[00:00:00] .
[00:00:30] The year is 2021.
[00:00:37] November 24th, a Wednesday.
[00:00:42] Two men gather chains in the city hall of New York, preparing to hoist a box that will
[00:00:52] cover, enclose and eventually take away a statue of Thomas Jefferson.
[00:01:05] Many of you have forgotten about the removal of the statue of Thomas Jefferson which in
[00:01:09] 2021, the society particularly certain segments of the society had riled themselves up to
[00:01:17] as such a fever that articles like this one could be written in CNN.
[00:01:27] Several cities have made moves to remove controversial statues tied to Confederate symbols
[00:01:32] and leaders connected to slavery.
[00:01:37] Now remember that this great enlightenment, if you want to call it that, this great enlightenment
[00:01:46] came from the death of a criminal who once held unjust as it was, the death.
[00:01:54] George Floyd who once held a knife to a pregnant woman's belly, you know, good guy had
[00:02:02] worked the society up into such a fever that one lifetime politician by the name of Adrian
[00:02:10] Adams had pushed the issue of removing Thomas Jefferson statue from the city hall in New
[00:02:19] York City that sat there for almost 200 years.
[00:02:24] Her comments are interesting to say the least.
[00:02:29] Thomas Jefferson was a slave holder who owned over 600 human beings.
[00:02:34] Council member Adrian Adams co-chair of the Black Latino and Asian caucus.
[00:02:39] But the Asian still a member of that caucus.
[00:02:41] I don't know said in a presentation last month, it makes me deeply uncomfortable.
[00:02:49] This is the most important line in all that she says.
[00:02:52] This is the most important line.
[00:02:54] It makes me deeply uncomfortable.
[00:02:58] What do I always talk to you about PVF the dangers of comfort and convenience?
[00:03:03] It makes me deeply uncomfortable knowing that we sit in the presence of a statue that pays
[00:03:08] homage to a slave holder who fundamentally believed the people who look like me were
[00:03:13] inherently inferior, lacked intelligence and were not worthy of freedom or right.
[00:03:23] And those words and the words of others were enough to remove one of the great men of history.
[00:03:34] You'll believe the I don't know how do you rate the founding fathers fundamentally?
[00:03:40] The man who sat down by candlelight in the mid 1700s or late, late, lagus, later 1700s
[00:03:50] and wrote the declaration of independence.
[00:03:55] Certainly it was read by others and amended to some degree but this is the guy who sat
[00:04:00] down and wrote it.
[00:04:01] This is the guy who paved the way for what is America today.
[00:04:11] Now the reason I bring this up is because I want you all to understand in this moment where
[00:04:18] so much seems unjust and the idiots seem to have full control of the soapbox and the
[00:04:25] phones.
[00:04:29] This story is a reminder of how the lens that we see history through gets clearer and
[00:04:37] clearer the further we get from the event.
[00:04:42] So this is not even three years old but when you look I guarantee you many of the people
[00:04:49] who have worked up into such a fever look back on this now some three years later and go,
[00:04:55] what?
[00:04:57] What did we think that was going to do and now look at New York City less than three years
[00:05:03] later and tell me did the removal of Thomas Jefferson make Adrian Adams a better politician?
[00:05:14] Did it make the people of her of Queens live a better life?
[00:05:24] She's a three term chairperson of the Queens community board.
[00:05:29] New York City Council person I mean is life in New York better was her decision and her
[00:05:36] in other words did this?
[00:05:38] Did this affect her performance in any way?
[00:05:40] Did she become a new woman?
[00:05:41] I never remember her after the statue coming down writing a great paper about how her productivity
[00:05:50] and her mood and her everything has been boosted in life in the 28th district has gotten
[00:05:59] so much better because we've taken this man Thomas Jefferson statue from looming over top
[00:06:07] of me and reminding me that life as a, because what is a looming statue of Thomas Jefferson
[00:06:14] really remind you of?
[00:06:16] Why do we put these statues up?
[00:06:20] If you're honest about it, right?
[00:06:21] If you see everything through the lens of race I can't help you read more read read read
[00:06:27] more particularly about the British history and their history with slavery and read a few
[00:06:34] books about the Civil War and wrap your head around the horrors that one of the most brutal
[00:06:41] wars, you know civil wars in history brought in order to keep this country together and
[00:06:49] end slavery for good in the United States.
