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MHM statement of purpose. Should I email you? Should I put this on your action item list? You decide your own love love involvement. We are the Proper Broadcasting Network. You are now listening to the Patriot Power Hour, the newest show of the Prepper Broadcasting Network. This live episode features the situational awareness you need to practice self reliance and independence. Introducing your hosts, Ben the Breaker of Banksters and Future Dan, the editor of Future Danger dot Com. Patrick Power Hour Live once More, April twenty third, twenty twenty six, Episode three hundred and forty four. Ben the Breaker of Banksters here with Future Dan. Three forty four. Let's do it. Let's do it. Ben, Let's roll right into it. Man, how about we just hit the dashboard unless you have a topic to start with. I want to hit the dashboard because there's a lot just looking right at us. We've got black on red grade one, but they're different, new things emerging. Yeah, let's get into it. Let's see what's going on. Well. Earlier today, James Walton himself talked about SPLC, Southern Poverty Law Center indicted by DOJ for fraudulently funding extremist groups charged with defrauding donors with payments to informants, simultaneously funding, raising money to fight, and advising law enforcement on how to arrest the same quote unquote violent extremist POTUS forty six directly involved. Yep, another Alex Jones was right. I remember him talking about SPLC fifteen years ago when I first started talking about him, and of course with Charlottesville, that was a big one. So that's one of the SAHTF. Let's keep rolling in that column. We'll identify a couple of other extreme news items later, but starting with potentially the biggest one of the day, but some other big ones under riots, erupt mob rex, fiery, havoc on New York Intersection, lots of news in the foreign black ops suspected. We've been seeing this heat up big time in the last year and really in twenty twenty six, generally FBI to probe cases of missing scientists. Yet another NASA scientists dead, nuclear propulsion expert found charred inside a crash Tesla. FBI is officially investigating the reports. And as we've covered, all the staff our secretive government are at government laboratories. Many are scientists, but even one was an executive assistant to very high level other foreign black ops. Iranian woman arested for helping Iranian regimes sell drones. A Chinese national was arrested after photography after photographing US doomsday plane and other military aircraft at oph Air Force Base. So lots of smoke. Where's the fire, We'll keep keep on it. Pacific commander says victory over Iran needed to deter Chinese attack on Taiwan. The US and Philippines launched the biggest ever drill with a large Japanese contingent as an ally for the first time in modern history. So US Philippines in Japan are working together. DA warns of expanding Chinese missile threat. So this is all in the security column today. Let's move on super quickly to economics and money, finance, etc. We're past thirty nine trillion in debt, We're going on forty thirty nine, going on forty man, where does the time go? Adding two trillion every year, not just one trillion, So we're aging double quickly in that regard. Another article is a vicious treasury market emergency at our doorstep and the highest rated in the economics column, but still kind of mid level but important. Trump deploys five Defense Production Act memos for American energy put an American energy production into overdrive. And then fourth column, the third we're going to review tonight, but the fourth to the right health nature, starting with a reckoning underway at FDA. Learn about that, check that out, we'll do so here later. And then wildfires wildfire seasons picking up. I hadn't seen any real wildfire news over the winter as expected, but here we are mid to late April. We're seeing multi state red flag warnings, strong winds, very low humidity across the central US. Sixteen thousand acres burned in Georgia, dozens of homes destroyed Florida as well. So this is Georgia and Florida. We're not even necessarily talking about out far out west. And that's it for the health nature type of news. So let's go to the last column of the night. Start with the lower graded news. First, US Navy fires on and marine sees Iranian cargo vessel challenging the blockade. So the Iranian cargo vessel tried to challenge the blockade, fired upon and seized. And then in Mexico, two Americans killed in Mexico car crash, for CIA officers leaving a drug elaboradet forget about that war going on down there. DOJ sued to prevent collection of state voter lists. And then we have two more SHTF level articles. First, Supreme Court considers warrantless phone searches by digital dragnets so easy to unreasonably search and seize these days, So SCOTUS is looking into that. We'll follow that closely. And then the FCC Federal Communications violates major telecoms Seventh Amendment right to jury trial. Supreme Courts here and that as well. So two big cases we're talking about here on Patriot Power Hour Future Day. That's Newsblitz. Where do you want to go? Yeah? Good one? Ben as a footnote, that's off It air Force Base, Very sensitive air Force base. Off It sounds like off the off It YEP. Where it's located. I figured it's Germany the way I pronounced. It out west. I can't recall the state right now, might be Nebraska, okay, And that's where the doomsday planes are. They're called the doomsday planes because those are the planes that very you know, senior people in the administration, in national command authorities, they go airborne if it ever, looked like we were about to be struck, right. So Omaha, Nebraska, the most central place in the entire United States. I pulled it and I was not in the Air Force and I pulled that one. And the reason why I. There's many Air Force bases I could not tell you a single thing about, but. Office that often has those planes, and. For a Chinese student to be walking around photographing them is like, that's that's that's brazen. In fact, oh absolutely had uh. They You might expect something like that at a small reserve base that should be big trouble enough, but not that certainly not something like Vandenburg. But they've been having some issues at Vandenburg and other places as well. This is just the most recent one. Chinese national was arrested actually at JFK Airport in New York after or he was trying to leave Nebraska and plan to target another installation twenty one year old, so perfect asset. There probably been brainwashing as he's a little kid, you know. And the Iranian woman arranging drone sails also I believe picked up at the airport. So what is obviously the standard practices once they identify spies, they leave them alone and just absolutely surveil them to try to, you know, learn learn even more about their objectives and their network. Right, But if you're about to get as soon as you hit the airport, you're not going anywhere. I won't go into a diatribe about why I freak out every time I go through airport security. No, I got nothing on my record, But I'm like, you know, this is where all the global surveillance state kind of comes in, especially if you're going overseas. And folk about black ops