Sunday - Alex Jones
- May 19, 2024 at 05:00PM
Alex Jones 2024-May-19 Sunday
Click the headline to read the full story at InfoWars & Associates
Sunday - Alex Jones - May 19, 2024 at 05:00PM Alex Jones 2024-May-19 Sunday Click the headline to read the full story at InfoWars & Associates Harrison Smith also covers the latest waterfront of breaking news, including the Iran helicopter crash, Bronx MAGA march, Big Tech censorship and much more -- tune in! Harrison Smith lays out Joe Biden’s sinking poll numbers among black voters over his disastrous economic policies and his latest commencement speech at the Morehouse College in Atlanta calling black graduates victims and claiming America hates them. Jamie White - May 19, 2024 at 12:58PM Biden Desperately Panders to Black Voters in Commencement Speech Amid Plunging Approval Numbers — Sunday Night Live Click the headline to read the full story at InfoWars & Associates Alex Jones will also report and give his analysis on new videos emerging from the Congo showing thousands of children being pressed into slavery at Communist Chinese mines -- tune in! Alex Jones breaks down the mysterious helicopter crash involving Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi and top officials in Azerbaijan on Sunday and how it’s sparking fears of a wider conflict in the Middle East. We’ll also discuss disturbing videos out of the Congo showing children being pushed into slavery at Communist Chinese mines. Tune in now!
Tune into this live broadcast at MadMaxWorld.TV and spread the word! Jamie White - May 19, 2024 at 10:59AM Sunday Live: Helicopter Crash Involving Iran President & Top Officials Sparks World War III Fears as Signs Point to Assassination Attempt — Must Watch! Click the headline to read the full story at InfoWars & Associates Victory! All Charges Dismissed Against N.J. Gym Owner Who Wouldnt Close During COVID Lockdown5/19/2024 "4 years ago today, we reopened Atilis Gym in direct violation of an unconstitutional order by Governor Philip Murphy to close small businesses in New Jersey," says gym owner Ian Smith. A New Jersey court has dismissed the case against gym owner Ian Smith over 80 citations and violations of Gov. Phil Murphy’s (D) order to close small businesses during the Covid plandemic. Smith, owner of Atilis Gym in Bellmawr, made a statement on X Saturday breaking the good news. “4 years ago today, we reopened Atilis Gym in direct violation of an unconstitutional order by Governor Philip Murphy to close small businesses in New Jersey,” Smith posted. “ALL OF THE 80+ municipal citations of violations of a governor’s order, public nuisance, disturbing the peace, and operating without a license against us have been dropped by the courts WITH prejudice.”
“This means the State has NO ability to revisit or refile these charges. This victory opens the battlefield again and gives us options to continue to push back and bring justice to the treasonous actions of Phil Murphy and his lackies.” “Suck my d*ck Phil Murphy,” he added. Smith and co-owner Frank Trumbetti refused to close Atilis Gym in 2020 after Murphy issued an arbitrary executive order imposing the closure of small “nonessential” businesses to fight the spread of COVID. A year later, amid litigation against the state over its refusal to close, Murphy seized all $165,000 of the gym’s assets, and Smith was notified he would face a fine of over $15,000 each day the business chose to keep its doors open.
A state Appeals Court judge also ruled last year that Smith and Trumbetti must pay nearly $124,000 in fines for violating Murphy’s order. Murphy came much closer to defeat than expected in the 2022 midterms over frustrations relating to COVID restrictions and in the wake of a campaign adviser admitting in undercover video that he planned to impose vaccine mandates AFTER the election. Now that Smith and Trumbetti have been vindicated, it’s long past time for Murphy to be held accountable for his unconstitutional lockdown orders. Follow Jamie White on X | Truth | Gab | Gettr | Minds Jamie White - May 19, 2024 at 09:10AM Victory! All Charges Dismissed Against N.J. Gym Owner Who Wouldn’t Close During COVID Lockdown Click the headline to read the full story at InfoWars & Associates Chase Geiser joins the show to discuss the downstream effect cultural wars have on U.S. politics. Chase Geiser is a populist influencer and frequent Infowars host. He has amassed hundreds of thousands of followers and garnered millions of views of his content since 2021. Geiser joins Toxic Culture to discuss the downstream effect cultural battles have on American politics.