[00:06:53] You know, just get acquainted with these things but I never remember reading anything incredible
[00:07:00] about what difference any of this is made in the years to come.
[00:07:07] But it is apparent that the lens gets clear.
[00:07:12] The fever goes away as we get further removed from these idiotic actions that have had
[00:07:18] no effect whatsoever.
[00:07:21] You know here in Richmond, Virginia we destroyed monument avenue which had beautiful statues
[00:07:30] of people who were linked to the Civil War so we could make believe that I don't know
[00:07:34] they didn't exist.
[00:07:35] The Civil War didn't exist one of the great, one of the great sort of, I mean what is it?
[00:07:42] You know what it was?
[00:07:43] Obviously it was a war obviously a lot of people died.
[00:07:49] But it was something, right?
[00:07:50] It was I don't know if I didn't think about this enough to bring it to you today this way.
[00:07:57] It was more than a war, right?
[00:08:00] It was a nation working through several issues, right?
[00:08:06] Several fundamental issues, slavery being the biggest for sure and what was on the other
[00:08:15] side was, you know what we have today which is incredible.
[00:08:18] Do you know what I mean?
[00:08:22] But we destroyed monument avenue because of the same sort of looming, scary looming statues
[00:08:27] of white people who've done bad things in their past in hopes that it would change things
[00:08:34] for the better somehow.
[00:08:38] And then our mayor then our mayor proposes some massive like 10 acre span slavery museum
[00:08:48] to be the center point of Richmond City.
[00:08:52] You know, effectively creating slave city, you know what I mean?
[00:08:58] Come the Richmond's, he's slave city.
[00:09:01] The museum of all things slavery.
[00:09:04] Now I'll tell you, Richmond City Historical Museum would be awesome.
[00:09:12] That I'd love to see.
[00:09:14] Sizeable portion could be definitely dedicated to the things that we as a society seem to
[00:09:20] love to beat ourselves half the death over.
[00:09:27] But this idea that, you know, we took Thomas Jefferson statue out of city hall, drove it
[00:09:33] to a natural history museum or historical society and hit it in a box to improve something.
[00:09:44] To me, it was, you know, laughable and deplorable back then but now looking forward and being
[00:09:50] reminded of it, I was reminded of this event due to something I was listening to on the
[00:09:56] way to dropping the kids off at school.
[00:09:59] And I was reminded of it.
[00:10:01] And I said, you know, wow, even to me the sheer mongoloidal effort that brings something
[00:10:14] like this to actually happen.
[00:10:18] The low resolution thinking that it takes to put a man like this in a box and hide him
[00:10:28] away is just amazing.
[00:10:31] Some three years later, not even three years later.
[00:10:36] And you look at New York City now and you say to yourself, well, thank God the ghost of
[00:10:40] Thomas Jefferson has left this city because now, now we have something to be excited about.
[00:10:47] Huh?
[00:10:48] Now we have much to report.
[00:10:51] Now that we got that lunatic out of there.
[00:10:55] The PBN family, the whole of this point is very simple.
[00:11:00] People are dumb or now than they've been in a long time and I don't mean that in a scathing
[00:11:06] way like I don't mean that in a joking way.
[00:11:09] I don't mean that in the comedic realm.
[00:11:11] It's not meant to be that way.
[00:11:12] It's not many even to be as it's not even meant to be uh to victimize a person.
[00:11:21] People are dumb or now than they ever were.
[00:11:24] I think they, I think they come from dumb parents and they come out of school systems that
[00:11:32] are failures.
[00:11:35] And no one ever really grabs a hold of them and says, you know, you're the luckiest person
[00:11:39] in the world living the greatest nation in the world.
[00:11:42] No one, you know, no one gets their talons in them to give them an appreciation for what
[00:11:48] it is.
[00:11:49] Even an appreciation of this nation is not enough.
[00:11:54] Like you have to look, people are dumb.
[00:11:59] I'm sorry.
[00:12:00] I don't know what to tell you but it's clear to me when you see what we're fighting for
[00:12:06] with all our might.
