Bill Walton Re: Sovereignty; Cultural Marxism; Climate Hoax; National Debt; Trump 24 | Judicial Watch

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Summary

➡ This podcast, Judicial Watch, discusses news that mainstream media often overlooks. The host, Chris Farrell, invites listeners to share their thoughts and ideas. In this episode, he interviews Bill Walton, a successful businessman and chair of the Resolute Protector Foundation. They discuss Walton’s experiences in business and politics, his work with the Trump administration, and the influence of a professional political class on government agencies.
➡ The article discusses the challenges faced by those trying to implement changes in government agencies, particularly those appointed by President Trump. It highlights the resistance from long-standing employees and suggests solutions such as relocating departments, rotating job assignments, and eliminating unnecessary units. The article also criticizes the current administration’s lack of concern for national debt and the focus on climate change and diversity, equity, and inclusion, which the author views as detrimental to the western world.
➡ The U.S. debt is growing and it’s becoming a problem. People are losing trust in the U.S. because of its financial behavior and political decisions, like leaving Afghanistan. This could lead to the U.S. dollar no longer being the main currency used for global trade. If that happens, our debt could become unmanageable. Also, there are concerns about the U.S.’s security and sovereignty, with some people worried about the influence of global organizations like the World Health Organization. Lastly, there’s a growing skepticism about government actions, like the COVID lockdowns, and people are becoming more aware of these issues.
➡ The text talks about two main points. First, it discusses the idea of a credit card that could track your health and vaccination status, which is being considered. Second, it talks about the rise of China’s economy, largely due to American efforts to help it grow. The text suggests that China used this help to strengthen its own economy and now poses a threat. It also criticizes American companies for continuing to do business in China and the lack of political leadership to change this. Lastly, it questions the common belief that CO2 is harmful, suggesting it’s actually beneficial and necessary for plant life.
➡ This text discusses the concern over the influence of critical theory and its narrative of oppression in our education system. It suggests that this narrative is being taught to children from a young age, even through simple math problems, and argues that this is harmful. The text also highlights the importance of parents and the public being aware of what is being taught in schools, and suggests that cutting off funding could be a solution. It also touches on concerns about censorship and surveillance, and the need for people to be aware and take action against these issues.
➡ The Resolute Protector foundation hosts a show where they discuss various topics with experts, like economics and future energy sources. They aim to provide in-depth discussions on subjects that aren’t usually covered well elsewhere. The show’s episodes can be found on the Judicial Watch site. The hosts believe it’s important to have thoughtful conversations and not forget about these topics.

Transcript

I’m Chris Farrell, and this is on Watch. Welcome to on Watch, everybody, the Judicial Watch podcast, where we take a deep dive behind the headlines to cover news items that the mainstream media would rather you not know about, where we try to recover some lost history and where we try to explain the inexplicable. We appreciate you taking time to join us, and we’d like you, whether you’re following us on the video version of this podcast or on the audio streaming version on Spotify or wherever you listen to your podcasts, we appreciate you taking the time to listen or to watch us.

Please be sure to subscribe. Leave us a rating that helps us out and also communicate with us. You can email us at info digitalwatch. org dot. Give us your ideas on what you want us to work on, talk about what you’d like us to investigate and what kind of guests you’d like to have on the show today. A real treat for you. I’m joined by my friend and colleague, Bill Walton.

Mister Walton is the chair of the Resolute Protector foundation, which is a media company. But he’s got a long history as an entrepreneur, a business executive, a leader in the business community, but also a leader in what I’d like to call, or what I guess I should refer to really, as not just entrepreneurial efforts, but also in arts and culture and trying to really raise the standards of America’s public trying efforts or foundations.

Giving it a shot, yeah. Bill Walton, welcome to on Watch. Well, thanks, Chris. It’s great to see you. I had you on my show about two weeks ago with, I’m sure that was a record breaking. Actually, it was record breaking. You know, what you pointed out that I didn’t realize at the time with your book about George Earle and the foot Roosevelt administration, we had a problem of elite capture back then.

It’s not just now. So anyway, your book is a real treat. I highly recommend it. Thank you very much. I appreciate that. Elite capture is one of the topics we wanted to talk about today with you. You’re one of the elite, at least in my view. You are. You are a guy with a tremendous background and experience as a business leader, as a Wall street guy, as somebody who understands business and finance and economics.

