Powers & Principalities, Episode 038, YouTube Auto-Generated Transcription

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Powers & Principalities, Episode 038

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High and Low Crimes.

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The transcription text below is a YouTube auto-generated English transcription from Powers & Principalities, Episode 038, published by "thkelly67" on 2018-02-10 with a running time of 1:25:47. All episodes of the Powers & Principalities weekly audio interview series between Joseph Atwill and Tim Kelly are included in this playlist on YouTube and are also available as audio podcast downloads on Tim Kelly's "Our Interesting Times" channel on Podomatic.

All transcription copyrights belong to Tim Kelly (thkelly67) & Joseph Atwill.

Donate on PayPal or on Patreon to Tim Kelly's "Our Interesting Times" and "Powers & Principalities" audio shows.

YouTube auto-generated English transcription

00:00 [Music] 00:27 the 00:29 [Music] 00:38 [Music] 00:41 Joe how you doing Tim I believe that the 00:49 gods would destroy they first require 00:52 that they do a bathroom remodel it is 00:58 the biggest nightmare imaginable I mean 01:01 I have dodged you know like ash like 01:06 Pompeii fires like from Hades then flood 01:14 this is the you did need an ark even to 01:17 attempt to what aid through all of that 01:20 was no problem but nobody got a bathroom 01:24 remodel it's hit me so I mean it I don't 01:33 want to listeners but it's just beyond 01:39 it and mr. Perkis I mean the widgets 01:42 nothing is comprehensible you know 01:45 designs that I mean in Chapel you know 01:50 I'm just trying to get a toilet that 01:52 flushes and it's it's anyway it's been 01:57 very frustrating and hey you know what 02:01 you've notices but Beauty is a miserable 02:04 cancer you know you you do one nice 02:09 thing you know like you paint a wall 02:13 house and suddenly the wife will go that 02:16 looks great but now you know the rug yes 02:18 yes you know and then those and the 02:21 value of the room is really too small 02:23 you know this wall and it's just you 02:25 know everything is logical it seems good 02:27 but then you know eventually you're just 02:30 into you know you're just we're of your 02:33 head and nothing makes any sense and you 02:35 just sort of lose all perspective and 02:37 sense of aesthetics 02:39 um and you'd rather live in a cave 02:42 because at least you know that you don't 02:45 have a gay interior decorator you know 02:49 help 02:50 the floor you know so anyway we're fine 02:56 here and you know there's very little 03:00 crime where I live that may change but 03:04 very very little crime but not so in 03:08 places I've lived in the past I lived in 03:11 Venice California when as young and 03:14 there was a tremendous amount of street 03:16 crime there there was an episode 03:19 actually where a guy tried to break into 03:22 the person's there's a young woman who 03:26 lived next to me in an apartment he 03:28 tried to get in through this tiny window 03:30 that was into a closet and he got stuck 03:34 and I couldn't get out and the police 03:39 came but before they did the girl beat 03:44 him with a broom because he was you know 03:48 this is a real Venice guy you know so 03:51 the question that I had was you know 03:55 punishment you know like what is a real 04:01 crop I mean you know in our culture we 04:04 have high crimes by oligarchs right that 04:09 they walk and in this beat this 04:11 essentially is defined as culture and 04:13 then we have street crime know like 04:16 people try to make a living selling 04:18 drugs so our our petty petty theft and 04:22 violence of course you know which is 04:24 associated with a lot of the low crime 04:26 so what do you make of a Tim I mean 04:27 we've got high crime low crime what what 04:31 is crime in our world how do you how do 04:35 we know what to punish well well we 04:38 think of crime and most people think of 04:41 crime they think of low crime street 04:43 crime the estimate seems to affect them 04:44 immediately as it concerns them that's 04:46 what the media covers you know a woman 04:49 is assaulted or raped there's a you know 04:52 there's a rapist on the loose there's 04:55 carjackings people worry about being 04:58 mugged and you know that sort of thing 04:59 people breaking in breaking entering a 05:01 property theft so that's what gets 05:04 people worry that's what affects 05:05 property values and that's what will 05:07 affect the vitality neighborhood these 05:09 type this type of criminals will destroy 05:11 businesses and also result in a marked 05:15 reduction in the quality of life in a 05:17 given neighborhood or area so that's a 05:20 motional thing of crime robbery a 05:22 robbery burglary rape homicide these 05:25 things and that's what 05:27 receives a lion's share of attention by 05:29 law enforcement the courts and the 05:31 correctional institutions and it's also 05:34 if you study criminology most of it does 05:36 focus on these crimes criminologist for 05:39 study these things they don't but they 05:40 don't really study the higher crimes 05:42 this doesn't say the street crime is not 05:45 important 05:46 but this is greater dimensions to these 05:49 things in fact you could say that crime 05:53 itself is in the United States is rooted 05:55 in and in the social structure the 05:59 institutions that were all used to this 06:04 would be like organized crime 06:06 corporations and also you know 06:08 governments and the political class you 06:14 can also look at the cost of crime I 06:16 think it's estimated that street crime 06:18 will cost anywhere from 150 to 200 06:21 billion dollars a year but if looked 06:23 like a leaked crime like financial 06:24 crimes well Bernie Madoff got caught and 06:28 that was 64 just by himself with sixty 06:31 four billion dollars a year these are 06:32 like white crime or white-collar crimes 06:34 but the financial scandals which have 06:38 cost the trillions of dollars it 06:40 normally knows what the to accounting is 06:41 because it was all papered over by the 06:43 Federal Reserve yeah so there's that but 06:48 there's also the intersection of high 06:51 crime to organized crime to street crime 06:53 and a good book on this is a there's a 06:56 book called elite deviance it's a 06:58 textbook by David our assignment serve 07:00 an academic examination of crime and he 07:02 kind of looks into this the relationship 07:05 between high crime elite crime organized 07:08 crime and then street crime and I've 07:10 just read apart from here I'm just 07:11 probably get a good grasp of it from 07:13 that the great bridge between elite and 07:16 not only deviance is organized 07:17 crime profits from activities of 07:20 organized criminal syndicates are made 07:22 from various types of street crime 07:23 including prostitution illegal gambling 07:26 selling drugs which include monies 07:28 obtained by burglars and robbers you 07:30 need to support their drug habits such 07:33 proceeds totaling some 150 billion 07:35 dollars in annual gross revenues 07:36 generate an estimated 50 billion in net 07:39 profits profits that must be reinvested 07:41 in order to grow at time such profits 07:44 have been invested in partnerships 07:46 ventures with legitimate corporations as 07:48 when Pan Am the Mafia and Mafia interest 07:51 open up gambling resorts in the 07:52 Caribbean following Castro's expulsion 07:54 of the Mafia from the Cuba casinos 07:58 likewise business dealings between 08:00 organized crime and legitimate 08:01 corporations included the use of 08:02 racketeers to suppress labor unions and 08:04 laundering of mafia drug funds through 08:07 banks and other legit legal enterprises 08:09 in addition there are numerous financial 08:11 links between organized criminal 08:12 syndicates the game and the government 08:15 from campaign donations of the Mafia 08:16 money's to outright bribery of 08:18 politicians not to mention the infamous 08:20 activities of the CIA so that's that I 08:23 think a good summation or at least in a 08:24 kind of microcosm what we're talking 08:26 about here is that we have they're all 08:29 kind of related and not not just because 08:32 of cause and effect there's a there's a 08:34 direct financial link because obviously 08:36 the punish the drug peddlers are working 08:39 for somebody and the drug industry the 08:43 narcotics trafficking itself isn't isn't 08:46 so much suppressed by the government or 08:48 you know preventive argument as it is 08:50 managed by such agencies like DEA 08:53 directly and perhaps infiltrated by 08:56 other agencies like the CIA which has 08:59 been sort of manipulating or managing 09:01 the drug trade even before its inception 09:03 there's just offices as the OSS and just 09:06 going back to the days of Scotland you 09:09 know the early days of the Sawbones and 09:12 these things in the in the opium trade 09:14 then the and the clipper ships I have 09:16 the proceeds from those from that trade 09:21 resulted in the development of large 09:23 financial banking interest here in 09:24 England I mean over there in England 09:26 also here in United States and that kind 09:27 of forms the elite the the financial 09:29 structure 09:30 companies the banks in these things so 09:32 there really is a direct link not to 09:34 mention how in the past well documented 09:37 how government agencies whether it's 09:39 Department of the native Navy the War 09:42 Department and OSS working with the 09:44 criminal syndicate in New York to secure 09:47 the ports and also to gather 09:49 intelligence for the invasion of Sicily 09:51 during World War two and how people like 09:54 Lucky Luciano were rewarded he was let 09:56 out of prison and and and and he was 09:59 deported he was never a citizen in the 10:01 United States back in into Italy where 10:04 he was sort of set up and kind of the 10:06 manage to heroin trade coming out of 10:08 Europe and this course this was the fame 10:10 the infamous French Connection and that 10:12 