. I'm just trying it out. I don't I'm not expecting a big result, by the way, But I just say, why don't you make me king? It's it's a really interesting
[01:58:08] Unknown:
sort of line to run past people. Well, you know, our friend Freddie King. Go. Give it a go. Your mutual friend. You've had a little bit of contact with this guy that I've known for so many years and admire so much, Harvey Wysong. I mean, you remember him if nothing else because you've never heard anybody with a name like that, Harvey. And Harvey used to be on that, when I'm king, we're gonna get rid of the IRS or do this. So I've I've been I've seen people use that that approach before. Hell, I hope they elect you, man. You damn sure be better than the one they got.
[01:58:39] Unknown:
Yeah. Oh, I think it'd be great fun. I've told everybody. I said, you we I said it wouldn't be great fun for a bit. I said, 3 to 5 years, it would be a bit hairy. I said, I have to I need some blokes that that'll have to do some pretty dirty work, I said, because I'm aware of what's out there. But I said, once that's sorted out, I said, it'll be all strawberries ice cream, really. I said, it's just gonna be great. So, but the thing I'm pursuing Like I say, what democracy is a terrible thing. Well, see these things. I still see these things.
[01:59:06] Unknown:
What our approach allows you to do is to be your own king.
[01:59:11] Unknown:
Yeah. I don't I don't wanna lord it over anybody else. I'm simply saying there's a complete absence of adherence to the law. Every man is a king and a chicken in every pot. You know where that came from?
[01:59:22] Unknown:
No. Huey Plong.
[01:59:25] Unknown:
Oh, I liked
[01:59:26] Unknown:
him. Yeah. I mean, yeah. For him as well, didn't they? He boy. They did yeah. They had to get rid of him. He he was a real threat. Chicken in every pot and every man's a king. There's our whistler. Well, we're done being kings for the day here, Paul. I appreciate you being along. Thank you, Roger. We didn't have other folks joining us with questions or whatever, but we got a lot of good conversation out of the way and I think touched on some important points. So, appreciate these 2 hours with you every week, my friend, and I'll look forward to the ones we spend together next week too. We'll see what water goes under the bridge 'tween now and then. Thank you, Paul, so much. Always my pleasure. Thank you. Okay. See you next week, buddy. And listeners, we'll see you tomorrow, and maybe we'll have James Taylor with us or something and answer some questions for him or some of you other new guys. You guys watch the news, stay on top of everything the best you can, and we'll talk to you tomorrow. So have a great day from Coyoiqui, Ecuador, Hasta Luega. See you tomorrow. Thank you again, Paul. Thank you.
[02:01:15] Unknown:
Lay
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right now. For more information on the Iteracare classic terahertz frequency wand, go to iteraplanet.com. That's iteraplanet.com. Forward moving and focused on freedom. You're listening to the Global Voice Radio Network. Oh, yeah. Yes. Yes. We would love to change the world, and that is exactly what we're trying to do with Radio Ranch with Roger Sales. We're still working on the hiatus, that Roger's taking until January 2nd when, he will be back in rare form, all rested up and raring to attack the topics at hand. We're on a number of platforms today. We're on a drastically, radically abbreviated list of platforms. We're on Eurofolks Radio.com, and we're on Global Voice Radio Network.
Our website is the matrixdocs.com. That is the matrix, d o c s, dot com. And, you will find more information on the topics discussed. You will find links to free conference calls so you can join us live on live days. Today, we'll be doing an archive from March 20, 2019. You can also find the links to Euro Folk Radio dotcom and Global Voice Radio Network. Normally, we're on 106.9 WBOU FM for the first hour, and Monday through Friday, we're on, radiosopox.com, but they are not with us today. So we will be powering straight through with the March 20, 2019 archive.
I'm Paul from Global Voice Network. Thank you so much for joining us. This is a Wednesday, program, and they had a little difficulty with phones. Seems to me that they had a lot of difficulty with technology back then. So, well, that was then. This is now. Welcome to the Radio Ranch with Roger Sales.
[00:04:52] Unknown:
I have to choose
[00:04:56] Unknown:
Yeah. Mister Lee, the world's changing pretty much on its own without yours or our help, but we do like to discuss it here. So, Roger's the name, Freedom's the game, Radio Ranch is the show, and the People's Patriot Network is our platform. I have my good friend and the facilitator of all this actually, 1 Mr. Paul on with us as it is our day, Wednesdays. And always happy to have you too, a selfish reason, it takes a little of the burden off me, but you always bring so much interesting stuff, Paul, in a different perspective, in a different view, in a different part of the world. And, so anyway, here we go on another one. It's the first one we've had since this debauchery down in the Southern Hemisphere last Friday. So I know you and I have exchanged a bunch of stuff on it, and I know you're pretty well up on what has happened is what's happening, so, we might as well start right there, don't you think?
[00:05:51] Unknown:
Well, why not? And and it's good to be here, Roger. Yeah. Why not? I I you know what? I've barely given it more than 5 or 10 minutes thought. I'm quite serious, actually. I I think I'm completely, I'm incidenced out. I can't actually deal with any more incidents. I don't mean I'm I'm I'm nervously at my wits end. I just think, you know, the whole slew of responses that came in over the weekend, you see them all the time, don't you? And I think it's, it's awkward. I find some of them rather awkward because people come in very, very fast to say it's a false flag, which it could be.
It could be genuine, which it could be. It could be a mix of the 2, which it could be. And how many hours and years of your life do you want to spend No. Fiddling around with all this kind of nonsense, you know? No. And I I I feel the same way. I try not to get sucked into these things where I totally
[00:06:48] Unknown:
devote all my time to the intricacies of whatever they've done, but yet it bears a lot of importance because it tells you a lot about them in a number of ways. It was clearly a false flag, all the signs are there, not only the disappearing cartridges, but even more so to me, the Goldblatt, the head of ADL's announcement where he said this is the only mass shooting in history, when he knows damn well that Barack Goldstein went in there and blew away about 45 of them in Jerusalem, I believe.
[00:07:24] Unknown:
And I think it might be just a small point that slipped his mind at the time. Yes. Especially since they just referred to it a couple of months ago from the 50th year. Yeah. He just casually forgot about Pruitt Goldstein. He just casually oh, hang on just a minute. You see it? About that. With me, what I've learned about these guys, because I know them pretty well, is I don't I look for the absences.
[00:07:45] Unknown:
I look for their reactions to things. That tells me more than whatever went on overtly. And that fact that that guy left that out, that public statement after that incident really told me what I needed to know early on. Now, subsequently, 2 other things, I don't know if you know that there was a you know, they're having another police drill. If they wouldn't have been having this drill, the article says Paul, it could have taken a long time for the cops to get there because this special squad with all this special gear and stuff, they got a they would have pleased and happy.
I
[00:08:32] Unknown:
Well, this is lovely. I'm so, so pleased, and happy. I mean, the point I'm sort of trying to get to early on, I don't want to dismiss, I think there's lots to talk about, really, with regards to it, of course, but the the way that they, mix, admix together truth and fiction in these situations is getting ever more complicated, intentionally of course, so that you can be thrown off. These things are all sort of like plotted out, and I think, it you know, having never been, shot at, I've got to tell you this, by a high powered modern assault rifle, thankfully, I haven't been shot at with any of those, nor have I nor have I been around people imminently receiving bullets on the receiving end of that. I literally have no experience of what it would be like. Now you imagine, of course, that maybe people would start shouting and jumping around and doing all sorts of things, but I don't know. It may be that people are so subdued and cowed, and they just got sort of almost like into a hypnotic state.
So I I had people saying, well, look, they're not making any noise. I'm going, well, maybe you don't if you think you're about to die. I mean, I just really don't know, particularly if you haven't got any guns. Maybe you just think, I know, I'll play possum. Maybe that was that was the way it goes. So I saw the footage, which of course, I didn't really see the footage because apparently I'm gonna spend 20 years in prison just for even knowing that the footage existed in theory. It's nuts. You know, what we're supposed to do? Don't look at it. You might die, you know. Well, even if you don't die, we'll lock you up for even thinking about looking at it. And if you know somebody who you think saw it, who looked at it, you you could be in for 2 years for that as well. I mean, it's just mad. Oh, well.
[00:10:07] Unknown:
But it's you know. As you were saying that, I was laughing, you'd never been shot at before, and I was kinda thinking about that. And back when I was in Atlanta, I had a pretty nice little gun collection when I was in the US, and, I belong to You're not offering to come over and shoot at me, are you? No. No. I don't even have my soul to model. Okay? Almost all of them. And I'm in Ecuador now. So anyway, this is a long time ago. But to be able to become proficient with those things and to be able to utilize your investment because shooting's fun, man.
And not people, but shooting is sports shooting's fun. And so, I joined a really nice gun club up north of Atlantis called Riverbend Gun Club and they've got one of the only 2 600 yard ranges on like the whole East Coast, okay? And they had a beautiful setup where they had a 300, a 400, and a 600 yard range. You could go to different hills and shoot those distances. Right? When you get to the 600, they got those pop those big pop up targets is what you're using, where it's behind a berm and you you they have to have somebody back there to man them and you they got spring loaded and you pull them down and mark the the target or change targets or whatever. That's the operation, right? Well, I was back there.
You know, somebody's got to be back there and you're out there with your buddies and it's time for them to shoot, so you get back there and do the target stuff. And, buddy, you want to see some of those 3 0 8 and 223 rounds hitting at 6 from 600 yards, and they break the sound barrier, right, as they're going over you, and they land in the berm behind you. And, I mean, it's pretty frightening. Okay? I can't even imagine. Alright?
[00:11:54] Unknown:
No. No. No. I've just I've no idea, you see, of knowing how to get a frame of reference because we get these conflicting reports, intentionally of course. The whole thing is really just set up meticulously, but to appear like a sort of spontaneous shooting. Did people die? Possibly, probably. Looks like it. Looks like it. But but was that real footage at the real time? Was it a blend of live footage with stock footage with all sorts of other things? Well Are the clues put in intentionally to get the debate going so that we all end up talking for hours and hours and hours, and
[00:12:27] Unknown:
missed the point again? No. Don't have to do all that. You didn't let me finish my litany of of over clues. And I'm looking through, I catch this story over on Mike Rivera's site, what really happened.com is a real good resource. He scours and gets a lot of obscure articles that don't show up other places, I've found. And you know, Paul, there was another member, you know, there was like 4 4 of them arrested, 3 guys and a girl, I think. And you may not know, but one of them was released and escorted personally through the airport and left the country and destination country, what do you think?
[00:13:09] Unknown:
I'm going to say,
[00:13:11] Unknown:
I think it's I'm gonna say Israel. Are you close, Roger? God almighty, you are just omnipotent.
[00:13:19] Unknown:
How did I how did I do that? So many countries to pick from, and I picked the right one. Well, well, well, I was surprised even myself. So the Guggenheim lack of statement, the the, training exercise going on 10 minutes away, fully suited out for the job, and the
[00:13:40] Unknown:
time on
[00:13:44] Unknown:
No. I mean, the thing is, you know, do you wanna bury and and use a lot of time working out all the my new No. No. My my response as soon as I saw it was, whether it's real or a false flag or wherever it lies in between those two extreme points, yeah, which it will be somewhere, it'll be a blend of the 2. It it the thing's inevitable given the way that things are being orchestrated. And I also think that, what it illustrates quite simply, you know, if you if his manifesto, which I haven't readied, I mean, you know, we've only got so much time. I don't wanna keep reading people's manifestos and all that kind of stuff. But, if it's a genuine thing, the thought I had as well outside of the false flag issue is of course if these people didn't live amongst our people in Christchurch, then there's no way they would have been on the receiving end of bullets. Now that sentence I've just said could be completely mad. I do accept that. You could say, well, nobody actually got shot by any bullets, Paul, and this, that, and the other. But the fact is, I've only got so many, you know, minutes and hours a day just like we all have to sort of devote to this kind of stuff. The bottom line is that the the response from the media is telling as well. I mean, over here, as you know, there's a bloke called, Sado Khan, Sadiq Khan or something, who who runs around pretending to be the mayor of London, and lots of people go along with this ruse as well. Now according to him, when people get stabbed by Muslims, that's just part and parcel of the cost of living in a big city. But if you get blown away by some crazed white racist maniac, you know, as he's being portrayed, then that's intolerable, and we can't have any of that at all. Now Greg,
[00:15:22] Unknown:
the day the day of the event, I'll just insert this. Greg, our our own beloved, much beloved Greg, wrote me an I'm and he said, what the hell are 50 new Arabs doing in New Zealand anyway?