You’re connected. You know people and you know people who know people. And you’re the kind of person, if you were on the other side of the political aisle, I think that there would be a lot of folks from different countries who are very interested in being very good friends with you. Well, I’d like to think they want to be knowing me now. I have a terrible, terrible background.

I was New York Stock Exchange CEO for 14 years, but a $12 billion company. And I was on all sorts of boards. I was on the financial services Roundtable board, which is all the big banks and all the big investment banks like Goldman Sachs. And then I even went to Davos. And so I’ve seen that upfront and personal. I was there in surgery. Brin and his partner at Google were there.

And we had lunch, and they were just kids, but boy, listened to them talk and they saw themselves as masters of the universe, did even as 20 something. It was really interesting. That’s a set of experiences. I mean, you’re smarter than the average bear. This is not something that everybody has access to or has awareness of. You did something else that I really find very interesting. And that is, given all your background and experience, you assisted the Trump administration as they launched into the administration with landing teams.

Everybody knows what a landing team is. But these are the folks that first go into agencies, and you had responsibility for all those financial and economic departments and agencies, treasury, sec, Ir’s. You came up with kind of the structure, the architecture and the manning of who was going to go in and take leadership of those. Well, when a new government comes in, is formed, in this case, 2016 is when Donald Trump was elected.

Even three or four months before the election, they stand up something called a transition team. And I was part of his transition team, and I oversaw all of the financial agencies, the IR’s, the Treasury, Commerce Department, us trade representatives, and all that whole Alphabet soup of FCC and SEC and all that sort of thing, and all the things we don’t understand, but we ought to, because they’re up to no good.

And so, yeah, I had a chance to, and I managed about 250 people who were actually doing the plans. We had a lot of experience in that area, and it was eye opening. And the issue we had with Donald Trump, who I’m still major supporter of, is that even though we’d done all this work, when he came in from New York and came in with his business background, I don’t think he fully appreciated how much more he needed to know about those agencies.

I think there’s a lost opportunity that we didn’t, in fact, do all the things that we thought we ought to do. We were actually beginning to gear up again in 2020. Now that he’d had all these wake up calls and realized that he didn’t have control of his own government, we began thinking about how to change personnel, how to get rigs, how to get things in place to permanently change all the damage the deep state was doing.

And, you know, as we circle back to right now, Heritage was a group project 25, and I wrote the plan for treasury along with Steve Moore and David Burton. Who’s the treasury? Daniel? Well, the left thinks that you’re like one of the architects of the end of the republic. I mean, because the left is hyperventilating about Heritage’s 2025 project. Well, we’re the end of their cushy jobs in Washington.

I mean, the thing is, they define democracy. They define democracy as the institutions, and they control the institutions. And so anything that attacks the institutions that they’ve got in place for their power is against democracy. Well, we define democracy about people. And, you know, you ask sovereignty, the sovereignty of the citizens, not the you know, somehow I got infected with this idea that all the really good stuff comes from individuals, and all the good things that happen in the economy come from innovation and growth initiatives by entrepreneurs and ordinary people who become successful.

I happen to think that works. And the closer you get to people who are actually doing things, the better things go. And now we’ve got is this incredible power structure in Washington and all the other capitals of the world, Brussels, London. I think Beijing would qualify in that. Absolutely. And they want to control us all from above, and we’ve got to stop that. People don’t necessarily understand. I guess they’re increasing their awareness, understanding of sort of this professional political class that really controls governmental agencies, departments, bureaus, and they’re a fourth branch of government.

Right. It’s the most important piece of the puzzle that people don’t understand. I was really not that political. I became, I guess, sort of radicalized, if we will, running a public company. When I began to realize how much the government was against growth and ESCC and regulation and things like that were really, really negative instead of positive. But the thing about me getting involved is the first thing I did 2010, I was involved with the tea Party for a little while.

I was chairman of Ginny Beth’s tea party patriots, which was fantastic. But we at the time were aimed at Congress. We thought if we could just get better congressmen and get better laws passed, things like that, we could transform things. And what I’ve come to realize in that 16 years or 14 years since then is the real action, the real thing we’ve got to stop are all those administrative agencies, all those agencies I mentioned, and that’s a permanent governing class.

But the way I’ve described it, and people will remember this. Sally Yates is a figure from early in the Trump administration. She was the acting attorney general, and Trump had made some executive orders. His so called muslim ban, which is not a muslim ban, had to do with persons coming from targeted countries. In fact, the most populous muslim nation in the world, Indonesia, was not subject to this ban, which proves the point.