suspected really heating up. It's really heated up in the last what fourteen months of the Trump administration. But I suspect the espionage under Biden was all time high, out of control, and this is simply the new president coming in and redirecting the FBI away from him and towards the spies in the country. Yeah. I've seen tons of roaches everywhere now in the past that many roaches are more were under the floorboards doing what they do. No one really noticed, no one tried to get them out. Now trying to fumigate a little bit, and they're scattering everywhere. That's good hop you know for everyone that we learn about I'm sure there's several others potentially that they don't let us know about. And it's two double sword, right, the the ability to conduct espionage is maximized by a free society. Right, So you know, I'm not I'm not surprised that we're seeing this now, the scientists getting killed. That's that's like I said last week in episode three forty three, that if that leads back to foreign you know, intelligence agencies, that that might be somewhat dangerous and historic if they're actually actively killing you know people and have figured out, you know, how to target them, like which scientists are working in secret access prom programs. They're called SAP by the US government and SAP and if you're a scientist, we're getting a SAP and later getting assassinated. Yeah, that's a big problem. Huntsville, Alabama one of the main HQ's of NASA. And the FBI. There you go, and the Army there you go. Wow. And in fact it's the Army space of Missile Defense Command. You know it could aligns and is adjacent to the NASA. Right, so it's. Huntsill is a very vital area for US. And this guy lived there twenty nine year old nuclear Thermal propos Pulsion team leader, nuclear engineer. This is what the report says. Got to take it for what it is that he left his wallet and phone at home, got into his tesla. Obviously wealthy guy, very nice, safe tesla. But the car was discovered colliding with the guardrails, slamming into trees, erupting in flames. Could he just have made a mistake, Could he been suicided? I don't know, But when you have like a dozen ano of these happened in the recent future or excuse me, in the recent past, it's a tread. But I don't know if it's a trend, but it's it's definitely needs to be investigated to make sure it's is or isn't. And I think that's what you reported and heat map dashboard is in fact, it's now that although I would have to believe the FBI was well aware of anything like this after only one or two and especially the Air Force Research Laboratory retired Air Force general and the commander of AFRL went missing, Like there's no chance that someone that senior wasn't. Immediately reported to the FBI. Is hey that hey, that happened? I mean it's not like they're just suddenly waking up. The FBI has been well aware that this could happen to us. Soviets we're running wild in this country during certain decades. Toob from my very uh basic knowledge and experience, if you have a top secret clearance, you have to report in if you're leaving the country, and even probably do other stuff too, so like you being totally kidnapped or just disappearing. And these people are way higher than just like you know, your average semi you know, cleared person or whatever that has to still follow those requirements. So I would almost wonder they got freaking implants in these people, to be honest. Real quick quick primer on how our government organizes this. So essentially there's three classifications level levels, but there's really a fourth because there's like unclassified but controlled information, like the penalties aren't there, but you're it's supposed to be controlled, like its secret, you know, you know, and then confidential secret and top secret, and when when you're in the realm of top secret. Then there's other kinds of top secret there. And these scientists, if they're working on military programs or you know, nuclear propulsion, right, that's not something that any commercial entities allowed to do in the United States. That's military. So those people are in special access programs. They hold a top secret clearance, but they're in an S A P. Sometimes sometimes they're called STO S. Same idea and how it worked, it sends from principles of keeping secrets that go back way back then, right like if you do the history on how Puritans in England organized to avoid, you know, persecution by the Church of England, they would they would get into compartments, small groups. And and and and and make it. All these choke points where nobody knew who else was a Puritan, and they kept it that way so they could worship secretly. So we do that with technology programs. There'll be a list of people that have access to only one piece of a of a major project, and they have they have no knowledge of other pieces that they don't have to have knowledge of, and they get what's called red on, Right, they go to join the program, they get hired, accepted. They're going to be on that program. They get read on and. It's a very strict security brief in it says this is what you must never to your dying breath. This is you're not going to speak ever about this ever. And then the day you quit working on it, you leave the compartment and they read you off and they again warn you like. Never to speak of this. And that way the government can keep track if a secret is if they find out a secret has been escaped the system, they go back. And be like, all right, who had that knowledge? And they can go. Look at the lists, and the list will very quickly tell them these are the only These are the twelve people that could have known that, right or over the last twenty years. Here's the forty people. Twelve of them currently are on the program, and there's forty still alive. They could possibly have leaked that. Like that's how that those scientists that are mysteriously dying. They're not gonna they're not gonna say this out loud, but highly likely most of them were in those compartments and they know things that potentially a foreign adversary, you know, either wants to know from them or they just want to remove the talent from the on in the compartments right now, just you know, basically, you know, hamper the programs by killing the members of the of the compartments. Several years ago, they would kill Iranius scientists all the time, right, we killed their head. Nicular scientists killed that. So why wouldn't a state actor or some other I don't know who you have hypothesis on who this could be, or is there any. Kinda or Russia on the top of the list, and and and no, I don't believe it non state actors would be incentivized to do this. Not to say that Russia and China couldn't cloak themselves and put parties in between them and what's happening. But ultimately it goes back to what it what. You know, state intelligence agency could be behind this or or they can all be accidental. Right, Nothing says that it has to be a plot or conspiracy. But trust me, inside the security establishments that they know this is happening, they're well aware that they are well aware that this always could have happened. And I also saw a report that supposedly some new article put out that China is reporting it's scientists disappearing and mysteriously dying. For all we