Episode Transcript
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0:00
Stu Does
0:02
America. A
0:06
simple message to our friends out
0:09
in tents at Columbia University. Learn,
0:12
then protest. The order is important.
0:14
You can make sure you get
0:16
the shirt or the mug or
0:18
whatever you want at studosmerch.com. Use
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the code STU10 to get 10% off your entire
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order. Perfect for protest season. Be sure to check
0:25
out the show on YouTube as well. youtube.com/Stu Does
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of our surprise broadcasts.
0:39
Jason Butchrell is going to be here to explain what
0:42
looks like a color revolution happening in America.
0:44
We'll get into that. Donald Trump gets held
0:46
in contempt of court. But we start by
0:48
doing the Columbia occupation.
0:51
You know, it's a fascinating thing we're watching go
0:53
on right now all across the country. Columbia
0:55
University set down a big red line. They said, don't
0:58
you dare cross this red line. And
1:01
the protesters were like, what
1:03
red line? You don't mean any of
1:05
this. Columbia University begins suspending students who
1:07
refuse to leave encampment. A daily
1:10
audio briefing on Monday, Ben Chang, vice
1:12
president, Office of Public Affairs for Columbia,
1:14
said the administration has begun
1:16
suspending students as part of a
1:18
next phase to ensure safety on
1:20
campus. He did not say how many
1:22
students have been suspended so far and said there is
1:25
a disciplined process. He said the
1:27
university was hopeful during negotiations and
1:29
were discouraged when students were unable to come
1:31
to a consensus. The leaflet
1:33
that was left out for the protest
1:35
group said Columbia students for justice in
1:37
Palestine said the university distributed leaflets telling
1:39
the group to leave the encampment by
1:41
2 p.m. deadline
1:44
or risk suspensions and probation until June 2025.
1:47
They say they are also being threatened with
1:49
evictions from housing, impossible expulsion. It was kind
1:51
of funny because they were like, oh, you
1:53
better not be there too. So
1:56
they just added a bunch of people at like noon
1:58
so they could try to defend the encampment. And
2:00
then of course, Columbia let the red line go
2:02
by and didn't really do much of anything So what
2:04
does that lead to when you make a red line
2:06
and you let the people who you've given the red
2:08
line to cross That red line what happens usually usually
2:11
it escalates protesters take over
2:13
Columbia's universities building an escalation
2:16
of Israel Hamas war demonstrations
2:20
Again, I'm very uncomfortable calling
2:22
these war demonstrations. I'm very
2:24
uncomfortable calling them protests I
2:27
mean at some point you embrace the language Just
2:30
from the aspect of like trying to communicate easily
2:32
and quickly So, you know what
2:34
we're talking about, but like these are not protesters. Okay.
2:36
A lot of these people support Hamas I
2:39
mean, you know a gas and you can call that
2:41
a protest if you want. Maybe there's an academic, you
2:43
know Opening for someone
2:45
to support Hamas, I guess I
2:47
certainly don't see it But I guess that
2:50
does exist all over academia for whatever reason
2:52
but when you're damaging property and breaking down
2:55
All sorts of things inside of a building you
2:57
just shouldn't have access to that's
2:59
not what we call a protest I
3:01
don't remember the January 6 protesters being
3:04
mentioned all that much. I remember rioters.
3:06
I remember insurgents I
3:08
remember all that stuff, but I don't really remember
3:11
protesters being the focus of that
3:13
here is a here are the
3:15
Columbia students now breaking into a
3:17
building Again
3:21
a hammer Breaking windows right
3:23
in front of people, you know thousands of
3:25
people they're taking the Photos
3:28
of all this going on They
3:30
don't care And
3:33
they eventually keep pushing on these
3:36
floors and break through
3:40
and run away This
3:44
is not a quote-unquote protest Okay,
3:47
that's not what this is Then of
3:49
course there was a Heinz Hall is the place where all this
3:51
is going on There was
3:53
a flag dropped
3:56
here showing the superiority
3:58
of I mean, the
4:01
inmates are running the asylum and
4:03
the inmates have put a flag down
4:06
To make sure you know they're running it. Now,
4:08
of course, they're also chanting things as they usually
4:10
do. We have the intifada flag
4:13
up From
4:24
the river to the sea, Palestine Will
4:26
be free and the Jews won't be there So we don't
4:28
have to worry about that by the way, am I the
4:31
only one who when I hear intifada? I think of frittata
4:33
and I get hungry All right. Am I
4:35
the only person that this happens to because it happens to me all the time
4:38
Now there are of course more more
4:40
of this going on the counter protesters
4:42
were muscled away from a door By
4:49
the way these are No People
4:55
who want to use the person leading this protest
4:57
we'll get into him here in just a minute
5:02
Trying to push away these people who are protecting
5:04
the university No help
5:06
no security there helping them nothing like that.
5:09
No, no Let him
5:11
fend for themselves now, of course Texas and in
5:13
Florida are handling things just a little bit differently
5:15
than New York when these things are popping up
5:17
in those states The
5:19
protesters are being removed quickly and things
5:21
are under control quickly and I have
5:23
not seen the word insurrection used for
5:26
these particular Protesters
5:29
taking control of buildings. They don't belong
5:31
in I've seen it being downplayed. I've
5:33
seen it being Excused as
5:35
understandable considering the circumstances. It's not
5:37
understandable. It wasn't understandable on January
5:40
6th either Sorry,
5:42
just wasn't and it never will
5:44
be you shouldn't be doing these things. This
5:46
is not acceptable behavior Whether
5:49
you like the policies of the United States or you
5:51
don't this is not what you do
5:53
in a civilized society And you
5:55
know, you might say well, we're not civilized anymore. Well, I mean
5:57
if that's the world you want I mean you can have it.