[00:15:35] Unknown:
Very Yeah. I like Greg. Why? Why are they doing that? Well what are they doing there? Yeah. They were set up as Well this is I mean this is just the bottom line, how do people get there? You know, and and look at the way that we can't manhandle, the the communication can't be dealt with. I mean we can here, but you can see that in the public sphere, you're not allowed to communicate about it properly. No. I mean, we can we can we can spin this,
[00:16:02] Unknown:
as we see fit. We might as well. Everybody else is having a go. Do you know what I mean? Well, I I go, if it's nice like this. I said, well, I think it's like this. I don't think we're doing any spin. I think we're looking at facts and trying to do an honest assessment. And every you can't you don't have to look at too many and the the usual suspects walk away dead guilty. Now the other things that are interesting from the event, though, that we can maybe take some lessons away from, and that is Facebook pulling a 1,000,000 and a half videos within 24 hours.
[00:16:34] Unknown:
Yeah. That guy's finger must have been really sore. Hell, hell, what was
[00:16:39] Unknown:
that? Who was that masked man? Okay? Why what do would they have taken off the JFK assassination if they if that would have been live on Facebook? No, so the need there to. As I said, how they react to stuff is so telling, see? And now, of course, I know you know because you referenced it, if you have the video, it's a 10 year in jail, if you give it to somebody, it's 14 years in jail and I believe if you have it on your website, it's a $200,000 fine. On top of that, because the questionable video about the disappearing cartridges was put on Zero Hedge, Zero Hedge was blocked in New Zealand and Australia now.
[00:17:30] Unknown:
Well, yes. I think that's the kind of 0 hedge. That means 0 hedge is a very competent outfit. I mean, come on, you know? A very competent outfit. Obviously, from that reaction they are. You wanted
[00:17:42] Unknown:
a seal of approval for 0 hedge? Kapom. Get your stamp. They got one now. So to look at our enemies and their reactions is what I really get out of this. I wouldn't I wouldn't spend all my time looking into all that minutia for nothing. I've learned that over the years. But to take the lessons and be able to obviously look at the surface, pick these little easily identifiable things out as to what happened, be able to see how they react to it, and the other thing that's pretty neat about this is the world community, they're busting them within
[00:18:16] Unknown:
a short period of time after every one of these things now. Yeah. They are. Yeah. They are. I think, it's the way that the debate is to be handled, you know, and also these instantaneous reactions which we see all the time. In other words, the reactions of what are really being cultivated here. And you know that thing we're touching on, I mentioned a few weeks ago, the, which is always worth in my mind going back to this revelation of the method that Michael Hoffman addressed in his book, secret societies and psychological warfare, which I think is an excellent thing. It's about the the programming of the mind and and I'm just gonna go back to the simple stuff which everybody knows, we know about the old problem reaction solution stuff don't we, you know, so I'm I'm basically, I think it all all tends to come down to that. And part of the great ingredients in the problem is to elicit fear.
[00:19:09] Unknown:
So that's what this is It's got to they will use that ingredient. It's got to be an ingredient in there because let's face it, you serve the one you fear.
[00:19:18] Unknown:
That's right, you know, and, people are going, oh, protect me, protect me, protect me, you must protect me, and all that kind of stuff, you know. So I think, then people plead for the very thing that's that's actually the whole goal of of what they're after. But I think we've hit sort of peak indifference. One of the things that I noticed was a lot of the comments I saw linked to Breitbart, which I don't go to. I actually don't go to Breitbart, but I saw a link to it. And, there were a lot of comments from some of the first early articles about this. I suppose that would have been during Friday afternoon and evening. Yes. Yes. It's very interesting about many of the comments, where the people actually couldn't care less.
It was very interesting. They just couldn't care. They just said, so what? Betting that was that was the impact they had on me. It's like, you know, these people run around blowing things up and everything. What do you expect? In in other words, there's a sort of the emotional, manipulation, the emotional leverage that has been attained by these events in the past, that well appears to have run dry or is beginning to run dry very, very quickly. People are just looking I mean, what whatever truth or lies are in the in the account and the supposed event, people are just looking at the way that they're supposed to absorb and go, so what? These people shouldn't be living with us. That and that's what's beginning to come to the surface, because bottom line is that's the truth. This is not about, you know, I'm gonna go back to it. It's not about hating or liking anybody. It's simply about nature wins every single time.
And Liberals don't wanna pay attention to nature. They don't like it too much because they think they need to be in charge. So, that's kind of part and parcel of the problem, I think. And, you know, their hysterical sort of solutions instantaneously are, or we must look at the gun situation in New Zealand, I think. I mean, gun ownership in New Zealand is considerably higher than it is here. There again, you could say that about just about anywhere in the world. Right? But I think it's about 20, 22 percent of households in New Zealand are armed. The police are not armed, I think not all the time, I think they still sort of conform to the idea of the English Bobby.
I mean in many ways New Zealand is is pretty much I've often thought if I was to go and live anywhere else, New Zealand would be pretty high up on my list purely because of the reserved culture that they have. They're not as reserved as Canadians. Sorry if I offended any Canadians, but I find Canadians incredibly reserved, if that's the right word. Very very different to Americans, I find, most of the time anyway. And, so there's all sorts of little connections there between New Zealand and Britain historically in terms of shared cultural values. There's a lot of Kiwis who have lived in London. I used to know quite a few of them, great guys, and, there's all that kind of connection. In fact, I found out about it from a friend whose wife or partner's a Kiwi, and she was really sort of a bit distressed about it at first, and maybe she still is, I suppose, in terms of this is going on in my home. But when you look at what's happening here, the idea of locking someone up for what we were saying 4 or 10 years for having a video, Right? Now over here, every month there is a report, they don't linger on it, of course, very much of some Muslim rape gang having been raping kids for 5 10 years. This comes up all the time. There must be tens of 1,000 of children in this country that have been suffering at their hands, but these guys don't get threatened with that. I mean, it's just you can see that the whole narrative is to be swung one particular way.
All of it is to we we are responsible and guilty for everybody else's bad behavior. Well, I'm not, and I reject them. I think in those comments sections at Breitbart, you're beginning to see it. Even normal people are beginning to become colossally indifferent How about it? And just go Is the word desensitized,
[00:23:09] Unknown:
does that work better?
[00:23:12] Unknown:
Might be that. It might be actually it might be actually getting clarified. They might be getting clear to some degree. Yes. Because, you have to think about this in very simple terms, because it is a simple problem dressed up as a tremendously complex political issue, that somehow we need all these people who earn amounts of money to sit in rooms for years years years and work out immigration policies. Well, we don't. We don't need any of that. It's it's really quite simple. We've got a cultural base a at home, and you've got cultural arrivees from base b, and the 2 don't mix, not when they're on the same bit of real estate. So if you separate it out it's fine, it's as fine as it's ever gonna get, but the idea of making an attempt to to blend oil and water is just beyond stupid. Yes. And of course that you know, and it's intentional, of course. The alchemist.
[00:24:05] Unknown:
The alchemist's dream for centuries was to convert lead into gold. Right?
[00:24:13] Unknown:
Yeah. I mean, if if you are absolutely right. If you are pretending to be in this mythical business called the problem solving business, which actually is not needed, I've said this for years, you know, governments are actually in the business of creating the very problems that they then they turn up the next day and say, oh, you need us to solve the problem.
[00:24:35] Unknown:
And, of course, it's down to people like I say, yeah, but you're the ones creating it, you. And you want more power every time. Well, what I was gonna say, well, what our buddies did was that they took the dialectic of that and they turned gold into paper.
[00:24:50] Unknown:
Yeah. They did. They did. Okay. Pretty solid. And they did that through yeah. Yeah. They did it. Well, I mean, it's all through the number one tool is fear. Fear of loss is a great motivator for many, many people. You have it less, of course, when you live in a civilized society, which is what we've sought to build. So to stop it being civilized, you have to have fear mongers, you have to have the providers of fear. I mean, I've just been listening to someone saying, well, look, there probably isn't really any genuine Islamic terrorism in the world. You know, if I found out that that was true, it wouldn't surprise me. We know that ISIS is completely a creation of the spook agencies, and all of these things are, and then they get blow back and all sorts of rubbish happens.
Why? Well, they want that. How are you supposed to justify being an intelligence agency if there's no real great societal upheavals and problems in the world? So because there there wouldn't be, they go off and create them to justify the expansion of their budgets. I mean, there's a lot more to it than just that, but that's definitely a strand to it. It's Confucius and Sun Tzu, divide and conquer,
[00:25:53] Unknown:
and, you know, the old don't know don't let your enemy know who you are, how strong you are, where you are, what you are, who you are, when you're coming to dinner, any of that. It's a combination of those two things, they use it extremely effectively, good God look what they've accomplished using them. And seek the problem reaction, solution you mentioned earlier, that's nothing but the Holy Grail. That's the triangle, you know, first a line, then another line, then a square. Problem, you set it up, reaction, do the other one, bam! You got the solution and they're done. They use it again, incredibly skillfully, because it is a cookie cutter concept.
In other words, they just come and take that same thing and apply it anywhere. Boom, boom, boom, boom, boom. Okay? Yep. They're they're they're very slick, but they got some big problems right now. Paul, I was listening to in fact, I sent you overnight. You were sleeping, I think, when I was watching it and sent it to you. I do that at nighttime. I know. I'm sorry for that. I do it. Sometimes I do. Okay. I go to bed and fall asleep. Do you not do that? You should, and I I wish I could do it more. But but one of these days, I'll do it permanently, so, you know, I like to get up still now.
[00:27:07] Unknown:
I love it. I've been doing for years now. I'm not I've got no intention of giving it up. It seems to work rather well.
[00:27:14] Unknown:
But, now, hell, I lost my train of thought there. I was going somewhere. You you You sent me something last week. Sorry about that. Did. Well, you said last week, you said something very interesting. It stuck with me. I've thought about it several times in the discussion we had, and you said, They know we're wise to them, and they do. Okay? And that even puts more intrigue on these things blowing up in their face. I see see, Webster Tarpley, who's a guy I'm familiar with for many years. I'm sure many of the audience have seen him. Very scholarly, got a lot of great pedigree, good credentials, talks pretty good stuff. I don't agree with him, you know, when he does things like praises Franklin Roosevelt and whatnot.
No. But that's a leader here and there. Well, he did a whole program, I listened to another one I didn't send you that was twice as long on Brexit. And the whole background and the intrigue of what's going on there, now this guy covered a lot of ground that you would relate to much better than like an American, and they actually showed up there some pictures, old pictures of leaves in Yorkshire, Paul. I couldn't help but think about you.
[00:28:27] Unknown:
I'm sorry. Are you telling me that my old town is the epicenter of all the world's evil? Wouldn't surprise me. No. No. There's some
[00:28:39] Unknown:
border on Scotland right up there? Yep. And and that brings a whole different, different view and angle to the whole thing because Scotland's goals are sometimes adversarial to Britain's goals, evidently from what Tarpley said. Yeah. And so it was very interesting, but I just wondered if you had listened to any of it because in the second one, he got into it a little bit more and he threw a concept out there that in all the Brexit stuff, we're aware of it, we're not as affected by it by you or as conscious of it or as unconscious of it, maybe, as you are. But, he said in there that it's a a deal to hook Britain up to with China. Have you heard this concept floated?
[00:29:27] Unknown:
No.
[00:29:28] Unknown:
I thought we were gonna hook up with the Eskimos, which I'm quite keen on. No. He's he goes into a lot of detail. He says the Queen's for Brexit, and what they're wanting to do is to get out from under this oppressive EU stuff and combine over there with Canada and basically be Canada's clearing house for the world. I mean, not Canada, China. China's clearing house for the world. And when the, the Chinese Emperor Xi, the Xi, in 20 15, came over there, addressed parliament, all that stuff, had all the that has not happened in your country since the Japanese came over when they opened up Japan in the 1800s.
