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The War on Sunlight Is Real (And It’s Not an Accident) | Dr. Jack Kruse

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0:00

Dr. Jack Cruz, thank you for making time

0:02

to be here.

0:03

>> No problem. Anytime.

0:06

>> Dr. Jack, what is the greatest lie

0:08

modern culture is told about the sun?

0:12

>> Everything.

0:14

Everything about it is wrong.

0:19

Everything they believe

0:21

is a lie

0:23

because it suits their agenda.

0:26

>> Can you say more?

0:28

I mean, I think that covers it.

0:31

[laughter]

0:34

>> What is the sun? What is the sun to us?

0:37

>> The sun is what provides you a trickle

0:39

of electricity that runs every single

0:42

thing in your body.

0:44

I mean, it's the everything.

0:47

I I put a picture out all the time. It

0:50

says the sun is Tina. What does Tina

0:51

stand for? There is no alternative. You

0:54

don't run on anything else.

0:57

You may think you you run on food and

0:59

exercise, but you don't because all of

1:02

that comes from the sun.

1:04

That's that's the, you know, dirty

1:06

little secret of nature.

1:10

And when you understand just how

1:12

connected

1:14

that life is for 4.6 billion years,

1:19

you know what those centralized shills

1:21

tell you? It's just abject propaganda.

1:25

It's nonsense. It's so they can sell you

1:28

products.

1:30

That's it.

1:33

It's that simple.

1:34

>> What does the word enlightenment mean to

1:36

you? [snorts]

1:38

>> Depends on the context. Obviously, when

1:40

you you talk about this, it's going to

1:42

mean something different.

1:45

But to me, enlightenment is people who

1:49

actually put time into their lives

1:52

to become first principal thinkers. so

1:55

that they don't get drunk on their own

1:56

dogma.

1:57

>> What is light's role in enlightenment?

2:01

>> Um, goes back to what I told you about

2:03

the sun. It's pretty much everything.

2:05

Without the sun, without you embibing

2:10

information and wisdom from nature,

2:13

which is from mostly from light,

2:16

there is no enlightenment. It's

2:18

impossible.

2:21

And people fool themselves all the time

2:23

when they're in an environment

2:25

that is polluted with polarized light.

2:28

They may think they're enlightened,

2:30

but they're suffering from the Dunning

2:31

Krueger effect.

2:34

There is no enlightenment

2:37

um with man-made artificial light at any

2:41

level. And anybody who tells you

2:43

otherwise is also full of [ __ ]

2:46

>> Why is that?

2:48

because that's not light we're designed

2:50

to work with. Sunlight is unpolarized.

2:52

Every last bit of artificial light,

2:56

whether it's the electric or magnetic

2:57

field associated with it, is polarized.

3:01

That means it's suboptimal by

3:04

definition.

3:08

You may not like it, but physics and

3:10

nature could care less about what your

3:13

opinion is on it. These are like

3:15

axiomatic

3:16

truths. The problem is people don't like

3:20

axiomatic [snorts]

3:21

truths. But you know when you go and

3:23

fact check this you find out that I'm

3:25

right and that creates you know then a

3:28

different conundrum. That's why I said

3:31

enlightenment depends on the context you

3:33

bring it.

3:33

>> What do you know about MK Ultra and

3:39

tell me about it? I mean depends how you

3:44

want to discuss it. If you want to

3:46

discuss it from the way everybody else

3:49

understands it, uh you'll get a

3:51

different story. If you want to

3:54

understand it the way I understand it,

3:55

because I was involved,

3:57

I actually was able to find boxes

3:59

related to this program before they were

4:04

destroyed

4:05

uh in the basement of Charity Hospital.

4:08

Um, basically it's a program that

4:11

started originally with a guy named Meer

4:14

Lansky finding uh a surgeon from the SS

4:19

on the docks of the Brooklyn Navyyard at

4:21

the behest of Leslie Groves. They killed

4:26

most of the people, but they didn't kill

4:27

him. And the link, the reason why he

4:31

wasn't killed by the accountant of

4:34

Murder Inc. is because he said some

4:36

interesting things that shocked Lansky.

4:39

Namely that uh the Nazis were doing mind

4:42

control

4:43

u experiments and the one that they were

4:46

currently doing when he was caught was

4:48

they were using mex Mexican peyote

4:52

um to see if they could control

4:55

uh the minds of of people in Germany and

4:58

people they had captured. Um,

5:02

and that spared his life. And then that

5:04

information went straight up the command

5:06

chain to General Groves. What happens

5:11

from that time during the war to when MK

5:14

Ultra gets formalized in his CIA

5:17

doctrine? Eventually, a guy named

5:19

Stanley Gotautly runs the program and

5:22

they move from drugs

5:25

uh to

5:28

different drugs. the the one that's most

5:30

famous with Gotautle is he dropped acid

5:34

on the city of St. Louis in the 1950s.

5:39

Um they found that it didn't really

5:41

cause what they thought it would cause

5:44

and then they morphed into using other

5:47

different things on people for mind

5:50

control. Where did it eventually end? It

5:54

went through a guy named Delgato who

5:56

spent time in both Mexico, Spain, Europe

5:59

and for small parts of the time at

6:02

Twolane University in New Orleans where

6:05

they began to use light. What light did

6:08

they use? First they use electricity.

6:11

They got the idea from electric shock

6:13

therapy and then it morphed into

6:16

wireless

6:18

radiation. It first started with

6:21

wireless. They use wires plant implanted

6:23

in animals heads. When they found that

6:25

that worked, then [snorts] the next

6:28

logical question was what about

6:30

wireless? They were able to do that. And

6:33

then they magically landed on what light

6:38

allows us to control people the best.

6:42

And it wasn't just people. It was

6:44

actually a lot of animals they had

6:45

tested. And it turned out the answer was

6:47

blue light. And the reason why was

6:51

pretty simple. It's because it was able

6:53

to ruin the leptin melanoorton pathway

6:57

which they didn't know about at that

6:58

time but they knew it caused a dopamine

7:01

problem in the brain that they did knew

7:04

definitively.

7:05

And what did they do through empiric

7:08

testing? Uh MK Ultra got more refined.

7:13

uh MK Ultra moved from Washington

7:15

University where most of it was done in

7:18

St. Louis uh and then was moved to the

7:22

Stanford Research Institute.

7:25

Then a lot of the shady characters that

7:27

you heard about in the JFK

7:28

assassination.

7:30

Um some of the psychiatrists there that

7:33

go all the way back to Trosky. Um again,

7:37

Bolevik revolution played a huge role in

7:39

a lot of these scientists that came over

7:42

in operation paperclip. Um so much so

7:45

that Trosky's granddaughter still runs

7:48

the National Institutes of Drug Abuse in

7:50

the United States right now. She was

7:52

appointed by Fouchy in 2006. Her name is

7:55

Nora Vulc.

7:58

uh once it moved from Stanford Research

8:01

uh you had a lot of the tech bros um

8:04

specifically the the mother of the

8:07

Wajjiki sisters who I'm sure you know uh

8:10

that's Susan and an uh those were two

8:13

founders of Google. Um, the other sister

8:18

went on to uh great fame when she was

8:22

married to Sergey Brin, starting 23 and

8:24

me, which is something I'm sure you've

8:26

probably heard of. And um then it moved

8:30

to the brain health initiative when

8:33

Obama came in and then most of the

8:36

research was sent offshore. Why? because

8:40

they realized because of uh the tyranny

8:43

that went on with 9/11

8:46

and uh the Patriot Act that if this was

8:48

ever found on shore that and there was

8:52

any evidence

8:54

that potentially

8:56

uh people could be brought up in

8:57

treason. So they moved most of it to

9:01

South America. They picked South America

9:03

specifically because it was close to a

9:05

lot of the the CIA honeypotss and bases

9:09

that are present in Central and South

9:11

America because that's effectively what

9:13

the embassies are. And they needed to do

9:15

a lot of the the formal testing on brown

9:19

people. Um why? Because they found that

9:22

brown people are more resistant to

9:25

electromagnetic radiation than people

9:28

who have Fitzpatrick ones.

9:31

And that stuff has been borne out right

9:34

in front of your face without you

9:35

realizing it. If you remember um the

9:39

Navyyard attack in I believe it was

9:41

Virginia on the top of one of the guys

9:44

rifles that he wound up killing some of

9:47

his people that he was involved with in

9:50

his experiments. He had the word ELF RF

9:55

carved in the gun. He was black guy.

9:59

Second one that was famously happened

10:02

during the Obama second Obama term was a

10:05

black lawyer from Florida State

10:06

University who didn't kill anybody but

10:10

shot into the library at Florida State

10:14

and um he had told many of his friends

10:18

and family that there was somebody in

10:20

his head controlling him and um he also

10:26

at the scene knew that it was ELF, RF

10:30

and blue light radiation when he had no

10:33

way of really knowing any of this

10:37

because by training he was a lawyer.

10:40

So those those are the two latest issues

10:44

where the evolution of MK Ultra [snorts]

10:48

uh got fast forward in that time frame I

10:51

just gave you. There was many uh

10:54

patents. Several of them are

10:56

discoverable

10:58

uh through Google patents. Meta's got

11:00

some, but you can control people through

11:02

electromagnetic radiation through

11:04

screens. Those patents are out there.

11:06

They're well known. It's no longer a

11:08

mystery. Um I think uh many people think

11:12

it's a conspiracy uh theory until they

11:16

actually looked into it. But I always

11:18

tell people that there can be no

11:20

conspiracy theory when there's patents

11:21

associated with the technology.

11:23

>> What's up guys? I hope you're enjoying

11:24

this conversation. If you like what

11:26

we're doing here on the Align podcast,

11:27

one of the greatest ways you can be

11:29

supportive is simply pressing the

11:30

subscribe button below. It is more

11:33

healthy than you realize and you can

11:34

change your mind at any time. That's it.

11:36

Thank you guys so much for being here. I

11:38

appreciate you.

11:38

>> What is the directive of [clears throat]

11:41

mind control of people using blue light

11:44

and screens? What is the current term?

