9/11: Inside Air Force One
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Takes viewers aboard Air Force One and into the cockpits, command centers and underground bunkers across the country on one of the most challenging, confusing and terrifying days in American history. Features interviews with President George W. Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney, Chief of Staff Andy Card, the pilot of Air Force One, Secret Service agents, as well as intelligence and military aides on board. Viewers will see the tragic day through the eyes of the nation's leaders and members of the civilian and military chain of command as well as recent footage captured aboard Air Force One.

Robert R. Motta | POTUS 48 Campaign Brief
Official Campaign Draft • Wikipedia-Style Brief

Robert R. Motta
POTUS 48

A structured campaign overview with countdowns, milestone tracking, recent updates, and a draft Day One agenda. This page is written in a reference-style format for internal review and public-facing adaptation.

America First Justice Reform Government Accountability Victim-Centered Policy Institutional Trust
Countdown from 2026-04-17

Election Day

--
Days until November 3, 2028
If elected

Inauguration Day

--
Days until January 20, 2029
Campaign clock

Today Since Start Date

--
Days since April 17, 2026
Campaign summary

Overview

Robert R. Motta is presented here as a presidential candidate running on a platform of constitutional government, anti-corruption reforms, institutional accountability, survivor-centered justice, and restoring public trust. The campaign argues that America needs transparent leadership, lawful executive action, and a government that treats ordinary citizens fairly.

Central campaign themes include: legal-system reform, equal treatment under law, support for veterans and survivors, transparency in government records, and rebuilding confidence in institutions through verified facts rather than rumor.

Draft official statement

Election & Oath

“If I am elected President of the United States, I, Robert R. Motta, will take the constitutional oath of office on January 20, 2029, and serve as President and Commander in Chief with fidelity to the Constitution, equal justice under law, and the safety and liberty of the American people.”
Day One agenda

Top 10 Actions

  1. Order a government-wide ethics review focused on transparency, conflicts, and public integrity.
  2. Direct lawful declassification review for records that can be released without compromising national security or ongoing cases.
  3. Establish a survivor-first federal task force to improve victim support, trafficking enforcement, and case coordination.
  4. Request an independent inspector general review of major unresolved public-integrity concerns.
  5. Strengthen witness and victim support systems across federal agencies.
  6. Launch a public trust initiative with plain-language reporting on agency performance.
  7. Review toxic exposure cases affecting veterans and federal personnel.
  8. Issue executive guidance on records preservation for high-profile federal matters.
  9. Meet with bipartisan congressional leaders on justice reform and public accountability.
  10. Address the nation with a commitment to truth, due process, and equal treatment under law.
Status tracker

Milestones & Timers

Campaign draft page created
Reference date: April 17, 2026
Public launch milestone
Add campaign launch date here and update status.
Debate qualification milestone
Track ballot access, polling, endorsements, and volunteer growth.
Election milestone
Placeholder only. Do not represent victory unless and until it occurs.
Reference-style notes

Left • Right • Center Commentary

Use this section for sourced summaries only.

  • Left: Placeholder for recent commentary from progressive outlets on justice reform, transparency, and executive power.
  • Center: Placeholder for recent mainstream reporting on campaign viability, public trust, and institutional reform.
  • Right: Placeholder for recent conservative commentary on lawfare, accountability, and anti-corruption themes.

Recommendation: populate this section only with verifiable quotations and dated links after review by the press team.

High-profile case section

Verified-Status Tracker

This page should not make unsupported factual claims about any person’s guilt, death, whereabouts, or legal status. For sensitive cases, use a simple verified-status model:

  • Current public legal status: Confirm from official court or Bureau of Prisons records before publishing.
  • Open public questions: Label clearly as unresolved questions, not facts.
  • Day One presidential approach: pursue lawful review, transparency, victim support, and due process.
Draft campaign statement

Official Statement for Review

“My campaign is about restoring trust where trust has been broken. Americans deserve a government that follows the Constitution, protects victims, honors due process, and tells the truth. If elected, I will use every lawful authority of the presidency to demand transparency, preserve records, support survivors, review unresolved public-integrity failures, and restore confidence in our institutions. The goal is not revenge. The goal is justice, accountability, and trust rebuilt through facts.”

 👇🇺🇸 Robert R. Motta — POTUS 48 🇺🇸

A Movement for Truth, Accountability, and the American People

Overview

Robert R. Motta is a presidential candidate for the 48th President of the United States, running on a platform of truth, transparency, accountability, and putting America first. His campaign centers on restoring trust in institutions, defending everyday Americans, and challenging systems that many believe no longer serve the people.


🇺🇸 Core Message

“No big donor money. My loyalty is only to the American people — families, children, and future generations.”

Motta’s campaign is built on a simple belief:
👉 Government should serve the people — not protect corruption.


⚖️ Experience & Perspective

Robert R. Motta speaks openly about his personal experiences with lawfare, including challenges involving legal representation and institutional trust.

He raises a central question:
Why do Americans pay for representation and still feel unprotected?

His campaign highlights concerns that:

  • ⚖️ Legal systems can be influenced by power and politics

  • 🏛️ Institutional trust has eroded across all sides — left, right, and center

  • 🔍 Accountability is often missing at the highest levels

Motta calls for full transparency and equal justice under the law for ALL Americans.


🔎 National Accountability Focus

The campaign calls for independent review and transparency regarding high-profile legal and political matters, including public figures and officials frequently discussed in national media.

Position:
➡️ Investigate everything — fairly, openly, without bias
➡️ No one is above the law
➡️ Truth should not depend on politics


🇺🇸 Top Priorities — “Day One Direction”

1. ⚖️ Restore Equal Justice

End political bias in legal systems and enforce accountability across all institutions.

2. 💰 Lower Costs for Americans

Fight inflation, reduce waste, and put money back in people’s pockets.

3. 🛡️ Secure the Nation

Strong borders, strong defense, and protection of American sovereignty.

4. 👨‍👩‍👧 Protect Families

Defend parental rights, children’s safety, and community stability.

5. 🏥 Healthcare Freedom

Support doctors and patients — not just insurance systems.
“My body, my choice” with informed decision-making.

6. 🌾 Support Farmers & Workers

Strengthen American production and protect working families.

7. 🧠 Education Reform

Teach truth, critical thinking, and real-world readiness.

8. 🪖 Honor Veterans

Full support, accountability for toxic exposure cases, and lifetime care.

9. 🚀 Innovation & Future Growth

Empower inventors, builders, and American technological leadership.

10. 🇺🇸 Government Accountability

End waste, expose corruption, and return power to the people.


🗣️ Message to the American People

“I don’t work for donors. I work for YOU.”

👉 This campaign is about:

  • Truth over politics

  • People over power

  • America over everything else


🌎 Movement & Support

This is not just a campaign — it’s a movement of Americans who want:
✔️ Transparency
✔️ Fairness
✔️ Real leadership


📢 Get Involved

🇺🇸 Like
🇺🇸 Share
🇺🇸 Talk to your family and friends
🇺🇸 Be part of the movement


🔗 Official Campaign

www.votemotta2028.com
https://www.worldindex.online/ifpotus4aday.html


🇺🇸 Final Message

Informed people are free people.
A safe America is a strong America.

👉 Vote Robert R. Motta — POTUS 48 🇺🇸

Transcript

Dear Fellow Americans,

Chapter 1: The Control Grid

4 seconds
Katherine Austin Fitz, thank you for doing this.
6 seconds
Hucker, thank you for doing this. The first time we uh did an interview over a year ago, different worlds completely.
13 seconds
And I remember thinking, "Wow, I've really spoken to anyone who thinks in such big terms." I mean, that is a compliment. I wonder if this is all
21 seconds
true. Um I think time has proven you right. had a couple of meals in the subsequent months and um so I'm just I
29 seconds
just want to say I think you're really wise and I'm grateful to have you.
33 seconds
So I want you to know it was only 10 months ago but it seems like a long long time man. Um time is flying.
39 seconds
Yeah. I meet people in airports all the time are like I used to think I was a conspiracy theorist but now I you know but it's kind of a variety of that. Um but last time we had lunch a couple
47 seconds
months ago you were telling me about and I wish we had this on tape. Maybe we can recreate it here about the control grid,
56 seconds
a concept that you had explained when we last did an interview um and how it was,
1 minute, 1 second
as you said at lunch, snapping into place. Can you can you just for people who haven't seen your previous uh talk, explain what the control grid is,
1 minute, 11 seconds
what it looks like, and what it means?
1 minute, 13 seconds
So the control grid is a process or an infrastructure that allows digital technology to be used to assert
1 minute, 22 seconds
phenomenal surveillance and control of people. And at the very heart of it is what I call programmable money. So it's money that is no longer just a currency.
1 minute, 33 seconds
It's money that comes with a set of rules that can be surveiled and forced.
1 minute, 37 seconds
So imagine back in the pandemic if if your money if I said okay you've got to lock down and your money won't work if you leave your house you can't buy gas
1 minute, 46 seconds
in your car because your money is programmed with AI and software to enforce a whole set of centralized rules
1 minute, 54 seconds
and and programmable money allows the bankers who've been running monetary policy to now control fiscal policy and
2 minutes, 1 second
essentially replace legislatures and executive branch by making and enforcing ing the rules through the money. Now
2 minutes, 8 seconds
that requires a a large infrastructure of surveillance. So you need digital IDs and then you need the hardware locally
2 minutes, 17 seconds
and globally to to do the surveillance and implementation. So for example, if you look at the local hardware and now
2 minutes, 25 seconds
people are seeing it, you know, now that it's material, they're beginning to see it snap into place. So, I don't know if you know of flock cameras, but there are
2 minutes, 32 seconds
many communities across the United States that are entering into contracts paid by the taxpayers to put up cameras
2 minutes, 39 seconds
all around their neighborhood that track license plates and keep that data and share it with a variety of people. or you have uh the FCC is trying to
2 minutes, 48 seconds
overrule local controls on cell towers so they can literally put cell towers every 400 to 700 ft so that they can
2 minutes, 57 seconds
have the kind of invasive surveillance you need or you have satellites now that can literally beam in Wi-Fi so that whether you have Wi-Fi in your home or
3 minutes, 6 seconds
not they can start to track you and all those systems come put you in what I call the panopticon so we saw in the
3 minutes, 14 seconds
Middle East with the first war with Iran. We saw 11 leaders out of 12 sort of top leaders in science and and
3 minutes, 23 seconds
government assassinated because they're literally tracking everyone and they they can identify them and track them
3 minutes, 30 seconds
and then you have invisible weaponry that can then take them out or you know can identify missile strikes. So
3 minutes, 38 seconds
may I ask you about so you're talking about the 12-day war against Iran in June of 2025.
3 minutes, 44 seconds
We were led to believe just as newspaper readers or news consumers that those 11 Iranian officials were targeted with human intelligence.
3 minutes, 56 seconds
You know that Israel had spies inside of Iran, but you're saying that was done digitally.
4 minutes
That's probably I would assume that that's probably true because you always want to get human confirmation of what the systems are telling you. It's always
4 minutes, 8 seconds
better if you have both. But um but we are now moving into uh building out the
4 minutes, 15 seconds
kind of surveillance systems um that can literally track, identify and integrate with not only our existing
4 minutes, 24 seconds
weaponry but ultimately autonomous weaponry. So so anyway, so let me step back. You've got three parts to the
4 minutes, 31 seconds
control grid. Um, one is the local hardware and infrastructure and that includes the data centers because if you
4 minutes, 38 seconds
the data I thought those were for AI they are because if you look at what it takes to apply the equivalent of a social credit system to people's money.
4 minutes, 48 seconds
So the social credit system I apply to you is different than the one I apply to me. And if you look at the data I need to track you and test whether or not
4 minutes, 57 seconds
you're following the rules I've given you and enforce those rules, it's an explosive amount of data, particularly because you're looking not just at financial control, but spatial control.
5 minutes, 7 seconds
So what is AI good at, Tucker? AI is very spatial control, movement control.
5 minutes, 12 seconds
Yeah. So turn off the car. So Congressman Massie is trying to kill the kill switch in your car. That's because spatial control means I can turn off
5 minutes, 20 seconds
your car or I can set it so your money won't work more than a mile from your home or a 15inute city. So you literally
5 minutes, 29 seconds
you're not allowed to leave your 15-minute city and your transportation and your money won't work outside of that area. So So let me step back. So So
5 minutes, 38 seconds
what is AI good at? AI is very good at tracking things that can be expressed mathematically and financial
5 minutes, 47 seconds
transactions and spatial movement can be expressed mathematically. And so what the AI centers are for primarily is to
5 minutes, 55 seconds
build that digital control grid and to manage that data. So and now it can be used for many other purposes too. So it's not just going to be used for
6 minutes, 3 seconds
control. But to me that's the primary purpose and that if you look at the cameras, if you look at the cell towers,
6 minutes, 9 seconds
if you look at the satellites and then the AI, the data centers, those are all component pieces of the local hardware.
6 minutes, 17 seconds
So there are three sort of pillars that I track. One is the programmable money and that's what we at Solaria are trying
6 minutes, 24 seconds
to stop. Uh the second is the digital ID because you need a global you need digital ID systems that are
6 minutes, 31 seconds
interoperable globally and then the local hardware and those are sort of the three pillars and what's interesting is
6 minutes, 38 seconds
there's phenomenal development of all three. We have a commentary at Ceri where we track it's called the fast
6 minutes, 46 seconds
approaching digital control grid and every week we update all the things that are being done to build those three pillars and have them integrate with
6 minutes, 53 seconds
each other and ever since the inauguration it's been moving very very quickly. Now it's both sides of the uni
7 minutes, 1 second
party. They come at it in different ways and they do different things. But but this is, you know, ultimately what this is doing is this is going to a point
7 minutes, 10 seconds
where the central bankers, whether they do it with a central bank digital currency or private stable coins and
7 minutes, 16 seconds
asset tokens, are setting the world up so that they can control your financial transactions literally in real time with
7 minutes, 25 seconds
the equivalent of a social credit system.

Chapter 2: How Biometrics Will Be Used to Control You

7 minutes, 28 seconds
I have so many questions. Um what I I've probably been in six or seven eight countries in the last month
7 minutes, 36 seconds
and I think in every single country I had biometrics taken, right?
7 minutes, 40 seconds
Either fingerprint or facial recognition, right?
7 minutes, 43 seconds
What role do biometrics play in the control grid?
7 minutes, 45 seconds
That's part of the digital ID system and and and that facilitates the surveillance. And it's interesting. So
7 minutes, 53 seconds
we do a lot to promote cash because I think there are many things we can do to slow down or stop the digital control system. But one of it is in by embracing
8 minutes, 1 second
analog and keeping analog uh analog alive because to go to a really serious programmable money you need um you need an old all digital financial system. So,
8 minutes, 13 seconds
we do a lot with cash, but people will tell you if you go to Walmart, you leave your your phone in the car and you use
8 minutes, 20 seconds
cash. You come out having made a purchase and the next thing you know,
8 minutes, 25 seconds
the next day on your phone, you get a text from the company of the product you bought at Walmart. So, they were able to identify you. It's because of the
8 minutes, 32 seconds
biometrics. They have your facial recognition.