[00:30:11] Unknown:
Interesting. That does sound interesting. I'd probably get stuck into that. You never know what they're up to next, do you? No. I think, I mean, it's it's rich coming from the Queen, isn't it? Yes. Quite rich. She's for Brexit. She's the one that didn't stand in the way. She's the one that didn't say anything when the decision to go in came before parliament. She could have completely knocked it back. In fact, it was her job to. Yes. It was her job to do it. And the minute she she didn't do that, the minute she didn't say to the country, oh, by the way, Edward Heath is committing treason, I'm gonna have his head off, which is which would have been fine, you know. A lot of people would have quite enjoyed that even back in 1971. It would have gone down quite well. Things were pretty dull over here. So that would have been a bit of entertainment that they missed out on, and it wouldn't have done any harm, and, only to Heath, but he was a harmer of children and everything. He was a revolting individual. And I think, so, you know, I've said to people, even though it's just me saying it, I said she can't be the queen or at least she's not the monarch because the monarch is defined by as being the person who fulfills these duties in regards to her subjects.
I don't mind being a subject. I'm not bothered what words we use. I want the thing run properly. That's all we're after. We want things run right. You wanna be generalist, Emma? I don't mind. You better do a good job, though. Otherwise, I'm just gonna call you Bob like everybody else, and we'll throw you in a field. Right? You can be called whatever you want if that's if that's what lights your candle, but you've gotta do your job. And the minute she didn't do that, she in actuality, even though nobody acknowledges it, of course, in the communications sphere, she stopped being the monarch because the monarch doesn't do that. The monarch has to be the monarch of these islands, and she stopped doing it. She said, oh, I'll let this foreign entity called the European Union make decisions about how this nation's governed.
No. You won't, love. You won't do that at all. But of course we're faced with this momentum, are we not? You know, I know I'm using words here to parry a situation that's actual. I do understand that. But it seems to me that in talking to people, normal people, we have to I'm keen to find out what would occur if these ideas get transmitted properly and are taken route. They're very simple ideas that we're talking about, very very simple. And most people tend to not think that way. They tend to think of I'm at the effect of the big wide world. Well, to some degree we all are, yeah, but not to this degree. You don't need to go overboard and, and be sort of suckered into every dumb stupid thing that comes out of the mouths of these people that are pretending to be our leaders, because they're not our leaders. By definition, they couldn't be. They're not leading us. They're leading their own little gang to what they consider to be this, hellish nirvana,
[00:32:56] Unknown:
for us, and heavenly nirvana, I suppose, for them, something like that. I would encourage you to watch that web for Tarpley. I sent you the 30 minute one. I think you already have. Yeah. I will, Ben. And and and when it's finished with that over there on the right where they list the other videos, it goes into the next hour. Well, I'll tell you what, I'll, if I can find that, I know where I can get it, I'll put it on today's show description for the audience over on Castbox.
[00:33:22] Unknown:
Is it this one, Who Are the Windsors? Is it that one? Yes. Yes. Yes. That one. Yeah. Okay. Okay. And he goes into a bunch of history there that you're gonna really, I think, find fascinating. Let me throw
[00:33:29] Unknown:
gray out of gray out of that 30 minutes, he bashes the hell out of him for a bunch of it. And I wanted to throw his name at you today, and he blamed all of the catastrophes of last century on this guy, Edward the 7th.
[00:33:57] Unknown:
Yeah. Probably. That's, who's he? Is he the guy around World War 1? He ruled
[00:34:05] Unknown:
up through 1910, but he ruled in the 1800s too. And it was a lot of his intrigue that set up these things. Now they covered something else that was incredibly interesting to me in there, that at one point, the Russians, as they were trying to set up the Triple Entente and the alliances and all that stuff, and he's the one that did it. Okay? The, one of the Russians came back and kind of realized what was happening and they went to France and Germany and said, why don't we build an alliance here and you'd had Russia, Germany, and France, it would have totally sequestered Britain from getting into the continent.
And what happened was, Bismarck, the German chancellor, and as
[00:34:56] Unknown:
Tarpley says, well, he wasn't the sharpest knife in the drawer and he didn't understand the implications of it and he didn't do it, and so it opened the door for World War I.
[00:35:02] Unknown:
Of it, and he didn't do it. And so it opened the door for World War 1. And then Milner and the other bunch started scheming.
[00:35:10] Unknown:
Yeah. Edward the 7th was working for him, really. He was in on the whole gig, and he used his, he sort of went outside of the parameters of core etiquette, I believe, by by basically touting all these ideas around Europe at the end of the 1800 and early 1900.
[00:35:27] Unknown:
He went to the Jews, and he said, You want to be accepted in society. And he said, I can help you do that, but what you've got to do evidently, he had some investments, but he didn't have many and he wasn't very good at it. And he turned his investments over to the Jews, the bankers, and he said, if you make a profit, I get all of it. And if you if there's any losses, you eat them. And they took that. And that really and then that 18.50 to 18.60 range when this is going on right there. I mean, now you get enough different pieces of the puzzle from enough different angles, and it's of the puzzle from enough different angles, and it's like looking at a hologram, it becomes 3-dimensional.
[00:36:20] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah, it does. I mean, there's, yeah it's just non stop really. As I say, you know, for me I I tend to sort of, it's not that I'm not interested in the ancient stuff because it's relevant and you get the repeat cycles, but in terms of relevance to today, I had to sort of, I've I've settled on looking at everything from Henry the 8th to this point, as being mass a really good use of time in terms of research and finding out how the whole thing has fallen apart. But of course the royal family, I mean, during the sixties seventies, I think because of the ability to use television to basically sell the royal family to the British, were probably as popular during that period as they've ever been, if not more so.
And there was not much sort of criticism of them or observations of them. And and still even to this day, it's more of a sort of emotional connection that you think of, little old ladies having with the royal family and waving their flags and all that kind of stuff. That's kind of dying out though, it's been doing that for quite a while. And I think, Tarpley has done some good stuff. I mean, it's the stuff he wrote on the and I agree with you, I don't agree with him on a lot of things. I think he's mistaken, quite sharply on certain things, but the work that he did on, Venice and of the Venetian influence on England because effectively, it wasn't just him there were several other writers actually around this magazine, published in the nineties called American something or other. I think it's still online. Spectator? It was a physical print. Spectator?
May have may have been. There's a whole series of articles about it, but they were tremendously, useful about opening up the role of Venice. And you find that the the British parliamentary system, even the arrangement of the house, is effectively a mimic of the Doge system that that ruled in Venice. Oh. So, you know, this adversarial nature of things. And, of course, we would suggest rightfully that politicians are really little more than puppets. Very well trained and very well paid ones, and they're very irritating because they get in the way. And, it's it's difficult to get them out of the way because they actually think they're in control, but this is because they lack the ability to see that they obviously aren't. Otherwise, we could get all our problems sorted out very, very quickly. So, yeah, that that whole role of the Venetians, in the British system is very strong. And I, the reason why I was just even mentioning Henry the 8th again, and I know we discussed it maybe a couple of months back, is that everybody knows that apparently he had trouble having a son, but that's not the case. His first wife had 2 sons, but they both died very early on. Why is that? What's all this death going on? Loads of them. Well, I I my my view is that there were Venetian doctors in and around that court, tempering with everything. Because as we've said, they and this is either covered by Tarpley or one of his colleagues on this project.
The, the Venetians have basically taken the decision to destroy the Catholic church, because they were very cross with the Pope for putting an army together to march on them in the late 1400 to put a stop to their rampant taxation of boats amongst other things. But, basically, every time a ship or a vessel went past Venice, they'd send out a couple of men of war, and they would levy attacks on them, which is something you may recall that the Khazars. That's right. Absolutely. The Khazars' whole game right there. That's right. And in fact, I didn't I didn't I hear a threat of something who's just as as in something like that just being proposed again for shipping somewhere? Was it Chinese shipping or something by some Edomite within the administration over at your neck of the woods? I'm I'm struggling here. I'm grasping at straws, but I I'm sure I heard some sort of dozy suggestion, you know, that they've got a right to just tax stuff. And it's this sort of affrontery of what's it got to do with you, you know? Well, the reason it got to do with them is that because they can't produce any other stuff, they've got to sort of rip everybody else off. But, it's, their their sites. Yeah. So the patterns repeat. The pat repeats. It just keeps repeating and repeats and repeating. Yes. Venice, I I come to understand, there's some of those little tidbits you see reading, and this is probably
[00:40:27] Unknown:
25 or more years ago when I was doing a lot of intense reading in the early stages, and there was a comment in there, don't remember who the source, but Venice was the origin of the concept of double entry bookkeepings in about the middle 1500s, 1552 or something like that, I'm not sure the exact date. It was in the 1500s though. And now I understand that it was the advent of Double Entry Bookkeeping that allowed them to set up this system. They couldn't do it. They with that without double entry bookkeeping and discounting and notes, this system would fall on his face today.
[00:41:06] Unknown:
Yep. Yep. It would. It would. It's opened up all sorts of intrigues, and of course, to this day in London, you've got Lombardy Street and all these other streets,
[00:41:18] Unknown:
that were named from when they arrived. What about What about Threadneedle Street? That's just always intrigued me. That's right down in the city, isn't it?
[00:41:27] Unknown:
Yeah. I I think that's them taking the mickey out of the, you know, it's easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle than it is for a rich man to get into heaven. Yeah. Yeah. So they're thinking, right, well, we can thread that needle.
[00:41:37] Unknown:
Sure. Now the for the people that didn't catch this, and I think it's something came out of something we've watched over you know, there's been a proliferation of this stuff here since last fall because of the 100 year anniversary of World War I. So there's been a lot of people that have brought projects that had a lot of background information in them, Corbett I and Europa and all this stuff. But I remember, and we discussed it with you, the city of London is the only spot that the Romans couldn't conquer?
[00:42:14] Unknown:
Well, I think they were probably, I don't know. I can't answer that fully. Maybe the idea of conquering it seemed a dumb idea because there was so much organized wealth taking place within there. Maybe they were induced to become partners in it, shareholders in it, or whatever the phrase was of the day, stakeholders. But, yes. I mean, I think, you know, London was found as far as we're aware, London Brutus from the Trojan wars, came to London and came to England. And, you know, this is pre Christ time, of course, and he's a pivotal figure, in the formation of the nation. And I understand that under Brutus, this is when it took place.
The the formation of this walled enclave around the Thames, which has subsequently become known as the city, which of course is the Rothschild sort of shorthand for all of their places, you know. Sure. So, this the city system is what is what they have, but, maybe it's always been the sort of tail end of a very long sort of well, let's call it a silk trade, but it was. There was a very a very long route, and I think probably Khazars or Edomites were realistically in in England even before they came with, William the Conqueror, I think it's possible because of the the trade routes that that sort of started and ended there. Sure. Right. You know, we were the farthest point west at that time.
[00:43:37] Unknown:
I was watching another deal today. I've got these several videos going on, I stumbled into this one or somebody sent it to me, and it's a guy doing research on an author I've never heard of, he's the first author that observed the development of this monetary system, and actively seeing what they did to the American colonies and writing books about the banking establishment, and the money power, if you will. And he directly, in what I was watching right before the show, laid it in 16/62 when they when Charles maybe? Allowed East India Company to ship silver out of the country and then they gave them a restriction and then a year or 2 later, they totally took all lifted all the restrictions And what that allowed them to do, because silver was the coin of the realm.
And so, this king allowed and said, Sure, you can export the coin of the realm. I mean, come on. All right? And so what they were doing is the price disparity in India was so great that they could take 12 shillings over there and anyway, they'd come back with 6 as profit. And they were buying gold with it because gold was real cheap and that that really started the demise, a, of the empire and these guys getting their clutches in and it's developed all these systems all over the world and strengthened them ever since. When I stumble on that again, I'll shoot you the link, Paul.
[00:45:18] Unknown:
That's interesting. Yeah. I'd be I'm always interested in anything with military history that I'm not aware of before. I thought you were I didn't think you were gonna go back that that far. Del Mar is very good, although some of his writing's almost impenetrable. It's quite labyrinthine. That may be the guy that he's talking about. I just Well, that's in the 1800. He's one of he's one of your guys, but he's actually an Edomite as well. But he he actually writes straight about the fiscal situation, and he's very good. It's, he is very good. So I don't know quite where his heart was, I'm not really too concerned about that, but he wrote copious amounts about banking and modern sort of finance structures back in the late 1800s, from an extremely
[00:45:54] Unknown:
experienced point of view. But it's quite it would make for probably pretty dry reading for most people, I think. I don't think it's sort of Well, that's why this this video's nice because this guy did all of that dry reading for you, and he just goes through and shows you the book and pulls out the verbiage for you right there as he's explaining it. I'm only a partway into it, so I'm not very deep in it. It's only about 30 minutes, I think, or a little less. But more and more resources, more and more knowledge, more and more understanding, as to your comment last week, they know we're wise to them.