11:46

>> That's changed. That's changed a lot in

11:48

the military. But I think where it is

11:51

right now, it's for complete control to

11:54

get us back to the feudalist medieval

11:57

state so that we all do what the people

12:00

who are in charge. Those are the elites.

12:03

Those elites are the transhumanist

12:05

technocrats that run the big um tech

12:09

companies who work for the Department of

12:12

Defense and the military. The military

12:14

is who runs the United States. They're

12:18

the best way to put it. Uh they're the

12:20

original proletariat.

12:23

They're the Templars as same type of

12:26

evolution.

12:28

Uh [snorts] they're the people that hold

12:29

the knife behind the people that are on

12:32

your TV every night that you call

12:34

president, vice president, congressman,

12:38

senator,

12:39

you name it. Supreme Court Justice.

12:45

That's MK Walter in a nutshell.

12:48

>> What percentage of personalities on the

12:51

internet or politicians would be useful

12:54

idiots compared to knowing fraudulent

12:59

domestic terrorists, I guess you could

13:00

say.

13:01

>> Uh, I mean, based on what we know from

13:03

the programs, everybody's a useful idiot

13:06

if they understand they can be

13:08

programmed. I mean, I mean, if you've

13:10

done any homework on this at all,

13:13

probably

13:15

the most famous

13:17

place where the shark fin for this

13:19

program came up was in 1968

13:22

through 73

13:24

when the US uh embassy in Moscow was

13:27

bombarded by microwave radiation by the

13:29

Russians. And this was done to show the

13:32

world that this has a huge biological

13:35

effect. If you look back at history,

13:36

which anybody can do, we had four

13:39

straight ambassadors to Russia come down

13:42

with blood cancers. It wasn't until

13:46

um Kissinger, who was the secretary of

13:49

state with um Nixon at that time, he

13:53

ordered the military to line the entire

13:56

US embassy with tinfoil. Now, the only

13:59

reason that we know of this today, the

14:02

reason it's discoverable is because

14:03

anything who was on the Federal Register

14:06

got um kickback. And it wasn't really a

14:09

kickback. It was called hazard pay

14:12

uh for this time because it was obvious

14:15

that these people were sick. That was

14:17

the forerunner for Havana syndrome,

14:20

which you all heard about in Obama's

14:23

reign when the Cuban government did the

14:26

same thing to American journalists and

14:28

American scientists in Havana.

14:31

And the basic science of that came out

14:34

of the DARPA program that was present

14:37

when MK Ultra moved to Stanford. That's

14:40

called fry syndrome or microwave

14:44

um effect on the ear where you can use

14:47

microwaves and you can force people to

14:51

hear things in their head through an

14:53

acoustic microwave sound. Those papers

14:55

are all published in the literature.

14:58

Very well known. Uh no magic. There's

15:02

many people out in the uh internet world

15:06

who are what we call deed people. their

15:09

directed energy weapon injured.

15:13

Um, in fact, guy that I did a podcast

15:15

with, I would say two years ago,

15:17

actually had one of those guys on his

15:19

podcast. You could probably go back and

15:22

listen to exactly, you know, what he

15:24

talked about, but everything that he

15:26

said was factually correct about

15:29

actually how

15:31

um microwaves interact with melanin in

15:35

your ear to cause this microwave

15:38

microphone effect so that they can put

15:40

thoughts into your head. And these were

15:42

the same things that the guy who is uh

15:45

the Navy guy that had the ELF RF um

15:50

drilled into his phone, I should say,

15:52

drilled into his gun that he used to

15:54

kill people. And the same thing with the

15:56

lawyer at Florida State. So, this is,

16:00

like I said, fully [snorts]

16:02

discoverable.

16:04

Should be very obvious to everybody who

16:06

listens to this, but I know isn't, you

16:08

know, in the neck of the woods where you

16:10

are. I think you're still in California.

16:12

Um

16:13

>> I'm in I'm in Miami.

16:15

>> All right. So different place now. So um

16:19

the prison system in the 1960s before it

16:23

went right to Stanford, they used a lot

16:27

of the prisoners as how shall we say

16:31

uh volunteers to make sure this

16:33

technology could work. That's also been

16:37

discoverable. We found out a lot of that

16:39

stuff through the church commission that

16:41

went from 197475

16:44

through 77.

16:46

Um, and I think the

16:50

probably the most damning

16:52

uh state of affairs was probably the

16:55

psychiatrist that dealt with

16:58

um

17:00

Jack Ruby in the JFK assassination. His

17:03

name is Jolly West. He was also involved

17:05

with several other prominent people at

17:08

that time. He was an MK Ultra U

17:12

psychiatrist.

17:14

Um

17:16

he was found

17:18

uh to be heavily involved with uh Jack

17:22

Ruby's demise

17:24

but he also worked with other people in

17:27

there. Um, the gentleman who was his

17:31

direct superior

17:33

was the head of uh the CIA at that time.

17:37

I'm blanking on his name, but I can tell

17:40

you exactly where you can find his name

17:42

because Oliver Stone in the last frame

17:45

of JFK

17:48

put uh the story that MK Ultra was

17:51

effectively ended by this head of the

17:53

CIA. Why? Because he destroyed all the

17:55

files before the Church Commission. so

17:57

that none of them would be discoverable.

18:00

The only problem was they didn't know

18:02

about the ones in Louisiana.

18:04

Those are the ones I got into when I was

18:06

a resident. So that's how I know a lot

18:08

of the details that a lot of people

18:11

don't know about. And um the very

18:15

interesting part is the gentleman who

18:18

I'm referencing right now who I'm

18:19

blanking on his name uh he was put into

18:22

power by Dallasos and you probably do

18:25

know Dallasos airport uh is named after

18:30

John Foster Dulles and his brother his

18:32

brother both of them were CFR people.

18:35

These are the Fabians. These are the

18:37

people that were loyal to the crown.

18:39

They were both involved in the Treaty of

18:41

Versailles. Allan Dulles was famously

18:44

also head of the CIA. He was fired by

18:47

JFK.

18:49

Um John Foster Dulles was also a

18:53

prominent politician. He died before JFK

18:55

was killed, but Allan Dulles was very

18:58

involved in JFK's demise. he effectively

19:03

appointed the next head of the CIA

19:08

uh who was involved with the prosecution

19:10

of Klay Shaw in New Orleans. And that

19:13

was what Garrison,

19:16

he was the only person ever brought up

19:18

on on trial in the United States for the

19:20

assassination of JFK. And Jolly West was

19:24

involved in that investigation.

19:27

So MK Ultra was also involved not only

19:31

in the science part but also in one of

19:34

the greatest you know political

19:36

mysteries

19:37

of probably the 20th century and still

19:40

to this day uh most of those archives

19:44

uh are redacted the the parts that we

19:47

need to see we can't see even though

19:49

Trump released a lot of them that the

19:51

key pages

19:54

uh of the players that were involved in

19:56

MK Ultra CIA,

19:58

there's about a page and a half that

20:00

everybody's want redacted and nobody

20:02

will do it.

20:04

So, you know, as far as I'm concerned, I

20:07

just gave you a history lesson

20:10

um of kind of what MK Ultra is really

20:14

about. And anybody who thinks that MK

20:16

Ultra

20:18

um isn't active in a new evolutionary

20:21

format now

20:24

with algorithms, EMF,

20:28

blue light, and other parts of the

20:30

spectrum being used against

20:33

uh humanity at a global scale, then

20:36

you're just brain dead sitting behind a

20:39

computer. Where specifically is there a

20:43

a

20:45

resource of sorts that a skeptical

20:48

person could see in a simplistic,

20:51

concise, spoonfed way that would back up

20:55

these claims with evidence that someone

20:58

could see online?

20:59

>> Yeah. I mean, I think everything that

21:01

I've told you, you should fact check. I

21:03

mean, I tell everybody the the the issue

21:06

with first principal thinking is that

21:08

you have to fact check everything.

21:09

Everything that I've told you today with

21:11

the exception of one thing is not

21:13

discoverable. Why isn't the boxes that I

21:17

found at Charity Hospital not

21:18

discoverable? Because Charity Hospital

21:20

was destroyed in 2005 by Katrina.

21:24

That's where the boxes were stored. And

21:29

um the one thing that you can find uh is

21:33

that CIA director

21:35

after Klay Shaw died, he died in 1974.

21:39

Five years later in 1979,

21:42

he destroyed all of the files that are

21:45

associated with with MK Ultra. The most

21:48

interesting part that was discovered in

21:52

1979 is on trial

21:56

um when Klay Shaw was asked was he a CIA

21:59

asset you know in this program he of

22:02

course denied it. Uh there was a lot of

22:04

evidence that Garrison had found that

22:06

wasn't the case. I found all the

22:09

evidence in the boxes in Charity

22:11

Hospital. But the interesting thing was

22:13

that that CIA director admitted in 1979,

22:17

five years after Shaw was dead, that he

22:20

was in fact a CIA asset.

22:23

So, I mean, everything I've told you is

22:28

fully discoverable. The only thing

22:30

that's not is the boxes in Charity

22:31

Hospital. But then you have to ask

22:34

yourself this question if you're a first

22:35

principal thinker. How the [ __ ] would I

22:38

know any of this if I didn't get in

22:40

those boxes?

22:42

because nobody else does.

22:46

And I was able to link everything back

22:49

to things that completely happened and

22:52

happened in the city that I happen to do

22:54

my residency in. None of that is

22:57

arguable at this point. Most of the the

23:01

basic research

23:03

was done at Twolane University in the

23:07

department of neurology and and

23:08

neurosurgery. That's also discoverable.

23:11

That's where why there's a primate lab

23:14

there. LSU also has a primate lab. Uh

23:18

that primate lab was well known to be

23:20

tied in the JFK story. Am I under a

23:25

state of mind control and if I am, how

23:28

would I know?