5:59
It's available to you. Usually it's available in the
6:01
Middle East though. Usually it's available in third world
6:03
countries. I don't want it to be available to
6:05
you here. I mean the people
6:07
who were protesting George Floyd's death, those
6:10
people thought, hey, maybe we should have, maybe
6:13
we should bring a little of the third
6:15
world right on home. I don't
6:17
want that world for America. I've got kids who live here.
6:19
I want them to live in a
6:21
world like I lived in. You know, that
6:23
was at least mildly sane at times. That's
6:26
really the only standard we're looking for
6:28
at this point. Now Elise Stefanik is
6:31
up there, you know, she's in the
6:33
upper echelon I would say of potential
6:35
Trump VP choices though. No, no, I,
6:37
it's possible. I'm a little skeptical that she'll
6:40
actually get it, but she is definitely going
6:42
for it. Here she is responding to the
6:44
college protests. The
6:46
world is watching as the leadership
6:48
of our so-called elite colleges and
6:50
universities continue to fail to condemn
6:53
antisemitism and protect Jewish students on
6:55
campus. Just look at the abject
6:57
failure of Columbia's president to enforce
6:59
their own code of conduct that
7:01
they gave lip service to during
7:03
the recent education and workforce hearing.
7:06
Last night, the pro Hamas
7:08
antisemitic mob took over an
7:10
academic building. The university leadership
7:12
has lost complete control. It
7:15
is a disgrace and it is untenable
7:17
and we as House Republicans will hold
7:19
them to account. I will continue to
7:21
lead on this issue and House Republicans
7:24
will expand our efforts on oversight with
7:26
additional committee chairs with an announcement later
7:28
today. That's a big threat
7:30
of committee chairs. Committee chairs coming your way. Stefanik
7:32
has been actually really great on this. She's been,
7:34
and now she's kind of been a one note
7:37
candidate for the VP job, and she's been very
7:39
good on this particular issue when it comes to
7:42
elite universities. I don't know if that's enough to
7:44
get her in the number two person on the
7:46
ticket. We should do maybe, maybe this
7:48
week or next week, a Veep
7:50
Stakes type of thing. It will give you a running
7:52
countdown of who's in fifth place, who's in fourth place.
7:55
It will be completely made up by my perception. But
7:57
that's the important thing, right? I'll give
7:59
you my... power ranking dvd
8:01
power rankings coming soon to us to does
8:03
america i wonder at this point
8:05
i mean are there are these are these
8:08
all students doing this we know that i
8:10
mean the estimates from the mainstream media about
8:12
fifty percent of these people are not even
8:14
students there outside agitators protesters paid people who
8:16
are coming in and doing a lot of
8:18
these things and that you know that that
8:20
the stupid students are going along with it
8:22
some of them are just really dumb and
8:24
they don't know what's going on there trying
8:26
to fit in some of our justice radical
8:28
as the activists themselves you wonder what percentages
8:30
are between those two groups uh... i'd be
8:33
terrifying to know the truth on that one we
8:37
step back and you look at all these protests
8:39
you think yourself our country lost like this is
8:41
we're screwed we're screwed what is going on here
8:44
uh... you then you step back and you think
8:47
well let's look at the entire country as a
8:49
whole and then this is a little bit better
8:51
there vast majority of americans are backing israel over
8:53
him off the city poll harvard caps harris survey
8:56
shared with the hill show the eighty percent of
8:58
registered voters said they support israel more in the
9:00
war well twenty percent said they support him off
9:02
more this is about in line with the polls
9:05
fighting last month when seventy nine percent indicated
9:07
they support israel mo more
9:10
in the in the poll older age groups
9:12
were much more likely to be supportive of
9:14
israel than younger respondents the clear majority of
9:16
each age group supported israel more than him
9:18
off more than ninety percent of those is
9:20
over sixty five years old of
9:23
those fifty five to sixty four also over ninety
9:25
percent said they support israel more well eighty five
9:27
percent of those forty five to fifty four and
9:29
three quarters of those thirty five to forty four
9:31
you see those numbers dropping as you get to
9:33
younger groups and that winds up playing out
9:36
all the way to the bottom support for israel was
9:38
the lowest among the youngest age
9:40
groups pollsters found sixty four percent of
9:42
those twenty five thirty four and only
9:44
fifty seven percent of those eighteen to
9:46
twenty four said they support israel more
9:48
while the rest of those age groups
9:50
said they support uh... a mass
9:52
more now a lot of people
9:54
that will be familiar with her right like you we hear
9:56
all the crap going on in the news and we look
9:58
at these university protection like I'll be all gone insane then you
10:01
look at that poll and it's like 8020 Support
10:03
of Israel over Hamas and you're like, okay, maybe
10:06
that's good news But I challenge you to think
10:08
about it for a second. This
10:10
is not Israel versus
10:13
the Palestinian people This is
10:15
not Israel versus innocent homeless
10:17
people on the streets. The
10:20
question is specifically Israel
10:22
versus Hamas like
10:25
the country of Israel our ally Versus
10:28
a known terrorist group that just
10:31
wound up murdering 1,200 people a
10:33
few weeks ago Now
10:37
months ago now, I guess it's been a little bit
10:39
longer than that But I mean this should not be
10:41
8020. We should not be happy with 8020
10:44
8020 means 20% of our country's sports Terrorism
10:49
and we're like, oh what that's
10:51
wonderful news. It's not good news.