was also that that drug trade was 10:14 tolerated as they say because the mob 10:16 the Mafia there's also used to suppress 10:19 the communists and get control of the 10:20 docks in Marseilles just serve the cold 10:22 war agenda so that's how complicated 10:24 crime is of course there's also the 10:25 connection of the banking interest but 10:27 that's kinda what we're talking about 10:28 all these the chronic machine the 10:30 streets is it really gets the attention 10:32 but really it's related to these higher 10:34 crimes of the elite not to mention the 10:35 social engineering or psychological 10:37 warfare use the crime has sort of a 10:40 strategy of tension so any thoughts yeah 10:46 kind of all over the place there but I'm 10:48 trying to yeah yeah but no that was that 10:51 that took us on a great journey yeah and 10:53 the thing is just to focus on one aspect 10:57 to start the you know the banking system 11:03 that we have is very much originated 11:08 from the trading companies right very 11:12 much you know very easy to to trace back 11:17 these families into the victim the 11:21 families that were at Jekyll Island that 11:24 set up the Federal Reserve you know as 11:26 that just take that cluster pretty easy 11:30 to go backwards and time and see the 11:31 relationships that they have into the 11:36 trading companies the trading companies 11:38 in turn become the bank like HBS see you 11:42 know the Hong Kong Bank 11:43 even bankamerica you know what becomes 11:46 Wells Fargo the Citibank these banks are 11:50 also involved you know with these 11:53 trading companies so when we talk about 11:55 the drug company you know the drug the 11:58 illegal drug sales of being kind of a 12:00 platform for the banking system I mean 12:03 this isn't an abstraction Tim I mean 12:05 that this you know as I've have come to 12:08 believe is literally what the banking 12:11 system was and to some extent still is 12:13 and so you can see that you know you 12:17 already you have a kind of a problem in 12:21 terming in determining crime from 12:24 basically what is you know culture 12:27 because the banks are seen as a positive 12:32 thing or at least their propaganda is 12:34 basically moves us in that direction 12:35 whereas people who sell the drugs 12:38 illegally are regarded as criminals it's 12:40 like as banks serve our communities as 12:42 the commercial service yeah yeah exactly 12:44 but you see if you look at what the 12:47 banks actually do for a living then 12:49 suddenly this this kind of distinction 12:53 disappears right and then you don't you 12:56 don't have any sort of one side is 12:59 criminal on the other side is you know 13:02 pillar of our of our of our nation so 13:06 this is you know it's it's it's kind of 13:11 in my opinion moving people to a new 13:16 understanding of crime just we have to 13:20 do this we have to start to realize that 13:22 when we see street crime you know so 13:26 often it's it's seen as moral failure or 13:31 intellectual failure sometimes you know 13:34 people say well this group is basically 13:38 evil are they're prone to violence and 13:45 the the problem with that is that you 13:49 haven't really parsed out the cultural 13:52 flow that brought them to that point 13:55 because you know it gets into ray 13:57 very often you know and then this this 13:59 then it becomes an issue that's almost 14:01 impossible to discuss calmly but I think 14:07 it's a mistake to start the discussion 14:10 with race I've always thought that this 14:13 was sofa sir never made any sense to me 14:16 because you have to understand sort of 14:20 the just the cultural elements not not 14:25 the stuff that you know will this 14:27 person's you know ancestors had a hard 14:29 time I mean that that's really you know 14:33 it's it's that argument I think is hard 14:35 to really make sense of maybe true but 14:37 it's just really difficult to know you 14:39 know like what are these long-standing 14:42 sociological yeah because every ethnic 14:43 cookie can claim at some point in their 14:45 yeah exactly exactly so slavery I mean 14:48 well I think you know a lot of people 14:50 can claim this unfortunately and I don't 14:52 think that you know you can get a really 14:55 clear understanding of the effects of 14:57 slavery three or four generations that I 14:59 just 14:59 I've seen some analysis of this makes no 15:01 sense to me but you can certainly see 15:04 the cultural influences today and I 15:08 think if you look at like crime in the 15:10 United States is asymmetrical and you 15:12 have a lot of crime by young black males 15:18 okay so this is a subject that's hard to 15:21 really you know discuss without all of 15:25 the political correctness you know 15:28 coming into play right very very tough 15:30 but nevertheless I think everyone should 15:34 at least start the discussion with well 15:37 what actually is the culture that the 15:39 individual is accused was produced by 15:43 right like you look at rap music now who 15:47 where did this come from 15:49 right what influence does it have when 15:51 you look at the pimp culture being 15:54 brought into you know like American 15:59 black neighborhoods where does that 16:01 originate how did that become so popular 16:04 when I was a kid it's autumn well all 16:08 the black guys that can fill Hollywood 16:10 know 16:10 yeah that's right yeah and also they're 16:13 there they're you know manufacturing you 16:16 know automatic weapons and cocaine but 16:18 see this is the thing and I don't want 16:20 it I don't want to you know it's I don't 16:22 want to put some kind of excuse out 16:25 there for for any kind of crime but I'm 16:28 just saying that is that and we're not 16:31 talking about the the you know what what 16:35 the punishment is going to be and what 16:37 is reasonable there we're just trying to 16:39 understand where it comes from and to do 16:41 that you gotta really understand the 16:43 culture that produces the individual and 16:45 in my opinion you have a situation that 16:49 the debasement of the culture of you 16:56 know that was in the inner cities was to 16:59 the benefit of the Ozarks they wanted to 17:02 break up ethnic communities right so the 17:06 more the more violent the blacks were 17:11 seen by by you know the city dwellers in 17:16 the 1950s like the the Polish the 17:19 Germans the Italians the Irish right the 17:22 these groups the Beezer was going to be 17:25 to get the D racin aided white middle 17:27 class get white flight yeah you get 17:30 white flight and I think that white 17:33 flight like feminism is something have 17:36 just you know would never have occurred 17:39 if it wasn't created it's also be good 17:42 it's also you're kind of that term 17:44 itself it's kind of a trick is you're 17:45 kind of blaming the victim yeah everyone 17:48 it wasn't everyone's an Archie Bunker 17:50 you know weekends yeah well I mean the 17:53 whites were just completely wrapped and 17:55 on speed and and of course then I mean 17:58 that's just no no doubt about it there 18:00 was the violence did become way worse 18:03 then you could you know if you were you 18:07 know trying to have a middle-class oh 18:12 it's that you couldn't accept I mean I 18:14 mean and but I think that race was 18:18 really that larger component I think 18:19 that it was just behavior that was 18:21 really you know and also propaganda that 18:24 was 18:24 moving people and so the ethnic 18:28 communities were broken up and black 18:30 crime played a huge part of it but you 18:32 see I in my opinion I just think that 18:34 that was you know just an artificial you 18:38 know cultural movement that that the old 18:43 guards had brought about and so the the 18:46 question is is well who's the criminal 18:47 you know and so this is this is why I 18:51 just would I would hope that that when 18:54 people you know when they want to lay 18:58 blame that they don't forget to to try 19:03 to blame to try to lay blame not just on 19:07 the people who commit crimes and they 19:09 and of course they should they should 19:10 find these you know try to lay blame on 19:13 these individuals and protect yourselves 19:15 from them and particularly violence you 19:18 see streetwise and yeah B Street was it 19:21 Awards well I mean I mean being 19:23 streetwise in America basically has met 19:26 suburbs that's twice did you leave right 19:31 so that that's what people have done you 19:35 know and it's just kind of funny because 19:36 you can see how deliberate this whole 19:39 thing was because you know the the inner 19:42 cities were very integrated you know I'm 19:45 so old I feel like Methuselah I mean 19:48 I've lived through this I actually have 19:50 I can remember integrated cities that's 19:53 how old I am 19:54 that's why you know when they talk about 19:56 multiculturalism you can just see these 19:58 people are absolute liars this is 20:02 something they wanted look we had 20:04 multiculturalism this is what was 20:06 destroyed right we had ethnic 20:11 communities all kinds of I used to take 20:13 like a well I mean it like in the in Los 20:17 Angeles there are all kinds of you know 20:22 and that's so much in LA in LA you had 20:26 it was always kind of a suburban city 20:30 you didn't really have too much ethnic 20:33 neighbors it was really built out over 20:36 you know it's kind of after 1940s that 20:38 he'd think got really popular but I 20:40 spent a lot of time in Chicago and man 20:41 I'm Tanya there were ethnic communities 20:43 in Chicago yeah there were and there was 20:46 that meant there was real integration 20:48 there Lithuanian neighborhoods there 20:51 were Lithuanian there was that were 20:53 right next to polish neighborhoods 20:54 yeah and there were african-american to 20:57 use an expression neighbors that weren't 20:59 very far away he but you see people 21:01 didn't we weren't forced by integration 21:04 and and all kinds of weird laws just put 21:07 their kids in schools like this they 21:09 could they could basically keep their 21:11 ethnic community intact and felt 21:15 