23:30

>> Well, you wouldn't. That's one of the

23:32

the key things about becoming a first

23:33

principal thinker. You have to question

23:36

everything. most people, especially

23:38

these days when you're online as much as

23:39

you are. I mean, I I not to be a dick,

23:42

but I mean, it's probably good for the

23:44

audience,

23:46

you know, to pick up this flavor. Before

23:48

we recorded, you asked me, "Jack, should

23:51

I wear my glasses?" Then when you asked

23:52

me the questions you asked me, you

23:54

magically put your blue glasses on. But

23:56

you didn't think I noticed it, but I

23:58

did. Why? Because there in lies the big

24:02

issue. because you became aware of

24:05

something that um you were like I didn't

24:08

know that I was going to talk to him

24:10

about and I didn't know he was going to

24:11

answer the way he answered but the fact

24:13

that I did you said well maybe it's a

24:16

good idea that I interrupt the

24:19

electromagnetic connection through

24:20

polarized light when we talk about this

24:23

stuff because if you want to know the

24:25

truth are the questions that you ask me

24:29

with and without the glasses on

24:32

different Yes. And if the programming

24:38

um like let's let's be hypothetical

24:41

here. Let's say Google knew that you and

24:45

I were doing this today.

24:48

Could they have easily went through

24:50

Zencaster

24:53

and done something to affect this

24:55

interview to get the answers they want?

24:57

The answer is absolutely no question

24:59

about it. Now, have I had something like

25:02

that happen to me in the last uh I'd say

25:06

the last 14 months? Yeah. I had the

25:09

internet t turned off when I gave a talk

25:12

at adopting Bitcoin in 2024.

25:16

And we know Google did it. So, you have

25:19

to ask yourself, why was that the case?

25:23

Because they knew they weren't going to

25:24

be able to control anything I was able

25:26

to say. It's why when you see me do uh

25:30

talks and podcasts, you never see me

25:32

wearing electromagnetic devices around

25:34

me. I'm very careful about what I do and

25:39

how I do it. So you you Aaron should

25:43

probably tell the audience what my

25:45

answer was to you when you said, "Jack,

25:47

should I wear these?" What did I say to

25:49

you?

25:50

>> Uh you said only you know about your

25:53

light environment.

25:54

>> Correct.

25:56

But do you really?

25:58

No, you don't. And see that in lies that

26:01

there's the Dunning Krueger moment for

26:03

you. But the interesting thing is you

26:05

became informed

26:07

by asking me the question and then you

26:10

started to think about it. And did we

26:13

talk about this? No. But I saw it

26:15

happen. So did the audience.

26:18

So you have to ask yourself,

26:22

what happens if you don't know about it?

26:24

Because your original question is how

26:26

many people do I think are affected by

26:28

this? I don't think there's a person out

26:31

there that isn't

26:33

except the people that understand the

26:35

capabilities of what's possible

26:39

and they can take effects. Is are there

26:42

ways to protect yourself from this?

26:44

There absolutely is. But are most people

26:47

in the daily course of their life in the

26:50

Western Hemisphere doing that? No. It

26:55

does make sense to me that it would be

26:59

very valuable to be able to control the

27:02

mind of someone, particularly for

27:04

something like the JFK scenario or

27:07

perhaps the recent Trump scenario. And I

27:10

have

27:12

resistance to saying certain words on

27:14

the internet.

27:16

And I think that's a reasonable thing

27:17

just because I'd prefer for this this

27:20

episode to get aired to hundreds of

27:22

thousands of people instead of hundreds

27:23

of people. Um,

27:26

but that would make sense to me that

27:29

that would be a very valuable tool.

27:33

Who is Lee Harvey Oswald? What's up,

27:35

guys? I hope you're enjoying this

27:36

conversation. I want to invite you to

27:37

try a breathing technique that I find to

27:39

be one of the fastest, most effective

27:41

ways to regulate my nervous system using

27:43

my breath. if that is of interest for

27:45

you to try. It is fast, is effective,

27:47

and it is a free, and the link for it is

27:49

in the description below. That's it.

27:51

Hope you enjoy the rest of the

27:52

conversation.

27:53

>> A pathy, he worked for the CIA, and um

27:59

he was a useful idiot in his time.

28:02

And in some ways, was he a patriot?

28:06

Yeah, he was. He actually foiled the

28:09

attempt on JFK's life in two cities. one

28:12

in Chicago and another one in Tampa.

28:16

Very few people know about that, but

28:18

there was people that were involved that

28:23

have the proof, at least as far as I'm

28:25

concerned. Not only is it published in

28:28

books they've written, but I actually

28:29

had that person come to my house with

28:32

the original documentation for me to see

28:34

it. Uh, once I verified it for myself,

28:38

I I I can tell you there's nothing about

28:41

me that thinks that Lee Harvey Oswald

28:46

was involved in a nefarious way with

28:49

killing JFK. And did Lee Harvey Oswald

28:52

know that he was going to be set up by

28:56

the people in the CIA

28:58

for this attack? Yes. Is it also true

29:02

that Lee Harvey Oswald was closely

29:04

associated with people who truly hated

29:08

Kennedy? Yes, that is also very true.

29:11

Um,

29:13

but the key thing is, was he the person?

29:17

No. Was Jack Ruby more involved

29:22

with the JFK assassination than Lee

29:24

Harvey Oswald? In my opinion, he was.

29:28

And he was taken out.

29:31

um very much I believe the same way Klay

29:33

Shaw was taken out. Most people don't

29:35

talk about Klay Shaw's death, but he

29:37

died in 1974

29:40

of lung cancer. What people forget is

29:43

Jack Ruby died of stomach cancer. And

29:47

what's brought a lot of this to light

29:48

lately is kind of the Danny Jones

29:51

podcast that I did when I talked about

29:54

MK Ultra the first time when I was asked

29:56

about it. And I made a comment there

30:00

that the people that had taken this new

30:06

distribution from the Department of

30:08

Defense that we called the

30:10

in time we would see the same type of

30:14

turbo

30:16

um cancers that we saw in the past

30:21

around the people that were involved

30:24

with the cutter incident, that were

30:26

involved with the original bioweapons

30:30

research that was done on mice and rats

30:33

and then eventually morphed into

30:35

primates.

30:37

Um,

30:38

all of that has been shown to be true.

30:40

The interesting thing is I thought

30:42

people when I originally did that

30:45

podcast would be very interested to see

30:47

how a new technology as Dr. Robert

30:51

Malone likes to talk about it have the

30:54

original problem from the polio in 1951

30:58

through 55 that it was, you know,

31:02

polluted with SV40 amongst other things.

31:06

And when that proof was definitively

31:09

shown uh through vials that Kevin

31:12

McCurin tested and then reconfirmed by

31:14

Philip Buck Holtz and now many other

31:17

labs, it's no longer conjecture or

31:20

conspiracy theory that these things

31:22

happen. The question that you have to

31:24

ask yourself as a podcaster and a

31:27

podcast listener, tell me how it is that

31:31

the SV40 promoter that we found out

31:34

about 75 years ago is also in some of

31:37

the newest technology that the

31:39

Department of Defense

31:41

was the main distributor. Wasn't big

31:43

pharma. We like to use big pharma's

31:46

names associated with this. But remember

31:49

who was the distributor?

31:51

That means proximal to big pharma. Big

31:56

pharma was just like a drug dealer. They

31:59

weren't the cartel. The department of

32:01

fence was the cartel.

32:04

So when you think about some of the

32:06

other people that I've been involved

32:07

with, you may know that Bobby Kennedy,

32:11

his dad was killed by Siran Sirhan. also

32:13

discoverable that many people believe

32:16

that Sirhan Sirhan was part of the MK

32:19

Ultra uh program that was based out of

32:22

the Estelin Institute and also Bohemian

32:25

Grove. Again, all discoverable by you.

32:28

All you have to do is look into it. Um I

32:32

was the one that told Bobby Kennedy on

32:34

Rick Rubin's podcast that the boweapon

32:38

actually had SV40 promoter in it. didn't

32:40

have the full genome, but it had the

32:42

promoter. And there was reasons that I

32:45

knew that. Bobby had never known that.

32:48

And immediately upon saying that, if you

32:50

look at his face on the podcast, he kind

32:52

of acted like you did when you put your

32:54

blue blockers on. He was like, he knew

32:57

exactly what it meant. It meant that the

33:00

same people that were involved in

33:02

killing his dad were now involved with

33:05

killing millions of people or

33:07

potentially killing them. but certainly

33:11

making them more controllable. And one

33:13

of the things that we do know in the MK

33:17

Ultra, the Sri and the Brain Health

33:21

Initiative, if we can cause any type of

33:23

mitochondrial damage, you become much

33:25

more programmable to electromagnetic

33:27

radiation. And the reason for that is

33:30

because it destroys endogenous melanin.

33:33

This also is not a shock to anybody

33:35

today. Why? Because your government

33:38

right now is trying to protect the

33:40

International Space Center and

33:42

astronauts that circle this planet with

33:45

synthetic melanin from what? The solar

33:49

wind. Is that not EMF? Yes, it is. So

33:55

all the pieces and parts are there. And

33:57

when this program found out that if we

34:00

destroy their endogenous melanin that

34:02

they become more controllable, what was

34:06

the second part of this study, Erin,

34:08

that you may want to uh fact check since

34:11

you're into the facteing thing today?

34:14

Um, you know who did the first uh paper

34:17

on the effect of electromagnetic

34:19

radiation raising blood sugar and

34:21

insulin? That was Norah Volcal, Trosky's

34:25

granddaughter that runs the National

34:27

Institutes of Drug Abuse who was

34:29

appointed by Fouchy in 2006.

34:32

So you have a psychiatrist

34:35

from the drug side from the Jolly West

34:38

family, okay, at a very high position in

34:42

the government

34:43

now telling you in 2011 that nonVMF from

34:47

a cell phone raises blood glucose and

34:49

blood sugar.

34:52

Guess what the ultimate cause of that

34:53

is? Destruction of melanin inside. So

34:57

this was DARPA getting things in the

35:00

literature so that other researchers

35:02

would understand

35:04

that here is the mode of how we do it.

35:07

So let's talk about how this was done at

35:11

global scale. Say from the time you were

35:13

a little boy or maybe when I was a

35:15

little boy that's when dermatologists

35:18

started recommending sunscreen for

35:20

everybody. Why would we do that?

