The Importance of Greatness_ Left Wing Doomers_ NY Muslim March
Prepper Broadcasting NetworkJune 22, 202600:32:3829.87 MB

The Importance of Greatness_ Left Wing Doomers_ NY Muslim March

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[00:00:03] You're listening to PBN. Your path back the stability here.

[00:00:42] Welcome into another week of the Relentless Prep and Broadcasting Network. Thank you for joining me today. We're going to touch on some things, the importance of greatness being the starting point, maybe for your week. I don't know. Maybe not. I've got a great news clip from an MSN Now guest that thinks America will last another 250 years in her reasoning. It's really something worth listening to.

[00:01:14] Before we get into it all, I want to tell you about tonight, Monday, the 22nd. We're going to be doing The Mother of Mayhem tonight, 9 p.m. Eastern Standard Time. The Mother of Mayhem. It's been a while since we've done our Virginia political show. Our show focused on Virginia politics. It was born out of the election of Abigail Spanberger and our concerns for the state.

[00:01:34] Rightly so. She ran on a platform of cost effectiveness for Virginians and largely it's been radical left wing insanity, gerrymandering attempts, attempts at our Second Amendment rights. It's a variety of tax increases, basically, fundamental. And that's, you know, that's been the deal.

[00:02:00] So, and then we knew it. We saw it coming, you know, when it seemed like she was going to win anyway. And we knew that it was going to be worth putting a show out to keep people, you know, up to date on all the mayhem that she's foisting upon the people of Virginia. So, join us tonight. I'm not sure who's going to join you for that show. Wednesday night, okay? Wednesday night we have a big Q&A show coming up with Dave Jones, the NBC guy. Don't miss that one.

[00:02:28] Preparedness questions answered from the community. It's going to be a great show. It's going to be a great show. As usual, the community is like blowing me away on just on the things that you guys know. You know, like what you guys know is always amazing to me. In other words, you'll bring a question, but you'll tell us about the things that you're doing and it's like, wow, amazing. Really amazing.

[00:02:54] So, yesterday for Father's Day, I took my dad to the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. Okay? The Virginia Museum of Fine Arts is one of those weird sort of places where you realize that you need both wings of the political spectrum, right? You need the full political spectrum for a society to be at its peak. You know, it's easy to say like I wish all these crazy left-wing liberals would go away.

[00:03:26] But you need both sides. And when you go, this is why the importance of greatness is such. You know what I mean? When you go to a place like the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts and you wrap your head around what it's offered to the community. And it's one of the rare examples of like government done well. I don't know how else to put it. Government and charity, of course. Maybe mostly charity.

[00:03:54] But the VMFA is open 24, probably not 24 hours a day, but 365 days a year. It's always open and it's always free. So, what that means to the community and what that meant for us yesterday, what that means for me when I get sort of down in the dumps is you can always go and get the compass recalibrated on greatness. And I think that's invaluable, right?

[00:04:24] The world sort of has its way with you. You get manipulated a little bit. You see things that are kind of cool on a day-to-day basis. You do things that are cool on a day-to-day basis. Maybe you achieve some things that are decent on a day-to-day basis, right? You get downtrodden. You get depressed. You know, the whole spectrum of feelings.

[00:04:44] But when you take a morning, a Sunday morning to go in and look at the fine works, not just in the importance of museuming is not just paintings. It's artifacts. It's creations. My father and I were looking at artifacts, handmade pottery from 2500 BC, right?

[00:05:14] 2500 BC. You work your way through Egypt into Rome. You work your way across the hall then into the east. You go into ancient China and you see Buddhas. You see sculpture. You see cooking vessels that were created of iron. And you wrap your head around this level of survival, but also this level of appreciation.

[00:05:43] This level of craftsmanship, I think, is what stands out in the history. You can look at a dresser that was made in the Gilded Age and understand how much the world has changed. And then, of course, you see the Cezanne and you see the Van Goghs. You see Bradford's wailing, his unbelievable Scotch whalers breaking through the Arctic ice, my favorite painting at the VNFA.

[00:06:13] You see the modern or the post-Civil War era American artwork, which is probably my favorite. It probably is my favorite. It used to be the romantics. It used to be sort of the renaissance or the over-stylized, over-detailed, just unbelievably real pictures of women and the idolatry of women in that age.