protected and they wouldn't move and 21:18 that and you see so now they are an 21:21 undigestible lump of culture that the 21:24 oligarch wants to somehow put into the 21:27 mill of the deracinate advise middle 21:30 class how do you get him to leave how do 21:32 you get him to move how do you get the 21:34 Lithuanians 21:35 to leave you know a neighborhood that 21:38 took them like maybe in some cases a 21:40 hundred years to develop well you got a 21:43 scare amount yeah that's what they did 21:45 so they they imported african-americans 21:49 I mean you've done a good job when 21:51 you're interviewed of the Michael Jones 21:52 of through a lot of this but they 21:55 basically just deliberately brought in 21:57 people who couldn't really in any way 22:01 relate to this kind of culture did the 22:04 african-americans from the south right 22:06 and then created busing now this was 22:10 this was supposedly done by people who 22:13 were wanting to create integration right 22:16 haha didn't work out very well did it 22:19 too yeah look at Boston more racially 22:23 polarized than ever 22:24 I mean it's of course so it's just you 22:28 know come and see if I come it's like 22:31 the you know in the Great Society 22:33 programs when they go god we're really 22:36 trying to help african-american culture 22:39 with our Great Society programs and you 22:41 go really every year since its existence 22:44 every single statistic that can measure 22:46 in any way human misery is 22:48 gotten worse 100% 22:51 why do you well how can you with a 22:54 straight face really claim that you're 22:56 here to try to help african-american 22:58 culture 22:58 yeah and it was proven in Vegas in the 23:01 70s it was revealed that the Office of 23:04 Economic Opportunity had given a what I 23:07 love the title was a million dollars to 23:10 this gang Chicago called The Blackstone 23:12 Rangers whose primary job just to make 23:14 life unbearable for the whites and 23:17 living there I think in this case was a 23:19 Polish neighborhood and just to chase 23:22 them out and that was that was the that 23:24 was the goal and it was it's all done 23:25 the guise of you know welfare and 23:28 humanitarian just the same way that the 23:31 United States might be set using NGOs to 23:34 provide humanitarian relief to Syria 23:36 when money is being used for these al 23:38 nusra front sir Muslim extremists to 23:40 destabilize neighborhoods of Syria you 23:43 know so it's a just a domestic 23:45 application of what the Empire has been 23:47 doing around the world destabilization 23:49 that's a great I mean what I really like 23:53 that piece of an ounce that's exactly 23:55 right that's a great analogy that's what 23:56 this is is they're they're just all of 23:59 these things are just the strategy of 24:01 tension they're just trying to drive 24:02 people out drive them away make people 24:05 feel basically that they can't function 24:09 in an area and and then in the ensuing 24:12 chaos then they're they're there they're 24:14 ready with the programs right so you 24:17 know I mean this this has happened over 24:19 and over and over again 24:22 right and and and then you have these 24:26 high crime areas and then politicians 24:28 saying that they're opposed to high 24:30 crime they will stop high crime but what 24:33 do you actually hear anybody talk about 24:34 well you know their crime is there 24:37 because the the Oleg arcs who controlled 24:40 the government wanted the crime to exist 24:42 have you ever heard anybody say that 24:44 it's true it's a true statement and it 24:47 would really help the public understand 24:49 what happened and what to do but ever 24:51 anybody say that well just recently I 24:53 think Donald Trump talked about ms-13 in 24:56 a state of a union address calling out 24:58 the victims of this savage 25:01 you know gang they imitate sir out of 25:04 Central America and well what's the 25:08 function is something like ms-13 I was 25:10 reading an article by Paul and Phillip 25:14 columns but I was thirteen thirty really 25:16 is a creation of federal policy not just 25:18 immigration lacks immigration policy 25:20 also foreign policy to destabilize the 25:23 you know decades-long destabilization of 25:25 Latin America trade policy political 25:28 instability we don't mean the federal 25:30 government was caught gun running in the 25:32 Mexico these things destabilize Mexico 25:35 they were caught another crime by the 25:37 way the another example of government 25:39 crime that doesn't get prosecuted is gun 25:41 running but what it does is so the 25:45 effect is massive you know illegal 25:48 immigration the United States these 25:50 various groups from Central America come 25:53 in in South America come in and they are 25:56 initiated in this gang which is involved 25:59 in human trafficking drug running gun 26:01 smuggling and violence in these things 26:03 and they make the point how this group 26:06 actually serves important an important 26:08 function for the system one thing is 26:10 it's a criminal gang and getting crime 26:13 itself street crime is very important 26:15 for group cohesion think you know the 26:17 report from iron mountain the same way 26:19 that foreign foreign enemy is important 26:20 for national cohesion and purpose well 26:23 same thing with crime itself it's it 26:25 people rally behind the state and they 26:27 asked for greater law enforcement so 26:29 high crime actually served doesn't 26:31 delegitimize law enforcement agencies 26:34 actually leads to greater budgets more 26:36 more power um for their oceans of civil 26:41 liberties because crime is a serious 26:42 problem we can't afford it really 26:44 respect to bill of rights anymore and at 26:47 the same time it serves a strategy of 26:49 tension yeah because people become 26:53 fearful these groups another point was 26:55 made that during the LA riots in 1991 27:00 well various reports that come out 27:02 various police told they were told to 27:04 stand down and they wanted the riots to 27:06 be bad because that would justify 27:07 further militarization of the police and 27:10 they they wanted that incident 27:13 so it's again it's it's there it's a 27:15 form of psychological warfare it's just 27:20 social control and not to mention these 27:22 gangs also are almost like assets of the 27:25 bank banks and also the intelligence 27:27 agencies because is at that street level 27:29 is where they disperse the weapons and 27:31 the drugs and it's how its managed 27:35 anyone knows that these large drug 27:38 cartels there is a kind of like a 27:41 revolving or kind of a game of musical 27:43 chairs when cartels favored over another 27:45 for maybe a decade or so and this helps 27:48 the CIA and the various intelligence 27:51 agencies who are really agents of the 27:54 banking interests that we talked about 27:55 that grew out of the opium trade 27:57 initially but in the 19th century they 28:00 managed the drug trade by selectively 28:04 picking one gang over a wooden cartel 28:07 over another we've seen this in Mexico 28:08 and we've seen it in Colombia in these 28:11 things 28:11 now one point then they'll crack down on 28:15 a cartel you know like the what's the 28:19 one in Colombia you know Pablo Escobar 28:22 Pablo Escobar yeah I mean he what he was 28:25 basically working you know with with 28:29 elements of the US and then fell out of 28:33 favor and then they they then at that 28:36 point permitted him to be deposed but if 28:39 you look at the history I mean like 28:42 really we didn't know he was the person 28:45 who was putting like tons of cocaine in 28:47 the United States every week and no one 28:50 could find it yeah see this is the thing 28:53 is that this I think this is kind of 28:54 where they usually trip themselves up is 28:56 it's like well you know we we have to 28:59 find half --lo Escobar look you could 29:02 you could look him up and in his like 29:05 find his address in the phone book he 29:07 yeah they don't want to stop this stuff 29:10 they they have the timing issues as far 29:12 as like trying to convince people that 29:15 you know they're doing something about 29:16 it but the fact is is that the public 29:18 would be well-served to just remember 29:20 that the CIA comes from the banks I mean 29:24 this is something that 29:26 you know I mean at this point we've got 29:27 other intelligence agencies and then 29:29 alphabet soup but you know going back to 29:31 like 1946 you know how did the CI get 29:36 created who who created it well you know 29:40 it was Donovan 29:41 well whose died of it I mean he's the 29:45 OSS head but he's actually just an 29:47 investment banker right 29:49 who is he working with in Europe and neo 29:51 SSI dwells with Mellon 29:53 who's this well it's the my own banking 29:55 family mountain banking town was running 29:57 the OSS in Europe just look at the 29:59 number of melons that are in positions 30:01 of authority in the OSS and you can see 30:03 it's just a complete tip to stern 30:05 operation by this family now what Joe 30:08 what do you have against family when 30:09 businesses come on you know it's right 30:11 particularly I just want my family to 30:14 develop its own Intelligence Agency 30:16 I mean this is and I want to budget a 30:20 big big black I have lots of family 30:24 members and I mean and I need some 30:26 technical equipment and I want I want to 30:28 be above the law for a while because I'm 30:30 tired of having to you know watch what I 30:32 say and do but the thing is is that is 30:36 that so when you just look and then of 30:38 course like go well okay but what the 30:41 Donovan was bad but surely they got 30:43 somebody else in there was better after 30:44 that well yeah they get in Helms and 30:46 Dulles who are these guys 30:47 they're more investment bankers he 30:50 skullenbones they these guys are just 30:53 complete shills for for the oligarchs 30:56 they're their training is in basically 31:01 financial maneuvering they're they're 31:04 part of the group that we're helping you 31:05 know Hitler