1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:07,260 The World Health Organization has been discussing a new pandemic treaty as well 2 00:00:07,260 --> 00:00:10,860 as amendments to the international health regulations. What is the real 3 00:00:10,860 --> 00:00:15,720 significance of these? What would they look like in America if they were passed? 4 00:00:15,720 --> 00:00:22,440 And how is it that a treaty could supersede the US Constitution? This 5 00:00:22,440 --> 00:00:38,440 could be one of the most important topics of our time. 6 00:00:40,440 --> 00:00:45,840 Welcome to Fallout. So there's been a lot of discussion about this new WHO treaty and 7 00:00:45,840 --> 00:00:50,400 international health regulations. We've heard everything from these are just 8 00:00:50,400 --> 00:00:55,440 guidelines purely to be picked up by member states as they wish, all the way to these 9 00:00:55,440 --> 00:01:00,400 things will encroach dramatically on national sovereignty and kind of everything in between. 10 00:01:00,400 --> 00:01:04,400 So let's break this down for people. What I've heard from a number of lawyers, 11 00:01:04,400 --> 00:01:12,320 including testimony during the recent Ron Johnson hearings, if you actually look at the language 12 00:01:12,320 --> 00:01:18,640 that's being deployed here, they're removing the language that talks about these being optional. 13 00:01:18,640 --> 00:01:27,200 And it appears that there is an intent to make these obligatory requirements. And in so doing, 14 00:01:27,200 --> 00:01:33,920 that would directly infringe on the sovereign rights of individual nation states, including the United 15 00:01:33,920 --> 00:01:39,920 States, to manage their own health care. And so before we continue, this is a big topic. Let's just 16 00:01:39,920 --> 00:01:45,760 explain to people what these really are. What does this allow the WHO to do? 17 00:01:45,760 --> 00:01:53,120 So it's important to recognize there's two things going on at the same time that makes it kind of complex. 18 00:01:54,080 --> 00:02:02,240 One is this new international pandemic treaty that is being advanced. Some are making the case that 19 00:02:02,240 --> 00:02:09,520 that's actually a straw man, that that's not the thing to focus on, that's unlikely to pass. But rather, 20 00:02:09,520 --> 00:02:18,080 the thing to focus on is this separate initiative, having to do with updating, that's the WHO phrase, 21 00:02:18,080 --> 00:02:24,000 or modifying, I think that's more objective, the international health regulations, which is 22 00:02:24,000 --> 00:02:30,480 something that the United States has previously approved, basically as an executive agreement, 23 00:02:30,480 --> 00:02:36,800 but it has the force of a treaty. So previously, there were these international health regulations 24 00:02:37,600 --> 00:02:46,320 that were optional, had some very soft and squishy language that the WHO would make recommendations, 25 00:02:46,320 --> 00:02:54,480 and nation states could elect to implement those. And there was also a guidance about how those could 26 00:02:54,480 --> 00:03:02,000 be updated. They were supposed to be only updated for modest technical reasons, in case there was 27 00:03:02,000 --> 00:03:09,600 some language that was problematic. But that seems to have been ignored. And under Mr. Biden, and this is 28 00:03:09,600 --> 00:03:18,880 for sure, there has been development of majorly modified international health regulation language within the 29 00:03:18,880 --> 00:03:27,600 Department of Health and Human Services. That is being promoted globally as an update or modification to this 30 00:03:27,600 --> 00:03:36,480 pre-existing agreement which has the force of a treaty, even though the Senate never voted on it as a treaty per se. 31 00:03:36,480 --> 00:03:46,160 And that seems to also be disregarding normal practices for timelines and processes for approval. 32 00:03:46,160 --> 00:03:54,880 It seems to be being rushed or kind of jammed through the system so that it would be implemented potentially 33 00:03:54,880 --> 00:04:00,080 before the next election. So let me mention a few things here. There's a few elephants in the room, 34 00:04:00,080 --> 00:04:06,160 if that's even possible, that I want to mention. But before we talk about those, let's just talk about what 35 00:04:06,160 --> 00:04:13,120 these health regulations allow the WHO to do. And essentially, from what I understand, they allow the WHO to 36 00:04:13,120 --> 00:04:20,000 declare a pandemic and a cascade of responses that are required if such a pandemic were to be declared. 37 00:04:20,000 --> 00:04:28,160 It's a little more nuanced than that. It's not necessarily a pandemic. But it's any global public 38 00:04:28,160 --> 00:04:37,040 health threat. And this falls under the One Health Initiative, which makes it so that anything that is 39 00:04:37,040 --> 00:04:46,480 potentially impacting on health of humans or animals can be declared an emergency and would potentially 40 00:04:46,480 --> 00:04:55,280 activate these new updated, quote unquote, international health regulations or the WHO pandemic treaty. 