know, there's that level of clandestine warfare going on right now. That's kind of where my head was going. And I was like, well, that's you know, pretty pretty intense behind the scenes violence going on. If you're literally whacking each other's scientists. Doesn't mean we're gonna have nuclear war in the next day. But that's not normal relations by any means. No, Well, it can't last long, that's the thing. If all these twelve people, the Air Force general he was retired, right, so that and he disappeared too, So you know what knowledge did he used to did he have from previous compartments that somebody might want to capture him for? But you know, somebody dying in at Tesla could be just an accident. But we're watching it on Patriot Power our episode three forty four. It's it's a big deal right now, this this this spring. When it all goes hand in hand with the UAPs and advanced technology, whether it's aliens or human made or some sort of artifacts that were reverse engineered, whatever you want to say. You know, this all has to do with advanced propulsion, gravity and energy, which is all really cool and sounds like sci fi. But we're in the year twenty twenty six, so it's real stuff going on here. Any other thoughts on that or any other UAPs you've been talking big time about how those have been used demonstrated on the world stage kind of, you know, and Iran, And I believe he said Venezuela even but you know, where does that standing anything else you want to say on that, Well. We don't we don't have a hot war with Iran right now. Season tankers doesn't quite qualify, especially since nobody's dying on those raids. So we're we're in a ceasefire for the past couple of weeks or so. And as a consequences, you know, I'm not keeping as a sharp eye out if if there's and I heard Senator on the radio before I turned this on use no word that I think is maybe a code word among people that have been read in right members of Congress that when you hear them talking about exquisite capability, I think they're referring to, you know, technologies that the rest of the world doesn't, you know, even begin to acknowledge could exist. And I believe it's ISR, which is intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance, which the difference between any of the three is relatively meaningless to the you know, if. You're outside of the military. But if the same thing isr knowing what's what anywhere you want to know. So I'm still of the opinion that, you know, when Trump talks about and he has talked about, you know, weapons or capabilities or you know, he said things like we got stuff you wouldn't believe he said that many times, I believe it's that's what he's talking about. But no, not since the war, the hot ward, you know, stopped at least for the time being, I haven't seen anything on that. Also. I want to also mentioned just because the headline that you read in the heat map Plitzkrieg was it's it's like a few days old. I think. I think the number of acres in Georgia burning you said five thousand, that those fires are way worse tonight in in northern Florida, southern Georgia. Some serious natural disaster going on, and I think during at least during the period of future danger, I haven't seen giant wildfires this far east. Right, that's the thing. It's not out west. And as of last night it was sixteen thousand acres on that one fire, but in total twenty two thousand, and again you know, they were only ten percent contained. So I'm sure several thousand more acres will be burned before it's all said and done. And I don't think Georgia and Florida fier response necessarily has the you know, at least the same skill what level as you'd see in California or Colorado. So if you're down there, boy, that's one of those things. Don't if you're even thinking that you might want to evacuate, you should probably find out find a hotel out of state, but you know, a little bit north of where you are, where you are, and wait and see if that gets worse. Pretty amazing satellite footage here. You can see we're playing it for those who are watching either live or on the archive. On the video, we've been showing the articles and now here's a satellite satellite compilation. So Pineland road fire, it's only mid April. Needs some rain. I know a lot of the country's under drought right now, so hopefully this won't become something we report on an increase in the dangerous articles throughout the summer. But need rain country wide, I know. That, yeah, yeah, And this is pure natural right, so you know, unlike those things that are political and calm one and calm two and in the political economy calm three. These are things that. Could be you know, off the radar immediately as soon as these fires are contained, and I definitely hope that's true. Let's look here, let's say this before I forget it. The FDA reckoning at the FDA Food and Drug Administration. Wow, we've seen heads roll at the CDC as well. But this article here a future danger dot com came out earlier this week and it's all about the FDA officials investigating pediatric deaths following COVID vaccination. The first reviews since the rollout of vaccines came out. So there's a lot of infighting between a lot of these organizations because there's the old old guards still trying to hold in in there. I mean places like the Federal Reserve. The old guard has not even been pushed out at all yet. But we'll talk about that later. But at the FDA, at the CDC, Kennedy and others are definitely making big changes here and so trying to work some things out here. I hope more and more truth comes out. That's all I care about. It'll be ugly, but it's better than everything being just covered up. What do you say, yeah, every time we do this, I got to put it back into the context of the heat map dashboard. This is in the indicator of danger. Entitled you know, vaccination effects exposed. And if you look at it simplistically, you're like, well, that's a good thing, right, transparency, we're learning it won't happen again. Yeah, but there's always you know, kind of this pendulum that oftentimes when people are scared and this stuff scares people, you know, swings the pendulum the other direction. And now there's such a reticence to actually use an emergency vaccine when, for example, you know, six generations Chinese hybrid warfare turns to another bioattack that is significantly more lethal than COVID nineteen, and now best part of American population bo't take a VACS. That under that those circumstances might really be a good idea. M that's a great point, the pendulum swinging. I know, I probable will never take a vaccine ever again. So but we'll see, you know, if everyone's dropping dead and it's the only way out, well, I take the long term death of a vax or immediate death of the new bubonic plague. Hard to say hard to say. I won't trust the vaccine ever again, though, I'll tell you that myself so good in fighting, keep getting the truth out, keep destroying everything for posterity's sake at least. I'm sure when the Democrats get back into power, they just will ignore all the findings that came out though. Anyway, but we have people must remember. You know, you're playing the odds with that point of view, and I respect that. But there could from nature, without any secret lab program, that, no big pharma, none of