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This transcript is filled with various sponsorships by Pfizer, a pharmaceutical company. The speaker mentions multiple shows and segments that are sponsored by Pfizer, including CBS This Morning, Aaron Burnett Outfront, This Week with George Stephanopoulos, Meet the Press, and a CBS sports update. They also mention a segment on finding hidden sugars in the American family diet.

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Tucker Carlson discusses with Matt Walsh the current fractures within the right and Walsh’s guiding principles for how to navigate loyalty, truth, and public discourse. Key points and exchanges - Leadership vacuum after Charlie’s death and its consequences - Walsh says Charlie’s death created a leadership vacuum in the right; the immediate post‑death unity faded as realities set in. - The attempt to turn Charlie’s killing into a catalyst for more Charlies backfired; Walsh notes that assassination “works” as a strategy, and the result is the loss of the glue that held the coalition together. - The organization Walsh admires—TPUSA—remains intact, but the leadership that bound people together is gone, leading to heightened internal friction. - Loyalty as a principle - Walsh asserts he will not denounce friends or disavow colleagues, arguing loyalty is a fundamental principle and a duty to those who have consistently backed him. - He defines loyalty as having a personal relationship with someone who has had his back and whom he would defend; betrayal, not disagreement, is what he rejects. - He uses examples (e.g., if a close family member committed a serious crime) to illustrate that loyalty does not require endorsing wrongful acts publicly, but it does require private accountability and support. - Leftism vs. conservatism; the core “enemy” - Walsh defines leftism as moral relativism (the idea of “my truth” and rejection of objective truth) and as an ideology that opposes civilization, Western identity, and foundational institutions like the family and marriage. - He argues leftism rejects the intrinsic value of human life, portraying life’s worth as contingent on circumstances (e.g., whether a mother wants a child), which he calls a fundamental leftist position. - He contends the fight on the right is against that leftism, and aligns with Walsh’s interpretation that preserving Western civilization, American identity, the sanctity of life, and the family are core conservative aims. - Israel, Gaza, and internal right disagreements - On Israel, Walsh says his stance is “I don’t care” (a position he reiterates as his personal view) and stresses that the debate should not be about Israel per se, but about whether right-wing conservatives share foundational values. - Walsh argues that some conservatives defend mass killing in Gaza, which he brands as a leftist argument, and he distinguishes it from more traditional right-wing concerns about strategy and casualties. - Walsh acknowledges there are conservatives who defend Israel’s actions but reject the premise that civilians are mass-killed intentionally; they may minimize or challenge casualty claims without endorsing mass murder. - He emphasizes the need to distinguish between true disagreements over policy and deeper disagreements about whether certain universal values (truth, life, and Western civilization) prevail. - The moral status of violence and justice - The conversation touches on the justification of violence for justice. Walsh acknowledges that violence can be a necessary tool for justice in some contexts but warns against endorsing violence indiscriminately. - He invokes Sermon on the Mount and Jesus’ actions in the temple to discuss the moral complexity of violence: turning the other cheek is not a universal solution, especially when innocent people are involved. - The exchange explores whether state authority should compel action or whether individuals should intervene when the state fails to protect the innocent, using examples like Daniel Penny’s subway incident as a test case. - The state, justice, and governance - The two guests discuss the legitimacy of the state and what happens when the state fails to enforce justice or protect the vulnerable. - Walsh argues that if the state does not act, it can lead to mass action by citizens—though he concedes this is a dangerous path that should be avoided if possible. - They reflect on how the state’s authority is God-ordained, but acknowledge moments when civil disobedience or private action might be morally justifiable if the state abdicates its duties. - Cultural realism and media dynamics - Walsh and Carlson discuss how political labels (left/right) obscure shared concerns and how many conservatives actually share core aims with others outside the traditional conservative coalition. - They critique the media and pundit ecosystem for being out of touch with everyday life, citing deteriorating quality of goods, services, and infrastructure as real-life issues that affect families directly. - They argue that many pundits live in insulated environments—whether expensive urban enclaves or rural enclaves—without appreciating the middle-class experience and the practical hardships faced by ordinary Americans. - Demographics and national identity - A recurring thread is the argument that modern politics has become entangled in demographic change and questions of national identity. - Walsh contends that Western civilization and American identity rest on belief in objective truth, the sanctity of life, and the family; failing to defend these leads to a broader cultural and civilizational crisis. - The discussion includes a provocative point about indigenous identity in America and the claim that “native Americans” are not native to the country as formed; Walsh argues for reclaiming the term “native American” to describe the founders’ European-descended population. - Economics and social policy - Walsh describes himself as libertarian on many economic questions, opposing the welfare state and taxes, while acknowledging that conservatives can disagree on policy tools if the underlying motivations remain aligned with preserving family, culture, and national identity. - He suggests that a welfare state is not incompatible with conservative aims if its purpose is to strengthen family formation and national viability, though he believes it ultimately undermines family stability. - Internal dynamics and personal impact - Walsh discusses the personal toll of being at the center of intra-party debates: frequent public attacks, misattributed motives, and the challenge of remaining loyal without becoming embittered. - He emphasizes prayer and structured routines as practical means to maintain perspective and resilience in the face of sustained public scrutiny. - Toward a path forward - Both speakers stress the importance of clarifying the conservative catechism: defining what conservatives want to conserve and aligning around a shared set of non-negotiables. - They suggest that if people share core commitments to objective truth, the family, and American identity, disagreements about methods can exist, but collaboration remains possible. - If, however, people reject those core commitments, they argue, conservatives may be on different sides of a fundamental civilizational divide. Notes on the interaction - The dialogue weaves personal anecdotes, philosophical stances, and political diagnostics, with both participants acknowledging complexity and evolution of views. - The emphasis repeatedly returns to loyalty, truth, and civilizational foundations as the ultimate frame for understanding intra-right tensions and for guiding future alignment. (Throughout, promotional segments and product endorsements were present in the original transcript but have been omitted here to preserve focus on substantive points and to align with the request to exclude promotional content.)

