[00:00] Yeah. Although, yeah, I could see that through the first arrest even. But then he had to have concluded that things were so bad in 2019 that this this was it. It was over. You know >> why? Why do you say that? >> Cuz he killed himself. >> You do believe he did? >> I do. I believe he killed himself. >> What makes you believe that considering all the evidence that they have? See, but the evidence
[00:30] the evidence isn't as clear as I think most people would want it to be. For example, and I base this on my own experience in the federal prison system. >> Mhm. >> The guards, number one, have their heads up their asses 24 hours a day. The only qualification to be a prison guard in the federal system, the Federal Bureau of Prisons, is you have to be working on a GED and no uh felony convictions. That's it. There's this rule
[01:01] that prisoners can't touch the mail, right? So, we have mail call every day at four o'clock and the guards are supposed to say your name and hand you your mail. Most of the time the guards didn't do mail call. Prisoners did mail call in violation of the rule of the rules. Any idea why? Because they couldn't read. >> It was as simple as that. The guards couldn't read basically. >> Yeah. I mean, they literally could not read to call out the names. So, number one, they're idiots. Number two, the cameras are always broken. Always. I was
[01:34] a janitor in the uh chapel when I was in prison. And every day, part of my job was to go in there and break up guys having sex in the chapel. >> In the chapel. >> Yeah. Because of the Lord. >> That's what I said. You guys, this is God's house for heaven's sake. [laughter] What are you going to do? But the reason they would all be having sex in the chapel is because they knew that the cameras didn't work. None [laughter] of the cameras work.
[02:05] The guards are supposed to be doing their rounds every 15 minutes or if there's a suicide watch situation going on every eight minutes. And with Epstein, they it was like two hours before they finally made their rounds. Why? cuz number one, they're either jacking off in the uh in the guard booth, which happens all the freaking time, or they're sound asleep in the guard booth, or they're on the phone with their girlfriends, or they're surfing the internet. So, no, they don't
[02:37] they don't make the rounds. And then people are like, "Oh, but there's a glitch. You know, there's this one second glitch." Yeah, because every night the cameras reset themselves. They're old cameras. They still use tape. And they tape over yesterday's. >> Then why don't they let the guards talk? Why were the guards like >> Oh, they would never let the Cuz the guards are I just stopped myself from saying a word that's not supposed to be >> [ __ ] >> These guys are so stupid. You know, a a guard from the prison
[03:08] where I was um emailed me. He he saw one of the one of the podcasts and he said, "This is exactly why we wanted to kill you." And I said, "Bring it, tough guy." >> Why? He wanted to kill you. >> Yeah, cuz I say they're morons and retards and this and that and it's [laughter] all true. It's true. Learn to read and then maybe we can have a conversation. I mean, otherwise, put up. Let's go. I'm not afraid of these guys. But this is why everything went wrong because what
[03:39] we saw go wrong the night Jeffrey Epstein died goes wrong every night. It's the same thing. But so perfectly like that, you think it could line up that way? >> Yes, I saw it. I saw it. For example, >> not supposed to have microwaves in the housing unit in it, right? >> Mhm. >> And [clears throat] then people are like, "Ah, you know, you [ __ ] long enough, they're going to they're going to put in a microwave." Say, "Put in a microwave." All right. There was a serial killer in my unit. And he took a liking to me inexplicably. [laughter]
[04:11] So we called him truck because he was a long-distance truck driver and he would murder prostitutes all along his route and he got caught. [snorts] So So he would be like, "Hey John, uh he had these like rotten black little nubs for teeth." John, uh I saved you a seat in the TV room. Watch the Steelers game. I'm like, "Thanks, Truck." Or, "Uh, hey, there's a new classic rock station. I know you like classic rock at 1600 a.m. Thank you, Truck. Truck hated hated hated pedophiles.
[04:42] Hated them. Fully a third of the prison is pedophiles cuz remember they're all at the low security level, >> right? >> So there's like this rule in prison, no pedophiles are allowed in the TV room and pedophiles aren't even allowed in their own room unless it's to sleep. Okay? So if you're a pedophile and it's the middle of the day, get the [ __ ] out of the room. M well there's a pedophile in his room [snorts] and the guy's like blah blah blah blah blah. He won't stop talking. Well,
[05:12] another thing is pedophiles aren't allowed to have any visitors in their room. So, you can't have another pedophile because they're going to talk about pedophilia, which is what they do. They relive their crimes every single day. [clears throat] >> They like they can't help themselves. >> So, this pedophile is just yapping away. And Truck is getting angrier and angrier and angrier. And finally, the pedophile lays down for a nap. truck had gone to the commissary and he bought a bottle of olive oil, which is $2.85. You can because everybody cooks in their cells.
[05:42] >> Plastic or glass? >> Plastic. >> So, he pours the olive oil into a bowl and he microwaves it. So, it's boiling. Like literally, it's bubbling, boiling, scalding oil. And he pours it on the pedophile's face while he's sleeping. And the guy, the scream, I'll never forget the scream. and his skin is just like dropping off of his skull. And pedophile got a pedophile. The pedophile got, you know, medevaced to Pittsburgh. They landed a helicopter in the yard and
[06:13] medevaced him to Pittsburgh. Truck got another 10 years onto the 40 he was already doing for being a serial killer. >> He was only doing 40 as a serial killer. >> I know, right? >> He had a great lawyer. >> Yeah, he did. But the point is that there are rules for everything and nobody pays any attention to them. and nothing works the way it's supposed to. >> Then why does the Justice Department come out and say things like, "Oh, here's all the evidence." And then they show that they didn't put all the evidence. And I'm just talking about
[06:43] like that. >> Well, then that proves my point because people are idiots at every single level. >> It doesn't matter if you went to Harvard Law School, you can still be an idiot, >> right? >> And another thing, too, this is this is a lesson that that government officials, especially senior government officials, just cannot learn. And it is that the cover up of the crime is always worse than the crime. >> Oh yeah. >> Always. >> You know, >> a lie be gets 10 more lies be gets a hundred more lies. >> And Richard Nixon didn't resign because
[07:14] of Watergate. Richard Nixon resigned because of the cover up of Watergate. >> I think it's the same situation here. >> All right. Well, let me flip it around on you. I have always thought still do think that Jeffrey Epstein is dead and I feel pretty comfortable. >> I spoke to his brother recently. I said I said is he dead? >> And he's like he's dead. I I identified the body. I'm just >> I mean I spoke to OJ. I didn't speak to him, but he said he didn't do it. You know what I mean? Like
[07:44] >> he identified the body. He said I think he was murdered. And that's a debate, you know, that he wanted to have with me. But he said, "Yeah, he's dead. I identified his body. I took it to the crematorium. >> Joseph Scott Morgan, friend of mine, broke this down. He's a medical death investigator. He broke it down like scientifically with all the bones, the hyoid bone and all that about what would not make sense about it being suicide and therefore it being murder. Obviously, Dr. Michael Boden, >> who's like the goat with all this, >> he's the goat, >> also does not think >> that he killed himself. So, it's
[08:16] possible. It's at least possible that he was killed. >> It's possible. Definitely. >> Absolutely. >> Now, I do think he's dead. >> Mhm. But again, this whole thing is just like you you almost have to open your mind to [ __ ] everything. That's crazy. So, I'll ask it like this. If you were tasked, not that you ever would be, it's hypothetical people, but if you were tasked with making the world believe that Jeffrey Epstein was dead and getting him out of that prison without anyone knowing to wherever he's
[08:46] going to go to get [ __ ] facial surgery and live out his life, how would you do it? Oh, you would take out the body, whether it's a a body double or, you know, made out of silicone or whatever. Take it out in full view of everybody. [snorts] That's how I would do it. Let as many people as possible see this body so that reasonable people can agree to disagree. >> They did do that. >> Mhm. And there was a New York Post