get funding on one side and 31:09 British Zionists you know trying to take 31:12 over Palestine in the other these guys 31:15 are masterminds of deception of but of 31:19 special interests you know so so the 31:21 idea that when you look at the history 31:23 of the CIA that you know it's some kind 31:25 of agency here to help you know the 31:29 democratic forces you know kind of 31:31 figure out well what's real in the world 31:33 this is preposterous that these are just 31:37 the it's the oligarchs 31:40 having basically intelligence under the 31:44 cover of government I mean the way to 31:46 look at like the CIA or the FBI is think 31:50 about organized crime in Cuba having a 31:55 relationship with the you know with 31:59 Batista right and did this was like 32:02 covered in in one of the Godfather 32:04 movies where you know the guy goes well 32:06 really we're gonna have what we always 32:08 wanted which is we're going to have 32:10 basically a government that's that 32:13 basically will be working with us in all 32:16 of these criminal activities well that's 32:18 what the CIA is I mean this is honestly 32:21 what the thing is in fact and and so 32:24 that's why you have you know an unbroken 32:27 string of shills for the banking 32:29 industry and banking families from 32:31 running the thing from the third 32:33 beginning and the most absurd of them 32:35 was then George Bush Senior forgot 60 I 32:40 mean this was just preposterous you know 32:43 that someone like this would would be 32:45 given the reins I mean he's his family 32:47 couldn't be more corrupt there they were 32:50 like in the son of the initial partners 32:53 with with Rockefeller you know and some 32:56 of these and some of these businesses 32:57 that go way back and so now suddenly 32:59 they're you know the family members are 33:01 running in the Intelligence Agency well 33:03 what's the Intelligence Agency who is it 33:05 serving anyway you know not to be 33:07 long-winded about this but but this is 33:10 why when you when you think about the 33:12 proposition that the the drug the 33:16 illegal drug trade is basically being 33:20 promoted and controlled by the 33:22 government you know you have to remember 33:25 this is how it started you know the this 33:28 is this is the of course it's going in 33:31 this tax fashion this is how these this 33:35 is how these these families made their 33:38 big money in the very you know in the 33:39 beginning so yeah it never changed it's 33:42 still going on today and and and so you 33:46 know we have we have the high crime 33:48 which the public basically sees as an 33:52 intelligence agents 33:53 our just culture right like Hollywood 33:56 empty empty and then the low-crime which 33:59 is just the the individual in society 34:02 who's been maneuvered into you know 34:04 doing something nefarious in order to 34:06 make a living now no there is no excuse 34:11 for this and you know I don't want to 34:14 give the idea like well they're excused 34:17 you know they're not we just have to if 34:19 we want to if you want to get the system 34:21 to work more efficiently for democracy 34:23 you've got to understand how the low 34:27 crimes are being created and they're 34:29 being created from the top down that's 34:32 the main thing it's again and you know 34:34 what it goes to Tim it's just the 34:35 awareness of the secret society and how 34:37 nefarious they are if you know that 34:39 they're in play if you know that they're 34:42 creating culture then you look at low 34:44 crime you go okay it's a function of 34:47 that and so now you don't you it's you 34:51 have a way to deal with you that you 34:53 actually you know think about the 34:56 illegal drug trade right I mean does 35:01 anyone even think now that there's even 35:03 a hope of ever getting it under control 35:05 right it's preposterous you can go to 35:08 any street corner in any city and buy 35:09 any drug you want yeah right so there's 35:12 that the whole interdiction mantra had 35:16 an idea just collapse it's just absurd 35:18 so you know well how do you fix it well 35:23 understand where it comes from 35:25 understand that this is a money-making 35:27 system for the oligarch family and then 35:30 at least you might be able to you know 35:32 get to the bottom of these things and 35:33 then make some real changes yeah there's 35:36 a good illustration I think I mentioned 35:37 this to you a couple weeks ago a 35:40 dramatization of this dynamic and of 35:42 course doesn't go this this particular 35:44 example doesn't go over the top but it's 35:46 it's I think it's a give us an idea how 35:48 how this works 35:49 I was watching The Sopranos customership 35:53 know that's about a crime family the 35:57 five families in New York and if crime 35:58 family New Jersey The Sopranos but one 36:03 of the episodes begins with a family 36:05 driving Mercedes 36:07 SUV in the neighborhood a nice 36:10 neighborhood in New York City and as 36:12 they're pulling out there is a daughter 36:14 and the son the dog wife husband driving 36:18 and it's it's a new car that you're 36:21 driving in he's not familiar with so you 36:22 know it's the new car and they're 36:24 pulling into the driveway just then two 36:25 black guys mugged them carjacking right 36:29 yeah the heck out of them forced the 36:32 family out of it you know wife screaming 36:33 and the husbands huddling in fear kids 36:36 are forced out like these two black guys 36:38 get in the car 36:39 you know you curse at them and they 36:41 drive off brandishing their weapons and 36:43 they find they see the dog in the back 36:45 and they toss the dog out the car and 36:46 the dog gets away and the car drives off 36:48 and the husband is just so outraged 36:50 looking at his wife and Hema his words 36:54 he goes effing niggers effing niggers 36:57 and the wife goes honey don't say that 37:00 this is but isn't it true and as it 37:02 turns out that this you know they steal 37:04 the car of course they're still in their 37:05 car for Tony Soprano's car smuggling 37:08 racket he's got that he's selling off 37:10 he's selling in Eastern Europe somewhere 37:11 but so a street crime they see the 37:14 racial element right all right that's 37:16 right they don't know the higher 37:17 networks if these people are working for 37:19 a criminal syndicate and of course it 37:22 doesn't stop a Tony Soprano of course 37:23 but that was using that as an example so 37:25 even the show itself knows how to show 37:27 that dynamic and for the character Tony 37:29 Soprano will often say off-color remarks 37:31 about blacks and crime and he also his 37:35 his his he also facilitates or allows 37:39 for the distribution of drugs in the 37:42 neighborhood which he'll condemn at the 37:44 same time make money offer but not 37:46 accept his responsibility for there's 37:47 another episode where his uncle who is 37:50 the titular head of the family but he's 37:51 old and Tony really runs the show and 37:53 his uncle also gets the heat from the 37:56 FBI from the show but anything goes to 37:58 trial and she goes to jail that sort of 38:00 thing but um the uncle of course part of 38:04 his money is the tribute that the local 38:08 drug dealers play pay him for the 38:11 protection he offers from local police 38:13 typical setup okay and so there's these 38:16 drug deals are paying his men money 38:18 which then they kick up to the uncle 38:21 now part of the tribute the way it's you 38:22 know the way that the the patron system 38:24 works patroness system works but um 38:26 there's one episode where he the uncle 38:29 is getting a suit tailored and he's 38:32 making small chat to his tailor which 38:33 he's been going for years so he's 38:35 friendly with him and he says you feel 38:37 you look a little down what's wrong and 38:39 he goes well my grandson has died that's 38:42 awful but happening is well it's a drug 38:44 overdose really drug overdose Wow so he 38:48 finds out who the drug dealer is and 38:51 hasn't killed because that personal to 38:54 him then his man comes to Tony complains 38:57 your uncle had what am i drug dealers 38:58 killed he was a great earner for me see 39:02 ya but they're all getting money it's 39:04 another verse you know there's there's 39:06 mobsters they're gonna stop to think 39:08 about this but in a way that's sort of a 39:10 reflection of a lot of people who they 39:12 don't think the role they're playing in 39:13 all this and they only they only see the 39:16 street level and draw conclusions and 39:18 you know the thing is is that it just 39:20 shows that you have to understand the 39:26 malevolence of the secret society are 39:28 you're just incapable of making any 39:30 moral decisions or understandings you 39:36 just cared lost in the world 39:38 you're absolutely fundamentally lost you 39:41 just you don't have the opportunity of 39:44 even having an idea that sensible come 39:46 into your mind because you know as as 39:49 you experience reality you're just going 39:51 to see what they put in front of you 39:53 that's how deep the propaganda is at 39:56 this point you know and you know this is 40:02 you know one of the the problems of 40:05 course is the it's the lack of kind of 40:08 clarity and just sort of you know what 40:11 is you know just say that the secret 40:14 society was exposed and the next 40:16 question is well then what is justice 40:19 how do you actually achieve it right 40:20 what what sort of the law the law that 40:24 we have is you know is as it was created 40:28 with nefarious purpose right I mean it's 40:30 it just enables you know they 40:34 Oleg arks produce culture with their 40:38 crime and the street person produces you 40:42 know crime that that can land him in 40:44 prison right he say that system is 40:49 exposed you still have the problem 40:51 because we've been so underdeveloped as 40:55 individuals in the last 2,000 years well 41:01 then what is crime right I mean how do 41:04 we you know people talk about natural 41:06 law but this is a good idea but how do 41:09 we apply it in our current