35:23

Well, we would always give you the bait.

35:26

The bait is, well, the sun is bad for

35:28

you. That's what you started this

35:29

podcast with. But what's the hook of the

35:32

scops? I just gave you the answer. You

35:36

have to get rid of people's melanin to

35:38

make them more programmable. And guess

35:40

what? In the last 75 years, the American

35:44

centralized healthc care

35:47

program has become experts in making the

35:50

sun toxic.

35:52

Now you know the real reason why

35:56

they all got that original answer

35:59

when Lansky found Planin on the Brooklyn

36:03

docks. That's how it all started. Now

36:06

it's a big circle. Everything's

36:08

discoverable.

36:10

I guess my question to you is why the

36:12

[ __ ] don't you know about it? Why the

36:14

[ __ ] doesn't everybody know about it?

36:17

You know why? Because they brand guys

36:20

like me as a conspiracy theorist. So

36:22

remember what I told you. Can't be a

36:24

conspiracy theory when it's provable and

36:27

there's patents to back it up.

36:30

So now it's incumbent upon you and your

36:33

audience to do your due diligence and

36:36

become a first principal thinker and

36:38

find out a is this true and b what are

36:41

the implications of this for me and my

36:43

life right now

36:48

>> from your perspective who is Joe Rogan

36:52

in all of this if

36:55

>> Joe Rogan Joe Rogan is u part of the

36:58

industrial military complex He's funded

37:00

by people

37:02

uh that are linked to the largest

37:06

enemies of the American people. Um those

37:10

people

37:12

historically are linked back to the

37:14

Balffor Declaration.

37:16

Uh they're linked back to Theodore

37:19

Herszel. They're linked back uh to

37:23

Nathan Rothchild, Nelson Rockefeller,

37:27

the Trilateral Commission, the Council

37:28

of Foreign Relations.

37:31

They now are most of the transhumanist

37:33

and uh technologists that are in Silicon

37:36

Valley. Namely, the number one guy for I

37:40

think for most people is probably Peter

37:43

Teal with Palanteer,

37:47

but he's just the latest iteration. The

37:49

generation before him that was Paige and

37:53

and uh and Bin Larry Ellison from Oracle

37:57

is also in there. Um is Jamie Diamond

38:03

part of this? Yeah, the bankers are the

38:06

original

38:08

generation of this. This would be like

38:09

the 60s and 70s. But remember, most

38:11

people don't realize that Jamie Diamond

38:14

uh was basically propped up by Sandy

38:16

while of Travelers and eventually Croup

38:19

when they merged. He he learned

38:21

everything he needed to learn. And I

38:24

will remind you who banked Jeffrey

38:28

Epstein,

38:30

Jaime Diamond.

38:33

So, you know, anybody who's a good

38:34

sleuth, just follow the money. The money

38:37

will bring you back to the technology.

38:39

But remember, who else did JP Morgan

38:42

Bank, several of the transhumanist

38:45

technologists that I just mentioned to

38:46

you in this podcast, who I won't name

38:48

now because you'll probably never get

38:50

this on YouTube.

38:52

>> You believe Rogan is being

38:55

is under some state of mind control, or

38:57

do you believe someone like him?

38:59

>> I think Rogan is a useful idiot. I think

39:01

Rogan's a useful idiot. He doesn't know

39:04

what he doesn't know. Uh so the the

39:07

synonyms I would use for you here,

39:10

um

39:12

I would probably tell you,

39:15

um

39:18

Dunning Krueger is probably larger for

39:21

him than actually mind control. Do I

39:24

think he actually helps the people in

39:28

the elitist paradigm

39:31

control people they need to control?

39:32

Yes, that I think he does through his

39:34

podcast. No question about it. Um,

39:37

>> unknowingly.

39:38

>> Right. Unknowingly. I don't think he is

39:40

smart enough to know some of the things

39:43

that you and I are talking about now. Do

39:46

I think he's smarter than you think?

39:48

Yeah. Why? because he's had enough

39:51

people on that have gotten on the fringe

39:53

of this story. Uh, and probably the

39:57

number one guy that I would bring back

40:00

because he comes from the same layer of

40:02

the transhumanist technologist which is

40:04

Elon Musk. You know, when they talked

40:06

about Neurolink, anybody who understands

40:08

what Neurolink is, what's the goal? The

40:11

goal is to use a satellite to control a

40:13

device in your head to actually improve

40:17

your light. That's that's the worm on

40:19

the hook. But what's the real hook? The

40:22

hook is what Peter Teal is interested

40:24

in. Can we control people through

40:27

satellite technology, which is the

40:29

reason why the Department of Defense is

40:32

so interested in,

40:35

you know, electromagnetic radiation

40:37

because let's face it, what gets beamed

40:39

down, you know, to do this interview

40:42

through your iPhone, your cell phone,

40:44

GPS data, it's all electromagnetic

40:46

radiation. it. That's why it's to me

40:48

it's preposterous when you ask me the

40:50

question you asked me has no face

40:52

validity. Anybody who's not brain dead

40:55

should understand that the

40:57

electromagnetic radiation

40:58

electromagnetic spectrum is how

41:02

information is parsed and transmitted. I

41:04

mean that goes all the way back from

41:05

Morse code, you know, to what we have

41:07

now in Garmin data. But I also would

41:11

remind you because I don't think the

41:13

part that's really discoverable unless

41:15

you look for it is most people don't

41:17

know that a lot of the satellites are

41:19

now being protected with synthetic

41:20

melanin. That should raise a big

41:23

question. Say, wait a minute. We come

41:26

with biologic melanin and three

41:29

different types. What does this mean if

41:32

one of these or two of these or three of

41:33

these is destroyed? If we're trying to

41:36

protect electronics and astronauts,

41:39

cosminauts,

41:41

the ESA astronauts

41:44

in space from this stuff.

41:47

You know, that is a logical question

41:51

from a first principal thinker. But you

41:54

haven't heard too many people talk about

41:55

that on podcasts, have you? I will tell

41:59

you, Aaron, that that won't come up in

42:01

Joe Rogan's world. that won't come up in

42:04

Danny Jones's world because when it

42:06

does, guess what happens? It gets shut

42:08

down or you get deplatformed or no one

42:13

wants to talk about it. But I can tell

42:15

you, I happen to be one of those guys

42:19

that not only has an encyclopedia

42:22

knowledge about the history around this,

42:25

but also happens to know the physics

42:27

intimately

42:28

that this is all based on. And there's

42:32

many military types out there that know

42:34

about this. They don't give you the full

42:37

parts either because that's part

42:40

of the manual that the CIA developed in

42:44

prior to the Church Commission. They

42:46

don't have to tell you everything. All

42:47

they all they have to do is give you

42:51

bits and pieces of the story. When you

42:53

have a halftruth, it always leads to a

42:54

full lie. That's always been the CIA's

42:59

modicum. And if you know me well enough,

43:01

you've probably heard me say that many

43:04

times to some of the food gurus.

43:07

Many of the things follow the same way.

43:11

You never ever get told the full story.

43:14

And that's the reason why you need to be

43:16

a first principal thinker because when

43:17

you do it and you find out that things

43:21

are a little bit more nefarious than you

43:22

thought of and then you find out that

43:25

uh the industrial military complex and

43:27

the department of defense are really

43:29

where most of this comes from. You begin

43:31

to realize that big pharma um aren't

43:36

really your enemy. It's your government

43:38

that's the enemy. The politicians in

43:41

Congress right now, many people will say

43:44

they're the enemy. I wouldn't disagree

43:46

with that at this point, but I will say

43:49

to you that are they the real enemy? No.

43:51

Because they're holding the knife to the

43:55

necks of the politicians.

43:57

If you want to know the truth, the same

43:59

thing is true. Charlie Kirk. Why?

44:01

Charlie Kirk was likely going to be a

44:04

president down the road. Well, when they

44:06

realized that they couldn't control him

44:08

anymore, guess what happened? They made

44:12

his corateed artery bleed. That

44:14

magically happens many, many times

44:17

through history. Happened to Bobby

44:19

Kennedy's father. Why? Because he was

44:22

mattered in hell and wanted to find out

44:23

what happened to his brother.

44:26

And you and I are sitting here 75 years

44:29

after that event and we still don't know

44:31

that answer.

44:33

You would think that would get a young

44:35

guy like you maybe asking better

44:37

questions

44:39

than talking about some other stuff, but

44:44

nobody seems to be interested in this

44:46

stuff anymore.

44:47

>> What are the what are the what are the

44:49

what are the questions that I'm asking?

44:50

Are asking those questions? I'm talking

44:52

about like talking about um you know

44:56

let's let's make it simple because I

44:58

want to make it so the audience

45:00

understands when people talk about food,

45:04

diet, exercise,

45:06

um meditation,

45:08

those things are all good but they're

45:11

really superfluous when you understand

45:13

this story. when you understand this

45:15

story fundamentally

45:17

that they're going after the control

45:18

grid that all these things operate with

45:22

and we should be much more interested in

45:26

that story. Um why how do we protect

45:29

people

45:31

from that issue? And to be honest with

45:35

you, you actually hinted at the real

45:38

problem, Jack. How many people really

45:41

can be affected by this? I'm going to

45:43

tell you, Aaron, do you know any people,

45:46

at least in your circle, that don't have

45:48

a screen, that don't are not using

45:52

wireless electromagnetic radiation at

45:54

some level in their life, either through

45:56

their car, their job. Um, I mean, look,

45:59

I'm pretty diligent about it and I can

46:01

tell you even I break that rule. You

46:05

know, every time I get in my car to

46:06

drive somewhere, it's an issue. And I

46:10

know it's an issue, but I don't have a

46:12

good answer for some of those problems.

46:14

The things that I can control, I try to

46:17

control. That's why, you know, I was

46:19

provocative with you earlier in the

46:22

interview. I was like, well, I think the

46:24

things we can control, we have a duty to

46:26

ourselves to do it. But the things that

46:28

we can control, I think those are the

46:30

things that we should talk about on

46:31

podcast and say, okay, what are the

46:33

implications of us not controlling it

46:36

and what potentially can happen? You

46:38

know, like something we haven't talked

46:40

about yet. Let's think about it like

46:42

this. If we have more polarized light

46:45

around all of us and we block the sun

46:48

via Bill Gates technology, via

46:50

geoengineering,

46:52

what could the implications that be?