Jamie White - May 19, 2024 at 08:55AM The Impact of Culture on American Politics — Toxic Culture Click the headline to read the full story at InfoWars & Associates Trump posted parody video of Tom Petty's hit song "Free Falling" featuring Biden falling on stage, stumbling up steps of Air Force One, wandering aimlessly, and sniffing women and children. Allies of Joe Biden appear to be attempting to scrub a viral parody music video highlighting Jee Biden’s cognitive decline. Trump on Friday posted to Truth Social a parody music video of Tom Petty’s hit song “Free Falling” mocking Biden’s many gaffes. The “Keeps Falling” video features Biden collapsing on stage, stumbling up the steps of Air Force One, aimlessly wandering around and creepily sniffing women and children. But by Sunday, the video was removed across the X platform with a disclaimer that read, “This media has been disabled in response to a report by the copyright owner.”
Jamie White - May 19, 2024 at 08:03AM Dems CENSOR Viral Parody Music Video Exposing Joe Biden’s Cognitive Decline Click the headline to read the full story at InfoWars & Associates Tango Blast gang member discovered among group of nearly 30 illegals hiding in stash house near Mexican border Authorities in Texas arrested a known gang member from Mexico during a raid at a stash house where dozens of illegal aliens were being held. The bust unfolded on Wednesday but the Texas Department of Public Safety (TxDPS) just released information and footage over the weekend. “This account has repeatedly posted false information that was reviewed by independent fact checkers or went against our Community Guidelines," Instagram says in warning. Mark Zuckerberg’s Instagram warned against tagging former Fox News host Tucker Carlson in a “Happy Birthday” post on Thursday, claiming the top journalist has been known to violate “Community Guidelines.” A post wishing Carlson a “happy birthday” was met with a warning from Instagram urging users to reconsider tagging the former Fox News host in a Story. “This account has repeatedly posted false information that was reviewed by independent fact checkers or went against our Community Guidelines. Do you want to mention this account?” the warning from Instagram read, before giving users the option to either “cancel” or “mention anyway.” Carlson, one of the top journalists in the country who started his media company Tucker Carlson Network after leaving Fox News, celebrated his 55th birthday Thursday. Notably, Meta, Instagram and Facebook’s parent company, in February revealed a strategy aiming to diminish the circulation of political content on its apps. It’s unclear exactly what Community Guidelines Carlson has violated, but given his criticism of the Ukraine war, abortion, transgenderism and the Biden administration, it’s reasonable to assume Instagram “fact checkers” considered any one of those criticisms to be a “violation.” That is, except facilitating pedophile trafficking networks on the platform. Jamie White - May 19, 2024 at 07:29AM Zuckerberg’s Instagram Warns Against Tagging Tucker Carlson in ‘Happy Birthday’ Post Click the headline to read the full story at InfoWars & Associates The irrational is ever-present in our lives, however much we want to believe otherwise An essential part of the modern self-image is a belief in the power of rationality. And not just a belief in the power of rationality, but its power above everything else: above emotion, above instinct, above intuition—and certainly above faith. Frankly, it’s nonsense. Yes, rationality plays an enormous, even oversized role, in the way the modern world works, not least of all in the operation of science and industry, which have transformed our societies and our planet, giving us electricity, the x-ray, the atom bomb, the Saturn V rocket, and of course, the IPhone, with its wondrous ability to send high-resolution images of our private parts beaming across vast distances in the blink of an eye. I think I’ve made that joke before. Anyway, you don’t need to be paying attention too closely to see, or indeed to feel, that, for all our technological progress, the irrational is very much still with us, whatever we like to tell ourselves about the triumphant, and inevitable, march of Progress. Humans are, after all, animals, whose being is grounded in animal senses and instincts that claw us back hundreds and thousands and millions of years into the primordial soup in which the first single-celled organisms bubbled and roiled. These senses and instincts, which have nothing to do with formal calculations made according to the axioms of logic, have remained with us as guides across the vast chasm of our development for the simple fact that they have helped us survive. They’re still here because we are. But those irrational parts of us can also lead us astray, into folly and even our own doom. Fear, in particular, as Paul Atreides reminds himself in Dune, “is the mindkiller”—the most potent means of inactivating our thinking faculties and rendering us helpless and compliant. There’s no better example of this, in our time, than the pandemic. I posted a screenshot on Twitter today of a Daily Mail headline from 2021, in which the paper—famous for issuing sober, well-considered warnings—claimed that trees might be spreading COVID-19 through their