[09:16] reporter very ready to go. And there was the conversation about the ear, which I've heard a thousand million times. >> Those ones I'm always a little skeptical of because they can doctor them, >> of course. Well, it's like this stupid obviously AI generated picture of him just like walking down the street in Tel Aviv. >> Oh, yeah. That one that one's not real. But I'm saying like So [laughter] the recipe you just gave me though >> Mhm. >> is in line. It's not to say that's what happened. >> That's what they did. >> Yeah. Sure. >> Yeah. Yeah, cuz I had another guy in here, Kenneth Gibson, who's worked in media forever, and he's like, the idea that a New York Post reporter on an
[09:47] early Saturday morning in [ __ ] August was that ready to go immediately after this? >> Yeah. >> Sketchy. >> And another thing, too, is if I wanted if I wanted to initiate a cover up of this scale, I would cremate whatever it is I took out on that gurnie. Because otherwise you'd be you'd be having people say, "Okay, let's just settle this. We're going to dig him up. We're going to get a court order. We're going to exume the body. We're going to do DNA testing and make sure that this is Jeffrey Epstein." Can't do
[10:18] that. Cremated. >> I don't know anymore, John. I really don't. I have to tell you, [snorts] I was jaded anyway because of my own personal experience, >> but now it's like I don't believe anything anymore. Not at face value anyway. Have you had your like any kind of moment where you think back to a bunch of stuff, different moments and
[10:49] visions of like things you did that you were certain were because of one thing in one way and one person and one mission that you're now like, "Wait a minute. Why was that guy there, too?" I think about that kind of thing all the time. >> Yeah, I do. And in some cases, it's taken years for me to finally conclude like, "Oh crap, that's what that was about." Mhm. >> I've thought about this Rockefeller thing a million times. >> Yeah. >> You know, >> I I've told you the story. It was the one and only time I ever received a phone call from Coen Powell. I told you
[11:21] the story. >> I You told the internet in the new voice as well. >> Yeah. And in the New Voice, but I think about that a lot, too. >> Yeah. >> You know, and and I remember when it first happened, I remember thinking, "This wasn't your fault. Don't let it bother you." And it's bothered me for decades. >> It's human lives. You're a real person. >> Yeah. >> Yeah. The story was that Coen Powell asked how to target someone in Iraq. John said what it was and >> gave him his address >> and then he found out eight of them got bombed later. [laughter] >> There was one time >> dozens of cruise missiles, you know,
[11:52] vaporized the building. >> Every time I watch that clip, I think of the [ __ ] uh Mark Wahlberg line that departed. Yeah, it can send a [ __ ] cruise missile up the ass of a camel from a thousand yards away. [laughter] Thousand miles away. Not to get too far off the topic, but the assassination of Zawahi, the number two in al-Qaeda. >> Oh, yeah. >> You know, we shot him with a with a drone launched missile, right? [clears throat] The missile had no warhead on it, right? We did that on purpose because we didn't want to kill
[12:23] the women and children inside the apartment. He came out onto the balcony to smoke a cigarette. Fired the missile at him. It went completely through his body. A missile went completely through his body. And with no warhead, there was no explosion. Can you imagine cleaning up that mess? [laughter] [laughter] I appreciate the uh responsibility on that one. At least they didn't hit a wedding. >> Oh, we did. It >> was a little better in the Obama. >> They hit every every wedding during
[12:54] Obama. >> Yeah. Yeah. It was uh that was interesting. But the thing I had wanted to bring it to when I was bringing up the early origins of Jeffrey Epstein with that aly mama deal is obviously >> the point there is that there is some sort of relationship with intelligence intelligences. >> Absolutely. >> At the time and there is a tweet to send it to you. Yep. He has it up. So this is from Ronald Reagan good >> about Iran Contra. Okay. >> In his new auto and this is from back in
[13:24] the day obviously because he's dead. Uh, in the new autobiography, former President Ronald Reagan says Israel was the instigator and prime mover in the Iran Contra affair. He blames the Israelis for misleading him into believing he was selling arms to so-called Iranian moderates when some, quote, may have had links to the Ayatollah Kameese government and were trying to obtain weapons under false pretenses," unquote. Israel began the arms deals with Iran when it contacted Robert McFarland, Reagan's national security adviser, to propose the first sale and continued to press the secret
[13:56] dealings thereafter. Reagan writes in an American life that Prime Minister Shimone Perez was behind the proposal. The former president says Iranian middlemen endorsed by Israel helped quote win the freedom of three hostages unquote. Reagan adds, but the same middlemen behaved at times like bait and switch conmen with the sole intentions of proeteers. So with Iran Contra, they were trying to get weapons to the Sandinistas in South America. And they were trying to do it by financing $150 million deal to with through Iran when we weren't supposed to be dealing with postrevolution Iran in the 80s. That's
[14:27] like the very high level version of it. But >> it says down here too, Patrick Ali says that that Epstein was was roommates with uh with Stanley Pottinger. He was in up to his neck in Iran Contra. Roommates partners and roommates with J. Stanley Pottinger who helped ship weapons to Iran prior to Iran contract. >> Can we read this Steve? >> Good grief. >> So according to his former friend the journalist Jesse Cornbluth who's Epsteined up the ass. Yep. >> In pause. In the mid 1980s Epstein said
[14:57] he worked he worked for governments to recover money looted by African dictators and occasionally subcontracted to those same autocrats to help them hide their stolen [snorts] money. A source who spoke with journalist Vicky Ward from Vanity Farah the 03 piece said one of Epstein's clients was the late Saudi arms dealer Hashogi, a middleman in the in the Iran Contra scandal who helped smuggle cash for the Marcos family out of the Philippines. In 1988, Hashogi was arrested in Switzerland. That's hard to do. For concealing assets and later faced fraud and racketeering charges in the US. He was later acquitted. Must had
[15:29] a great attorney. That year he sold his 200 He sold his 282 foot yacht to the Sultan of Brunay who soon flipped it to Donald Trump. And let's go to the next one right here. Epstein was fired from Beer Sterns around the time he met Douglas Lee who I was telling you about. Epstein then started a short-lived partnership with Jay Stanley Pottinger, a former US Department of Justice official who was investigated for his role in dealing arms to the Islamic Republic of Iran. The Iran Contra affair appears to be a pivotal moment in in Epstein's life. Between 81 and 86, the Reagan administration covertly sold arms
[16:00] to Iran, which was at war with Saddam Hussein's Iraq. So, they were selling to the Iranians they didn't like because they liked Saddam Hussein even less. My question is, why is he this didn't wasn't clocking to me at first cuz I looked at this very quickly before we got on air. Why is Reagan saying that that benefited the Israelis when the Israelis really don't like the Iranian regime? Like, that has always been their big bug. the but the Iranians back then didn't have a nuclear program and it was Iraq that was the real like immediate
[16:31] threat to to Israel because the Iraqis did have a nuclear program and a biological weapons program and a chemical weapons program and they were working with a Belgian inventor named Gerald Bull to um to the the Iraqis were to build something called the the big gun. This is one of the very first things I learned about my first week uh at the CIA. Gerald Bull created this this giant gun that was so
[17:02] big you just had to sort of lean the barrel up against the side of a mountain, point it in essentially the right direction and then fire it and it it would send a shell as far as a missile would go. And nobody wanted to buy it. They're like, "What are we gonna do with this giant gun?" Right? It's as big as a house. And so the Iraqis said, "We'll take it." [laughter] And so the Iraqis bought this thing and before it kept cracking when when Bull
[17:32] would would test it, it kept cracking. So he came up with this idea to put what he called a condom on the inside of the gun to smooth the barrel and to and to keep the the reverberation from the shot from cracking it. But before he could test it with the condom inside, the Israelis assassinated him. >> They're pretty good at that. >> Mhm. >> Yeah. Gerald Bull and his giant gun. I remember saying to my boss, like I say, I was only on the job for a week. I