10:54
This should be 99 to 1 or 100
10:57
to 0 let me give you a couple of other
10:59
polls if you say who's better Chris Pratt or Jeffrey
11:02
Epstein if that one came out 8020
11:05
Pratt would Pratt be happy about that?
11:07
Would anyone be happy about that? How
11:09
about I don't know who's better Sidney
11:11
Sweeney or Harvey Weinstein? Hey,
11:14
I'll 80% favor Sidney. Well,
11:17
that's good news At least our country's
11:19
kind of thing know the fact that
11:21
20% support the guy who was having
11:23
sex with everybody including plants is not
11:26
Not a good thing Now
11:29
we are doing what we can to help the
11:31
people in Gaza and it's odd that we're doing
11:33
it, isn't it? Why are we
11:36
doing it? Why is the
11:38
United States responsible for this particular
11:40
problem considering a 150
11:43
nations came together to say how bad
11:45
Israel was and they couldn't even say
11:48
how bad Hamas was So
11:50
those 150 countries seem like they could come together
11:52
and maybe they can bring
11:54
all the wonderful food supplies
11:57
to the Gazans who need it
12:00
But now, of course, we're doing it. Images
12:02
show US military building a floating pier off
12:05
of Gaza. Pentagon says it will cost
12:07
$320 million. So
12:11
now we're spending hundreds of
12:13
millions of dollars to give food aid
12:15
to a few people who don't quite
12:17
entirely mind us all that much, and the
12:20
vast majority of people who want us all
12:22
dead. That's wonderful. What
12:24
a great plan that is. By the way, you'll
12:26
be surprised to hear it's like 100% over budget
12:28
already. Deputy
12:31
Press Secretary Sabrina Singh said on Monday that
12:33
the pier will cost $320 million. That
12:36
estimate includes all costs associated with the
12:39
initial construction of the system, known as
12:41
the Joint Logistics Over the Shore, or
12:43
J-LOTS. The cost of operating the pier will
12:46
likely grow over the next several months. So it's not just $320
12:48
million. It's going to grow over the next whole month. But
12:51
look what you're getting for your money here. Look at these
12:53
pictures. This looks awesome. I mean,
12:55
a floating pier of scrap
12:59
metal-looking stuff. And wow, what an
13:01
incredible achievement this is. A big
13:04
floating deck in the middle of
13:06
the water. By
13:08
the way, I mentioned we just had a tax
13:11
day the other day. And
13:15
all the money you'll ever make in
13:17
your entire life you'll pay taxes on,
13:19
and all that money combined won't even pay
13:22
for one, one of
13:24
the little rectangles that make up that pier.
13:28
Not even one. All your
13:31
life's work, all the taxes
13:33
you'll pay in your entire life, won't
13:35
even make up for one of the
13:37
rectangles that makes up the floaty thing
13:39
that we're doing to make sure terrorists
13:41
can eat. I
13:45
just wanted to pay that little picture here. Because
13:47
we're now like 350 days away from the next
13:49
tax day. I don't want you to really forget
13:52
it. By the way, here's the overhead. This
13:54
is the giant thing you're building. So congratulations.
13:56
See that little tiny square in the little
13:58
corner there? That's you. You made that one. Good
14:01
job, boys and girls. By the way, I think, again, we do this
14:03
cheaper than $320 million. Every
14:06
summer, and my kids have gone to this a couple times here
14:08
in Texas, and I think it goes all over the country, the
14:11
world's largest floating obstacle
14:13
course comes to town. Look
14:16
at this thing. It's awesome. It's like a bunch of bouncy
14:18
houses on the water, and you jump off, and you jump
14:20
in the lake, and you get back on, and you try
14:22
to stay afloat, and you slip off, and it's a great
14:24
time. And
14:26
why do we just have these people build up here? I
14:29
mean, look how much more fun that would look than our
14:31
stupid scrap metal heap that we have out there now. I'm
14:33
just saying. I bet they could do it for $2 million,
14:35
not $320. That's
14:38
just a prediction. By the way,
14:41
what do you know about this floating pier?
14:44
It's going to bring food somehow to the
14:46
Middle East, the people in Gaza. I mean,
14:48
everyone knows this is just a ploy, right?
14:50
Joe Biden is losing voters, younger voters in
14:52
particular who are upset about the whole Israel
14:55
thing. They're calling him genocide Joe. He's trying to
14:57
make sure he gets out there and puts on
15:00
a happy face, and if it costs $320
15:02
million of your money, fine, whatever, even though this
15:04
is not really going to do anything to solve
15:07
the problem in the Middle East,
15:09
even if your entire focus is helping
15:12
citizens of Gaza, regardless,
15:14
this is not going to be the answer to
15:17
all of that. But I'm kind of surprised that
15:19
that's all you know about this, because I was
15:21
kind of interested about this story that happened a
15:24
few days ago. A mortar attack on
15:26
the Gaza coast spotlights risk to US
15:28
peer mission. Militants launch
15:30
mortars at Israeli forces in Gaza as
15:32
they prepare for the arrival of a
15:35
floating US army pier dispatched to facilitate
15:37
delivery of humanitarian aid, US officials said
15:39
this past Thursday, an incident that underscores
15:41
the mission's vulnerabilities. The attack
15:43
on a marshalling area for the pier
15:46
caused minimal damage and occurred while US
15:48
ships involved in the operation remain a
15:50
ways offshore. The pier is under construction
15:52
by US troops, though nowhere near mortal
15:55
range and expected to be put into
15:57
service by early May. Now, by the way, this
15:59
is just one. of several attacks that has happened. People
16:02
from, we don't know if it's Hamas, if
16:04
it's Islamic Jihad, we don't know who it
16:06
is, but somebody's firing at this pier. And
16:09
it's not Israel, it's not us. Who
16:11
is it? I
16:13
wonder who it could be. It's
16:16
interesting because you would think
16:18
they would, if they wanted food, if
16:21
this was really about aid to Gaza,
16:23
they'd be excited about this $300 million
16:25
pier we're popping up there to bring
16:27
some rice into town. But no, instead
16:29
they're firing at it. It
16:32
makes you think maybe this isn't about aid at all. That's
16:35
just a question. And by the way, why wasn't that
16:37
a massive story? It
16:40
was a massive story when the World
16:43
Central Kitchen employees were killed.