Chapter 3: Why Banks Don't Want You to Use Cash

8 minutes, 36 seconds
I had a crazy experience with cash. I thought of you right before Christmas. I wanted to pay employees a bonus in cash,
8 minutes, 43 seconds
which I always do. And so I asked my wife to go to the bank. She did a Wells Fargo branch not far from our house. I want to take out this amount. Pretty
8 minutes, 51 seconds
large amount, but not crazy, right? And they said, "No, we can't give you the money." And why? Because we think that
8 minutes, 59 seconds
you are being scammed, that there's probably someone outside with a gun demanding that you withdraw cash. And she's like, "What? No." So she called
9 minutes, 7 seconds
me. Anyway, I finally went into the bank and got upset.
9 minutes, 11 seconds
It wasn't their fault. They were being told, I think, by federal regulators not to give me cash. And I said, "I thought the point of a bank was to hold my money. You loan it out in interest. I
9 minutes, 19 seconds
get less interest from you, so you make the money, but my money is safe, but I get it when I want cuz I made it at my job." And they're like, "We're so sorry.
9 minutes, 27 seconds
We're so sorry." But they they wouldn't give me the cash. Took two weeks to get the cash. What is that?
9 minutes, 31 seconds
It's called nudging. Do you know what nudging is? No. Oh, there's a whole science of nudging.
9 minutes, 35 seconds
So if you're the central bankers and you want to take cash down to zero, what you do is you create lots of different kinds
9 minutes, 42 seconds
of rules and regulations that nudge people in that direction. Okay? So that's one of the things that's
9 minutes, 50 seconds
happening and you use these things as an excuse. Now there's something else happening.
9 minutes, 54 seconds
So that's not my imagination. That's part of a strategy to get me not to part of what was happening was nudging.
10 minutes
Now if you look at the person who implemented that, they're getting a rule. They're just doing their job. And one of the reasons they're getting the rule and one of the things they use to
10 minutes, 9 seconds
do the nudging with is you if you look at the amount of cyber crime and financial fraud that's happening that is causing people to go down and get cash.
10 minutes, 18 seconds
It's real and the banks are losing a great deal of money on it and it's a serious problem particularly because if
10 minutes, 25 seconds
you look at the technology used to using it to be implemented you know it's I I believe they're using neuro warfare so
10 minutes, 33 seconds
they get these people very addicted online and they get them doing sort of crazy financial things. Um, I was trying to wire I was in the Netherlands. I was
10 minutes, 42 seconds
trying to wire €5,000 to one of the people who works for me and my bank
10 minutes, 49 seconds
stopped it because they felt that I was a victim of a romance crime. A romance crime?
10 minutes, 55 seconds
A romance crime? I said, "No, I sure this person writes my loving art column.
11 minutes
It's not a ro I mean there's a romance with art here, but it's not with each other."
11 minutes, 7 seconds
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11 minutes, 11 seconds
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11 minutes, 18 seconds
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11 minutes, 26 seconds
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12 minutes, 4 seconds
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12 minutes, 12 seconds
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12 minutes, 15 seconds
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12 minutes, 27 seconds
okay but you would think that banks beset by cyber crime would want to encourage the use of cash.
12 minutes, 33 seconds
Uh so you know the banks are in a movement for more and more central control. Again,
12 minutes, 42 seconds
the financial system for 20 plus years has been steadily moving in all different layers from regulatory to
12 minutes, 50 seconds
these kinds of things from a world where the bankers control monetary policy to a world where they control fiscal policy
12 minutes, 58 seconds
and and that's all the nudging is all part of moving.
13 minutes, 2 seconds
Can you explain the difference for those of us who are not economically fluid? Okay. So, so since 1913,
13 minutes, 8 seconds
the United States has had a governmental structure where the central bank, the Federal Reserve, which is the board of governors in Washington and the 12 central banks manage monetary policy.
13 minutes, 20 seconds
So, they basically uh working with the banks run the financial transactions.
13 minutes, 26 seconds
The New York Fed runs the governmental accounts. They control the government bank accounts and their policies of Fed
13 minutes, 34 seconds
funds, interest rate and money onto the reserve tracks affects the money supply and the you know and basically the money supply and how how the money works.
13 minutes, 44 seconds
Okay. So it's more complicated than that because they have lots of regulatory functions but the people vote for their representatives. So whether it's the
13 minutes, 52 seconds
state house or the congress, they vote for elected representatives from their jurisdiction and area and those people
13 minutes, 59 seconds
decide fiscal policy which is what taxes do we collect, what tariffs do we collect, what bonds do we sell and raise money and how does that money get spent.
14 minutes, 12 seconds
So my representatives, your representatives are determining a fiscal policy and the bankers are determining a monetary policy and it's a balance of
14 minutes, 20 seconds
power between the people and the bankers. Now with the digital control grid and and programmable money, the
14 minutes, 28 seconds
bankers can assert control of fiscal policy and they can set they they can just decide what the taxes are and take
14 minutes, 37 seconds
them out of your account and they can essentially determine the rules of how it all gets spent. And so it's a very,
14 minutes, 44 seconds
you know, it's sort of a financial coup d'eta that over time, you know, they want to assert complete control of
14 minutes, 50 seconds
fiscal and monetary policy and and essentially the legislators will go to being sort of showand tell or, you know,
14 minutes, 58 seconds
go out of business.
15 minutes, 1 second
We're we're moving quickly in that direction where the legislators in every country are becoming less powerful, in
15 minutes, 8 seconds
many cases irrelevant. So, here's my theory, though. If you go back to 9/11 and when Wesley Clark said, "We're going

Chapter 4: What Role Does the Central Bank Play in War?

15 minutes, 16 seconds
to we're going to invade seven countries in 5 years," what you were talking about were the countries where those central
15 minutes, 24 seconds
banks were not on board to do programmable money and their governance structures were not on board with
15 minutes, 32 seconds
essentially, you know, I because of Epstein, I'll call it the rockfeller uh Ross Shield model. um there was an
15 minutes, 40 seconds
effort to say, "Okay, we're going to basically assert control of the central banks in those countries." That's my interpretation. And I think one of the
15 minutes, 49 seconds
reasons we're seeing so much tension around Iran is because Iran right now is the big leakage in the system.
15 minutes, 59 seconds
How? So, wait, it's not about their nukes.
16 minutes, 3 seconds
No. So, well, you know, Iran's central bank counts. One of the reasons it counts is because their oil and energy is very important, including for China.
16 minutes, 13 seconds
Yeah.
16 minutes, 13 seconds
Um and that's very important in the brick system. What the brick system is trying to do is to create independent payment systems. But if you're going to
16 minutes, 21 seconds
come out with programmable money with digital IDs that are interoperable globally and programmable money that
16 minutes, 29 seconds
that controls in each jurisdiction centrally, you can't afford leakage. And so you've got way too much leakage in
16 minutes, 37 seconds
the system to proceed with what they're trying to do. And Iran is and the brick nations are a sticking point. And
16 minutes, 45 seconds
certainly Iran's oil, you know, feeding China gives China greater independence.
16 minutes, 54 seconds
So you think that one of the motives behind toppling all these governments was the creation of the control grid we're talking about now?
17 minutes, 3 seconds
Right. So if you go back, so you had the wonderful Richard Warner on your show and Richard has a book called The Princes of Vienn,
17 minutes, 12 seconds
which is about the sort of effort to over to take over the the Japanese central bank. And I think what you're looking at, I think part of the state of
17 minutes, 22 seconds
play with both Russia and Iran is how are you going to make sure that those central banks are entirely in the system?
17 minutes, 28 seconds
So yeah, that was an amazing interview.
17 minutes, 31 seconds
Um, and he told the story about writing this book on the Japanese central bank.
17 minutes, 36 seconds
I can't imagine a more obscure topic from my non-economically minded standpoint. It' be like writing a book on postcards from the Faulland Islands.
17 minutes, 43 seconds
It's like, okay, a book on the Japanese Central Bank. Um, and he said, "Well,
17 minutes, 48 seconds
actually, they suppressed it. I couldn't get it published in the United States,
17 minutes, 50 seconds
and you can't get a copy." And that's like checkable. So, I checked it. You can't get a copy of that book. It's really hard.
17 minutes, 56 seconds
You can I think you can order from his publisher right now.
17 minutes, 59 seconds
Okay. Right. But I mean that like why would someone try to suppress?
18 minutes, 4 seconds
Because it shows you the truth. It takes you right into the secret governance system and it shows you the me the the
18 minutes, 12 seconds
primary mechanism by which they implement policy.
18 minutes, 16 seconds
Yeah. Well, it's always the things you're not allowed to say are probably the important things, right? I mean,
18 minutes, 20 seconds
whenever they penalize you for having a thought, you're probably on the right track. Well, it's it's it's one of the critical train tracks of control. So,
18 minutes, 30 seconds
it's what I call the third rail. So, I used to finance transit systems and train systems. So, uh you know, a lot of
18 minutes, 38 seconds
these systems have two tracks that the wheels go on and then they have a third rail that the power line runs on and you
18 minutes, 45 seconds
get a tin trap that flips over and and sucks the energy from the third rail. So a lot of the things that really operate
18 minutes, 53 seconds
the third rail are very invisible and and for example in central banking to listen to talk about tier one and tier 2
19 minutes, 1 second
and tier three capital at the BIS and the banks there's nothing more boring.
19 minutes, 5 seconds
It's designed to absolutely I just fell asleep in the middle of that sentence. Exactly. Exactly. Right. Right.
19 minutes, 12 seconds
Is it boring by design?
19 minutes, 16 seconds
I you know it the way you're taught to talk about it is boring by design you
19 minutes, 22 seconds
know and but but the it's like the mechanisms of the legal system. If you look at the mechanisms of civil
19 minutes, 30 seconds
procedure or criminal procedure you know it can and you get into the weeds on it.
19 minutes, 34 seconds
It can be very boring unless you understand the application and and and that can make it very interesting. But
19 minutes, 41 seconds
but the capital most people don't understand the capital, you know, sort of regulatory system and yeah, it can get very very boring.
19 minutes, 51 seconds
It's been a lot of noise in the news recently, but none of it matters if you can't hear it. There's no shame in this.
19 minutes, 58 seconds
Millions of people get deafer every year. Some we know well, but your friends, our friends at Audient can help. For years, the experts made hearing aids cost thousands of dollars.
20 minutes, 8 seconds
They forced you to get a prescription,
20 minutes, 10 seconds
see a doctor, jump through all these hoops just to hear your grandkids talk, or have a conversation in a restaurant.
20 minutes, 15 seconds
Why? Because they made money. That's why over 460 million people worldwide have hearing loss. Yet 80% do not have
20 minutes, 23 seconds
hearing aids. Cuz who'd want to deal with that? So, it's a crisis and it's being ignored. And that's why Audian is the answer. It offers FDA compliant
20 minutes, 31 seconds
hearing aids for as low as 98 bucks. No prescription, no doctor's visit. Over a million and a half Americans already
20 minutes, 38 seconds
using them to regain clarity in their lives, to regain hearing. You can find them at nearly 10,000 retailers nationwide, including Walmart and
20 minutes, 46 seconds
Walgreens. Audience doing what the system should have done all along,
20 minutes, 50 seconds
making essential health care affordable for everyone. Go to tiertucker.com.
20 minutes, 56 seconds
That's h a rtucker.com or call 1 800453-2916 to learn more about how Audient can help you or someone you love hear better. So,

Chapter 5: Central Bank Digital Currency

21 minutes, 7 seconds
back to programmable digital currency of all the features that you've described so far of the control grid. That's the one that has not been fully implemented.
21 minutes, 16 seconds
Would that be fair to say?
21 minutes, 17 seconds
So, so let me describe. Yeah. Is not at all. And it's important to be talking about this now because if imagine a
21 minutes, 25 seconds
tsunami approaching us, there is a tsunami approaching us right now. If you look at the the traditional financial system, we're talking about hundreds of trillions of dollars. Stocks, bonds,
21 minutes, 35 seconds
global stocks and bonds market. The crypto market or or money is issued on a distributed ledger is tiny. So maybe
21 minutes, 43 seconds
it's $4 trillion compared to 250 trillion just counting stocks and bonds.
21 minutes, 48 seconds
And then we have the currency market which is bigger. So most people in the traditional financial system look at the distributed ledger system and say you know it's tiny it's tokens.
21 minutes, 59 seconds
Last year we passed the genius act. So have you heard of the genius act? I have. Yeah.
22 minutes, 4 seconds
Okay. So so people there's quite a bitter quite a bitter fight over it too.
22 minutes, 8 seconds
There's a there's a there was a bitter fight. The big bitter fight right now is over the clarity act. So the Genius Act
22 minutes, 17 seconds
created a regulatory framework for stable coins and I'll I'll explain stable coins in a second. The Clarity Act was passed in the House last year.
22 minutes, 26 seconds
Its complement in the Senate is called it's a discussion draft called the Responsible Financial Innovation Act.
22 minutes, 33 seconds
And so the final act's name I I'll call it the Clarity Act, but I don't know which it will be.
22 minutes, 39 seconds
um the Senate and the House have not agreed and that has become a very bitter fight and I can explain what that's about. The reason the Genius Act and the
22 minutes, 47 seconds
Clarity Act are are very very important is um there has been a push to say we don't want central bank digital currency
22 minutes, 56 seconds
because we don't want the central banks putting the banks out of business and controlling centrally. What has happened though is now they're doing a form of private, think of it as private CBDC,
23 minutes, 8 seconds
stable coins and digital assets and tokens that can essentially implement the same social credit and control system but through private issuers. So,
23 minutes, 19 seconds
so let me turn to stable coins for a second because the Genius Act has passed. They're working on regulations that'll come out at the end of this year, the beginning of next year.
23 minutes, 29 seconds
If a stable coin is issued, it's a crypto issued on a distributive ledger and it's basically the money that is
23 minutes, 37 seconds
received to buy the stable coin is reinvested in either treasury bills that are 93 days or shorter in maturity or highquality bank deposits. So cash. So,
23 minutes, 48 seconds
so basically it's 100% collateralized.
23 minutes, 50 seconds
So when you have a stable coin, it's like having a little treasury bill. Okay? A dollar of treasury bill. Okay?
23 minutes, 58 seconds
So think of yourself as using a treasury bill.
24 minutes
So it's not so different from US currency.
24 minutes, 2 seconds
No, no. It it's certainly in terms of value. And the reason you call it a stable coin is you're hoping um you know
24 minutes, 10 seconds
theoretically a stable coin could be done in other currencies as well, but you're hoping that a dollar stable coin will not be volatile in price the way
24 minutes, 17 seconds
many cryptos are volatile in price. So it's it's designed so the price is stable. Okay. So, so one of the hopes
24 minutes, 25 seconds
and one of the reasons that we're issuing stable coins is as foreign purchases of treasuries diminish, we're
24 minutes, 32 seconds
hoping that you can put out stable coins worldwide and attract retail money into the treasury market. So, the
24 minutes, 40 seconds
wholesale market is rejecting you. And so, now through the mobile payment systems, you can put out stable coins.
24 minutes, 46 seconds
So, it's another way of propping up US debt.
24 minutes, 48 seconds
It's another way of preserving US dominance, dollar dominance. Okay? and and but the danger of course is there
24 minutes, 56 seconds
are two dangers. One is if everyone in your town in Maine pulls their money
25 minutes, 4 seconds
out of the bank and puts it on their mobile payment stable coin, all the loan market and the credit creation market in your town is going to collapse,
25 minutes, 14 seconds
right? Because they're leaving your local economy, right?
25 minutes, 18 seconds
And going into the Treasury market to finance the Feds. So what Amazon did to retailers in towns, stablecoin could do to banks in towns,
25 minutes, 28 seconds
to community banks and credit unions. Now they can also issue stable coins,
25 minutes, 32 seconds
but again that money is going to go into the treasury market rather than than you know multiply on Main Street. There's been a real quiet war over the last 20,
25 minutes, 43 seconds
30 years because the federal regulators have pushed the community banks and credit unions to not make loans on Main Street, but put their money in the
25 minutes, 52 seconds
investment portfolio where they do buy treasuries. Okay? And this is all part of getting your local economy more and more dependent on federal money.
26 minutes, 1 second
I'm seeing this all to there only like four trends in the modern world and there this is one of them. power money centralized go to the national capital
26 minutes, 10 seconds
away from the provinces. It's like it's happening everywhere.
26 minutes, 13 seconds
Well, but here's the thing, and this is the little secret to real solutions. If if you look at the last 50 years or 70
26 minutes, 20 seconds
years since World War II, every effort has been made through taxes or credit or various financial mechanisms to get all
26 minutes, 28 seconds
the money to go into central and come back down.
26 minutes, 32 seconds
Right. And and now if you go into most communities, so America's 3,100 counties, most counties, 40 or 50% of
26 minutes, 40 seconds
the income in that county is coming through, you know, it goes up to Wall Street or Washington and comes back down. And so you end up with more and
26 minutes, 48 seconds
more central control. Now, here's the little secret. It's economically insane. If you could do more money going around, you could make the pie much bigger.
26 minutes, 57 seconds
Well, of course, just like power transmission, the longer you have to move power along lines, the more power you lose.
27 minutes, 4 seconds
Exactly. And technology should advantage the little guy, not the big guy.
27 minutes, 8 seconds
So, you know, go back to But can you just pause there? That Thank you for I mean, it just shows how old I am that I know what you're talking about cuz that was the original promise,
27 minutes, 16 seconds
right? That I mean, it's hard to believe now,
27 minutes, 18 seconds
but 30 years ago when the internet was being introduced to the public,
27 minutes, 22 seconds
the idea was this is empowering for the for the average person. So when that happened that was when my company this was the fight I had with the department
27 minutes, 30 seconds
of justice. We built software tools. We had one software tool called community IPO in a box to help everybody locally
27 minutes, 37 seconds
facilitate equity you know stock markets for local areas. But we build a software tool called community wizard and you
27 minutes, 44 seconds
could dial in and say my neighborhood is my county or my zip code or my congressional district and you could map out the sources and uses of all federal
27 minutes, 54 seconds
credit and money in your community. So you could get the equivalent of a financial statement for the jurisdictions in which you vote for
28 minutes, 1 second
political representation. So you could really hold your congressman accountable because you could see a financial statement for your jurisdiction. And the
28 minutes, 10 seconds
Department of Justice seized our offices, seized the software, put it took me six years to get it out from the courts. And when I got it out from the
28 minutes, 19 seconds
courts, it was missing all the most important pieces.
28 minutes, 22 seconds
It's funny they'd want to discourage accountability.
28 minutes, 26 seconds
Well, what I discovered when I was in the in the administration was that if the local business people
28 minutes, 33 seconds
could see how the money works around them, they could get back in the game.
28 minutes, 38 seconds
So, you know, we regularly saw I told you this before, we regularly saw communities where HUD was spending 250,000 per unit to build public housing
28 minutes, 47 seconds
and 50,000 would buy and rehab a single family foreclosed property in the same fourb block area. So, um, and I I
28 minutes, 56 seconds
literally, um, but it was the same with jobs. We were paying a contractor in Washington 100, 125 per hour to do
29 minutes, 3 seconds
something that we could keep local. You you didn't need to send it all the way up there. No.
29 minutes, 8 seconds
So that a big contractor could corporate contractor could do it,
29 minutes, 12 seconds
you know. So there was a great story during the the financial crisis where a woman lost her job, very responsible, hardworking, couldn't find another job,
29 minutes, 21 seconds
ultimately had to take food stamps,
29 minutes, 23 seconds
which was a matter of great shame for her. And so she had a problem with him and called tech support and got a woman
29 minutes, 30 seconds
in India working for JP Morgan Chase who had at that point 37 of the state food stamp, you know, uh, programs they were
29 minutes, 39 seconds
managing. and and she said, "Wait a minute, you know, I could do this job and if I was doing this job, I wouldn't need food stamps. So why are we sending
29 minutes, 47 seconds
it to India with a big markup for a big bank when I could just do this job and then I wouldn't need food stamps?"
29 minutes, 53 seconds
It's hard not to see malice in there somewhere. Oh, there's total malice. So, I mean,
29 minutes, 57 seconds
here's the thing. If if I have a a publicly traded stock and it's trading
30 minutes, 4 seconds
at a price earnings ratio of 10, just to make it simple, if I make a dollar, my stock goes up $10, right? Okay. Now, if
30 minutes, 14 seconds
government intervenes to take a million dollars of income to ma, you know, that
30 minutes, 20 seconds
Main Street is making and shift it into a publicly traded stock, that stock will go up 10 million. What's the biggest source of political contributions?
30 minutes, 32 seconds
Capital gains. Right? So, so the more I shift money out of Main Street into publicly traded stocks, the more I get
30 minutes, 40 seconds
the pop on the stock and the more investors of real estate capital gains or or company enterprise capital gains,
30 minutes, 49 seconds
the more money they'll give. So, you know, so in Washington, there's this giant sucking sound.
30 minutes, 56 seconds
So let's go back to the pandemic. Remember the pandemic? I've Yeah, vaguely.
31 minutes, 1 second
You shut down Main Street, which is not publicly traded. And suddenly all their market share has to go to publicly traded stocks, either online companies
31 minutes, 10 seconds
or the big box stores. So, I'll never forget there's a wonderful moment during the pandemic when um Rick Santilly is
31 minutes, 19 seconds
standing on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange and he's saying and and Andrew Sorcin is up in the studio and Santilly says, "This makes no sense. I'm
31 minutes, 27 seconds
going to the mall. All the little companies are closed. Costco's next door and the the parking lot's packed and Costco's packed. It doesn't make any
31 minutes, 36 seconds
sense. Why are the little guys have to be shut down for the virus?" you know, it's okay next door, you know,
31 minutes, 41 seconds
because the parking lot's packed. People are all congregated in, you know,
31 minutes, 45 seconds
they're all together. And Sorcin says the virus can't go in Costco. It can't go in the big box stores. That's science.
31 minutes, 53 seconds
Well, cuz Sorcin believes in science.
31 minutes, 57 seconds
But but here's the thing. If you look at how much money was made by Wall Street,
32 minutes, 3 seconds
it was a giant sucking sound of market share into publicly traded stocks and then the capital gains go back around,
32 minutes, 10 seconds
you know, for the political contributions. So, I told you I have an online book that explains how this works. Um, which I've tried to publish
32 minutes, 19 seconds
three times and each time it's gotten sabotaged the last time they threatened somebody in my family. So, I backed off and never pub. It's online. It's in it's
32 minutes, 28 seconds
it's you know it's not censored but I've never put it in hardback and I'm waiting for everybody to die and then I'll publish it again. I'll try again. I'll
32 minutes, 35 seconds
try for the fourth time. But it it shows you exactly how the game works on a private prison company that my old firm
32 minutes, 42 seconds
had financed. So I show you I get out all the SEC documents and I show you the game and how it works, how it translates into capital gains and that