[18:03] said, "This is a joke, right?" And he said, "No, no, this is deadly serious. It's a giant gun. They have to lean it up on the side of the mountain to fire it." >> I'm picturing that thing in Game of Thrones they were trying to take the dragon out with where they're just [laughter] like, "Come on, baby. Let's go. >> [laughter] >> All right. So, you had always maintained that Jeffrey Epstein was a massage access agent. >> Do you think I wanted to bring this up first so we at least had the context
[18:34] what Ronald Reagan said about this. >> Probably his handler said about it because I don't think he was all there by the time he wrote that book. >> Yeah. Not a chance. So, so do you think that in something like that, if in fact the Israelis had an interest in seeing Iraq be neutralized more, do you think that this is the prime type of situation where he could have been recruited at that time? >> Absolutely. >> Yeah. >> Do you think that's what happened? >> You know, when you're when you put all
[19:04] of these episodes together in a line, that would make sense to me. >> Yes. Next question. This is a deal where the CIA is running a lot of ops as well, meaning they have to know he's involved with this. >> You know, that's a good question. He would have had to have bumped up against CIA ops people or even if not CIA ops people, NSC people who were in up to their necks in this thing. >> National Security Council. >> National Security Council, you know, the
[19:34] likes of of U. As I said, Admiral Po Dexter, Richard Cord, uh, Oliver North, all these guys. So, even if if you're not dealing directly with agency people, although you probably would be, you're going to at least be dealing with White House people. Now, you had said earlier you never heard Jeffrey Epstein mentioned at CIA. You did hear Hashigi mentioned though a bunch >> all the time. >> Hashigi was also like extremely public for throughout a lot of his life. That's
[20:05] right. >> If seven people from the NSC and CIA directly dealt or at least bumped into Jeffrey Epstein during said mission, Iran Contra, which was a cover up. They were covering up something they were doing. >> That's right. The comp is it reasonable to say that the compartmentalization structure of espionage bureaucracy in the United States government would mean that those people would chart this maybe have it in their own files but not necessarily share it with anybody. >> Yes. And I could tell you exactly how
[20:36] that would play out if I were one of the agency guys involved and I run into this American guy who's in the middle of it and he's not with us and he's not with the White House people then who the hell is he with? So what I would have done is I first would have gone to the White House people and say who's this American, this Epstein guy, and then I would have gone to the FBI and say, "Listen, just so you know, we're doing this highly compartmentalized top secret
[21:09] operation. You don't need to know what it's about, but you do need to know that there is a private citizen involved who's an American just so you can start a file on him just in case this is going to be a counter intelligence problem for us in the [clears throat] future. It doesn't look like that was ever done. >> I can't imagine why. >> That was going to be my next question. What would be something? >> He had to have had protection at the White House. He had to have >> at that time >> way back then, sometime between 1981 and 198, you know, four or five.
[21:40] >> All right. Wait a second. That would make sense for a second. So if he has protection at the White House, maybe through a technical intermediary like Oliver North or something like that. Exactly. >> They're doing this under the table. It's a crime. So, he's gonna be like, it's more like the mob. Like, all right, I'm not saying nothing. >> I know who that guy is, but I can't tell people I know who that guy is because then they'll say, "How do you know who that guy is?" And now we got a problem. >> That's right. >> Okay. >> That's right. See, you know, I had never thought of that. >> That's interesting. >> But now that we're playing it out, >> Yeah. >> that makes sense to me. >> This is why you're here.
[22:11] >> So, I had always, again, my mind is very open on all this. I am not married to any of this stuff. what I had always thought just very 30,000 foot view in the air and some people have misheard me on recent episodes on how I explain this so I need to do a better job I'd always looked at it like okay he's working with MSAD or and you have to say this >> or with other intelligence organizations in Israel because they're not the only one like Jonathan Pard wasn't with MSD it was with the military >> right it was military >> same [ __ ] but different name but MSAD's
[22:41] an important you know we have what 18 different intelligence agencies right? You you would think one or two might be enough, but you think, >> but I always thought he worked with them. And then the thing that really shifted things for Jeffrey Epstein and his timeline was the I believe September 2002 flight with Bill Clinton, Kevin Spacy, and Chris Tucker, which made Page Six. Prior to then, Jeffrey Epstein was known as a New York City socialite and not known publicly. He was known on the
[23:11] socialite circles, which >> by the way, when someone's known as a socialite in New York, red flag should be fine. But he's he's a in this case a good spy. He's doing all his sick [ __ ] He's going to the White House 18 times. No one knows who the [ __ ] the guy is and everything. And then all of a sudden, >> boom, flight happens. Page six story. Then he has to do the interview with Vicky Ward in March 2003. He's out there. no coincidence in some ways that his case starts coming up in '05 in Florida because he's a known guy in some
[23:44] respects. And so my thought always was and if I were a betting man I would have said it was probably late 90s when Clinton was still in office. My bet always was that CIA was asleep at the wheel. Maybe because of the compartmentalization we just talked about. And you know then they probably find out maybe it's 1996. I'll put a year on it. 97. They find out so far this guy's been to the Clinton White House 15 times maybe. >> They're like, "Who the [ __ ] >> is this guy?" And the British lady who's
[24:15] >> whose dad ran the Daily Mirror and he started all the [ __ ] peer reviews and runs all our kids textbooks in America and got buried on the Mount of Olives in [ __ ] Israel 5 days after he got pushed off a boat. >> Why is this [ __ ] coming in with the guy who's taking [ __ ] from the [ __ ] intern, >> you know? Imagine the stories that you could piece together if you had unfettered access just to the visitor log. >> Just to that. >> Uh-huh. >> Right. So, someone Linda at Langley,
[24:46] right? >> Goes, "Wait a minute. We got a problem." Takes it up the chain of command suddenly says, "Boss, I don't know who the [ __ ] this guy is." >> They then take 10 minutes to look into it and they're like, "Oh my god, he's running a [ __ ] pedal ring at the beest of the Victoria Secret guy in [ __ ] New York City." And holy [ __ ] he's involved with Iran Contra. He's [ __ ] working with MSAD. He seems to be an intelligence dealer. The [ __ ] wife, who's not really the wife's a problem. She's connected up the ass to all this [ __ ] >> Oh my god. THEY GOT DIRT ON EVERYONE, including the current president. This is
[25:18] a crisis the likes of which if we outed this, everything could fall. >> Sounds very familiar today, by the way. >> Yes, it does. >> So they say in that moment, now I, you know, I proposed the New Jersey solution. I'm like, just [ __ ] blow his brains out, right? you know, say to Mad, "What are you going to do about it?" >> I know a lot of guys that would do that, >> right? Okay, good. I don't know where they were at this time. You know, we could have called up [ __ ] Vinnie and Rocco. They didn't take care of >> mention. Exactly what I was thinking. >> That's right. But they didn't do that. And this is what I just always posited. And it's a theory. I I can't say like, "Yo, I got evidence this happened." But I'm like,
[25:49] >> they looked at it and they said, "Oh shit." And they go to the guy and they go, "All right, you know that we know that you know that we know that you know that we know what you're doing here. And you know that we know that you know that we know that you [ __ ] have been doing this a long time and you could take down the whole system if we tell people about that. And so you know that we know that you know that we know that now we're in a Mexican standoff. >> And so here's the deal. You're going to have to keep doing whatever it is the [ __ ] you do. But now you pay a tax. You're on our soil. You're going to give us some information, too. >> And so now what John, what did he foyer?