[00:12:07] When you see what the cross is that we're willing to sacrifice ourselves on the hills
[00:12:12] that we're willing to die on in this day and age.
[00:12:16] You see the great movements that will define an era right?
[00:12:20] The great movements out there here and now that will define an era.
[00:12:24] I want to pee in the ladies room.
[00:12:29] Damn it.
[00:12:33] And you realize that this is a population of people that education, I think, in parenting
[00:12:38] at large, you failed them.
[00:12:41] I really do.
[00:12:44] I really do.
[00:12:45] That's what I see.
[00:12:47] Those are the only conclusions I can come to when I watch what's happening.
[00:12:52] We're going to look back on the further we get from the statue hiding and all that, the
[00:12:57] more we're going to look down at this point in history and say, wow, wow, we thought that
[00:13:06] was going to do something to change something.
[00:13:09] We allowed that to happen.
[00:13:10] That was allowed to happen.
[00:13:13] And all of this will be swiftly followed by what all of this is swiftly followed by
[00:13:17] throughout history statues go missing statues go away statues get crumbled ideas that have
[00:13:24] floated a society forever get crumbled rebellions come murder in the streets.
[00:13:30] I mean, it's you know, is what it is right now.
[00:13:34] And then when you look back on history, say how could a society be so dumb to have fallen
[00:13:38] for that?
[00:13:39] And then you realize because the society was dumb, they were literally dumb.
[00:13:45] Look, listen, let's quote from the man himself now what am I say anyway, what am I what's
[00:13:56] the solution right?
[00:13:57] Because there's no point in calling a bunch of people dumb and not giving them a solution
[00:14:01] to that.
[00:14:02] But we have to maybe it's not reading, maybe it's not there has to be a place in our society
[00:14:11] for understanding our incredible history.
[00:14:14] There has to be a place in society for understanding Western civilization and the greatness of it.
[00:14:22] While you see I don't understand how you can live enveloped in the greatness of Western
[00:14:28] civilization with all the accoutrement, all the comfort, all the convenience of Western
[00:14:33] civilization and at the same time, all the protections and at the same time.
[00:14:41] Sit there on your cell phone and talk about how terrible it is and what what how hell it
[00:14:45] is to live here and how much we need to change it.
[00:14:50] It doesn't even make any sense to me, you know, it makes zero sense to me.
[00:14:56] And I think it's just because people, you know, we don't have, we don't have impassioned
[00:15:01] history teachers to teach about the greatness of America.
[00:15:05] I was lucky enough to have one at an early age, just one, only one that I can remember.
[00:15:09] Mr. Carter funny enough.
[00:15:11] Wow.
[00:15:12] Phoebe and family might, my favorite history teacher of all time really taught me about
[00:15:19] the greatness of America was named Mr. Carter.
[00:15:24] And he never crossed my mind once in the naming of my own son or maybe he did.
[00:15:28] I don't know.
[00:15:29] Maybe he didn't, I didn't even know it anyhow.
[00:15:35] There has to be a place for us to, to be honest and to read and to learn and to watch.
[00:15:40] And I think, you know, maybe Hollywood has a hand in it.
[00:15:43] Maybe, you know, all of, all of society has a responsibility to say, look, we can get
[00:15:49] rebellious and we can get silly and we can have our protests about the pebble in
[00:15:54] the shoe.
[00:15:55] But we also have to understand, you know, listen, we're in the land of milk and honey for
[00:16:02] a reason, you know, and it's not, it didn't come easy.
[00:16:08] I can tell you that much.
[00:16:10] It did not come easy.
[00:16:12] So at the very least, and I think we all would do better with this piece of advice myself
[00:16:19] included.
[00:16:21] You know, I'm not saying that I'm, I stand on a, you know, like I'm some brilliant genius
[00:16:26] or anything.
[00:16:27] I think we'd all do better to study the people that we really hate or that we really
[00:16:36] foist our hatred upon.
[00:16:40] I think this iteration of society would do really well if they wake up in the morning
[00:16:46] incensed and just have to tweet out about their hatred of slavery and how it was propagated
[00:16:55] by, you know, people who look like me.
[00:16:59] I think they would just do good to better study, you know, where slavery is today?