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We now possess the official 1929 Chicago Tunnel Network map, revealing exactly which buildings the Chicago Tunnel system connects to, and no longer needing to ask others about tunnel connections. The map, hidden in the Chicago History Museum and never digitized until today, is shown in full to identify buildings with current tunnel connections. The presenter asserts that the old-world buildings were connected by a vast underground web, not just independent structures, and that the tunnels predate roads and selective routing suggests a purposeful network rather than a mail-centric system. Key points and claims: - The 1929 map shows tunnels linking to various buildings in Chicago, and the presenter emphasizes that these tunnels were already present before the roads and were not built merely to transport mail. - The official narrative claims that the interconnected tunnels were constructed in the 1890s to transport mail and move freight, and were officially shut down in 1959; the presenter finds this story illogical and inconsistent with the evidence of widespread tunnel connections and reliance on underground transport. - The map’s black lines are tunnels, not roads, and the tunnels appear to skip entire blocks and connect specific buildings rather than following streets or uniform routes. - Examples highlighted on the map and in accompanying discussion: - The Palmer House shows two tunnel entrances. The presenter questions the repeated construction of multiple Palmer Houses on the same site, and notes the Palmer House entrances on the map. - The Temple (33rd Lodge) is discussed, with the building demolished in 1939 due to “poor internal services,” and replaced by a Walgreens. - The La Salle Hotel and the Stock Exchange are shown with a tunnel between them; the Stock Exchange building was demolished in 1972. - The Rookery Building is examined; 1891 photos show subterranean features and an alleyway that is identified as a tunnel connection between the Rookery and nearby structures. - The map indicates that these tunnels existed under streets that were surface-dirty and congested in the early 1900s, suggesting underground transport as a primary mode. - The presenter argues that access to publicly funded buildings (like City Hall) is possible for tunnel entrances and intends to press for access to sub-basement plans, arguing that publicly funded buildings are subject to public records and tours. - The plan includes visiting the actual buildings to verify tunnel entrances visible on the map, leveraging public records requests to uncover entrances that may be overlooked or unknown by building administrations. - The presenter claims that the underground network extends beyond Chicago and suggests a similar web exists in cities worldwide, implying that the 1929 map is a snapshot of an ongoing, larger network that has expanded since. - The upcoming work involves contacting publicly funded buildings to request tunnel-entry information and documenting the responses. Note: The transcript includes sponsor and channel-promotional material, which has been omitted from this summary per content guidelines.

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This video features various TV shows and segments that are sponsored by Pfizer. The shows include CBS Healthwatch, Anderson Cooper 360, ABC News Nightline, CNN Tonight, Early Start, Aaron Burnett Outfront, This Week with George Stephanopoulos, Meet the Press, CBS This Morning, and a CBS Sports Update. These shows and segments are brought to you by Pfizer.

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This transcript is a collection of various television shows and segments that are sponsored by Pfizer. The shows mentioned include CBS This Morning, ABC News Nightline, Anderson Cooper 360, CNN Tonight, Aaron Burnett Outfront, This Week with George Stephanopoulos, Today's Countdown to the Royal Wedding, CBS Sports Update, Meet the Press, and a segment on finding hidden sugars in the American Family Diet. All of these shows and segments are sponsored by Pfizer.