41 00:04:55,280 --> 00:05:03,760 Under this logic, Mr. Tedros unilaterally, as he did in the case of monkeypox, could declare a public health 42 00:05:03,760 --> 00:05:14,000 emergency for global warming, for immigration, for lack of equity, for gun violence. He has the latitude to 43 00:05:14,000 --> 00:05:22,800 declare a public health emergency for virtually anything. And under the One Health Initiative, 44 00:05:22,800 --> 00:05:29,920 that doesn't have to necessarily involve threats to human health. It can be health related to any species. 45 00:05:29,920 --> 00:05:41,920 This really fear is, and the interpretation is, that virtually anything can be cited as a justification 46 00:05:41,920 --> 00:05:51,040 for imposition of a globalized response under the direction of the Director General of the WHO. 47 00:05:51,040 --> 00:05:59,840 And the position taken by many that have been WHO watchers is that Mr. Tedros, as Director General of 48 00:05:59,840 --> 00:06:06,720 WHO, who would have complete authority to make these determinations, is largely a puppet, a creature 49 00:06:06,720 --> 00:06:15,120 of the CCP in China, and in particular, Mr. Gates and his foundation, who is the second largest funder of 50 00:06:15,120 --> 00:06:17,680 the WHO behind the United States. 51 00:06:17,680 --> 00:06:24,320 So let's talk about these elephants in the room then. Actually, during the pandemic, things which were described as 52 00:06:24,320 --> 00:06:32,160 guidelines were cited as the reason for imposing harsh regulations, local, regional, and federal governments. 53 00:06:32,160 --> 00:06:44,640 Some would say totalitarian regulations or responses. That seems to be the thrust of these international 54 00:06:44,640 --> 00:06:50,880 health regulation modifications, but it's a little bit more than that even. There is a position taken by 55 00:06:50,880 --> 00:06:57,680 many experienced international lawyers, which I'm not, but I listen to and try to learn from. As you said, 56 00:06:57,680 --> 00:07:05,920 global regulations and international courts are largely decoupled from domestic courts under a 57 00:07:05,920 --> 00:07:13,200 sovereign nation. Unless there's a treaty, and in the United States it's been determined by the courts, 58 00:07:13,200 --> 00:07:23,520 including the Supreme Court, that treaties can supersede the Constitution. It's one of the few things that 59 00:07:23,520 --> 00:07:32,960 supersedes constitutional law. And furthermore, when a treaty is implemented, then it creates kind of a legal 60 00:07:32,960 --> 00:07:41,360 socket that ties together the international court down into the United States Supreme and District courts, 61 00:07:41,360 --> 00:07:51,120 so that international law can, through the mechanism of a treaty, become enforceable in U.S. domestic courts. 62 00:07:51,120 --> 00:07:58,000 Otherwise, without a treaty, it's not. And the consequence of that is, if you think it through in the context of these 63 00:07:58,000 --> 00:08:07,360 WHO international health regulations and the potential WHO treaty, is that in the United States under the Tenth Amendment, 64 00:08:07,360 --> 00:08:14,560 the power to regulate the practice of medicine vests with the states because it's not explicitly allocated to 65 00:08:14,560 --> 00:08:21,360 the federal government. And this has been a problem for the U.S. government in managing these outbreaks or public 66 00:08:21,360 --> 00:08:27,360 health responses. A problem or a benefit, actually? Depending on how you look at it. From the standpoint of 67 00:08:27,360 --> 00:08:34,400 the CDC and the federal government, they would like to have more direct control. This is what I was taught 68 00:08:34,400 --> 00:08:40,240 is always the policy position that the federal government has to take. Is there in a position to 69 00:08:40,240 --> 00:08:49,040 advise the states? But they have to walk very softly because the states technically have the right to 70 00:08:49,040 --> 00:08:56,080 regulate the practice of medicine. Under a treaty which the international health regulations can be interpreted 71 00:08:56,080 --> 00:09:05,120 as such. And the IHRs currently have language that is very soft, that the WHO can make recommendations, 72 00:09:05,120 --> 00:09:11,280 but they're not enforceable functionally. Under this new language, it appears that they will be enforceable. 