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Saved - October 29, 2023 at 2:25 PM

@_johnnymaga - johnny maga

No wayyyy ๐Ÿคฃ https://t.co/kBNQ0wy3qU

Saved - November 3, 2023 at 3:24 AM

@RichardNieman27 - Richard Nieman Jr

Yes sir https://t.co/SQ4gGWlosw

Video Transcript AI Summary
I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America. And to the republic for which it stands, 1 nation Under god. Indivisible, with liberty and justice for all. I call them the j six hostages, not prisoners. They asked me to partake in saying the beautiful words, and I agreed. The spirit was incredible, and the song became number one, beating Taylor Swift and Miley Cyrus. It was up there for months until there was a problem with the Internet. We fought to have it put back on. I wanted to share this in Texas, a state I love.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America. And to the republic for which it stands, 1 nation Under god. Indivisible, with liberty and justice for all. Well, thank you very much. And you know what that was? That was I call them the j six hostages, Not prisoners. I call them the hostages, what's happened. And it's a shame. And, you know, they did that, and they asked me whether or not I would partake and Do the beautiful words, and I said, yes. I would. And you saw the spirit. The, the spirit was incredible. And when that came out, it went to the number 1 song. It was beating everybody. It beat, Taylor Swift. It beat Miley Cyrus, who is number 1 and 2. They were number 1 and 2. We knocked them off for a long time. That song was out there for a long time. Then, of course, they had a problem with the Internet. Right? You know? And so all of a sudden, they said, oh, there's a problem. We'll have to take it off. And we raised hell, and it, it went back on. That was up there for a long time. It was a number one record or song, There was for months, so I just want to tell you about it. And I thought maybe this would be an appropriate place. It's certainly An appropriate state. I love Texas, and it's big and strong. And
Saved - November 26, 2023 at 7:32 PM

@ClownWorld_ - Clown World โ„ข ๐Ÿคก

Ok https://t.co/cCYPnc7DrQ

Video Transcript AI Summary
I recently started reading the Quran and I'm really excited about it. I want to study it, not just out of curiosity. I found someone on social media who teaches the Quran and hosts a book club for Muslims and non-Muslims, which I'm looking forward to joining. The way she describes things in the Quran, like the chapter about bees, really resonates with me. I learned that Allah is beyond gender and that there are two Qurans: the Quran of Nature and the actual book. Each chapter is named after a natural phenomenon. I'm amazed by this book and already have many sticky notes marking important passages. It's causing a revolution within me, making me reconsider my beliefs and possibly believe in God. I recommend it to anyone curious, as many people are converting or reading it. I'm grateful for this experience and just wanted to express my excitement.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Just started reading the Quran, and I am so excited about it. People thought when I first asked that I just wanted to read it out of curiosity, but I want to read it to study it. I started following somebody on social media that teaches the Quran and hosts a Quran book club for Muslims and non Muslims, so I'm really excited to start going to that. She was describing the chapter of the bee, and that just blew my mind. Like, the way that she describes things and the way that the Quran describes things actually makes sense to me. And also did you know that Allah is beyond gender? Did you know that actually scholars believe that there are 2 Qurans, the Quran of Nature and the Quran the actual book? AND did you know that each chapter is named after a natural phenomenon? I just I don't know. This whole book is just blowing my mind, and I am so excited. I got sticky notes so that I could mark out things that I was that I was drawn to. And, I'm not even through the 1st chapter, and I already have a bunch of sticky notes. I'm definitely gonna have to buy more tabs. I'm honestly having a whole revolution with myself where the way that I describe the universe and the things that I believe in are actually described in the Quran of believing in Allah. And I've never thought that I believed in God before and now I'm really having a revolution of self of, I think I actually believe in God. If you've been curious, I really recommend it. There are a lot of people who are converting. There's a lot of people who are reading it. I'm not saying I'm going to convert. I'm not saying that I wouldn't. And I don't know. I just I know that this is exactly what I need right now. I just wanted to say thank you and just point out how excited I am.
Saved - December 1, 2023 at 11:47 PM

@ecomarxi - Tiberius

Yes this is what is happening https://t.co/A3AohQM2hA

Video Transcript AI Summary
Two individuals argue about a violent incident. One person questions why the other hates their religion, but the other clarifies that they only dislike the violent actions being done in the name of that religion. The first person accuses the other of self-hatred, but the second person insists that the issue is not about religion, but about reason. The argument continues, with both individuals claiming the other is wrong. In the end, it is revealed that both individuals have lost their jobs.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Dude, what the hell are you doing? Defending myself? What's it to you? You're gonna kill him. Oh my god. Why do you hate all followers of my faith so much? What's happening? You criticizing me means you hate me and all adherence to my religion. I couldn't care less what religion you are, buddy. I just want you to stop beating that guy to death. You see? Defending him. That means you hate us. That's not true. I detest what you're doing in our name. Well, that's because you hate yourself. Mate, this isn't about your religion. Just be reasonable. They're doing it again. Yeah. Sorry, guys. If you criticize him, you're anti his religion. So But that's ridiculous. Like, it is a bit ridiculous, isn't it? Want me to tell everyone what you did to my grandparents again? He's right. You're wrong. Move along. Oh, and both of you just lost your jobs.
Saved - December 11, 2023 at 10:15 PM

@TakingoutTrash7 - CtrlAltDelete

Trueโ€ฆ https://t.co/Z7PBmoqhnz

Saved - December 13, 2023 at 8:49 PM

@LauraBromet - Laura Bromet ๐Ÿ€๐Ÿ•Š

Ja mensen https://t.co/MFQuymCYmq

@lakemonstercl1 - ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธSteve2A๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธGod๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธFamily๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธCountry๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

Of course he is! https://t.co/exgvLyJk46

Video Transcript AI Summary
I am a black conservative who defies stereotypes. I drive a lifted truck, know my father, live by the water, and have never faced job interview discrimination. I don't own a pit bull, wear a belt to avoid sagging pants, and have never fit any description. Despite being called names and mistaken for other black conservatives, I don't play basketball. My white manager doesn't make me uncomfortable around white people.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: I'm a black conservative. Of course, I have a lifted truck. I'm a black conservative. Of course, I know who my dad is. I'm a black conservative, and and I live on the water because, of course, I don't mind swimming. Of course, I've never been denied a job interview. Of course, I don't own a pit bull. Of course, I wear a belt so my pants don't sag. I'm a black conservative. Of course, I've never fit the description. I'm a black conservative. Of course, I've been Called every single other black conservative that looks relatively similar or anything like me. Of course, I don't play basketball. Black conservative. Of course, my manager's white, and I'm never uncomfortable around white people.