46:54

More or less mind control. I think if

46:56

you listen to this podcast, you know the

46:58

answer implicitly.

47:00

Well, how come we're not talking about

47:01

that? Instead, what we're talking about

47:04

is who killed Charlie Kirk, why you

47:08

should owe Bitcoin and not Ethereum. Um,

47:11

why Emerald Robinson on TV is talking

47:14

about some idiot um, you know, who

47:18

cooked an election in Fulton County,

47:20

Georgia. You know, what

47:23

dominates your awareness

47:27

actually is what you focus on. And for

47:30

me, I mean, to me, this is some of the

47:32

biggest stuff that that I teach people

47:35

about. And I like talking about the

47:38

history. I want people to discover it.

47:41

But I have to be honest with you, I

47:43

guess why. I guess I'm a little bit

47:45

incredulous. Maybe I'm being a little

47:46

bit of a dick here. I don't know.

47:49

>> I don't think I know you any any other

47:51

other way. I I would just say to you,

47:54

[snorts]

47:55

we have now discoverable data

47:58

that shows that your government put SV40

48:00

in it and it makes you more control. Why

48:04

doesn't anybody why aren't we in the

48:07

streets? I mean, can you imagine telling

48:09

the story to Thomas Jefferson

48:10

considering what he wrote in the

48:11

Federalist Papers? Do you know what he

48:14

likely would have said? And then when

48:16

you think about the people that

48:18

bankrolled all this, the bankers, those

48:19

are the people that Jefferson and

48:21

Madison warned us about. But here we are

48:24

250 years later and you know what we're

48:26

doing? It's Plato's allegory of the

48:28

cave. And remember that was written way

48:31

before our government ever formed. So I

48:34

guess what I'm saying to you is um

48:40

there's bigger fish to fry. And I don't

48:42

know if there's a lot of people out

48:44

there that were going to want to fish

48:46

it. If you would have talked to me

48:47

probably three or four years ago, I

48:49

would have thought before this story

48:51

broke with Bobby, with Nicole, with the

48:56

transhumanist that people would have

48:58

been more engaged in it. And I guess I'm

49:01

on the other side of that mountain now.

49:03

And I'm kind of disgusted with humanity

49:05

to be quite frank with you.

49:08

>> Is there anything you like about

49:09

humanity?

49:10

Well, I like the people that actually

49:12

get pissed off about these kinds of

49:14

things. Why? Because I mean, let's face

49:16

it, the people that formed the United

49:20

States government, they did a pretty

49:21

good job. It took 250 years for the

49:25

Fabians to figure out how to take this

49:27

government apart.

49:29

And I think we're probably three to five

49:32

years away from complete abject total

49:36

destruction, which is part of the reason

49:38

why, you know, I'm in El Salvador and

49:41

you're not. It's part of the reason why

49:43

I'm a believer in Bitcoin and not

49:45

American money. Why? Everything that was

49:48

great about the United States went away.

49:50

We just had a president that told us,

49:52

you know, told me and you, let's make

49:55

America great again. I mean, who could

49:57

not get behind that? even if you're, you

49:59

know, a left-wing liberal, you're like,

50:01

"Okay, let's see what he's going to do."

50:03

And then literally in the last year, we

50:05

find out that make America great again

50:07

really is an acronym for Make Israel

50:10

Great Again. Well, who's that good for,

50:14

you know, in this story? Well, all all

50:17

those guys that are running big tech

50:19

companies in Silicon Valley, all those

50:21

people that are running money center

50:23

banks that we hear about on CNBC every

50:25

day. Well, I'm just that guy that's out

50:29

there saying, "When are we gonna do

50:31

something for Joe Smith in St. Louis

50:35

whose parents got popped with LSD from

50:38

Washington University? When are we going

50:40

to do something for the directed energy

50:43

weapon people that are wellknown and

50:46

documented out there? What when are we

50:49

going to put someone in jail? When will

50:52

Pam Bondi and Cash Patel put someone in

50:55

jail instead of putting people for

50:56

tweets in jail? You know, because they

50:59

said something against a group of people

51:01

that they didn't like.

51:04

Well, I think Aaron, what I'm saying to

51:07

you, because I don't think I'm being a

51:08

dick here, I think I'm actually pointing

51:10

out the obvious that there's something

51:13

radically wrong

51:16

in the world when these things happen. I

51:18

mean, if you don't know this, you

51:20

should.

51:21

13,000 people in Britain in the last

51:24

three months have been put in jail for

51:25

tweets. And this is supposed to be, you

51:29

know, a free country that you can say

51:31

what you want. I'll also have you know

51:33

that just about every Western government

51:35

has opened their borders to an invasion.

51:37

Why? Because they can't have the

51:38

military go and shoot at American. So,

51:40

what did they do? Let's get brown people

51:43

from the south, get them to come up

51:45

who've already been processed through

51:47

the mind control off and then we'll give

51:49

them social security numbers and free

51:51

money and let them drive the people in

51:56

the United States

51:58

get mad enough so you start a civil war.

52:00

You know what the whole goal Aaron of

52:02

this whole thing is? To start a civil

52:05

war to get rid of the constitution. Why?

52:09

The one thing that the transhumanist

52:10

can't handle is the first, the second,

52:13

and the fourth amendment. But if you

52:16

know anything about history and you

52:17

understand what they're doing, you

52:19

should look into the execution of

52:21

Charles I and Oliver Cromwell. Anytime

52:24

when the there's been civil war, what's

52:27

the thing that always is a collateral

52:28

effect? They change documentation.

52:31

They change the laws. That's exactly

52:34

what the people in in elite power that

52:37

are wielding this electromagnetic

52:41

um magic stick at all of us. We need to

52:45

do something about that. And they have

52:47

risks. Trust me, they have weak points.

52:49

Um we're not talking about those. I And

52:52

I would tell you I don't want to talk

52:54

about the weak points on a podcast. I

52:57

actually just mentioned this to a couple

52:58

of Bitcoiners that this is not a

53:01

discussion that I would like to have

53:03

publicly. It's a discussion that I would

53:05

like to have with you next to me when

53:07

all of your electromagnetic devices are

53:10

in a Faraday bag.

53:12

Okay? Just very similar to what Paul

53:16

River did before he blasted through

53:18

Lexington Concord. He didn't tell the

53:21

British that he was coming. He told

53:23

everybody in Massachusetts that they

53:26

were coming. We need to do the same

53:29

thing. When you are run by tyrants and a

53:32

criminal cabal,

53:34

you effectively have to decide what do

53:36

you want to do. So, I guess what I'm

53:39

giving you right now,

53:41

Uncle Jack's pretty pissed off. I'm

53:43

older than most of you. I've seen them

53:46

do it longer than most of you. It's kind

53:49

of what drives me to be pissed off.

53:52

Now, I'm kind of apathetic about it

53:53

because none of you want to do anything.

53:56

You just want to go and fact check

53:58

everything I'm telling you. Dude, this

54:00

factecking has been going on for almost

54:02

70 years.

54:04

And if you know anything through the

54:06

epic, the only unde undefeated people

54:10

through the epic are the conspiracy

54:12

theorists. They've turned out to be

54:14

right about everything. But we still

54:16

don't have I should I should I shouldn't

54:20

say that. I'll give Cash Patel his due.

54:22

He just put He just put a judge from

54:27

Milwaukee in jail for going after ICE

54:29

agents. Okay. One, but nobody that is

54:33

linked to the JFK assassination. Nobody

54:36

that's linked to MK Ultra, Stanford

54:39

Research, Brain Health Initiative. I

54:41

mean, [ __ ] we haven't even talked about

54:43

the biggest elephant in the room. Why is

54:45

it that Obama and Joe Biden went after

54:47

incandescent bulbs? Well, if you're

54:49

listening to this story, should be

54:51

blatantly obvious why they did. And that

54:54

effect goes to be permanent in 2028. Why

54:59

aren't we shooting at the government

55:01

over that? I think I think even the

55:05

brain dead in the audience will say, you

55:08

know, that is a problem. I don't like

55:10

LED lights because they give me

55:11

headaches or they give me migraines or

55:14

they're not good for me. I know they're

55:15

not good for me because I've had the

55:17

experience of living under them. And

55:19

here's what's the hook there. What was

55:21

the bait? The bait was you'll save in

55:24

energy bills. Aaron, can I ask you a

55:26

question? Have your energy bills gone

55:28

down since you started using LED lights?

55:31

The answer is no. So, the bait isn't

55:35

even good, but the hook is deep in your

55:39

epiglatus. No,

55:42

>> what would be the solution for an

55:44

individual

55:46

listening to this if

55:49

they're not in a place of of being

55:51

skeptical? If they're like, "Okay, I

55:53

want to entertain this. I want to do

55:54

some research and explore this for

55:56

myself and I want to address this um

56:00

within my own body biologically."

56:02

>> Yeah. I would I would tell them the

56:04

first thing I would do is probably

56:05

listen back to this podcast and start

56:07

numbering all the different things that

56:09

I said, fact check each one. At the end

56:12

of it, if you want to short or speed the

56:16

process up, go by Andrew Marino's book,

56:19

Going Somewhere, read that. That'll

56:21

probably blow your mind when you read

56:22

the con the congressional testimony that

56:25

he and Becker put in in the early 70s.

56:29

If that doesn't convince you that this

56:31

has been going on at global scale, then

56:36

you know what? I can't help you. This

56:38

podcast can't help you. You have to help

56:40

yourself. And I guess that's probably

56:44

what's the under the undercurrent of

56:47

this podcast is I think we're past we're

56:52

past the skeptical phase. It's now we

56:56

need to do something.

56:59

And if we don't do something soon,

57:02

this is not going to end the way many

57:04

the way many people like it's not at

57:07

all. And if you want to know the truth,

57:10

Aaron, I've already told you through

57:12

foreshadowing how I feel about it. Where

57:15

are you located? Miami. Where am I

57:17

located?