the things that are suspected, the patenting of viruses, that something could emerge from nature that it is really lethal, and it is a smart idea to take up, you know what, you know, because vaccines weren't always unsafe, right, like the measles vaccine, the polio vaccine. Those things always did, you know, save a lot of lives. It's in recent years that we're worried about it, right, and it for all the right reasons. We reported on it heavily on Patriot Power Hour, on Future Danger. You know the scam that was the you know, the the virus out of China and then and then the you know, the double punch with a with a vaccine that was highly suspicious. That's why it's dangerous to me. There could be cases in scenarios where we really. Ought to be vaccinating something and people won't, and I felt. It was a trap myself. Just now, it wasn't a vaccine. It was gene therapy mRNA manipulation, not actually a vaccine, So don't let them have to call it a vaccine. It was GEEP therapy experimental. So yeah, it's definitely different than the polio vaccine. There's smallpox by far. Yeah, perfect example. You don't have to have mRNA to have a vaccine. You do have to test it for a long time, or you got to go to emergency use authorization. And I still believe that any emergency use authors authorized vaccine has to be entirely voluntary. You cannot force people ever to take it. Right. That's a good point for sure. Because like this study right here, you know it killed an infant, the COVID nineteen vaccination nation. It's the evidence is coming out. It's a reckoning in the FDA. Hey, why don't we talk about I want to jump over to Calumn one. I want to get into the rarely rarely active. In fact, you can give me a favor, maybe hit the hit the link. That is the title of you know, the Seventh Amendment Jury trial issue. Do we have anything ever? Yeah, I guess only one other one for January sixth. The judge refuses to let pot US forty five see evidence in his own j six trial from November twenty twenty three. So it's kind of in that zone of the Seventh Amendment and what some of the men as well, all about fording you know, what kind of trials you could have, right, And it's in the back half of the ten Amendments that we talk about much less often. But it is sort of fascinating what has happened here, and I'm going to try to summarize it for our listeners in a nutshell. Okay, So, you know, if if you're fine, you have a right to you know, a jury trial. Right, if the government's. Going to come and take money out of your pocket because it's said you did something wrong, it's supposed to be able to go before judge and a jury. The third branch of government, you know, the judicial branch. Well, during the Roosevelt years with the establishment of the Federal Communications Commission and over time this great, big, what was thought of as an expedient way of administrative law came about. And the ministry of law is when the executive branch access judge and jury and imposes fines. And it because of the size of the companies, the very large multinationals and the very large national companies, the huge corporations that grew, you know, since the time of Roosevelt through now, you know, it became kind of you know, locked in that they were just gonna stuffer those fines and probably passed their finds onto their customers eventually and just you know, never demand a trial, a legitimate Seventh Amendment trial. Well that's changed, and AT and T and Verizon have stood up to the FCC and it was fines that were imposed, i believe under Biden for you know, not taking care of users data. So this cuts the other way too. And there's another you know thing that you know, the surveillance state and your data and my data. So it's you know, it's not like the plaintiffs in this are necessarily sympathetic to us, but if you look at it, you know, in cold constitutional logic, they've stood up to FCC and said, you know, you know, you're putting us in this position where if we don't pay the fine, maybe the Department of Justice will come after us and sue us to get the fine, or maybe they won't, but we don't know. Plus, at the same time, periodically the same agency, the FCC, can withhold our rights to broadcasts on airwaves. Total New Deal Roosevelt era stuff, you know, total Atlas shrug capture state, regulatory state stuff. But in this case, the Trump Department of Justice went before the Supreme Court, it basically admitted something that you know would obviously Biden's lawyers wouldn't have admitted, which is if at and Tea and Verizon didn't want to pay the fines, they didn't have to, right, And that undermined the executive branch the FCC's case and is probably going to result in a significant president that from my perspective, restores the third branch of government in these things. And for you, the breaker bankster's heads up, the FCC goes down this way, watch and see what pressure is on the SEC next, scaries, exchange commit and the financial regulatory state much much worse than the telecoms. Right, But they're the banksters. So having this kind of it's repressing to see the you know, the Seventh Amendment get renewed. Brett Kabana, Supreme. Court Justice is is smart on these things and he was leading the questioning. So a lot of court watchers think that, you know, we're going to see that restored, and that you know, FCC like entities can't just show up at the worst step of a business and say, hey, that's a fifty million dollar fine. Pay it. Well. There's definitely the issue about the intersection of government and big corporations, and sometimes they're adversarial, but a lot of times it's a slap on the wrist and actually a rubber stamp to allow them to get away with worse crimes. But mostly focus on the banksters in that regard, like JP Morgan finds for precious metal manipulation, which is like two percent of the profit they made off of even though it was a lot of money they had to pay, they weighed way more profit. But anyway, that was really one of the first things that went through my mind. I've been looking at this and after hearing you talk about it, was okay, let's apply this to all the other executive branch overreaches and there's a lot that have been built up in the last one hundred years or whatever eighty years. And they will. Companies will, if AT and T and Verizon did it. Those are some big ones. There's gonna be a lot of people saying to the SEC now will in fact, this was possible because of previous SEC ruling just a few years ago that headed in this direction of restoring jury trial, taking away administrative law. This is this decision will be a big step in it. The only reason I got on heat map dashboard is grade one happening now is that for the time being, FCC still has this power to do this to companies. You know, there's sort of a. I don't know, I want to say it since sensualized, kind of a false positive on the heat map dashboard. But there's really no other way to record this, you know event which was a you know, the Supreme Court hearing on the issue. So we talked a little bit about this before the show. Let's see if I can pose the question correctly. The way things are set up, it's kind of a top down control where you know, the organization is being you know, find monitored, regulated by the federal government. But what that should be replaced with