@BlindToLies - ๐๐ฅ๐ข๐ง๐ ๐“๐จ ๐‹๐ข๐ž๐ฌ

no way! https://t.co/8ZnXpcwMHz

Video Transcript AI Summary
The video questions the believability of the Auschwitz gas chambers, presenting evidence such as eyewitness testimonies, satellite photos, and blueprints. It argues that the design and operation of the gas chambers are not plausible, pointing out flaws in the layout, cremation process, and door strength. The video suggests that the gas chambers were actually used for storing dead bodies and that the high number of cremation ovens was due to a typhus epidemic. It concludes that the Auschwitz gas chambers are a myth and that the strategy is to suppress denial of the genocide.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Auschwitz, where the Germans sent the Jews to the gas chambers. Here's a movie depiction. It's considered the most evil thing that ever happened in Europe, but when you get into it, it's not believable. And I'll offer good reasons why using this 3 d model of an Auschwitz gas chamber, eyewitness testimony, satellite photos, and blueprints. But can you think objectively about something so socially unacceptable? Consider this clip. Speaker 1: We know that evil has yet to run its course on earth. We've seen it in this century, the mass graves and The ashes of villages burned to the ground and children used as soldiers and rape used as a weapon of war. To this day, there are those who insist the Holocaust never happened, who perpetrate every form of intolerance, Racism and antisemitism, homophobia, xenophobia, sexism, and more. Hatred that degrades its victim And diminishes us all. Speaker 0: Is that logical? That if you don't believe in this, that you must be hateful with a lot of phobias and Isms. And can you think open mindedly about something so heaped with scorn? First, let me explain how it supposedly worked. This is crematorium 2, the main gas chamber facility at Auschwitz. In the distance is chimney smoke from burning bodies. 2,000 Jews would gather here in the grass and be told they were going underground to undress and then take a shower. The undressing room and gas chamber are underground. So this is a stairway. This is grass. This is an underground room that sticks out above the ground just a little where they got undressed. Jews forced to work in the gassing operation were called Sonderkommando. Dario Gabbay claimed to be a Sonderkommando. And Speaker 2: putting their, you know, their undress going there. And the only one thing I remember that always the As as we're saying, is, take your shoes on, Susan and Majin. You know? Put them together as a pair And take it in your hand and walk in through the corridor, come into the before going into the gas chamber, you had to leave it. Somebody was taking them. Speaker 0: So we go underground into the undressing room. Men, women, and children would get undressed in this elongated Room. Back then, lice carried a deadly disease called typhus, and taking a shower could help prevent the spread of lice. So there's a poster showing a skull and a louse because getting clean could mean not getting killed by typhus. However, it's a trick. They're really going to the gas chamber. So 2,000 Jews would go through this corridor, where we make a right turn into the gas chamber. Here's the gas chamber. And we see a mesh column. Someone above ground would open a hatch and pour pellets into the room. The pellets were soaked with deadly cyanide liquid and would land here on the floor. The gas would evaporate out of the pellets into the room and kill everybody. Here's a can of the pellets. A product called Zyklon B made by the Dagesh company. Speaker 2: My my first observations of that is that I saw 25 to 3000 people going on the on the gas chamber, And they closed the doors and, you know, then I knew that the SS through the Cyclone b, you know, from, above 3, 4 openings. Speaker 0: Everyone would be killed by gas, and the dead bodies were then dragged back into the corridor through the same door which everybody walked in, making a hard right turn into an elevator, back up to ground level where there were 15 cremation ovens on the left. 2000 Jews were gassed at one time in this building known as crematorium 2, The main gas chamber at Auschwitz. We use a 3 d model to describe it since the Psyllidi was destroyed at the end of the war, but the blueprints were in the Auschwitz archives. Here's a block of 3 out of the 15 ovens, and we see a pile of ash inside. This is Philip Mueller, a European Jew who claimed he was forced to work in the gassing operation. Let's go over this once more with a physical model. The Jews went down a stairway here and were told to undress to get ready to take a shower. Here's the undressing room. Going this way, they went into a corridor, made a right turn, and went into the gas chamber. 2000 Jews made the chamber packed to capacity, as you can see in this tangle of dead bodies. Speaker 2: You know, when after 15, 20 minutes, they open up The thing, the first thing I see, I saw the people I saw 15 minutes before alive. I So the mothers with the children standing up before because the gas chamber will will take maybe 500 people. It used to make 12 25100 people. Everybody's standing up. There was no room for anything else standing up. Speaker 0: The bodies were then dragged on the floor out of the gas chamber Into an elevator, back up to ground level, and into a room where 15 cremation ovens were. And this whole facility was called crematorium 2 where half a 1000000 Jews were supposedly killed. That's a larger number than all American military who died in World War 2. This is what it would have looked like during the war. 2,000 Jews would assemble back over there, then they go into this underground undressing room with the gas chamber on the other side of the building. Currently, it looks like this. There are the stairs leading into the undressing room. There's the undressing room with the stairway in the distance. And there's the gas chamber. The roof is partially caved in but can still be entered. Here's what it looks like inside. Here's a blueprint of crematorium 2 from the Auschwitz archive. There's the undressing room. There's the passage. There's the gas chamber. There's the elevator coming up to 5 blocks of 3 ovens each. There, the vents snaking up to the chimney, which you saw in the beginning. You can see the dressing room and gas chamber are fairly elongated and the gas chamber a little smaller. So the first thing to notice is incredibly bad design. 2,000 Jews go in here, go through this narrow passage into the gas chamber. Why not have it be above ground? This is the undressing room and this is the gas chamber. And have 4 large doors between so that 500 people can go through each door, totaling 2,000. Then 4 large doors open up on the right side where there is a conveyor belt that Takes the bodies to a blast furnace. When the bodies here are removed, carts on wheels are then brought in for the heavy of moving the 1700 remaining bodies to the conveyor belt. Carts on wheels because Even a smaller man of a ยฃ135 is equal to 3 plates in the gym, which is draggable but slow going, And one would get tired quickly. Of course, with wheels, it's much easier. So how did they do it in this 100 foot elongated room? If, say, they had 700 bodies left to haul out down at the end of the gas chamber and had to move them 70 feet to the door. Speaker 3: So, when they would open the doors of the gas chamber, whose job was it to take the bodies out? Speaker 2: Well, they they they give us some Canes. You reverse the can and you put it in in the and you Drag them out because when the gas, they get very, very tight and takes a long lot of, force to be able to drag the bodies from from the gas chambers, you know, to put it in the elevator going on the second floor. Speaker 0: Dragging with canes instead of using wheels? Not believable. There's also the bad design of taking everyone underground just to have the problem of then taking all their bodies back up to ground level. But the worst design of all is individual ovens. Individual ovens are for saving individual ashes to give to relatives. If that's not a requirement, Then you don't use individual ovens. The Germans would have used a large brick cylinder furnace where bodies and coal are thrown in at the top creating a pile inside with air being blown beneath through the pile. Elongated rooms perpendicular is pretty stupid design. Any thinking person would have elongated rooms side by side. This improved design has just 100 Jews going into an undressing room since 2,000 people is Too unwieldy and hard to control, particularly if there's a revolt. They undress and go into a shower room, which in contrast to this It's actually convincing as a shower room where steel guillotine doors shut. In other words, doors that open toward the sky and shut toward the ground. The gas chamber fills with gas, and afterwards, still guillotine doors open at the conveyor belt to a continuously operating oven. The bodies are already a short distance to the conveyor belt. The floor slanted slightly toward it. Conceptually, a little bit like this. A gassing could happen every hour and a half, and a strong point of this design is bodies are put into the oven steadily throughout the day and night Because cremating the bodies is the hardest part of the process, it could do 13 gassings a day, killing 1300 people. It is also small and easily