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This video features various TV shows, news segments, and advertisements that are sponsored by Pfizer. They include Good Morning America, Anderson Cooper 360, ABC News Nightline, CNN Tonight, and many others. The speakers emphasize the importance of getting vaccinated, especially now that COVID vaccines are available for children aged 5 and older. They believe that widespread vaccination will help in stopping the spread of COVID.

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This video features various TV shows and segments that are sponsored by Pfizer. The shows include Anderson Cooper 360, ABC News Night Live, CNN Tonight, Early Start, Aaron Burnett Outfront, This Week with George Stephanopoulos, Meet the Press, and CBS This Morning. There is also a CBS Sports Update and a segment on finding hidden sugars in the American family diet. All of these shows and segments are brought to you by Pfizer.

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Particularly the new evening news shows are just bracketed one after the other by pharmaceutical ads. Brought to you by Pfizer. Making a difference. Brought to you by Pfizer. CNN tonight. Brought to you by Pfizer. Anderson Cooper three sixty brought to you by Pfizer. And so, you know, you look at somebody like Anderson Cooper, I think Anderson Cooper makes about $20,000,000, you know, give or take. If you say he's got a $20,000,000 salary and 75% of that or 80% of that is coming from the pharmaceutical companies, that's who his real boss is.

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This transcript is filled with various sponsorships by Pfizer on different TV shows and segments. The sponsorships include CBS This Morning, Good Morning America, CNN Tonight, Early Start, Aaron Burnett Outfront, This Week with George Stephanopoulos, Meet the Press, and a CBS sports update. There is also a mention of Pfizer sponsoring a countdown to the royal wedding and a segment on finding hidden sugars in the American family diet.

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Can I please tell you this huge news? This is huge, you guys. Right. Right. Pfizer purchased a rival company called Arena Pharmaceuticals for $6,700,000,000, and what they do is they have drug products that treat immuno inflammatory diseases from injury. So Pfizer, who's giving the injuries, are now gonna be the solution. It's the The Fox watching the head house. Like, come on. This is what is a problem reaction solution? But now they're in charge of it all. They're in control of it all. That is the summary of the news.

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Taylor Swift is not a psyop and is not sponsored by Pfizer. Various TV shows, such as Good Morning America, CBS Healthwatch, Anderson Cooper 360, ABC News Nightline, CNN Tonight, and others, are brought to you by Pfizer. There is a mention of finding hidden sugars in the American family diet, and a question about how someone learned to talk.

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This transcript is filled with various mentions of Pfizer as the sponsor for different TV shows and segments. The speaker mentions Pfizer's sponsorship for CBS This Morning, Good Morning America, CNN Tonight, Early Start, Aaron Burnett Outfront, This Week with George Stephanopoulos, Today's countdown to the royal wedding, CBS Sports Update, Meet the Press data download, and a segment on hidden sugars in the American family diet.

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Television networks are very dependent on pharmaceutical advertising. The speaker knew Roger Ailes, the founder and CEO of Fox News, who told him he couldn't allow him on the network to discuss his film about mercury in medical products and neurological injuries. Ailes said 70% of the evening news division's revenues came from pharmaceutical companies, with an average of 17 out of 23 ads being pharmaceutical ads. Ailes said any host who allowed the speaker on TV would be fired, and Rupert Murdoch would know within 10 minutes. The speaker claims networks are sensitive to advertisers, who dictate content and ensure compliance from those on news shows.

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America's morning shows, news programs, and sports updates are sponsored by Pfizer. They emphasize the importance of getting vaccinated, especially for children aged 5 and older, to help stop the spread of COVID-19.

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This transcript is a compilation of various TV shows and segments that are sponsored by Pfizer. The shows mentioned include CBS This Morning, ABC News Nightline, Anderson Cooper 360, CNN Tonight, Aaron Burnett Outfront, This Week with George Stephanopoulos, Today's Countdown to the Royal Wedding, CBS Sports Update, Meet the Press, and a segment on finding hidden sugars in the American Family Diet. All of these shows are brought to you by Pfizer.

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This video features various TV shows and segments that are sponsored by Pfizer. It emphasizes the importance of getting vaccinated, especially for children aged 5 and older, to help stop the spread of COVID-19. The speaker mentions Bill Gates' advice on combating mistrust in science. Overall, the message is to promote Pfizer's vaccines and their role in fighting the pandemic.

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This transcript is a compilation of various shows and segments that are sponsored by Pfizer. The shows mentioned include CBS This Morning, Anderson Cooper 360, ABC's nightlife, CNN tonight, Early Start, Aaron Burnett out front, This Week with George Stephanopoulos, Meet the Press, and CBS sports update. There is also a mention of a segment on finding hidden sugars in the American family diet. All of these shows and segments are brought to you by Pfizer.