73 00:09:12,240 --> 00:09:17,360 These new international health regulation updates that have been developed again by the Biden 74 00:09:17,360 --> 00:09:26,880 administration and the USHHS. They would be enforceable under a treaty structure which would bypass the 75 00:09:26,880 --> 00:09:34,400 constitution. And then so suddenly we find a solution from the federal government's perspective 76 00:09:35,360 --> 00:09:45,120 to the problem of exercising control over public health response across the 50 states and the territories, 77 00:09:45,120 --> 00:09:58,000 which is that under these IHRs as proposed, the WHO would make recommendations. The federal government would 78 00:09:58,000 --> 00:10:06,160 then technically be in a position of needing to enforce these regulations. And the rights of states to control 79 00:10:06,160 --> 00:10:11,120 the practice of medicine would become null and void. If that wasn't bad enough, 80 00:10:11,120 --> 00:10:21,520 we've all been taught in constitutional law, in civics classes, et cetera, that the Senate has to approve 81 00:10:21,520 --> 00:10:32,800 treaties through a two-thirds majority. But under court interpretation of executive agreements, this has been 82 00:10:32,800 --> 00:10:40,480 expanded president after president to the point now where we functionally have over 200 treaties per year 83 00:10:41,680 --> 00:10:51,040 approved by executive agreement. And typically, at most, one or two approved by the Senate. But these executive 84 00:10:51,040 --> 00:11:01,600 agreements are interpreted by the courts as having the force of an approved treaty. And what this means is that 85 00:11:01,600 --> 00:11:09,520 a president can just agree to these terms and conditions with, in this case, the WHO. 86 00:11:09,520 --> 00:11:16,400 They then have the force of a treaty. But the Senate doesn't have to approve them. So there's no two-thirds 87 00:11:16,960 --> 00:11:24,800 vote. But they then are able to supersede the constitutional rights, including potentially the 88 00:11:24,800 --> 00:11:32,080 rights of states to regulate the practice of medicine. Under current interpretation, all Mr. Biden needs to do is 89 00:11:32,080 --> 00:11:40,080 basically bless these agreements via an executive agreement. And then they will have the full force 90 00:11:40,080 --> 00:11:47,040 of a treaty as if it was approved through a two-thirds majority. And then the WHO can mandate 91 00:11:47,040 --> 00:11:58,400 what shots you take, how your doctor would treat you, what medicines you're allowed to take or are mandated to take, and other 92 00:11:58,400 --> 00:12:08,720 actions such as vaccine passports, green cards, etc. All these could be mandated by the WHO and then enforced by the 93 00:12:08,720 --> 00:12:16,160 federal government. And the states would have no legal right to object to this. You wouldn't have a Ron 94 00:12:16,160 --> 00:12:23,200 DeSantis or a Ken Paxton objecting in red states and setting their own policies. They would be forced to 95 00:12:23,200 --> 00:12:32,480 comply with whatever Washington DC tells them they have to do based on whatever the WHO says in Geneva. 96 00:12:32,480 --> 00:12:38,320 So the other elephant in the room, and actually I'm thinking of even more elephants that we may 97 00:12:38,320 --> 00:12:44,880 want to talk about. A lot of pachyderms here. That's right. These centralized responses that we've tried 98 00:12:44,880 --> 00:12:53,440 to implement have been so thoroughly wrong and failed so completely in, frankly, every respect that I can 99 00:12:53,440 --> 00:12:59,760 think of off the top of my head. Yeah. Name one thing that the WHO got right. Right. But not just the 100 00:12:59,760 --> 00:13:05,520 WHO, but these various mandates and the impact of them and sort of, you know, this, I guess you would 101 00:13:05,520 --> 00:13:11,200 call it the Hippocratic Oath coming into question with, you know, informed consent. I mean, all of this 102 00:13:11,760 --> 00:13:17,440 patient rights all the way down from the top. And this is, so we have this, we have the evidence 103 00:13:17,440 --> 00:13:23,520 of why this type of centralized approach shouldn't be done. If anything, if anything, this is a case study. 104 00:13:23,520 --> 00:13:34,320 I wholeheartedly agree. This is one of my basic premises is that this type of utilitarian centralized 105 00:13:34,320 --> 00:13:40,480 command economy approach, particularly when coupled with censorship and propaganda, this new 106 00:13:40,480 --> 00:13:48,240 censorship industrial complex is intrinsically anti-innovation. When you think about it, you have 107 00:13:48,240 --> 00:13:57,040 a group of bureaucrats located in a centralized organization that is paid for by foreign governments, 108 00:13:57,040 --> 00:14:04,240 including our greatest competitor and by the pharmaceutical industry and by non-governmental 109 00:14:04,240 --> 00:14:11,840 organizations. Making policy decisions then be implemented domestically in the United States and 110 00:14:11,840 --> 00:14:19,360 through other nation states, determining that you would receive this, that, or the other product or 111 00:14:19,360 --> 00:14:25,760 take this, that, or the other action. We know that during the COVID crisis, of course, we had the suppression 112 00:14:25,760 --> 00:14:35,520 of early treatment, the advocacy and deployment of these products that are genetically based, and a series of 113 00:14:35,520 --> 00:14:44,480 policies such as the lockdowns that resulted in enormous economic damage and upward transfer of wealth, 114 00:14:44,480 --> 00:14:52,960 and benefits occurring to the largest organizations like Amazon, etc., at the expense of small businesses. 