But nonetheless, there was a Sally Yates, as acting attorney general, essentially issued an order saying to the Department of Justice, do not follow the president’s executive order. Do not execute, which is mutinous, really. It’s an outrageous act by somebody acting as the attorney general. And so there was much hullabaloo. She ended up getting canned. That’s a whole separate story. But I mention that because what I try to explain to people is that within the Department of Justice, there’s an entire army of Sally Yates, the rank and file membership of the Department of Justice are people just like that.

And even if theyre not actively opposing the president, in this case President Trump, then they just sit there with their arms folded and they take no action whatsoever. So theyre not defying and theyre not disobeying, but theyre simply not complying. And that is a problem that Trump not just in DOJ, but in many, many other, like you said. Well, yeah, our friend Michael Pack, the very famous documentary filmmaker on our side, did a film about Rick over all sorts of interesting documentaries that have won a lot of awards.

Well, he was appointed head of the agency that does that, runs Voice of America. Right. The global. I’m going to get my name messed up. I like Voice of America. It’s easier to understand. So, global communications officer. Yeah, exactly. But what he discovered when he finally got, got into the job, they tried to block his nomination. When he got in, he had one other person, maybe two other people, that he could begin to implement President Trump’s agenda.

And the other 2500 people in the building did not want to do it. Correct. And they actively fought against him every step of the way. It was an incredibly eye opening experience. Now, coming back around to this time, we know what we’re up against, and we can begin to think about getting some of those permanent government employees, maybe out of those jobs and get more appointees in. Want to hear two solutions I have for that? Let me give you another brief.

You said I was, I helped put plans together for the treasury and the IR’s, and they’re all part of this one agency. And the treasury supposedly employs 80,000 people. Well, not really 75,000 of those people are employed at the Internal Revenue Service. And that tells you what you need to know. Okay. So you become the IR’s commissioner, and there are some people who want me to try to do that job.

Do you know how many political appointees there are? Three. Two. Okay. I was going to, you get the commissioner and you get the general counsel. And other than that, you’ve got the whole permanent class in the IR’s. I want to hear your two solutions. Yeah. So two solutions to this one. Number one is, and this has been talked about forever and ever, and I’d love to see it actually executed.

And Trump, I think, is the guy to do it, is move these departments out of Washington, DC. So take agriculture and put it in St. Louis, Missouri, take interior and put it in Billings, Montana. You just simply break up the physical location of the government and you put it in a place that it kind of makes sense where it would be. The second thing, if that was too drastic, too crazy, is an administrative, that’s a pretty good idea.

Is an administrative way. Look, so I was an army officer in my youth, many moons ago, and I knew every three to four years I was going to move, I was going to change jobs. It’s just the way it works. So every three to four years, all military officers, in fact, not even officers, all military personnel know that they’re going to move. You’re going to get a new assignment.

And so what I would say, particularly in the Department of Justice, because there’s a lot of people homesteading. Right. They’ve been in this division or this department forever, is after four years, we know you’ve been working on patent law. That’s wonderful. Here’s an exciting opportunity to go to St. Louis, to Chicago, to Albuquerque, and you’re going to do criminal work. And if you don’t want to do that, well, there’s exciting opportunities for you out in the public sector.

Go ahead and. Well, the third solution is that these agencies, all these agencies have units in them that got started up in 1934 or 1956 or they got started up because of the real estate crisis or because of this thing or that LBJ’s great society. And there are all these agencies that got created at a time where there was need. They’re still there. And so one of the things you need to do if you go in is you need to say, okay, we’ve got 20 different units in, say, the treasury.

About half of them shouldn’t even exist. And so you can shut those down and it leaves you with all the employees and you just put them on furlough. I’d rather have them. I’d rather pay them to do nothing, to do nothing than to do what they were doing, to actively be destructive. And I think that would work. So I heard stories from people who were on some of these landing parties.

And when I sit here, landing party, I think, like World War two in the Philippines, mostly like that. The first guys to go ashore, and then they realize, holy cow, this island is occupied by the Japanese, and they’re there by themselves. And that really was kind of the stories they would tell. They would say, I showed up at State Department, or I showed up at wherever aG, and they came creeping ashore, and all of a sudden they realized, hey, we’re surrounded.