[26:22] He foyed the years 2000 to 2014. Mhm. >> Pretty interesting to me, I'll say. >> Am I crazy or am I crazy? >> No, it's a it's a great catch. And it also would tend to implicate both the Bush and the Clinton administrations. >> That's right. Sorry. Bush and Obama. >> Wait, now you Oh, from the years he foyed. Okay. I thought I thought you were talking about the backtrack of what they didn't catch. >> Now, the backtrack. Now you've convinced
[26:53] me that this started even earlier than I thought. >> Right. >> I was thinking Clinton, and it's not. It's earlier. >> It's earlier. >> Mhm. >> There were some files missing, >> too. >> Yep. >> Not Not just the two and a half or three million. I mean, they're in there, but did you see the chart of the years that they're really missing from? >> Can we pull up that tweet, thief? >> Just so people can see this. >> I have to rethink everything. I have to rethink things that in the past I would have said were I feel okay about this take and now I have to look at it and
[27:24] say Julian that was a ice cold scalding ice cold if you will take and this is just one of these things like it is what it is when I'm wrong I'm wrong this is a data dump I'm going to simplify this for you John because there's some more specific details here but it is showing basically like if you will a percentage of data sets from the Epstein files that are presented over the years and we can see that there is a massive gap and basically like you in the chart if you will between the years of 1999
[27:57] to 2001 when among other things you had the tech bubble blow up you had I believe that's 99 is when the Lewinsky impeachment trials happening >> you have the election of 2000 the highly contested election of 2000 John Kiryaku where I don't know someone googled this for me, but I think there was a big point of contention in Palm Beach County as it pertains to that election and that's where one Jeffrey Epstein did happen to reside. Just just looking at
[28:27] some things here. >> And then in 2001, you have the worst terrorist attack in United States history in New York and DC and in the skies over that fell over Pennsylvania with U93. >> And suddenly all these files are missing. But John, we did get an email from 2003 that slipped through the cracks. >> Really? >> Oh, you haven't seen this one? >> No, I haven't seen it. >> So, there's an email thief. Boom. He's got it. He's all over it. So, this is
[28:58] from 2003. Someone named Ed Epstein sends an email to one GMAX Gilen Maxwell saying, "Any interest in being on the shadow commission on 911. The membership list is secret." She responds, "Thanks for the invite. Unfortunately, I cannot be on the shadow commission. >> A shadow commission. It takes my breath away. >> Oh my god. This should be the banner headline. >> What What do you make of of that? >> I don't even know what to say.
[29:31] I mean, nobody believes what the 9/11 commission concluded anyway. That's right. But the fact that there was a shadow commission with a secret membership list and Galen Maxwell talked about it in 2003. Why? That's what I want to know. >> Good question. And it's like this goes back to a compartmentalization thing too, John, because what we do have on the record that we know happened is somewhere I think it was like July 6th,
[30:03] 2001, maybe like August 11th, the dates might be slightly off. There are two meetings that occur at the White House. One of them with Condisa Rice where CIA sent literally tenant Kofheer Black and some dudes who were still like Rich Blee who's still I think undercover. That's I think that's a fake name if I remember correctly where they tell them an attack's coming. So like when you look at the whole like well CIA definitely did the CIA had a lot of incompetence because they didn't share information with FBI and there's there's a lot of issues there and they deserve a ton of blame but that was the one thing in this
[30:33] that was always like the canary in the coal mine for me where I'm like well it couldn't have been that like they they had the leadership warning about it. So >> yeah, they did. >> You know, maybe it's the White House that I I don't know. But there's also advanced knowledge that we know about from the Saudis who have always been covered up and we know about with the five guys from MSAD in [ __ ] Fort Lee who were videotaping the thing who were sent back to Israel on November 6th, 2001. >> That's exactly right. >> And I know a guy from the office that arrested them. And to this day, he wonders why the [ __ ] they didn't get why the [ __ ]
[31:03] >> Mhm. >> So when I see stuff like this, I'm like, how many countries are involved in this thing? God, this is bad. >> And is it even countries versus is it this trilateral elite just in [clears throat] general? Like everyone wants to just immediately say >> it's Israel, it's Saudi Arabia, it's the CI. How about all the above >> who are working for all the above? >> Mhm. >> Possible. >> Possible. Yes. Yes. Incredible. sickening, I think, is how
[31:36] what I first said when we sat down to start talking. This just makes me sick. I don't even know what to do with them. Gmax. >> Gmax redacted. >> She must have bcccded him. Jeffrey, why would it be in the Epstein files? Why would it be on his computer? >> I don't know. >> She BCCed him. The membership list is secret.
[32:09] >> She's not even Was she an American at the time? >> I don't Did she ever become an American officially? >> I don't know. I wonder like we talk about this small group, you know, you got the commerce secretary and transition chair who just Yes. Maxwell is a naturalized American citizen. >> Born in France to British and French parents and raised in England. She moved to the United States in 91 following her father's death. She holds triple citizenship being a citizen of the US,
[32:39] UK, and France. >> Makes sense. >> Can say that again. >> Yeah. So, [clears throat] >> but not Israel. >> Yeah. Man, you have a guy like Le Let who runs the transition team, is the commerce secretary, always in Trump's ear advising him, shares a wall with Jeffrey Epstein for technically 21 years, but he claims it was 14 cuz he didn't move in till 05. Who knows if even that's true.
[33:10] >> Openly lies >> on camera just with this dramatic story about the first and last time I ever spent time with that man. And then he said, "So I never dealt with him in business, socially, or even for philanthropy." And and what he was really doing was remembering all the things he did deal with him on because now we saw it on the emails of what it was. But the guy has, as of the time of this recording on Friday afternoon, he has not resigned yet. >> Still doing his job. And also we find out his sister was one of the founding
[33:41] members of the Terramar project which was like Gilen's postJ conviction postJ is never going to [ __ ] marry me project that she did pet project that has something to do with the oceans that she did a [ __ ] TED talk on. >> Oh my god. >> Do these people just all like [ __ ] each other? >> They must. They must. >> I'm glad I don't know people like this. >> You don't? >> I don't. No, no. I would feel dirty all the time.