[00:46:30] Unknown:
Well, they do. I suppose they've always known that there's pockets of people, but they must take the view. I would have thought that as long as as long as we don't get too big, then they can always contain it, you know. And the way that they contain us is by getting our kith and kin, who are not quite up to speed, to almost like actors stampeding cows and run over us. That's kind of how it works, you know, they're easily spooked to the crowd, and we've got to watch out for that, because it gets very difficult. I've noticed in the recent exchange is it's almost, I wouldn't say impossible, but it's extremely you have to make a decision about how you're gonna use your time and energy in communicating to certain people at certain times. Because some people get so entrenched that you're going, well I could reach you in communication, but it looks as it's gonna take me about 3 years.
No. You're not worth it. It's too you're too far gone. I'm not gonna invest 3 years of my time trying to unpeel every consideration that you've got. And I think also people are not trained into how to undermine themselves, and they need to. People need to be not so sure of themselves, would actually be very, very useful from our point of view. People have got very entrenched views, many, you know, and they go, well I've read it in the newspapers for 40 years, so it must be true. It's like, actually, that's about the worst sort of ingredient you could put into your head.
But then, you know, they have a lot of agreement for that, because everybody around them has been doing the same thing for the last 4 or 5 decades as well, you know. Well I think that one of the barometers, if you will, as to your statement is accuracy.
[00:48:05] Unknown:
Something like 94, 96 percent of the people in the country polled didn't believe 911 happened like they said it did. So that kind of penetration on that important a topic and the other false flags because all that does is heighten people's awareness of false flags. Now, New Zealand comes along, they see these other things, boom, boom, boom, and, yeah, we're I mean, they're losing, man. They're losing, and they know it. That's why the uproar over Omar in the House of Representatives, she didn't say the word Jew, She said the word Benjamin.
[00:48:44] Unknown:
Yeah.
[00:48:45] Unknown:
All she did was reference. And then she comes back and made a listen, that chick made a masterful statement. She said, every day, I'm called anti American because I'm not pro Israel.
[00:49:06] Unknown:
That's right.
[00:49:08] Unknown:
Now that statement, they can't play with that. See? They can't touch it.
[00:49:15] Unknown:
No. But what they do do, this is not to say that we're not gonna get through, but what they do do, of course, is that they distract or deplatform these sorts of conversations as fast as possible to get them flushed down the memory hole as quickly as they can. So it's a story on Monday. By Wednesday,
[00:49:30] Unknown:
an oil tanker's blown up, and everybody's looking at something that's it well, it is okay. It is part of it. It will. Absolutely. I agree with you. Continue to do it. It'll catch up with them. The snake's eating its tail right now, and the best thing we can do is to wrap ourselves in the armor of knowledge in the Lord, and get out of her as he dictated to us, and sit back and watch the son of a bitch fall.
[00:49:52] Unknown:
Well, I think that that is the way, because I think what we're seeing is the law dynamically unfolding in their face, as it should. Yes. And, as it will to anybody. I'm not sort of picking on them, it still applies to me today. If I go in error, it'll happen to me. And because it's a law, it's a principle. It's like that, you know, the rotating door. If you if you stand there, it will swing back and smack you in the nose. In you. I wouldn't stand there if I were you. Did you hear that? So I that's the way it works. Yeah. Of course. It has to be. Otherwise, we we couldn't measure anything. I proved it here last year. You go step out of a second floor window, and your ass is gonna get into some bad problems 14 feet down. Okay? You drop an apple I think it's about a sort of excessively dramatic way to prove the law to you. I could not. But well done you for doing it, sir. Fantastic.
[00:50:41] Unknown:
I've accomplished a lot, but I could not overcome the forces of gravity,
[00:50:45] Unknown:
Okay? No. We were all a bit disappointed in you doing that. I wanted to hear you flying around the mountains of Equidel, but I wanted to do it too, but obviously that didn't happen. So,
[00:50:55] Unknown:
I did have an interesting, really pleasant experience this morning as I'm getting ready for our couple hours here together. And by the way, anybody in the audience, we haven't even had anybody call in. Chris must be filing some paperwork or getting chased or something. I don't know anybody else, about anybody's circumstances today, but, generally we have people join us and you're certainly welcome to if you want. You can call in at 404-448-1420, that's listed on the People's Patriot Network website and contact us that way and now we can even seamlessly join you into the conversation.
Well, this morning, right before the show, my Skype popped up, I was in there in the kitchen doing something and I, Who is that? So I come into the office in here and look and it's a guy, Paul. Now, you know, I spent many years of my career in the music industry, okay? And when I first started doing these shows, I didn't know I was gonna have to accept 3 shows to get this information out. And in those three shows, this guy calls me and if you've been in the record business for that long and somebody calls you by the name of James Taylor, you just don't forget it.
Okay? And so this guy's name is James Taylor, and he lives up in, Eastern Tennessee. And he he called in and says, Roger, we love what you're telling us, but, man, would you please slow down a little bit? Because I only thought I had had a couple of shows to do this.
[00:52:29] Unknown:
And so it's only
[00:52:31] Unknown:
it's odd. Now So you're running off the motor mount. Oh, man. What? I was like gatling gatling gun legal information. Oh, you didn't get that? Go back and listen to the replay. Okay? I've only got an hour here. So anyway and I I I will always remember it and it was James Taylor contacting me this morning. He said, Roger, I picked your book back up, man. I started reading it. He said, I couldn't figure out how to get you. And and and he said, I I knew we'd contact on Skype, goes back to Skype, finds me, sends a message. Boom. So I'm assuming James is listening today and normally we don't Paul and I talk about all this other stuff. I've got him once a week on Wednesdays and his perspective from across the pond, but I wanted to welcome James back to the group and I'm sure we'll hear from him and and, he's got a he tells me he's got a son who lives over in Thailand right around where I believe our Thailand listener, Don, lives. I said, This is where it is. He tells me, he said, Well, that's pretty much where my son is, so might even be we hook those guys up over there in Thailand to meet each other and have a coconut drink of some sort.
[00:53:43] Unknown:
So You've doubled the Thai listening audience. I might have. You've doubled it. I might have. Woah. This is good. I told you. I told you. A 100% boost in Thai listeners. Fantastic. I tell you, we're making progress, Paul. So, Yeah. It's good. This is good. I like these figures. This is good.
[00:54:00] Unknown:
But I thought that was really interesting. Kind of brightened my morning this morning a little bit. James is a nice guy, and so I imagine he's probably listening today and we'll probably hear from him as we go forward. Also, the Castbox thing, which is gonna be it's a very nice resource, Paul. Thank you for bringing that to our disposal.
[00:54:21] Unknown:
Is it working for you? It's not working for me, you know. I'm fed up of it. Every time I go there, well, I just sit there for sort of days going, and it just will not upload things. So It's very slow. Maybe, I don't yeah. It's it's sort of insanely slow. Maybe it's because it's got 96,000,000 users or something. I don't quite know what's going on. Or so it claims to have Between
[00:54:40] Unknown:
that and my slow upload speed on my Internet situation here, between those two combined, it takes me as long or longer to upload the program than it did to do it.
[00:54:55] Unknown:
I can understand now why you smoke a pipe. Well, you need to. And then the card You've got lots of pondering time, haven't you? But, listen The pondering time's gone through the roof now. Well, I just ignore it. I go take a nap or something, you know?
[00:55:10] Unknown:
But then what aggravates you is you come back and it's got that scroll bar on how how much of the upload's done. And when it's finished, this is for audience's sake, when it's finished, there's a little button over on the right that lights up orange, and it says publish. And you hit the publish button and it puts it in the system. Right? You sit there and wait for hours, and you hit the publish thing, and you get failed to publish. Oh, that's what I get. Oh, man. That's the one that my, yeah, my sphincter muscle tends to tighten a little bit at that point. But anyway, I've
[00:55:46] Unknown:
been getting it done. More information than we needed. I will. Thanks, Jerry. An offhand comment.
[00:55:52] Unknown:
And, so where else would you like to anything else on your mind that you wanted to discuss? I've kinda commanded the first hour here, Paul.
[00:56:03] Unknown:
I don't know what's been going on. No. I mean, look, the the main thing, I've just been really busy with I've been busy with doing stuff around the audio book, which I mentioned the other week, so I've just been very busy with that. I don't wanna talk about that today. We don't need to talk about that. I'm just sort of cracking on and Well, no. I think we need some sort of an update. You did kind of announce it here on the show last week, week before last. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, well, it's just, I suppose this little little technical update, and, we can't use basically, there's just I always knew there'd be a few more little things that would, would turn up as I rolled through the whole process.
And this has nothing to do with actually doing the the actual book itself. It's to do with basically just selling things digitally, particularly audiobooks. I I think I might have mentioned that Amazon are are actually quite good if you're an independent writer. If you're selling ebooks or you wanna get print on demand, Amazon's deal with you as an author is pretty good. If you're producing audiobooks, their deal with you is pretty bad. In fact, it's appalling, actually. It's unbelievably strange. I know I know they're leveraging their their platform as best they can, but, you're you're tied into them for 7 years if you go for an exclusive deal with them, during which time they can fix the price of your product as they see fit. Uh-oh. You have no say in that. And the most you get out of the deal is 40%.
Now I was underwhelmed with this the more I looked at it, and I thought, well, the sorts of things that I'm interested in, that you're interested in, that the audience are listening are interested in, are generally we we could easily call them niche markets, which people like you and I are seeking to expand and make them they'll still be niche markets, but we'd like them to get bigger. We still think there's a lot of people could join these niches of knowledge, and get involved. So I didn't see the point, really of of just handing over a lot of stuff to Amazon because we're not producing, a populist novel and this, that, and the other. I mean, we're just not. I I will I'll never be in that line of work. So, well, I've just sent the decision to do it all independently, which is really probably more work than producing the book, to be quite honest.
But it's it's appropriate. It's gotta be done. So the last few days, my head's just been spinning with the idea of really trying to develop a full blown publishing platform because I don't know if I mentioned it when we were talking before, this just goes back into the realm of free speech. 2018 particularly, although, you know, these sorts of actions have been going on for the last few years, but I believe in 2018, Amazon kicked off something like a 160 books off of their platform. Yikes. Yeah. That's quite a lot. So Is that equivalent to a book burning? Yeah. That well, that's what you know, I was looking for a domain name, booksamazonburned.com, which is available.
Some sharp operator is gonna go out there and get it right now, I suppose. But, well, why it is. It's I mean, why would you burn it? Why would you I mean, you know, metaphorically speaking, why would you do that? In many cases, they they've been selling these things. I'm sure they're not their top sellers, but they've been selling them quite steadily for 12, 15 years in some cases, even longer than that. And many of them are extremely rational, calm analyses of things that you and I probably would be quite interested in. So do you know? You know? You can access the titles of the books that they've banned, kicked off, in essence? I'm titles of the books that they've banned, kicked off in essence? I don't know. Someone's actually put it together. Yeah. I think there is a list. There's about a 160, and there is a list somewhere. You I'm sure if you went to a search engine, you'd find another website that's kind of collated, most of them, that have been nuked.
Have you seen the list? In fact, they even took Kevin you know Kevin McDonald? Sure. Sure. Of course. Well, last week, I think it was, or within the last 2 weeks, Culture of Critique, which they've been selling ever since he wrote it, they they've been that. I mean, this is sort of like so what are we supposed to say here? This is just nothing ever changes. Nothing ever changes. They they used to physically burn books in the past. Now they're basically, you know, burning your ability to connect with the books. It's all about the control of ideas that people up there don't like.
And, of course, you and I, I would say, are genetically disposed to only liking those sorts of ideas. Those are the only ideas that interest me, you know.
[01:00:21] Unknown:
Certainly, as compared to their euphoric crap, that you answered the kind of the question as to that being one book, was there a was there a trend in in the type of books there? Was it in other words, Amazon just saying, okay, whatever, I'm gonna take this off, it doesn't sell, or is it specific stuff like Kevin McDonald's,
[01:00:44] Unknown:
book? And that Yeah. Yeah. Really, that that's yeah. Well, that that seemed to be the thread. You've got this an Italian guy called Carlo Matogno, who's written some very scholarly books, about really analyzing the Holocaust situation. And, they've they've they've got rid of all those. These are extremely calm, almost professorial books. Yes? Yes. Which of course is the reason why they're so effective. Of course. But of course they weren't designed to let's pretend to be a professor. No. This is just the approach that the writers have taken, correctly of course, to kind of, take the emotion and stress out of the whole thing and say, you know, calmly, there's something wrong with this account. This account that you're giving, that everybody's swallowing down, it really doesn't stack up. There's a substantial lack of evidence to support, well, anything that you claim. Here, have a look at what I've written to actually show you this. And of course, it's still one of the great awkward communications to for people to enter into.