[00:17:07] How slavery was ended?
[00:17:10] Where slavery was ended?
[00:17:11] How early slavery was ended?
[00:17:14] You know, what sort of sacrifices were made all around the world so that slavery could
[00:17:19] be ended in the Western civilization and understanding that it is far from over in the African continent
[00:17:28] and understanding that as far from over in China and other places in the world.
[00:17:35] All of this should be a part of that argument.
[00:17:39] All of this should be up inside of the brain of a woman like Adrian who decides one day
[00:17:45] that she can't stand to have this man staring down upon her even though he is just made
[00:17:51] of plaster because he held views of his time.
[00:17:57] And actually, he stood against slavery in a time when almost no one did.
[00:18:03] You know, he was, he was an abolitionist fundamentally and you say how could I don't want to go
[00:18:07] into that?
[00:18:08] Read, you know, read.
[00:18:14] Whenever any form of government becomes destructive of these ends, life, liberty and the pursuit
[00:18:19] of happiness is the right of the people to alter or abolish it and to institute new
[00:18:23] government, evil triumphs when good men do nothing.
[00:18:30] Just a few words from the, the race is himself Thomas Jefferson.
[00:18:36] One threat, one solution, PBF family.
[00:18:38] Let's do it.
[00:18:43] I'm going to blow your mind with this story because it's blown my mind in every sense
[00:18:59] of the word.
[00:19:05] Federal court now.
[00:19:11] Federal court rules illegal immigrants have same second amendment rights to carry, as lawful
[00:19:22] US citizens.
[00:19:31] court rules illegal immigrants have same second amendment rights to carry as lawful US
[00:19:35] citizens. On March 15th, the federal judge issued a ruling on the US verse, Harry Berthol
[00:19:41] Carbaha Flores by dismissing a case against an illegal immigrant who was charged with possessing
[00:19:49] a firearm in ammunition despite being in the country illegally.
[00:19:55] The court cited 18 USC 922 G5 explaining that a ban on illegal immigrants owning guns
[00:20:02] violates the second amendment. Now, the decisions focal point was on the term the people,
[00:20:08] which have constitutional rights and who it applies to. It appears that illegal immigrants
[00:20:12] who have started a life laid roots gotten a job or have otherwise been nonviolent have
[00:20:16] all US constitutional rights inferred. Do you feel like you have all constitutional
[00:20:24] rights inferred lately? Do you? Do you feel like you have all constitutional rights inferred?
[00:20:33] Need we go over the amendments, I don't have enough time to do a show. That's two hours
[00:20:37] long to go line by line on our constitutional rights and discuss which ones have been taken
[00:20:46] from me or you or groups at large.
[00:20:53] PBN family, the second amendment is a beautiful thing, but this is a very curious thing. A
[00:21:05] federal judge issued this ruling. Now I don't even know it's so crazy. I don't even know
[00:21:11] if it'll stand for very long. If you cross the border and lay roots some way, you got
[00:21:19] a job, been nonviolent, then what? You get the rights of an American citizen. And maybe
[00:21:27] this story I wouldn't even care about this story so much if I wasn't so concerned about
[00:21:31] my own rights as an American citizen, right? If I wasn't worried about being attacked,
[00:21:42] surveilled, controlled, demonized, vilified all of the above for my beliefs and my choices,
[00:21:54] then maybe I wouldn't even care about a story like this. But it is one of those things. And
[00:22:02] what does it call? I mean, what is the solution to something like this? We're calling it one
[00:22:05] threat one solution. Of course, the big threat here, you know what the big threat is, right?
[00:22:11] The big threat is a ban on illegal immigrants owning guns violates the second amendment. Okay,
[00:22:18] this tells every illegal immigrant and not all of them are going to be like the type of person
[00:22:23] you want carrying a firearm by the way. Right? In other words, if you're a felon in the United
[00:22:31] States and we've convicted you, then we said, you know, this guy's a felon. He made some serious
[00:22:36] errors in judgment may have affected other people's lives severely. You don't get to have a gun.
[00:22:45] A lot of second amendment guys don't appreciate that but whatever.
[00:22:50] That's the rule of the land. And I'm sure it saved people's lives.