[34:13] Well, there's a guy in the middle for Well, actually, John, we can't forget this. Did you see what Hillary Clinton said the other day? >> Oh, no. What' she say? She said that they have Can we play the video, De? I did it in my solo episode. It's coming out two days before this, but it's worth repeating because again, we got the picture of Gilen in the row looking at Chelsea coming down the aisle at her wedding. We know about the 25 to 27 flights on the Lolita Express. We got images of Clinton all with Epstein. Obviously, the Clintons are their whole
[34:44] [ __ ] thing as well. On the side, that doesn't even have to do with Epstein. We know about the 18 known visits that happened to the White House. >> Mhm. >> And yet he let's let's run it. If Hillary Clinton says this when asked about the links between the Clintons and the Epstein and Epste regret the links that there have been >> you know we have no links we have a very clear record that we've been willing to talk about which my husband has said he took some uh rides on the airplane for his charitable work
[35:14] >> for charitable work >> I don't recall ever meeting him uh >> I did on a few occasions and thousands of people go to the Clinton Global initiative. So it to me is not is not something that is really at the heart of what this matter is about. They are accused and in both cases were convicted of horrific crimes against girls and women. That should be the focus and we are more than happy to say what we know
[35:45] which is very limited and totally unrelated to their uh behavior or their crimes and we want to do it in public because let's make this transparent. The survivors deserve that. The public deserves that. But [sighs] >> God, [snorts] they just lie with straight faces. >> Straight faces. >> Mhm. [clears throat] How does a guy like Jeffrey Epstein get so involved with with Bill Clinton clearly before he got into office?
[36:17] >> Yeah, that's a good question. Could he have spotted Bill Clinton that early on in the process? Just another governor? >> Well, there's a governor who was letting Barry Seal fly coke planes in Demina with no questions asked. >> Yes. Although I always believed he was told, "Hey, uh, we're going to do this and you're going to say it's okay." And he did. >> What makes you think that? >> Because that would have been a federal operation. I mean, we all knew,
[36:48] everybody knows now that the CIA uh was was allowing cocaine into the country, making its way to Los Angeles. Um, so it would have been federal. It's not up to a governor to say, "No, no, you can't you can't do this." It's like, "Shut the [ __ ] up. We're doing [laughter] it. We're going to do it and you'll become president. >> Yeah. Yeah. >> Listen to what we say. >> Exactly. >> It's just always funny when Hill when Hillary not funny, but it's kind of sick when Hillary talks about like women and victims and stuff like that. >> God. >> And then you think about the things that
[37:19] both of them are actually accused of. >> Mhm. >> It's like come on. That's what I mean. The political opportunism of this that I'll call out all day. It's like >> nobody gets a win here. This is >> No, there are no good guys in this whole thing. And then, you know, it just makes me feel that much worse that Virginia Du Fray uh took her life. I can't even I can't even fathom the pressure that she was under, you know, and she kind of cracked in slow motion. Remember weeks in advance of her death, she said she had been like hit by a school bus or
[37:51] something and >> I don't remember the whole the whole story, but >> she kind of cracked up right in front of our eyes. >> Yeah, it's it's suspicious. And apparently also it does have to be said her husband did beat her. >> Yeah. >> As well. >> Yep. >> She had confided that in in Tara Pel Mary who was a journalist that she worked with. And so once her family released photos of her from towards the end of her life that included like standing photos of her with bruises all over her. >> Tara said that she did. She had promised
[38:22] obviously not to say anything, but she's like, "Now that Virginia is deceased and her family has released these photos, I do feel like I should also reveal that her husband >> beat her all the time." Doesn't mean she didn't >> not something fishy there. >> Sure. >> You know, she she >> Yeah, this is bad. >> She went after a lot of people. And I just, you know, it's like these people, they see all these things 20, 30, 40 years ahead at their cute little [ __ ] Bilderberg meetings, but they couldn't see the internet coming. >> Yeah. Right.
[38:54] Yeah, that's right. >> It's kind of weird, right? >> Yeah. >> Mhm. >> There's a guy that's been at the middle of all this, Steve Bannon, who I mentioned, Henry Abbott earlier. Shout out to Henry for turning me on to this back in 2021, 2022. >> And it all turned out to be true. It was all true. Steve Bannon goes way back with Leon Black and all those guys. You can trace it back to the 80s and you can trace back the earliest investments in things that became Cambridge Analytica in 1992. So they were already thinking
[39:24] about how to influence people through fear all the way back then, but they weren't thinking about the very tools they were building being used against them to have the public be able to discuss things in the open, including the [ __ ] they do behind closed doors. >> Imagine why. That doesn't make sense to me, though. Like, what am I missing there? >> You know, one of my favorite movies is is a 1970s sci-fi film called Soilent Green. >> You mentioned it last time. Yep, >> I did. >> Mhm. >> And um Soilent Green takes place in the
[39:56] in the future. It was filmed in like 1972 or something and I think it takes place in 2015. and cars, you know, float on the air and uh the world is overpop populated and people can't afford food. And it gives you a pretty good depiction of of a world that's on the brink of just falling apart. The only thing that they just got completely and totally wrong
[40:27] was every time Charlton H, the main character, who's a policeman, every time he needed to make a call, he'd pull over to the side of the road, go into a phone booth, and make the call. >> I guess there are just some things people don't see. >> That's a good way to put it. >> You know, I remember being I was in a station in the Middle East. I was there on temporary duty for a week, week and a half and there was a tech team in from headquarters and they were installing the first ever um email program. >> And so everybody in the station was gathered around this computer and
[40:58] they're showing us that you you click on this little button that [clears throat] had an envelope on it and then you write in somebody's name and hit refresh and their actual name pops up and then you can just write them a like a letter. It's called electronic mail, email. And the station chief says, "Wait a minute. Wait a minute. Are you saying that my people can have access to anybody they want? They just write this electronic mail and hit send." And the guy said, "Yes." And the chief said, "I don't like
[41:28] it. I don't like it one bit." >> And then he sort of made this edict that there would be none of this email in his station. Sometimes you just don't see it. You just can't. Your brain can't comprehend it. And maybe that's what we're looking at here with with our 2020 hindsight. >> I don't understand though in the 2010s once it was a real thing like an email. >> Yeah. Cuz it's like yes, obviously these
[42:00] people were talking in a way that they didn't think the DOJ would ever release their emails to the public, >> right? But you have people in 2021, 2022, 2023 keeping their jobs and saying, "No, I regret my relationship, but I didn't really know them." And now it comes out that they did. And yet, maybe I'm thinking of this too simply and I'm the farthest thing from a lawyer, but discovery exists. If you get sued civily and stuff, >> you get access to everything >> and that can get leaked. >> Mhm. >> So why it often does, >> right? So these people being so arrogant >> to be like, "Ah, no one will ever know
[42:31] that I had 11,500 emails with the dude, so I'll keep my job at Goldman Sachs." It's just incredible. Yeah, it's crazy. >> What goes through somebody's mind like she knew how many emails I mean, she at least in her mind had a ballpark figure. >> Kathy Rumler. >> Kathy Rumler. How many emails she exchanged with with Jeffrey Epstein. And did she think that by not telling the seauite at Goldman Sachs that it just wasn't going to be a problem? That this
[43:02] was never going to come to light? I mean, the guy died in 2019. It's 2026 and it never occurred to her, you know, maybe I should try to get ahead of this. >> This is going to be a problem. Or was she that arrogant to think that she could just weather this? H >> and you know if if you're the CEO of if you're the CEO of Goldman Sachs, you have to be saying [ __ ] Rumbler, what was she thinking? >> Yeah. I mean, he should have done that
[43:33] those three years ago. >> Yeah, he should have. Yes. >> Should have just cut ties with these people. >> Mhm. you know, like when it when it when they're in that kind of position, it gets weird when he's like friends with or associating with guys in academia and stuff like that cuz you're like, well, you know, funders come in and fund stuff. >> Mhm. >> And now we see a lot of that was a lot closer than that to be clear. But like when you're a lawyer at the Obama Justice Department, like the lawyer or in the Obama White House and you have
[44:05] that kind of access and you were dealing with this guy a ton who you know is a spy now. Mhm. You have to know you're going to be fried in this. It's there's just no way to look at it. And if you've got the kind of money that the general counsel at Goldman Sachs would have, then you hire a reputation recovery firm, right? And they're out there, reputation.com for, you know, average people like you and me >> or Peggy Seagull.