And they had a situation where they had their own kind of small version of lawfare where the entire staff would say, you know, we were in a meeting with you, and when we gave you our report, you sighed and then you rolled your eyes. Well, that’s a hostile workplace, and we’re not going to be subjected to your authoritarian, hostile, vicious. And they would file complaints, ig complaints, eo complaints, any kind of complaint you could imagine.

And that was just because a person sat in a meeting and went, whew, what are we going to do? And that, that was offensive to. Well, here’s, here’s the good news. We learned from that. We learned from that. And the Heritage Project, 2025. And there’s also. What’s the other group headed up by? Brooke Rollins, American. It’s always America first. Always. Everybody’s named America first. Now there’s like ten Americans.

I’m for America first. It’s a good concept, but they’re doing a lot of work with people who’ve been through that experience. And we’re working on plans so that when Trump’s elected, we’re not going to go in that naively again. And it’s not, it would be pretty boring to go through all the bureaucratic, technical things you’ve got to do, but there are ways to dramatically change that. And I think we now know what to do.

Yeah, it was quite a learning experience. And it’s tough. It’s tough, I think, for if you’re really trying to make a difference and you go in with the very best of intentions, and even if you’re a pretty sharp character, you know how Washington has played when the entire organization is against you. It’s a tough, a tough climb. Yeah. Anybody suffers in that environment, it’s tough to be a change maker.

I’m looking at our debt. Our national debt. Because of your extensive background in finance and economics, I get the feeling that we’re teetering on the edge. I mean, we’re whistling past the graveyard. Oh, the stock market’s doing great. Oh, we had good return on investments last year. Oh, everything is grand and glorious, but we are in very grave danger long term. Well, in the first place, we have an administration that does not care.

Does not care. You’ve got the large group of people in the financial world. Modern monetary theory will tell you that you can just put a issue, as much debt as possible, and as long as the world will take it, then you’re just fine. You can spend anything you want. That won’t work. That’s the Dick Cheney deficits don’t matter. Yeah, exactly like that. And given what we know about loose Cheney, I think we can stop there.

We can stop there, but they do matter. And that’s one of the real issues with Janet Yellen’s treasury, because one of the things I did when I did the plan for treasury last time is I’m a geek. I studied accounting. I taught accounting. I know all that. I went on the website to look at her strategic plan, and you look at the five points on the strategic plan, and it’s right there.

There’s really nothing in there about debt. There’s nothing in there about a strong dollar. You know, it’s, number one, climate change, which is science fiction, which is science fiction. And then the other one’s diversity, equity, inclusion, which is cultural Marxism, which is cultural Marxism. And they’re both based on fantasies, the client fantasy, and then the DEI. Cultural Marxism. Thing is, you don’t have to worry about meritocracy anymore.

We’ll just select people based on identity. And ultimately, that’s going to destroy modern organizations. Actually, it will destroy the western world. I mean, western civilization. Why stop there? Cannot survive. No, it can’t. It can’t. Aggressive DEI or whatever critical theory is. When you think about it, all modern organizations are complex. Most of the technology we work with is complex. The bridge in Baltimore was complex. We knew, for example, that Tampa, 40 years ago, there was a bridge that collapsed in Tampa, had exactly the same design, and we didn’t do anything about it.

And if we had some people in the department of transportation besides Pete Buttigieg, who were technical people who were hired on merit, they would have said, we’ve got to do something about that bridge before what happened, happened. But let’s circle back to your question about the debt. It’s unsustainable. And the breaking mechanism, though, is going to come when the rest of the world begins to react to that amount of debt.

And the dollar, we have something called a reserve currency, which is where most of the trade and most of the banking reserves of the world are held in dollars. Well, there are a lot of people, because of what’s happened in the last three years of the Biden administration that no longer trusts the United States to manage itself, starting with leaving Afghanistan. But in the financial world, we’re behaving just as recklessly and they’re beginning to think about currency blocks and other sorts of things as an alternative to the dollar.

And if the dollar stops as being the reserve currency, that debt is definitely unsustainable and we’re not going to be able to get people to hold it. The interest on the debt now is close to a trillion dollars. Well, that’s more than almost all the other discretionary spending in the budget combined. It won’t work. So I guess Bloomberg last night saw an article that said that they ran literally a million computations of how our current spending could play out, how they could resolve it, and it doesn’t.