is jury trial. And maybe you can run us through why a jury of appeers, just jury of regular old people would actually be beneficial instead of extremely sophisticated attorneys that get paid hundreds and hundreds of thousand dollars a year at the or at the FCC or all these other places. You know, they should you know, one theory is they should be the ones that are regulating and making the decision. But your theory, and I guess the constitutional theory is that the average twelve people averagel citizens, that is, should be able to make the decision. But everything's so complicated these days. How can you square that? Well? The Roosevelt White House said the same thing, right, all the new technologies in the nineteen thirties, only the experts can understand it. Today, You and I can understand most of the technology is pretty fast that we're in effect then, But most average people back then couldn't either, right, So it's all relative, you know, And do you want a technocracy? Do you want the experts ruling you? Right? That sounds like dystopia to me. So you know, it's one of those. Things, right that you know paraphrase Church, Will you know, there's democracy is the worst way to do this, but it's clearly better than everything else. So who's responsible for in dieting or bringing about a grand jury or any of that. I don't know the technicals, but if SEC or the FCC is not supposed to be doing it, or DOJ do OJ brings it up and then the. Attorney channel does it, why don't why don't they want to do it? Why don't they try to power grab? Isn't that what's supposed to happen, Like they were like, Hey, that's my jurisdiction, let me do it type of stuff, right or no. It was just this consensus in Washington from the thirties through the twenty twenties that experts could best decide these things and levy these fines, and you know, go down to you know, Wall Street veterans today and try to talk to them about what it would mean if you know, to the entire you know, to everything on Wall Street, if the SEC couldn't just show up and find at will and companies just fuck under and immediately paid, Like if every single one of those went to trial with discovery and actual rights that are afforded in court. Because when you're an administrative court with the agency. When the FCC lays this fine on AT and T and Verizon, they have all these quasi judicial processes. But at the end of the day, the judge the FCC, you know, administrative law judge, works for the agency. He's not neutral, he's not a third branch of government. It's it's it's. Fundamentally anti constitutional to have done what became. It's just it's just a little bit of chipping away of the of the new deal state that we got after the Great Depression. And honestly, I like to see it, and I honestly think Trump is going to do more to tear down long precedents eighty years, right, lifetimes a president in the United States, so that population doesn't know, you know, doesn't know any better. Right, everybody grew up and got a job on Wall Street just automatically thinks, oh yeah, SEC can find us, right, changing that around could be healthy. Well two things, maybe finish it off on my end the in my opinion, I'll just stick to the SEC. But I'm sure it applies to a lot of these other they're running cover for them. Their experts are there to you know, pretty much deflect and frame up and whitewash everything else except for the true evil actors, the real banksters. So they bust some of the mid level and low level like Bernie Madoff's, but they'll never go after Jamie Diamond as a simple clear example. But number two, I'm all about what we're talking about here. But if they just remove all the regulatory oversight, you though it's mostly bad, let's just say there's a little good to it. Let's just pretend there is some good to it. But if they don't bring in actual constitutional enforcement and restraint, then things will get worse than ever and it really will be like technocracy corporate elites that run roughshot. So like, if we need to replace the leaky dam we can't just like blow up the damn that's leaky and crappy and always was bad idea and then not replace it, you know, with what we know should work. Well, you know, the uh and oh one more thing from a bankster level. And you kind of spark this idea in my head of when I was kind of like, well, well, people understand what's going on. You're like, well, the lawyers that are defending and also on the plaintiff side of these battles will have to explain it to the average person with just a high school education or whatever the average citizen of the US is. So they're gonna have to bring it down to more basics. And I feel like the banks to financial engineering would not pass the smell test if you know how to break it down to like twelfth grade logic, you know what I mean. It wouldn't. It wouldn't. It was denial. The founders meant for it to be this way. It was the New Deal that imposed the secs, fccs, FECs, right, and they would still be regulators. They would just do criminal referrals to the or civil referrals to the agency that's supposed to prosecute that before a court. Of law at a jury trial. Three branches of the government, right, that's a big thing that happened. Right before World War One, we got a quasi fourth branch of government, the FED, and then after the Great Depression, we got a long list of supposedly independent agencies. If the president can't control it, could go throwing down fines on people that don't even get a jury trial. So I see some balance coming back to things. And you have a conservative court, you know, in the Roberts Court right now, and there's gonna be big changes in this regard. It's gonna it's gonna shake up the banksters before you know it. Ben, this is the type of thing that you see the headlining like, oh well, this ain't Iran or this ain't I don't know. Here on Prepper Broadcasting Network, we're looking for like the big ticket items. But this is really the underlying fabric of a lot of society. So you got it. Kind of took me a little while to get warmed up to it and understanding the importance of it. But definitely you don't get many Seventh Amendment triggers on the heat map dashboard. So we take a look at. Jury of your peers and speedy trial or with speedy trial all the different one. I thought they're the same. But yeah, you know, I thought all the aspects of a trial that are guaranteed by the Constitution of your peers and jurisdiction, et cetera. You know, you know that that stuff's important and individuals, we still get that right. That hasn't gone by the wayside. But you're right, he's in the captured regulatory state. Things got really weird for many decades. And you know, it could be a majority opinion by Kavanaugh that snaps a lot about that that back to an originalist point of view, brings a third branch government in jury trials. Hey, a lot more discovery, right, a lot more public things come out. Right, So if if JP Morgan was ever in one of these, you know, in court, we would learn things that could really lead to great reform. Right, little threads that others could pull on, especially, and they would modern internet exactly. It's like, yeah, thousands of independent investigators just like prying over every sentence and the deposition for example, which would be awesome. That'd be great