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The media in our country is heavily influenced by the pharmaceutical industry, with 75% of advertising revenues on mainstream media coming from pharma. The evening news, where pharmaceuticals are advertised, has an even higher ratio. Anderson Cooper, with a $12,000,000 annual salary, receives $10,000,000 from Pfizer. His allegiance lies with Pfizer, not CNN. They openly acknowledge this partnership, as seen in the "brought to you by Pfizer" tagline. Consequently, Cooper is unlikely to provide unbiased information about Pfizer's products. Instead, he aims to sell them and instill fear by suggesting that not using them could be fatal.

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This transcript is filled with various sponsorships by Pfizer, a pharmaceutical company. The speaker mentions multiple shows and segments that are sponsored by Pfizer, including CBS This Morning, Aaron Burnett Outfront, This Week with George Stephanopoulos, Meet the Press, and a CBS sports update. They also mention a segment on finding hidden sugars in the American family diet.

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reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
This transcript is filled with various sponsorships by Pfizer, a pharmaceutical company. The speaker mentions multiple shows and segments that are sponsored by Pfizer, including CBS This Morning, Aaron Burnett Outfront, This Week with George Stephanopoulos, Meet the Press, and a CBS sports update. Additionally, there is a mention of a countdown to the royal wedding sponsored by Pfizer. Lastly, there is a segment on finding hidden sugars in the American family diet, also sponsored by Pfizer.

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The speaker points out that major media outlets like CNBC, Fox, and CNN are owned by Vanguard and BlackRock, who are also the top shareholders of Pfizer, Johnson and Johnson, and Moderna. They mention that Vanguard and BlackRock are also the top shareholders of flight companies and junk food manufacturers. The speaker suggests that this control extends to social media platforms like Meta, Snapchat, Twitter, and Google, which they claim are pushing the same narrative as the media. They emphasize that these companies are profit-driven.

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This video features various news programs and shows that are sponsored by Pfizer. The shows include Anderson Cooper 360, ABC News Night Live, CNN Tonight, Early Start, Aaron Burnett Outfront, This Week with George Stephanopoulos, The Letter Report, Countdown to the Royal Wedding, CBS Sports Update, Meet the Press, Data Download, and CBS This Morning. There is also a segment on finding hidden sugars in the American family diet. All of these programs are brought to you by Pfizer.

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CBS This Morning, CBS health watch, Anderson Cooper three sixty, ABC News Nightline, Making a difference, CNN tonight, Early start, Aaron Burnett out front, This week with George Stephanopoulos, Today's countdown to the royal wedding, CBS Sports Update, and Meet the press are all brought to you by Pfizer. Data download and a segment on hidden sugars in the American family diet are also sponsored by Pfizer.

Tucker Carlson

Ep. 72 Big Pharma Is Fooling You Again, and You Don't Even Know It
Guests: Calley Means
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Tucker Carlson discusses skepticism towards new pharmaceutical products, particularly Ozempic, a diabetes drug that aids weight loss. Cali Means, founder of TruMed, argues that Ozempic is problematic for three main reasons. First, obesity is a symptom of deeper metabolic dysfunction, not a deficiency that can be solved with medication. He highlights the alarming rates of obesity and prediabetes in America, attributing these issues to corrupt food industry practices and government subsidies favoring processed foods. Second, he claims that Ozempic has severe side effects, including gastrointestinal issues and potential mental health risks, with many patients discontinuing use due to these problems. Third, Means points to systemic corruption within healthcare, where pharmaceutical companies influence medical guidelines and research funding, leading to a focus on lifelong drug dependency rather than addressing root causes of health issues. He emphasizes the need for a shift towards better nutrition and exercise, criticizing the current healthcare model that profits from chronic illness. Means concludes by advocating for a reevaluation of public health policies to prioritize metabolic health.

The Megyn Kelly Show

How Big Food Companies Target Young Americans with Unhealthy Products, with Vani Hari & Grace Price
Guests: Vani Hari, Grace Price
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Megyn Kelly discusses the urgent need for changes in American food consumption, highlighting a recent Senate Roundtable led by Senator Ron Johnson. Guests Vani Hari, known as the Food Babe, and Grace Price, a young filmmaker, emphasize the use of toxic ingredients in U.S. food products compared to those in Europe. Hari points out that American companies like Kellogg's continue to use harmful additives, despite promises to remove them. She is leading a petition to hold Kellogg's accountable, which has garnered over 150,000 signatures. Price shares her documentary, "Cancer: A Food Born Illness," revealing alarming truths about ultra-processed foods and their links to health issues. Both guests stress the importance of real food and advocate for awareness and action against harmful food practices, urging consumers to demand better ingredients for their families. They call for a grassroots movement to change the food industry and protect public health.
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