57:19

>> Yeah.

57:20

>> El Salvador.

57:21

>> Exactly. Why is that? Would would that

57:24

be would that be a wise choice?

57:28

Say, Aaron, based on all the things you

57:31

know for the last 20 years between those

57:32

countries, isn't that a really unusual

57:36

decision to make? Why would I do

57:39

something like that?

57:41

See, those are the kind of things

57:44

that you need to think about when you

57:46

listen to a podcast like this. And I

57:49

think when you do enough homework and

57:52

you decide, okay, I'm not going to be

57:53

apathetic anymore. I'm actually I'm very

57:56

interested in this. Then what you do is

57:59

then you start reading material. Then

58:02

you start finding, okay, tell me the

58:04

implications.

58:06

What are the what's the action plan?

58:08

What do you have to do? I mean, you

58:09

already saw the people that will be

58:11

watching this already saw the first

58:12

action plan. When you get in front of a

58:15

screen, you probably should have blue

58:16

blockers on. Okay, that's the bare

58:18

minimum. But are there other things we

58:21

can do? Obviously, you know, there are.

58:23

We talked about some of them already.

58:26

The US military, Henry Kissinger, put

58:29

tin foil in the inside of the US embassy

58:31

in Moscow to stop microwave bombardment.

58:34

Well, maybe you can do the same thing

58:37

with your iPhone. Maybe you can do the

58:40

same thing with your house. Maybe you

58:41

can learn about a Faraday cage. Maybe

58:43

you can learn about Faraday clothing.

58:45

Maybe you can learn about how to protect

58:47

yourself when you're in an airplane or

58:49

in a Tesla. Um, maybe you can go out and

58:53

buy EMF uh meters. You know, we have

58:57

Geiger counters for radiation. Remember,

59:00

radiation is ionizing, radioactivity.

59:03

That's part of the electromagnetic

59:04

spectrum. We also have little badges

59:07

that you see doctors wear in hospitals

59:09

that measure how much X-rays we get.

59:12

Well, we also have things that measure

59:13

how much RF you get and how much

59:15

microwaves you get, maybe you learn

59:17

those things. And instead of buying

59:19

useless [ __ ] for Christmas this week,

59:22

you buy those and learn how to use them

59:24

and go, "Hey, look at that. Where I

59:27

live, there's a guy next door that has a

59:29

router that's right on the wall. Maybe

59:32

that's why my my mother can't sleep and

59:34

she's got Alzheimer's disease. Could

59:36

that maybe be a reasonable link?"

59:40

That's kind of what we need. We need to

59:44

take control back of our life. And the

59:47

best way for us to do that is not only

59:50

to be skeptical, but it's also to be

59:52

curious and feed your curiosity

59:56

with some of these things that are in

59:58

this podcast. And then realize that how

60:01

those things, those historical facts are

60:04

all around your life now. All the

60:07

current events in your life currently

60:09

right now, none of those things happen.

60:11

If what happened in the 50s and 60s

60:15

didn't happen, if you don't understand,

60:18

you know, how we went from Meer Lansky

60:21

to Roy Connie Epstein, you need to know

60:24

that. You need to know that who who

60:26

[clears throat] Roy Conn was when he

60:28

started. You may not know this. You may

60:30

not know the links, but Roy Conn was the

60:33

lawyer for Joe McCarthy. Who was Joe

60:35

McCarthy going after communism?

60:38

Guess what Roy Conn was? Roy Conn was a

60:42

guy that was a Fabian. And what did he

60:44

do? He actually took McCarthy apart.

60:48

Who did Roy Conn become, Aaron? He

60:51

became the first fixer for Donald J.

60:54

Trump and he was taken out in 1986.

60:58

Then other lawyers stepped up.

61:02

Now we have new fixers. Everything

61:04

always evolves, but guess what? The

61:06

story the story is always the same.

61:11

You know, you you saw it recently in the

61:13

attorney general. We had people outside

61:17

with binders. Oh, this is the Epstein

61:20

list. Look, we all have this. Then we

61:23

went to magically there is no Epstein

61:25

list. There was nobody that Epstein

61:28

harmed. We just had a former president

61:30

and his wife come out and say

61:34

there was nothing about us and Jeffrey

61:37

Epstein. You just heard that literally

61:39

this week. And then what happens? Then

61:42

you get a data dump that Cash Patel and

61:45

Bondi said we didn't have that show all

61:47

these pictures of all these people all

61:49

together. Ask yourself, my friend,

61:53

doesn't that sound a little bit about I

61:56

just remembered the guy's name, Richard

61:57

Helms. Uh, that's the CIA director that

62:01

ended the MK Ultra stuff. Isn't that

62:03

very similar to the story I told you

62:05

Richard Helms and destroying the boxes?

62:09

Isn't that very similar to what Hillary

62:10

Clinton did with uh Beach Blit when she

62:14

destroyed the servers about Comey with

62:16

the emails? Don't you find it kind of

62:19

interesting that how all these stories

62:20

kind of rhyme and they're not

62:22

duplicates, but they rhyme

62:25

and they're always tied to the same

62:27

thing?

62:28

So,

62:30

what I'm saying to you is I want you to

62:32

be more engaged. I want you to

62:34

understand how many of these biology

62:36

stories that people are interested in

62:40

um

62:41

are tied to this story. Like if you

62:44

think your breathing techniques,

62:48

your movement techniques improve you,

62:50

great. But remember, if you lose the

62:52

indogenous melanin in the body of

62:55

interlandal,

62:57

[snorts]

62:58

you're not enlightened.

63:00

Your movement's not doing [ __ ] Your

63:02

breathing techniques aren't as effective

63:04

as they could be. I want you to become

63:07

really effective. I want you to become a

63:09

savage.

63:11

And I want you to understand how the

63:13

things in our environment, the things

63:14

that are being done to us at a

63:16

submolelecular level below your ability

63:19

to perceive it are happening. And

63:21

they're affecting those things. And

63:23

they're doing it not just one way.

63:25

They're doing it literally in thousands

63:28

of different ways all to slowly wear you

63:32

down.

63:33

>> How important is it for a human being to

63:36

make

63:37

contact with the earth? How important is

63:40

grounding?

63:41

>> It's really important. Uh part of the

63:43

reason why it's uh critically important

63:47

has a lot to do with physics. So I like

63:50

to give people the uh idea that they've

63:54

already had the experience. Instead of

63:55

using a person on the ground because

63:58

that can the physics can be a little bit

64:00

hard for people to follow. I'd rather

64:02

use a coffee maker. If you go get a

64:04

coffee maker that has two prongs and one

64:08

that has three prongs and you get

64:09

voltmeters and things like that, you'll

64:11

find out that the one that has three

64:12

prongs is more energy efficient. I would

64:14

tell you the same thing about you when

64:16

you're standing on the earth with feet

64:19

exposed and there's no power lines or

64:21

water lines that have EMF below, you're

64:25

way more energy efficient. And if you

64:27

understand when you're m way more energy

64:28

efficient that means that you're not as

64:31

subject to the MK Ultra

64:34

SRRI or brain health initiative

64:36

programs. That's actually one of the

64:38

first things of you getting better. So

64:42

grounding is something it's free. It's

64:44

really hard for the government to

64:46

impact. The interesting thing is the way

64:49

they try to impact it is they're

64:51

allowing people to put you know that

64:53

stuff below ground and people don't

64:55

realize that that is exactly the same

64:58

thing as geoengineering above by

65:01

blocking the sun. So grounding is really

65:04

really important

65:06

>> if a person is in a highrise or they're

65:10

surrounded by non-native EMFs, Wi-Fi,

65:14

etc.

65:16

Is grounding almost like a form of

65:18

discharge in a way or how how does that

65:21

how does that work?

65:22

>> You could think about it, but it again

65:24

this goes very this goes really back to

65:27

the question that you asked me about

65:30

should I wear blue blockers or not. I'm

65:32

going to tell you when you're in uh a

65:34

big building, you have to realize you're

65:36

away from the ground. Now, can you

65:38

effectively ground yourself in a big

65:40

building if you know what you're doing

65:41

properly? The answer is yes. Here's the

65:43

problem that you don't realize is that

65:47

the higher you go up off the earth, EMF

65:50

gets bigger. So there's more polarized

65:52

light, say at the 30th floor, than there

65:54

is at the first floor. So the second

65:56

question I would ask you, even though

65:58

you're grounded, how much are you doing

66:00

for the EMF around you? And then you

66:03

have to ask yourself, okay, what are

66:04

those effects? So, like one of the

66:06

things that I can do as a neurosurgeon,

66:08

I can do an MRI on you looking for

66:11

melanin sheets in different parts of

66:12

your body to see if they've been

66:14

destroyed or not. You know, we'll see

66:15

little white matter plaques in different

66:17

places. So, if you tell me, okay, I

66:19

can't sleep or I'm having more trouble

66:22

meditating since I've moved to the 37th

66:24

floor in Miami than I did, say, when I

66:26

lived on the first floor, then we have

66:28

an actionable plan that we can fix. The

66:31

problem is, do you think most of the

66:33

people that you know and talk to are

66:36

that sophisticated? The answer is

66:38

they're not. And unfortunately, that's

66:41

the problem. And I need more of those

66:44

people, not less. Why? Because really

66:47

the battle that I fight both on the

66:48

biologic side and probably on the

66:51

thinking side is I need more of those

66:54

people to realize the most valuable

66:55

asset that they have is their time and

66:59

specifically their healthy time so that

67:02

the most amazing machine, this brain of

67:05

yours continues to work really well in

67:08

the future. though we don't allow people

67:10

in Washington DC to steal our time any

67:14

further because effectively that's the

67:15

greatest inflation I think that we face.