115 00:14:53,680 --> 00:15:02,480 And we would vest all this power now, could be implemented for any reason, including climate change, 116 00:15:02,480 --> 00:15:09,520 which is identified as one of the leading goals under this new set of agreements, that Mr. Tedros would 117 00:15:09,520 --> 00:15:16,160 be able to mandate responses to climate. We would have no choice. It would have the power of law. 118 00:15:16,160 --> 00:15:23,200 And this is actually what's being cited as this, you know, key health threat, in fact. I think we're 119 00:15:23,200 --> 00:15:28,160 being told that this is something that's going to be used in this way in the future. I mean, that's the 120 00:15:28,160 --> 00:15:35,040 sense that I get anyway. Absolutely. And we have literally thousands of scientific journals now 121 00:15:35,840 --> 00:15:44,000 that are advocating that climate change be considered a global health emergency, which is 122 00:15:44,640 --> 00:15:53,920 the specific language that would potentially trigger the WHO's ability to mandate mitigation measures. 123 00:15:53,920 --> 00:16:01,600 So they would have the ability to mandate that we should all drive EVs, electric vehicles, 124 00:16:02,160 --> 00:16:09,920 for instance, or we would all have to rely on non-petroleum or coal-based energy production, 125 00:16:10,480 --> 00:16:16,720 like they tried to do in Germany, and it's basically destroyed the German economy. That would all be 126 00:16:16,720 --> 00:16:24,320 at the behest and power, not just of one organization, but of one man, Mr. Tedros, who is 127 00:16:24,320 --> 00:16:32,720 apparently an avowed Marxist with a clear documented past involving in a known terrorist organization in 128 00:16:32,720 --> 00:16:38,160 Africa. This is the person that we would invest all this power with. So this is kind of the other 129 00:16:38,160 --> 00:16:42,000 elephant in the room, or yet another elephant in the room, which is that, you know, when you look, 130 00:16:42,000 --> 00:16:51,680 especially early on in the pandemic response, we see the situation where the WHO is basically taking 131 00:16:52,400 --> 00:16:59,440 the Chinese Communist Party's word for what's happening in China and applying it as if it were 132 00:16:59,440 --> 00:17:05,360 something that they believe in and attest to. So this is often referred to as the China solution. 133 00:17:05,360 --> 00:17:17,840 And you're exactly right. Bizarrely, early on in 2020, there was direct importation of Chinese CCP 134 00:17:17,840 --> 00:17:26,400 policy for pandemic response and substitution of that policy for the previously agreed upon norms of 135 00:17:26,400 --> 00:17:32,720 pandemic response. And I might add that in 2019, if these were, you know, kind of looked at again and 136 00:17:32,720 --> 00:17:38,240 decided like that lockdown policy is something that should almost never be done. And if ever done 137 00:17:38,240 --> 00:17:41,760 really for only of the shortest of periods of time in an extreme emergency. 138 00:17:41,760 --> 00:17:49,680 And yet because China did it and they propagandized basically that it was very effective 139 00:17:50,880 --> 00:17:56,400 using a number of different methods, the West somehow in its fear response 140 00:17:56,400 --> 00:18:02,720 just rolled over and accepted that these were going to be effective measures 141 00:18:03,840 --> 00:18:08,960 and that they should go ahead and adopt the China solution. There's been detailed work 142 00:18:09,760 --> 00:18:17,040 demonstrating how this logic was imported directly into the National Security Council and from there 143 00:18:17,040 --> 00:18:25,680 into the White House as a series of policy decisions, basically aping what was going on in China under the 144 00:18:25,680 --> 00:18:28,160 belief system that the Chinese had got it right. 