interesting. I want to see more of this type of stuff for sure. What else we got here on the news blitz? I mean we got no. We've been been on for about forty five minutes. Let's plug super quick Prepper Broadcasting Network. If you're not a member already, be so then you need to get no more ads and it's just a one time payment. You can of course do like month to month. But future Dan and I are lifetime members of Prepperbroadcasting Network dot com. So suggested for everybody Future Dan well I don't want to spoil anything, but we're gonna have one of the sponsors, and I won't spoil it either of the network though. We're gonna be implementing or integrating that into a future exercise of ours, so looking forward to that. But anyway, all the sponsors that you hear and see on Prepper Broadcasting Network definitely give him a shout. Future Dan, where do you want to go from here? I don't know why I want to go from from all the news and the network and prep into it. Maybe I want to step back and just I don't know why. I just thought about this, and I wonder how it shapes this show now that I'm thinking about it. And it's the fact that over the course of my life, I have lived, on average, well within two hour drive from the Atlantic Ocean. Now I've lived up and down the entire East Coast, and for you know, less than four years of my life I've lived, you know, significantly, you know, inland right in the United States a way, but but that's total four years of my life. And you, however, if I'm an Easterner, you're pretty much a Westerner or Midwesterner because you split time in in the West and Midwest, and and your average distance from the Atlantic over the course of your life where you lived is like. Many times more than me because he grew. And it got me thinking because when I did later, you know, when I grew up and started traveling around the United States, and I'm talking, you know, I've traveled the United States. I just haven't lived very far away from the Atlantic coast. And I've always kind of wondered, like why Westerners they always seem to have a, you know, just generally a deeper distrust of the United States. Now, I won't say that my father was from Texas, Oklahoma region, him and his families, and I would say it would be it would be accurate to say that he had less trust, uh you know then then then than on average. And I've I don't why in the last few days I thought about this, but I thought I'm gonna mention it on Patriot Power. Get your take, because you know, you and I have a generational difference. We'd see things differently from different generations. I'm gen X, you're gen y millennial, but also you're a Westerner or a Midwesterner. Be interested in which one do you really think you are? But I'm straight up a Lant Coast guy, always have been, probably always will be. Hmmm. I got a few ideas I would say now it's not as important probably as fifty years ago, let alone one hundred and fifty years ago, but there's probably some trends or you know, correlations still. Of course, real West they love the government more than anything, freaking California, Portland, Seattle or straight up status over there. But do they love the federal government like the us DC, or do they want their own like communists, you know, West Coast equivalent. That's a question for them. But uh, you know, first off, the type of people that would come to America generally from the old world didn't trust government as much as your average bear. And then if you're gonna leave, if you're gonna leave like Philadelphia or Charles did or New York where you first came in, whatever, then you probably like the further you go. You probably want to get away from all the elite, and you'd see them as kind of rich and snobby. You want to get away from the snobby East Coasters. That's probably how I look at it. Do you consider yourself Midwesterner or or or Rocky Mountain Westerner. I mean I lived almost there's like three sections of my life that are almost exactly the same at this point, where it is rocky mountains and then Indiana and then you know, I guess East Coast, but not like I've only been to the Atlantic Ocean maybe ten times. Oh my god, you really aren't in atlantisis are you? No? I mean ten times since I lived here. But when I was a kid, I went a few times. So I've probably been in the Atlantic Coast like twenty times in my life. It's only been in the Pacific Ocean a few times. For what it's worth. Yeah, yeah, it doesn't. It does reflect you know, I am East Coast. I always you know, in the education establishment and and and my mother's family was you know constantly you know, never never went west, so you know, I but I have a perspective because my father was from the West, so I but now to realize that that's a I think it has a legacy effect on you know, our viewpoints. I trust the government as little as you do. Domestically. My think it's a wide gap when it comes militarily, like you know, not not just the fact that I'm a veteran, but that you know, when when when when we were talking about our armed services out in the world opposing other armed services, you know, I got a lot more trust in them than perhaps Westerner does. I don't know. Yeah, that one might be more generational than geography, but maybe. You think so because about people by age from the West, and for the West to go, the less they trust. I think the military felt like that. Go talk to people in Las Vegas or Los Angeles is like not well, you know nothing like you know, Southeast United States. Go talk to go back to anybody in Georgia about the. Military versus some of those other places, and trusting trusting the military in Georgia is gonna be South Carolina. It's like gonna be rare individuals that were you know, don't trust that we got change of command that would do the right thing if if, if, if it called for it. Oh great segue if I could had the baby was fired? Right? So yeah, ahead of everybody fire recent in the last year or so, what's going on here? Yeah? And I don't know if that plungs on the heat map dash where he's not a uniformed flag officer, but he's top civilian in the Navy, and. That guy might have been between a rock and a hard place. I'm only guessing, and. Just just if I had to guess, like the inability to uh mind sweep better than we have have been able to could have put a lot of people in tough positions in the Department of the Navy. And it could be there could be some admirals out there that maybe are a little bit defiant of the White House and Secretary Navy is. A lot easier to fire. Than an admiral, right, although this Secretary of War has been doing it and it might might have been a warning. Maybe maybe the secondary Navy just you know, got on the wrong side of of heg Seth and Trump. And this is what's supposed. To happen when you know you have a proper functioning you know, government, senior senior executive schedule appointees, you know, they they serve at the pleasure of the president. It's got to be that way. Is it that they're trying to tell Trump not to be more aggressive and he's like bowling them over or is that too simplistic of a view. It could be that they're being asked to do things that are literally impossible, and the admirals are saying, it's literally impossible to do that, and then this guy's in the in the crossfire, and he, you know, he