pollen. Quick, chop them all down! How did anybody ever believe such arrant nonsense—or the ten thousand other absurd things we were told to believe and do by our rulers during the greatest mass delusion in history? How did anybody believe that standing six feet away from everyone else would protect them from the virus? What about if I stand 5 feet 11 inches away—what then? How did anybody believe that sitting on a bench outside with a cup of coffee or walking, alone, across a desolate English moor, or surfing—again alone—on the beach could be a public-health risk? And how did anybody believe a thin piece of cloth, with pores of a size many magnitudes greater than the virus itself, could offer an effective barrier to transmission? How indeed. On the subject of masks, I also wrote today, at greater length, about a new study which shows that wearing face coverings did nothing to reduce the risk of infection by the Omicron variant of COVID. I can’t say I’m shocked. Researchers from the University of East Anglia looked at survey data taken from large-scale public surveys during the pandemic which assessed rates of infection and also gave details of personal habits, including social and work behaviour, and mask-wearing. By analysing these data, the researchers found that wearing face coverings did not reduce the risk of infection by the Omicron variant at all. The researchers claim, however, that during the first wave of COVID-19, before the emergence of the Omicron variant, wearing a mask was associated with a decreased risk of infection. But other evidence, including other studies, suggests even that isn’t true. At the very least, we can say that during the pandemic, we had no effective guide—no clear data, no clear precedents—as to the effectiveness of masking. Many people forget that we were told, in the beginning, not to wear masks. Remember that? It was because, we were told, even if you had a proper medical-grade respirator, only a professional could fit one properly and ensure an effective seal. In the very early days, it was the few mask-wearers, usually equipped with proper respirators and even military gasmasks, who were considered weirdos, and the non-mask wearers were the sane majority. And then, overnight, it was the other way around. We just did it and swallowed the uncertainties, the cognitive dissonance. We would be wrong, however, to believe that the irrational has somehow just intruded into medical practice and public health recently. A 1957 paper in the American Sociological Review, titled “Ritual and Magic in the Control of Contagion,” looked at protective measures against tuberculosis in a veterans’ hospital. The author, Julius Roth, showed that the uncertainties surrounding the transmission and the effectiveness of techniques like ultraviolet sterilisation and wearing of personal protective equipment, led to the “ritualization” of safety procedures in ways that made little rational sense. These uncertainties, Roth added, “also leave the way open for irrational practices that can properly be called ‘magic’.” For example, hospital workers were aware that they were not consistently sterilising items that entered the hospital, but they still carried on: books were sometimes sterilised, for example, but money, never. Although medical personnel were required to wear personal protective equipment at all times, visitors to the wards weren’t. Even so, doctors and higher-ups would frequently flout the rules for wearing masks and caps—probably because they knew they didn’t work as barriers and that nobody would challenge them for doing so—whereas the lower-downs wore their gear rigorously. Patients were forced to wear masks when they were moving around the hospital on “business,” but when they socialized, including sitting in a crowded room for hours watching movies, they didn’t have to wear them. As Roth put it, acidly, “The rules suggest that the tubercle bacillus works only during business hours.” Wearing Face Masks Did Nothing To Reduce Risk of Infection with COVID Omicron Variant: New Study5/19/2024 Wearing a mask did nothing to reduce the spread of the Omicron variant, according to new research out of the UK Wearing face coverings did nothing to reduce the risk of infection by the Omicron variant of COVID, according to a new study from the University of East Anglia. The researchers used data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) COVID survey in England which estimated how many people had infections. From November 2021 to May 2022, the ONS also asked individuals about their circumstances and habits—including mask-wearing, work habits and travel—to see if those factors could be linked to risk of positivity. By analysing this data, the researchers found that wearing face coverings did not reduce the risk of infection by the Omicron variant at all. The researchers claim, however, that during the first wave of COVID-19, before the emergence of the Omicron variant, wearing a mask was associated with a decreased risk of infection. Co-author Dr. Julii Brainard said, “This isn’t totally surprising because laboratory evidence suggests that the omicron variant was better able to infect the cells lining the upper respiratory tract than previous variants and so be more transmissible.” |
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