situation 41:13 yeah cuz the worst crimes are the worst 41:16 crimes are really with legal now like 41:18 legalized counterfeiting from the 41:19 federal reserve system at least I'm sure 41:21 an arat there is a real crime but but so 41:26 you can you could were able to define it 41:27 but the question is is like well then 41:30 how do we actually evaluate crime you 41:35 know I mean who's who is who who is who 41:38 is a criminal 41:39 it's is kind of interesting it's has 41:41 been like a lot of people on the 41:43 internet are interested in this you know 41:45 like natural law yeah very interesting 41:49 subject but I haven't heard any real 41:51 clarity come you know people talk about 41:54 they there's a lot of generalities 41:56 they'll say things like well it's you 41:59 can't restrict the agency of another 42:01 person well I mean that isn't gonna get 42:05 very far as a definition when you know 42:08 people start having disputes over who 42:10 has you know agency and in different 42:13 areas you know so it's it doesn't strike 42:16 me at least I haven't this argument 42:18 hasn't been to develop to the point 42:20 where I think and unuseful has come out 42:21 of it 42:22 but I can understand the you know the 42:25 reason why people are interested in it 42:27 it doesn't take an effect psychological 42:29 warfare in my control exactly I mean how 42:32 exactly right because that's that's you 42:34 know and you know it's like I'll give an 42:38 example what because you know when you 42:40 when we were talking or we had the 42:42 exchange in a but well like you know 42:43 high crime and low crime and I was 42:45 thinking about well 42:47 how do we determine one from another and 42:49 what is a cultural crime and you know 42:52 really what when you get right down into 42:54 what is crime and I was I thought 42:57 oddly enough of the opening scene of 43:00 2001 a space idiocy excuse anyway if you 43:07 look at that what you have is you know a 43:10 group of chimps or primitive hominoids 43:14 that are beaten up and then the obelisk 43:18 this Masonic mystery suddenly comes into 43:24 their presence and the next thing that 43:26 you know they they go you know what we 43:29 need is weapons he then they develop 43:34 weapons they take bones and leverage the 43:38 strength and their limbs go back and 43:41 kill the group that they had lost to 43:43 right so now the obelisk the Masonic 43:47 symbol has given them this power and 43:50 they've used it to develop weapons and 43:53 now they're able to control their their 43:57 territory and destroy the other 43:59 ethnicity the other hominoid group so I 44:06 my question is is was that a crime was 44:11 that or was that though dude because you 44:13 see I I think that Kubrick and Clarke 44:16 are on the inside those guys aren't you 44:19 know just you know creating metaphor 44:23 without purpose or perspective so 44:26 something is being told to us there and 44:29 what I think is happening is they're 44:31 simply saying well this is why we're 44:34 justified and doing what we we do 44:36 because we're pissed it's a jungle yeah 44:39 it's abuse it's a natural law I mean 44:41 that's how they perceive natural law and 44:43 we we got the Masonic you know widget 44:47 whatever whatever they want to call it 44:49 and so now we can make weapons and we 44:52 can control you you know and of course 44:54 propaganda is one of the weapons but 44:55 it's always widget so you know when you 44:58 have high crime and local 45:01 you have the question of ethnic crime 45:05 and and of you know of like well how do 45:08 how do what sort of what is appropriate 45:10 you know in terms of basically 45:15 development of weapons because we're 45:16 talking about psychological weapons and 45:18 we're also talking about you know atom 45:21 bombs and things like this so you know 45:24 my question is is like is there do you 45:26 see any kind of sort of natural law that 45:31 can be a plaintiff to are used in a way 45:36 that will kind of help this situation in 45:39 other words were the we're the hominoids 45:42 who developed the the the clubs because 45:48 of yeah the obelisk landing in front of 45:51 them with the creepy music right were 45:54 they justified or was this a crime well 45:59 that's the fun yeah think because it all 46:00 goes back to I guess what your 46:02 anthropology is your vision of man is he 46:05 just a naked ape of clever naked ape or 46:08 is he you know a you know someone who 46:14 has a touch of the divine to them 46:16 separate separate from the animal I 46:19 think it's fairly obvious well like 46:21 getting a religious discussion that man 46:22 is separate from the animals and many 46:24 language you know they the divine spark 46:28 even human beings were selves or so 46:30 individually they're so different from 46:32 one another and as opposed animals 46:33 aren't you know so if there's a clear 46:35 demarcation line between you know man 46:38 and animal there you know now if you're 46:42 if you are like a freemason and you 46:46 you're you will develop an argument 46:47 where so now we're just like the animals 46:50 and therefore its prey and predator and 46:51 they that they you know the smartest 46:54 strongest predator rules rules out so 46:57 it's okay so you know you can refer to 47:00 natural law but also you have to refer 47:02 to a sort of a moral observation that 47:06 goes back to MIT perhaps the the golden 47:09 rule in these things 47:10 and apply it across the board and you 47:13 have to you know they look at things 47:17 like a cult acknowledges some sort of 47:18 justification exactly what I did my 47:22 opinion what they're saying is and what 47:25 Clark and Kubrick are developing with 47:28 their creepy and basically insane film 47:32 is they're justifying he actually saying 47:37 hey look we we we were beaten up right 47:40 so that's why we developed this thing in 47:42 our spirit the intelligence to separate 47:48 ourselves from you know these other 47:51 groups that is itself the moral 47:55 justification which I think in Clark's 47:59 book was it the end of childhood what's 48:01 that end of childhood yeah my childhoods 48:05 end childhood down roads end where I 48:08 think it doesn't end with these superior 48:10 specialist destroy humanity or something 48:14 I think you're right I know that Clark 48:18 actually worked on the screenplay for 48:20 2001 and they threw in this you know 48:22 really clear-cut opening where they 48:26 basically show technology being 48:29 developed by the people with the Masonic 48:32 symbol yes are the group the hominoids 48:35 so in technology is sort of a divine 48:37 right I guess well it is it is a 48:40 reflection of divinity in their person 48:43 and so this when you think about and I 48:46 hate to say it but you know the elite 48:48 criminality Pizza Gaetti pedophilia 48:51 rings you know just the whole like 48:55 quattro core nadi kind of you know world 49:00 shaping events you know where they're 49:02 setting up world wars and moving 49:04 ethnicities around and things like that 49:06 it all it all comes from this 49:08 understanding this is how they justified 49:10 that kind of criminality high 49:11 criminality low criminality is you know 49:16 we're taught just to not accept any 49:19 justification for it right 49:21 but high criminality which is what I 49:24 hope becomes the focus of the citizen in 49:29 the future high criminality is more 49:34 sophisticated in its defense and you 49:37 know like you have the eugenics society 49:39 people you know the social Darwin is the 49:42 Huxley family but you've also got from 49:48 them built into our high criminals today 49:52 this this belief that they possess this 49:57 Masonic cube of genius and therefore 50:02 that is what created the technology and 50:05 that's the justification so the 50:08 justification for their crime is 50:11 basically that they had the wit to 50:14 develop you know the propaganda and the 50:18 the physical tools to me this is 50:22 completely this is insane basically but 50:26 it just shows how dangerous the secret 50:29 society is its intellectual insider 50:33 trade yeah more or less yeah special 50:36 knowledge in these things and especial 50:37 knowledge exactly and and what justifies 50:40 it well I had the ability to have the 50:42 special knowledge I mean it's a the 50:45 logic is absolutely a circular and 50:49 flawed but that isn't going to help any 50:51 of the people who are suffering from 50:53 this yeah and it's your boo schwa 50:55 morality which hinders which inhibits 50:58 you yeah and so it's a mockery of you 51:02 know middle class you know morality 51:04 about the you know yeah exactly the 51:09 middle class morality you see this is 51:11 the thing is that once you realize that 51:14 the the moral perspective of the 51:18 hominids who are beating the brains out 51:21 of the other ones with their newly 51:23 discovered tool is is what high crime 51:28 has as its justification you don't 51:32 really have either logic or reason 51:34 or even the attempt at empathy to go to 51:36 these people and say look stop what 51:38 you're doing right because this this you 51:42 can see that they have developed in 51:44 secret this kind of Masonic 51:47 understanding you know of the world that 51:53 there isn't any moral order and there 51:56 isn't any rational order there is just 52:00 as Crowley said do what thou willst 52:03 that's the whole of the law that's what 52:06 he meant see that that's really what he 52:09 meant is that you know I think it was 52:13 being applied to the counterculture as 52:15 propaganda to get people to you know sex 52:17 drugs and rock and roll but he also 52:20 meant cryptically as you know that we 52:26 have the Masonic obelisk of genius and 52:29 so we need to basically we are entitled 52:32 to use it as ever in any way we want and 52:35 so high crime is you know is a is 52:42 something that needs to be understood in 52:45 terms of its mechanics you know what it 52:47 does how but we also have to understand 52:49 in terms of of its moral blankness