So, those books were assisting people to get to grips with it. But they they will still get through, and I do think that, you know, the point is for all of us, in depending on what aspect of this that you're involved with, you know, whether you're actually a sort of writer or whatever you may be, is that we need our to develop our own publishing platforms fully. And I've kind of resisted that, but I'm really looking into it quite seriously now. I think it may be a blessing. It may be a blessing. Yeah. Yeah. It could be. I mean, you know, the whole of the crypto cryptocurrency thing, as I said, I'm not I'm not gung ho about cryptocurrency, not because, I would be if if the if the bad guys were involved. I maintain, and my my view is this, I don't care what we use for money, but the problem is it's the certain sorts of character types that get involved
[01:02:28] Unknown:
who lack a thing called trust and integrity. If they're involved, it doesn't matter what you use Well it tends to get bent out of whack, you know, that's that's But but you wanna use something that's positive and not based on debt, and and all those things seem to work here. So interesting, I just saw the story. You know, Venezuela has been under severe attack from our government and all their little tricks, how they've caused this huge power outage over there for the last couple of weeks rolling, I guess. Right? Mhmm. The banks didn't work, but Bitcoin did. A lot of people some people would set up generators and have a little generator connected. The phone lines evidently still worked, and they'd stick a Wi Fi up and people could do Bitcoin transactions and cyber coin transactions even when the power was down and all the banks were closed. Pretty interesting, pretty interesting.
[01:03:21] Unknown:
Yeah. It is. I mean, I think if if we were looking at a situation where people had their own generators on their property, and we know that these generator designs exist, we just can't get our hands on them for now, or maybe we don't have a rich sugar daddy individual amongst us who could organize a team to provide these things, which I think would be great. But the idea of an independent network does appeal to me, of course, very much. We wouldn't be talking if it weren't for all these technologies and so on, and blah blah blah blah blah. And I I don't expect them to go away unless, of course, they do start dropping sort of pulse bombs everywhere, in which case the whole of the network gets wiped out anyway and we're all doomed. So that that's kind of a little bit excessive. I I think it may well be that the the biblical requirement to use gold and silver, will still prove to be probably the best situation.
Because I don't think it's I mean, it's very difficult, of course, to be duplicitous around gold, as long as the person as everybody's understands how you can test gold. And of course that requires quite a, people used to just test it with their teeth, didn't they? Yes. And the fact they were shiny, and it looked great, and that was enough for everybody, and rightly so in most cases until coin clipping came along, and then you find out that people are mixing in pure metals with it, and then they're gold coatings, then you find out all those tungsten bars covered in gold down in the Bank of England, they're pretending to be gold, and blah blah blah. I mean I remember, because I'm I'm looking at gold, I've just started looking over the last 4 or 5 days, I've just there's something just gone off in my head thinking, well, the Brexit situation's nuts. This is all orchestrated. Everything is nutty.
Each week's nuttier than the previous one. This is obviously, you know, the not so hidden hand at work now, really sort of ramping things up. What what would be a good situation to be in? I mean, ultimately, you wanna be in a situation where you've got plenty of food and water. Yeah. But gold may well be an extremely strong thing to hold because,
[01:05:16] Unknown:
you know, it just could be. I've got a lot of feelings on this, I've been studying gold and the metals and its relationship to this stuff for close to 30 years now, and, my feelings are that gold and silver, the physical metals are going to hit a bigger percentage of the population as we move into this calamity that we're moving into, that those are going to get a higher percentage of people's attention than the cyber's, let me add this word, initially. Okay? Because of the familiarity and the historical history of it. But, it's interesting to me that 5 years it's been about 5 years now since I found out about Karatbars and got involved in Karatbars and I can literally, with what I understand and know Paul, the Karatbars may be one of the only places in the world where people can find gold as we get into the throes of this thing.
Okay, there's a lot of really valid reasons behind that and for one is, you know, in less than 2 weeks, you know what happens April 1st or a day or so before that, is the Basel III accords take firm effect on everybody. You understand what that is,
[01:06:38] Unknown:
the moving of No, go over that with me. Tell me what's happening with the lovely
[01:06:43] Unknown:
creatures from Baal. Okay, well, no, this is really interesting and it's gonna buttress what your thoughts are on this. Banks have 3 level tiers of assets, and the asset is Tier 1, Tier 2, and Tier 3 and the variables on the requirements of that are Tier 1 assets, cash, bonds, currency, etcetera, are all counted as 100% on their balance sheet. Tier 2 assets I believe are counted 75% and Tier 3 assets are counted 50% and gold has always been a Tier 3 asset. And as of in less than 2 weeks, according to the BIS, it's going to move up to Tier 1. So now bankers that why would bankers not want to hold gold? Because if they held it, it was only counted 50%.
So now they know that's coming and what's been happening is any of the supply between Russia, China, and institutions and banks with this change coming, man, the background of any kind of big supply, not at your local coin dealer, but at the the guy that could do tonnage, they're just it ain't out there. That's why you're seeing them go, steal 40 tons from the Ukraine in the middle of the night, 50 tons out of Syria within the last couple of weeks. Okay? And so as this breaks, they've left enough in some of the local your little pawn shop on the corner and some of your coin dealers got a little bit access to product because they don't wanna cause a concern of people going and all of a sudden all the coins have dried up at the pawnshop.
But that's gonna happen, okay? And when it does, the backing supply is already gone. Okay? Because the way this has been engineered. And I honestly think Carabars, man, ain't Carabars ain't running out of gold. I believe it's gonna be one of the only places on the Earth that people can get a certified, guaranteed, high quality 24 four nines in small sizes that are affordable, a, and that can be used for commercial transactions, b.
[01:09:08] Unknown:
Yeah. What's the yeah. You could be right, really. I mean, it's just you never know. It's always circumstances. I mean, certain assets appear to be more or less attractive depending on what's going on with the society at the time, doesn't it? And, I remember there was I I may have mentioned this before. In the past, what time would this be? 14 years or so ago, 2,004, 2005, right about that time. Right. I was doing quite a bit of research into gold at the time, I wanted to know how much there was in the world and this that and the other. I came across a very interesting website, which may still be up, called deepblacklies.co.uk.
Deepblacklies, written by a guy called David Guyatt, g u y a t t. I think I exchanged a couple of emails with him at the time. Anyway, the site's rather intriguing if it's still up, because, it details, the hidden the vast hidden reserves of gold that there are in the world. Basically, making the case that there's colossal amounts of it, absolutely tons of it all over the place. And, one of the interesting, one of the interesting or the core of the stories there, were to do with the Philippines Mhmm. Which you may be familiar with because, there were photographs of these mines on the Philippines that had been dug out these shafts. And the story behind it was that, almost immediately, that Japan ended up in hostilities with America, which were, as you probably know, absolutely unavoidable for Japan because Japan was being intentionally squeezed to bring it to that point.
And the whole of the Pearl Harbor thing is likely to be an immense false flag, I'm not saying that people didn't die, but what I am saying is that,
[01:10:56] Unknown:
the way was cleared to allow it to happen Yeah. Intentionally because of positive reasons. Yeah. They had they knew it was coming and didn't alert the people. Oh, yeah. They were surprised. It was a reverse false flag.
[01:11:07] Unknown:
Well, it it was. They needed a positive reason, you know, to go into war with Japan, so they set it up. And I I think that many of the ships that were destroyed were very old. They actually took the modern fleet and sent it away, didn't they, to Hawaii or somewhere like that? Or they they bunged it off somewhere else. They took all the aircraft carriers out of Pearl. They were all at sea. Yeah. Yeah. So they were trashing, basically, a lot of old things, which were gonna get trashed anyway, but, of course, they were also trashing 3,000 human lives as well, which is not good. So it shows you how much, of course, that the US government care about their people. You know, are we surprised? No. We're not. Same goes here as well, by the way. It's not just confined to the US.
But, the the Japanese knew almost from the minute that they started that they'd lost, you know, because they weren't stupid. They just, you know, someone comes down and says, well, look at the level of resources and land and manpower, we're done. So if you start this, We can't win. Okay? So they went okay, and they decided that they were gonna win the peace. So the way that they were gonna do it is that they were going to, effectively secrete, hide all the gold that they had amassed, much of it, of course, from the rape of Nanking, and the war that they waged against the Chinese in the 19 thirties.
And so they had these boats, ships, frigates, destroyers, whatever you want to call them, a whole, on their way back to Japan to bury this stuff around Japanese islands. But the, 6th or 7th fleet, whatever it is, I've probably got me my terminology wrong, but they stepped up patrols. The American Navy stepped up patrols in the Pacific and around that stretch of waters. So they couldn't get to Japan, so they basically went to the Philippines. And they took with them or had with them many prisoners of war. This is rather gruesome and awful, I'm afraid, but these things do come up. And so they dug over a 100 mines there, about a 110, I think it is. Guyat lists these mines. And even you've even got photographs of these, stones, around the island with this sort of strange Japanese coded language on them, which has given you directions to where the entrance to the next mine is.
And what they did was they got the prisoners of war to dig these mines. They put gold in the mines, then they blew them up, burying the prisoners of war with the gold so that they couldn't reveal to anybody where it was. That's the rather unpleasant bit. And, however, whilst this is all going on, according to Guyatt, whilst this is all going on, officers from the OSS, that's the forerunner of, the CIA, I think it is. Yep. They've got their agents on the island, but they're not informing the US government. They're not doing that.
They're just, keeping a record of it all because they went, oh, hang on. We've got some black budget stuff coming up here after World War 2. That's what they're thinking. Don't let anybody know about that. So, many of those minds, some of them have still not even been open to this day because a, they were booby trapped, but b, they also lost record of where they all were. It's quite a few, you know, to go down. And of course, everybody will be familiar with Marcus becoming rather a prominent, spontaneously worldwide figure in the seventies. Remember that? Yes. Well, that's that's because they were getting the gold out. And he was he'd actually knew where it was, so they actually did a deal with him. And he got to get a bit fame and a bit more influence and power, and they were controlling him, but they were getting getting at this gold. And there are some amazing photographs, genuine photographs of these of these ingots, these colossal lumps of gold. There's one that that it shows you, there's a photograph of a tunnel, it would be about 3 feet high, 2 feet wide, that's it. It's like a little channel. And it goes down about a 100 meters. And it's got gold ingots in it all the way down. The ingots must weigh something like 200 kilos apiece. That's like £400 of gold. They're absolutely colossal. They've got 2 big handles molded into the ingots so that men could carry them. They're absolutely enormous stuff, colossal amounts of gold.
So, and then there's a lot of other paperwork from a guy, I think it was, Kurt Waldheim, you remember him? I I remember him. Kurt Waldheim was an Yeah. He was an Austrian, he was in the SS, but after World War 2 he became Prime Minister of Austria, which is kind of interesting really when you've been in the SS in World War 2 and everybody's been chewed up. And then you think, well, how did he get away with that? Well the reason he got away with it is that he was heavily involved up to his neck with the control of all this gold, and had a lot of records, which had he revealed would have blown the world gold market to bits because of his knowledge. And some of the documents that are in this account that Gaius put together are astonishing, when they're actually listing the total tonnage of gold that they were aware of at the time, which dwarfed what was being declared publicly. Because if everybody knew how much there was, the price would have fallen out the market. There was that much of it floating around. There's just tons of this stuff. It's all over the place, you know, because people don't wanna throw it away. For millennia, they don't wanna throw it away. So it's all it's all accrued. It's well, it's too valuable. It's almost indestructible,
[01:16:19] Unknown:
even in smaller amounts like in circuit boards and stuff. You can go through processes and get that stuff out. Mhmm. That's not even mentioned. The rumor Bix Weir has been on this one for as long as I've been listening to him. It was one of his original deals that gave him a status. His, Road to Rouda is his website, is the gold that's buried in, the Grand Canyon. And the fact that there's still part of down there, the Grand Canyon is armed by military, you can't go down there, and if you do, they'll shoot your ass, you know.
[01:16:55] Unknown:
If you say, can I have some gold, please?