16:46
Rightfully so. That was a terrible tragedy.
16:49
That's a good organization, even though I don't agree
16:51
with the leaders' politics, but it's a good organization
16:54
helping people around the world in these types of
16:56
areas. And the fact that some of them died
16:58
in the line of that duty is terrible. Israel
17:01
even said so themselves. But
17:04
it's fascinating to look at this and say,
17:06
does anyone care? Does
17:09
anyone question the moral
17:11
authority of Hamas these days? Does anyone
17:13
even bother doing that anymore? And
17:16
I want to leave you with this because this is, of course, typical
17:19
Republicans pounce verbiage.
17:23
But it gets to something interesting here. Why
17:25
the right loves the anti-Israel encampments. Three reasons
17:27
Trump and B.B. want the protest to continue.
17:29
And of course, it makes the typical arguments.
17:31
Republicans are pouncing on this for their advantage,
17:33
blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
17:36
But I want to draw your attention to one of the guys we
17:38
saw in one of those early videos, the one where they were barricading
17:41
the door. One of these
17:43
guys is someone who's known. He was supposed
17:45
to be kicked off of campus already. University
17:48
of Michigan, leader of the
17:50
main student anti-Israel group. This one is the
17:53
other protest who had been sympathetically profiled
17:55
in the New York Times and given
17:58
the university's prestigious award for student. who
18:00
best exemplify the leadership and extraordinary
18:02
provision of Reverend Dr. Martin Luther
18:05
King, Jr., wrote on social media,
18:08
Until my last breath I will utter
18:11
death to every single individual
18:13
who supports the Zionist state. Death
18:16
and more, death
18:18
and worse. These are
18:21
the people that are surrounding your kids
18:23
at college. These are the people in that
18:25
little college town that's having that little encampment.
18:28
They're treated so nicely by the media. These
18:30
are the people we're talking about who are
18:32
wishing anyone who even supports Israel, let
18:35
alone just Jews, but anyone who supports
18:37
Israel, death and not just death, death
18:40
and worse. This is
18:43
what we're dealing with right now, and unfortunately I think
18:45
it's going to get worse before it gets better. Who
18:49
knows where we're going?
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place, Jason Butrill. I mean, you're a smart man
20:34
for many reasons. Yeah, I got one. Or you
20:36
me on the show with another one of those.
20:39
Yeah, well, you got a two, I think it's
20:41
a two-appearance lead over Dan Andros right now. Screw
20:43
that guy. I know. I'm coming on tomorrow. He'll
20:45
be calling you. I'll be after you watch us
20:47
tonight. He will. Well, welcome to
20:49
the program. Let's go a little
20:51
history lesson here. You were on the radio today talking about
20:53
color revolution and how that ties into today. And a lot
20:56
of people would be like, what are you talking about? Where
20:58
does this play in? So let's take this back to the
21:00
beginning, back to the Arab Spring. Barack
21:03
Obama, president, doing all sorts of things behind
21:05
the scenes. Take us there. So
21:08
before the Arab Spring, even, we can go back even further,
21:10
like around 2009-ish or something like that,
21:13
the State Department under Obama decided
21:16
to do this program called Civil Society 2.0. So
21:19
Civil Society 2.0 was basically this
21:22
US State Department training, NGOs training activists
21:24
from other countries. Sometimes they brought them
21:26
over here and did it. And
21:29
sometimes they went over to the other countries
21:31
and said, hey, all you people of
21:34
military age that can rise up and hit
21:36
the streets, this
21:38
is what you do as far as reaching the
21:41
maximum amount of people. So they taught them social
21:43
media, how to basically do like, it
21:46
was basically global community organizing
21:48
pretty much. But how do you manipulate the
21:50
media? How do you manipulate people through social
21:52
media? How do you gather people in large? Things
21:54
like that. That's what they started doing. Well,
21:57
2010 rolls around, and this
21:59
is when there's... december two thousand ten will
22:01
be there spring first launched but
22:04
before that maybe three or four months before that
22:06
president wanted a really weird thing he added
22:09
a presidential study uh... order
22:11
presidential study order some like that uh...
22:14
and there's more than president at all time most
22:16
of them eventually get the classified this one ever
22:19
did today if you go
22:21
to the website you'll see all the presidential state directives
22:24
and that's what is direct you
22:26
get all through the all the through the president's day directors
22:28
president's presidential state directive eleven still
22:30
classified all the other ones from
22:33
his era not all of them also
22:35
the but me and most of them i
22:38
don't understand why it's considered so
22:40
classified the only brief descriptions like
22:42
four five words that says like
22:45
political reform in
22:47
the middle east and northern africa that's
22:49
all it is ok interesting
22:51
locations because three
22:53
or four months later whom their
22:55
spring exploded instantly all
22:57
these n g o's are going into action
23:00
uh... you know they're community organizing they you
23:02
know they're using slick ways of using facebook
23:04
and all these other ways to to you
23:06
know to reach out to people on on
23:09
a mass level and then geos and non-governmental
23:11
organization right uh... which they
23:14
call civil society and those circles uh...