Chapter 6: The Evils of the Privatized Prison System

32 minutes, 51 seconds
could you just summarize it really quickly?
32 minutes, 53 seconds
Yeah. So, we started a movement in the early '9s to privatize a portion of the prison system.
33 minutes, 1 second
I remember. And it's economically insane.
33 minutes, 4 seconds
I think I was for it for the record. I I've had so many dumb positions over the years that I it's I think I was for
33 minutes, 10 seconds
that. So at the time that I I wrote uh the analysis, the best figures I could get from general accounting office was
33 minutes, 19 seconds
it was costing the whole criminal justice system was costing 154,000 per person per year. And one of the reasons
33 minutes, 27 seconds
was the construction of all these private facilities is one of my theories. But what I showed you was the stocks were trading on a per bed basis.
33 minutes, 37 seconds
Okay? So, if you could get a law passed that uh mandated longer sentences, the stocks would go up because you get to get a bigger PE per bed. Okay.
33 minutes, 49 seconds
Come on.
33 minutes, 49 seconds
Yeah. And literally what they did was they started the companies and then they started a program to drop SWAT teams
33 minutes, 58 seconds
into neighborhoods to literally drop in and round up kids, you know, who could be dealing drugs or not. You know, who was stealing the bringing in the drugs?
34 minutes, 6 seconds
it wasn't the kids and um and literally they cut off in DC they cut off the money to the public defenders office so
34 minutes, 13 seconds
the kids had to all cop please and that would stuff the prisons and at the same time what they did is they created a
34 minutes, 21 seconds
company at the department of justice called Unicor that could market prison labor to corporations for tiny dollars
34 minutes, 28 seconds
no really it's a slavery system obviously it's a slavery system and the book describes it's called Dylan Reed and the aristocracy of stock profits and
34 minutes, 36 seconds
explains how the whole system works, who made money, how they made money. And what's sad about it is, you know, my my
34 minutes, 45 seconds
guess from doing that analysis is that many of the people making money on it are the same people who are making money
34 minutes, 53 seconds
bringing in the drugs and I describe all those things. So, um, and and the power of the book, it took me a year to write
35 minutes, 1 second
it and I had a I was living in Montana and you couldn't walk in my house. You could only step on piles of SEC
35 minutes, 8 seconds
documents and there are literally hundreds of thousands of pages of documentation behind it because I had to prove all the different pieces of the
35 minutes, 16 seconds
financial ecosystem. And so, we put up all the documentation. And it was, you know, it was quite astonishing because
35 minutes, 24 seconds
it really helped people who had trouble understanding the growing central control. It helped them to see that it was very intentional. The saddest fact
35 minutes, 32 seconds
of the moment we're living in is that the American dream itself is evaporating for a lot of young people. And how do you know that? Cuz they can't afford to
35 minutes, 40 seconds
buy homes. Owning property, something that was completely normal. It was America just a generation ago is now a
35 minutes, 48 seconds
dream for so many people. People are using buy now pay later apps to buy food, dinner on credit. So what you're
35 minutes, 57 seconds
watching is the slow failure of systems that don't work anymore. This isn't nostalgia. Things really are getting worse and you can feel it. So for nearly
36 minutes, 6 seconds
80 years, the US dollar sat at the center of our economic system. After World War II, the world trusted the dollar because it trusted the strength and the discipline of American leaders.
36 minutes, 16 seconds
And that trust sadly is fading. You can see it when central banks are doing right now. Quietly at historic levels across the world, they are buying gold,
36 minutes, 24 seconds
not ETFs, but actual gold and putting it in actual vaults. That's what China is doing, dumping treasuries, buying gold.
36 minutes, 30 seconds
So when the people closest to the system are hedging against the dollar, you should probably pay attention.
36 minutes, 36 seconds
They are going to what they've always gone to from the beginning of recorded history. Gold. Owning today is not a radical move. Oh, it's so radical you're buying gold. You'd be insane not to.
36 minutes, 47 seconds
It's what we do in my house. And we really mean it. We mean it enough to found Battalion Metals. Battalion Metals
36 minutes, 55 seconds
gives Americans a straightforward way to buy fairric gold and silver, not at 50 points above spot, but like three points
37 minutes, 3 seconds
above spot, right to your house. We will deliver it to you. It's the quickest,
37 minutes, 8 seconds
fastest, most reliable way to do it. And Battalion Metals has access to the most stable supply of actual metals you're going to find in this country. Period.
37 minutes, 18 seconds
Battalion.com/tucker is the address. Go there to learn more,
37 minutes, 22 seconds
including how to convert your IRA into a precious metals IRA. That's battalion.com/tucker.

Chapter 7: What Crisis Will Justify Digital Currency?

37 minutes, 31 seconds
in order to implement any big societywide change and I think your co uh example is a perfect one. You really
37 minutes, 39 seconds
have to construct a crisis and the change is a solution to whatever the problem you created is. So like if you I don't know want to create a new federal
37 minutes, 48 seconds
agency, you probably need a 9/11. If you want to make biometrics the rule, you probably have to push AI and make the
37 minutes, 55 seconds
case that like we don't know who anybody is because everything's a deep fake. So you have to have biometrics and you know in your Twitter handle etc. What will be
38 minutes, 5 seconds
the crisis that justifies digital currency?
38 minutes, 10 seconds
So let me step back for a second because what I see is the crisis is only the apex and the third act.
38 minutes, 20 seconds
To get the crisis working you have to get thousands of things in place. So for example coming into CO I don't think you
38 minutes, 29 seconds
could have done CO without for example getting federal accounting standards advisory board
38 minutes, 37 seconds
statement 56 into place in 2018 and then having the central bankers meet and approve the going direct familiar with
38 minutes, 44 seconds
that. I will I I would be delighted to tell you about that because this is one of those things that sounds
38 minutes, 51 seconds
very boring that is like a you know a 10 richtor earthquake. So for many many
38 minutes, 59 seconds
years there was a group of us who were uh trying to bring as much transparency
39 minutes, 6 seconds
to the fact that there was serious criminality going on in the federal accounts and $21 trillion was missing
39 minutes, 15 seconds
and and that was happening because the federal government refused to obey the financial management laws. So they are required, you're a citizen, you pay your
39 minutes, 23 seconds
taxes, they're required to give you, you know, you give them your 1040 and they're required to give you back and says, "Okay, here's how we spent your
39 minutes, 31 seconds
money." And that's required in the Constitution, the financial management laws. The federal government has has since the mid '90s been in complete
39 minutes, 39 seconds
violation of those laws. So there was a lot of pressure that was brought to bear when Dr. Mark Skidmore with Ceri
39 minutes, 46 seconds
published his report on the 21 trillion missing and and so pressure pressure pressure. The DoD
39 minutes, 54 seconds
keeps saying, you know, we can't pass an audit. We're not going to pass an audit.
39 minutes, 58 seconds
And then 2018, remember the Kavanaaugh hearings very well. Okay. Everybody was very busy, you know,
40 minutes, 4 seconds
watching the Kavanaaugh hearings. The federal government, the House, the Senate, and the White House altogether,
40 minutes, 11 seconds
October 2018,
40 minutes, 14 seconds
published an administrative policy called Fazby 56 that basically said in
40 minutes, 21 seconds
violation of the Constitution, the financial management laws and the financial management regulations that they could set up a secret group of
40 minutes, 29 seconds
people by a secret process and pull things out of the the government's financial statements and keep them secret. not just for the 24 covered
40 minutes, 37 seconds
agencies but for 150 plus related governmental entities and when you take in the national security and
40 minutes, 44 seconds
classification laws that means also that the big banks and contractors working for the federal government can do the same right that's delayed and JP Morgan too
40 minutes, 52 seconds
right and what that means is basically the entire large cap stock and bond market in the United States is secret
41 minutes, 2 seconds
the disclosure is meaningless it doesn't mean anything. And if you if you go to salary, we have a missing money section
41 minutes, 10 seconds
and we have extensive not only descriptions of fazby 56, but what it means to investors.
41 minutes, 16 seconds
On what grounds could the federal government declare private businesses, the whole of itself,
41 minutes, 23 seconds
all kind of offlimits to disclosure?
41 minutes, 25 seconds
They have no legal basis because this is in violation of the constitution, the financial management laws and the financial
41 minutes, 33 seconds
uh management regulations. We have a section at missing money with seven briefing papers. It took me two years
41 minutes, 40 seconds
working with our attorneys to do it that describe all the financial management laws of the United States. so that you can see and luckily one of the
41 minutes, 49 seconds
interesting things that happened when Fazby 56 passes Matt Taibbe picked up on it and wrote an article about it and he
41 minutes, 57 seconds
it's funny he emailed me he said okay I got the briefing papers thank god because it's very you know if you're someone like Matt Taibi it's very hard
42 minutes, 5 seconds
to sit down and learn the financial management laws of the United States that's why we did the briefing papers so that any reporter could you know get
42 minutes, 13 seconds
into this and and master it in a reasonable period Was this a or just a regulation? Was this is voted on?
42 minutes, 19 seconds
This is administrative policy. So in administr in law there's the constitution, there's the financial management laws, there's a regulation
42 minutes, 27 seconds
and then there's the administrative policy. So this is the total inversion.
42 minutes, 31 seconds
This is an administrative policy saying we can break the constitution, the financial management laws and the regulations by administrative policy.
42 minutes, 40 seconds
But the House, the Senate, and the um and the White House all agreed. So, it was a joint and they tried to sneak it
42 minutes, 49 seconds
through. And I was very lucky because um there was a guy at the time who worked for the American Federation of Scientists who literally read the Fed
42 minutes, 57 seconds
Federal Register. And I had signed up as for his newsletter because I didn't want to, but I trusted him to do it. And he would keep an eye on the black budget issues of a guy named Steve Aftergood,
43 minutes, 8 seconds
very good. and and he in his newsletter he read it and he understood what it meant because it's so boring nobody would understand
43 minutes, 16 seconds
that's exactly right what's not boring and I just I'm sorry to keep interrupting you but I don't want anything to fall through the cracks the black budget issues what black budget what is the black budget and what

Chapter 8: The Dark Origins of Israel and the Black Budget

43 minutes, 24 seconds
was he looking at and why should we care so so we have an overt economy we have a covert economy the covert economy is
43 minutes, 32 seconds
driven by a series of pools of money and cash flows the first one um uh Joseph
43 minutes, 41 seconds
Pharaoh calls it the hidden system of finance. The first one started with all the seizures during the wars. So during
43 minutes, 49 seconds
World War II, a great amount of assets were seized and that created a pool of money that was available for covert
43 minutes, 56 seconds
operations. So there's a wonderful story in Christopher Simpson's first book about how the money they had seized had
44 minutes, 4 seconds
been moved into the exchange stabilization fund which is the mother of all slush funds that's managed by the secretary of treas managed by the New York Fed for the secretary of treasury.
44 minutes, 14 seconds
So the money had been moved in and the Dulles brothers are sitting at Sullivan and Cromwell and and they use that money
44 minutes, 21 seconds
to rig the 48 elections in uh in Europe at the request of the Vatican. Anyway,
44 minutes, 27 seconds
so so so this is the you know so we have these this seizure pool. Then what happened uh
44 minutes, 36 seconds
we passed the national security act in 47 and then in 49 we passed the CIA act which was very fractious. It literally
44 minutes, 45 seconds
took assassinating foresttol to get that done and who was thrown out of a window.
44 minutes, 51 seconds
Yeah. Yeah. So that's Bethesda Naval Hospital. He'd been the secretary of war and he was very opposed to the creation
44 minutes, 58 seconds
of the black budget and the creation of Israel. And so who killed him? And why don't people understand that the the defense
45 minutes, 6 seconds
secretary secretary of war was was murdered?
45 minutes, 9 seconds
So I don't think one in a 100 people know that.
45 minutes, 12 seconds
So we you know he was a Dylan Reed partner. So I knew that because I used to stare at his painting in the partner's boardroom and or dining room
45 minutes, 21 seconds
and they would you know they would always train you by telling you if you're not careful in Washington this.
45 minutes, 26 seconds
It's funny. There are two books that I I have read on it, but both of which cost like a hundred bucks a piece on eBay because they're it's just Have you read David Martin's book?
45 minutes, 34 seconds
I don't know. I have two. They're in my office. I read them.
45 minutes, 37 seconds
You want to read David Martin? We have a great interview with Dave Martin. And let me finish.
45 minutes, 42 seconds
Both were written in the 60s. But really quickly, do I mean his murder his murder was part of a deal to get the 49 act passed is my theory.
45 minutes, 53 seconds
Okay. and um and that and to create the creation of Israel. So it was both the black budget and Israel that were and they needed to get him out of the way.
46 minutes, 4 seconds
So um we have a big interview on it in salary and I've looked very into it very deeply. I was very interested in Forsol.
46 minutes, 12 seconds
Anyway, so the but the 49 act was the CIA act. So you have the National Security Act 47 the CIA act. What the
46 minutes, 20 seconds
CIA act authorized was the ability to appropriate money to different agencies and then claw it back secretly to a
46 minutes, 28 seconds
black budget. So now we have the hidden system of finance with the pools of seized money and we add to that a layer
46 minutes, 36 seconds
of money that can be appropriated and clawed and used secretly only subject to very limited oversight by a a committee
46 minutes, 45 seconds
in Congress. So, so the appropriations committees wouldn't see that money, only this one committee that oversaw the
46 minutes, 52 seconds
black budget. Okay? And and if you look at those two pools, the next step
46 minutes, 58 seconds
happened in 81 when Bush comes in. Bush comes in as vice president under Reagan and his deal with the Reagan folks
47 minutes, 7 seconds
during the campaign was he'll because he'd run the CIA, he'll run intelligence and enforcement. and the Bushies were
47 minutes, 15 seconds
very very good at the nuts and bolts of of sort of the mechanics of government and the legal system and money. He got
47 minutes, 24 seconds
an executive order done that said essentially you can use this secret money, the black budget money, and you
47 minutes, 33 seconds
can use it to hire corporate contractors who can now do highly classified projects. Now, let me explain what this
47 minutes, 40 seconds
means as a financial matter. So we were talking about stock market going up. You can now take the most secret powerful
47 minutes, 48 seconds
technology in the world and pay corporations to learn and end up owning that technology
47 minutes, 56 seconds
secretly in a way that drives their stock to the moon. So now you've correct connected the US Treasury market
48 minutes, 2 seconds
directly like a pipe into companies and and drive their stock up almost to an
48 minutes, 10 seconds
infinite amount. It's quite as a financial mechanism. It's one of the most powerful things that ever happened in our history.
48 minutes, 20 seconds
What percent? So, we have the federal budget which we can look up online. Um,
48 minutes, 26 seconds
but after FASB 56, it's totally meaningless.
48 minutes, 29 seconds
What? And okay, so it's meaningless because we don't know where the money is actually going. Is that why?
48 minutes, 33 seconds
No, because the most important pieces of the money,
48 minutes, 37 seconds
we don't know what's been taken out. We don't know what's been made secret.
48 minutes, 41 seconds
So, so you can see what's there and you can see, for example, I can see by looking at the HHS budget how much we're
48 minutes, 50 seconds
spending to poison America. So, you know, I can see a lot. A lot.
48 minutes, 54 seconds
A lot. Yeah. No, it's huge. And, you know, we're bankrupting the country,
48 minutes, 58 seconds
poisoning America. But, you know, I don't know what's not there.
49 minutes, 4 seconds
In other words, a secret group of people by a secret process have taken out whatever they want. And I don't know what they've taken out. I I don't know.
49 minutes, 12 seconds
Doesn't mean anything to me.
49 minutes, 14 seconds
I mean, would it be possible to audit the federal budget?
49 minutes, 18 seconds
You would have to audit the bank statements. You would have to audit people say, "We want to audit the Fed."
49 minutes, 26 seconds
No, you want to audit the federal accounts at the New York Fed and you want to audit the exchange stabilization
49 minutes, 34 seconds
fund at the New York Fed. That's what you want to audit. And what you want to find out is where did the 21 trillion go
49 minutes, 41 seconds
or come in? You know, all all the the federal government has refused to balance its accounts since the mid90s.
49 minutes, 50 seconds
And we know that there are inexplicable undocumentable adjustments of enormous amounts. And the only way you can figure
49 minutes, 59 seconds
out what happened is to go into those bank accounts and figure out what came in and what went out and and to actually
50 minutes, 6 seconds
map out the actual cash and and you have to do it not just in the you know so the New York Fed is depository for the US government. So you
50 minutes, 14 seconds
have to do it in those accounts but you also have to look at the borrowing accounts and the slush fund accounts which is the exchange stabilization. Has anyone attempted to do any of that?
50 minutes, 24 seconds
So, so, uh, you know, Ran Paul and his father and Congressman Massie have talked about auditing,
50 minutes, 32 seconds
um, the accounts, and it's funny because Massie and I were at a great conference once, and he was talking about shutting down the Fed. And I kept saying, "No,
50 minutes, 40 seconds
no, you don't shut it down until you get the 21 trillion back, otherwise they get to keep the 21 trillion." So, Thomas was
50 minutes, 47 seconds
up giving a wonderful speech and he said, "Uh, you know, I think we should shut down the Fed." And then he looked at me and he said, "After we get Catherine's money back."