becomes a casualty as a warning shot, warning shot to some admirals to say, you know, hey, you go do the impossible. Figure it out. Right, Well, that's heads must role at some point. Hey, I'll tell you this. In any organization that where it's impossible to get someone fire like, that organization is a piece of trash, like usually your local government for example. Yeah, and uh, you gotta have a little fear, a little stick in, a little bit of a carrot in life, otherwise you can't keep it good, balance, keep it honest. And with the military, I figured it's ten times more important. Hmm. What's going on in Iran? You said a little bit yourself, not you know, the ceasefire exists because it's not all out bombing, and you know, you know, just because they're destroying boats that might be mining. I mean that seems fair to me, I suppose. But what do you see, what have you seen in the last week, and more importantly, what do you think is gonna happen in the next week? Or two. Uh huh. What I'm seeing in the last week is the after effects of the original strikes in Epicure. And the truth is they pour through so many levels of command that what they got left over with And Trump said it today, he's like I got all the time in the world. He asked to say that, because it's literally going to take that long for the remnants of what was the Iranian regime, you know, at the end of February, like to get it into any kind of shape that it can make a decision. It's it's it's and they've called it the Mosaic defense right at the. Society of Iran. The Iranian you know, Islamic Revolution fragmented into all these little fiefdoms, and it's clear there are there, they're little power centers that can you know, decide to go mind the straight ur muse and make statements, and there's others that are you know, most likely talking to the Trump administration is it's it's gonna take time to settle down to heal enough. And I don't know, he might have to do Epic Fury Part two. Well, oil stayed just under one hundred. Trump did deploy five Defense Production Act memos for American energy. Let's see if I can read that's through them. That's an FDR era or Truman era law. That's really like if you hear Industrial Production Act, that's the literal seizing of the economy by the executive branch ordering businesses to perform business that the US government directs. So it does rate on the the heat dashboard. You know, even even if you agree with why Trump did it, Industrial Production Act powers in the wrong hands could get way out of control. I think Mom Donnie in New York with the involve the Industrial Production Acts, Yeah, that would make you worry. For sure. What an example you got there, Well, that's the you know, that's where you go when you go to war. You gotta put your economy into a war footing. And there's different ways to do that. Well, if you're seeing big time not just spikes and energy prices, but shortages and other parts of the world but not here, well Number one, we better keep our production going gangbusters for ourselves. Number two, now is the time to try to squeeze some more out, maybe get a little more money. You sent me a stat just came out where the percent of international transactions made in US dollars went up quite a lot in relative records, record number a month. So that's that's that's not in the direction of the petro dollar perishing. That's not in the direction of the dollar falling or being you know, rejected. It's quite the opposite. So you know there, you know, we'll see how this turns out. But uh, I'm not I'm not sure that you know, a year from now we'll be talking about you know, d dollarization. The bricks almost have us. You know, if you're a member of the bricks right now, economy is not good for you. No, And that was what I mentioned right before we went on air, is that the reason the US dollars being used more as a percentage that is really not much, if at all, due to organic growth and gangbuster economy. It's more because everybody else is collapsing and partially because of the situation I ran. And it's putting pressure on all the other countries, China in particular, in Russia. Well, it wiped out all those those all those oil transfers, all those ships were round to the United States. You're filling up a tanker in the United States, you're paying dollars. So yeah, exactly. You don't know. Sometimes I heard I think it was actually the zero hedge, the exit counts on zero hedge, you know, not an article of THEIRS yet, but I'd be interested to read it if they get it. But it was a suggestion that there's certain technical things about a very old third world oil exporting infrastructure, like all the ports, all the pipelines, all the tanks, all the all the infrastructure that I Ran. Has had, if it is capped. I don't know. I don't know if this is true, but zero Head was saying it, and it sounds plausible if if it can't continue to flow like it, you two, it actually starts to break, and it breaks in ways that can't be repaired easily. Bye bye. Not by the Ruginian not even by the Iranian regime before midnight hammer, let alone after a midnight hammer and. After epic fury. You know, like like Western companies, you know, tell Off Brown and Root and and and and and and those things, could you know they can go. Get it working again. And I obviously I think that's happening and quietly inside of Venezuela right now. But you know, this idea that the actual infrastructure can break down permanently if it doesn't output at a certain level, and that perhaps that's exactly what Trump's trying to do right now. Well, I worked with a very large factory that was shut down for about two weeks and it took about six weeks to restart it. So it's shut down for two weeks and took six weeks to restart it because so many things were damage seals dried out, and all types of crap went wrong with it. And now it was built off of like forties, fifties, sixties technology and there you go, same thing with Iran. Not only is it stuff old, but it's older technology, but it's literally like old as well. So makes sense. But that's actually meaning that it won't come back online for the world oil market at any point then. Yeah, I mean it could be major leverage that you know, maybe maybe somebody in the remnants of the Iran regime is well aware that you know, they got a clock ticking on them in this regard. Yeah, that and that's. Where the that's where the money focused people in Iran are. But the military focused people in Iran, the remnants of the command of the you know, the Revolutionary Guards, they probably could care less. They probably don't even they think about that, you know, just about as. Far as your typical you know, general officer in the US military. The US military officers aren't you know. Trained to necessarily think about the economics of anything. The civilians in the Pentagon definitely do, but you know, very few uniform officers. It's not their role. They're not, it's not they're not supposed to be worried about that. I guarantee their Revolutionary Guard doesn't doesn't consider that a concern. But if they have the mosaic defense, I mean, they're all blown the hells, just all scattered, little remnants, shattered. They're trying to get back together, I guess, but that's where the warlord rivalries power grabs, not to mention all the outside