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Top Intelligence Advisor: “Epstein Was A Front.” They Can See Everything, Even Your Messages!

1h 44m 50s20,546 単語3,093 segmentsEnglish

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0:00

I have inside information on Jeffrey

0:02

Epstein and why the the US government is

0:04

reluctant to be more transparent. And I

0:06

know this because when I was working in

0:08

government, meetings were not how shall

0:10

we tell the public, but what shall we

0:12

tell the public? So often the best we

0:14

can get [music] in our skepticism is to

0:16

know that we are not being told the

0:18

truth. I think people need to know the

0:20

truth. So put on your seat belt, I'm

0:21

going to tell you everything. And all

0:23

senior people in the US government know

0:25

everything that you and I have discussed

0:27

here today. So you've been behind the

0:28

scenes with some of the most successful,

0:30

richest, most powerful people on planet

0:31

Earth. But what is it you do, Gavin? So

0:33

I do protective coverage, you know, any

0:35

of the ways that wealthy or prominent

0:37

people might be targeted. For example,

0:39

the Saudi Arabian government obtained a

0:41

system which can [music] get into your

0:43

phone, used it on Jeff Bezos. So our

0:45

work was to figure out how it happened.

0:48

>> Why would a government want to hack the

0:49

founder of Amazon's phone?

0:51

>> So I'll tell you in a second, but we're

0:52

all not as careful as we could be in

0:54

terms of what we say, what we text, and

0:56

there is absolutely no protection viable

0:59

for the confidentiality of your phone.

1:02

Do you have any skepticism about that? I

1:04

just have a lot of ignorance to how this

1:06

whole world works. Lucky you. But all

1:08

power centers in human history lie.

1:10

There are some examples of this where it

1:12

will start telling the truth about

1:13

something, but years later. Things like

1:15

cancer-causing asbestos in baby powder,

1:17

100,000 people dying from heart attacks

1:19

from opioids, and we'll see it with mass

1:20

vaccination.

1:21

>> So what advice would you give about how

1:23

to navigate in the world we're living in

1:25

today to avoid risk, threat?

1:27

>> I've got some [music] core truths. So

1:28

first of all,

1:32

Guys, I've got a quick favor to ask you.

1:34

We're approaching a significant

1:36

subscriber milestone on this show, and

1:38

roughly 69% of you that listen and love

1:40

this show haven't yet subscribed for

1:42

whatever reason. If there was ever a

1:44

time for you to do us a favor, if we've

1:46

ever done anything for you, given you

1:47

value in any way, it is simply hitting

1:50

that subscribe button. And it means so

1:52

[clears throat] much to myself, but also

1:52

to my team because when we hit these

1:53

milestones, we go away as a team and

1:55

celebrate. And it's the thing, the

1:56

simple, free, easy thing you can do to

1:58

help make this show a little bit better

2:00

every single week. So that's a favor I

2:02

would ask you. And

2:04

if you do [clears throat] hit the

2:04

subscribe button, I won't let you down

2:06

and we'll continue to find small ways to

2:08

make this whole production better. Thank

2:10

you so much for being part of this

2:11

journey. Means the world. And yeah,

2:13

let's do this.

2:16

>> [music]

2:19

>> Gavin, we have a mutual friend, and that

2:22

mutual friend actually sent me a voice

2:23

note late last night.

2:25

Here is what the voice note says. I'm

2:27

calling at this crazy hours. I found out

2:29

that you're interviewing a dear friend

2:31

of mine, Gavin de Becker, I think in 2

2:33

days. I think on the 13th. He is an

2:35

extraordinary human being, extraordinary

2:37

soul. He comes from a a very tough

2:39

background. But what he's done to move

2:42

from that background to becoming

2:44

probably the single greatest security

2:46

expert in the world. He designed the

2:48

systems that are used to protect the

2:50

Supreme Court. Well, I met him decades

2:52

ago when there was a threat happening to

2:54

a former girlfriend of mine, and then I

2:57

was getting threatening letters, and he

2:58

deciphered the letters in microseconds,

3:01

got the FBI involved, and put a stop to

3:03

it all. It was extraordinary what he

3:06

did.