duplicable. Speaker 4: And when we were in the In the train, we were afraid. We never knew what will be our future. Speaker 0: Among Jews, rumors of gas chambers abounded during the war as can be seen in this testimony. Speaker 5: At Linz in Austria, The train stopped, and Jews on board were told to get out and take a shower. Speaker 4: I was standing naked before the doctor and Still looking very proud into his eyes and, thought he should see how a Jewish woman is going a proud Jewish woman is going to die Because most of us knew that in Auschwitz, from the taps, there didn't come any water but the gas. And, from the pipes came fine warm water. Afterwards, we dressed up and returned to our train. It was a very relieving experience after we were ready to die there. Speaker 0: She solemnly accepted her fate, but that couldn't have been every person's reaction who didn't believe the shower story. Some would have become hysterical and done the proverbial yelling of fire in the crowded theater. Speaker 4: Because most of us knew that In Auschwitz, and from the taps, there didn't come any water, but the gas. Speaker 0: Her testimony shows us that gassing rumors existed among Jews. We thus expect some level of noncooperation from them. On a football field, the Auschwitz gas chamber would be this size with that little flashing white line being the door. To see how crowded it would be, we'll have this be a head and these be shoulders. We make one row of 14 people across 23 feet and bring it up into the gas chamber. That would be how crowded the gas chamber would be. Speaker 2: And after after that, You know, when after 15, 20 minutes, they open up the thing, the first thing I see, I saw the people I saw 15 minutes before alive, I saw the mothers with their children standing up For because the gas chamber will will take maybe 500 people. It used to meet 12 25100 people. Everybody standing up. There was no room for anything else They're standing up. Speaker 0: This density implies no resistance at all. It implies total cooperation. Speaker 3: Did you have any contact with the people being brought in? Were you able to talk to them? Did they talk Speaker 6: to me? Speaker 2: Time to time. From time to time, we will tell them, you know, just in in a very few words, you know, that they are going to die. Speaker 0: It's hard to believe 2,000 people would go in there without resistance or outright rebellion because that's a little over 1 square foot per person, which would make them skeptical of the shower story, particularly with no soap dispensers anywhere. Speaker 5: The Nazis had hugely increased the number of Jewish prisoners in the Sonderkommando, prisoners who were forced to work in the crematoria To deal with the massive numbers the Nazis planned to murder. So much so that a crematorium and gas chamber like this Was operated by around 100 Jews and just 4 Germans. Speaker 0: It's not believable that Jewish men would do that, And not believable that the Germans would assign so few Germans. Speaker 1: While you were doing this, who was overseeing all of this? Was there that was in Speaker 2: charge? On the crematory. Speaker 0: A kappa was a Jewish worker put in charge. Speaker 1: While you were doing this, Who was overseeing all of this? Who was there that was in charge? Speaker 2: Was on the crematorium. You know, we had only 1 or 2 guards. There wasn't too many, I say. They're always outside the crematorium. Every, 3, 4 hours is, you know, about half a dozen Well equipped, you know, SS just moving around. But inside the crematorium were only a couple of SS, 2, 3 SS. The cops were doing the job. The the the job they had. Speaker 0: And in a layout like this, It's hard to believe that they could get people to move all the way to the back, particularly when you find out that it was Jewish workers running the operation. Speaker 2: Moving around. But inside the crematorium were only a couple of SS, 2 or 3 SS. Speaker 0: This level of crowding would take military Total compliance and a lot of practice. And it's not believable that the Germans would have Jews, of all the ethnicities of Europe, Run the killing operation since they are the ethnicity most likely to foment a revolt and to mutiny. At some point in the gassing operation, people would panic and surge toward the door. How hard could they push? Consider the Heysel Stadium disaster of 1985 where 39 people were killed. Speaker 7: Heysel Stadium, Brussels. Highly charged British soccer fans fly into a frenzy attacking rival Italian fans. In a panic, the Italians make a run for the exit. They suddenly They have nowhere to go. The enemy now, a concrete wall. As the hysteria rises, Other fans attempt an escape over the wall, but it quickly collapses under the weight. Speaker 0: They pushed over a concrete wall. So in the gas chamber, how hard could they push on this door? And what does the door look like? In the movie portrayal, it looks strong. If we have actual photos of the cremation ovens It's under construction and finished. Might there be a photo of the gas chamber door somewhere? To find out, we go to the US Holocaust Memorial Museum website And look up gassing operations. And scroll down to further reading to find the author Jean Claude Pressac. In his book, Auschwitz, Technique and operation of the gas chambers. We find numerous photos of the type of door used, though not the actual door. Speaker 2: And, you know, it takes about 4, 5 minutes to die, except the people that are in front where the gas is coming, then it takes about a Couple of minutes. Speaker 0: We see wood slats. This is taped to keep the gas from coming out through the cracks. This flimsy wrought iron band is what would hold 2,000 panicking people inside. It pivots there swinging this way. The doors were made by the inmates themselves. On page 46, we read, this type of gas tight door with the same method of closing was to be used as it stood in the homicidal gas chambers. But up here, it says that this is the gas tight door of the A Canada 1 delousing gas chamber. In other words, behind this door would be a room full of blankets and clothes to be fumigated. But we're supposed to believe that the same door design with no added fortifications would be used to hold 2,000 panicking people in a gas chamber. Speaker 2: They can address them right away. They were going direct to to the chambers. And Since it takes a few minutes to die, you know, then they realize that they were dying. You know? So you always will find when you open the doors a lot of Scratches in the walls of blood, you know, with their going with their fingers, you know, scratching the walls to be You can get saved someplace, but it was not Speaker 0: If a surge of panicking people pushed on such a flimsy door, The people nearest the door would be crushed to death and then the latches would give and the door would burst open. And how believable is it that a door for 2,000 People to go through on a regular basis is the size of a household door. And these columns through which Zyklon B was poured, Pressek's book has a schematic diagram of it, which Pressek drew himself based on eyewitness claims. It looks like chicken wire. They would have been destroyed by the crowd also. Jean Claude Pressac's book has a photo of the elevator too. It says a provisional 300 kilogram capacity goods hoist used in crematorium 2. So the bodies would go on here and this is a triangular bar with a stabilizing piece of wood here. How flimsy. Imagine you have 2,000 bodies in the basement, but maximum capacity, ยฃ661. So with 7 bodies going up at a time, you'd have to make 285 trips. Why not just have a conveyor belt on an incline here like this. It says provisional as in temporary, but Carlo Matonio, in his book Auschwitz, The case for sanity makes a strong case that this was the elevator that remained for the entire war period. Germany is the country of BMW, Mercedes, Porsche, Volkswagen, Kroups and Braun. Industrial design is part of their culture. So much so that in North America, sometimes it's made into a parody. Speaker 8: It's me, Norm Piel. We're in Berlin on the Alvestrasse, Where we're in the apartment of electro pop stars Dieter and Kurt from the German band League of Darwinists. Kurt Dieter, it's a pleasure to meet you. You know, it's ironic. You're huge here in Europe, but in North America, you're virtually unknown. Speaker 0: Yet the design at Auschwitz is So poor Speaker 2: They give us some, canes. Speaker 0: That it can't be believed. Cremation. Most people don't know how long it takes. It's a key issue because While a wall of 15 ovens seems like a lot, it's not even close to being able to handle the 2,000 bodies downstairs. To illustrate, let's think of the process in terms of time. Let's say everyone undressing and then going into the gas chamber takes a half hour. Now we jump to the gas chamber, and let's say the time it takes to kill everyone with poison gas also takes a half hour. So now we're 1 hour into the killing operation. In hour number 2, 15 bodies are taken upstairs as to the 15 ovens and cremated. Each body is put on a stretcher and placed in the oven. On average, it takes an hour to cremate a body. So in hour number 1, 2,000 Jews are killed. In hour number 2, 15 Jews are cremated with 19 185 left to go. In hour number 3, 15 more are cremated with 1,970 left to go. And at this snail's pace, by hour number 133 or 6 days later, you cremate 15 bodies and only have 5 