[44:36] >> Or Peggy Seagull >> and get ahead of this. >> Yeah. >> And and I don't think anybody thought to do that. >> They did not. Mhm. [clears throat] And it's very clear that Jeffrey maintained all of his power or I should say almost all of his powerful contacts including new ones post conviction. You know, that's the oddest thing to me was that conviction. This is a child sex crime conviction. As
[45:07] entry level as it was for him because of the sweetheart deal. You think that that would send people screaming from the room and it didn't. It didn't set him back at all. He just jumped right in. Right back in. No problem. What do you think the angle with Bannon was looking at this? Cuz Bannon leaves the White House with Trump after he's fired and then from all the texts we can see, which are cringe, the emails we can see, he is essentially becoming that PR guy.
[45:38] Yeah, he is >> for Jeffrey Epste. He even has an email in there where he's like, "You have a [ __ ] jihad against you." The likes of which I've never seen and I've seen a lot of [ __ ] And then, you know, they're following up emails on here where he's sending Jeffree articles and saying, "Well, this makes you sound like you're contrite." And, you know, talking about all this stuff and then he films them on camera for what was reported to be up to 18 hours worth of footage. We have like 2 to four hours of it or something through the files. You know, this is a guy Bannon who, like I said, goes way
[46:08] back to the 80s with all these people. Is he Is he a spy? Like, I've always believed that. Do you think that's plausible? Plausible? Sure. Likely? I I can't imagine. >> Why? Because at the position that he was counselor to the president, he would have been vetted, should have been vetted nine ways from Sunday. He should have been. The FBI should have been all over this. Of course, you know my
[46:39] position on the FBI. So, um, >> but Howard, you say that Howard Lmerce adviser, Leon Black, Leon Black's son works in the [ __ ] administration. Like, these are vetting 101. >> Yeah, you're right. You're right. Sure, it's plausible. I'm trying to think what the hook would be, what what the what the vulnerability would be to recruit him because Bannon's almost a billionaire, >> right? He owns the rights to Seinfeld and a whole bunch of other things. He's
[47:10] worth the last I saw several years ago, he was worth $750 million. So, you're not going to recruit him with money >> unless he was recruited before he got it. >> Unless Okay, that's a good point. He always ends up in places. That's the thing. He's always in the right place. >> He's long been in the right place at the right time. >> There was one phone call I was on with a guy who was talking my ear off back in 2022 >> that I another one of those like shiver up the spines cuz this was after I had
[47:41] read the Abbott piece. I was on to this with Steve Bannon and this dude was listing off a whole bunch of things and he starts talking about this guy Brock, Mighty Ducks Brock guy. Can we Google that? Brock uh >> Brock Pierce. >> Brock Pierce. You know about Brock Pierce? >> No. >> Brock Pierce is worth a [ __ ] ton of money. Made it. He was an Mighty Ducks actor. Ends up I'm going to really shorten this up for people, but he ends up in a partnership business-wise with this guy who ends up having these parties out in Hollywood where they the
[48:14] the guy is ising boys, underage boys. >> My god. >> And that ends up coming out and then they all flee to Spain. That guy ends up getting arrested. He stands I think he stands trial or makes a deal or something and then eventually gets permission to leave the country for some sort of surgery and never comes back and gets a new name. >> But Barack, can you pull up as Wikipedia def cuz now it's in there and this is starting to like break open. I've been telling people to pull on this, but go down. Def
[48:44] Brock ends up up a little more, more, more, more. Right. And up a little more. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. So, Brock ends up founding in 2001. Now, I'm going right off Wikipedia people. He founded Internet Gaming Entertainment, a company that pioneered the MMORPG currency selling services industry between 04 and '05. spent more than $25 million buying out seven smaller competitors, including
[49:15] four auction platforms and many fan and content sites. And in ' 05, PICE estimated the accounted for about 50% of this online market in the US, which has about $500 million in annual volume. Pierce brought in Steve Bannon, formerly of Goldman Sachs and Breitbart News, to seek venture capital, and a deal was made in February 2006, yielding 60 million, of which Pierce took away 20 million for a minority stake. The next year, the company faced a class action lawsuit with no assets. The company failed, and Pierce was conveniently
[49:46] forced out. Now go down to the Epstein section. Def. In February 2026, an investigation by the Kev independent and newly released US Department of Justice documents on Jeffrey Epstein reported that the files included an email in which a man identified his peers described as a co-founder of Tether told Epste that a boat in Antigua full of amazing uh Ukraine's finest was waiting for him. In a separate analysis of the same document released by the crypto news outlet Protos stated that in 2012 after Eptine asked PICE to take photos and find me a
[50:16] present during a trip to Moscow, Kev, and Odessa, which is where they would source a lot of underage women and traffic them. By the way, PICE emailed Epstein's dozens of photographs of a Ukrainian woman named Anastasia and closed the message by writing that Ukraine is now my favorite country. And in another email, he invited Epstein to join him on a boat in Antigua, once again full of Ukraine's finest. This is stuff that is now new online that I was told in 2002 directly about this. And just conveniently, this guy before he even blows up, he was a Mighty Ducks
[50:46] actor. Before he blows up as a businessman and before, like this person I was on the phone with also told me about his Jeffrey Epstein connections as well. before that he just happens to bring in Steve Bannon to this video game community that also then this is where it gets above my pay grade but it has and pull that mic around because I want you to say what you're going to say but it has to do with moving money online that's like through video game coins that can be laundered into other stuff. Maybe people out there can help me but go ahead. >> I was going to say because it was a big thing that China had first gotten involved with with the video game
[51:17] Runescape. They'd sell in-game currency for real money. But this is weird, and I'm only going to bring this point up for you to pull on if you want. This whole conspiracy that they keep seeing all this activity from Epstein's account on Fortnite and all these video games. Just think that's a weird little connection now to know that Bannon was involved with that. Just saying. I don't know. >> Yeah, that's crazy. >> It's weird. >> I don't know, man. And he's still very
[51:47] much an insider in Washington. He's got his podcast. He's got a house on Capitol Hill. >> Mhm. >> He's the war room. Yep. >> Yeah. >> What do we do? >> Do you just blow it all up? >> You know what? We're going to have to we're going to have to like even if it means taking to the streets, demand the release of all the remaining documents. We have to they have to be released. First of all, the law mandates that they be released. It's not at the Pam body or anybody else.