67:19

I think the inflation of our money is a

67:21

problem but it's probably not even in my

67:23

top three. The the top one is the

67:25

inflation of stealing our time and our

67:28

ability to think so that we become

67:31

useful idiots and you know economic

67:33

slaves in the paradigm that we're in. To

67:35

me that's a real big problem. And I

67:37

mean, I think you know this as as well

67:39

as the audience that the sicker you are,

67:42

the much more easy it is to control you

67:45

economically. But I've already told you

67:47

the reason why is because they're

67:49

removing melanin from the system. When

67:51

they do that, the things that they're

67:53

using are much more effective. And if

67:55

you don't believe that, remember who's

67:57

the other normal humans that are not

68:00

heavily melanated or mileelinated? Those

68:02

are children. And what do we know

68:04

already? Children who are around EMF are

68:08

much more subject to the detrimental

68:11

effects.

68:13

Um the same thing is true with adults

68:15

who have had, how shall I say, their

68:18

endogenous security system removed from

68:20

them without them knowing about it.

68:25

>> And who is what is the what's the name

68:29

of the uh the Satoshi? Satoshi Mia, how

68:33

do you say his name? Satoshi Nakamoto.

68:35

That's the guy uh who is um the boy.

68:40

>> Hold on. Let me let me let me [laughter]

68:42

I want to I want to specifically ask

68:45

you, how do you say his name? Satoshi

68:48

Nakamoto.

68:48

>> Satoshi Nakamoto.

68:50

>> Who is Satoshi Nakamoto?

68:53

>> Uh I've publicly come out in several

68:56

other podcasts. I believe that gentleman

68:58

was a guy named Len Sassimon, but he has

69:02

direct lineage back to Meer Lansky.

69:06

And the guy who's the middleman is a guy

69:07

named uh David Cham.

69:10

That's the the link. And um the link

69:16

used to be Myer Lansky. You have to know

69:19

who and what he was. He was a Ukrainian

69:22

Russian immigrant that came over 1911.

69:26

He began to work for some of the

69:27

Zionists

69:29

um ones that you would know as Bronin

69:32

running liquor you know in in the

69:34

Midwest of the United States. And then

69:36

he is the guy that um we got the term

69:40

called money laundering. Why? because he

69:42

realized early on as a young man that

69:45

the best way to steal money and the

69:48

government couldn't see you from paying

69:49

taxes because remember the Federal

69:51

Reserve Act came in with also taxes in

69:54

1913. Lance was the guy that came up

69:57

with using laundry mats. That's why you

69:59

have the term money laundering. So he

70:02

was the guy that broke the original

70:06

system. And it turned out in this whole

70:08

story, he's also the guy that broke

70:11

the Rothschild and Rockefeller system in

70:13

banking in 1969.

70:16

He basically came back to the United

70:18

States after taking some solless in

70:21

Israel

70:22

uh and went back and told the United

70:24

States that he effectively had control

70:27

of the Blackburg, Virginia computer for

70:31

the IRS. He was always one step ahead of

70:33

the bankers. He hated the bankers. And

70:37

the reason that he hated the bankers is

70:40

because, as I told you, he found out

70:43

through his work with General Groves,

70:45

through the military, that the people

70:48

that were behind this whole thing were

70:50

the bankers. It wasn't uh the religion.

70:54

He was very upset as a Jewish man that

70:56

Zionists were using Jews as a human

70:59

shield. And he was really pissed off

71:01

about it. The one thing about Lansky as

71:04

a criminal, which makes him very unique,

71:07

he actually had uh morality.

71:11

He believed if you were stupid enough to

71:14

get screwed, then that was okay. But if

71:16

you had something happen to you that was

71:19

below your ability to see it, that that

71:21

wasn't that wasn't a good thing. And he

71:24

did he wasn't about that. So from 1950

71:28

all the way through 1969,

71:31

he devised a way to always be proximal

71:34

to the US Treasury, to always be

71:37

proximal to the IRS, to be proximal to

71:40

intelligence. And how do you how do you

71:44

know this to be the case? Who was he

71:47

historically that you can all find out?

71:49

He's the accountant for Murder Inc. He's

71:51

the accountant for the mob. all the

71:53

people that were involved in the JFK

71:55

assassination, he was the guy running

71:57

their money.

71:59

That's how successful he was. And when

72:02

he found out what was really going on,

72:07

uh he used a loophole in law. His his

72:10

attorney was a guy named Ira Malnik,

72:13

who's still alive, very close to where

72:15

you live now in South Florida. And um

72:19

Malnik told him that after Israel was

72:22

formed that if you have any Jewish blood

72:24

in you that you can go back and get a

72:26

passport and you can also seek refuge in

72:30

Israel and be protected by the

72:32

government. So who was going after Lansy

72:35

at that time? The FBI and intelligence.

72:37

Why? because they knew that Lansky had

72:39

taken some money from some of the

72:40

casinos in in Cuba during the Cuban

72:43

Revolution and they were going to go and

72:47

attempt

72:49

uh to bring him up on the same charges

72:51

that they got Al Capone on. Okay, which

72:54

was tax evasion. They never got Al

72:56

Capone on the things they wanted. So

72:59

that was the goal of Jay Edgar Hoover.

73:01

Why did Jay Edgar Hoover and the FBI

73:03

want Lansky dead to rights? Because

73:05

Lansky believed in controlling people

73:09

through blackmail and everyone knows

73:12

that J. Garoover was a flaming

73:14

homosexual. Lansky had him dead to

73:17

rights on everything that you could

73:20

imagine. And he Jay Edgar Hoover always

73:24

he was always afraid that Lansky was

73:25

going to drop the dime so to speak on

73:27

him. He never did. And that was one of

73:30

the codes that Lansky lived by that he

73:33

was not interested in owning assets. He

73:35

was interested in owning people. And he

73:37

was very interested in owning the FBI

73:40

because of his clients. Who was his

73:42

clients? Lucky Luchiano, John Gotti, you

73:46

know, those those types, you know, Carlo

73:48

Marsalo, the guys that you heard

73:51

involved in the JFK assassination.

73:54

And when Lansky

73:57

uh told the Israelis

74:00

the information that he had

74:03

because and I'll tell you exactly who it

74:05

was, the attorney general for [snorts]

74:09

Lyndon Baines Johnson and early part of

74:13

of uh Nixon

74:16

put out a subpoena to bring Lansky in on

74:19

tax evasion charges. That's when he fled

74:22

to Israel. Uh,

74:25

Lansky then decided to do something that

74:27

to this day I call it the Top Gun

74:29

offense. You want to know the truth?

74:31

This is where a Top Gun story comes

74:33

from. Um, he tells the Israelis, you

74:36

know what I'm going to do? I'm going to

74:37

go back to the United States and tell

74:38

them the truth. So, he literally walks

74:41

in in 1969

74:43

and tells them the story that I'm

74:44

telling you right now. And he said, "The

74:48

best way for you to stay one step ahead

74:51

of the bankers is that you have to have

74:52

programmable money. Everything has to be

74:55

computerized." How did he learn this? He

74:58

was the guy that told General Groves

75:00

when he set up the deep state outside

75:02

the military, they used uh 67 Unix

75:06

computers to do this. Lansky was the guy

75:09

that taught General Groves this. Then

75:11

General Gross was brought back into the

75:13

military in 1958 by Eisenhower. Why?

75:16

Over Sputnik.

75:18

Sputnik was the the military getting

75:21

that dressed down by the Russians

75:23

because the Russians were the first ones

75:25

in space. And the military knew exactly

75:27

what that meant that that they could

75:29

control things through electromagnetic

75:31

radiation. So Eisenhower, who hated

75:34

Gross from World War II, brings Gross

75:37

back in. That's how Lansky, Murder,

75:40

Inc., everybody gets back in. What

75:42

happens in 1959?

75:46

That name ARPA changes to DARPA.

75:49

That's where the deep state begins. What

75:51

also happens? The Cuban Revolution

75:53

happens the same year. What also

75:55

happens? That's where you get the SV40

75:58

story in the polio jabs. Like all these

76:00

things happen in history

76:03

um all at one time. And Lansky's

76:06

involved in it. And who's the guy that's

76:08

still trying to come after him? The FBI.

76:11

The FBI is going after Lansky because

76:13

they know he got money in the Cuban

76:15

revolution. They also know that he was

76:17

involved

76:19

uh in the JFK assassination at some

76:21

level. They don't know how,

76:24

but they figure if we can catch him on

76:26

tax evasion charges. So, what does he go

76:29

in and tell him? He said, "It's

76:30

impossible for you to catch me in tax

76:32

evasion." He goes, "I own the the

76:34

computer that you use." When the

76:37

Rothchilds and Rockefellers heard that,

76:39

they nearly [ __ ]

76:41

because they found there was a backdoor

76:43

in there. Lansky was using a back door

76:45

the whole time. So what magically

76:47

happens in US history, the Bank Secrecy

76:50

Act, which is the most illegal

76:53

governmental

76:55

law ever um

76:59

passed against Americans, but now banks

77:02

can spy on you.

77:05

Why was that? Because they wanted to

77:06

find out what Lansky knew. They knew

77:08

that American money was was absolutely

77:12

corruptible. Lansky told them the only

77:14

way to make money incorruptible is to

77:16

make it digital. That's where the idea

77:19

came from. What magically happens the

77:21

next year, Aaron? The nation shock.

77:24

That's when they closed the gold window.

77:26

In other words, US money is no longer be

77:30

backed by gold. In fact, it's backed by

77:32

the might of the US military. Why?

77:34

Because the government knows they need

77:36

to blow money up. because money is no

77:39

longer a safety harbor for the criminals

77:43

in the banking elite. What's happened

77:46

every year since then?

77:49

They have tried through their strong arm

77:52

in BIS, which is Belgium,

77:55

to make programmable money. You want to

77:57

know what the CBDC program is? It's the

77:59

original idea that Lansky gave them. But

78:02

Lansky warned them it was going to be

78:04

really, really difficult

78:06

to actually make programmable money. And

78:09

boy was he right because they told the

78:12

story in ' 69. They still haven't got it

78:15

right today. But what did Lansky also

78:18

plan to do?

78:20

He planned to go back and looked at the

78:22

Munitions Act of World War II. What was

78:24

magically in the munitions act?

78:28

Something that nobody could figure out.

78:30

Cryptography.

78:31

from Alan Turing from the Enigma

78:34

machine. Why was that listed as part of

78:38

the story? Because they use cryptography

78:41

uh to control the outcome of World War

78:43

II.