[00:06:43] It's the way that men handled women in this painting. So it still is breathtaking. But there is something about the moonlit New England coast. You know what I mean? Like we're staring at a picture of the moonlit New England coast. And there's another great sort of impressionist style almost with a guy in a chariot going down the snowy streets of Manhattan, 1912 or something like that.

[00:07:11] And you spend time with that kind of stuff and you start to really understand that like there is a measure of greatness in the world and it's real. And it's kind of forgotten. But more importantly than it being forgotten is that to be around that level of greatness, you kind of reset your compass. You know what I mean? Like you reset what great is.

[00:07:36] And if you think about the things that you've seen in the year 2026 so far, like what is the top of the heap, the greatest of the great that you've seen in 2026? Sometimes you can go a really long time with just mediocrity. There is something to it. Greatness also detracts from social engineering and manipulation of things like history and such, right?

[00:08:04] This idea that you don't understand these things are left out of the world. These artists are censored. And we saw some modern art and I historically am just disgusted by modern art. I think modern artists suck. I do. I really do. And not all, obviously. There's some modern artists who are amazing. But the actual category of modern art. So, what's the name Burns?

[00:08:34] There's a great section of the Revolutionary War. Revolutionary War art, right? And Washington at his deathbed. They were all done by Stearns or Burns. I think his name is Stearns. Washington at his deathbed. Washington getting married. Washington, you've probably seen Washington as a statesman. You've probably seen that picture. You saw that picture and say, oh, I know that picture. And we're looking over these great pictures of Washington and some Revolutionary War stuff.

[00:09:01] And in there they like threw a couple modern art pieces in there. And the two that really stood out as direct, as just... Well, the difference between greatness, right? And whatever the hell else is happening was this picture of Washington on a horse is huge. Modern art is always really big. Because it sucks. You've got to make it real big. It's got to be big, right?

[00:09:31] That way you go, ooh, look at that. Something about that is big. It's like when you can't cook. You're in culinary arts school with a kid. And you know he can't cook. So what he does is he gets into spicy food. Oh, I really like spicy food. He puts spicy stuff that's not that good. Oh, okay. Now it's spicy. Oh, yeah, it's hot. You're right. Modern art is always big. It's always giant. Oh, my. Look giant representation, right? Because I don't think the skill is there.

[00:09:57] I look at the painting, the actual painting of Washington on the horse, it's not really that good. They put nails all in Washington's face. It was eyes down, nails. All kinds of nails, right? And then from the nails were hanging straps of what looked like parchment, like constitutional parchment, torn, ripped. And it just looked terrible. And it looked worse against the greatness. And I think that's the idea.

[00:10:27] You know what I mean? Like that's the whole concept. It looks bad on its own, but it looked even worse in the face of the greatness. And that just is what it is, man. You know what I mean? I mean, but truly, I tell you, you know, we spent probably two and a half, three hours at the museum. No sweat. Like no sweat. Easy. Easy time. Great time.

[00:10:53] We walked through the designs of the Russian artist Fabergé, the Russian jeweler Fabergé, the Fabergé eggs, diamond-encrusted, and we see these flowers that were twirls with diamonds on the end. Lilies. The bud was a closed-blood pearl with diamonds. It's the excess is so insane getting the fathomets. And I'm sitting there talking to my dad about it. We're looking at all these pieces of gold.

[00:11:23] Red rubies and emeralds and gems and pearls and diamonds and gold and platinum, like all in this one, all in this one like frame. All in this handle of a cane. And my dad made a really interesting point. He said, I don't know if we'll ever be able to make this stuff ever again. And I thought about that. You know, except for like the super exclusive. You know, because who could even afford a thing?

[00:11:51] Anyhow, to walk through greatness is, it is something. To walk through a place like that, like a museum like that. And then of course, the outside grounds, how that all works. And you realize that not only are we looking at, not only are we looking at the greats through time, like the greatest painters, sculptors through time.

[00:12:19] But here in America, we've created a system, and it's in Europe too, but we've created a system where it's accessible to all. In other words, there's no excuse. You can't sit there and be like, oh, well, you know, I just don't have access to that because I'm not privileged. Right? No, it's free. The VMFA is free. And it's open almost every day. I think it's 364. It may be open every day.