that 52:55 it actually in order for these guys to 52:57 operate like they do they have to be at 53:02 a complete null state of empathy and 53:06 morality even reason is B is in other 53:10 words they are really just accepting 53:13 their their a Auto Tomica system as what 53:18 is the work you know the the divinity 53:21 that they need to respond to yeah you 53:25 know because they couldn't do it any 53:26 other way to him they couldn't I mean 53:28 you couldn't do something like World War 53:30 two you know or even you know say the 53:35 pizza gate that the pedophilia is is 53:37 correct you couldn't do things like that 53:39 if there was any capacity to even 53:44 question you know sort of 53:47 the moral moral order or empathy mean 53:49 look at Jimmy Savile you know the the 53:52 pedophile who was servicing all the 53:54 royal families and me leading Britain I 53:57 mean there isn't anything you can even 54:01 appeal to inside his mind you know of 54:05 you know that you can connect to in any 54:07 of the normal ways because I mean he's 54:09 operating just like one of the hominoids 54:11 with the the bone in the beginning of 54:14 2001 yeah it's just nihilism anyone any 54:19 word you want to use but it's just his 54:20 impulse is the only thing that matters 54:23 and he could care less 54:24 you could bring all every argument in 54:26 front of him that makes sense to a 54:28 normal person and it would never 54:29 they would never draw any response from 54:32 him he's you know he would see it as 54:35 just silliness now with uh we have it in 54:41 the United States with tough on crime 54:43 organized crime of course we're gonna 54:45 cry min the United States we think of 54:47 the Mafia the Italian mafia the Jewish 54:50 mafia the Irish mafia these things it 54:53 really got its start right around 54:55 prohibition because there was an 54:58 opportunity for them for these crime 55:00 families or crime outfits to for the 55:04 first time make a whole lot of money and 55:05 organize themselves in a way that they 55:09 could go any real power block became a 55:12 power block in the United States 55:14 particular Meyer Lansky yeah and the 55:19 Chicago gang like Joe Adonis owned Al 55:26 Capone and all that but this funny thing 55:28 because as weird as crime you know 55:31 flourished in the 20s 30s 40s and 50s it 55:35 peaked in the 50s 60s you know they they 55:38 got Las Vegas built these since of 55:40 course there was it was always in 55:41 conjunction with OSS and later the CIA 55:44 of course we saw that when some of the 55:48 evidence was dug dug up in regards to 55:50 the Kennedy assassination you know some 55:52 of these crime figures like Johnny Oh 55:54 Johnny Roselli yeah yeah yeah 55:58 Santo Trafficante sam giancana they said 56:03 were actually used by the agency for 56:05 some of their intelligence operations 56:06 particularly what they were doing down 56:08 in Cuba and it turns out perhaps in the 56:11 death of the President Kennedy but for 56:15 the longest time for some recent Jagger 56:19 Hoover because he was the head of the 56:21 Federal Bureau investigation I think 56:23 from 19 1920 until 1972 or at least late 56:27 20 so better part of 50 years he refused 56:30 to acknowledge that there was something 56:33 like organized crime or the Mafia and 56:37 well it turns out perhaps the reason why 56:39 that was the case is one of the reasons 56:41 why he just didn't um like the idea of 56:45 taking on them off he liked high-profile 56:47 cases like on a babyface Nelson or 56:50 something these stories going after 56:52 these these inner interests interstate 56:54 bank robbers and in the 20s and 30s but 56:58 it turns out that perhaps the J Hoover 57:01 himself he was another high criminal 57:04 because he conducted all types of 57:05 illegal surveillance and develop all 57:08 types of control files by conducting 57:11 illegal wiretap anything so he was a 57:13 high high high functioning criminal 57:15 himself of course the FBI Billy was 57:17 still named after him in Washington DC 57:19 despite the fact what's been revealed 57:20 about him but it shows that that the OSS 57:23 simper in another criminal outfit mera 57:26 Lansky had the goods and Jehu Hoover's a 57:29 homosexuality photographs of him with 57:31 Clyde Tolson and such and they some 57:33 people think that kept him from taking 57:35 on the mob until this raid in the 1957 57:42 in Appalachian the Appalachian raid his 57:44 Appalachian summit and there's a I think 57:47 the post eight police raided it and got 57:50 in the papers and J Hoover had to admit 57:53 that there was indeed something called 57:55 organized crime in the United States of 57:57 course then with 1961 you have the 57:59 Kennedys and Bobby Kennedy going after 58:00 the Mafia was JJ Hoover never liked 58:03 which could might have contributed to 58:05 both John and Bobby's assassinations 58:09 so you have that you have the the chief 58:12 enforcer the country the FBI not 58:14 acknowledging it to something called 58:15 organized crime it was amazing that's 58:19 all that full period was just incredible 58:22 yeah 58:24 so that's you know yes there that's 58:26 nothing but then we know the organized 58:28 crime itself served a particular 58:30 function because we've talked about 58:32 operation underground IRA limited 58:34 earlier with the word apartment using 58:36 Lansky and Sant Adonis and Luciano in 58:41 during the Second World War and of 58:43 course the Vietnam War another 58:46 opportunity to to engage in all types of 58:51 high-level criminality there's a drug 58:53 ring that came out of there that was a 58:54 facilitate of the operation CIA's 58:56 operations in Laos and that opened up 58:59 the the war itself create an opportunity 59:01 to ship drugs particularly heroin into 59:03 the United States to create a very 59:06 lucrative market this also coincides 59:08 with the the French Connection means 59:10 shut down and some people interpreted at 59:13 least the the Vietnam War at least one 59:15 reason for it was the CIA couldn't sort 59:17 of nudging the French out and into China 59:19 and of course is a Vietnam War shut down 59:22 oh well the drug trade shifted to other 59:25 areas like Afghanistan in 1980 in 59:28 Central America in the eighties another 59:30 intelligence operation Afghanistan in 59:32 Rome they were helping the freedom 59:36 fighters in Afghanistan fight the Soviet 59:38 occupiers and then there's the dirty 59:39 wars in Central America where they were 59:42 the Reagan administration was aiding the 59:45 Contras in their war against the spread 59:47 of communism in Central America 59:49 another reason to to import cocaine of 59:54 course that feeds the drug markets 59:56 throughout the country particularly Los 59:57 Angeles and that's revealed by Gary Webb 60:01 in his Dark Alliance series and San Jose 60:03 Mercury News how the se was facilitating 60:07 the importation of drugs the phone the 60:10 contra operation of drugs themselves a 60:11 lot of it was going into South Central 60:13 LA this is Freeway Ricky Ross and this 60:15 feeds the crack cocaine epidemic which 60:18 creates a whole nother panic or fear in 60:20 the country which in the white middle 60:23 class the white majority 60:25 fed these stories about black crime and 60:28 crack cocaine addiction and the crime 60:30 that radiates from these neighborhoods 60:31 causes more flight more fear more 60:33 support for the police state so there so 60:37 and so it goes again it's nothing what 60:39 we're talking about here is if yeah 60:41 there's a street crime is that there's 60:43 the just the human degradation the 60:46 violence and the destruction of these 60:48 communities all to feed an intelligence 60:51 operation and also just dose will make a 60:53 lot of people rich in the process these 60:54 Cowboys these cocaine Cowboys are flying 60:56 this is what they do it's almost like a 60:59 make works make-work job I was reading 61:01 them oh what's that book burying the 61:06 boys Daniel Daniel Hopson he was burying 61:08 the boys and he's talking about in Cuba 61:11 that how these pilots were flying in 61:17 weapons it's about the Barry seal 61:20 formula that Barry seal but it's about a 61:21 whole lot more about his involvement in 61:25 Cuba the Kennedy assassination and so on 61:28 but um how the CIA was had orchestrated 61:36 Batista's rise to power cuz they kicked 61:38 up this guy prey prio they didn't like 61:41 he was too corrupt for them so then the 61:44 CIA starts to fund Castro Castro got 61:48 about three hundred million dollars of 61:49 funding from where it wasn't from the 61:52 Soviets so they they set Castro up and 61:55 that's what Barry seal and David Ferrer 61:56 were actually flying in weapons and 61:57 supplies for Castro in the late 1950s 62:01 and then all sudden and once Castro 62:03 comes into power 62:04 the CIA conspires to take out Castro and 62:07 this is the sky Priya who had been you 62:11 know overthrown in the early 50s and 62:12 he's funding this operation and so he 62:16 just asked a question 62:16 why even go through all this trouble 62:18 when the good it looks like they're just 62:20 trying to reinstall this guy that they 62:22 deposed back in the early 1950s he says 62:24 is this just some sort of twisted like 62:27 New Deal WPA type make work solution for 62:30 business you know cuz all this money's 62:33 being churned up and you know all 62:34 there's no real rationale to it and I 62:37 had a laugh 62:38 just a make-work thing and that's kind 62:40 of what you get idea what was going on 62:41 in Central America because at a certain 62:44 level this is just what they do it's 62:46 almost I get that sense when during the 62:47 iran-contra hearings when Major General 62:50 Sir chord was testifying and they're 62:51 talking about the arms shipments of 62:53 course the big cover-up iron contour 62:54 wasn't the fact that the weapons have 62:56 been you know shipped to Iran to fund 63:01 the Contras in violation of the Boland 63:03 Amendment the big cover-up was affected 63:05 cocaine