78:45

You didn't know that, but Lansky did.

78:48

And what did he do? He hired a computer

78:51

scientist that has no money. You can go

78:54

and look at this one, too. Magically,

78:57

that guy David Sham opened seven

79:00

international c uh companies all tied to

79:04

cryptography and making digital

79:07

currency.

79:09

So, Lansky was going to use the best

79:13

minds from Cal Berkeley at that time to

79:15

build his digital money that was better

79:18

than theirs. What did that eventually

79:21

become? It became good. But here's the

79:24

problem. When Lansky died in ' 83, David

79:27

Sham was running with Ira Malnik this

79:31

whole time and they were trying to

79:33

figure out how to do it. Magically,

79:35

this young kid who's a PhD student of

79:38

David Shons named Len Sassimon comes in.

79:42

Len Sassim is so [ __ ] smart, the US

79:44

government hires him to do the TCP IP

79:48

protocol that you use today on the

79:50

internet. He did that when he was 18

79:52

years old.

79:54

Okay,

79:56

here's the ultimate tie to the story. Do

79:58

you know what Len Sassimon died from,

80:00

Aaron? He died from a functional

80:03

neurologic deficit tied to non-native

80:06

EMF toxicity. Guess why? Because

80:09

everything he did was based on

80:12

digitization.

80:13

He was always around a computer.

80:17

So what happens in the time between Sham

80:20

and Sassimon? Bitcoin goes from a

80:23

project of Lansky and the accountants

80:26

that control the mob goes open source to

80:30

the cipher punks. All the people that

80:33

are tied that you know about Jack

80:36

Dorsey, Adam Back, Hal Finny. And when

80:40

it goes open source, guess what that

80:42

means? We get the greatest gift that

80:46

Meer Lansky could ever give us. It's

80:49

like him giving us herpes, the gift that

80:52

never stops giving.

80:54

But guess what the problem is? The

80:56

people in control do not like the fact

81:00

that you now have a Lloydial title

81:02

that's better than their CBDC.

81:05

And if you want to know what's been

81:06

going on the last, I'd say since 2008

81:11

since Sandy Wild trained Jaime Diamond,

81:15

that's it. There you go. The controlled

81:19

demolition of money has been going on

81:20

actively since 1971.

81:24

That's the life that you the bubble

81:27

you've existed in. So let's really zoom

81:31

out. When you said to me, Jack, how many

81:33

people are afflicted by MK Ultra? Aaron,

81:36

you don't know any of this story. So

81:39

guess what? You are. You didn't know it.

81:43

And it was the system is designed for

81:45

you not to know it.

81:48

And how did I know it? Because it's

81:50

discoverable. Because I kept following

81:53

the breadcrumbs.

81:55

Now the job as a guy like you to put

81:57

this all back together and say, "Wow,

81:59

this not only affects my money, but this

82:01

is actually affecting the health of my

82:03

friends, my family, and everyone else.

82:07

So maybe this is a bigger story. Maybe

82:10

maybe we need to do something about the

82:13

deep state. Maybe we need to do

82:14

something about surveillance technology.

82:17

Maybe now you understand why Peter Teal,

82:19

Elon Musk, and Reed Hoffman, the PayPal

82:21

Mafia guys, they're not totally your

82:24

friend all the time. You need to

82:26

understand that. Maybe you need to do a

82:29

better job thinking about why is Joe

82:33

Rogan so popular when he's just a

82:35

comedian.

82:36

You know, why is Lex Freriedman a

82:38

physicist doing a podcast?

82:41

You know, why why is Brett Weinstein, a

82:45

biologist who has no clinical training,

82:47

talking about the things he's talking

82:48

about? Why does his brother get on a

82:50

podcast and ask one simple question?

82:53

[snorts] I'd like to know why Jeffrey

82:54

Epstein was at MIT, at my university, in

82:57

the math department, in the finance

82:59

department. I'll tell you what, Aaron,

83:02

those are pretty good questions.

83:05

Pretty damn good questions. But guess

83:08

what? Your current government

83:11

redacted and whitewashed everything

83:13

else. Your current attorney general,

83:15

your current FBI director, they want to

83:18

make sure Aaron Alexander doesn't even

83:19

know how to say Satoshi Nakamoto.

83:27

Why is Trump and his son and much of

83:32

what seems like the people around the

83:33

government right now uh seem like they

83:37

are pro Bitcoin.

83:40

>> Well, they're pro Bitcoin because they

83:43

know that Bitcoin is better than the

83:44

CBDC.

83:46

So, they would like to back Bitcoin by

83:49

the failing money. In other words, this

83:51

is now an evolution of what happened in

83:54

69 through about 75 where the bankers

83:59

knew that their money had to be blown

84:01

up. But their goal has been to go to the

84:03

CBDC.

84:05

Who has Trump hitched his wagon to? No

84:07

longer the bankers. Remember, he's a

84:08

real estate guy. He's hooked his his

84:11

wagon to the transhumanist technologist

84:14

because what's the belief of the

84:16

technologist that they can control

84:17

people better than the bankers could?

84:19

Remember the banking idea famously is

84:22

linked to the Rothschild family through

84:24

the battle of Wateroo when they they

84:26

controlled the bank of England. How did

84:28

that happen? Uh, one of the Rothschilds,

84:31

I believe it was Nathan Rothchild

84:33

famously said,"I don't care who rules

84:35

England. Just give me the ability to

84:38

control the money and I control the

84:39

country." So that has been in operation

84:42

since 1812. When did that change? It

84:45

changed when John Po Dexter brought

84:48

Peter Teal into the Department of

84:51

Defense. Who whose administration was

84:53

that? That's Bush. And if you want to

84:57

know top five worst presidents for

85:00

probably Americans, George W. and George

85:04

H, two of the biggest criminals you can

85:07

imagine. I'd put Obama up there because

85:09

he's in the Bush crew, but you need to

85:13

understand that George W. Bush

85:17

um allows PO Dexter to bring Peter Teal

85:19

in. Peter Teal now is the enemy of the

85:23

banker. So, what are we really fighting

85:25

about? And what am I trying to talk to

85:27

you about today? I'm trying to tell you

85:30

the ultimate battle in our geopolitics

85:32

is the transhumanist technologist

85:34

against the banking elite. They hate

85:36

each other. That's the reason why the

85:38

transhumanist all like Bitcoin. It's

85:40

also the reason why the Jaime Diamond

85:42

crowd, the Elizabeth Warren crowd, the

85:45

Bernie Sanders crowd hate it. Okay? And

85:49

once you understand that, then you

85:51

realize if you're a modern Bitcoiner,

85:53

you have to understand some of the

85:55

people at our table at Thanksgiving, our

85:57

Uncle Peter, our uncle Elon, our uncle

86:00

Reed, they're not our friends. They just

86:03

happen to own Bitcoin. And when you

86:05

really understand Bitcoin and you

86:06

understand Myer Lansky, you need

86:09

adversaries, Aaron, to actually own

86:12

Bitcoin. It's smart. Okay? You never

86:16

want centralized control of money in any

86:19

one place. So for example, I'll try to

86:21

make this really simple for you. If

86:23

you're a sovereign person and you know

86:25

you don't have sovereignty in the United

86:26

States, what would be another passport

86:28

that you'd like? Maybe an Iranian one,

86:31

maybe an Lebanese one, maybe a Russian

86:33

one. Is that the reason why Snowden is

86:35

in Russia and not in the United States?

86:37

Because you need an adversary to protect

86:40

you from the tyranny of your own

86:42

government. Well, the same thing is true

86:45

when it comes to money. So, while many

86:49

people who listen to this podcast may

86:51

not realize I'm playing 4D chess when

86:54

you're playing checkers, I want people

86:56

to understand even though I dislike

86:59

Peter Teal, I dislike Sergey Brand, I

87:01

dislike Elon Musk, I dislike Reed

87:03

Hoffman,

87:05

it's imperative that they're on our team

87:08

right now on the finance side. Why?

87:10

because we have to eliminate the banking

87:13

elite. The next level is we're gonna

87:15

have to eliminate the surveillance guys.

87:18

Okay? And that's going to be a tougher

87:20

task, but that's the reason why your

87:24

original questions to me in the

87:25

beginning of this podcast are so

87:26

important because those are biologic

87:29

questions. Those are energy questions.

87:32

Those are tied to AI. Those are tied to

87:35

things around Nvidia. If you want to

87:37

know the truth, this is the reason why

87:40

that MIT physicist was just killed last

87:43

week.

87:45

Yeah, these things are all tied

87:47

together, my friend. And that is part of

87:50

the reason why podcasts like this are

87:52

important because there may be only 5

87:55

10% of your audience that wants to put

87:57

all this together. But I will guarantee

87:59

you this, when you release it, people

88:01

will listen to this. People will go,

88:04

"Now, this is not something you hear

88:07

every day." And a lot of it begins to

88:10

make sense when you see it put together

88:13

this way. And what do I want you to do?

88:15

I don't want you to believe a godamn

88:17

thing that I said today. I want you to

88:20

fact check every last bit of it. And

88:23

when you find out that I'm right, I only

88:25

expect you to do one thing. Buy Bitcoin

88:29

and then start asking better questions.

88:31

Because when we do that, we're going to

88:34

have to change the world. We're going to

88:35

have to change the way we communicate.

88:36

We're going to have to protect our

88:37

melanin. We're going to have to start

88:40

taking duty serum depleted water uh like

88:42

a one a day vitamin. Those kind of

88:45

things are going to become really

88:47

important because then Aaron then we

88:51

become enlightened.

88:55

>> Dr. Jack Cruz, thank you so much for uh

88:58

making time to have this conversation.

88:59

>> No problem. anytime, my friend.

89:01

>> All right, I appreciate you, brother.

89:03

>> All right, bye-bye.

89:04

>> Thank you guys so much for watching. If

89:06

you enjoyed that episode, you might also

89:07

enjoy this episode over here, as well as

89:10

this one over here. Thank you for

89:12

subscribing. Appreciate you. I will see

89:13

you in the next video.

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