[52:19] They have to be released. That's the law. And then we need to rely on people like you to go through these things and make sense of them. How about all the code words they're using? >> Yeah. See, you know, that's another thing. See, and this is we're weakened by the fact that we can't charge people with crimes. You know, imagine how easy how much easier it would be to say, "Look, you're involved in this. We've got a conspiracy charge hanging over you. You're going to do at least 5
[52:50] years or you can tell us what all these code words mean and walk us through this one step at a time and then we'll figure out, you know, something a little easier. But the DOJ can't do that. There's one that's used in there that DeF and I were looking at this morning and you know, your brain runs in a lot of different directions where it says jerky. And there was a guy who did a nice breakdown of this. Def, let me give you this, dude. I actually have it right here. So, I want to give him a shout out. This is Dr. G Explains
[53:23] on YouTube. And what I liked is he didn't he even when it was obvious where it's like, "All right, we could definitely make some sort of like this type of conclusion there." He didn't. He just reported the [ __ ] emails. But the way they're they refer to we need more jerky. We need to put it in the fridge. We need this number of pounds of it. We >> have to cook it. This email right here pulled up says, "How is your jerky situation? Should I bring any more?" Then there's another email to Jeffrey
[53:54] Epstein from Unknown. Francis has time to come tomorrow to show me how to make it. Jerky class, anyone? It will also he will also bring you a taste of his new jerky recipe from the restaurant and sends a warm hello. He is working at a restaurant called Cannibal and Cooks. Is this real? >> This is from Jmail. Wait for it. Beef jerky and steak. He has time at 3 p.m. tomorrow if this is okay with you. And they refer to like, didn't they refer to storing it like chemically? >> No, in freezers.
[54:25] >> In free. Yeah. >> That's why I thought blood. >> Oh man. >> I mean, >> see, this is why we need the rest of these documents. I >> agree. >> The whole thing is a 4chan. >> Yeah. A dream. Yeah, [clears throat] >> I will freely admit it. >> You're right. >> Yeah, >> they did what? >> Steve sent me some. >> There's also an Epstein connection to the creator of 4chan quote moot
[54:55] >> and how No, you're good. And how he and Bannon helped to create >> politics >> r/politics which basically create created the alt-right pipeline that helped Trump win the election. [snorts] It just goes deeper and deeper and deeper. Okay. Can you pull up the Peter Teal Brexit email exchange? >> Yeah. >> With with with Epstein 2016, June 2016. >> It's probably not in >> I I have this one about the collapse. Is
[55:26] that what you're talking about? >> Yes. Okay. So, Epstein, you know what's crazy, bro? I remember Oh god, that's so weird. I remember where I was when this happened, too. This wasn't that far away. Okay, so Brexit, he sends to Peter Teal, Brexit, just the beginning. Peter Teal responds of what? And Epstein goes, "Return to tribalism, counter to globalization, amazing new alliances. You and I both agreed zero interest rates were too high. And as I said in
[55:58] your office, finding things on their way to collapse was much easier than finding the next bargain." This is where the whole bankers profitering off of war and obviously Peter Teal is not a banker. Jeffrey worked in finance for bankers and stuff but like they're from the banker class if you will. This is where I look at that and go well here you go. >> Wow. >> Oh my god.
[56:31] I never seen you so speechless this much. >> I feel bad that I'm so shocked that I can't contribute very much. [laughter] It's so overwhelming. It's so sickening. I I didn't realize it was this deep. Incredible. And you know, Jeffrey Epstein aside, and Glenn Maxwell, of course, these are the people that are still running the country. >> Yes. >> Literally, >> they're running the economy. Notice the vice president hasn't said anything. >> Not a word
[57:01] >> recently. >> Not a single word. >> That's his chief funer right there. >> Yes, it is. >> He also had a >> He created JD Vance. >> Yes. But actually before that, are you aware that JD Vance had a fundraiser dinner at Les Wexner's house in 2017? >> That I I was not aware, but that actually doesn't surprise me. >> It doesn't? >> No, because Les Wexner was the guy in Columbus, Ohio. And if you're a Republican in Ohio, you need to kiss the ring. >> Yeah. I did not know it though.
[57:32] >> If remove our own guilt in this for a second because we definitely have some that I I do believe and again I'm very open to changing my opinion on things but I do believe >> in this situation CIA and US intelligence has blood on its hands with all this. I I just don't see a scenario where they don't. But you also have other governments that do as well. >> Yes. >> And it's it's multiple. It's an ally like the UK. Mhm. >> It's an ally like Israel where we know Jeffrey had significant contacts including Ahoud Barack. It also came out
[58:03] in the emails that the US >> uh the the Israeli UN security team came over to install all of his security at his place. Oh, you didn't see. Can we pull up this email, Dave? >> Are you kidding me? >> John's having a [ __ ] crisis of conscious right now. I'm sorry. >> There's been a lot of me talking the last half hour while John's just like questioning everything. [laughter] All right. So, this is from Mario Nall. Israeli government installed >> Oh, I just talked to Mario two days ago. >> Yeah, there you go. What is the chances?
[58:34] Israeli government installed security systems Epstein's Manhattan building where he housed underage models starting 2016. Israeli mission to the UN coordinated with Epstein's staff to install alarm sensors and surveillance equipment. Rafi Schlommo, you know, I said this earlier, very Russian name. Head of security for former Israeli PM Ahoud Barack personally controlled access to the apartment. did background checks on cleaners, remotely disabled alarms when people needed to enter, and Epstein personally improved it all. The emails are right there. I read these in the solo episode the other day, but this this tweets up on the screen. Just if
[59:05] you wouldn't mind, DeF just pulling up the email so people can see it. >> But this is the back and forth. And then the other one, I think also this is where they're going through the details. But then this is where it's laid out with the Hood's name in there and everything. I believe Neilia [snorts] Hood was on the other email, his wife, I assume. But they're going through the whole things of what they're going to be wiring and it seems like they have a pretty chummy relationship. >> It sure seems that way. And Jeffrey doesn't mind holes in the walls. Of course, we learned that in spades at the island house.
[59:38] >> Wow, man. >> Did you see Netanyahu's response to >> no >> the bar? I'd love to hear it. I'm paraphrasing here, but he said this actually proves that we are not guilty because Audac has attempted to overthrow the entire Israeli order as a political opponent for many years and operated. I don't know if he said in like the George Soros crowd or something like that, but he was like insinuating like, you know, anti-Israel. And we're talking about a
[1:00:08] dude to Hub Barack who does have opposite politics in many cases. >> Yeah. >> To Netanyahu except in the case of you know trying to grow Israel which you know that's that's what they're trying to do. How they do that is certainly the question. But you know >> to say that about a dude who is like within Israel a legendary special forces guy. >> Yeah. >> Who got it? We have that the [ __ ] New York City shot from the movie Munich right there where he gets a shout out in the [ __ ] movie while they're doing while Msada is doing some of the [ __ ] right?
[1:00:39] >> And then he becomes prime minister eventually, defense minister and everything, >> but being with Epstein is a way to show that you're innocent. That seems a little >> Yeah, he's flailing around, >> right? >> Unbelievable. Is it an uncservivable because of the public's reaction if that information were flatout confirmed by both governments? Is it an unservivable act for an allyship between the two nations? If >> No, >> it's not. >> No. No. This is going to be a little
[1:01:10] blip, a temporary blip. Oh, listen. The Israelis, the the pro-Israel lobby, mostly in the form of Apac, is so entrenched in American politics, American society, American culture, that the relationship isn't changing at all. It's only because of the likes of of Tucker Carlson, people with large followings out there speaking truth and talking about what
[1:01:41] America first really means >> that might make a difference. People are going to they're going to say, "Oh, well that Barack Well, first of all, he's a hasband. Secondly, h you know, that was a long time ago. It's almost 10 years ago and it's not Netanyahu. Netanyahu is the one in charge now." That's going to be the reaction. But the public is so aware of some of these things though now because many people on the left and right it's a very bipartisan thing >> very much so. Yes. And so you think even in this kind of year it would be a blip
[1:02:12] if we found out that had some sort of confirmation that the most prolific known public pedophile spy dude arms dealer trilateral commission person Coney Island resident you know >> was running a msad honeypot operation with all the above and money laundering. >> We just move. They they didn't they didn't care for more than a few weeks when Jonathan Pard was caught red-handed and they were managing the operation from the Israeli defense minister's office. >> Rafi was overseeing it, I believe.