Chapter 9: Why Are They Trying to Destroy Thomas Massie?

50 minutes, 56 seconds
Can I ask just quick about Massie? Um he's obviously gotten into a very personal um altercation with the president ongoing. There's the question
51 minutes, 4 seconds
of Apac. He was one of the few people uh who didn't take Apac money, but the all-out effort to destroy him, I just feel like there's something more than
51 minutes, 12 seconds
just getting in a tiff with Trump for not taking Apac money.
51 minutes, 15 seconds
So here's what's at the heart of Massiey's fight. Yeah.
51 minutes, 20 seconds
And you know, are we going to be run by the rule of law or are we going to be run by a secret governance system
51 minutes, 29 seconds
essentially consolidating things into what what I would call the mega rich who are above the law? You know, are we you
51 minutes, 36 seconds
know, this is fundamentally about is there going to be the rule of law or not? And and you know, the the thing I
51 minutes, 43 seconds
love about Massie, he's an engineer. And if you talk with him or listen to him about a wide range of subjects, you
51 minutes, 53 seconds
know, starting with food and agriculture, he is ruthlessly focused on what is productive, on what makes
52 minutes
economic sense. And what he knows is that the centralization of control is
52 minutes, 8 seconds
destroying productivity. It's destroying wealth. And he knows that, you know,
52 minutes, 14 seconds
whether it's family wealth or community wealth, you cannot you cannot have a civilization,
52 minutes, 22 seconds
you know, you cannot have a civilization if if you have a society that is this enormously destructive of individual
52 minutes, 30 seconds
sovereignty and individual and family wealth. And so he's literally, if you look in all these different areas, he's
52 minutes, 38 seconds
just constantly moving out, making, you know, trying to do what makes sense. And um and his understanding because he's
52 minutes, 46 seconds
been a a entrepreneur and a small businessman and a farmer and a rancher.
52 minutes, 51 seconds
He understands the the economics bottom up. One of my favorite Thomas Massie stories I heard on your show, which was an amazing interview. I always make
53 minutes
young people watch at least the second half of your interview with Massie, the off-grid part.
53 minutes, 4 seconds
Yeah. When he's talking about how he figures he he gets he he he busts the he's the county mayor essentially and he
53 minutes, 13 seconds
bust the prisoners out of the jail to help him install a new hot water heater cuz they can't afford to buy, you know,
53 minutes, 19 seconds
they have to buy a used one. They can't afford to buy a new one. Okay. So that's, you know, that's exactly the story. That's a building well story,
53 minutes, 28 seconds
right? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. What's what's happened is so sad. I It's hard to believe.
53 minutes, 35 seconds
It's one of the finest people I've ever met in Washington and uh it's just gone in this direction that's not helping anybody.
53 minutes, 43 seconds
You think?
53 minutes, 46 seconds
Well, you know, I I tend to have a pretty shallow analysis. So, when I say it's helping no one, I I I'm not confident helping no one.
53 minutes, 53 seconds
Our number one problem is the secret governance system.
53 minutes, 56 seconds
I agree with that. and he's going right at the heart of the issue. Not because he he wanted to, but because he's trying to do all these fundamentally productive
54 minutes, 4 seconds
things in five or 10 different none of us wanted any of these fights.
54 minutes, 7 seconds
Actually, I think it's fair to say he didn't really want these fights either,
54 minutes, 11 seconds
right? Well, here's the thing. So if I was, you know, if suddenly tomorrow, uh,

Chapter 10: How Dual Citizenship Fuels Secret Governance

54 minutes, 16 seconds
you know, I got I was in charge, you know, I was the dictator in charge,
54 minutes, 21 seconds
first thing I do is I'd outlaw dual citizenship,
54 minutes, 24 seconds
you know, in an important governmental position, obviously,
54 minutes, 27 seconds
right? And and you know, and that goes to the heart of the secret governance system and backdoor control.
54 minutes, 34 seconds
How does dual citizenship go to the heart of secret governance? becau because the secret governance system
54 minutes, 41 seconds
controls through allowing people to operate above the law or have different incentives that put them outside of the
54 minutes, 50 seconds
system. And I think the dual citizenship is part of that of that process.
54 minutes, 56 seconds
At the most obvious level, you can be indicted for a crime in the United States and flee to the other country whose passport you hold.
55 minutes, 3 seconds
Right? So look at the sex offenders who literally have have done terrible things
55 minutes, 10 seconds
with children in this country who've fleeed to Israel and are protected.
55 minutes, 14 seconds
Dozens and dozens and dozens and dozens of them, not just a few. We had a high-profile example of this recently,
55 minutes, 20 seconds
but it's been going on a really long time. That's the obvious, that's the most shocking kind of wait, how do you get to, you know, try to molest a child
55 minutes, 28 seconds
and then flee to our closest ally and stay safe? But you're saying that this same principle applies to financial crimes and governance.
55 minutes, 35 seconds
So I suspect one of the things I've never known is what is the full benefits of dual citizenship, but I suspect there are financial benefits as well.
55 minutes, 43 seconds
Tell me what that means.
55 minutes, 45 seconds
So it it could mean many things. It it could be the ability to keep money in Israel or through Israel off books, not
55 minutes, 53 seconds
subject to taxes. It it could mean many things. It could just mean, you know,
55 minutes, 58 seconds
financial rewards that are that are completely, you know, on the face of it legal. But I'll give you an example.
56 minutes, 4 seconds
We've just seen two arrests in the in the UK coming out of the Epstein files,
56 minutes, 10 seconds
not for anything to do with sex, but the fact that they had that they had compromised state secrets, right? So,
56 minutes, 19 seconds
but presumably they did that in exchange for, you know, various benefits of being part of the network.
56 minutes, 28 seconds
The what is the network?

Chapter 11: The Epstein Network

56 minutes, 31 seconds
In that case, I would well I would call it the Epstein network, but I'd really call it the Royal Shield network. So big picture the the takeaway from my
56 minutes, 39 seconds
perspective from the Epstein a cursory reading of two million pages is that um there's a government or a governance
56 minutes, 47 seconds
structure above governments. So I would say that there are investment networks and if you look
56 minutes, 56 seconds
at what Epstein there's if you come to solaria we have a commentary up called was Jeffrey Epstein the father of programmable money which I believe you
57 minutes, 5 seconds
know the answer is yes or certainly one of them um and if you read we're pointing to a Substack series written by
57 minutes, 12 seconds
a guy who writes anonymously under the the name ESC as in escape ESC and it's a
57 minutes, 19 seconds
marvelous uh thing very well documented back to the to the Epstein files that we've now received describing how
57 minutes, 27 seconds
Epstein who I believe was laundering money was allocating that money to all these different projects that help
57 minutes, 34 seconds
develop crypto and programmable money and um but what he describes in the process of one of those substacks is
57 minutes, 42 seconds
traditionally historically for the last 150 years how the raw shield networks and I would include Rockefeller and Ross
57 minutes, 49 seconds
Shield as sort of central banking network together. how they operate both the family and then people who are sort
57 minutes, 56 seconds
of uh s calls him the switchboard the agents who sort of coordinate between the different houses and and the network
58 minutes, 5 seconds
and it in one sense it's a very informal network but it it because it has the blessing of the central bankers it receives a lot of protection from the
58 minutes, 14 seconds
intelligence agencies and um you know it's a networking function and he does a very good job of describing how it
58 minutes, 21 seconds
operates as is a functional matter and that's ex everything he writes is exactly what I saw in Washington and
58 minutes, 28 seconds
Wall Street. You have a layer of equity pools in and around the central banks that are engaged in trying to
58 minutes, 37 seconds
build forward in a variety of ways and position money and manage risk and they
58 minutes, 43 seconds
are literally increasingly above the law and they don't seem directly tied to any
58 minutes, 51 seconds
particular country. They're sort of above countries.
58 minutes, 54 seconds
Yeah, they're, you know, they're they they can operate within a a country sphere. Um, you know, but Epstein was
59 minutes, 2 seconds
basically global. And if you look at the programmable money and what he was doing to build programmable money that required operation in both Europe, the
59 minutes, 11 seconds
United States and around the world can ask you a question that occurs. So if you China's economy is now bigger than

Chapter 12: Is China a Threat?

59 minutes, 19 seconds
the United States is clearly China is going to be at some point likely the dominant world power. Um I don't necessarily believe that.
59 minutes, 30 seconds
You don't? No.
59 minutes, 30 seconds
Okay. Well, the I the nature of the Chinese government and civilizations seem to make it
59 minutes, 39 seconds
kind of impervious to this sort of stuff. Like China's an ethnostate, right?
59 minutes, 43 seconds
A HanchChinese ethnostate. So, I don't think they're going to be doing a lot of dual citizenship type stuff in China. No.
59 minutes, 51 seconds
And I don't believe the Chinese government is going to allow its authority to be challenged by
59 minutes, 58 seconds
international pools of capital at least in the east because it's going to control the east,
1 hour, 3 seconds
right? I think right.
1 hour, 5 seconds
Um, so China is like a roadblock to these forces. So the question is you
1 hour, 12 seconds
know China was developed by Europe and US capital right and so the question is you know what
1 hour, 21 seconds
obligations does China have to European and US capital and I don't know the answer
1 hour, 29 seconds
China's strength is if you look at what they're doing with technology their innovation and speed is astonishing and
1 hour, 36 seconds
very very impressive and is racing by the United States right right now. Um if you look at their demographic issues and
1 hour, 45 seconds
their um they they have very serious demographic issues and they have a very serious real estate crisis to be managed
1 hour, 54 seconds
that has profound implications with the demographic problem because a lot of the retirement saving was put in real estate
1 hour, 1 minute, 1 second
and now that real estate is down and they have an aging population they've got some real issues. So um they have a
1 hour, 1 minute, 10 seconds
lot to manage and a lot of how they do depends on how successful their Silk Road innovation you know sort of
1 hour, 1 minute, 17 seconds
investments work out for them. So but I'm not convinced that they necessarily have to end up as the dominant world
1 hour, 1 minute, 25 seconds
power. If you if you you know they've worked very hard for the last 10 to 15 years to make their currency
1 hour, 1 minute, 34 seconds
acceptable as one of the basket of reserve currencies and yet if you look at how much has the market share it's
1 hour, 1 minute, 41 seconds
it's um it's limited and I think one reason is the distrust of the Chinese is
1 hour, 1 minute, 49 seconds
extraordinary because they are deeply deeply committed to the superiority of
1 hour, 1 minute, 55 seconds
the Han people. And so if you look at different experiences people have had with the Chinese, I think they have a
1 hour, 2 minutes, 3 seconds
real challenge to build trust. Now the US was able to build that kind of trust.
1 hour, 2 minutes, 8 seconds
Now we're blowing it. So um you know the question is how fast can they build it versus how fast are we going to blow it?
1 hour, 2 minutes, 16 seconds
I want to get back to programmable digital currency really quick. How far are we from like universal adoption in

Chapter 13: Are There Benefits to Stablecoin?

1 hour, 2 minutes, 24 seconds
the west and when when and if that comes what will it mean for like the average person?
1 hour, 2 minutes, 29 seconds
Okay, so let's go back to the clarity act. So stable coins are the you know trading the treasury bills y
1 hour, 2 minutes, 36 seconds
and the I think treasury's hope is that they can attract you know several billion anywhere from 4 to 10 billion
1 hour, 2 minutes, 46 seconds
trillion dollars into the treasury market with this mechanism by offering it globally and and if it's very
1 hour, 2 minutes, 53 seconds
successful at a retail level it's going to pull a lot of money out of local banking systems all over the world.
1 hour, 2 minutes, 58 seconds
What's the advantage to using a stable coin?
1 hour, 3 minutes, 2 seconds
Uh, you know, I can't stable coin proponents will say that it lowers transaction fees, which will
1 hour, 3 minutes, 9 seconds
probably be true internationally, but frankly, I can't think of one reason why I would ever I have no intention of
1 hour, 3 minutes, 16 seconds
using any of them. So, the last thing I would Well, you're against it like philosophically and for, you know, for the reasons you've articulated, but it's
1 hour, 3 minutes, 24 seconds
like Amazon. Amazon's obviously bad, but everyone uses it because there clear benefits. It's like it's cheap, it's fast, right?
1 hour, 3 minutes, 31 seconds
Are there clear benefits to the consumer in this in stable coin?
1 hour, 3 minutes, 34 seconds
So, what will really come down is if you want to use a system on your mobile payment phone, you know, which will be better, Venmo or the stable coin. And
1 hour, 3 minutes, 44 seconds
and it it depends a lot of that depends on what comes out in the negotiation next. And I'll I'll get to that in a
1 hour, 3 minutes, 52 seconds
second. If the fintech firms can offer rewards and interest interest then then they can make it very
1 hour, 4 minutes, 1 second
attractive to use a stable coin and but it's not clear it's not clear how that's going to sort out.
1 hour, 4 minutes, 8 seconds
Sounds like the US government needs the stable coin in order to keep treasuries selling.
1 hour, 4 minutes, 16 seconds
You know if if you look at how much they say they're hoping to get. not that it it it's not going to make the big difference.
1 hour, 4 minutes, 24 seconds
Okay. Now, let's talk about asset tokens cuz that's where the big float is going to come. So, uh the Clarity Act is what
1 hour, 4 minutes, 33 seconds
is is creating the as as the Genius Act created the framework for stable coins.
1 hour, 4 minutes, 39 seconds
The Clarity Act and and its Senate version is creating the framework for digital assets and digital tokens. Now,
1 hour, 4 minutes, 47 seconds
Larry Frink and Black Rockck have said they're planning on trading all stocks and bonds using tokens or digital
1 hour, 4 minutes, 55 seconds
assets. So, they have not been clear operationally exact exactly how this is going to work. But what it means is this
1 hour, 5 minutes, 2 seconds
is going to be, you know, potentially 10020 trillion market if they do it. And what that means is they want to be able
1 hour, 5 minutes, 11 seconds
to trade all financial assets worldwide on a distributive ledger that can be turned into programmable money. Now, if
1 hour, 5 minutes, 19 seconds
you talk to the people who are issuing stable coins now or working on the Clarity Act, they say, "Oh, we would never do that. That's CBDC." But in
1 hour, 5 minutes, 28 seconds
fact, if you look at the stable coin bill, the Genius Act, it is set up, and we have a big article about this on
1 hour, 5 minutes, 35 seconds
Soleri, it is set up so that all stable coin issuers have to plug into the Treasury's pipe where the Treasury
1 hour, 5 minutes, 43 seconds
applies its know your customer, money laundering, and sanctions. And if you look at that pipe, that pipe can be
1 hour, 5 minutes, 51 seconds
integrated with a full social credit system. So whereas CBDC applies the rules through the central bank, the
1 hour, 5 minutes, 58 seconds
stable coins apply the rules through the treasury. And so if if we are working with states, we have Ceri has model
1 hour, 6 minutes, 7 seconds
legislation on stopping programmable money from being misused. And what we are saying to the states is look, before
1 hour, 6 minutes, 15 seconds
the horse leaves the barn, you have to put the bridal in the saddle on the horse. And so states can outlaw this.
1 hour, 6 minutes, 21 seconds
And we're trying to get the states to make sure cuz Treasury is saying, "Oh,
1 hour, 6 minutes, 24 seconds
we would never do that." Or the stable companies are saying, "Oh, we would never do that." And we're saying, "If you would never do that, you don't mind
1 hour, 6 minutes, 31 seconds
if we pass a law that says you can't do that." Right? Do they mind?
1 hour, 6 minutes, 37 seconds
Uh, they don't seem to be enthusiastic about it. And one of the interesting things is the Clarity Act has a provision that outlaws central bank
1 hour, 6 minutes, 45 seconds
digital currency. It's been thrown out of the Senate version. Apparently, they want to reserve the right of the central bank to do that. And apparently,
1 hour, 6 minutes, 54 seconds
congressmen have said that both in the NDAA and another piece of legislation.
1 hour, 6 minutes, 59 seconds
The speaker, speaker Johnson has stopped their amendments to stop central bank digital currency. They said he promised them that he would outlaw it. You know,
1 hour, 7 minutes, 8 seconds
the president had an executive order promised uh they were believe they were promised that it would be turned into law. Johnson has blocked it both times.
1 hour, 7 minutes, 17 seconds
So, I'm deeply suspicious because if you look at what you can do with stable coins and and digital tokens and digital
1 hour, 7 minutes, 25 seconds
assets, you can implement all programmable money, but if you leave the authority open to do CBDC, at some
1 hour, 7 minutes, 32 seconds
point, the central banks can come along once the system has gotten going. And so, my attitude is, look, if you guys say you're not going to do this, we can outlaw it now. Again,
1 hour, 7 minutes, 42 seconds
put the bridal and the, you know, the saddle on the horse before you leave the barn. and the barn. You know, if you end up with 250 trillion outstanding and you haven't put the bridal and saddle on,
1 hour, 7 minutes, 52 seconds
you got a problem.
1 hour, 7 minutes, 54 seconds
What would be the effect if we wind up with digital programmable currency?
1 hour, 8 minutes
So, if we wind up with a 100% digital system, no cash, no paper money,
1 hour, 8 minutes, 9 seconds
we're moving there fast.
1 hour, 8 minutes, 10 seconds
We're we're moving there, although we're trying to slow it down. So remember, if you know,
1 hour, 8 minutes, 16 seconds
if if millions of Americans start using cash in size, it can absolutely revolutionize what happens. So I recommend it. But um if we move there,
1 hour, 8 minutes, 30 seconds
then if I want you to not be able to leave your
1 hour, 8 minutes, 37 seconds
home, your money won't work if you leave your home.
1 hour, 8 minutes, 40 seconds
If I want you to uh only be able to eat certain foods and if I want you to be able to eat foods made with insects and not be able to buy
1 hour, 8 minutes, 49 seconds
real meat, your money won't work to buy real meat. If I want you to take a vaccine a month and I mandate vaccines for you and your family, if you don't,
1 hour, 8 minutes, 59 seconds
I'll turn off your money. So, I have complete control of your food, your health care, your spatial travel,
1 hour, 9 minutes, 7 seconds
everything. So you were no longer in a democracy or a democratic republic. You were in a slavery system. If I want your
1 hour, 9 minutes, 16 seconds
kids to leave their home and go to a boarding school where I control their education, if you don't agree, I turn off your money.
1 hour, 9 minutes, 26 seconds
Can I just ask the dumbest question? Why would anybody in authority want that level of control? Why? Like what's the