tons of cocaine was being 63:07 shipped into the country 63:08 in this process but anyway major suckers 63:11 asked a question about how much money he 63:12 made on it and through these illegal 63:15 arms shipments and he gives oh of course 63:16 I made money on it's a business yeah and 63:21 all this is all this all criminal and no 63:23 one ever went to jail for it 63:25 so you know yeah I mean well you know 63:28 the people who are the low criminals go 63:31 to jail 63:31 yeah it's just part of the social 63:34 structure that you know that's been 63:37 created with the whole process what 63:39 about what about the Clinton Foundation 63:41 I mean jeez this guy chores or tell was 63:49 retired investment banker actually did 63:51 the research to the Clinton Foundation 63:52 and said it didn't even meet the state 63:55 requirements for its paperwork like it's 63:58 a big fraud and of course of course what 64:00 the Clinton Foundation is it's a money 64:02 laundering operation they're at a high 64:05 public graft and bribery because there 64:08 was done an anticipation for her being 64:09 elected president and the process that's 64:11 also ripping off all these funds and 64:13 misdirecting aid but is supposed to help 64:15 the Haitians and apparently it was used 64:18 to fund a autumn eyes factory down there 64:21 and also build a resort brother got the 64:28 permit for the the first gold mining 64:32 permit that Haiti had issued in like 50 64:34 years or something 64:35 forget the detail but it was like this 64:38 was actually his company was on the 64:40 direct board of directors onand but and 64:43 then the telecommunication went to 64:45 another huge Clinton don't I mean they 64:47 they just just parsed up that that 64:51 country like it was a loaf of bread or 64:53 something and and you know this is the 64:56 high crime though this is not something 64:58 they will ever be prosecuted for in fact 65:00 on the contrary they'll get medals for 65:03 this they'll get humanitarian awards for 65:07 this and you know this stuff is you know 65:10 they can do it the high criminal can 65:12 function because the people in many 65:15 cases are so busy dealing with the low 65:17 criminal that they can't think about how 65:19 their culture is being shaped this is 65:21 the you know this to me is the hopefully 65:26 the plain of understanding the 65:28 distinction between high and low 65:30 criminal is that you know the citizen is 65:34 in the dark about the nature of the high 65:38 criminal activity and what they're doing 65:40 and how they're reducing the low 65:42 criminal and you know that's that's 65:45 really if we want to to have a better 65:49 less crime ridden culture the idea of 65:54 like achieving that through locking out 65:56 more people it's pretty far-fetched in 65:59 my mind you have to look at the 66:02 production of the culture the deliberate 66:04 debasement of culture by the high 66:07 criminal good example is that is the 66:09 migration and ensuing the rape crisis 66:12 that's occurring in Europe particularly 66:13 in Germany because again you have 66:15 another group the same thing they did 66:17 with the sharecroppers in the in the 66:20 eighties and 50s shipping up north in 66:22 these cities to create all types of 66:24 problems and also weaken the labor 66:26 unions that descending securing in 66:28 Europe where they've well the high crime 66:30 is these fomented civil wars in North 66:32 Africa and in the Middle East in Syria 66:34 and then you have these agencies 66:36 particularly there's this one this one 66:38 juice agency jaxa gets funded out of 66:40 Israel they ship they facilitate the 66:43 shipment of these people and they're 66:45 paid by tax dollars NGO funding to ship 66:48 these migrants facilitate their their 66:51 their voyage to Europe and flood these 66:55 countries with like hungry or 66:57 germinating these things and then they 66:59 have the problems on the streets we see 67:00 if you have a lot of single men and 67:03 alien culture 67:05 being introduced into a culture that's 67:07 much more permissive and then you have 67:08 the ensuing rape crisis that gets the 67:10 press and that gets the the racial 67:12 ethnic violence going because that's a 67:14 natural reaction to these things but 67:15 they get worse they're blaming the 67:17 immediate enemy which is the migrant 67:19 enough that the oligarchs that ever 67:21 facilitated created this this situation 67:23 at the same time groups like the Germans 67:26 who have been psychologically sort of 67:28 psychologically decapitated culturally 67:31 that if German voices any discomfort to 67:35 the fact that his country his 67:38 ethnicities being assaulted and diluted 67:40 by this imported mass migration they are 67:43 accused of being a Nazi 67:44 because factly and so you can see that 67:48 you just have to break completely free 67:50 of the of this the the propaganda that 67:53 keeps the citizen frozen in place focus 67:57 on the low crime and not turning and 68:00 looking at the high crime that that's a 68:03 great exposition because that's exactly 68:05 how it's done that's exactly how it's 68:07 done it's the same thing at if you're 68:10 white and you X Express discomfort or 68:15 dislike towards well let's say 68:20 sexualized black music rap music and 68:22 these things and promoting interracial 68:25 you know mating in these things how 68:29 ordinarily you may might be indifferent 68:31 to this but if it's being app everywhere 68:33 you go it's being actively promoted the 68:35 same way like in Germany we can the 68:37 public the health authorities are 68:38 issuing pamphlets showing white German 68:42 women how to have sex with black men 68:44 yeah it's like a brochure said they're 68:47 just doing everything they can to create 68:51 a easily to enslave population yeah and 68:55 that's destroying that's all the and and 68:57 and the the you know the people who are 69:00 proponents of like maintaining you know 69:03 the an ethnicity they're just being 69:07 ground down with you know the cultural 69:10 Marxism which is not even a good way of 69:13 you know describing it but just with the 69:16 the the system by which the the the 69:21 ethnicities that are on the chopping 69:23 block for destruction are being diluted 69:26 and wiped out and you know interracial 69:30 integration is just one of the tools 69:33 that a really big tool that's being used 69:36 and so it's it's um you know the 69:40 dividing line is clear enough the low 69:43 crime you know you you you can't even 69:48 really have any way of dealing with it 69:50 if you're just going to deal at that 69:52 level you know you can't lock up the 69:56 Muslim immigrants who misbehave in 69:58 Europe and think you well if we lock up 70:00 enough of them it we're going to be 70:01 solving something I mean you have to do 70:05 that with criminals but that is not the 70:07 root of the problem now there's just 70:09 going to be more than what if if this 70:11 batch didn't demolish your community 70:15 we'll just have another batch next month 70:18 and we'll if that doesn't work we'll 70:21 send in another batch you have to look 70:24 at who's sending in these people and 70:26 what their motivations are and the way 70:29 it is now because the the media is so 70:31 controlled you can't even talk about the 70:34 possibility that there's some 70:36 criminality some high criminality you 70:38 know that's going on well I mean it's 70:41 time that you know some courage you know 70:45 it's uh is is brought to bear you've got 70:48 to you've got to have the courage to 70:50 stand up and point out that look this is 70:54 deliberate genocide this is not you know 70:57 you know it's under the guise of some 71:00 kind of bizarre moral structure it's 71:02 like you know just like the the people 71:06 who are who are claiming that you know 71:07 we're bringing in sharecroppers from the 71:10 south and to the northern cities you 71:12 know we're really just trying to help 71:13 with integration we're here to help with 71:18 integration no huh yeah and that's why 71:20 your kid is spending three hours on a 71:22 bus if you're a kid in Boston in 1975 71:25 you've been spending three hours in a 71:27 bus rules you know because 71:29 really what America is all about and if 71:30 you're if you're a parent if you're a 71:32 Southie in Boston and you're a parent 71:35 and you're working class you don't have 71:36 and you're not media savvy and your 71:38 voice opposition to this you're a racist 71:41 right so that's that's the thing is that 71:44 they have these psychological tools like 71:47 the word racism are sexist or you know 71:50 these things are cutting you know they 71:54 cut they have emotional charge you know 71:59 how to how to do neuter the the the 72:02 propaganda you know that's kind of what 72:04 is on the table right now yeah I was up 72:07 I was sorry example I was watching a 72:10 music video that's what's something 72:12 that's being um broadcast in Sweden and 72:15 this music this is like a dance floor in 72:18 this you get these white blonde you know 72:20 women that are grinding on the floor 72:22 with these black guys who are like 72:24 humping him from behind and and I thing 72:28 is that's disgusting and this is why is 72:30 it disgusting what are you a racist 72:33 [Laughter] 72:38 yeah the you can just hear Gregor Lukas 72:42 chuckling in a grey you know and so well 72:45 we're under attack it's not too hard to 72:49 see and it comes from the high criminals 72:52 and we have to be have you know the same 72:55 courage that you know you can stand up 72:57 to the low criminality I mean that's 73:00 easy that doesn't take anything try to 73:03 find the courage to stand up to the high 73:05 criminals you know try to have that try 73:07 to have the courage to do the research 73:09 that's needed to really understand what 73:11 the high criminals doing you know yeah 73:14 that's that's what it's going to take 73:16 and you know and and and of course you 73:20 have to disassociate yourself from 73:22 mainstream media