I mean, they tried every which way to do these computerized models of how they would, and it simply, even they concluded, and Bloomberg editorially, even they concluded, we’re screwed, we can’t do this. Bloomberg would have been happy to have a good answer, and they couldn’t find one. Correct? Correct. Well, if you put that same question at GPT, it will come back with, we’re not authorized to give you the answer.

Pick another topic to discuss. But it’s just stunning to me that almost every cabinet secretary in the Biden administration is not paying a bit of attention to issues like that, and they’re not paying any attention to what’s spending, and instead they’re spending, paying attention to climate, which is a whole of government agenda and dei whole of government agenda. We got to make a change. Something that I think is related to this.

You touched on it briefly, is the idea of the US dollar being the reserve currency for the world. Sometimes it’s referred to as petrodollars because Saudi arabian oil was priced at and traded at the dollar level. But you have other organizations like BRICS, very mischievously, are trying to destabilize the dollar and trying to move people off of the dollar as being the standard. And I want to know whether you thought that.

What’s your estimation, what’s your evaluation of Brics as a trading block, as an entity? Well, let’s break brics down. Into the component parts. Bric B is Brazil, Russia, India, China. I don’t know. The eye is for India or Iran, but if you start looking at all the countries, they don’t like each other, and they’re going to have a very hard time pulling together a stable currency bloc. And China, which has an economy, almost equaled our size, in theory, their currency could be a substitute for the dollar.

But because people justifiably do not trust the Chinese Communist Party to manage the money, manage their currency, people are never going to go to the yuan unless something happens with China. So short term, in the next year or two, three, I don’t see those blocs amounting to much in terms of a currency. But we’re in this kind of world where you game, you put it into a computer, you can game out all sorts of scenarios, and any one of them is maybe equally likely, and almost none of them are good.

Elon Musk has a theory that whatever scenario you come up with, whatever, what is most outrageous and sort of ridiculously sensational, that’s probably the one that’s going to. Yeah, I agree. I subscribe to that. I subscribe to that. You know, you gave a few examples as to why he felt that way. Well, the problem for Americans is we’ve had it. We’ve been protected by two oceans. We’ve been protected by the largest economy in the world.

We’ve been protected by a constitution and a legal system which has created an enormous stability. We’ve been protected by a stable culture based on Christianity. And now all that is, oceans don’t matter as much now, particularly when we no longer have a southern border. And we would if we’ve got 1012 million people flooding into the United States. We don’t know who they are. In fact, we know a lot of them are Chinese.

We know a lot of them are from countries that want to take us down. So this security that Americans have had, I know people aren’t feeling that secure right now. Well, you shouldn’t, because the forces that have protected us are being stripped away. And we talked about the trip to Davos and the global elites and that sort of thing. They’re not interested in american sovereignty. They’re interested in the globalist movement.

And I don’t know that you followed what’s happening with the World Health Organization. Sure. Yeah. But they’re now in the process of renegotiating, or among themselves, I might add, a new international agreement. And I also want to put out something called a pandemic treaty, which would be what would happen if there were another health emergency. Now the thing thats in this agreement, though, is just in the first place, it throws most of the authority at President Tedros first name.

Whos a communist, whos handpicked by the Chinese communist Party. The second thing, it gives him the power to declare what constitutes a health emergency. And they’re now actively saying that climate could be a health emergency. They’re actively saying gun violence, talk of insurrection. And inside this document that they want everybody to sign would be requirements that countries surveil their people to determine whether people are speaking out against that regime or whether they’re whatever they want to surveil.

Like any good leftist, they want everything either mandatory or forbidden. They want to put everything in one of two boxes. Right. The left always wants to, you must do the following under penalty of death, foreclosure, seizure, or you are absolutely forbidden to do something. And that’s what they love, that’s what they drive at. But we’re talking about things that are not sustainable. I mean, they can’t, they can’t.

I think the good thing about, I’m part of a group called the Sovereignty Coalition and we’re basically aimed at what to do something about the World Health Organization’s agenda. But it’s a much bigger concern about american sovereignty. And I think half of America, 100, 5161 hundred, 80 million people have woken up to this attack. You know, we kind of got snuck up on by the 2020 COVID situation.

They all of a sudden instituted all these measures and we didn’t quite know what was happening to us. Well, now we do. And I think the first time they try to roll something like this out, it’s going to be very interesting to see how people respond. I think there are going to be a lot of acts of civil disobedience. Yeah, I think, you know what was kind of creepy about the whole COVID lockdown scenario was the large number, the large percentage of people that were compliant.