[00:12:47] You have the ability to go to that district and fan, walk into the museum, walk right in the front door. Nobody's, it's actually terrifies me sometimes. Sometimes I'm in utter horror that you can walk into the VMFA and the security guard is reading the book and he just looks at you and looks down. And you can do untold damage. Because I worry about radical Muslims, you know, they tend to, they tend to enjoy a conflagration, you know. And it makes me nervous.

[00:13:17] Remember we had the crazy climate people who were throwing cans of tomato sauce on paintings? Like, I'm looking over some of the, some of the Renaissance paintings of like Jesus and Mary. And I'm thinking to myself, should we add a cardinal sin? Should we add a, you know what I mean? Like, I think we might need to add, because I don't know that the destruction of fine art is so crazy. It's irreplaceable, right?

[00:13:46] The destruction of artifacts. These things are irreplaceable. They're, they're invaluable. We don't know. I don't think we take it seriously. Because our society is so beautiful. That we respect it. That we go in there and respect it. We care for it. We take care of it. We look at upon it. In Marvel. Now I want to give you the juxtaposition of greatness.

[00:14:15] You know what I mean? I'm going to, I'm going to show you a thoughtless individual. Now that I've fed you all of that. I want to show you what lurks out there in, in America today. Quite honestly, these are people on television today. Uh, they are, you know, their opinions, for some reason they matter. It's like a shave before the show.

[00:14:46] We have a woman here. It goes by the name of Akilah. And she has a really awesome take. She's, she's made it on the MSN Now. She's all smiles and white teeth. And done up all well. And her take is that, uh, the United States just won't make it another 250. We won't have another 200. We won't have a 500 year celebration for our nation.

[00:15:17] And a reason behind it is kind of hard to believe. You got to hear it. It's just too good. Yeah. Okay. Akilah, um, your predictions. Okay. So I have quite a few, but I think that this is a long-term one. I don't know if we'll be around to see the results, but I don't think America's making it to 500 if we're on the same trajectory. You know, 250 with a ledge. No!

[00:15:46] Don't say it. I mean, I think that like, we have a concerted effort from the current-

[00:15:58] We're in the current administration to forget about history, to, you know, sort of destroy public education, to destroy public works, to make it more than a new world. We can privatize everything.

[00:16:23] And if we know one thing about corporations, you know, in the long term, they're not giving back to the people. And I think, you know, we are a very young democracy. Um, there are so many other countries that have come and gone. And I don't know why we believe that we are immune to, uh, that.

[00:16:43] My favorite part is when someone shows you how ignorant they are and that like, they think that America is like so many other countries. Like this is just, you know, there's been a lot of countries that have collapsed over time. It's what it is. This America is falling like all other great empires. There are many other countries that have collapsed in America. It'll just be another one.

[00:17:12] And the history, the short term, I mean, the, the derangement of the fact that you look at what public school has been for my whole life. And you say to yourself, Donald Trump did it. Right. You look at public works. You look at corporations. I mean, she's right about corporations. You gotta be careful. No doubt about that. That's the only thing she's right.

[00:17:37] But this sort of sneering, like, what I hate is the sneering told you so, or, or maybe even you deserve it. America deserves the collapse because, uh, kids can't read and that's Donald Trump's fault. Right. Because we're, we're making up history or something. Right. By not, by not, by not forcing people to learn about history that doesn't matter.

[00:18:04] Or that, that is not nearly as important as the founding of the nation, the founding documents of the value therein, the battle spot to protect it. By learning about, you know, by learning about, you know, the history of the most evil race of all time, the white man. Like, by doing those things, the country will fall and collapse. And to do it all with a smile on your faces. It's just a level of ignorance there. It's crazy to watch.

[00:18:34] You know what I mean? Because underneath it all, underneath this radical left wing thing is a calm communist concept that assumes you're going to survive in the next country or else you wouldn't be smiling. You'd be petrified. Right. There's an assumption that America will fall and we will be better for it. And I will, I appeal on whatever my name is, we'll be doing great.

[00:19:03] You know, because I'll finally be out from under the oppressive nightmare that is this. That, that allows her to show up with the pearly whites and the smile and the makeup and the lights and the cameras and the action and the polo shirt. And do stupid shows that nobody watches like MS now. That the only reason they exist is because they're on airports across the world. Can these people be safe?