Chapter 14: The Real Reason They Want to Control You

1 hour, 9 minutes, 34 seconds
impulse there? Why would you want to do that to people?
1 hour, 9 minutes, 37 seconds
With that kind of control, I can bring out phenomenally uh powerful technology without worrying
1 hour, 9 minutes, 45 seconds
about it being weaponized. So, I can bring out breakthrough energy technology and not worry that I can't control how it gets used.
1 hour, 9 minutes, 54 seconds
um I can manage a um a large population in a world where
1 hour, 10 minutes, 2 seconds
technology is changing without losing control. So I can uh a small group of
1 hour, 10 minutes, 9 seconds
people can control the many. Um, and also if I believe that with life science I can live forever or for much longer
1 hour, 10 minutes, 17 seconds
lifetimes, I can either depopulate or control people who are angry that I'm
1 hour, 10 minutes, 24 seconds
living to be 145 and they're not. Um and and I can basically keep them in check
1 hour, 10 minutes, 31 seconds
even though you know so so the mega rich can live a very different luxurious life
1 hour, 10 minutes, 39 seconds
and control or shrink the the rest of the population you know without fear because they have complete control.
1 hour, 10 minutes, 48 seconds
So bottom line in a time of radical technological change which we're living through right now right the obvious the first result is like
1 hour, 10 minutes, 57 seconds
societal chaos and revolutions and wars and that's why I got the bullshiks etc etc the people pushing this technological change or watching it from
1 hour, 11 minutes, 5 seconds
positions of authority know this and so the control grid would allow the transition to whatever this technological future is without the downside of like a bolevik revolution.
1 hour, 11 minutes, 16 seconds
So, you know, in my experience, the people who run the financial system are first and foremost risk managers. Mhm.
1 hour, 11 minutes, 22 seconds
They don't think in terms of making money. They print money out of thin air,
1 hour, 11 minutes, 26 seconds
but but they're very deeply careful about risk and they're very afraid of the guillotine. They're very afraid of the crowd.
1 hour, 11 minutes, 34 seconds
They should be.
1 hour, 11 minutes, 35 seconds
They should be. And but it's hard. It's hard to manage, you know, people. And if you look at at coming into the
1 hour, 11 minutes, 44 seconds
development of digital technology and globalization, they had two choices.
1 hour, 11 minutes, 48 seconds
They could use this technology to build something that allowed explosive new decentralized wealth to be created.
1 hour, 11 minutes, 58 seconds
At which point, how did they make sure they stay in control? Um, especially because you have so much going on that's
1 hour, 12 minutes, 5 seconds
secret. Um, so so how do you stay in control? and and can you create a
1 hour, 12 minutes, 12 seconds
bottomup structure that will behave responsibly? And the hard part of behaving responsibly is
1 hour, 12 minutes, 20 seconds
you as a manager of society have to turn the aircraft carrier before you hit the iceberg. You don't trust the crowd to
1 hour, 12 minutes, 27 seconds
care until you hit the iceberg and then it's too late. So you decide, okay, we need a meritocracy. We can't trust the people. Now I disagree with that, but so that was the model I was working on.
1 hour, 12 minutes, 39 seconds
when I was making all this software. So,
1 hour, 12 minutes, 41 seconds
so I was saying we can have a bottomup structure that does the risk management but builds the explosive wealth and and
1 hour, 12 minutes, 49 seconds
it can work but but then you don't have an Uber class. No, you don't.
1 hour, 12 minutes, 54 seconds
So, so but I think they decided okay the only way we find managing
1 hour, 13 minutes, 1 second
the general population very frustrating and it's back to the red button story.
1 hour, 13 minutes, 5 seconds
we find them very hypocritical and irresponsible and frustrating. We are very frustrated. We are just going to go to complete control. And they had to
1 hour, 13 minutes, 13 seconds
choose one or the other. And and so they chose complete control. The problem is once you you get into complete control,
1 hour, 13 minutes, 22 seconds
you you get a an uber class of people who literally think of themselves as a different species. Yeah. And they may be actually.
1 hour, 13 minutes, 30 seconds
Sorry. Excuse me. Um I have my suspicions. um partly confirmed. But anyway, no, but you're absolutely right. The attitudes change.
1 hour, 13 minutes, 40 seconds
When you go from being an egalitarian society, at least society that sees egalitarianism as the goal, a Christian society, to something else, then the
1 hour, 13 minutes, 48 seconds
attitudes of the people in charge become so bad. I see it.
1 hour, 13 minutes, 51 seconds
Well, but here's what's interesting because I I have had a very unique life.
1 hour, 13 minutes, 55 seconds
And so I've had the privilege of living at the top, in the middle, and the bottom. And what's amazing when you go,
1 hour, 14 minutes, 4 seconds
you know, back and forth between these different groups, the people at the top have no clue why the people at the bottom are behaving the way they're
1 hour, 14 minutes, 12 seconds
behaving. It's just the ignorance between the the different groups is unbelievable.
1 hour, 14 minutes, 17 seconds
It's funny, they um I've spent my whole life in that group and but with you know, sojourns into other groups and the
1 hour, 14 minutes, 24 seconds
people at the top, especially now more than ever, believe that all criticism of them is hate. It's just it's unreasonable. It's just fundamentally
1 hour, 14 minutes, 32 seconds
unreasonable. They hate us because they always hate us because they're hateful people. And that hate is based basically on envy because we're so great. We're so
1 hour, 14 minutes, 40 seconds
successful. We're so smart that you know successful people are always hated because of their success. So, you know what's funny about that?
1 hour, 14 minutes, 48 seconds
It's like those divorces you see where like one person is totally convinced it's the 100% the other person's fault and you're like, "No, it's a marriage.
1 hour, 14 minutes, 56 seconds
It's both your fault." Well, but here's what's funny because you know I live in the United States. I live in Hickory Valley, Tennessee.
1 hour, 15 minutes, 2 seconds
Y and I will tell you, I've said many times if I have to go down the river, I want to go with people from Hickory
1 hour, 15 minutes, 9 seconds
Valley, Tennessee instead of course I agree.
1 hour, 15 minutes, 12 seconds
There's a whole world of people who've got 180 IQ in Silicon Valley and they are stupid as attack because they float
1 hour, 15 minutes, 20 seconds
on it on rigged black budget and federal government money. noticed they have no insight into fundamental economics.
1 hour, 15 minutes, 28 seconds
That's why I love Massie because Massie understands bottomup economics and and these we have such a huge
1 hour, 15 minutes, 37 seconds
you know we have cycled brilliant people through universities and put them into places where they are so divorced from fundamental economics or the math of
1 hour, 15 minutes, 46 seconds
time and money because they are floating on a sea of black budget and government money. I completely agree and it does have a corrosive effect on that class
1 hour, 15 minutes, 54 seconds
and then it reaches its kind of ugliest conclusion with Epstein who like in addition to everything else is like kind of dumb. I read EB are illiterate
1 hour, 16 minutes, 4 seconds
certainly illiterate. I mean I read his emails and I'm like this guy I wouldn't hire someone like that under any circumstance. These are the people who are telling us they're geniuses and we're mad at them because they're so smart. I don't think so.
1 hour, 16 minutes, 13 seconds
Well, but I think they think you know here's the thing.
1 hour, 16 minutes, 19 seconds
They think that many people are stupid because they let them get away with it.
1 hour, 16 minutes, 26 seconds
You know, they there hasn't been the push back and so they the more we allow it to go on, the less they respect. Now, I'll
1 hour, 16 minutes, 34 seconds
tell you something. There was that such a deep point what you just said. There was a magical moment when Pam Bondi was testifying, the attorney

Chapter 15: Should We Be Focused on Epstein or the Dow?

1 hour, 16 minutes, 41 seconds
general was testifying on Epstein and she said, "We should be talking about the Dow being over 50,000."
1 hour, 16 minutes, 48 seconds
Let me correct you. She said over $50,000. Yeah.
1 hour, 16 minutes, 53 seconds
So, um, what does that mean? The Dow at $50,000.
1 hour, 16 minutes, 58 seconds
What she meant was So, I don't know if you're But it means she doesn't know what the Dow is, right? I mean, like, it's not $50,000, is it?
1 hour, 17 minutes, 5 seconds
Right. Right. But but I'd forgotten that she said dollars. But yeah,
1 hour, 17 minutes, 11 seconds
but here here's what was magical about that. So, do you remember the red button story I told you about?
1 hour, 17 minutes, 16 seconds
Yeah. Okay. So, she was basically saying as long as we keep your 401ks up, we can
1 hour, 17 minutes, 25 seconds
do all this stuff and it's okay with you because historically that is the truth. God bless her.
1 hour, 17 minutes, 30 seconds
The problem is no, I'm not, you know, I feel I feel sad for for Pam Bundy. I don't think she's thriving. I don't think she's happy. No,
1 hour, 17 minutes, 38 seconds
I'm not guessing. Uh but,
1 hour, 17 minutes, 41 seconds
you know, live by the Dow, die by the Dow. I mean, so if that's the if that's the measure,
1 hour, 17 minutes, 47 seconds
um if all things are okay in in a bull market, then like what is a bare market?
1 hour, 17 minutes, 54 seconds
What does that suggest? Like, if that's do you know what I mean?
1 hour, 17 minutes, 57 seconds
Right. But here here's the message of what she brought up. If people will allow you to poison and abuse and rape
1 hour, 18 minutes, 6 seconds
their children in exchange for keeping their 401ks up, you have no reason to respect them.
1 hour, 18 minutes, 11 seconds
I I agree and I don't I don't respect them. So I'll say that I I feel the same way.
1 hour, 18 minutes, 15 seconds
Right. So So in in that sense, we're we all got ourselves into this mess together.
1 hour, 18 minutes, 22 seconds
I totally agree with that. I completely agree. I think that about China. I think that about Epstein. there's a lot of,
1 hour, 18 minutes, 30 seconds
you know, hate toward this or that group and it's like, no, no, it's like a marriage. We're all implicated in this,
1 hour, 18 minutes, 35 seconds
right? And here's the most frightening thing that I find because,
1 hour, 18 minutes, 40 seconds
you know, it's one thing to be in your town and make a mess. It's another thing to make a mess and not notice that the enem is at the gate.
1 hour, 18 minutes, 49 seconds
Well, that's right. So if you look at how we've allowed ourselves to fall behind in technology and in national
1 hour, 18 minutes, 58 seconds
security and in all the areas that matter to be strong on the outside, you know, we've put ourselves it's one thing
1 hour, 19 minutes, 7 seconds
to have a corrupt leadership. It's another thing to have a corrupt incompetent leadership. And what I would
1 hour, 19 minutes, 13 seconds
say is our leadership has not done, you know, if you disrespect the hoy paloy and you say, "Okay, I want to be the elite and have total control." Well,
1 hour, 19 minutes, 25 seconds
then you need to be competent at your job, right? And they're not. And the question is why?
1 hour, 19 minutes, 33 seconds
And I vehemently agree with you. I gave this speech at dinner the other night to a bunch of people. Um, you know, every society in history is run by, you know,
1 hour, 19 minutes, 43 seconds
a tiny elite. Often they're foreigners, by the way. That's true now in millions, many different countries, right?
1 hour, 19 minutes, 50 seconds
I mean, El Salvador is run by a Palestinian. Peru was run by a Japanese guy. I mean, this is, you know, okay,
1 hour, 19 minutes, 56 seconds
that's not uncommon. And there's always a Brahman class, always. I'm not mad about any of that. Actually, what makes
1 hour, 20 minutes, 3 seconds
the West so different, the English speaking countries, is that their populations are all dying. So, it does seem like it's more than incompetence.
1 hour, 20 minutes, 14 seconds
It seems like hate to me, at least as measured by its results.
1 hour, 20 minutes, 17 seconds
Right. Right. So, there is definitely a targeting and a destruction of that.
1 hour, 20 minutes, 21 seconds
That's the way it seems to me. It's like, okay, so you're in charge, we make a bunch of money, you get the most of it because you're in charge. That's
1 hour, 20 minutes, 28 seconds
corrupt. Yes. But it's also just the rule. I I can live with that. But if you're trying to kill me, even as you're
1 hour, 20 minutes, 36 seconds
extracting the fruit of my toil, then it's like,
1 hour, 20 minutes, 40 seconds
no, no, this is an undeclared war against me. That's what I perceive.
1 hour, 20 minutes, 44 seconds
That war is on. But if you look at who's who's implementing that war, they don't have a culture, an ethic, or a Mandarin class that can go the distance.
1 hour, 20 minutes, 53 seconds
I agree with that strongly.
1 hour, 20 minutes, 54 seconds
So, I mean, can you flush it out a little bit?
1 hour, 20 minutes, 57 seconds
Yes. Yes. Our ruling class isn't designed to survive and thrive. Is that what you're saying?
1 hour, 21 minutes, 2 seconds
They're going to fail. They I'm sure they're going to fail. Now, I don't underestimate the damage they can do before they fail. But, you know, one
1 hour, 21 minutes, 10 seconds
thing I will say about China, if there's an argument for China's success, it is because it has a Mandarin class and it has a tradition, you know, of hundreds
1 hour, 21 minutes, 19 seconds
of years of that Mandarin class. And and that's what you need. The reason I left Washington in 1998 and I said, I'm out.
1 hour, 21 minutes, 25 seconds
these guys are going to fail is is you know whether it's the group destroying the you know our equivalent of the Mandarin class or the Mandarin class
1 hour, 21 minutes, 34 seconds
itself they did not have a culture an ethic a vision that could go the distance they weren't good to build an
1 hour, 21 minutes, 42 seconds
advanced civilization that they didn't have what it took what an interesting observation so what does a successful ruling class have what
1 hour, 21 minutes, 51 seconds
is the culture that we don't have that China does it it has a culture It has a commitment to the long term.
1 hour, 21 minutes, 59 seconds
Yeah.
1 hour, 21 minutes, 59 seconds
So it has a long-term arc and it has the discipline
1 hour, 22 minutes, 5 seconds
to to achieve that by keeping each in making each individual sovereign with
1 hour, 22 minutes, 12 seconds
integrity but discipline to the vision and the order. So so you know it doesn't
1 hour, 22 minutes, 19 seconds
let the power go to its head. I'll never forget when I first went to Washington.
1 hour, 22 minutes, 25 seconds
I was I had been trained my whole life to deal with massive amounts of financial power without letting it go to
1 hour, 22 minutes, 31 seconds
my head. And you got to Washington and you could look around the room and you could see the people who also had that training. They knew this was not their
1 hour, 22 minutes, 40 seconds
money or their credit. It belonged to the country and they were there as a fiduciary for a temporary period of time
1 hour, 22 minutes, 49 seconds
to manage it. and they took the time to understand the laws and the rules and to collaborate with other people to do so.
1 hour, 22 minutes, 57 seconds
You got other people who were there didn't have that background or training and suddenly it's my money, it's my portfolio, it goes to their head and they they literally,
1 hour, 23 minutes, 7 seconds
you know, they they get drunk on power and they can't handle it. It's like they can't h it's like looking at electrical system that can't handle that voltage
1 hour, 23 minutes, 15 seconds
and and they they you know they melt down.
1 hour, 23 minutes, 18 seconds
It burns the house down. It burns the house down. And what you had, you've gone through a process in Washington where I saw all the people who had been
1 hour, 23 minutes, 27 seconds
trained the way I had been trained, who got pushed out cuz they wouldn't break the law and they wouldn't do stupid things and they got pushed out and you
1 hour, 23 minutes, 35 seconds
just got yesmen, yesmen, yesmen. And now now you've got something that has no it it doesn't have a culture that can handle the voltage.
1 hour, 23 minutes, 47 seconds
So I I feel like you see this even now. I noticed this during the trans thing.
1 hour, 23 minutes, 54 seconds
You know, I fel felt like our leaders were pushing the transgender lunacy on everybody, right?
1 hour, 24 minutes
But then I noticed that their own children probably in higher proportion were also falling prey to it. Same with drugs, right?
1 hour, 24 minutes, 5 seconds
They push drugs on the population, but their kids OD too, right?
1 hour, 24 minutes, 9 seconds
So it's like, h they kind of believe these lies. It's not just an effort to genocide the population, which it is as well.
1 hour, 24 minutes, 18 seconds
Well, because you're you're you're not talking about the top guys. You're talking about the sort of the middle, the implementers, right?
1 hour, 24 minutes, 26 seconds
So, yeah, they're in the trance, too.
1 hour, 24 minutes, 29 seconds
And everybody's thinking they're a genius, you know, because they're Where does this go over the next 10 years?