145 00:18:28,160 --> 00:18:33,040 It's very interesting that you say that, because one of the things I've been covering 146 00:18:33,040 --> 00:18:43,920 on American Thought Leaders recently is this strange way in which our governing class essentially 147 00:18:43,920 --> 00:18:52,240 has become enamored with the way the Chinese Communist Party functions and the so-called efficiency of top-down 148 00:18:52,240 --> 00:18:59,120 control. In one specific American Thought Leaders episode, we discuss how America invested absolutely 149 00:18:59,120 --> 00:19:05,440 incredible amounts of money into the Chinese regime, effectively growing the world's biggest 150 00:19:05,440 --> 00:19:12,000 dictatorship with the idea, the official line was, with that investment, we will change them 151 00:19:12,560 --> 00:19:18,560 into being more like us, a liberal democracy. But it seems like the reality is that it actually happened in the 152 00:19:18,560 --> 00:19:26,480 other direction. Right? And really what you're touching on is the consequences of the Nixon-Kissinger 153 00:19:27,120 --> 00:19:35,520 initiative in opening China and then the entrance of American business and particularly American finance 154 00:19:36,320 --> 00:19:46,160 into that to advance this logic. Not only did we have the American leadership cast becoming enamored of this 155 00:19:46,160 --> 00:19:56,640 totalitarian top-down centralized utilitarian model as very convenient. I think a lot of that really took off 156 00:19:56,640 --> 00:20:06,720 in the Beijing Olympics where the world saw an ascendant China that was producing these amazing venues so 157 00:20:06,720 --> 00:20:19,200 organized, so controlled and they liked it very much. And then what we've had since then is the World Economic Forum 158 00:20:19,200 --> 00:20:28,240 now holding its meetings both in China as well as in Davos and the rise of integration of these large 159 00:20:28,240 --> 00:20:35,520 transnational investment funds like BlackRock, State Street, Vanguard, Bank of America that all inner-own each 160 00:20:35,520 --> 00:20:44,560 other investing in China in a major way, becoming very invested in the Chinese model. The way I've heard this 161 00:20:44,560 --> 00:20:54,800 talked about most recently is that American business and these transnational investment firms were able to 162 00:20:54,800 --> 00:21:02,000 get deals with the People's Republic of China that they find very favorable. And they find doing business in this 163 00:21:02,000 --> 00:21:10,720 environment very favorable very favorable. One way to express that is using the kind of language that's used in the 164 00:21:10,720 --> 00:21:22,080 investment community. It reduces the friction of transactions when you get to have harmonized business practices and 165 00:21:22,080 --> 00:21:30,160 regulations across a very large market and ideally across the entire world. I think this is part of what drives 166 00:21:30,160 --> 00:21:40,960 globalism is the logic that business and finance would like to have harmonized regulations and business 167 00:21:40,960 --> 00:21:48,240 practices across the world so they don't have to grapple with all these local nuances and cultures and the 168 00:21:48,240 --> 00:21:57,200 diversity that exists worldwide economically. They can just have one set of rules, one set of business practices 169 00:21:57,200 --> 00:22:05,440 that they can rely on and they can optimize their business practices to this kind of centralized planned 170 00:22:05,440 --> 00:22:14,560 economy model and then be able to maximize their profit while minimizing risk associated with dealing with 171 00:22:14,560 --> 00:22:23,520 cultural diversity. I think for them they really do want to have the blending of cultures because it gives 172 00:22:23,520 --> 00:22:30,480 a business and economic benefits associated with it which leads into Agenda 2030. 173 00:22:31,920 --> 00:22:36,240 Right and actually that's very interesting because one of the things I've been thinking about as 174 00:22:36,240 --> 00:22:42,640 well you know Agenda 2030 I think came on as one of these kinds of executive agreements a long time ago. 175 00:22:42,640 --> 00:22:46,000 Perhaps maybe under the Obama administration that's my guess. That's my understanding. 176 00:22:46,000 --> 00:22:49,680 I don't know the whole story but you know we didn't even know about that right. 177 00:22:49,680 --> 00:22:53,600 But when you know nobody seemed to be paying attention. And when you look at a lot of the 178 00:22:53,600 --> 00:22:59,520 what I would call bizarre policy that we see around whether whether it comes to climate change 179 00:23:00,080 --> 00:23:05,040 or gender or you know actually a multitude of number of things they actually when you look back 180 00:23:05,040 --> 00:23:10,240 at Agenda 2030 it's all in the UN it's actually all in there in the first place. So there's this 181 00:23:10,240 --> 00:23:17,840 incremental drive without anyone knowing towards this particular goal and I wonder when I look at this 182 00:23:17,840 --> 00:23:22,960 these international health regulations and the pandemic treaty let's say it's just guidelines now 183 00:23:22,960 --> 00:23:29,520 but it's sort of it lets you know where things are supposed to go. In the case of Agenda 2030 again to 184 00:23:29,520 --> 00:23:39,920 recap this is a United Nations policy position that has the force of a treaty but was approved by Mr. Obama, 185 00:23:39,920 --> 00:23:46,800 President Obama as an executive agreement. But as we covered a little bit earlier these executive 