23:16
but it is very interesting because the this
23:20
this led to tons of regime change
23:22
egypt you know to me you know all
23:24
these places you know they tried in syria
23:26
you know all over the place within in
23:28
the middle east uh... and
23:30
then later it would basically copied around
23:32
two thousand thirteen two thousand fourteen with
23:34
the state department now calling these uh...
23:36
so side to put on things that'll
23:38
take they called it tech camps where
23:40
they were again training organizers helping them
23:43
to you know get out the streets
23:45
the might on protest and and ukraine
23:47
happened uh... we know the united states
23:49
uh... led a lot by victoria newland
23:51
was heavily involved uh...
23:54
regime change seem to be civil
23:57
society two point oh seems like
24:00
That was Obama's secret
24:02
foreign policy that they were
24:04
using as ordered through a directive
24:06
that they never declassified. It was just
24:08
essentially a replacement for
24:10
war as a way to get what you
24:13
want around the world. The
24:15
sort of underhanded, weakened, the interior
24:18
structure of the country, start
24:20
a bottom-up type revolution and then
24:22
pray for the best. Yeah. The
24:25
Russian general called
24:28
Gorazimov, the Gorazimov
24:30
doctrine, kind
24:32
of copied what he saw that NATO
24:34
was doing. NATO kind of changed their
24:37
first strike ability, not first strike, but
24:39
a lot of their strategies once
24:41
the internet came to prominence, once social media
24:43
came out. They said, why use soldiers to
24:46
fight these battles? Why not have
24:48
the people do it themselves through information? Russia
24:51
ended up copying a lot of that as well. Just
24:54
a well-known tactic, and it seems like
24:56
it really came into power
24:58
during the Obama administration. Are we
25:00
seeing that now when it comes to what's
25:02
going on with Gaza and the
25:04
universities? I mean, it does seem like
25:07
there's a tie in there. You get
25:09
these NGOs that are very
25:11
similar. They have dark money funding
25:13
through a lot of these dark
25:15
money organizations. Spring into
25:17
action, you get the signs, you get the same
25:19
colored tents thrown out there immediately. Fox
25:22
News just did a story, I think it was yesterday,
25:24
talking about a lot of these NGOs and
25:26
some of these dark money groups that are going directly
25:28
to some of these groups, kind of like
25:30
that. What's that Palestinian for students
25:32
for Palestine or whatever? I'll always put that
25:35
in the first one, that Columbia that started
25:37
that up. Then what do you
25:39
see from the media, which is interesting? You
25:41
always see, usually, the media either
25:44
turning a blind eye when things start getting violent,
25:48
kind of like at Columbia, or you'll see them
25:50
in other ways pretty much
25:52
egging them on, all but egging them
25:54
on. Social media all
25:56
over the place will be pushing some of these.
26:00
of these uh... some of these actions from these
26:02
issues yeah you'll see it like the
26:04
obama administration you know he he was just that they
26:06
were finding out more more everyday how the obama are
26:08
i'm sorry the by demonstration is funding
26:10
a lot of uh... a lot of these influencers
26:12
on place of the tiktok yeah yeah i thought
26:14
that was a good interesting story came out we've
26:16
talked about it briefly but it was a tiktok
26:18
it was for all of them only fans and
26:20
closer who talked about this openly on a podcast
26:22
saying yeah they came to me by in came
26:24
to me uh... the or he's and
26:26
i thought this was an interesting part of it she didn't
26:28
say biden came to me she said just some
26:31
third party there's just some third
26:33
party that came to me and said hey
26:35
we talk possibly about biden we say as
26:37
a person of color that katunji brown jackson
26:39
inspired you or something and she's like a
26:42
m is basically just doing political propaganda everyone's
26:44
talking about the idea that biden
26:46
you know is trying to get this done through
26:49
some only family closer which is just
26:51
comical i i just i came in
26:53
the eighty-year-old guy trying to
26:55
get only fans girls to talk about
26:57
his dumb policies but i thought that
26:59
outside aspect of it being a third
27:01
party that didn't have their fingers on
27:03
it and that told this influencer apparently
27:06
according to her that uh...
27:08
she didn't have to disclose it was an ad
27:10
because it wasn't a product which is i don't
27:12
think the rule at all i i think it's
27:14
the opposite of that usually these social media companies
27:16
want you to disclose it more if it's political speech
27:19
all this comes together like there are these efforts
27:21
going on behind the scenes that we don't know
27:23
about that are influencing the way we talk
27:26
about politics and the way our country deals
27:28
with it not in the least the fact
27:30
that all of this is happening on a
27:32
chinese communist party own platform yeah and when
27:34
everything is described with that sound like to
27:37
you it sounds like civil society three
27:39
point oh yeah three point oh being
27:41
taking what we've learned and perfected overseas
27:43
during the arab spring during ukraine during
27:45
the other color of revolutions that popped
27:47
up there is even one in in
27:49
russia right after uh... putin was elected
27:51
for the gazillion time uh...