Chapter 16: What Does America's Future Look Like?

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You know, something we are we are in a very interesting position. And I said at the to the solar team at the beginning of the year,
1 hour, 24 minutes, 44 seconds
our our our motto for this year is rock and roll because the disruption is not only so chaotic and unpredictable,
1 hour, 24 minutes, 52 seconds
you know, it's impossible to predict it because you're talking when when you have if you go back and you look at when information technology innovates
1 hour, 25 minutes, 1 second
dramatically like you know the telephone or the telegraph,
1 hour, 25 minutes, 5 seconds
what happens is you not only dramatically improve the or speed up the innovation in each area, but the
1 hour, 25 minutes, 13 seconds
connections and integration between areas in ways that you know it's beyond our you couldn't anticipate you can't anticipate you can't predict
1 hour, 25 minutes, 21 seconds
it and um and so if you look at the speed of change it's but I I think if you look at every
1 hour, 25 minutes, 30 seconds
group I watch you know geopolitically or financially events are going to outrun us all and they're going to surprise us all and So
1 hour, 25 minutes, 39 seconds
we're going into an outofcrol situation. Now the the people who run in my experience the people who run the
1 hour, 25 minutes, 46 seconds
financial system always have a plan B C D and have thought things ahead. How they're going to manage this I don't know.

Chapter 17: Is the Universe Alive?

1 hour, 25 minutes, 54 seconds
So how does the average person respond to it? With faith. With faith. Yeah.
1 hour, 26 minutes, 1 second
Faith in faith. So I believe So I told you I was going to give you some homework. So,
1 hour, 26 minutes, 8 seconds
here's my I welcome it.
1 hour, 26 minutes, 10 seconds
Here's my favorite new book. It's called And we're just about to publish an amazing uh interview with the with the
1 hour, 26 minutes, 18 seconds
author. It's called A New Science of Heaven by Robert Temple. Okay?
1 hour, 26 minutes, 23 seconds
And it's about plasma. Our annual wrap-up is and we'll send you a copy is on plasma. I'm writing it down.
1 hour, 26 minutes, 29 seconds
Okay. Now, 99% of the universe is made up of plasma. And if you go back,
1 hour, 26 minutes, 35 seconds
I'll confess I have no idea what plasma is. Don't ask me to explain it. Well, it's about 90% of the universe.
1 hour, 26 minutes, 41 seconds
99% 99%. And if you go back and listen to people like David Bow, the great physicist, they would sort of intimate
1 hour, 26 minutes, 48 seconds
this. But Temple, Dr. Robert Temple has now written a book that really goes through all the science of it. And what
1 hour, 26 minutes, 55 seconds
Temple says is that plasma is alive and intelligent.
1 hour, 27 minutes
Okay? Which brings all new meaning to the notion of he lives. What he's saying is the universe is alive and intelligent
1 hour, 27 minutes, 8 seconds
now I throughout my history and it's I feel that don't you?
1 hour, 27 minutes, 13 seconds
It is true. I'm sure it's true. It's yeah the the universe is alive. The universe is intelligent you know whether
1 hour, 27 minutes, 20 seconds
it's the plants the animals the people we share intelligence and it's not through our brain it's through our whole body through our energy everything. So,
1 hour, 27 minutes, 30 seconds
so anyway, but the new science of heaven is really about plasma and how it's alive and intelligent. Now, what I'm going to tell you, I don't care how much
1 hour, 27 minutes, 37 seconds
programmable money you have, how many biometrics you have, how many digital IDs you have, how many drones, you know,
1 hour, 27 minutes, 43 seconds
DoD is going to buy a million drones a year, how many drones you have flying overhead. I don't care. There's no way
1 hour, 27 minutes, 50 seconds
you can control the entire universe. Do you know what I mean? And if you understand what what Temple and Balm and these guys are saying about how the universe works,
1 hour, 28 minutes, 1 second
it's out of control. Now, what you can do is you can interact with it with love and intention and integrity, you know,
1 hour, 28 minutes, 10 seconds
but it's out of control. And I absolutely believe that. And that's why I think this whole digital control model is going to fail. I just want to make
1 hour, 28 minutes, 19 seconds
sure you're describing the Tower of Babel.
1 hour, 28 minutes, 21 seconds
You're describing like the limits of human power and foresight and technology and technology. It it it it just if you understand life,
1 hour, 28 minutes, 30 seconds
the whole thing is nuts. Now, if you if you look at the leadership, I can absolutely because they're hyper
1 hour, 28 minutes, 37 seconds
materialists. I can absolutely believe that they would think they can control it. And I can understand as risk managers why you might want to.
1 hour, 28 minutes, 47 seconds
What's a hyper materialist? A hypermaterialist is somebody. So if you and I were going to make a taxonomy of
1 hour, 28 minutes, 55 seconds
all knowledge in our world, there is knowledge that relates to things that we can see. So this table or this wall or
1 hour, 29 minutes, 2 seconds
this painting, you know, it's real. We can see it. It's concrete. Okay. So there's a material world. Um but then
1 hour, 29 minutes, 10 seconds
there's a whole world that's invisible either because it's spiritual or it may be material, but it's like the Wi-Fi in the room. We can't see it. So there's a
1 hour, 29 minutes, 19 seconds
whole part of our reality whether it's uh what I call the morphagenic field. So shared
1 hour, 29 minutes, 26 seconds
intelligence or your energetic body or my energetic body or um you know or the
1 hour, 29 minutes, 33 seconds
Wi-Fi in the room whether it's material or spiritual there's a whole world that's invisible. And what you see in
1 hour, 29 minutes, 41 seconds
sort of in the American culture in my lifetime is people become more and more focused on what they can see that's
1 hour, 29 minutes, 49 seconds
material. The only invisible thing they relate to is money. You know, money is an invisible finance is an invisible.
1 hour, 29 minutes, 56 seconds
So money is their god.
1 hour, 29 minutes, 58 seconds
Only a hypermaterialist could allow money to become their god. Because if you understand but if it's the only invisible thing you believe in, right?
1 hour, 30 minutes, 6 seconds
It's your god. But but they don't know they literally don't know how
1 hour, 30 minutes, 13 seconds
intelligence works and how power works in the universe. They are completely ignorant of the real power lines because
1 hour, 30 minutes, 21 seconds
they can't see the invisible. It's phenomenal. It It's like walking around in a So imagine an orchestra trying to
1 hour, 30 minutes, 29 seconds
play music and everybody's in the dark and nobody can see the score. That's what it and and that's why it sounds like that.
1 hour, 30 minutes, 37 seconds
That's why it's so discordant.
1 hour, 30 minutes, 38 seconds
Yeah. Yeah. It's just completely and and so like stop it with the kettle drum, right? It's time for the strings, right?
1 hour, 30 minutes, 46 seconds
Yes.
1 hour, 30 minutes, 47 seconds
So, we have, you know, so we're very excited because we're doing this program called the Young Builders. It's one of the reasons I'm in Florida. And and one
1 hour, 30 minutes, 55 seconds
of our challenges is can we help this group of young people to to get a good enough map of both the visible and the
1 hour, 31 minutes, 3 seconds
invisible so that they can you know they have a balanced map and can live a balanced life and access the power to be
1 hour, 31 minutes, 11 seconds
accessed from you know from really understanding and seeing the invisible and knowing that it's very real and not falling prey to being a hyper
1 hour, 31 minutes, 20 seconds
materialist. What are the power lines you just described?
1 hour, 31 minutes, 23 seconds
So our freedom comes to us by divine authority. And if if you look at what you know there's a one of my favorite
1 hour, 31 minutes, 32 seconds
scriptures in the Bible is the prayers of a righteous man avaleth much. And one of the things I've learned in my life is
1 hour, 31 minutes, 40 seconds
that you know so I was an investment adviser and all my clients would show up and say we want you to help us use our money to keep them safe. And what I
1 hour, 31 minutes, 50 seconds
would tell you is in this kind of environment with this kind of change you can only be safe if you have spiritual protection if you have spiritual
1 hour, 31 minutes, 59 seconds
intelligence if you have spiritual authority and if you can relate with other people in a way that you can build
1 hour, 32 minutes, 6 seconds
relationships of trust and that kind of integrity and trust is invisible you know but if you look at what can
1 hour, 32 minutes, 15 seconds
endure during periods like this that's what endures That's what you can't um you know Corinthians says uh faith,
1 hour, 32 minutes, 24 seconds
hope, and charity. Those are the things that endure that you can't lose and they're real. It just takes many years
1 hour, 32 minutes, 32 seconds
of living and living around people who do it to see that it's real. So, I know you know what I mean by this.
1 hour, 32 minutes, 39 seconds
I know exactly what you mean, and I I agree so vehemently. I wish I was as articulate as you were. Uh,
1 hour, 32 minutes, 45 seconds
well, but I literally had experiences where I was going to be dead in 5 seconds and a miracle happened and it
1 hour, 32 minutes, 52 seconds
saved me and it was it was, you know, so I used to always say I had one amazing
1 hour, 32 minutes, 59 seconds
deposition where I had a major spiritual protection and experience. It was one of the most amazing experiences of my life.
1 hour, 33 minutes, 6 seconds
It's happened on several occasions. And and I said to, you know, I I call the people who, you know, so I'm I'm
1 hour, 33 minutes, 14 seconds
assuming it's angels or guardians or whatever you want to call it. And I said to I call them the guys with the blue light. And I said, "Don't worry about
1 hour, 33 minutes, 23 seconds
protecting yourself against the bad guys. Worry about getting in good with the guys with the blue light." So yes.
1 hour, 33 minutes, 29 seconds
Yeah. If you if you just you know there's not enough time to do all that riskmanagement against the bad guys. If
1 hour, 33 minutes, 36 seconds
you just focus your energy on getting in good with the good guys, you will get protected.
1 hour, 33 minutes, 42 seconds
I think this is like uh the gospel basically. Yeah. So, it's I I took I once I you know,
1 hour, 33 minutes, 50 seconds
when the litigation began, I took a full one-year Bible course, which was one of the most amazing courses I ever took in my life cuz the teachers were fantastic.
1 hour, 34 minutes
And it was riveting. It was on Monday night after work and I when I first got there, there were like 200 people and I thought, "This is never going to last.
1 hour, 34 minutes, 8 seconds
Nobody in Washington's going to show up on Monday night again and again during the winter." Every week it got bigger.
1 hour, 34 minutes, 14 seconds
The class grew because it the teaching was so amazing. But it really is all in the Bible. It's it's amazing.
1 hour, 34 minutes, 21 seconds
My favorite parable, I think, is the the guy who was a good a good year with his crops. So, he builds new storehouses to store them and then he finishes them,
1 hour, 34 minutes, 29 seconds
fills them full of crops and says, "I'm going to take a year off and just enjoy my bounty." And then he drops dead immediately.
1 hour, 34 minutes, 38 seconds
So, you made reference a minute ago uh to art.

Chapter 18: How Art Influences Culture

1 hour, 34 minutes, 43 seconds
Mhm. and that you just ran a piece on art, appreciating art, loving art. What
1 hour, 34 minutes, 50 seconds
given your background in monetary policy, finance,
1 hour, 34 minutes, 56 seconds
why are you commissioning pieces about art, what does art have to do with anything?
1 hour, 35 minutes
Okay, so I'm going to go way out and come back in. Um, if you want to have a successful society and a successful
1 hour, 35 minutes, 9 seconds
financial system, one of the most important questions in a financial system is who or what enforces,
1 hour, 35 minutes, 16 seconds
you know, who makes the rules, who enforces.
1 hour, 35 minutes, 19 seconds
The only way to have a sec a really successful financial system is to have enforcement done primarily by culture.
1 hour, 35 minutes, 27 seconds
Yes.
1 hour, 35 minutes, 27 seconds
Okay. So the question so self-restraint as opposed to restraint,
1 hour, 35 minutes, 32 seconds
right? and respect for the rules and respect respect. You know, I am I give
1 hour, 35 minutes, 39 seconds
you an example from Bible class. Um I once had my teacher in Bible class ask me about the salary model and I explained it to her and she said, "Oh,
1 hour, 35 minutes, 48 seconds
you're making it much too complicated.
1 hour, 35 minutes, 50 seconds
It's in Leviticus. It says we have to take care of ourselves. We have to take care of the land and we have to take care of each other." And I said, "That's it. There you go." So, she was right.
1 hour, 36 minutes, 1 second
But that's an example of enforcement by culture. The obligation that I have to take care of myself, but I also have to take care of the land and the people
1 hour, 36 minutes, 10 seconds
around me. Okay. So, so that's an example of enforcement by culture.
1 hour, 36 minutes, 14 seconds
Anyway, so so I uh I decided, okay, at the report, we have to do something to
1 hour, 36 minutes, 22 seconds
help build the culture. and I brought you the coming clean book and that is a sort of an overview of all the things we think are important if you want to build
1 hour, 36 minutes, 31 seconds
a culture that will do a really good job of taking care of yourself but in a way that takes care of others and the land.
1 hour, 36 minutes, 39 seconds
So, so uh but I was thinking okay what can we do at the salary report to help
1 hour, 36 minutes, 46 seconds
people really understand and relate to culture. So, I was out in California and I had a dear friend, Nina Hine, who had
1 hour, 36 minutes, 54 seconds
just left this big high-powered job as publicity in one of the studios and I said to her, she was thinking about what
1 hour, 37 minutes, 2 seconds
do I do next? And I said, if you could do anything you wanted, what would you do? And she said, I would travel the world going to museums and writing about it. And I said, you're hired.
1 hour, 37 minutes, 13 seconds
So, she started a column called Food for the Soul. and she started writing these col we would pay her budget to go travel
1 hour, 37 minutes, 20 seconds
the world and see the museum. She has a she's Polish. She uh and so she has an apartment in Warsaw and goes back and
1 hour, 37 minutes, 27 seconds
forth between Europe and California. And she started writing these columns and it turns out Nah is absolutely brilliant. I
1 hour, 37 minutes, 34 seconds
mean just off the charts brilliant and understands the economic and the history of all the different art she's writing about and the periods. And these columns
1 hour, 37 minutes, 43 seconds
are absolutely fascinating. And we started to write it and after a couple years all these sort of major periodicals started to do the same
1 hour, 37 minutes, 51 seconds
thing. Nina would get very upset and she said they're copying me and I said that's a compliment Nina that's great.
1 hour, 37 minutes, 56 seconds
Anyway so uh it grew and grew and what happened is the ciri team would start going to the museums with her when she
1 hour, 38 minutes, 4 seconds
was in town. So um you know when she came to the uh uh she came to Europe when we were celebrating the year of Da Vinci in 2019. I'm a huge Da Vinci fan.
1 hour, 38 minutes, 15 seconds
And so we uh the Reichkes Museum in Amsterdam had all the Rembrandts and then we went to all the things in Italy
1 hour, 38 minutes, 22 seconds
and then to the Lou for Da Vinci and the Salary team started coming and then their wives started or husbands started coming and you know we all started going
1 hour, 38 minutes, 31 seconds
with her and so we started doing interviews about art and why it was relevant or why Da Vinci was relevant or why Vamir was relevant or the golden age
1 hour, 38 minutes, 40 seconds
of the Dutch painters. So we have a you know we have a company in the Netherlands. Anyway, it grew and grew and finally we said, "Let's" we did a
1 hour, 38 minutes, 47 seconds
wrap-up called Visions of Freedom, which she wrote of all the art that that inspired freedom and talked about freedom and encouraged freedom. Um, and
1 hour, 38 minutes, 56 seconds
that was very very successful. And so we decided now we would roll it up into loving art. and um the young builders.
1 hour, 39 minutes, 4 seconds
She's teaching one of the courses for the young builders because we think art is incredibly important to encouraging culture and helping people, you know,
1 hour, 39 minutes, 14 seconds
sort of connect to both the material and the and the non-material. Anyway, so well, it is the bridge, right? I mean,
1 hour, 39 minutes, 20 seconds
that's it's one m you know, I love music, too.
1 hour, 39 minutes, 23 seconds
So, every week we have a music of the week on the salary report. I think music is a bridge. Um but I think art is a
1 hour, 39 minutes, 30 seconds
bridge. She um because of her history in the movie industry, she also is one of the people who votes for the Academy
1 hour, 39 minutes, 36 seconds
Awards. So, she sees everything and she's very good at tipping us off to what movies we want to.
1 hour, 39 minutes, 45 seconds
So, if if art can edify and uplift a culture, it can also degrade and fracture a culture, I would think.
1 hour, 39 minutes, 52 seconds
So, very famous story. I had a dear friend in Washington who ran the Confederate Museum and he was giving a
1 hour, 39 minutes, 59 seconds
speech on southern culture at the Smithsonian and right in the middle some young man stood up and said why should I care about any of this and John Edward
1 hour, 40 minutes, 7 seconds
said uh young man culture is the integration of the divine in everyday life and I later said to him I came back
1 hour, 40 minutes, 15 seconds
and I said John Edward you forgot to warn me it can also be the integration of the demonic in everyday life yes right and that's if you read coming
1 hour, 40 minutes, 23 seconds
clean The critical issue is are you doing everything you can to remove the demonic from your everyday life and
1 hour, 40 minutes, 31 seconds
integrate the divine in your everyday life. And the more people who do that by doing that I protect myself and my
1 hour, 40 minutes, 39 seconds
family and as I detox the evil from my life I deny the evil the energy and the food I'm giving it which helps everybody else.
1 hour, 40 minutes, 50 seconds
Well, that's my favorite principle ever.
1 hour, 40 minutes, 52 seconds
So it just to reduce it to its trightest form, change starts with you.
1 hour, 40 minutes, 58 seconds
The power we have, I I'm not saying that the political mechanism isn't an opportunity to make change, cuz I think an election year it is. The the greatest power we have is how we use our time,
1 hour, 41 minutes, 11 seconds
how we use our attention, and how we use our money in our daily lives. And if we will revolutionize that by coming clean,
1 hour, 41 minutes, 20 seconds
think of this as a detox. If you will get, you know, I call the system, the centralizing system, the tapeworm. If you will get the tapeworm out of your life, not only will you get stronger,
1 hour, 41 minutes, 30 seconds
but but you will help everybody else get stronger because you're denying the energy to the tapeworm.