left to go. You can't do another gassing until the 6th day because there's nowhere to put the bodies. The main point is that the Germans would have never had a system with a ratio like this where the cremation holds up the killing for almost a week. Another way to look at it. The 15 ovens take about a row of bodies in 1 hour. But look how many rows you have left. How does Dario Gebay make it work? Speaker 2: And then we went upstairs on the 2nd floor and put them in stretchers and put them in the oven. And Just from the body fat, they didn't have to do anything. They started, but then after all, the the body fat of Of each person was given the flames. Speaker 0: He makes it work by focusing on the fat content of a body, and ignoring the water content. Speaker 2: And, actually, they had to take with the Outside the women and inside the men because the women have more fat that can could burn the the bodies. Speaker 0: The bigger issue is that both bodies are around 60% water. Evaporating that water takes the first half of the cremation time. After that, the female body has more fat and will burn faster, but only 3% faster in total time, a negligible difference. How else does he make it work? Speaker 3: So after taking the bodies out of the gas chamber and putting them on these elevators, then what would happen? Speaker 2: You go to the just you put them in the ovens. Speaker 3: Who would put them in the oven? Speaker 2: There are 2 other people, you know, that put them in stretchers. 3, 4 of them in stretches and put them in the oven. Speaker 0: He makes it work by putting 3 or 4 bodies in each opening. Speaker 3: How many people were, were you able to actually put inside of each oven? Speaker 2: You put about 4. Speaker 0: How else does he make it work? Speaker 3: And, how long again would it take to burn? Speaker 2: 90 to 30 minutes. Speaker 3: So after Speaker 0: by having it not take very long. Speaker 3: Did they give you any kind of an instruction as to how to do things or give you tools to work with. Speaker 2: When you know, they give you all the tools. You know? And they had to all the tools to you know, every 20 minutes, you had to Turn them around, you know, whatever it was. Takes 30:30, 40 minutes to burn. Speaker 0: He makes it work by having 3 to 4 bodies take 30 to 40 minutes, which averages out to 10 minutes a body, Whereas, we said the average is 1 hour for 1 body. With an average of 10 minutes of body, you could clear out the gas chamber a lot faster than 6 days. So what do the cremation experts say? Does it take an hour for 1 body, or could you put 3 to 4 bodies in an opening and have it take 30 to 40 minutes? Speaker 9: Hi, Alisa. Could you please walk us through the funeral process? Speaker 0: We look for cremation information on YouTube and find Alisa Krysilik. Alisa is a funeral director who works for the Cremation Society of Illinois as their vice president. Speaker 9: And could you tell us about the cremation process itself? Speaker 0: This video was never meant to support the Auschwitz gas chamber being a myth, but under fair use, we can use it as that. Because cremation of more than one body at the same time is illegal, we can think of 3 to 4 bodies as the equivalent to a 3 to 400 pound person. Speaker 9: And could you tell us about the cremation process itself? Certainly. The cremation process on the airbrush Takes about 2 to 3 hours. There's a lot of variations that would, cause the cremation to take more time or less time. The size of an individual is a big factor in that. Speaker 0: The number is high, but she's probably including heating the oven and cooling the remains, which aren't factors for us. Speaker 9: So it does take time to cool the remains. Speaker 0: Patrick O'Neil is a funeral director featured on a National Geographic TV program about cremation. Neither he nor National Geographic ever intended their information to be used in this context either. Speaker 6: One of the unique features of this funeral home is the inclusion of a crematorium on-site. Speaker 1: This is where I like to show off of what I do for a living. These machines actually are ยฃ38,000. They cost around $100,000 a Speaker 6: piece. Process. He estimates that the time it takes to cremate a body is about 1 hour for every 45 kilograms. Speaker 0: 45 kilograms is about a ยฃ100. So that's 1 hour for a 100 pound person, which is the number we used. The National Geographic video shows a cremation oven manufacturing plant. Speaker 6: In Steve's Retorts, the monitoring of the combustion process is automated. Temperature sensors are installed in the chamber. These sensors are wired to the control panel, and they provide the data that will regulate the fuel and the airflow Oh, needed for the cremation. Speaker 0: Putting 4 bodies in an oven might be equivalent to 1 large body, and this company says that takes extra requirements. Speaker 6: Currently, BNL makes 6 different types of cremation retorts. Some of these models are for Very large bodies of up to 385 kilos. It takes 5 months to make one of these size models and up to 18 workers can be involved in the process, 2 months longer than a regular model. A mammoth crane is needed to lift any one of these machines for transport. They weigh 18 tons. Speaker 0: We go to their website and find the Phoenix 2 oven. It gives a cremation rate of ยฃ150 an hour. In our calculation, we use a ยฃ100 an hour for ovens built 70 years earlier with the average person weighing ยฃ100 based on data in the book, Auschwitz, the case for sanity. Speaker 2: You put about 4. Takes 30:30, 40 minutes to burn. Speaker 0: That would take more like 4 hours. He lies about the cremation to obscure the fact that 15 ovens isn't enough to handle 2,000 bodies. And when that's established, the overall number of half a 1000000 can't be true either. There. Because Holocaust historians tell us that crematorium 2 wasn't in operation until spring 1943 And ending in November 1944, it was only supposedly in operation for a year and a half. They tell us that 500,000 people were killed in this building. But because of the slow cremation rate, that's not enough time to kill that many people. 15 ovens would not have been enough even if they had been these computerized ovens. This is Carlo Matonio. In his book, Auschwitz, A Case for Sanity, He shows that 4 bodies wouldn't even fit in that opening, and that the vaporizing water, 96 gallons for 12 bodies, would overwhelm the oven, bringing the temperature down too much for it to work properly. A muffle is the opening in the oven. For instance, here the middle muffled opened faster than the left muffled. Now the right muffled is opening up. Matonio tells us that the bodies can't go in lengthwise because the depth of the muffle is only 6 feet 11 inches You can't do 2 stretcher loads either because here we look at the underside of the stretcher. There are the rollers. Matonio tells us that if you drop 1 body in and then load the stretcher with 3 more, this part of the stretcher would hit the first body and block the stretcher. You thus have to pile 4 bodies here and use the stretcher to slide them into this opening, which wouldn't fit. At Malthausen, Carlo Mattono found the type of muffle they had at crematorium 2 at Auschwitz. There's the stretcher. Some flowers and a red candle have been placed in the back. This candle is this candle right here. We look at this muffule. Someone has placed some flowers in green cellophane right there. If a body was put in and the stretcher was then pulled out, The body would come up to here. The second body would come up to here. There's very little room after that. These ovens are at Buchenwald. There you see the rollers, but it's the same muffel that they had at Auschwitz. These are liberated prisoners in 1945 demonstrating for the Americans. Laurence Rees is the world's most well known Auschwitz historian. The normal experience of going to this place was To die. He wrote and produced a 6 part series on Auschwitz for the BBC. Speaker 5: This is the site of the largest mass murder in the history of the world, Speaker 3: Auschwitz. Speaker 0: And he wrote this companion book to the BBC series, which won History Book of the Year in Britain in 2006. How would he solve the slow cremation rate problem? On the ground floor was a large crematorium with 3 mufflers capable of burning 5 corpses in each. Mufflers is a misprint for muffles, but the main point is he says they put 5 corpses says in each opening. Or on another page, the ovens, each capable of holding several bodies. The reader getting the emotional impression of morbid barbarity, but never questioning whether it's even possible. And he devotes 4 pages to Dario Gebay. Gabbai had never told his story to anyone until the 19 nineties. What was he doing before that? He had a brief and minor stint as an actor in a Hollywood movie called The Glory Brigade. He went from the worst profession in the world to the most glamorous one. Speaker 2: Buddy. Speaker 0: 8 years after his supposed job at Auschwitz. And we didn't even get into the crazier stuff he said. Speaker 2: You know, when we came in in the crematorium, the all the the streets in the crematorium outside We're all from the bones. Speaker 0: We say that 2,000 people wouldn't have gone into a room that size, And we say that 4 bodies wouldn't fit in that opening. Could it all be possible at Auschwitz because everyone was so thin? We go