[00:22:53] The big problem with this is nobody knows who you are when you cross that border with no identification.
[00:23:04] You give a fake name, you become whatever it is in purgatory here in America that you become
[00:23:11] the American purgatory of citizenship and non-citizenship.
[00:23:16] You could have been a murderer in your home country. You could have been a thrice convicted felon
[00:23:27] who took off to come to America to seek quote unquote asylum from your own wrong doings
[00:23:33] and our government not only is going to let you in Willie Nilly but is also going to say,
[00:23:37] what is that? What do you got there? Nine millimeter? Okay, well it's fine. You know, life liberty pursuit
[00:23:42] of happiness, baby. Bill of rights. What do you want me to?
[00:23:47] Meanwhile, if I get up here on this microphone and say things that enough people don't agree with
[00:23:53] and that ryeal people up enough, I could have someone come to my door and start saying the red flag word.
[00:24:00] Oh, I don't know. Red flag. He talks a lot about January 6th. Red flag. Red flag take all his weapons.
[00:24:06] Civil unrest. I think it's just the threat that I think that the true
[00:24:17] crux of a story like this is just a reminder of, you know, the fact that
[00:24:22] the threats are increasing and you need to act accordingly.
[00:24:28] More than acting according in courting Lee, you definitely need to sit down and really think.
[00:24:38] I know it's a lost art but you need to sit down and really think. You know, Thomas Jefferson
[00:24:44] moved the capital of Virginia from Williamsburg to Richmond. He was a man who said he couldn't live
[00:24:52] without books. He's always reading, always studying, you know what I mean?
[00:24:59] And he thought about his position a lot, the position of the capital and he said to himself, you know,
[00:25:07] inland is better. Inland is safer from from the war rising waters and from attacks and from so on
[00:25:14] and so forth. So he moved his position. He thought about his position and then he moved his position.
[00:25:22] Now in all honesty, Richmond was burned to senders later in the civil war, so maybe it wasn't the best
[00:25:29] position of all but you know, you're fighting the union army and losing a lot.
[00:25:36] It's time for you to consider all that. And when I say position, I don't just mean where your home is,
[00:25:42] where you live, where you do your life but how and when and why?
[00:25:48] It's a time of great thought, PB&F family. We had to figure out if we are where we want to be
[00:25:53] through this thing. We also have to figure out not just, not just if you are where you want to be
[00:26:00] because everybody wants to be somewhere else nowadays, right? But what are your convictions in
[00:26:06] a time like this? What are you here for? Truly. What are you here for in this time, in this moment
[00:26:15] in history? What are you here to do? Because people have different convictions. You know, there are
[00:26:21] many people out there who are who are completely okay with I'm here to do whatever it takes to
[00:26:26] protect me and mine. And listen, that's righteous enough if you ask me.
[00:26:38] But there's also people out there who are here to defend what is good and what is true.
[00:26:49] And I think it's important to understand, you know, where do you want to be to do that? What
[00:26:53] position do you want to take to be able to do that? We cannot let fools lifetime career politicians
[00:27:05] make the decisions uneducated on top of that. Make the decisions to do things that have no effect
[00:27:14] on a society or only negative effects on a society like the woman we talked about at the
[00:27:19] beginning of the show, we can't allow these people to run roughshod over the cities of America forever.
[00:27:27] You will know them by their works, huh? Check out the cities, check out who's been running the cities.
[00:27:33] You will know them by their works.
[00:27:40] Think it over, man. The power of thinking, right? This is our gift. This is our gift from God.
[00:27:46] This is our big brain. This is our big capacity, right? We can think.
[00:27:52] So that's all I got for you today. No extras. No extras today. I do appreciate you. Thank you
[00:28:02] for all your support folks. Visit pbnfamily.com, become a member today. Don't delay. I put an amazing
[00:28:09] podcast up yesterday about a water system that you can build and you may even have several
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[00:28:27] in many places in the US and harvest plenty of clean drinking water from the air. It sounds crazy.
[00:28:36] It sounds like it can't be real. It's actually very simple and a prep that you may want to consider.
[00:28:43] Okay. The world is changing. We must be adapting. Talk soon, pbnfamily.
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