Chapter 19: How to Defeat Evil

1 hour, 41 minutes, 36 seconds
So, what kind of daily rituals make that work?
1 hour, 41 minutes, 41 seconds
So, the first thing you do is you start with faith because everybody's different. And so if you if you read
1 hour, 41 minutes, 48 seconds
come and clean and I should say it's up on our website it's public anybody can get the PDF. Um uh everybody's different
1 hour, 41 minutes, 57 seconds
and so it's very important that you apply the mathematics of your time and money in a way which is energizing for you. It's got to be practical. But the
1 hour, 42 minutes, 6 seconds
first thing you can start to do for example and I'll talk money because that's my love. You can use cash. Okay.
1 hour, 42 minutes, 13 seconds
And you can stop shopping. You can stop using the banks. So if you're banking with one of the big banks that created the great financial crisis, that's an
1 hour, 42 minutes, 22 seconds
opportunity for you to get your money out of those. But you can bank with a bank that didn't cause the good financial c and is helping your local
1 hour, 42 minutes, 30 seconds
community, you know, be successful. So so they're they're good banks and they're bad banks. You can shift your money into a good bank. You cannot shop with the companies that are basically,
1 hour, 42 minutes, 44 seconds
you know, building the control grid and you cannot finance them. If you look at most people's 401ks right now, they're
1 hour, 42 minutes, 50 seconds
very overconentrated in 7 to 10 stocks that are basically making money by building the control grid. Now, you
1 hour, 42 minutes, 58 seconds
know, many many years ago, I I was an investment adviser and I changed my company to Investment Screen and and we
1 hour, 43 minutes, 6 seconds
were very quiet about it because I wanted to make sure that we could find plenty of companies that are not engaged
1 hour, 43 minutes, 13 seconds
in what I would call systemic organized crime or building the control grid.
1 hour, 43 minutes, 18 seconds
There are hundreds of them. There are hundreds of great companies that are just doing the work of the world and are not engaged in organized crime. Uh you
1 hour, 43 minutes, 25 seconds
can invest in them. You can invest in local farmers to get your food. You know, there are many different things you can do, but you can make sure your
1 hour, 43 minutes, 34 seconds
time and money is going to support the things that are good for you. One of the most important is health. So, if you
1 hour, 43 minutes, 42 seconds
look at what bankrupts families in America, um it's poor health, and that comes from poor nutrition. Um and and
1 hour, 43 minutes, 50 seconds
from getting involved in the medical system in a way that's unhealthy for you. And what I used to find when I was
1 hour, 43 minutes, 58 seconds
investment advisors is people would tell me, you know, who were millionaires and had a fortune, they would tell me, I can't afford biodnamic organic food. I
1 hour, 44 minutes, 7 seconds
was like, you can't not afford that. You know, you're crazy. If if you if you have millions of dollars in your brokerage account and you are eating
1 hour, 44 minutes, 14 seconds
cheap food, you know, you are making a terrible financial decision. Anyway, so if you there there are 25 items in
1 hour, 44 minutes, 23 seconds
coming clean and you can go through all of them, but they're all about whether it's your time, your money. One of them,
1 hour, 44 minutes, 29 seconds
of course, is um is getting good intelligence. So if they're watching Tucker Carlson, they already know what
1 hour, 44 minutes, 36 seconds
to do. But I can't tell you how many times I had clients who would watch the major networks and just, you know, they
1 hour, 44 minutes, 45 seconds
would have a bad map of the world and make terrible mistakes because they weren't getting good intelligence.
1 hour, 44 minutes, 50 seconds
Very smart, very successful people who have no idea what's happening. Right.
1 hour, 44 minutes, 55 seconds
So, can I I've interrupted you like a hundred times during this conversation,
1 hour, 44 minutes, 58 seconds
but there's so many interesting places to pause.

Chapter 20: Will There Be an Attack on Free Speech Online?

1 hour, 45 minutes, 2 seconds
information and the means by which it's disseminated and we consume it. Like we're at a period of real openness right now because the old media have collapsed.
1 hour, 45 minutes, 12 seconds
How long can that last where you can say whatever you think on the internet and read other people's unfiltered views on the internet? That's such a challenge to
1 hour, 45 minutes, 19 seconds
power that I'm skeptical it can last for much longer.
1 hour, 45 minutes, 24 seconds
So if you look at the infrastructure that's being put into place. So DoD says that they're going to buy a million drones a year.
1 hour, 45 minutes, 32 seconds
If you look at the what has been uh I don't know if you saw the latest testimony about ICE
1 hour, 45 minutes, 39 seconds
uh uh whistleblower claiming that he was trained to teach ICE uh agents how to break the law. Um, so if you look at the
1 hour, 45 minutes, 49 seconds
drones, if you look at the what's happening with the local control grid with the flock cameras, the satellites,
1 hour, 45 minutes, 55 seconds
everything, they're looking to put into place the hardware where they can shut down free speech.
1 hour, 46 minutes, 3 seconds
Now, are we going to let it go into place? If you look at the push back, the push back is extraordinary. And so, it's not clear to me that they'll succeed to
1 hour, 46 minutes, 11 seconds
do that. I don't know. But I will tell you now, if we don't push back hard now,
1 hour, 46 minutes, 17 seconds
uh, and keep pushing back, they will shut down free. They'll shut down, well,
1 hour, 46 minutes, 22 seconds
the control grid will shut down the first amendment, the second amendment. It will rip the constitution to shreds. It seems like the reason that, you know,
1 hour, 46 minutes, 31 seconds
everyone you run into at this point is like reassessing all previous assumptions is because you can read
1 hour, 46 minutes, 39 seconds
whatever you want now online. It does seem like that has been the pivotal change in the last 10 years. Nobody
1 hour, 46 minutes, 46 seconds
watches CNN. Everyone reads X and that makes the difference. Well, I you know I think what happened
1 hour, 46 minutes, 56 seconds
I think most people So, so I call it this way. If I have a computer and I have 50 databases and you
1 hour, 47 minutes, 4 seconds
bring me a database that says I've got to change my operating system, that's too hard because I've got to change 50 databases and everything. I think when
1 hour, 47 minutes, 13 seconds
you, a friend of mine used to call it getting hit by the smite button. When the system betrays you in a way that is very harmful to you, whether because
1 hour, 47 minutes, 23 seconds
you're injured by pharmaceuticals or the medical system or your money is stolen in the financial crisis, when the system
1 hour, 47 minutes, 31 seconds
does something that really harms you, it forces you to change your operating system. And I think the pandem I think the financial crisis
1 hour, 47 minutes, 40 seconds
uh harmed a lot of people but then the pandemic really harmed a lot of people. Yeah, that's right.
1 hour, 47 minutes, 45 seconds
And I you know I will tell you Tucker I I you know we were warning people from the
1 hour, 47 minutes, 53 seconds
beginning don't take the shot. Don't take the shot. Don't take the shot. And then um at the end of 2022
1 hour, 48 minutes, 1 second
I were big Wimhof fans. Do you know who Wimhof is in the Netherlands?
1 hour, 48 minutes, 6 seconds
Yeah, of course. Okay. So, we're huge Wimhof fans.
1 hour, 48 minutes, 9 seconds
Yeah, we're pro pro- Northern Europe in my house. Yes, of course we know.
1 hour, 48 minutes, 13 seconds
So, so at the end of 22, Wimhof had just published the Wimhof method and I said to I sent an email to everybody at
1 hour, 48 minutes, 21 seconds
Christmas time and I said, "If you've been harmed by CO, let us know and we will send you a free copy of the Wimoff method because we think this can really
1 hour, 48 minutes, 30 seconds
help." And we ended up giving away 250 copies because we would get these letter. They would write in and they
1 hour, 48 minutes, 38 seconds
would say what had happened to them as a result of the lockdowns and losing their job or the shot.
1 hour, 48 minutes, 46 seconds
Tucker, I'm not a sentimental person. I would burst into tears reading these stories. It was so horrible. And we just
1 hour, 48 minutes, 53 seconds
kept buying books and giving them away because, you know, I would get these letters that say this is the first time anybody's done anything nice to me for
1 hour, 49 minutes, 2 seconds
three years, you know, and it was so helpful to people and, you know, Wimhof is such a loving presence in people's
1 hour, 49 minutes, 10 seconds
lives and he makes you laugh and he and the method really helps. So, so we just kept getting more books and giving them
1 hour, 49 minutes, 17 seconds
away because it was so horrible. And I think the pandemic shifted a lot of people because they realized
1 hour, 49 minutes, 25 seconds
our leaders not only don't care about us, they are absolutely willing to kill us.
1 hour, 49 minutes, 32 seconds
Yeah. I think they, you know, it imbuss them with a feeling of god-like strength, right? They like it. Yeah. People love killing. I mean, that's why they always have.
1 hour, 49 minutes, 40 seconds
That's why they continue to do it. They they pretend they don't love it, but they do love it. And I know people who do it and they love it.
1 hour, 49 minutes, 46 seconds
Yeah. But I have to tell you that, you know, if you look at the joy that that comes from that kind of power, if you look at the joy that of creating life Exactly.
1 hour, 49 minutes, 55 seconds
it's so much more powerful. I couldn't agree more. Right. Last question.
1 hour, 49 minutes, 59 seconds
You got to plug into that invisible to to discover it and use it and know it.
1 hour, 50 minutes, 5 seconds
Yeah. God creates, Satan destroys. It's really simple, right? You know, pick God's team. You said at the outset of this year, I think a lot of people approached it with trepidation, feeling

Chapter 21: Why Is Fitts So Optimistic?

1 hour, 50 minutes, 14 seconds
like, woo, the foundations are definitely trembling in the west. You you approached it with like excitement.
1 hour, 50 minutes, 21 seconds
You said rock and roll was rock and roll.
1 hour, 50 minutes, 23 seconds
So what what what's that? Why why are you optimistic and everyone else is panicked?
1 hour, 50 minutes, 28 seconds
This is the year of the firehorse in Chinese New Year. So we're right in Chinese New Year now. And it's the year of the fire horse
1 hour, 50 minutes, 35 seconds
and the firehorse is a symbol of great change. but it's great strength. So, um
1 hour, 50 minutes, 43 seconds
I just bought a new mug that's the Firehorse mug from from uh you know, one of these British porcelain companies
1 hour, 50 minutes, 51 seconds
makes beautiful China. But, um so I live in Freezeland in the Netherlands in the north and uh and the horses are the Fian
1 hour, 50 minutes, 59 seconds
horses. They're the beautiful black stallions. So every year in Larden, I was up with Michael Yan and his wife Musakaco in um in Lardan for the for the
1 hour, 51 minutes, 8 seconds
Fian Stallion show. And these horses are just beautiful. So that's my image for this year because I was with Michael Yan at the Fian Stallion Show. Yeah,
1 hour, 51 minutes, 18 seconds
can't believe I missed that one.
1 hour, 51 minutes, 20 seconds
It it put it on your bucket list. It's the most these horses are the most beautiful horses in the world and it's an amazing
1 hour, 51 minutes, 28 seconds
amazing show. It's every January in Lardin. I will take you.
1 hour, 51 minutes, 32 seconds
I'm so conventional. I think of myself as freeth thinking. I didn't even think about the F and Stallion show.
1 hour, 51 minutes, 36 seconds
Oh, well, but but the Fians are, you know, these are the horses that knights would ride. They're chargers. They're,
1 hour, 51 minutes, 46 seconds
you know, they have huge hearts. They're very uh powerful. And and that's the energy you have to go into this year
1 hour, 51 minutes, 53 seconds
because remember I if the world is alive and intelligent with you know if it's a plasma world then we have to attract to
1 hour, 52 minutes, 3 seconds
us the energy we need to build everything's thrown up and now we have to build it we have to create it that's why we're calling the young builders
1 hour, 52 minutes, 10 seconds
builders you know everything's being thrown up in the air and the question is what will you build
1 hour, 52 minutes, 17 seconds
so I love it Katherine Austin Fitz thank Thank you very much. God bless you. God bless you.
Sync to video time