27:54
but it sounds exactly like what they did they took
27:56
their skills from there and now you have people over
27:58
here Came back
28:00
home do the exact same thing the
28:03
the story. The Npr Ceo ah let's
28:05
see had ties to the Arab Spring
28:07
and some of these like Cd in
28:09
Jos in. Our
28:12
know they always have some kind of
28:15
alphabet you know abbreviation to hims national
28:17
democracy ball or whatever but a lotta
28:19
times are used as see a cut
28:21
outs until this me cutouts arms. he
28:23
comes back after the Arab Spring and
28:26
the specifically engaging with the people that
28:28
were hit hitting the streets comes back
28:30
here she goes to war for was
28:32
a Wikipedia wikimedia. ah and then. Lo.
28:35
And behold, Ceo of Npr National
28:37
Public Radio. What? The hell
28:39
is he doing from there. And. In
28:41
the know that is the whistleblower discovered this guy
28:43
that came out and said hey, but this went
28:46
wildly you know, to the left. I can't explain
28:48
it. We were never like this. Why is that
28:50
like that Now. Ah,
28:52
To Civil Society Three point know? maybe
28:54
I don't know. I would love the
28:56
ones that ones that came out. What's
28:58
these connections have are all this can
29:00
like What we're doing stories about like
29:02
of this. I think back and twenty
29:04
twenty of my best for years ago
29:06
and now we're hearing more personalities popping
29:08
up that directly go into that theory
29:10
that you know our State Department was
29:12
very much involved in Color of Revolutions.
29:14
A lot of those people are back
29:16
here now. The Ceos of a major
29:19
companies and media organizations to. Seems odd
29:21
doesn't it? Sure does know. talk about Columbia
29:23
little that here in the protests going on
29:25
there at the I feel like there's like.
29:28
In. A time of when you're challenge, when
29:30
you're at a time of stress from something
29:32
difficult as going on. there's a few different
29:34
types of leaders you have like if you
29:36
go back to covered for can we have
29:38
Rhonda Santas right who was pretty decisive I
29:41
think, handle it pretty well and was able
29:43
to kind of like. Give. his
29:45
state a heads up our a head start
29:47
against other states when it came to recovery
29:49
from covered because of the way he handles
29:52
hamlet decisively have instinct for doing the right
29:54
thing generally through that period on the other
29:56
side of added someone who has the who
29:59
has isn't it strong instincts but truly wrong
30:01
with an interquomo who will immediately but all we
30:03
have sure take the uh... people who are the
30:05
covered positive and put them right back in with
30:07
all the old people the nursing homes like he's
30:10
so inexplicably uh... incompetent
30:12
that it's it's just like almost like inside of
30:14
him to make the wrong decision each time i
30:17
feel like the columbia president of the third category
30:19
would you like terrified
30:22
like to do anything she seems
30:24
to be there just like every day releases another statement that
30:26
goes kind of down the other road until she gets pushed
30:29
back and then go the other way they
30:31
keep making these bright red lines uh...
30:33
about the excuse me about
30:37
the encampments uh... sorry uh...
30:39
about the encampments and then the
30:41
red line comes the deadline passes nothing
30:44
happens and then they just go on the next day
30:46
make another threatening thing they have no idea she seems
30:48
to have absolutely no idea how to handle this stuff
30:50
i mean that university
30:52
is so radical i can only imagine
30:54
because she's absolutely yeah absolutely
30:56
seems scared to use the deer in
30:59
the headlights at this point completely frozen
31:01
unable to act i mean at columbia
31:03
you have professors engage
31:06
uh... they will stand up with megaphones and
31:09
talks about talk about marxism i
31:11
don't i don't i don't know what you can do
31:13
when you're looking at a bunch of protesters over here
31:16
some of them true believers the rest is falling
31:18
in line because they think it's cool uh...
31:21
and on the other side you've got a bunch of
31:23
professors pushing from the other direction i
31:25
don't know how the heck you can combat that
31:27
but it's an interesting i mean interesting
31:31
dynamic looking at college universities now
31:33
and in the future i feel like it
31:35
it's been several generations that
31:38
have been so brainwashed at these
31:40
universities the radicals and
31:42
their building more radicals daily
31:45
how do you do you radical i mean there's gotta be
31:47
a point where they're like whoa this went way too far
31:50
how do we stop it now it's like it's like
31:52
it's like people in gaza uh... there's been
31:54
generation after generation of people that have been trained
31:56
to hate jews I mean
31:58
Mhm, How do you? How did Israel
32:00
even deal with that situation? You
32:03
have kids that are running around look his and
32:05
his videos. I'm all over the place saying I
32:07
when I grew up on ago kills juice. How
32:10
do you handle that And the rivers of
32:13
he i don't live under bridges are cards
32:15
are caught. Campuses are very similar. yeah it's
32:17
been generation of Londoners and from so generous
32:19
of the students they go on to be
32:21
professors at these universities is is that it's
32:23
a never ending cycle now of this radical
32:25
left wing ideology. I. Mean, if you
32:27
are a President at one of these universes,
32:29
I would you even make an attempt to.
32:32
Bring. Sanity. I. Don't
32:34
know how you can. Unless you just
32:36
let all the professors go say fine
32:38
You know if you wanna protests in
32:40
these ways support the know the take
32:42
over our buildings over this over this
32:44
cause ah fight you go. And
32:46
we will rebuild and start over him and
32:49
said intractable problem I think and some at
32:51
some level unlimited given to one other one.
32:53
Before we go get about a minute here.
32:55
been months since to solve this problem as
32:57
easy to do in a minute Gaza versus
32:59
versus Israel. He got the of the situation
33:01
going on there and like. What?