to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum website and read, of the new arrivals at Auschwitz, The majority were sent immediately to the gas chambers. The point being, they wouldn't have had time to get thin. Now we learn where most came from. Speaker 5: The vast majority of those who were murdered at Auschwitz in 1944 came from one place, Hungary. In March 1944, German troops entered Budapest. For the Nazis, Hungary was a rich country, ripe for plunder. And though already allied to the Nazis, The Hungarians had been unreliable partners as far as Hitler was concerned, not least in their refusal to deport The 760,000 Hungarian Jews. Speaker 0: So they came from a rich country, and they've been free up till now. Lawrence Rees' BBC documentary shows pictures of Hungarian deportees, and they don't look thin. The starvation happened more in the last few months of the war, and Auschwitz was closed by then. Speaker 5: On average, 75% of the people on each transport from Hungary were selected to be murdered immediately. Speaker 0: In Hungary, Jews had been hearing Nazi extermination rumors for most of the war and yet would pack like this into an unfamiliar underground 2,000 person shower room when other Jews told them to. Not believable. And were they thin from hunger like many would assume? No. Here's crematorium 2 from the air. So what was this building if it wasn't a gas chamber facility? The answer is on a blueprint from the Auschwitz archives. The text is small, but it says, lichenkeller 1. Keller means Cellar, as in wine cellar. Lichen means dead bodies. A cold underground place for storing dead bodies. And the other side was never an undressing room. It's labeled like in Keller 2, corpse cellar number 2, cold to keep the bodies from spoiling until they can be cremated. Underground never made sense for a gas chamber. We find crematorium 2 in satellite view. It's on the edge of this huge community because it's for cremating the bodies of those who die here. The community called Birkenau was the population center of Auschwitz. 100,000 people, mostly Jewish. One would assume that these are able-bodied men selected for labor. This building is the entrance building right here. We see dismantled housing in the background, salvaged after the war for materials. The BBC documentary showing what it might have looked like before. Speaker 3: When you arrived at Auschwitz after this 9 day journey. Can you describe for us the very first thing you remember when that door opened up to the wagon? Speaker 2: The First thing that I remember is that the s s always is Snell, Snell, Snell. Right? You know, We got into line and there were Mengele was there making the selection, always with these two fingers. Most of the fingers went on the right and which is going direct to the crematorium. On the left was he was selecting 10% of the Young of the every transport, 10%, I would say, went to work. The others were direct to the crematorium, and I knew that After a while. Speaker 0: One would assume that these are barracks for able-bodied men selected for labor. So it's surprising to find out that the majority of the barracks are women and medical. These are women. These are medical. This is a family camp for Jewish families from the Czech Republic. This is a gypsy camp. This is men's quarantine, and just this small section was the men's camp. The selection to live or die story doesn't fit with the division of the barracks in the population center of Auschwitz. We pull back from Birkenau to see the greater Auschwitz area and overlay with a map from the US Holocaust Memorial Museum website. Those minority of inmates who did work at Birkenau walked a mile in the morning to the SS Workshops and Armament Industries here. The whole Auschwitz area was around 22 square miles. Crematorium 2 had a mirror facility called crematorium 3. These two buildings are the same in mirror formation. That seems like way too many cremation ovens and body storage space, But Carlo Matonio explains, the increase in cremation units at Birkenau depended on 2 concomitant factors. The first was the order given by Himmler during his visit to Auschwitz on July 17 18, 1942, To bring the camp capacity up to 200,000 detainees. We see plans to expand the camp that were never completed. Matonyo gives the second reason why there are so many ovens. The second was the mortality of the detainees. August 1942 was the month with the highest death rate in the history of the Auschwitz camp caused by a terrible typhus epidemic. Some 8,600 detainees died during that month, almost twice as many as had died the month before, about 4,400 deaths. There were peaks of 500 deaths per day. The average strength of the camp at the time was a little more than 40,000 inmates. Just imagine what could have occurred with the strength of 200,000 detainees. The ovens would therefore have to be able to cope with any future emergencies. Here's crematorium 23. Over here, we have a complex for killing lice, the small bugs that spread typhus. These two buildings are for giving people showers upon arriving and for fumigating clothes with cycloneb. Tour buses over here help us see how big this disinfestation facility is, but the Germans obviously They didn't do enough and are responsible for this typhus tragedy because they put the Jews here in the first place. Speaker 2: They put the railroad cars on the steps of the of the where the chambers to Andresworth. You're just in the crematorium. It was not from direct. You know? Everybody was coming direct. You know, and when I was there, you know, was the 600,000 people mostly from Hungary, From Budapest and, I remember was 70,000 from Lodz and Holland. You know, this whole and beautiful people, it's, it's undescribable, I tell you. Speaker 0: According to the story, crematorium 2 is not related to Birkenau. Rather, it's for gassing Jews from all over Europe. But then why have it be so close to this primarily Jewish community? This is the women's food preparation building. One of the women looks out the window and sees a mysterious guy dumping something into an opening or looks past this underground room, to see 2,000 people congregating to go down the narrow stairway into the undressing room, never to emerge again. These trees were not there during the war as an American air photo of August 25, 1944 shows us. Auschwitz had a recreational soccer field for the inmates, which is bad design to put next to a top secret genocide operation. Speaker 10: Of course, what we did is for the weekends, we got together, we got a group of us together, and we made a soccer team, which was or a little later, where they Speaker 11: played soccer. What's amazing that there would be a soccer team, that there'd be enough energy left to do something Like that? Speaker 10: Well, I don't think we were quite as energetic as we were with the other, regular team, but we Did something to, you know it kept our mind off these, of the problems we had. Speaker 0: So a Jewish man is playing soccer after work. He looks to see 2,000 people waiting to descend into the undressing room of crematorium 3. Here's another perspective. These are gypsy barracks. A gypsy looks out his window across the soccer field. Here's the soccer field, and here's crematorium 2 and 3, with 22 square miles to work with. And so no one in Auschwitz Birkenau would find out, why not have crematorium 23 about a half mile away behind these trees? And then to transport Jews from all over Europe to get gassed, why not build the last part of the rail line coming from this side? Speaker 5: Fueled partly by these prejudices, Hoss prepared for the arrival of the Hungarian Jews at Auschwitz Birkenau, 2 miles away from Auschwitz main camp. He oversaw the completion of a railway line, Allowing new arrivals to be brought directly into Birkenau. Speaker 0: Right through the middle of the camp, Bad design heaped upon bad design. Understandable. But how many of the Birkenau inmates could have told the outside world? To answer that, we come to doctor Fransacek Pieper. He was the senior curator of the Auschwitz State Museum shown here in 1991. David Cole asked him some interesting questions. Speaker 7: Who initially came up with the Figure of 4,000,000 people dying in Auschwitz. Speaker 2: This is, estimated Speaker 0: But we're interested in a book Pieper wrote where he said that in 1943, 19,859 Auschwitz inmates were transferred to other camps, and a 139 escaped. And in 1944, a 163,000 inmates were transferred from Auschwitz. 500 were released, and 300 escaped. This large number is because people were constantly coming into Auschwitz and then leaving for other camps. Speaker 5: Fueled partly by these prejudices, Hoss prepared for the arrival of the Hungarian Jews at Auschwitz Birkenau, 2 miles away from Auschwitz main camp. He oversaw the completion of a railway line, allowing new arrivals to be brought directly into Birkenau. Speaker 0: So how many people could have told the outside world? A 183,000. From bad design, to how small it is, To how crowded it would be, to all the lies about cremation, it's clear the Auschwitz gas chambers are a myth. And the strategy to keep the myth in place? Speaker 12: Ultimately, and with this, I conclude, our objective should be to create a society Where denial of the genocide is seen as so outrageous and so despicable that anyone who engages in it would be rendered a pariah. Thank you very much.
Saved - May 3, 2024 at 6:00 PM