interference by all types of states, not just the US getting in there with their own. You know, it's gonna get messy. So well they come to a consensus to acquiesce to Trump or do they not need to? I guess, houses the straight going to open even if I ran ever produces oil. What about all the US allies included upstream then aren't able to get anything out right? Now? I don't know, I don't know. I think there's oil to be had elsewhere, and I think the US oil and gas industry is gonna get going to do very well in twenty twenty six. And I don't know how fast that you know, a leadership could rearrange itself. And I ran, but the people that Trump's negotiating with love to see him go. And what you know, look at how long it took after Midnight Hammer last summer before there was major protests and Iran it was January bled to January, right, so go you know, from March to oh, shall we say September October, right before the midterm elections. Will the Iranian people, you know, you know, have been influenced by the perhaps the CIA to get back out on the streets and you know, just just you know, have a revolution, hopefully peaceful relatively peaceful revolution, but you know, an entire change of you know, the you know, the change of the regime. By the way, Trump is saying that this has been regime changed, but it's a very narrow definition of you know, actually eliminating members of the regime. The way of government hasn't changed. And I think if we go back to the first episode of twenty twenty six when you and I made predictions the winter premiere of Patriot Power Hour on January first. I think I threw in a minority percentage chance that I RAN's regime falls this year. I would I'd probably raise that significantly if we did mid mid year predictions. Ben, well, we'll do our I guess hearing about two mon we'll be doing our midyear check in for twenty twenty six predictions, so we can see where we stand and maybe add or modify a couple. For sure, A lot has happened already here in the first half of the year. Not even close to halfway done with the year really still all of May and all of June. In fact, we got one more episode next week in April. We'll be on target for next Thursday, April thirtieth, for a Patriot Power Hour. But future Dan, I think that's about all we got for the night. Did you have any other topics or things when we get off your chest for the night? Yeah? Yeah, answer me? Are you a Midwesterner or a Westerner? I never heard which choice? You can't make a choice, Indiana, Colorado? Which one are you? I'd rather be Colorado? But I've hardly been there in the last thirty years, so it doesn't count. I mean, what your background, you're raising your mind frame, like which state and the people. From it are just. Just make or maybe you know, because I didn't live in either of those places, maybe maybe I'm I'm asking for a dichotomy that isn't there. I'm kind of amalgamation of both. I guess I prefer Colorado just because it's prettier. What would both Colorado's disagree with or agree with that? Most people in Indiana, most Hoosiers would have a different point of view. Can you point to someone that because I can do that up and down the East coast pretty fast, because I know, I know, I know. You know. Of course we have at the north and the south on the east, so it's pretty easy to do. But between Midwest and West, is there something about them that you know from your experience growing up that you'll be like, I know, the way those people thinking, I'm kind of with that that way. Well, I wasn't an adult when I was in Colorado, so I don't know how adults I actually think they're. But they seem to be a bunch of hippie dippies, but you know, they're rich liberal limousine hippies, I think are liberals, limousine liberals where they're very rich, but they're like anti gun and they vote for like Bernie Sanders and shit like that. That's in Colorado. It's not like that, and it is probably the opposite of that, but not necessarily in a good way, but probably better politically, I guess, but I don't know. And he has got a lot of corruption, like small town corruption, and then all the stuff up by Chicago's bad for sure. So it's like they got more like old school like mafia stuff Colorado. I don't know. Maybe now they got more freak and gangs and stuff for sure. But I'm talking about I'm talking about how you as a patriot, you're not those things. He has a patriot, which one formed your patriotism over the horse. Of your lifetime? Which one you keep pointing through. And be like that. That's kind of where. Always over here when I'm here in the East Coast, that's where I became patriot more like for sure, maybe because there's more history here and you know, I visited Mount Vernon and other places and stuff. East Coast elites bring it out of you. Yeah, like I visited Bilderberg, and they don't go to Bilderberg and Indianasto, for example. So I got to visit Bilderberg, got to see Ron Paul in person. You know, I'm sure he did visit Indiana and stuff, but you know, much easier to go to those kind of events. I guess over. Here to the East Coast, being closer to the Atlantic makes your patriotism more acute that accurate. Yeah, it just maybe it activates it more because there's more activity and there's more history and there's more stuff on around here. But I don't know Midwestern there's definitely a lot of patriots out there too, but maybe they you know, it's definitely that's more like a city versus ural thing, too. True, But bring you out of that to hear kind of amplifized it. I can see that, right. Yeah. I've gone and visited the Fed like at least a dozen times in person. You know, you can't do that from you know, Cincinnati or whatever. It's definitely it's more real, you know, It's like when you see it with your own eyes, when you go walk down Wall Street in New York it's definitely more like, oh, the banksters. But in my opinion, I was like, Oh, it's just most of these people just like look like regular people. Just looks like a regular place. But I know it ain't a regular place. But sometimes you get like dark, you know, kind of a dark if you point into it another hand. Sometimes you get it like a bright viewpoint. One time, when I was at Wall Street just walking around all down there, I saw scrawled and graffiti, banksters killed babies. I'm like, holy shit, someone else, there's someone besides me out there. I didn't do any graffiti down there, but it was awesome to see that. Nice episode. I think we're in the books. Ben, thank you for the audience for listening. We really appreciate you. Check out myself and Future Danger predominantly on X at Future Danger number six. Reach out to me there too. How can people reach you, Ben? Bankster Breaker Bankster Breaker on X Also email. I got a couple of emails recently, not from listeners, but proton mail. You can find it in the description of this podcast. So I'm checking that email more often, getting more active. I need to move more stuff to proton mail away from my other legacy email addresses I would guess so. But anyway, Proton mail and X. There you go. We'll be back next. Week folks, probably Thursday night, not concrete, but we're going to aim for Thursdays this year. So good show, Ben, look forward to talk to you then. All right, buddy, catch you later. Another great show in the bag.