[00:19:33] Is it possible? Is there a turnaround? Is there, is there a way you take a person like that? And then many people in our population right now, American haters. And try open their eyes like Kubrick, like clockwork orange. You know what I mean? Try open their eyes and make them see that they live in such a beautiful time. In the most beautiful time. In the most beautiful place. And see that the, the near impossibility of replicating this again. How are you going to replicate this? How are you going to crush all this?

[00:20:03] Burn it all down. And then build something back up that's even better. It's never going to happen. Right? It's never going to happen. It's likely, you can't even imagine sort of the low level thinking within the antichrist groups and the groups that really want to see America fall. They collapse down like this. Like even have the capability to crush our nation and such a way. I don't even think they have the capability. It's not to say it can't happen.

[00:20:33] I'm telling you right now. Insanity. And there's a lot of these people. You know, this isn't a one off character that I just pulled out of like, you know, some place. And she has this opinion that you can't believe. I want to show you now. I want to show you now. Uh, not the UK. Because the UK is embarrassing enough. I want to show you the war. I don't want to see the teens. I don't want to see the teen take over. I don't know what that means.

[00:21:03] I want to show you Manhattan. I want to show you Manhattan on the water. Of course I can't find it. Ranking analysis from four boxes by our US Supreme Court ruling crushes Virginia on assault weapons by arms banned arguments. I'm getting there. I guess I gotta look it up. Because all I'm getting is black teens. I don't even know.

[00:21:34] I want to show you Manhattan. I want to show you the... Asura? Asura? I think it was. The Asura march that had to happen yesterday on Father's Day in Manhattan. Where streets were flooded with mules and Shia Muslims and burqas and men beating their chests. It had to happen yesterday. And it...

[00:22:04] Thousands of Shia mourners shutting down Midtown for a shore. Black flags flapping. Grown men screaming and beating themselves bloody over a 7th century desert murder. Chance echoing off billion dollar buildings like it's Tehran. 2.0 welcome to New York City by the way. Happy Friday. You gotta see the image to understand what's happening to us.

[00:22:33] Do you think it's a coincidence that the Sultan Mamdani is in power? And things like this are happening. You're out of your mind. My question to you... I looked it up. I looked it up. It looks like Asura is the 25th, 26th of June. So... Why did this have to happen on Father's Day? Why did this have to happen on Father's Day? There's only one answer.

[00:23:03] You don't want to hear it. You don't want to believe it. People like Akilah would never believe that it could be happening. They want to cheer it on. They want to say it's culture and it's beautiful. Look at the blood. What's the blood? Because it is blood. It's all blood. Don't you get it? Things like this? What do you think things like this lead to? Better education in New York? What do you think? Come on, man. It's a takeover. Don't you understand that?

[00:23:33] It's a takeover. That's what it is. It's a takeover of your country that you're watching happen in real time. And these wonderful people here just had to do it on Father's Day. It had to happen on Father's Day. It couldn't happen next week. Because they had to make sure that the American father understood that your country is over. Right? That's what that message is. The message is very clear.

[00:24:01] We're going to do this on Father's Day in the biggest, one of the biggest cities in the world. And we want everyone to watch and understand that we're here. We are here to take over. It's a wrap. It was good while it lasted. You had a good thing. But we have come to take over and you will either be converted or killed. Just give it time. We don't have that kind of power yet. We're going to inconvenience you. You're going to shut your streets down. You can use your First Amendment right against you.

[00:24:30] We're going to throw our prayer rugs out wherever we want. And you're going to have to deal with that. Until we get enough power, we can do more damage. And that's the situation. That's the situation you need to know. You can sugarcoat it. You can say it's just, you know, a special day for them, whatever the situation is. But, yeah, I think you're wrong. I don't think you understand the threat.

[00:25:00] Okay? So, join us tonight for Mother of Mayhem, 9 p.m. Eastern. If you want to get your dose of preparedness, then look to Wednesday. We have a great show on PBS today. Medical Monday. My advice on how to build a medical cache using the Prepper's Medical Handbook. A great list of items within that book. How to build a nice, quiet, private medical cache. What to do with that. Red Beacon Daily News is up.

[00:25:30] I mean, we're off and running. It's another week of the Relentless Prepper Broadcasting Network. And don't, you know, go back. Look at the archives. The Herbal Medicine for Preppers last week, Friday. Amazing. The daily shows are incredible. The hosts are incredible. What we bring to you is like nowhere else on the internet. I mean, you show me the place where you're getting this kind of information. Not just me talking to you about the news and museums, right?