186 00:23:46,800 --> 00:23:54,480 agreements have the or they're interpreted by both domestic U.S. and international courts as having 187 00:23:54,480 --> 00:24:00,960 the force of treaties. Well and if I might jut in just by ideologically similar people in the 188 00:24:00,960 --> 00:24:08,240 administrative state for example that in a way is even more powerful. Yeah. Right. Yeah. I think not to 189 00:24:08,800 --> 00:24:16,320 focus too much on the negative what I'm hearing is from some international attorneys is that they 190 00:24:17,040 --> 00:24:24,160 you know people that that know both international and domestic U.S. law is there's a movement afoot to 191 00:24:24,160 --> 00:24:35,280 challenge this practice of allowing executive agreements to have the force of law as approving an 192 00:24:35,280 --> 00:24:45,680 international treaty instead of the requisite two-thirds majority in the senate and what I hear untested 193 00:24:46,640 --> 00:24:51,120 is that there's the appearance that there would be a supreme court majority 194 00:24:53,200 --> 00:24:59,680 in favor of greatly restricting the ability of the executive branch 195 00:24:59,680 --> 00:25:11,600 to implement these agreements and to force a more constitutionally compliant process of requiring two-thirds 196 00:25:11,600 --> 00:25:18,560 majorities for treaties and constraining this power of the executive to unilaterally agree to these things. 197 00:25:18,560 --> 00:25:26,160 That I think really does need to be tested. It may be one of the most important supreme court issues 198 00:25:26,160 --> 00:25:34,000 currently pending and we need to have a good demonstration case in order to bring this to fore 199 00:25:34,880 --> 00:25:42,720 but I think that in the whole spectrum of legal issues that we're now facing with the censorship 200 00:25:42,720 --> 00:25:52,080 industrial complex the compromise of the first amendment that's so actively ongoing let alone the 201 00:25:52,080 --> 00:25:56,960 threats to the threats to the second amendment which by the way these international health regulations 202 00:25:56,960 --> 00:26:05,440 could directly threaten under the guise that gun violence represents a health emergency 203 00:26:06,640 --> 00:26:15,120 Mr. Tedros could declare a public health threat of gun violence and then implement his 204 00:26:15,840 --> 00:26:21,520 recommendations and the federal government would be able to say of course truth is that the federal government 205 00:26:21,520 --> 00:26:30,240 would be suggesting what it is that they want WHO to recommend and then the federal government would be able to say 206 00:26:30,240 --> 00:26:36,560 well the WHO has made these recommendations under the IHR we're obligated to go ahead and implement them 207 00:26:36,560 --> 00:26:44,160 and therefore we're going to have to have controls on guns even though the second amendment exists 208 00:26:44,880 --> 00:26:54,640 because the force of treaties supersedes the rights in the position of the constitution that's the kind of not to sound paranoid 209 00:26:54,640 --> 00:27:00,720 but that's the kind of process that's being envisioned as you say it's an incremental chipping away 210 00:27:01,680 --> 00:27:08,880 at rights that we thought were guaranteed to us through this kind of backdoor pathway 211 00:27:08,880 --> 00:27:18,960 of international regulations that would supersede the sovereignty of individual nation states and 212 00:27:18,960 --> 00:27:25,440 specifically the united states another example of course that is more a present threat 213 00:27:27,520 --> 00:27:34,000 is that agenda 2030 specifically states that individuals have the right to migrate 214 00:27:34,000 --> 00:27:42,000 this is what's behind the open borders policy that is wrecking europe right now and causing so much strife and concern 215 00:27:42,640 --> 00:27:46,720 and is uh responsible for our open borders in the south 216 00:27:47,600 --> 00:27:51,680 is the the agenda 2030 agreement 217 00:27:52,640 --> 00:27:56,240 that human beings have the right to immigrate wherever they want 218 00:27:56,240 --> 00:28:02,080 and as been often pointed out if you can't control your borders you no longer have a nation 219 00:28:02,080 --> 00:28:08,160 well this would certainly explain a lot of the madness i think that we're seeing 220 00:28:09,360 --> 00:28:12,960 and across our reality in our time 221 00:28:12,960 --> 00:28:20,880 the transgender movement a whole lot of things are encapsulated in agenda 2030 from the u.n 222 00:28:20,880 --> 00:28:28,480 it really bears review and reading by the listeners of fallout and those that follow epoch times so i think 223 00:28:28,480 --> 00:28:34,320 that's it for today's truth bomb and we're going to change things up a little bit and head over to your farm let's go 224 00:28:41,840 --> 00:28:46,880 so today we're going to be planting some crops one that i love to plant in the winter