[01:16:58] Unknown:
Oh, please. Just a I'm just wondering if I could have a pound or 2. What do you think? I don't know, but it's gonna be very interesting as we roll forward and see. We may never know some of that stuff, but, we're going into a financial crunch. The world economy is about to hit a wall. Okay? And, in fact, it probably, according to a lot of people that know Jim Sinclair and those folks, who I tend to listen to, say it's already happened. Rob Kirby did an interview. He's back. He had almost a near death experience, some kind of hospital health situation, but he's pulled out of it and he's back. I've gotten about a third of the way through this morning, one of your fellow Brits, a guy that I really admire named Andrew McGuire, who I'm sure you're familiar with, is the interview on Greg Hunter's USA Watchdog here on Wednesday today. And he's going over some of this stuff too.
We're very close. The Federal Open Market Committee makes an announcement this afternoon. You've got 13 countries in the world with negative interest rates on their bonds. I mean, you know, this situation is just tenuous and it should have gone down a long time ago and it probably would have had not there possibly been some of these things like Marcos' Gold or the Grand Canyon Gold, but certainly the $21,000,000,000,000 that they found just through 2 agencies that they manufactured. You can kick the can pretty far down the road for 21 trillion.
[01:18:42] Unknown:
Yeah. I guess you can. I guess you can. They can keep doing it. I mean, I suppose when people talk about losses and things, though, it's all a bit meaningless. You're just we're still all buying in Well to a sort of a fictional world in which value is is measured in that way. I mean, the whole thing about the system, of course, is to to me I mean, this is just my take on it. People think they're motivated by the acquisition of wealth, but I I really don't think they are. I think a few are. I think that they're the they're the great disturbers of the world. I don't think it's the acquisition of wealth that really does light people's candle. I think, you know, to reverse it, for me anyway, it's the absence of being pestered for bills.
That's what's really required. You'd recover 98% of your sanity if you didn't have to deal with this, continual encroachment and pestering Yep. From the world of builds. Yep. And all the communication and laser printers have been, oh, good grief. Now they've got battalions of administrators with laser printers who send these colossal reports through thinking that it signifies intelligence whereas in fact it signifies the complete opposite. There's no brevity, there's no clarity, there's just, oh, you've got to read this clause. You've got no. I mean, look at things like, terms of service and these terms of agreements and things that you get on software and everything. Have you read that? You're going, what?
If I if I read it, I'll never get around to reusing the software. Right. I won't have any life left, you know? What's the point of this? Well, this one is evidently gonna get instituted a little bit differently, because it shapes up as a credit crunch this time.
[01:20:17] Unknown:
Alright. Okay. Okay. Well, they're gonna stop, there won't be any credit, is that what they're saying? All of a sudden, everything's gonna freeze on the credit front. And now, the effect on commerce, because almost all commerce is short term, floated on credit. Okay? All commerce, all the people getting loans, everything else, so that appears to be one of the real crucial points where it's gonna show its ugly head first, but we're real close, I mean, I've been following it for many years and we thought we were close before, but they're backing into it. When you got to take 13 countries and put them in bonds and negative interest rate.
[01:20:56] Unknown:
I guess.
[01:20:57] Unknown:
I mean, you know, that's like saying, here, I'm gonna give you I'm gonna give you this $1,000, Paul, and at the end of a year, you're gonna give me back 900.
[01:21:10] Unknown:
Yep. That's, it's gonna be a little bit awkward for the for the accountants, but remember, they can always come up with triple entry bookkeeping to cover that one. It's about time we went to triple. We had doubled 500 years ago. I can't wait for quadruple entry bookkeeping. That's gonna be great fun, isn't it? I remember speaking years ago, actually, around about this time, to a guy, he's probably still alive, actually. I can't he probably in his fifties then, and I can't even remember his name, but he worked in, his family ran a very long established gold selling business, selling Krugerrand, sovereigns, American Eagles, that kind of stuff here in the UK.
And I was doing a bit of research on the amount of I wanted to know how many sovereigns that that had ever been minted. I was just interested to know. There's a bunch. Yes. Hundreds of thousands of them, you know, they've been minting some every year for over a 100 years or whatever it is. Some of them go back to 16, 1500,
[01:22:01] Unknown:
don't they?
[01:22:02] Unknown:
Yeah. If you can get them, if you're lucky enough. They'll be worth a lot more, obviously because of their ancient value, as it were. But I remember speaking to him about, gold, and he was very helpful, and, had been involved for a long time, and we were just talking about, you know, ingots and, you know, these bars when they get stamped and everything. And he said, he said, well you should, the gist of the conversation was, he said, you should always buy physical. I said I said yeah? And he said absolutely, he said, I wouldn't trust any of them. He said I don't trust any of them.
You know, made a situation over here with Johnson Matthey in the early seventies, lying about what they had, Right? He said none of them, he said, nobody in this business is trustworthy. The only thing you can trust is to have it in your hand. And if you haven't got it in your hand, you haven't got it. I went, okay, he said, you need it in your hand. He said, that's why this business doesn't fall over. We've been selling coins and having it in our hand for, I think it was over 50 years by then, it was a family business that his father had passed down to him. And it just made a lot of simple sense. Of course, you know, they're dealing I suppose in I mean, sovereigns are great. They're about a quarter there's just under quarter of an ounce of gold in the sovereign. I think it's about 0.22 of a of an ounce of actual gold in it. They're nice looking coins. They're very tough. And they last a long time. The Krugerrand, of course, is immensely tough. I think it shot with about 2 or 3 percent copper, or something to harden it up. It makes it it's got a reddish it's got a very reddish color to it. Yeah. It does got a reddish color, it's not particularly handsome, but it's very tough and durable, and it's not, you know, it's not particularly attractive, but there are an awful lot of them.
So, and I remember, I don't know if I told you, years ago, if I haven't I'll tell you now. So at that time we ended up minting gold coins. I ended up minting them. You did. I was doing all sorts of oh, aye, we used the we use the yeah, me personally, no, not really, with a hammer out in the backyard. No. But you were involved with some people that did.
[01:24:04] Unknown:
Yeah, yeah. Well, we used a thing called do you remember that thing with, what's it, Herbert von Notthaus? Is that his name? Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. Oh, yeah. They got put up the Ron Paul dollar and did a little time in club fed for it.
[01:24:17] Unknown:
Yeah. I mean, his ideas were great. I actually quite liked him. He's a very interesting guy. Mhmm. Anyway, he they were minting coins. What was it called? Was it the Liberty Dollar or something? I think it's called. It was. Okay. And that was their mistake, calling it a dollar. Of course. That's what did him in. You just should have called it that. It's just don't call it that. This is the sort of thing, like, we've got to appeal to what everybody knows. I mean, this is the thing, the great challenge is education and getting people comfortable with a new idea. It's tricky, because the Internet helps us do that much more quickly than we could have done in the past. Yes. But, yeah, they had a mint for their coins called the sunshine mint in Idaho, I think if I remember correctly. Oh, I'm very familiar with that.
So we had somebody working over there as part of the team, and I contacted them and said, could you mint us a 1 ounce gold coin? And they said, yes. Now the thing was, shows how stupid we were. The thing was pure gold. There was not any alloy in it at all. And, boy did it glitter. I got some over here. I got at one point I had about 5. I had 5 ounces of gold in these things. The thing was, I noticed that the edges weren't beveled, so you'd get a little bit of flakes of gold coming off the corner of the coin. I'm going, bit of a design flaw this. Yeah. Let's hope that nobody actually points it out. It was. But I I I'd only just moved down here, this would be 2003, 4, 5, I'd only been here a couple of years. And I was in the local pub, the one that I go to still to this day, and, didn't really know anybody there. But I I bumped into someone who was who'd lived there all his life and knew many people in the pub, and he said, yeah, let me take these off you. I said, of course. He took he took 4 of them off me, he's got 4 ounces, and, if anybody it's quite an interesting thing when people hold gold, because they don't usually. Most people have never ever held it. Very true. So he went around the pub with his mates, and he steer, and he put urine out, and he put urine out, and he just dropped it in the hand. Of course, it's quite a weight. It's heavier than it looks, isn't it? You go, oh, that's gonna be a light, oh, wow, where's that weight come from? And, I was sort of like 30 feet away over in the corner room because nobody knew me, just watching everybody.
Nobody nicked it, thankfully. I would have had them. There was near the door. But, so And it was only about 250 back then, go ahead. Those wet days, it were grand. So, yeah. It was, but it was very interesting, and the look on people's faces, they was kind of fascinated with it. In other words, being re, you know, being reacquainted with the ancient coin of the realm as it were. We should get back. Silver, of course, is still very, very useful, even though it's used massively, of course, in industrial processes. But it was just watching people's faces. And the reason I was sort of spending all this time inordinately looking at this was that I was trying to figure out a way to mobilize gold. I just use this word mobilize. The idea was so I would look at the grammage weight in every single coin made. All the Krugerrands, all the American Eagles, all the sovereigns, those are the big ones, right, the ones in vast numbers. And you you look at the amount of grams of gold, and I go, oh, there's this amount of grams of gold out there in the world in spendable quantities.
Alright. Okay. So, you know, you couldn't go off and just spend 1 ounce of gold. What is it now? What is it these days? Is it 8 or 9 equips, $1200?
[01:27:34] Unknown:
I don't even know what it is. Thanks for the setup. I'm gonna read this or this headline right out from New Zero Hedge. Gold tumbles back below 1300 as someone suddenly dumps $1,000,000,000 of quote unquote precious paper.
[01:27:51] Unknown:
Oh, time to buy then. Kick dumping. It's
[01:27:57] Unknown:
if if you're in it's it's a good time to buy. If you hadn't bought previously, it's a good time to buy. I mean, you know, I can remember Robbie Noel. Did you ever hear him, Paul? Robbie Noel. No. He's not. It didn't ring a bell. He's one of the real icons. I'm not gonna hear from him then. Well, he no. You're not gonna. He was, South African, and he had your colonial accent and just a really good guy. And he was one of the metal specialists. And, I can remember Robbie Noel, when the gold went over 400, and get on this program every night and go, you'll never see $400 gold again the rest of your lifetime.
And he was pretty right. That's what he said. And, you know, I was fortuitous enough. I had been hit with I got probably the best cash flow situation in my whole life right in those years, and I was in a situation where I had gotten out of the tax system and I married a gal and moved in with her and her mother and they paid all the bills. So I had a couple of years of just this tremendous cash flow situation with literally no outgo.
[01:29:12] Unknown:
Okay? And a very enviable citizen Where did it all go wrong, Rocha? Where did it all go wrong?
[01:29:18] Unknown:
Well, it didn't go too wrong because at least I was smart enough to take all that gold right around Brown's bottom and all that money and buy gold. And that's why I can do that's one of the reasons I've been able to accomplish what I've been able to accomplish is to put the time and the research into this project because I didn't have that nagging crap of bills all over me. Okay?
[01:29:42] Unknown:
And I I was just gonna wait for you. That's it. That's the point, isn't it? It's not the equity I don't want tons of stuff. I mean, people go, oh, I want this. I'm I'm going, seriously? You want a yacht? You've gotta clean it. You know what it costs to insure? Then you've gotta organize all that kind of stuff. What do you want one for? Nobody wants one. Less. You don't want one. I mean, what do you want one for? It's just bad. Less is more. It gets
[01:30:04] Unknown:
you where you're not spending time worried about those pesky bills that you know were sitting there, and now you can focus a 100% of your conscious thinking on what you're trying to accomplish. That's one of the reasons I've been able to accomplish this. And I know it. And see, here's what the backlash is on me, is last year, when I thought I could overcome the laws of gravity, now for the first time in 20 years, I've been put in debt and I don't like it. Okay? I understand now even more vividly now because I hadn't been in that situation in so many years.
[01:30:38] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. I think that you see when the when the bill thing disappears out of people's lives, and this is all part of this pressure of the system, of coming out of her, right, as it were, is that not only are you denied, and most people are denied, the opportunity of possibly pursuing an interest and developing it into something that not only contributes back to themselves but to others. That's what it must do, No man is an island, right? You have to you have to share your passions with others for them to be valuable, and for them to sustain and grow. But also, you can possibly become what you are, you can actually grow into and actually become what you really are, which most people never ever really find out, in the sense that we are distracted permanently, you know, we are continually running around fulfilling somebody else's goals, as it were, in this system, which is a Yep.