They said, well, you know, this is an emergency. And they all became very obedient. That kind of surprised me. I thought the American I did too sort of character was a little more, well, thanks for the advice, but, you know, I know how to take care of myself. Thank you very much. There wasn’t a lot of that. There was a lot of obedience and compliance. But I also think that there’s sort of an emotional cultural hangover from that.

And that even people that were very compliant first time out on COVID, they’re more skeptical now. And even if they kind of went through the motions. They did what they were told, and they hid in their houses and whatever else they were doing. They now look at it and go, wait a minute, that was heavy handed and crazy, and I didn’t need to. And so I think that increased healthy skepticism, at least I hope so, because otherwise, you know, well, the work you guys are doing at judicial watch is raising people’s awareness of that.

One would hope so. You know, I mean, you’re head of investigations, and I think you see the way these things are being, you know, plotted out and built up. I mean, we’re, you’re raising people’s awareness, you know, before it actually happens. That’s, that’s what we aim to do, to educate the public about the operations of government. You know, and it’s ordinary people. It’s, you know, they’re not all people who hang out at Davos.

But also, interestingly enough, there’s also, by the way, it’s not that great. It’s not that great. The food’s not that good. It’s, and mainly back in the, I was there 15 years ago, but it was mainly people with big ideas and plans. But now it’s gotten a lot more sinister. And now they’re doing things like they’re rolling out credit cards that could be bio, you know, your bio records.

And so they could have a record of your health in this credit card, and they could also have something in there that wouldn’t let you use the credit card if you didn’t have your vaccine or if you didn’t have this sort of thing. I mean, that’s in the works. Those sort of things get unveiled at Davos. So I’m sort of sorry, I’m not going anymore. I could report back to you guys.

I could say, look, they’re serious. That’s not a bad idea at all. I know that there’s some stuff that you want to bring up or chat about. Well, I think we have to talk about China. Please. I mean, the threat is real. And the terrible thing about China from our standpoint is we really created China. In 1990, China was six tenths of 1% of the world’s gdp. Now it’s over 20%.

And that, by and large, was due to America trying to enable China engaging with China and make them financially successful. The theory was we’ll make them financially successful. They’ll become a liberal democracy like the United States. They’ll join the world community. And again, this gets back to you and your intelligence background. We didn’t see that the Chinese had a strategy they called hide and abide. Hide and bide, which Deng, which is one of their presidents back in the nineties, came up with is, well, we know that they’ll be asleep.

They’re going to bring us in. Let’s use their technology, their capital, their know how to build a chinese economy. And once we get to a certain size, only then can we reveal our true intentions. Well, Xi, the now president, has revealed their true intentions and were still seeing the spectacle of Janet Yellen and the three or four or five other senior cabinet level officials with the Biden administration rushing over to China even this week.

Bowing, bowing. And we’ve got, and I hate to say this because of all my, some of these people used to be my friends, these CEO’s that went to San Francisco when President Xi came to visit. And what did they do? They gave him a standing ovation. Right. And this is one of the, you know, China is one of the biggest mass murderers, if you count Mao. It is the biggest mass murderer in history.

It is the biggest. And they haven’t changed and they’re unrepentant. Correct. And yet we’ve still got people going over. Tim Cook was there. They’re opening a new Apple store in one of the provinces in China. That was last week. Walmart is opening a new Sam’s club in another province. Nearby, Starbucks has announced plans to roll out so many more stores, they’ll have many more stores in China than they’ll have here in the United States.

And that’s all within the last six weeks. Yeah. This is the realization of Lenin’s prophecy that we will sell them the rope that they’ll hang us with. Well, we’ve already done that. And so we’re in a position now. There isn’t a sense of, our old friend Lou Dobbs used to scream about where is the sense of economic and corporate nationalism? Why aren’t there CEO’s of big Fortune 500 companies who have an America first mentality? Yeah, sure, we want to do trade.

Absolutely, we want to. And where it’s beneficial, there was always a sense of, but we’re doing this because the business of America is business. Right. But we can do it for the benefit of the country, not as a sellout to anybody who’s willing to pay whatever the going rate is. But I do think there’s even good news there where these CEO’s, they’re economic actors. Yeah, but they also rule followers.