@SecretSunBlog - The Secret Sun Speaks

Of course they do. https://t.co/oSJ4b4NnpB

Saved - May 9, 2024 at 8:12 AM

@EndColonialsm - Free Palestine, free Congo, free Sudan

No. https://t.co/N4hUa3sHtj

@allinwithchris - All In with Chris Hayes

WATCH-- @chrislhayes: Are you better off now than you were 4 years ago on May 8, 2020? https://t.co/tzQbq7JNck

Video Transcript AI Summary
Conservatives question if people are better off than 4 years ago, highlighting issues like high unemployment, COVID-19 deaths, and economic struggles. President Trump and the White House downplay the severity of the situation, focusing on reopening and vaccine optimism. The contrast between current events and the past is emphasized, urging viewers to reflect on their current situation.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Believe it or not, every single week, multiple times a week, conservatives keep asking the question, are you better off than you were 4 4 years ago? Here's Fox News on Monday. Speaker 1: That's exactly what this election's about. Whether you're better off than you were 4 years ago, or you could be bamboozled into believing you don't know the difference. Speaker 0: I know the difference. Let's try to remember, shall we? What was life like for you 4 years ago as the US unemployment rate jumped to its highest rate since the Great Depression? As the White House rejected strict CDC standards for reopening the states even as White House staffers with top access kept catching the virus. While more than 1,000 Americans a day were dying, and divisions in anger were growing nationwide. President Trump held a summit at the White House where congressional Republicans took turns praising him. Speaker 2: Thank you, mister president, for all of the support for New York state. Speaker 0: I appreciate your work ethic. I know how hard you work for the American people. Speaker 3: This This man goes 18, 20 hours a day. As many of you know, he's the most transparent president in history. Thank you for bringing us back here to show the American people that we can be here and Speaker 0: do our work. Speaker 3: The Democrats, are cowering, at home right Speaker 0: now. Meanwhile, vice president Pence, the public face of the administration's COVID effort, made a show of delivering boxes of PPE to doctors and joked about the situation. Now listen to the reporting from 4 years ago versus what Donald Trump and the White House were saying. Speaker 4: The virus is again hitting home at the White House where two staffers have now tested positive. Speaker 1: Mister president, is there is there a reason why people just aren't wearing masks at the White House? Speaker 5: Well, they are. People that They're not. No. People that are serving me are. Speaker 4: The number of deaths still climbing at over a1000 a day, now to over 78,000. Speaker 6: Mister president, you said recently that you would, if necessary, be the first person to get a vaccine. How important do you think the vaccine ultimately is? Speaker 5: Well, I didn't say I wanted to. That's not a a correct statement. Well, I feel about vaccines like I feel about tests. This is gonna go away without a vaccine. It's gonna go away, and it's, we're not gonna see it again. Speaker 2: With new cases surging in states like Minnesota, Nebraska, Iowa, and Wisconsin, health experts say expect a spike in COVID cases as states loosen restrictions. If it really picks up, it's very hard to stop again. Speaker 6: Mister president, you were with 7 American heroes earlier today, these World War 2 I was. All in their in their nineties. Did you consider wearing a mask when you were with them given their No. Speaker 5: Because I was very far away. Speaker 6: Did he consider wearing a mask while he was with these veterans? Speaker 2: They made the choice to come here because they've chosen to put their nation first. Speaker 5: No. You didn't worry about me. You only worried about them, and that's okay. They've lived a a great life. Speaker 7: The Trump administration is expanding guidelines drafted by the CDC, offering detailed advice to states about how and when to reopen public places. Speaker 5: You can have it and get through it very easily. Some people have a heart attack. Most people get through it. Speaker 4: Historic unemployment, the worst since the great depression. American families going hungry. 1,000 lined up at food banks. 3,000,000 more Americans filing for unemployment as the job situation grows increasingly bleak. Speaker 1: So if unemployment's at 14% now, perhaps going as high as 20%, Where do you think that will be in the 4th? Speaker 5: The number's gonna be a great number. I can't oh, I'm not gonna say exactly what. I call it the transition to greatness. We're gonna have a great year next year. You'll see. Speaker 0: You wanna go back there? That what you wanna do? Tell me, are you better off today than you were 4 years ago?
Saved - August 18, 2024 at 4:24 PM

@newstart_2024 - Camus

True... https://t.co/qNst0hgBaX

Saved - September 14, 2024 at 3:36 AM

@MTGrepp - Marjorie Taylor Greene Press Release (Parody)

YES or NO ? https://t.co/RGKfOyBmFp

Saved - October 9, 2024 at 8:15 PM

@EvaVlaar - Eva Vlaardingerbroek

Yes. https://t.co/CyhMaKoaAm

Video Transcript AI Summary
Europe has been predominantly white throughout its history, but now bureaucrats are deciding that Europeans should become a minority against the will of the people. Speaking out against this will result in attacks. The only other option is to say nothing and allow it to happen. A choice must be made.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: You of course, you're gonna be attacked if you say, hey. This continent, Europe, has been predominantly white for, you know, the entirety of its history. And now suddenly within 1 generation, a few bureaucrats have decided against the will of the people that we should suddenly be a minority. Why do we agree that with that, or why do we allow that to happen? If you say that, you are going to be attacked. But the only other option then you have is say nothing and have it happen. So the choice is yours, you know, and I've made my choice.