because that's part of 73:23 the hike criminality that's the first 73:26 step is recognizing that the media is a 73:28 weapon see if you just think it's a 73:30 cesspool 73:31 you know and it is I mean they know you 73:34 have the people humping on the 73:36 dancefloor okay it's accessible it's not 73:39 why they're there they're there in 73:42 an image you know four in front of young 73:45 people as a weapon 73:47 it's there to to make it to eventually 73:51 produce a society that is going to be 73:52 really easy to enslave it's going to be 73:56 completely isolated there will not be 73:58 the ethnic strength needed to resist and 74:00 that's what's going on that's the 74:01 process you're saying yeah because if 74:03 you internalize that the mores sexual 74:06 mores and values of the elite if the 74:08 broad population does that it's not like 74:11 we're gonna be at the Rothschild mansion 74:13 taking part in the in the Eyes Wide Shut 74:15 party will be drug ridden crime ridden 74:19 ghettos and that's the reality that's 74:22 right well that's where we're takin 74:25 we're not invited in that party 74:26 step by step I mean it's even gonna be 74:28 worse i I mean I think the you know the 74:32 the normalization of autism is the next 74:36 step you know I'm already seeing TV lots 74:39 of TV shows now that are normalizing 74:41 autism inclusion of the autistic right 74:45 in the ensemble they had a show with in 74:49 what's called midwife's called the 74:53 Midwest it's a PBS show and they now 74:56 have a regular autistic you know 74:57 individual who's you know and and they 75:00 even have someone who basically is a 75:02 psychological battering ram for the 75:04 child to make sure no one teases that 75:06 you know trying to give the lessons that 75:08 they want society to have you know 75:10 instead of saying gee I will do 75:13 everything I have to to prevent any 75:15 autistic child from ever being born 75:18 instead you're you're told that you know 75:21 you're you're basically crazy if you 75:24 don't promote neurologic diversity yeah 75:26 well autistic the evidence suggests that 75:29 artistic terms are not born they're 75:30 created and I guess it's you don't it's 75:33 not adverse reactions to a quadrupling 75:35 of the the vaccine schedule it's uh it's 75:39 again it's just neurodiversity and your 75:41 race or whatever you're a what would you 75:43 be if you were I don't know that's go so 75:45 it's not really racism it's it's a neuro 75:49 list neuro list okay there and you know 75:53 the reality is they can be like 75:54 superheroes like in the movie 75:56 the accountant or yeah that kid doctor 75:58 who's an autistic they're trying to 76:02 normalize them and of course though 76:04 they'll create these heroes and stuff so 76:06 it's um yeah it's uh it's not a cesspool 76:09 we're dealing with it's a weapon and 76:11 it's a weapon in the hands unfortunately 76:14 of of the Apes with the the bones at the 76:19 beginning of 2001 I have the little 76:21 Masonic obelisk that makes a creepy 76:23 noise and get some ideas about how to 76:26 kill people 76:26 I mean that you know the if you kind of 76:30 get into 2001 it's it's just as sick as 76:34 anything you can yeah because it's it's 76:37 Masonic you know and it's all it's like 76:38 this creepy symbolism of what comes from 76:41 the mind of arthur c clarke so there you 76:43 go yeah wow i come he needs such a and 76:45 then as as translated by stanley kubrick 76:49 you know it's uh that they they like to 76:53 lead these legacy pieces i'm glad they 76:55 do it helps you know someone wake up to 77:00 what we're actually dealing with but i 77:03 do you know i will maintain and i will 77:07 you know stand by that claim that that 77:10 what you're seeing there is a 77:12 representation of the moral perspective 77:14 yes and and that's and that's why why 77:17 the high criminals are so difficult to 77:19 deal with the low criminals you know are 77:21 are not that abstracted from their 77:25 humanity you know they they will feel 77:27 guilt i think very often not all of them 77:30 some are psychopaths yeah i'm sakes you 77:32 know some drug addict but some of them 77:34 can and as a class they're capable of 77:36 connecting to you know to sort of what 77:39 we call basic human consciousness but 77:42 not the high criminal not not at the 77:45 high level because they because they 77:47 deal with such that murder right that 77:53 they they have to be completely sealed 77:56 away from any you know psychologically 77:58 from any concern you know it just has to 78:01 be like numbers on a computer screen 78:04 yeah 78:05 and so that's that's why they're they 78:07 you know it they're tough to deal with 78:10 you really need an aggressive program to 78:12 root them out and expose them but we 78:16 can't you know like look to things like 78:19 appeal to their reason or sense of 78:21 natural law or something mean this isn't 78:23 going to help anything you know they're 78:26 they're way past all of that you know so 78:29 and they have control over a lot of our 78:31 culture and so it's you know instead of 78:34 you know we need to find a way to 78:35 basically pry them out one yeah what one 78:39 psychopath it is time you they they they 78:42 have to hire they control culture and 78:44 education and these things in that way 78:46 it can normalize and legitimize their 78:48 high criminality to the point we don't 78:50 even identified and if you want to 78:53 example out just how people accept like 78:55 the banking system yeah exactly 78:58 yeah that's a great point I mean look 79:01 it's it's just a fundamental criminal 79:04 act they they create credit out of 79:07 nothing and charge us for it right every 79:11 time you know you pay interest on money 79:15 that comes out of nowhere it's a 79:17 criminal act you're being stolen from II 79:18 well its culture at this point no one 79:22 even complains you know so so this is a 79:26 you know how we've been conditioned into 79:29 the posture of subservience from which 79:33 we can be taken into the brave new world 79:37 of genocide it's the same thing of the 79:40 incremental ISM that led up to the dance 79:42 floor video that you're referring to 79:43 yeah you know just little by little you 79:47 get socialized you get intimidated you 79:49 can't speak up your normal instincts are 79:52 kind of well I didn't don't really feel 79:55 like no one else is talking about it you 79:57 know everyone gets quiet everyone just 80:01 sort of becomes meek and accepting and 80:03 the next thing you know you know you're 80:07 autistic okay yeah one minute you're 80:09 watching Dick Clark in American 80:11 Bandstand and next you're watching two 80:13 people home hump on the dance floor and 80:16 having an autistic child and 80:19 and the oligarchs have a perfect you 80:21 know slave basically at that point I 80:24 mean the autistic are really the 80:27 avant-garde of Oleg ARCIC slavery I mean 80:32 those people those those victims really 80:35 cannot defend themselves you know 80:38 against this this the predatory ape with 80:42 the hablas habla that makes a creepy 80:44 music you know definitely won't organize 80:50 no no but you better believe they're 80:53 gonna have the right to vote pretty 80:54 quick yes they'll have right to votes no 80:56 parades celebrate you're not some kind 80:59 of neural estar you yeah you're an 81:02 arraylist dare you 81:05 we need to send you to some neuro Ellis 81:09 D sensitivity training or something you 81:11 know so you know I mean um the issues 81:13 are pretty clear and I think the the way 81:17 of looking at the world as you know with 81:20 the concept of high crime and low crime 81:23 is very useful uh to me it's very you 81:25 know it helps me think clearly and I 81:27 hope others adopt the you know that 81:29 sense of the high crime mmm is the 81:33 really demonic and that's a good use of 81:38 the term it's really the demonic evil 81:41 crime low crime very often is caused by 81:45 the by high crime yeah and low crime you 81:48 can go to try to go to a nicer 81:50 neighborhood or just lock your door how 81:52 do you protect yourself against David 81:53 Rockefeller yeah it's very it's very 81:58 tough and so and so that's why you know 82:01 one thing is the identification of the 82:05 high criminal and then learning the how 82:09 how we are intimidated against speaking 82:12 out against them yeah I mean that that I 82:15 think is really what I'm hoping the alt 82:17 media is you know it's kind of that's 82:20 kind of the if you think I'm if it's 82:21 emergence you know sunlight coming out 82:24 of darkness I mean one really clear 82:27 aspect is just the ability to talk about 82:29 these things and into 82:32 to have the instead of having an 82:34 automatic sense of intimidation you know 82:38 you have this idea of well that maybe 82:41 there is criminality in back of the 82:44 intimidation and so the the old media 82:47 maybe this awareness coming out you know 82:50 I think that's one of the reasons why 82:51 it's it's growing so fast 82:52 it's that people's normal kind of sense 82:57 of psychological reality is starting to 83:00 reassert itself and we're kind of 83:02 deprogramming ourselves we're becoming 83:05 more and more able to talk about these 83:07 things you know and you know it's it's 83:13 it's a journey that we all have to make 83:16 and we all have to help each other make 83:17 it because we don't want to end up as 83:20 autistic you know sex slaves for David 83:23 Rockefeller 83:25 okay on that note okay I think we 83:28 covered it then yeah I got us to the 83:32 right point all right Tim next week's 83:35 gonna be exciting because we're gonna 83:36 name names we're gonna tell people who 83:38 they are 83:39 yes so that's very exciting so anyway 83:42 stay tuned and I will talk next week 83:44 journey weekend okay you too Tim thanks 83:49 [Music] 84:21 you 84:25 the 84:28 [Music] 84:35 [Music] 84:45 [Applause] 84:47 [Music] 85:04 [Music] 85:29 [Music] 85:36 [Music]

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