and early spring 225 00:28:46,880 --> 00:28:52,960 is spinach you can plant it every few weeks and then you get a crop rotating through and it's it's great 226 00:28:52,960 --> 00:28:57,120 and we've already got some spinach going that we've harvested that is correct yeah it's kind of amazing 227 00:28:57,120 --> 00:29:03,680 it survives the frost it's just like light leafy vegetable it is amazing you'll see it sometimes with 228 00:29:03,680 --> 00:29:08,480 spinach it'll have snow on it and it is just great another one that we're going to plant is radishes 229 00:29:08,480 --> 00:29:15,120 which are a great early crop they stand frost same with kale and lettuce i have a way i like to plant 230 00:29:15,120 --> 00:29:24,640 and that's to use a board and what this will do is it'll give me a nice straight line to plant against 231 00:29:24,640 --> 00:29:31,360 and then you can read on the back for spinach it's about six inches apart so that's six inches long and 232 00:29:31,360 --> 00:29:36,960 wide and you can just go through and and use a finger or a pencil or stick and just make holes 233 00:29:36,960 --> 00:29:43,680 and plant with spinach it's about a half inch apart okay you know you want a good organic matter 234 00:29:43,680 --> 00:29:50,080 for your soil so um well rotted compost is really good if you're going to use any sort of manure 235 00:29:50,080 --> 00:29:55,440 compost you need to make sure it's not too hot and that means that it's it's had time to sit and it's 236 00:29:55,440 --> 00:30:01,200 not steaming and it's just going to burn all your vegetables so let's go ahead and plant and and this 237 00:30:01,200 --> 00:30:08,000 soil is that or what yes it's a mix of topsoil and and manure soil okay yeah yeah let's do it you can 238 00:30:08,000 --> 00:30:18,720 literally put the seeds in and then just poke them in the ground if you need to do a much deeper than 239 00:30:18,720 --> 00:30:25,200 that then go ahead and use a pencil or something to to make your holes okay do another row of spinach 240 00:30:25,200 --> 00:30:29,600 on the other side that's right and then since this is a four inch board you can just go ahead and do 241 00:30:29,600 --> 00:30:34,800 about two inches and and go ahead and do it right through amazes me what's in one little seed it is 242 00:30:34,800 --> 00:30:41,600 amazing yeah yeah so we've built this out of some old wood we had but container gardening you can use 243 00:30:41,600 --> 00:30:46,960 almost anything it doesn't have to be fancy and it doesn't have to cost a lot of money sometimes we 244 00:30:46,960 --> 00:30:53,360 use pots that we bought other plants in you can use old buckets anything you have around even old food 245 00:30:53,360 --> 00:30:59,840 containers work but remember that whatever you have on the outside is going to leach into the soil so 246 00:30:59,840 --> 00:31:05,920 that's why we use this untreated oak oh yeah as opposed to like creosote treated exactly pressure 247 00:31:05,920 --> 00:31:10,800 treated that's right yeah i wouldn't want to use railroad ties you're going to move it over now 248 00:31:10,800 --> 00:31:15,840 yeah and then we just go ahead and we do it again so what is it that you most really need to pay 249 00:31:15,840 --> 00:31:22,640 attention to okay we've got the right soil water we know the distance so water this looks incredibly dry 250 00:31:22,640 --> 00:31:29,360 at the moment it is incredibly dry and so we will water this and we will keep it damp for um until 251 00:31:29,360 --> 00:31:34,800 the seeds sprout if you let it dry out when the seeds are at this stage you can lose them all so 252 00:31:34,800 --> 00:31:41,040 you want to make sure that they get plenty of water the next big problem certainly in virginia is pests 253 00:31:41,040 --> 00:31:46,720 now early spring is pretty good but once our warm weather hits we have a lot of pests this year i'm 254 00:31:46,720 --> 00:31:53,040 going to try something different jan yeah i'm going to try um making a hoop with a fine mesh net 255 00:31:53,680 --> 00:32:00,480 to try and control the pests the other problem we have is not just pests it's deer yeah the deer 256 00:32:00,480 --> 00:32:04,640 will come through and just strip out a garden and they'll also by the way eat all the leaves off of 257 00:32:04,640 --> 00:32:10,240 our fruit trees right that's a big problem around here right which is why we have this raised bed kind 258 00:32:10,240 --> 00:32:15,680 of close to our house because the dogs are always in and out and they really are the best deer deterrent we 259 00:32:15,680 --> 00:32:21,360 have right now they love to chase deer it's their favorite game they love to chase anything so we 260 00:32:21,360 --> 00:32:29,680 just buy plastic markers and then you use a sharpie to mark what vegetable you've planted where because 261 00:32:29,680 --> 00:32:35,280 it's amazing jan in four weeks we'll have