[01:31:42] Unknown:
So it's, but that's one of the reasons and that's the thing why I jumped on the cyber stuff and see it so plainly for our people, because listen, just like gold, you get to a point, Bitcoin was across $4 yesterday, I hadn't checked it since, there's going to be a point you're never going to see $4,000 Bitcoin again or $250 Ethereum or whatever it is. These things have got great viability down the line and particularly with the cyber coins, it gives us a sword to beat our enemies with, and while we're beating them at the same time, we're stealing their power. It's a simultaneous deal.
So, that's why I say, let's get ready, whatever you can do to get yourself ready in those areas because here's why. I mean, it's not just a pipe dream. People listen to people with money. It doesn't matter if they they like them or or or whatever. They they respect people with money even if it's a per perverse respect. Okay? And people generally you know, when EF Hutton speaks, people listen. You'll get back to that basic. So, if our people can get in a situation where we prepare ahead of time and on the other side of this, we're the ones with a little bit of financial wherewithal and we know the political message, now we got people's ears.
And so part of my reasoning for doing this is for down the line when that situation unfolds. Because listen, after this thing goes down, people are already looking for answers and a bigger percentage every day. And after that happens and it gets more acute and life gets harder, people are gonna be looking for more answers. And I think we can put ourselves in a position we're not gonna overturn this thing. We're not gonna stop it. We ain't gonna take the country back. It's gotta fall on its own. Then we step into the spotlight for action. My thinking.
[01:33:46] Unknown:
Our minds pretty similar to that. I think if you'd asked me 20 years ago, no, come on, we can blah blah blah blah blah, and it's difficult to let go of that as a sort of motivational thing. I I found it difficult at times to let go of that, but I think sometimes you just have to look and say, okay, the situation is so deep, it's so long term, this disease, that it's gonna have to come out the way it's gonna come out. Exactly. And after that, after that, if I'm still around, depending on how things go, then there may be a chance to actually, you know, get a glimpse of recovery for everybody. I'm not a spring chicken anymore, but my sons are. And you would like we would all like to think those of us that have got sons and daughters, that they're gonna be able to at least have an opportunity to recover back some dignity into their lives, you know, much of which has been destroyed and chewed out of Western Christian culture over the last 40 or 50 years, you know, an accelerated raid.
By the way, you mentioned earlier as well the, the Europa videos, and, I've watched a couple of them, I think, and they are good, but not that I've got a criticism of it, because I'd need to work, I mean, I probably would have a few, but I mean overall I think it looks, a cracking good use of time, if people are into grazing videos. I'm not always I'm not always disposed to watching videos, I I get fidgety for some reason, I want to sort of like listen to something, and read, and or do something at the same time, then I'm quite happy. But there's a chap, over here called Dennis Wise, who you may have heard of, he's the guy that made Adolf Hitler the greatest story never told.
And, me and Andy, I was on with Andrew Carrington Hitchcock, we, in fact it probably got broadcast yesterday, we we interviewed, or we had an hour or so with Dennis on, earlier in the week, and it got broadcast yesterday. And since he did, that series, he went on to do another one called Communism by the Back Door, which is excellent, which touches on more, I suppose, of the psychological and social engineering background to much of the, builders that we have to deal with day to day, you know, putting it into the light. But then he's also, and I was completely sure how much I'm out of the loop, he's also been doing another one, the name of which he escaped me. No, it's about freemasonry.
Oh, okay. It's actually about freemasonry. Freemasonry's, victory in World War 2. It's not called that literally, but they it's that's what it's about. And I there's about 18 episodes of it out so far, so I went on to I went on to you, each one's about 15 minutes long, and so I hopped on to YouTube, and managed to scramble them together from multiple sorts of accounts where people had hosted it, maybe it got pinned off. Anyway, I've watched the first 2 or 3 and it's really very very very good. In fact, Greg would like it. It's tremendous. And, Dennis I was talking to, he he called me up last week because I don't know him, well I do kind of know him well, even though we've only been talking for the last couple of weeks really. But I kind of know him culturally because he's from the same neck of the woods as me, so we kind of talk the same the same sort of language and understand where we're at. And, he was he was talking to me about something that he had observed with regards to the funding of National Socialist Germany in the early thirties. And of course there are these debates that go on that say, oh no he was getting money from the Western banks, and oh no he was getting money from Henry Ford, which of course he was, and that's what recovered Germany. Well it's not, you know, I don't think there's any one particular bow. I think it's a combination of things that they made use of there, rightfully in my view, considering the situation that they were in.
And, anyway, I'm talking to Dennis and, we start talking or he starts talking about Samuel Untermyer. This is the, man who was responsible for the the meeting, I think it was in Holland in 1933, which resulted in the declaration of Judea
[01:37:48] Unknown:
declaring war on Germany, you may recall. He was a real kingpin from World War 1 all the way through World War 2. He had his bunch of of of synagogue buddies over there in the US, and when World War 2 came along, he got them together, he said, I made you millionaires in the First World War, I'll make you billionaires in this one. Is that him or is that Baruch? No. That's undermine. No. You might Well, I might be confusing, but but were you gonna say, Barak,
[01:38:18] Unknown:
Bernard Baruch, yeah, him. Yep. Yeah. He was he he became Churchill's handler, for most of Churchill's life at a certain point. But just going back to this little exchange, which is a good little thing. I like this. So as we are all aware, Germany was inordinately punished, at the Treaty of Versailles for a war which it didn't even really start. I mean, it's just a ridiculous sort of situation, but it shows you that the fix was in to destroy Germany. That's what it's absolutely about. Right? Absolutely. Because it was the heartland Christian country of Europe, so the idea was to chew it over so that Bolshevism, you know, could, could wade on through. Anyway, as we are all aware, under under the Weimar Republic in the 19 twenties, Germany was a bit strapped, videntially, you know, wheelbarrows of cash to get a loaf of bread and all that kind of stuff.
And they had this massive reparations bill to pay, which was 100 of 1,000,000, which I don't know what it would be in today's money, but it was a lot, you know, it was a sort of inordinately stupid amount, which of course was suppressing them and and stopping their ability to lead a decent life and to and to grow as a good people. So, turns out that the the American banks, now I don't know which one specifically, but some, always on the lookout for a good business opportunity, being aware that Germany couldn't pay its reparations, were lending the money to Germany for Germany to pay its reparations back, at interest, of course.
And, and Adolf wasn't using all the money to pay the reparations back. According to Dennis's report, he was basically getting this money in from the US banks, which was supposed to be used then to pay the reparations off, but it wasn't being used for that, it was being used for him to restructure the country and to get it back on his feet, which of course it did, and, was by far and away the best thing for it to do because of course it became massively productive, as it, you know, slowly built up strength ready to run headlong into the arranged fisticuffs that had been arranged a long, long time before, which was, you know, this foul thing called World War 2. But I found that quite interesting actually, it's just another it's another string to the bow. Yeah. It's an interesting
[01:40:30] Unknown:
tidbit I had not heard, but let's see if we can piece a few things together. When did he split with the Zionists? Evidently, early on in his political career, he was befriended and financed by the Zionists and at some point turned on him, and that's when I think they turned on him and he started taking and putting the financial system from that terrible hyperinflation and it did cover a little bit of that in Europa, and I remember them saying what he did was monetize labor. And every Well, he did. Yeah. He did. Every mark, we did a couple hours of labor and that's how he went in and financed it and took a couple of years probably a combination of all that. But what he did in 5 years was totally created an economic miracle.
And if they weren't scared of the white Christian Germans before that, when they saw what he did with that economy and threatened to spread it to every other country in Europe, they were they were real concerned then.
[01:41:32] Unknown:
Well, they knew that from 33, and apparently Untermyer was very cross with the American banks. He was very cross with them. He said, you're lending him money, but he's not using it to pay the thing off. He used it to rebuild his country up. Oh, they said. Probably aware of that anyway, but knowing that they were off to a good deal long term. I mean, that's why Ford invested, but not until about 35. And, of course, I've seen these accounts saying, you know, Wall Street and Hitler, so what? Big deal. You know? I mean, what's this? That Wall Street is well, certain aspects of Wall Street, yes. Of course. Yes. But others would have just said, hey, there's there's an economy that's recovering. I mean, if you go back to 34 and 35, you know, it's difficult for us to do that because we've got this huge thing called World War 2 in the middle of our minds before we can propel ourselves back to that time. But it hadn't happened then, even though obviously people were stupid in the sense that something was gonna come along. Well, you still see the repercussions. I'm watching a video this morning on James Corbin over
[01:42:27] Unknown:
there, your guy. Mhmm. And his right hand black lady that's, out there politicking for the Palestinians is getting totally demonized. I can't remember her name. And she's sitting there talking. They closed they got meetings. She's supposed to talk. She goes to the building. They got the doors closed. That kind of subtle stuff. But she's up there talking and she started what about Hitler and the I mean, Hitler is so demonized and they've done such a thorough job of painting him in this demon and you start getting facts and the the man wasn't a demon. I mean, you know, and I as I told you, my personal experience was this was this German couple and he had fought in the Third Reich on the Eastern Front and after the war, they migrated to Milwaukee and they were some of my Silver Line customers. It's how we originally got connected. I've still got I've printed her emails, I've got them with me, and I've got Ecuador, okay?
And her last name was Adler, a d l e r, which can be a Jewish name but with them it wasn't, okay it wasn't. Okay? And Mhmm. And, she told me, she said, everybody loved Adolf. We loved him.
[01:43:43] Unknown:
Who wouldn't? Who wouldn't? You'd they'd have to demonize him because everything he did contradicts all of the control mechanisms and systems that they want to implement, and shows the the real bounty that's available to a people that are organized and racially pure with one another. Now that has to be demonized, of course. You have to why do you have to demonize race? Because when you get, people racially consonant with one another, they can perform like a team, like an orchestra. It just goes. There's still ruckuses at the back. You know, maybe the timpani department doesn't like the trombones and so on and so forth, but overall the music is improved considerably when everybody is genetically on the same part of the hymn sheet. It goes for whatever group you say, for what ever group you say. It is true. And, and that's why they had to hammer it because they, as a as a divisive force, thrive better when there is discord in the home market.
It creates all these nooks and crannies and these positions for government authorities to sort out these problems. Whereas a huge number of supposed problems are basically, bogusly, and artificially created by this situation which is simply not, you know, it's like saying, hey, I'm a seal, and I've got this real problem with killer whales. Oh, yeah. Really? Yeah. Every time I go swimming, they, you know, they wanna eat me. Well, Doug, go swim where the killer whales are. Oh, yeah. I never thought of that. Yeah. He's he's just really it's really simple stuff. Why do you not swim there? What? You go swim somewhere else.
Go where they're not. Oh, yeah. I never thought about that. It's so easy. But, of course, then it takes all the drama out of life, which we would like, or a lot of it. A lot of the unnecessary pointless. And the ideology that's been injected into people's heads that this is a good thing is never questioned. It's an idiotic thing. I'm come I'm bringing it all the way back to where we started up with the Christchurch thing. You know, irrespective of whether it's kinda true or not, that's what it tends to illustrate. And the other thing as well, just hopping back onto the gold thing as well, is that, you know, he did achieve that without using gold at all. That's right. Now, because he said you don't need any gold, and he's right, but you kind of do, but not in the way of you need it because you can't trust human beings Insurance. Ultimately. Insurance? That what do you do? Yeah. Abs there's no there's nothing wrong with having a bit of it put by. Right? Because it acts as a recovery point for things. And, you know, if we're all if everybody's devoid of personal greed and lust, and there'll always be a little bit of that because you could say that that's a little bit like the mustard that goes in a ham sandwich, it gives it a bit of pop. And we all got, particularly when we're young, we tend to have a yearning for things that we don't have, which which I've found as I've got older falls away. I'm not really interested, you know, everybody I wanted a Ferrari when I was 25, if I got one now I'd be one of those dophy middle aged idiots that's tools around in those things. It's like estate agents. You go, you sad, sad old fool. Get out of that thing.
Right? You know?
[01:46:43] Unknown:
Yeah. Was that Coleman's mustard that you put on that ham sandwich? Yeah. Okay. Now then I got a I got a question to ask you. Did did old man Coleman really make his money on all the mustard that was thrown away?
[01:46:59] Unknown:
I don't. You should sit we eat it over here. Why can't you there's some fire in that stuff, isn't there? Yeah. You see, listen, I would have never known what this was, and most
[01:47:09] Unknown:
people in the audience don't know what we're talking about. But when I was on the And when I was in Argentina, one of my very good friends down there was Scottish, actually. And, I went out and ate with them a few times, and that's where I had Coleman Mustard. And it's a powder. It comes in a yellow tin, and you take that stuff out and mix, and, boy, it is stout. And that's where the joke, did mister Coleman Coleman make his money with all the mustard that's thrown away? Because boy, that stuff is stout.