[00:26:00] I'm a flame. I'm just trying to keep the ship steered straight. Right? I'm just trying to navigate this world with the hosts and the incredible archives as my firepower. But yeah, man. I did start 3D printing some mesh-tastic nodes over the weekend. I had a couple failed experiments.

[00:26:26] But we're going to 3D print some of those, get them in the hands of some people around us, and start to build out that mesh network. And then, you know, emergency comms is a thing. Emergency comms is becoming an easier thing. You know, it really is. You look at mesh-tastic, we're offering text. You look at pop-link radios for alternative communications.

[00:26:48] Maybe not necessarily the best emergency communications, but the best alternate communications in a PACE plan library. If your primary communication method is a cell phone, and you want an alternate communication, say if your service provider is hacked or something happens to your particular service provider, pop-link radios, they do that. You know what I mean? They do.

[00:27:13] They jump around cell towers to find a provider that's available and boom, send that to anybody anywhere in the world in an instant, in the press of a button. PBN family have had a lot of fun this morning. I've got some writing to do. And we've got some big changes coming yet again. Big changes, huge.

[00:27:38] Huge changes coming to this PBN Red Beacon situation that we are evolving into. I will be asking, holding you this week on a number of different things because we have to keep evolving. We have to keep driving forward. We have to keep building on the mission of getting people prepared, of the continuity of these beautiful United States. Life is essential.

[00:28:06] There will never be another place or time like this. And we have to be grateful for that. Practice your gratitude. Don't forget it is still Men's Mental Health Month. We have our Men's Mental Health Routine. Right? If you're a lady, you can still do it. Okay? You can still do it. It's not, we're not, you know, singling anybody out. Just one month. I thought it'd be a great time to do that.

[00:28:30] The exercises and the fitness this month are very low key, low, uh, well let's take a look at it. Let's see what we got on. Men's Mental Health. I'm just going to bring the spreadsheet up so you can see it if you're watching. I really like this one, this low impact. We make people low impact fitness every other month.

[00:28:56] I realize that my, my idea of fitness and other people's ideas of fitness is very good. I mean, it's probably a bit of a good thing. So we have our, uh, our verses and our quotes. Today comes from St. John of Parpathia. The Parpathians. Is that the same thing? No, they start from C, right? Rise up again at each time. Repeat for reinforcement.

[00:29:27] Uh, what progress have I noticed in the last three weeks? This is for our, uh, journal. Right? This middle column is a literal journal, pen to paper journal. I know it's tough on them to sit down and write on paper, but there are things that you can deny if you want. You can deny writing if you want. You can deny art. You do it to your detriment.

[00:29:54] These are not things that historically men didn't participate in. You know what I mean? All of the writing for a long time was done by men, right? Daily journaling was a thing. Almost all men did were, were literal. And literacy was a gift. And now we have that gift baked into our society. We don't want to write it. Gratitude. So today, look, a 20 minute walk in reflection.

[00:30:25] It's a great day for reflection. Post-Fodding's day. Probably have some things sitting in your head. So on and so forth. It's a great day for reflection. I'm doing what I can. You know what I mean? To push the limestone forward a little bit of a way. For the country, for the network, for my family, your family. And this is the best way I know how it works. You know what I mean? It's the best way I know how to do it.

[00:30:54] I know what works. I know how to make the human body work. I know how to make people prepared for the unthinkable. I know how to make people understand the gift that it's like around. I know how to do these things. And I'm trying to take this whole ball of me, tethered with the incredible hosts that have been by my side for years.

[00:31:20] And give the world something that really will make it a better place. So tune in. Spread the word. Do the workouts. Do the journaling. Get in the Bible. Do the things. Praise God. There is a big, beautiful world out there waiting for you. And when you get into it, the better life seems to be. Do it with the right people. Do life with the right people.

[00:31:48] Try to do the life least with bad people. It's hard to do sometimes. Until next time, folks. Great shows today. Don't miss Church and State. It's going to be a very interesting Church and State. Father of Mayhem tonight. There's a lot. Red Beacon Daily News is out. Keir Starmer is out in the UK. Very interesting story about AI coding. Why is the US government using AI coding?

[00:32:18] Look into it. Red Beacon Daily News today for you to check out. I'll talk to you guys soon. Thanks so much.

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