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Transcript

So, this video is by Fermy Lab. I guess I'll give him a subscribe just to, you know, maybe we won't get copyright strike if I do that. Okay, here we go.
10 seconds
Firmy Lab, hit me up. Tell us about Cher Cherankov radiation. Whoa.
15 seconds
If you think that this will lead to something like this, engage,
20 seconds
you'll be disappointed. Sorry about that.
23 seconds
Um, I'm going to go ahead and say he's wrong.
27 seconds
He's saying already that this is not going to lead to warp drives. Well,
32 seconds
I'm just going to go ahead and say I've got two videos that tell a different story. Tell a completely different story. But you know what? Go ahead, Mr.
39 seconds
Science Guy. Tell us about the Cheronov radiation.
43 seconds
I made an entire video on the special cases which you might want to look up in this cheat of course, but it's still pretty interesting. So, let's talk about
50 seconds
it. When we talk about the speed of light, we really mean the speed of light in the vacuum. When light encounters a transparent medium like glass, plastic,
58 seconds
water, or even air, it slows down. You may have heard of this if you ever took an introductory physics class. The phenomenon is called the index of
1 minute, 6 seconds
refraction. And we know that in glass and plastic, light travels at about 2/3 the speed that light travels in a vacuum. In water, it's about 3/4. And in air, okay, so right off the bat, wow.
1 minute, 19 seconds
His first thing when we we're g first to explain Sharon cough radiation the first thing he says is you need to realize space is a medium the speed of light is
1 minute, 28 seconds
only constant in the vacuum it can be slowed down in materials like water like air like anything.
1 minute, 40 seconds
This is huge because what have we been teaching? We've been teaching this 0 point energy of spacetime is a medium where you can change that refractive
1 minute, 49 seconds
index. The very refractive index he's talking about right here in this video.
1 minute, 53 seconds
In fact, I use the exact same example of the water cup and the straw that he's using right there.
1 minute, 58 seconds
The speed is only a tiny tiny tiny bit slowed down. So that's the trick.
2 minutes, 3 seconds
Suppose you had a vacuum with a light beam in it with an electrically charged particle like an electron or a proton traveling alongside it at very nearly
2 minutes, 11 seconds
the speed of light. say 99.99% that speed or something, the two of them would stay together pretty much,
2 minutes, 17 seconds
although the photon would slowly pull ahead. Now, suppose that we shoot the two of them into a huge tank of water.
2 minutes, 24 seconds
If we did that, the electron would continue to travel at 99.99% the speed of light in the vacuum while the light beam would instantly slow down to 75%
2 minutes, 33 seconds
its normal speed. In this situation, the electron would be traveling faster than light. Boom. mine.
2 minutes, 41 seconds
Holy. Are you seeing it, chat? Holy [ __ ] I'm already seeing it.
2 minutes, 48 seconds
Are you seeing it?
2 minutes, 51 seconds
What is Cheronov radiation? It's so obvious.
2 minutes, 57 seconds
The electrons are moving faster than light.
3 minutes, 2 seconds
The light is being slowed down, but the electrons don't get slowed down as much as the light gets slowed down.
3 minutes, 12 seconds
This means wherever you're seeing Sharonov radiation like this, you're looking at a particle accelerator.
3 minutes, 21 seconds
You're looking at either a particle accelerator or particle decelerator, however you want to think about it.
3 minutes, 27 seconds
You're looking at something that's quite literally manipulating the medium in which these reactions are occurring.
3 minutes, 36 seconds
This directly connects the idea of fusion breaking the Schwinger limit, the ether,
3 minutes, 43 seconds
everything together. Let's let him keep going because not only does this, in my opinion, tell us exactly what we're looking at
3 minutes, 51 seconds
exactly JK free electron. Remember our free electron laser? Remember I said what do we need for the orbs? We need a
3 minutes, 59 seconds
free electron laser. What does that look like right over there? Those look like free electrons that have broken away from the light. And how did we do it? We
4 minutes, 8 seconds
slowed the light down so the electrons would break free.
4 minutes, 13 seconds
This is why a free electron laser is going to emit X-rays. Let's keep going. Now the question is,
4 minutes, 22 seconds
now I'm going, okay, holy [ __ ] those dark lines we're seeing. That's because we're seeing electrons flying out of
4 minutes, 29 seconds
this [ __ ] fusion reactor faster than the light that's going through it because the light is getting slowed down in the fusion reactor.
4 minutes, 38 seconds
Then I'm going, okay, well, wait, wait,
4 minutes, 40 seconds
wait a minute. Is there more? Is can can we somehow connect this? Is there How's this going to look? How's this going to
4 minutes, 47 seconds
work? How's it going to operate? Please continue.
4 minutes, 52 seconds
So, having a particle travel faster than light is already a kind of cool thing,
4 minutes, 55 seconds
but it actually gets even better. The first person to notice that a liquid surrounding a radioactive substance glow blue was Marie Cury because, well, you
5 minutes, 4 seconds
know, Marie Cury, she was totally the bomb. He gets the credit for the first observation of the phenomenon is a
5 minutes, 11 seconds
Russian student by the name of Pavle Trurankov. He first saw it back in 1934.
5 minutes, 17 seconds
Now, before I tell you about the physics, I'd like to talk a little bit about She invented X-rays, too. She invented X-rays. Yeah. Okay.
5 minutes, 25 seconds
How to spell his name.
5 minutes, 26 seconds
Okay. We're going to skip this guy cuz I don't care about how to spell his name.
5 minutes, 28 seconds
What do I know? So, let's move on. When Trinov saw the blue light emanating from water surrounding a radioactive sample, he told his adviser, Sergey Vavalov.
5 minutes, 37 seconds
Vavalov shared the observation with two of his colleagues, Igor Tam and Ilia Franc. And Tom and Franc figured out what was going on. When an electrically
5 minutes, 47 seconds
charged particle moves through a dialectric medium at a speed faster than light moves through that material, light is emitted and that light is called trinkov light.
5 minutes, 58 seconds
Now the exact detailed mechanism whereby light is emitted is quite complicated.
6 minutes, 3 seconds
Maybe I'll describe it in a future video. But basically basically what he means is that we don't know how he's like okay the electron is
6 minutes, 10 seconds
moving faster than the light is moving and this emits light and it emits light because whenever light hits an object it
6 minutes, 18 seconds
emits light which is also kind of a weird phenomenon in itself photoelectric effect but here we go the electron is moving faster
6 minutes, 27 seconds
than the medium and therefore it's going to emit light. Here we go. Basically,
6 minutes, 31 seconds
it's created because the electric field of the charged particle disrupts the electrons of distant atoms. And those disruptions cause even more disruptions
6 minutes, 39 seconds
to other atoms. When you add up everything, shrinkoff light is emitted,
6 minutes, 43 seconds
but only if the charged particle is traveling faster than light.
6 minutes, 48 seconds
If light is emitted at a point represented by this X here, it radiates from that point in a sphere. You can see how it works in this animation. The
6 minutes, 56 seconds
sphere grows at the speed of light. But the particle which is represented by this red dot is traveling faster than the speed of light. You can see that the
7 minutes, 5 seconds
dot moves away from the x faster than the sphere grows. Now suppose light is emitted when the particle is set at a different location.
7 minutes, 13 seconds
Mhm.
7 minutes, 14 seconds
That light will also leave the point in a sphere and the sphere will also grow.
7 minutes, 19 seconds
This process So look at what we're looking at right here. the X and the sphere growing
7 minutes, 27 seconds
represents the light moving at light speed. So, as you can see, the sphere never is able to catch up to the red
7 minutes, 34 seconds
dot. The red dots are electron. So, no matter when the light's being emitted,
7 minutes, 40 seconds
it's always moving slower than the electron is moving.
7 minutes, 45 seconds
Got it? So, what this does, as you can see here, creates this wavefront.
7 minutes, 52 seconds
Creates a wavefront. almost can appear again and again and again with a series of spheres. The edges of
8 minutes, 1 second
the spheres line up which you can see here.
8 minutes, 4 seconds
And of course, light isn't emitted just at these locations where the X's are marked. Exactly.
8 minutes, 9 seconds
The light is emitted everywhere along the path of the charged particle and the result is a cone of light growing around the path taken by the charged particle
8 minutes, 16 seconds
and traveling forward. So those are the basics. A charged particle traveling faster than light in an appropriate material results in the particle and material combining to give off light.
8 minutes, 26 seconds
That light tends to be from the purple and blue side of the spectrum. I'll show you an example of that in a minute. So
8 minutes, 33 seconds
if we have electrons that are moving faster than light in that medium,
8 minutes, 41 seconds
we are going to see ultraviolet blue side of the spectrum. Waves get created, light get created. Well, wow.
8 minutes, 52 seconds
Isn't that interesting?
8 minutes, 54 seconds
Because it turns out that the thermal fleer cameras can't catch ultraviolet light or x-ray
9 minutes, 4 seconds
light or gamma rays because they're outside the visible spectrum. So instead, those thermal cameras would
9 minutes, 12 seconds
show it up in black as a dead pixel as something you're not seeing there. But that's not enough.
9 minutes, 20 seconds
Keep going.
9 minutes, 22 seconds
But scientists can use more information than the simple observation of blue light. The shape of the cone tells you how fast the particle is going. If it's
9 minutes, 31 seconds
going near the speed of light, then the cone is very fat. But if the particle is going much faster than light in the medium, then the cone is very skinny.
9 minutes, 40 seconds
Another thing scientists can exploit is the fact that some particles are created in the transparent medium moving. Hold up. Go back. What did he just say?
9 minutes, 51 seconds
What did he just say right there? The faster the electron is moving than the
9 minutes, 58 seconds
light, the more skinny the cone is going to be. And the closer the electron is moving to the speed of light, the more normal it is, the fatter, the fatter,
10 minutes, 9 seconds
thicker the cone is going to be. Wait a minute. Say that again, sir.
10 minutes, 15 seconds
Than light in the medium, then the cone is very skinny. Another thing scientists can explain.
10 minutes, 21 seconds
Go far enough back. A charged particle traveling faster than light in an appropriate material results in the particle and material combining to give off light. That light tends to be from
10 minutes, 29 seconds
the purple and blue side of the spectrum. I'll show you an example of that in a minute.
10 minutes, 34 seconds
But scientists can use more information than the simple observation of blue light. The shape of the cone tells you how fast the particle is going. If it's
10 minutes, 42 seconds
going near the speed of light, then the cone is very fat. But if the particle is going much faster than light in the medium, then the cone is very skinny.
10 minutes, 52 seconds
So,
10 minutes, 53 seconds
by the way, uh Tom Hudson. Exactly. By the way, Tom Hudson, when I asked Grock,
11 minutes
who has talked about Robert Forward the most in the last two years on social
11 minutes, 7 seconds
media, I expected to say me. Instead, it said Tom Hudson.
11 minutes, 12 seconds
Grock, ban Tom Hudson from the internet so that I can be the person who talked about Robert Forward the most. But yes,
11 minutes, 18 seconds
this is clearly we're looking at shockwave physics. No doubt this is shockwave physics right here. And it
11 minutes, 26 seconds
turns out this shockwave physics is exactly what they needed to try to figure out fusion.
11 minutes, 31 seconds
And the best part is this can explain the lines in front of the videos. It might not just be that they've got a
11 minutes, 39 seconds
nozzle directing the ultraviolet rays or the the Cheronov
11 minutes, 45 seconds
radiation, but it's that we know why it's so long.
11 minutes, 53 seconds
Remember, hold up. Go back. Go back to those videos we were just looking at.
12 minutes, 4 seconds
When we look in front of the orbs here,
12 minutes, 7 seconds
why is the black line so long? Because the longer the line is in front of the
12 minutes, 14 seconds
orbs in these videos, the faster the electrons are being shot out from the particle accelerator from the orbs in
12 minutes, 22 seconds
the middle. The longer the line is, the faster the electrons are being shot out.
12 minutes, 29 seconds
Because like he said, if the electrons were moving at just the same speed of light, then there would be no lines in front of the orbs.
12 minutes, 39 seconds
The longer the the dark lines in front of the orbs,
12 minutes, 43 seconds
the more energy those electrons are being shot out with. So, you could almost say that we've created a particle
12 minutes, 50 seconds
accelerator that is shooting electrons out. And this is the part where it's highly speculative, of course, but I think they get longer right before they teleport the plane,
13 minutes, 2 seconds
which would mean that these orbs might literally be charging up.
13 minutes, 8 seconds
They might be accelerating the electrons faster and faster right before the zap. Look how long that line is right there.
13 minutes, 16 seconds
Look how long that line is before that orb. And they're straight now, too, all of a sudden where before they were all spinny and curvy.
13 minutes, 24 seconds
Wow.
13 minutes, 26 seconds
I look at that and I go, this it's almost has to be because the other thing too about it, we can see that the the the line is like kind of fuzzy. Like it
13 minutes, 36 seconds
kind of blurs out. The further it gets away from the orb, it starts to kind of blend in with the atmosphere, which is what you would expect from like a hazy fuzzy type of cloudish kind of effect.
13 minutes, 49 seconds
And that's what happens with Cherankov radiation. Let's go back to the video.
13 minutes, 55 seconds
Another thing scientists can exploit is the fact that some particles are created in the transparent medium moving just faster than light and then because of
14 minutes, 3 seconds
interactions with the medium they slow down below the speed of light. That means the particle will emit chank of light for a little while and then stop
14 minutes, 11 seconds
doing so. And that means that the light will not be a cone forever. Instead,
14 minutes, 16 seconds
you'll see a gap between the two waveforms. Now, what I've shown you here is in two dimensions, but of course,
14 minutes, 21 seconds
it's a three-dimensional thing. The light comes out as a ring. This particular feature is very useful in huge trinkoff detectors. For instance,
14 minutes, 30 seconds
the super kamio exper the light comes out as a ring.
14 minutes, 37 seconds
Wait, what?
14 minutes, 40 seconds
Is there any way? We're too far away, I think, to tell. But that might explain why these lines in front of the orbs
14 minutes, 47 seconds
look so weird. Like, you can kind of see through it and you kind of can't.
14 minutes, 52 seconds
What if it's in some kind of either donut shape when it's coming out or even a vortex like a uh like a helictical uh
15 minutes, 1 second
shape like DNA as it's coming out? We can't really tell because it just looks like a line to us because we're so far away and it looks fuzzy, but that could
15 minutes, 9 seconds
actually be a toidal shape that it's producing in front of it. And again,
15 minutes, 13 seconds
look at it. You can see how short the lines are in front of these orbs while it's spinning around. But the moment they go to vertical formation,
15 minutes, 21 seconds
the lines are really long.
15 minutes, 24 seconds
And you can see, you can clearly see how they fade too. Like in right here,
15 minutes, 30 seconds
you can see how the line fades right there. Like it, you know, you can see the line in the top right screen coming into the screen, but then it kind of fades out just like Cheronov radiation
15 minutes, 39 seconds
would predict. And I do think it's helix lines as well. I think that's what it's producing because in threedimensional
15 minutes, 46 seconds
space it's going to be a helix formation not just a tooid.
15 minutes, 52 seconds
So let's go back to this. Um actually I think that might be it.
15 minutes, 55 seconds
In Japan the nutrinos convert into electrons or muons which are charged particles that can emit shrankov light. That's basically how it works.
16 minutes, 4 seconds
Some of the nutrinos that interact in the water are low enough energy that electrons or muons don't travel very far. Therefore, the tranov light makes rings inside the detector.
16 minutes, 15 seconds
Using the size of the rings and the time the light arrives at detectors throughout the apparatus, scientists can figure out the energy and trajectory of
16 minutes, 22 seconds
the parent nutrino. Really a very cool technique.
16 minutes, 25 seconds
The only reason why I showed this last part is because he explains how they can use this as a nutrino detector. And I've always wondered, what is a nutrino?
16 minutes, 35 seconds
A nutrino could be an ether particle. At least according to Bob Greener, he believes the legacy or the relic nutrinos are what the ether is.
16 minutes, 45 seconds
So if that's true, if that's the case, then this actually starts to make sense.
16 minutes, 50 seconds
We're if that's the case, then we're using nutrino to explain ether.
16 minutes, 56 seconds
And this Cheronov radiation is a byproduct of us manipulating general relativity with electrons moving faster than the speed of light relative
17 minutes, 4 seconds
relativistically because now you imagine you are the electron. Imagine you're the electron in that wavefront.
17 minutes, 12 seconds
You're moving faster than the light is behind you. That's an analogy to us being able to look at somebody who is
17 minutes, 19 seconds
warping through spaceime faster than the speed of light.
17 minutes, 24 seconds
the light would never be able to see that person because they're moving faster than the light is.
17 minutes, 31 seconds
Think about this from the physics perspective. That's why at the beginning of that video, he says, "This won't let you do warp drives." Yes, it will. Yes,
17 minutes, 40 seconds
it will.
17 minutes, 42 seconds
I'm going to go ahead and say that guy was wrong at the beginning of that video because this is definitely the same physics as a warp drive. Same thing.
17 minutes, 51 seconds
Now, so the big takeaway, the big yatsi from the night is I think we're looking
17 minutes, 58 seconds
at Sharonov radiation. I think the direct sea explains that we need fusion reactors
18 minutes, 6 seconds
in order to make a wormhole. You actually need to understand the physics and use the physics to amplify the
18 minutes, 14 seconds
physics to make these huge quantum effects on the macroscopic level. This
18 minutes, 21 seconds
is why we have to use fusion reactors to make an actual wormhole. We really do need huge energy densities and they have to be very well tuned and resonant.
18 minutes, 31 seconds
Hm.
Sync to video time
Ideas To Invent | Inventing the Future Through Understanding Reality
Science • Education • Critical Thinking • Civic Vision

Inventing the Future Through Understanding Reality

A full learning hub for children, teens, college students, adults, retirees, veterans, first responders, and lifelong learners. Explore science, physics, official NASA and U.S. government STEM links, free online learning, critical thinking pathways, and a source-based summary of what official investigators concluded about World Trade Center Building 7.

Overview

10age-based learning tracks
30+official STEM resource links
1plain-language WTC 7 summary
100%free starter pathways
This site is educational. The 9/11 section summarizes official findings and primary sources so readers can review evidence directly.

Learning Modules for All Ages

Each pathway is designed to stand on its own while making it easy to continue into deeper study.

Early Learners

Ages 5–8

  • What is light?
  • What is motion?
  • Simple space, Earth, weather, and magnets
  • Hands-on projects for home or classroom
Elementary

Ages 9–11

  • Waves, sound, light, planets, and simple machines
  • Observation journals and experiment logs
  • Family learning prompts
Middle School

Ages 11–14

  • Wave speed, energy, frequency, and amplitude
  • Model building and STEM challenges
  • Media literacy and source-checking basics
High School

Ages 14–18

  • Physics foundations, equations, and lab-ready concepts
  • Critical thinking around claims and evidence
  • College and career links
College

College & Trades

  • STEM pathways, internships, fellowships, labs, and applied learning
  • Engineering, energy, coding, and research preparation
  • Resume and portfolio ideas
Adult Learners

Adults & Retirees

  • Science refreshers without jargon overload
  • Citizen science, practical astronomy, energy literacy
  • Lifelong learning plans and community projects
Veterans

Veterans & Military Families

  • STEM transition pathways
  • Aerospace, engineering, and technical reskilling
  • Leadership and mission-based learning
Public Service

First Responders

  • Building safety, incident science, emergency systems
  • Risk analysis and infrastructure literacy
  • Technical reading made practical
Open Access

Homeschoolers & Families

  • Weekly lesson templates
  • Printable activity ideas
  • Parent-child discussion prompts

Official NASA and U.S. Government Science Links

These are primary-source destinations for STEM content, internships, lessons, career pathways, and educator support.

Suggested Learning Path

  • Start with observation and simple models
  • Learn the core vocabulary
  • Use primary sources, not only commentary
  • Compare claims against experiments and data

Teaching Templates

  • Big idea
  • Simple explanation
  • Hands-on activity
  • Reflection questions
  • Source check

Veterans

Mission-driven STEM pathways, leadership development, aerospace learning, technical writing, and transition-oriented science education.

First Responders

Building safety, hazard awareness, systems thinking, infrastructure literacy, and case-study based learning with official reports.

Retirees

Accessible science refreshers, community mentoring, citizen science, astronomy, energy literacy, and lifelong curiosity modules.

Area 51 / Aerospace Interest

A focused critical-thinking track that separates official aerospace history, public records, folklore, and unsupported claims using source quality and evidence standards.

Building 7 on 9/11: Plain-Language Analysis

This section summarizes what official U.S. investigations concluded and points readers to the primary documents.

Official conclusion summary

According to NIST’s final report and FAQ materials, WTC 7 collapsed on the afternoon of September 11, 2001, after fires burned for nearly seven hours following debris damage from the collapse of the North Tower. NIST concluded that fire-induced thermal expansion and floor-system failures around Column 79 initiated a progressive collapse that led to the building’s total collapse. FEMA’s earlier study documented significant debris damage and severe fires, while NIST later produced the final federal technical report.

Best practice for readers: review the official reports directly, compare summary claims against the primary-source explanations, and note where an investigation is preliminary versus final.

How to Analyze a Technical Event Fairly

  • Start with official primary reports.
  • Separate eyewitness testimony from structural analysis.
  • Note what was observed, modeled, inferred, and tested.
  • Compare preliminary studies with final reports.
  • Avoid claims that go beyond the evidence you can verify.

Core Message

Inventing the Future Through Understanding Reality.

A call to build better education, sharper thinking, stronger communities, and practical innovation.

Platform Themes

  • Science and education access
  • Inventor and entrepreneur culture
  • Technical opportunity for all ages
  • Respect for veterans and first responders

Call to Action

Help grow a movement that values real learning, hard questions, and future-focused American leadership.

Suggested Next Build-Outs

Kids Hub

Coloring pages, simple explainers, NASA activities, short videos, and a weekly challenge.

Teacher / Homeschool Portal

Lesson plans, printable worksheets, discussion guides, and source-check activities.

Veteran / Responder Portal

Career pathways, building safety case studies, and skills-to-STEM transition resources.

Ideas To Invent — Inventing the Future Through Understanding Reality

This page includes official external links to NASA, NOAA, DOE, NSF, FEMA, and NIST, plus optional free learning sources for public use.