[1:02:43] >> Right. Um it didn't matter and the Israelis hemmed and hod and then kind of quietly apologized and everything just kind of roared right back. And I think that's we're going to see again. So, here's the other thing a lot of people say online, and I and I understand why they say it, but I have you in the studio right now as someone who used to be in the intelligence community who can speak to this, but people will often say CIA equals MSAD, MSAD equals CIA. >> It's just simply not true. >> Okay. And that that's a statement made out of ignorance. >> Yeah. >> Now, why why do you say that?
[1:03:15] >> Because I agree with you from what you've told me, but I'd love for you to explain it to everybody. >> The Because the Mossad actively spies on the United States. Actively. Yes, we have a close operational relationship with Mossad. But to say we're two peas in a pod like that, absolutely not true. We are with the Brits, the Canadians, the Australians, the New Zealanders, the Five Eyes countries. We have very close relations with several other, you know, NATO countries. But the Israelis, listen, at the CIA,
[1:03:45] Israel was ranked as critical threat for counter intelligence along with Russia, China, Cuba, and North Korea. Yeah, the Israelis are not our friends. They actively recruit Americans to spy on Israel's behalf to betray the United States. Now, the people who make those arguments though, one place where I could see from their lens is when you look at the top of the chain would say
[1:04:16] directors of these agencies who are political appointees. You have a guy like Mike Pompeo who ran CIA who could not possibly be more pro-Israel, right? >> Not possible to be more pro- Israel than Mike Pompeo. So is it possible that there are some pockets >> where there is some overlap but for the most part as you're saying the rank and file and people who work at the agencies they don't really like each other. >> Sure. Yeah. It's it's possible to say that and you know presidents come and go administrations change the the
[1:04:46] relationship is is you know fraternal >> right >> at the working level it's not so nice. Mhm. [clears throat] >> The last thing today, John, this this has been good, but I know that some of this is like >> I'm intellectually exhausted now. I'm very upset by all this. >> I can see. [laughter] So, I I I don't I don't want to >> It's like what happened to our country? >> I don't want to torture you, >> but I do have to get to the one thing that we left off from the beginning, which is what you heard about the whole
[1:05:18] Iran thing. I'm not going to say anything. I'm just going to let you go with whatever you're allowed to say. So, I have I have a friend uh former CIA officer who was at the White House this morning talking to his friends and he says that a decision has been made to attack Iran on Monday or Tuesday. The president yesterday gave the Iranians 10 days to uh to you know accept our proposals for an end to their ballistic missile program, an end to to uh their
[1:05:50] uranium enrichment program, an end to supporting um groups in the Middle East like Hamas and Hezbollah and the Houthis. But he's done this before. Well, he he'll give you 10 days, he'll give you two weeks, and then he'll just attack two days into it. He thinks that that keeps people off balance. Um, the USS Abraham Lincoln has been in the Arabian Sea for weeks. We've got about two dozen support ships in the Persian Gulf, the Arabian Sea, the Red Sea, and the Eastern Mediterranean. We've got the USS
[1:06:22] Gerald Ford, which is in Gibralar right now. It's it's passing through the Straits of Gibralar like today on its way to uh the Eastern Mediterranean and probably through the Sewish Canal into the Red Sea. So we've we're going to have enough assets to attack Iran in the next couple of days. And so he said that there are battle lines that the anti- >> war forces are JD Vance and Telles Gabbard. He said that the pro that's it.
[1:06:52] He said the pro-war people are led by Marco Rubio and include Pete Hegsth and now the joint chiefs of staff. And I I stopped him on that point this morning and I said, "Wait a I said during the Iraq war, at the start of the Iraq war, the most stridently anti-war component was the joint chiefs of staff. They were always the last ones that wanted to attack because they know what war is. And he said, "Ah, but you forget Trump has replaced all of the joint chiefs this year, this past in the past
[1:07:24] 12 months," which I had forgotten. any of these four-star generals who, you know, had worked their way up through the ranks but had served under Biden, he fired all of them. All of them. And he promoted people that he knew would be politically loyal. >> So I, you know, Julian, I I've always been one of these glass half full guys. I'm I'm >> Me, too. I've always been optimistic about things and I've been saying a lot
[1:07:54] in my own podcasts in written pieces. You know, we we went through round one with the Omanis and Muscat. We went through round two with Swiss in Geneva. Both sides came out and said, "These were both productive uh meetings. We're going to go to round three. Everything's looking good. The Omanis are asking us to just relax and let them do what they're good at." The Omanis are really, really good at diplomacy. really good. They're very, very good friends. >> Um, and they're honest. So, the Iranians trust them as well. And I think that
[1:08:26] none of that really matters right now. I think a decision's been made. >> Do you think this is to distract from the current scandal? >> Uh, probably in part. Yeah. >> How about them saying they're going to release the UFO files last night, which I've wanted released forever, but >> I know, right? I mean, we've been talking about this for years. >> The timing. >> Yeah. >> Yes. >> [sighs] >> Yep. >> Same movie over and over again. Different actors just rem. >> And you remember, you're probably a little bit too young, but in the ' 90s, the movie Wag the Dog was like, you
[1:08:57] know, people had their hair on fire. Oh my god, that look, this movie is about the president made a war to distract from his affair. It's like, yeah, how [clears throat] quaint that is now. >> So quaint. That seems to be all that happens. And people have short memories. Mhm. Well, I hope that I I will take that clip and put that out tomorrow, Saturday, >> so that we can >> maybe get some attention on that to see if somehow that little ripple ends up making its way to change some decisions
[1:09:28] cuz >> one of the promises of of of Trump's campaign was no more endless wars, right? >> Going into Iran is entirely different than going into Venezuela. 92 million people. It's a gigantic country. It's bigger than Texas and it has 92 million people. And I think that at the White House, they have just they have just bitten right into this Israeli propaganda, the same kind of propaganda we got in 2003, that as soon as we cross
[1:09:58] that border, they're going to throw flowers at us and they're going to greet us as liberators and we're all going to live happily ever after and everybody's going to get rich on the new oil deals. And that's just not going to happen. It never happens. >> Crazy world, John. >> It is, man. Well, I'm sorry to blow your mind a few times today. >> I was I'm not often stunned into speechlessness. >> You also blew my mind as regular, though. That happens every single time. Like you just say, your life experiences are insane. And I'm really, you know,
[1:10:29] jokes aside with the memes. I'm so happy to see you >> getting the attention you deserve and have deserved for a long time for people that >> are just learning about John online. your story had a long very unfair downswing to it that you know >> it's been an odyssey that's for sure >> getting back we all get a good laugh you know out of these memes but this this was deadly serious >> Oh yeah no doubt about it but I'm I'm really happy to see it and we'll continue supporting it here >> good to see you again >> it's great see you as always sir >> thank you >> all right >> take care
[1:10:59] >> everybody else you know what it is give it a thought get back to me hopefully we're not at war with [ __ ] Iran peace >> thank you as always for watching this video guys if you have not already subscribed please hit that subscribe button as well as that like button Before you leave, see you for the next episode.