33:03
You describe with the with the with
33:05
the professors is. A. Minor
33:07
League Example of what you describe in
33:10
in the Palestinian Territories where we see
33:12
these: these polls of ninety percent of
33:14
people saying they would kill jews if
33:16
they could Are they support the killing
33:18
of jews? They support October Seventh, Us
33:20
and Seventy and eighty percent approval in
33:22
the Palestinian Territories. What?
33:24
where is an answer to this at
33:27
like I I, I keep coming back.
33:29
This: If you've got ninety percent of
33:31
the people who are approving of this,
33:33
that doesn't mean there aren't. Good.
33:35
People are people that could be well meaning
33:37
members of society in the country. There are
33:40
on her memories ten percent, but like when
33:42
you're at ninety to ten, it just feels
33:44
like. There's. No answer to this.
33:46
There's no. there's no happiness over the rainbow
33:48
outside of God intervening and changing hearts. That's
33:51
the only thing I don't want to say.
33:53
nuclear weapon so don't take that from this.
33:55
Okay, but I'm an Interesting things. That
33:58
I am going to pants and. it to Imperial Japan.
34:02
The ideology was very, very similar to
34:05
death cult level status. They got
34:08
beat so brutally and shirredly
34:11
that they had no choice but to
34:14
capitulate. I don't
34:16
want to see that obviously happen
34:18
in Gaza, but the way that
34:20
translates to this is they have
34:23
to be completely beaten, Hamas dismantled,
34:26
and the Gaza Strip occupied. And
34:28
that has to happen for a very long time. How
34:30
long? I don't know. At some point you
34:32
handed over to a governor or something like
34:34
that, you know, that's from that area or
34:36
something. Yeah, find one of the good 10%
34:39
and have them lead the territory and hope
34:41
for the best. I have watched
34:43
the video footage of, you know, that
34:46
the Israeli government shows. After
34:48
you see that, you will have the exact
34:50
same opinion. This cannot stop. It
34:52
absolutely cannot stop. They have to be beaten
34:54
utterly, decisively, and occupied. That's the only question.
34:56
That's the only answer. And as you started
34:59
this with, I'm not advocating for a nuclear
35:01
bomb. I appreciate that. I am not. But
35:03
you should remember that Imperial Japan didn't surrender
35:05
after the nuclear bomb. They surrendered after
35:07
the second one. Right? Like that
35:09
is how hardcore they are. And I don't know
35:11
that there's a massive difference. It is, you know,
35:14
and there's some differences obviously that, you know, you
35:16
could point out. But when it comes
35:18
to adherence to a hardcore ideology, you know,
35:20
that is unrelenting, I
35:23
don't know that there is. It's going to be
35:25
a wild ride because the International Criminal Court is
35:27
going after is making moves. It looks
35:29
like they're going to go after Israeli officials, charge them
35:32
with war crimes. Is that not
35:34
insane? Yes, that was established after war to
35:36
after the Holocaust to make sure the Holocaust
35:38
didn't happen again. And now they're
35:40
cheering it on. It's just
35:43
insane. It's incredible. Jason Butrill, head writer,
35:45
researcher for Glenn Beck, number two, most
35:47
appearances here on this particular program. And
35:50
I think the third best person at the
35:52
Power Hour is I believe the records show
35:54
that. Thank you so much for coming on
35:56
the program, Jason. I appreciate
35:58
it. Thanks. Well,
36:08
we talked about this when it happened, and it
36:11
seems to be happening, unfortunately. Britney
36:13
Spears completely dysfunctional and in
36:15
danger of going broke. This is from TMZ.
36:18
You can say, well, maybe that's not true.
36:20
It's possible it's not true. She
36:22
supposedly had $60 million and is now
36:24
close to $0 million, which
36:26
is not great. She goes every month to
36:30
Hawaii, takes a private
36:32
jet, stays in the presidential suite of the four
36:34
seasons, dropping $350,000 a trip, and
36:37
the money is going away very quickly. She's not exactly bringing
36:39
it in at this point. She's more on social
36:42
media, going along with
36:44
knives and almost killing her puppy as
36:47
you watch now. The reason why I bring this up
36:49
is because everyone was like,
36:51
oh, free Britney, free Britney. Look,
36:53
I tend to be an individualist,
36:56
and if she wants to
36:59
be out of her conservatorship,
37:01
I think without very, very
37:03
infrequent exception, we should allow people to
37:05
do that because, look,
37:07
even if you want to screw your life up, even
37:09
if you want to spend millions of dollars, even if
37:11
you want to blow your life up and create a
37:13
complete catastrophe, that should be your right to do it,
37:15
unfortunately. Though I will say, everyone who's
37:17
like, oh, free Britney, this is ridiculous, you don't
37:20
just get a conservatorship. This is not easy to
37:22
get. Something happened that
37:24
made this possible. It is
37:26
very, very rare and not easy to get
37:28
one of these things on somebody, and when
37:30
it happens, there's usually a reason for it.
37:32
The fact that it went away and now
37:34
things are potentially in
37:36
a meltdown situation is not exactly shocking.
37:39
If you watch the Wendy Williams documentary that was
37:41
out, I did. I thought it was fascinating. My
37:43
wife was into it, and then I got into
37:45
it, I got to admit. But it was crazy.
37:47
I mean, and this stuff happens with conservatorships. Usually
37:49
there's some meaning there that actually
37:52
is legitimate, even if you don't
37:54
like the outcome. Jerry Seinfeld is in
37:56
the news. Pre-cancellation alert for Jerry Seinfeld. I don't know.