@Basil_TGMD - Basil ๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ง

Does this bother you? https://t.co/04uS0zSmbJ

Saved - October 16, 2024 at 1:09 PM

@VividProwess - Vivid.๐Ÿ‡ฎ๐Ÿ‡ฑ

Yes. https://t.co/C49kq28pvS

Saved - November 9, 2024 at 7:59 AM

@elonmusk - Elon Musk

YES! https://t.co/yrtfxAGfXi

Video Transcript AI Summary
Free speech is essential for a free country. If it is lost, all other rights will follow. I plan to dismantle the left-wing censorship regime and restore free speech for all Americans. First, I will sign an executive order to prevent federal agencies from colluding to censor speech and eliminate funding for labeling domestic speech as misinformation. Second, I will direct the DOJ to investigate and prosecute those involved in online censorship. Third, I will push Congress to revise Section 230 to ensure platforms meet standards of neutrality and transparency. Fourth, I will cut funding to universities engaging in censorship and impose penalties on federal officials collaborating with private entities to infringe on rights. Finally, Congress must pass a digital bill of rights, ensuring users have the right to due process and opt out of content moderation. Restoring free speech is vital for democracy and the nationโ€™s future.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: If we don't have free speech, then we just don't have a free country. It's as simple as that. If this most fundamental right is allowed to perish, then the rest of our rights and liberties will topple just like dominoes, 1 by 1. They'll go down. That's why today, I'm announcing my plan to shatter the left wing censorship regime and to reclaim the right to free speech for all Americans. And reclaim is a very important word in this case because they've taken it away. In recent weeks, bombshell reports have confirmed that a sinister group of deep state bureaucrats, Silicon Valley tyrants, left wing activists, and depraved corporate news media have been conspiring to manipulate and silence the American people. They have collaborated to suppress vital information on everything from elections to public health. The censorship cartel must be dismantled and destroyed and it must happen immediately, and here's my plan. 1st, within hours of my inauguration, I will sign an executive order banning any federal department or agency from colluding with any organization, business, or person to censor, limit, categorize, or impede the lawful speech of American citizens. I will then ban federal money from being used to label domestic speech as mis or disinformation, and I will begin the process of identifying and firing every federal bureaucrat who has engaged in domestic censorship directly or indirectly, whether they are the Department of Homeland Security, the Department of Health, Human Services, the FBI, the DOJ, no matter who they are. 2nd, I will order the Department of Justice to investigate all parties involved in the new online censorship regime, which is absolutely destructive and terrible, and to aggressively prosecute any and all crimes identified. These include possible violations of federal civil rights law, campaign finance laws, federal election law, securities law and antitrust laws, the Hatch Act, and a host of other potential criminal civil regulatory and constitutional offenses. To assist in these efforts, I am urging house Republicans to immediately send preservation letters, and we have to do this right now to the Biden administration, the Biden campaign, and every Silicon Valley tech giant, ordering them not to destroy evidence of censorship. 3rd, upon my inauguration as president, I will ask congress to send the bill to my desk revising section 230 to get big online platforms out of censorship business. From now on, digital platform should only qualify for immunity protection under section 230 if they meet high standards of neutrality, transparency, fairness, and nondiscrimination. We should require these platforms to increase their efforts to take down unlawful content such as child exploitation and promoting terrorism while dramatically curtailing their power to arbitrarily restrict lawful speech. 4th, we need to break up the entire toxic censorship industry that has arisen under the false guise of tackling so called mis and disinformation. The federal government should immediately stop funding all nonprofits and academic programs that support this authoritarian project. If any US university is discovered to have engaged in censorship activities or election interferences in the past, such as flagging social media content for removal of blacklisting, Those universities should lose federal research dollars and federal student loan support for a period of 5 years and maybe more. We should also enact new laws laying out clear criminal penalties for federal bureaucrats who partner with private entities to do an end run around the constitution and deprive Americans of their first, 4th, and 5th amendment rights. In other words, deprive them of their vote. And once you lose those elections and once you lose your borders like we have, you no longer have a country. Furthermore, to confront the problems of major platforms being infiltrated by legions of former deep staters and intelligence officials. There should be a 7 year calling off period before any employee of the FBI, CIA, NSA, DNI, DHS, or DOD is allowed to take a job at a company possessing vast quantities of US user data. 5th, the time has finally come for congress to pass a digital bill of rights. This should include a right to digital due process. In other words, government officials should need a court order to take down online content, not send information requests such as the FBI was sending to Twitter. Furthermore, when users of big online platforms have their content or accounts removed, throttled, shadow banned, or otherwise restricted, no matter what name they use, They should have the right to be informed that it's happening, the right to a specific explanation of the reason why, and the right to a timely appeal. In addition, all users over the age of 18 should have the right to opt out of content moderation and curation entirely and receive an unmanipulated stream of information if they so choose. The fight for free speech is a matter of victory or death for America and for the survival of Western civilization itself. When I am president, this whole rotten system of censorship and information control will be ripped out of the system at large. There won't be anything left. By restoring free speech, we'll begin to reclaim our democracy and save our nation. Thank you, and god bless America.
Saved - December 8, 2024 at 6:33 PM

@joeydark2Light - Joey dark 2 Light

. ๐Ÿค” https://t.co/LExDfGkJHc

Saved - January 19, 2025 at 6:15 PM

@DarkWebInformer - Dark Web Informer - Cyber Threat Intelligence

Sounds right. https://t.co/pWzdNFsjtg

Saved - January 27, 2025 at 12:01 AM

@Ragnar71115 - Archangel Michael

โšก๏ธโšก๏ธ https://t.co/MYaZUWLu79

Video Transcript AI Summary
In today's education, history is increasingly neglected, leading to a population that lacks national pride and awareness. Modern philosophy is criticized for promoting misguided ideas. The speaker argues against the acceptance of abortion, euthanasia, and same-sex marriage, claiming these issues stem from ignoring divine laws. They assert that the white race is being replaced and express a bleak outlook for the future. The speaker disputes the Holocaust narrative, claiming it is a fabrication and questioning the logistics of cremating six million bodies. They believe that emotional narratives overshadow evidence and lament that society prefers to live in a world of lies, failing to address the root causes of societal issues.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: It's interesting that in today's schools, the children are taught less and less history. The the one world government and the new world orders do not want people to know history. They want people to be dumb, stupid, sheep that could be led where they like with no pride in their country, no love of their country. Speaker 1: Modern philosophy teaches nonsense, and it's very grave. And that's why this the students are faggots. And then for when some sweet, soft, mushy minded liberal says to you, oh, but the existence of God is a question of faith. No. It is not. God's true church said the book artificialism of birth control is a very bad idea, and it's against the law of God. And if people had listened, we wouldn't have since abortion, euthanasia, same sex marriage, and all of these horrors one after another. And we'd have, a bigger number of white babies. Then there are no more white babies. The white race is being diluted and overrun, and the future looks very dark. Oh, that's grace. You're being replaced. Germany invaded Russia in order to head off communism as enemies of communism. Nazis were enemies of communism. Communism killed 100 of millions. Hitler allegedly killed 6,000,000 Jews. It's untrue. It's just not true. It's a fabrication. That so called holocaust is quite simply fabrication. You can spend a couple of hours on the Internet and if you seek out the revisionist, the best revisionist, is you'll see all the evidence points one way and all of the emotion points in the other way. The the emotion fully backs. 6,000,000 Jews wickedly killed in gas chambers by the Nazis. All the emotions on one side. All the evidence is on the other. How on earth in a couple of years do you cremate 6,000,000 corpses? It's not possible. With the number of gas evidence that they had at the most in in at Auschwitz or anywhere. The evidence is just absolutely against every time. But minds no longer run on evidence. People's minds today are gone. If you got a half a brain in your head, you'll see in a short space of time that the holocaust is quite simply a fabrication. 6,000,000 gas. There wasn't one, death deadly gas chamber or there wasn't one gas chamber in in in Nazi Germany, which was killing human beings. Not one. Yes. The lies have taken over. It's a world of lies that we're living in. And it's a world of lies that people the massive people want to live. People don't like the bad fruits, but they do like the bad roots. So if they cut off the bad fruits, bad fruits, but don't dig up the bad roots, then the bad fruits will simply grow.
Saved - February 11, 2025 at 10:42 AM

@elonmusk - Harry Bลlz

Bingo https://t.co/AdiByP94ei

Saved - April 5, 2025 at 8:19 PM

@elonmusk - Elon Musk

Yes https://t.co/j5DTPkmJ9g

Video Transcript AI Summary
The speakers discuss data showing teenage boys moving politically to the right. One speaker suggests boys are being pushed right by schools that tell them their instincts are bad, they are pathetic, and should be less masculine. The speaker claims this pressure cooker is created by a crazy, parasitized, left-wing educational movement. They state that this movement gives boys nothing and needs to get away from sons and daughters. The speaker does not identify as Republican, but wants people who do not understand human development away from children.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Have you seen the data showing the movement of teenage boys politically to the right? Have you been looking at this? Speaker 1: Where else are they gonna go? Speaker 0: It's a good question. Speaker 1: I mean, I I had a teenage boy. I still have one, but he's 18 now. And I watched them be pushed farther and farther right by their schools. You suck. All of your instincts are bad. These girls are amazing. Look at you. You're pathetic. Be less masculine and more attractive. You're just barking at them constantly. They're not moving right. They're moving out of your stupid way. You've given them what? Nothing. Nothing. One of my son's friends died recently by his own hand, And I don't know what kind of pressures he was put under, but I watched those kids go through this pressure cooker created by this crazy, parasitized, left wing educational movement. Get away from our sons. Get away from our daughters. Get away from our sons and away from our it's not left or right. I don't have a republican bone in my body. Get the crazy people who do not understand human development away from our children.
Saved - April 18, 2025 at 9:36 PM