3:08

Wow. That was Tony Robbins for anyone

3:10

that didn't recognize I recognized him.

3:12

the voice, yeah. It'd be crazy if

3:13

someone didn't. But it got me

3:15

incredibly, incredibly curious cuz he

3:16

said lots of things there that I found

3:17

fascinating. Um the first one I'm going

3:19

to start with is he described you

3:21

helping him with a personal situation in

3:23

his life. And I guess this begets the

3:25

question,

3:26

what is it

3:27

you do for people like Tony Robbins?

3:30

What is it you do for famous people, for

3:33

world leaders? What is it you do, Gavin?

3:35

The main function of my company is

3:38

anti-assassination. So uh we develop and

3:41

deploy anti-assassination strategies.

3:43

Under that, under assassination, which

3:45

you can consider the worst possible

3:47

outcome, um are lesser outcomes like

3:50

other kinds of crimes, destruction of of

3:53

reputation, uh threats that are designed

3:55

to cause anxiety and fear. We have a

3:58

division that does assessment of threats

4:00

and management of threats. We have a

4:02

division that does actual protective

4:04

coverage. That's the biggest division,

4:06

meaning actual physical protectors, fit,

4:09

young, capable people, not uh retired

4:11

ex-cops who are overweight and on their

4:13

second career, but uh you know, people

4:15

who are who are really trained for this

4:17

specific field. Armored vehicles,

4:19

modifications to homes, basically

4:21

everything that fits into the category

4:23

of preventing uh uh or disrupting

4:26

uh uh efforts to do tissue damage. So

4:29

we're in the business of preventing

4:30

tissue damage. And who are some of the

4:33

names that you do this for and have done

4:35

this for over the years? All of the

4:37

names that I do it for are uh never

4:39

spoken by me. So I don't say who clients

4:42

are, and I don't say who they aren't

4:44

because if I say to you so-and-so isn't

4:46

a client, uh that is information that

4:49

might reveal that somebody else is or

4:50

something you heard is true or not true.

4:52

The way I can describe it to you though

4:54

is to say that it's if you took the 20

4:56

people you would assume fit into this

4:59

category or the 50, um most of them are

5:02

clients.

5:03

I mean, according to the internet, I've

5:05

had you sort of reference certain things

5:07

before because these people have spoken

5:09

or, you know, you've been seen in

5:10

photos. That's right. If a client

5:12

identifies me or it happens because I

5:14

testify in a court case or something,

5:16

that's a different animal. It just

5:17

doesn't come from I view myself as sort

5:19

of like a a psychiatrist or a doctor, I

5:22

wouldn't be the one revealing it. And

5:24

some of those names that have been

5:25

revealed by others are Jeff Bezos,

5:28

Elizabeth Taylor, Cher, Madonna, Barbra

5:30

Streisand, and many, many, many more

5:32

from government officials to royalty,

5:33

etc., etc.

5:36

What was Tony referring to

5:38

when he said that you helped him with a

5:39

situation with his girlfriend, a threat,

5:40

found out that it wasn't who people

5:42

thought they were? Right. Surely he was

5:43

referring to a case I'll never reveal,

5:46

and I won't even acknowledge he's a

5:47

client. You won't even say he's a

5:49

client? Mhm. I won't say it. If you if

5:51

you have it from some other source, Tony

5:53

said it. I I understand. Your

5:55

interrogation is makes all the sense in

5:57

the world, but I just don't say it. I

5:58

don't talk about clients. There's a

6:00

bunch of reasons, but most of all, just

6:02

absolute confidentiality. I know it's

6:03

weird. Apologies. But I heard you talk

6:05

about the Jeff Bezos situation. Uh you

6:08

heard me talk about uh

6:10

cybersecurity and and the vulnerability

6:13

of phones.

6:14

Uh and the Bezos situation is a little

6:16

bit different in that I was involved

6:19

very publicly in it, but clearly with

6:21

permission of my client and and

6:23

organized with my client. Same thing as

6:24

when I testify in a court case, there's

6:26

no secrecy about it. I'm doing it, but

6:28

it doesn't mean that I'll then do it

6:31

everywhere.

6:32

And and so in that case where you did

6:33

have Jeff's permission, the the

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