completely forgotten which we planted first so we'll see it's 262 00:32:35,280 --> 00:32:40,720 spinach though we'll see it's spinach but you know not necessarily because spinach and lettuce kind of 263 00:32:40,720 --> 00:32:45,040 look the same at first and you just got to be really careful when you plant seeds to not 264 00:32:45,040 --> 00:32:48,640 plant seeds that are just going to get killed by the frost because you're just wasting time and 265 00:32:48,640 --> 00:32:55,200 money so when is it safe here in virginia do you think to to plant the next batch you know the last 266 00:32:55,200 --> 00:33:01,840 two years we've had a frost mid-april which is fairly unusual so but really it's mid-april there are 267 00:33:01,840 --> 00:33:08,480 directions online that say you know um around uh first or second week in april but that's a little so 268 00:33:08,480 --> 00:33:14,000 the next side what are we going to do yeah so why don't we do some some some radish i really thought these 269 00:33:14,000 --> 00:33:18,960 were cool they're watermelon radish okay and they're they're two colored so they're white and 270 00:33:18,960 --> 00:33:24,720 pink all right let's do that that's great they're tiny you know there's something absolutely magical 271 00:33:24,720 --> 00:33:30,560 i haven't done gardening in 35 years or something probably i mean my wife has a bit we haven't really 272 00:33:30,560 --> 00:33:38,320 been in a position to do it for a long time but the truth is that you could have a garden box by a window 273 00:33:39,280 --> 00:33:46,400 you can have a a little raised planter in a an apartment area so long as you get enough sunshine 274 00:33:46,400 --> 00:33:51,200 the other thing is if you don't have a lot of room or you're in an apartment you can use a hydroponic 275 00:33:51,200 --> 00:33:58,080 system which is right many of them are part dirt high part hydroponic and um they actually produce a 276 00:33:58,080 --> 00:34:03,680 lot of food and you can get those systems anywhere now the thing is you you really get this sense when 277 00:34:03,680 --> 00:34:11,360 you do this from seed how incredible this is when you think about it it's your perspective i just i 278 00:34:11,360 --> 00:34:17,600 worry too many people kind of lack that connection with the you know nature i wonder if that how much 279 00:34:17,600 --> 00:34:25,280 that impacts our some of our current social malaise i agree you know i think having projects is so 280 00:34:25,280 --> 00:34:31,200 important for the mind it may be that i'm too philosophical about this but you look at this little 281 00:34:31,200 --> 00:34:38,160 piney it's almost next to nothing and it turns into yes you know watermelon radish right right 282 00:34:38,160 --> 00:34:45,600 the food right yeah this is empowering yourself to start to become self-sufficient i think what's 283 00:34:46,320 --> 00:34:55,040 important to keep in mind is that even if you're not producing enough to have a huge impact on on your 284 00:34:55,040 --> 00:35:04,560 food bill by learning how to grow things you're basically preparing yourself in case you do have 285 00:35:04,560 --> 00:35:11,200 to start becoming more self-reliant and there is a whole skill set sure you have to learn it through 286 00:35:11,200 --> 00:35:17,760 trial and error and experience and you're not going to learn it until you start the exciting thing too is 287 00:35:17,760 --> 00:35:24,720 that we're going to get to hopefully unless the deer invade this planting bed we'll have we'll get to 288 00:35:24,720 --> 00:35:32,160 enjoy the a delicious salad made of this oh we're getting joined by friends oh yeah well what about 289 00:35:32,160 --> 00:35:38,720 the goose problem yes the goose is a problem goose loves kale so we can put it on this side okay all 290 00:35:38,720 --> 00:35:48,080 right they're voracious eaters of greens what about emus emus like kale very very small emu now that'll 291 00:35:48,080 --> 00:35:53,680 be another animal to watch grow yes with luck one day the emu will be about 80 pounds 292 00:36:02,560 --> 00:36:07,440 sometimes with these small seeds i think it's easier to just what you call broadcast 293 00:36:09,600 --> 00:36:12,800 and that's it now you just have to build me two more of these 294 00:36:12,800 --> 00:36:20,000 it seems like if i'm feeling this correctly we are not going to need to water this because we're 295 00:36:20,000 --> 00:36:25,280 going to get some natural straight up water from the sky pretty soon but i think that's it for this 296 00:36:25,280 --> 00:36:31,040 week with health and home with the malones and we'll oh look at this emu really likes my um my ring 297 00:36:32,640 --> 00:36:38,400 this is a very interesting uh surprise here we're actually yeah so and the duck now is also interested 298 00:36:38,400 --> 00:36:56,880 and the duck is protecting me from the emu this is this is something he just wanted his share