@KarluskaP - Karli Bonneโ€™ ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

Yea ok ๐Ÿ‘Œ https://t.co/veADrd1Bwf

Video Transcript AI Summary
After meeting with Kilmar, President Bukele tweeted a photo of them at a table with two glasses that looked like margaritas. According to the speaker, when he first sat down with Kilmar, there were only glasses of water and coffee on the table. During their conversation, a government official placed two additional glasses with ice and a salted or sugared rim on the table. The glass in front of Kilmar had slightly less liquid, seemingly to imply he had taken a sip. The speaker claims neither he nor Kilmar touched the drinks. He suggests examining the initial video or picture from the meeting, which shows no glasses on the table. He says that if someone had sipped from the glasses, there would be a visible gap in the salt or sugar, but no such gap exists. The speaker believes this incident demonstrates the lengths President Bukele will go to deceive people.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Trump was asked at the White House today about what I would call Margaritagate. I don't know if you guys have been following this, but president Bukele, you know, after I met with Kilmar, did this tweet showing us at a table with these two glasses. So, here's what happened. When I first sat down with Kilmar, we just had glasses of water on the table. I think maybe some coffee. And as we were talking, one of the government people came over and deposited two other glasses on the table with ice and I don't know if it was salt or sugar around the top, but they look like margaritas. And if you look at the one they put in front of Kilmar, it actually had a little less liquid than the one in me, made in front of me. To try to make it look, I assume, like, he drank out of it. Let me just be very clear. Neither of us touched the drinks that were in front of us. And if you wanna play a little Sherlock Holmes, I'll tell you how you can know that. So if you look at the video or the picture I sent out from the beginning of our meeting, you'll see there are no glasses on the table. So you'll see in later videos they are on the table. But they made a little mistake for some people to be careful, right? If you sip out of one of those glasses, some of whatever it was, salt or sugar. Would disappear. You would see a gap. There's no gap. Nobody drank any. There's no gap. Margaritas or sugar water or whatever it is. But this is a lesson into the lengths that president Bukele will do to deceive people about what's going on.
Saved - June 23, 2025 at 6:24 PM

@TuckerCNews - Tucker Carlson News

YES or NO? https://t.co/9YNAf8kQM6

Saved - July 21, 2025 at 11:58 AM

@its_The_Dr - Johnny Midnight โšก๏ธ

Yep! https://t.co/8wChcfaSoO

Saved - September 17, 2025 at 4:12 AM

@RealCandaceO - Candace Owens

Fact check: TRUE. https://t.co/dS2VLybX0Y

Video Transcript AI Summary
He did not like B. B. Netanyahu. He felt that B. B. Netanyahu was a very destructive force and was appalled by what was happening in Gaza. He was resentful that he believed Netanyahu was using The United States to prosecute his wars for the benefit of his country, and that it was shameful and embarrassing and bad for The United States. He resented it and didn't hate Netanyahu. "There's no question that BB's defenders, on the internet will call me a liar or a kook. But that's a fact." "Enough text messages exist that I think it can probably be verified in pretty short order." Shortly after that speech, there was "a very intense attack on Charlie" and "I have no donors." He had "$100,000,000" worth of donors. "They went after him and tormented him ... until the day he died."
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: He did not like B. B. Netanyahu, and he said that to me many times, and he said to people around him many times. He felt that B. B. Netanyahu was a very destructive force. He was appalled by what was happening in Gaza. He was above all resentful that he believed Netanyahu was using The United States to prosecute his wars for the benefit of his country, and that it was shameful and embarrassing and bad for The United States. He resented it. Didn't hate Netanyahu. He wasn't out there with a placard saying that, but he certainly expressed that to me and a lot of other people. There's no question that BB's defenders, on the internet will call me a liar or a kook. But that's a fact. Enough text messages exist that I think it can probably be verified in pretty short order. Not that it needs to be because that is true. Shortly after that speech, was a very intense attack on Charlie and to some extent, mean, not that I really noticed, but on him, I have no donors. He had $100,000,000 worth of donors. And so because he was involved in different projects from just yapping on the internet, which is what I do for a living, he was dependent to a great extent on his donors, of course. It's a nonprofit. And they went after him and tormented him, not all, of course, many were supportive, but, the ones who were offended by my speech, and there was a small, very intense group who were tormented Charlie Kirk until the day he died.
Saved - March 9, 2026 at 6:21 PM

@Mappy6984 - NRM84

Nope https://t.co/JfyMEmypoq

Video Transcript AI Summary
"Look at all these brand new houses they're building. Ain't that nice? Nope." "Alright. So let's take the irrigation control panel here and why don't we just put it on its own dedicated breaker?" "Panel is right here. Painting with our eyes closed again. Awesome. Nope. Nope." "Nope. Nope." "Yeah. Right. For fiber cement board planks or hardy board, which is that stuff up there, they should be moderately touching but not forced together. So the older alternative method of installing them is leaving about a onesixteen an inch gap to a oneeight an inch gap. Let's see how they did." "Nope. No. Nope. I mean, maybe the other side will be better, right? Maybe." "For real. Come on. It's literally the whole house. No. Wait for it." "Wait for it. Nope. Nope." "Alright. Well, here's the bathroom." "Yeah. Looks good. Alright. Yeah. Alright." "Yep. Nothing to see here. Everything's fine. Nope. And we're missing a splash guard." "And our cabinet doors are a little off there. Couple little dents there. They couldn't even erase what they wrote back here behind the refrigerator." "This is my favorite. Oh, yeah. That's nice." "Dishwasher might stay in place a little bit better if it was actually screwed in. Yeah. And we got that. Nope." "Well, you missed a spot. So there's definitely quite a bit of subject matter here in this garage. We'll go over some of it. Know, unsealed penetrations, all these repairs done to the block. That just looks atrocious." "Big old gap there, gaps at the ceiling, more gaps, repairs, That bracket isn't doing anything. A little bit of everywhere. Missing paint all on the bottom there. Yeah. New construction." "And to add to the garage, we're missing something. And then after doing that today, I get to enjoy my happy place."
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Look at all these brand new houses they're building. Ain't that nice? Nope. Alright. So let's take the irrigation control panel here and why don't we just put it on its own dedicated breaker? Panel is right here. Painting with our eyes closed again. Awesome. Nope. Nope. Nope. Nope. Where there's one, there's always another one. Nope. Nope. Yeah. Right. For fiber cement board planks or hardy board, which is that stuff up there, they should be moderately touching but not forced together. So the older alternative method of installing them is leaving about a onesixteen an inch gap to a oneeight an inch gap. Let's see how they did. Nope. No. Nope. I mean, maybe the other side will be better, right? Maybe. For real. Come on. It's literally the whole house. No. Wait for it. Wait for it. Nope. Nope. Alright. Well, here's the bathroom. Yeah. Looks good. Alright. Yeah. Alright. Yep. Nothing to see here. Everything's fine. Nope. And we're missing a splash guard. And our cabinet doors are a little off there. Couple little dents there. They couldn't even erase what they wrote back here behind the refrigerator. This is my favorite. Oh, yeah. That's nice. Dishwasher might stay in place a little bit better if it was actually screwed in. Yeah. And we got that. Nope. Well, you missed a spot. So there's definitely quite a bit of subject matter here in this garage. We'll go over some of it. Know, unsealed penetrations, all these repairs done to the block. That just looks atrocious. Big old gap there, gaps at the ceiling, more gaps, repairs, That bracket isn't doing anything. A little bit of everywhere. Missing paint all on the bottom there. Yeah. New construction. And to add to the garage, we're missing something. And then after doing that today, I get to enjoy my happy place.
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