[01:47:44] Unknown:
Yeah. It's rocket it's rocket fuel. He he was obsessed with mustard seeds. He was obsessed with mustard seeds. He used to take baths, mustard baths and everything. He thought it was the you know, he was one of those Victorian guys that said, you do this, you'll live forever. I don't know whether he did. Well, obviously, he didn't. Otherwise, he'd be here on the call with us telling us all about the great history of Coleman's mother. I couldn't stand it as a kid. I gotta tell you. It was just my mom used to stick it on her ham sandwiches. Go, hey. Have a bite of this. Go, what? What? Why have you ruined it? But then as I got older, I went, this is quite good. And it's just, I'd tell you, pork pies. I shouldn't eat pork pie. And I don't eat pork pies, but or sausage rolls every now and again. Oh, I'm revealing everything. I'm a wicked person. But every now and again every now and again I just have to do I mean I love the French's sort of American mustard. It's great on hot dogs. It's great mixed with a bit of ketchup. It's soft. It's a fruity sort of taste. It's great. I used to love quaffing, wrong word, but I used to love gulping down hot dogs when I was in New York watching baseball games back in the eighties nineties when I came over a few times. That was great fun. I know they kind of pureed stuff in in tinfoil,
[01:48:48] Unknown:
but I thought they were great. But, yeah, English mustard is a completely different proposition. It really is. At those ballpark, those are Nathan's hot dogs, and those are the kosher hot dogs. And I can remember that. I can remember listen, back when I was younger, and they they'd have commercials for Nathan's hot dogs, you know? Yeah. And their little tagline at the end was this big deep voice, and he said, we answer to a higher authority.
[01:49:17] Unknown:
Okay. It's a bit of a claim. It's only a hotdog, but still, thanks for letting us know.
[01:49:21] Unknown:
Coal and mustard on Nathan's hotdogs. Oh, my lord. And listen, audience, if you're in the store, and and you like spicy things, and you see it, it's in a tin. It's not it's not made up or anything. It's you got a bad water or whatever you put in there is a meal. Well you can get it made up these days, we've kind of moved on a bit, they've actually someone decided to put the water in.
[01:49:43] Unknown:
Yeah you can you can get jars of it now, but back in the day, yeah, it was powdered because I think probably you were in some people liked it ferociously hot, so it's just all powdered in a little bit of water. That's right. It's making it so so concentrated. But, yeah, I remember my dad making it on the kitchen table, but here we go, we'll have a bit of this. I'm going, I'm not having any of that. Be about 8. And, my once we were at when we moved down here about 50, this would be about 15, 16 years ago, when my youngest son was about 2, we're at this restaurant, and he's in a highchair.
And there are all these condiments, ketchup and everything, and there's this bright yellow mustard, which he thought was custard. Right? We're talking away, and he'd reached over and got the spoon and stuck a milk in his mouth. And we turned around, his face was red, and he just had his tongue out. And he was just, like, like, get this off my tongue. And we said, you thought that was custard? He went, his tongue was
[01:50:42] Unknown:
oh, those are the days. I will let you know, and I'm pretty innocent. I go out to Michael's house. We're having a nice dinner down there. And, you know, here, you would like some mustard dryer? Sure. I'll take a little. Yapo. I like your son. See? Well, you only do it once.
[01:51:00] Unknown:
Yeah. You'd only do it once with that stuff. You would. You would only do it once because it's it's very, very fiery. It really it really is. It really is. I don't know if they had it in Germany. Maybe it would have helped back in the thirties or something. I don't know. They they probably had better taste, really. I mean, even that you know, when I when I knew these guys over in Europe, they'd come over and say, you guys, you put vinegar on your chips. I'm going, yeah. I put it on loads of things, and they go, you can't put vinegar on chips. They go, soggy. I go, that's the whole point. What's the way you're doing? Because over over there, they put mayonnaise. They have mayonnaise with the chips. So over here, we still do mayonnaise, which makes it slightly more evolved than we used to be, but, vinegar is a standard thing. Yeah. Vinegar on your chips. How about that? It's quite good, actually.
[01:51:42] Unknown:
Great. I've been in some English fish and chip places and and done that whole routine and enjoyed it, you know.
[01:51:50] Unknown:
It's alright. You don't need to talk it up. I know it's rather basic fare, but
[01:51:54] Unknown:
when it's done right when it's done right, it's fantastic. Absolutely fantastic. I'm a big fish eater, so I always like that kind of stuff. As we tail off here, we got about 10 minutes left in the program. It's been you and I today, Paul. Unusual when nobody joins us, but that's okay.
[01:52:14] Unknown:
So anything else that we hadn't touched on that you had thought? Here's something that would be interesting. It's alright. Look, that's a series out. The Secret Masonic Victory of World War 2. That's what it's called. Sorry to that I I fumbled it earlier on, but I didn't have it to hand. The secret masonic victory of world war 2. There's 18 parts, I think part 19 will be out soon. Each one's about 14, 15 minutes long. It's fantastic. It's absolutely brilliant. Great music, and very steady pacing, and a good combination of factors, there's some really really good stuff. It might not be new if you are well versed in, you know, the the unfolding of communism throughout the 20th century, which is basically what we were living in, and basically shows you the role of of Masonry, higher level Masonry at that, you know.
I think that's the situation with Masonry, is that the vast
[01:53:07] Unknown:
Should Greg and I, shoot Greg and I both a link to that, to the first ones, I can take it from there.
[01:53:13] Unknown:
Yeah. What I actually did was, personally, I've downloaded every single bit, and I stuck it on a USB stick, and I've got a smart TV, which is like a 50 inch TV, which is an awful confession, isn't it? I don't watch much TV, but I thought, well, I'm gonna watch it and make sure it's big. So, and it's got a USB stick socket in it. I just stick it in there. I can play the movie straight off the USB stick, straight onto the TV. It's fantastic. A bit of work. Yeah. And, better at these things, you know, so the pacing's good, and, I'll leave you another there's another thing he he said to me the other day, what was it? I've got to do, I want to do a show with him just on this one sentence. He said to me, how many armadas do you think there were? Right, you've heard of the Spanish armada? I'm assuming you might have. Sure. Okay, so I'm, I'm starting laughing, I'm going, well, one, he said, uh-uh.
I'm going, okay, I'm interested, don't tell me anymore, right? I don't know what you saw, but quite a few armadas, he said, more than 1, more than 2. I said, ah, cool, this is interesting.
[01:54:13] Unknown:
You know, you find out that just about everything that we've been told is bent out of whack. It's not one whole you know, I used to tell people as I got into this early on, I'd say, my line was this, if they told me the sky was Carolina blue, I'd go by Sherman Williams and get a damn color chart and check it.
[01:54:33] Unknown:
Yep. You'd have to do something like that because it's, I think it's found you see, it's not that they're even lying, it's that an agenda at at work and that this way of communicating is completely okay with them, and it's not okay with us. That's the fundamental difference I would suggest. I think it's really you know, if everybody went around being transparent and doing their damnedest to be truthful and honorable to the truth,
[01:55:01] Unknown:
the amount of relief in the world would be considerable. It'd be a whole different man. It'd be a beautiful world instead of having these people who were there deliberately taught from birth and weaned on that trash in the Talmud about you're better than everybody else, you can steal from the Jew, you can steal from the Jew, you can marry, you can murder them, all the all the crap that's in there that they're literally leaned on, and you can see the you can see the extrapolation of those messages in our world today.
[01:55:32] Unknown:
You can. You can, and so I I mean it's a level of I noticed this when I'm running these ideas past people who are not particularly well versed in any of this. Right? And they I have I I stopped not because I'm angry or anything, but because I see they literally don't have a frame of reference to plug anything in that I'm saying, they can't plug it into anything, it's like you immediately I realize that, it's like we've got so far down the mine shaft working at the coal face so deeply, so deep and away from the top people on the top surface up at the ground there. When we talk back to them it just all comes back as an echo. Yeah. What we're talking about? Yeah. We've gone a long way away from them. But it is happening. I mean, I'm not trying to I don't think it's what it says. It's the as bleak as it possibly was, say, 20 or 30 years ago, in fact, it most definitely is not, and things are definitely going in the right direction as we've touched upon several times in this, in this exchange today.
There are more and more people getting clearer and clearer that something is is happening, and you know I don't think it's fatigue, I think it's just that people are getting clearer about the fact that the solutions to nearly all of our problems are simple ones. Oh, and there was a point I was gonna mention which, we still got a couple of minutes, haven't we? Yeah. So Brexit, which I like to leave alone because, you know, you can only sort of cope with so much fuss in your life. Correct. And then you you can't even laugh anymore because the jokes have been repeated so many times, but the, the decision to leave with no agreement is supposed to still take place on March 29th, which they are still squabbling around because it's all about just creating as long a delay as they possibly can.
On March 30th, the day after, there is a military exercise taking place in this country with 10,000 troops from around the world. Hey, so it's an exercise, Roger. I mean don't think that it would possibly be a backup in case things kick off. That that would be wrong thinking, don't you start thinking that? Don't think that they're sort of, you know, keeping their, bases covered with that. It's a joke, isn't it? You know, this is I'm looking at this thing, and I'm going, does everybody realize now that the people that are running this country are not British? And if they are, they gave it up a long, long time ago, and you need to stop listening to them completely.
I'm just asking people to make me king recently. I'm just trying it out. I don't I'm not expecting a big result, by the way, But I just say, why don't you make me king? It's it's a really interesting
[01:58:08] Unknown:
sort of line to run past people. Well, you know, our friend Freddie King. Go. Give it a go. Your mutual friend. You've had a little bit of contact with this guy that I've known for so many years and admire so much, Harvey Wysong. I mean, you remember him if nothing else because you've never heard anybody with a name like that, Harvey. And Harvey used to be on that, when I'm king, we're gonna get rid of the IRS or do this. So I've I've been I've seen people use that that approach before. Hell, I hope they elect you, man. You damn sure be better than the one they got.
[01:58:39] Unknown:
Yeah. Oh, I think it'd be great fun. I've told everybody. I said, you we I said it wouldn't be great fun for a bit. I said, 3 to 5 years, it would be a bit hairy. I said, I have to I need some blokes that that'll have to do some pretty dirty work, I said, because I'm aware of what's out there. But I said, once that's sorted out, I said, it'll be all strawberries ice cream, really. I said, it's just gonna be great. So, but the thing I'm pursuing Like I say, what democracy is a terrible thing. Well, see these things. I still see these things.
[01:59:06] Unknown:
What our approach allows you to do is to be your own king.
[01:59:11] Unknown:
Yeah. I don't I don't wanna lord it over anybody else. I'm simply saying there's a complete absence of adherence to the law. Every man is a king and a chicken in every pot. You know where that came from?
[01:59:22] Unknown:
No. Huey Plong.
[01:59:25] Unknown:
Oh, I liked
[01:59:26] Unknown:
him. Yeah. I mean, yeah. For him as well, didn't they? He boy. They did yeah. They had to get rid of him. He he was a real threat. Chicken in every pot and every man's a king. There's our whistler. Well, we're done being kings for the day here, Paul. I appreciate you being along. Thank you, Roger. We didn't have other folks joining us with questions or whatever, but we got a lot of good conversation out of the way and I think touched on some important points. So, appreciate these 2 hours with you every week, my friend, and I'll look forward to the ones we spend together next week too. We'll see what water goes under the bridge 'tween now and then. Thank you, Paul, so much. Always my pleasure. Thank you. Okay. See you next week, buddy. And listeners, we'll see you tomorrow, and maybe we'll have James Taylor with us or something and answer some questions for him or some of you other new guys. You guys watch the news, stay on top of everything the best you can, and we'll talk to you tomorrow. So have a great day from Coyoiqui, Ecuador, Hasta Luega. See you tomorrow. Thank you again, Paul. Thank you.
[02:01:15] Unknown:
Lay
Introduction to Radio Ranch with Roger Sales
Discussion on Recent Events and False Flags
Media Reactions and Public Perception
Brexit and Global Alliances
Historical Insights on Gold and Economy
Cryptocurrency and Economic Predictions
Historical Context of World Wars and Economic Policies
Racial and Cultural Dynamics in Society
Brexit Military Exercises and Political Implications