37:59
He's 70 years old. to be too big to
38:01
cancel i don't know he's saying he couldn't
38:03
uh... put certain jokes inside felt today mentioned
38:05
the rickshaw episode where uh... cremer
38:07
has uh... homeless people you
38:09
you go with the rickshaws pulled rickshaws because they're
38:11
outside anyway says i couldn't get on the air
38:14
today probably true i mean it you know i
38:16
if you want to go to fx or you
38:18
know some in a b hb o you can
38:20
probably do that like a larry david did some
38:22
of that stuff uh... on uh...
38:24
hb o uh... with a very
38:27
very edgy but like look at the bottom line
38:29
is there's no effort for the sun network
38:31
television anymore me it's not even possible to
38:33
do that there and we cannot leave today
38:35
without the happiest news of the
38:37
day for me will be run james
38:40
do on uh... but by another year
38:42
another first round exit for a little
38:44
brown so difficult to hear
38:46
now i did see the video of him
38:48
trying to intimidate a woman on the sidelines
38:50
acting like he was going to attack her
38:53
uh... that was fascinating and i and wonderful
38:55
video that i took in but i
38:58
think my favorite moment has to be uh...
39:00
the a karen bass which is the new
39:02
mayor of uh... los angeles uh... and she
39:05
wrote put this up uh... tough season
39:08
but at least we won the in-season tournament
39:11
proud of our team lakers yes
39:13
you did hoist that banner up
39:15
to the feeling a ab and
39:17
absolutely meaningless when uh... the in
39:20
season tournament which is a joke
39:22
in and of itself you got
39:24
back going for a which is
39:26
nice congratulations lebron another wonderful fifty
39:28
million dollar season what
39:41
if your food supply lasted for a couple
39:43
months or maybe uh... maybe had a year
39:45
storage what if though you could get one
39:47
that lasted forever this is a
39:49
pipe dream and endless food supply does exist
39:51
nature is kinda brought this to us and
39:53
when grocery stores which are not necessarily natural
39:56
in life and i got a lot of a sharp natural i hope
39:58
i go to a grocery store Grocery stores
40:01
are not natural, sometimes they go away, sometimes
40:03
they're wiped clean after a big national emergency
40:05
or weather disaster. So wouldn't it
40:07
be great if you had fail-proof food? You
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My Patriot Supply. You
41:02
know a lot of times people say, Trump, he's just like
41:04
me, he's not actually like you, he's got a lot more
41:06
money than you. And he makes a calculation here and there
41:08
when it comes to his speech, which is, you know, I've
41:10
got to spend a bunch of money to say this, but
41:13
it's worth it. We know
41:15
this happened with Eugene Carroll, he came out and spent
41:17
a couple million dollars, knew it was a big deal,
41:20
then he came out and just did it again and then got
41:22
sued for another 80 million dollars. He just is making these decisions
41:24
like, look, I'm running for president of the United States, I want
41:26
to say these things, I'm going to say what I want to
41:28
say, I don't care about your gag orders. Well, he had a
41:30
gag order in his case as well
41:33
in New York and this is the Hush
41:35
Money case we've been talking about for a
41:37
while and now he has violated the rules
41:39
there and he violated the gag order according
41:41
to the judge and they're like, well, we're
41:43
going to fine you a thousand dollars per incident.
41:46
So he now has to pay 9,000 dollars,
41:48
which is a huge deal to Donald Trump, I'm
41:50
sure. I've got to break the bank at any
41:52
moment. I will say that this is kind
41:54
of known by the judge and they're like, look, Juan
41:57
Mirchon is like, hey, if you
41:59
don't correct. this behavior, we
42:01
are going, and we know this doesn't bother you, these fines,
42:04
so we're going to up this to jail time. Can you
42:06
imagine if they try to put this guy in jail for
42:08
contempt of court? I think Donald Trump would love it, honestly,
42:10
right now. But man, can you
42:12
imagine, what does that do to our country? I
42:15
have no freaking idea. We are on the precipice
42:17
of disaster. And of course, this is all part
42:19
of the less warfare campaign when it comes to
42:21
destroying people. They used to try to win on
42:23
ideas and argue things, even though they were lying
42:26
a lot of times, at least it was something
42:28
you could manage. Now, they're just suing
42:30
everybody all the time. Fox News is going
42:32
to get sued now by Hunter Biden. Why?
42:34
Because they kept putting his nudie pics up
42:37
from his laptop on the TV.
42:40
And that's very, very bad. Can't put the nudie pics
42:42
on the laptop. Of course, the entire time this was
42:44
going on, it seemed like Hunter Biden did everything he
42:46
could to make sure he did not confirm they were
42:48
even his pictures or even from his laptop. But
42:51
now, apparently, he's saying they are so real
42:53
and so personal to me, I can't believe
42:55
they showed them on the TV. Well,
42:57
I don't know if this is going to work, but
42:59
the bottom line is to try to drain the finances
43:01
and make them terrified to say anything about him. It's
43:04
a long series of events that with
43:06
the same aim in mind, destroy anyone
43:08
who disagrees. Don't
43:17
forget to subscribe to Blaze TV. blazetv.com/Stu. Promo
43:19
code is Stu. Lots of great stuff going
43:21
on. And Glenn's got another big special coming
43:23
up on I think
43:25
it's next Wednesday. There's a
43:28
lot of stuff going on on Blaze
43:30
TV. Great shows, great content and great
43:32
election coverage. blazetv.com/Stu. Promo code is Stu.
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