If they had political leadership in Washington that said, look, guys, that game’s over. We’ve got to rethink how we’re doing business here, and maybe you don’t want to be there at all. And if we had somebody in the White House, let’s see, what would his name be, Donald Trump? Who could say to american corporations, okay, that was fine. You made your money, but now it’s time to rethink.

If you’re an american, you’ve got to do this. And I think we could shame those corporations to keep them from doing that right now. Just the opposites happening with the Biden administration. Yeah. Just, I’m always reminded of the records we got from the secret Service on Hunter Biden’s travel with his father. There’s 400 and some odd flights he was on with him. Secret Service provided this to us.

Of those flights, 26 were to foreign countries with his dad. And of the 26 foreign flights, five were to China. What the hell was Hunter Biden doing in China? Well, we know now we know what he was doing. But that is a little anecdotal snapshot that kind of gives you an indication of which way of how the story is being told, how you just made reference to these other companies that are saying, well, you know, we got to make a deal.

And there’s not really a lot of leadership or guidance from above. There’s nobody kind of banging the drum saying, it’s great you’re doing business and you should be selling your products and making new, better, faster. But what about the United States? And there isn’t that kind of call. One other, this may be controversial. I don’t think it is. But we talked about climate. The whole climate agenda is a hoax.

Of course it is. It’s a lie. And it’s based in its essence. The lie is that CO2 is a toxic poison that’s somehow going to, it’s causing the earth’s atmosphere to warm up. Al Gore tells us the oceans are going to start boiling. There’s never been a more stupid statement than that. And CO2, I’m part of another coalition called the CO2 coalition and filled with scientists, a couple Nobel laureates.

People are serious people. Now, the thing that’s notable about these scientists, they’re all sort of post career. They’re men and mostly men, some women in their sixties, seventies and eighties. And they’re not tied into the funding mechanisms that most of the other scientists are. If you want to know why there’s a consensus for these things, this client consensus is all these people depend on these agencies and these governments to provide funding for their job.

So they got to go long, and they’re terrified to speak out against it. But the fact is, CO2 is a beneficial set of molecules, and the more CO2 we have, the better plants do, the better the earth. It gets. A little warmer, maybe, but CO2 is a very minor element of that. Do you know what the most important element of the temperature or climate on earth? Guess what? The sun and clouds.

But it’s not CO2. CO2 is zero. 4% of the atmosphere. 0. 04. If you look at this table here, it’d be just a little speck on this table here. And if we can turn people’s minds around about CO2 not being a toxin, but instead being beneficial, that’d be a dramatic change in our energy policy. And I think that’s one of the things we need to really start pushing.

I know I’m working with some people to get the word out. CO2, if you look back over 500 million years on earth, it’s at the lowest level. It’s been virtually in 500 million years. And we’re at a point with CO2, it’s about 440 parts per million. I think that’s the way they calculate it. If it drops to 200 or 150, that’s lethal for plant life. So we’re dangerously close to a low level actually having a harmful environment.

I want to start putting this idea out there. This is probably new to a lot of people who think that CO2 has been demonized so badly, we need to turn our thinking on that 180 degrees. So two things that are related to what you just said. Number one is language, of course, drives an awful. A lot of this lot sensational rhetoric and the claims, hysterical claims. And so the left, in pushing this CO2 narrative, there’s a couple of things in action.

One was they wanted to create a carbon exchange where they could sell. I mean, they want to monetize it, right? Goldman Sachs loves it, so they turn it into carbon credits. People trade on this. It’s a way to make money. So that’s one gimmick or racket. The other thing is the language used, they used to call it global warming. And then you can’t say global warming because there was massive instances of fridge temperatures, record snowfall, and people would joke and say, yeah, look at the global warming outside.

And so then they said, well, now we have to call it climate change. So now it’s climate change, and that covers everything. So you could have a rainy spell, dry spell, snowy, whatever, and it’s changed. So how could you ever possibly be wrong? Right? This is capturing language, is incredibly important. Which takes me to this last thing I want to talk to you about with regard to cultural Marxism and capturing language.

This goes back to the Frankfurt school, which ended up in Colombia, its whole critical theory. It’s Adorno and Marcuse and all these guys who decided to use this sort of radical deconstruction of society as we know it with this critical theory, which ends up bringing you to this oppressed under pressure format that you see that’s templated and used everywhere, and people have really glommed onto it, and it’s a narrative in our education system.

No one even. It’s virtually unopposed. It’s deep in the system, is steep in there. So now we have to reverse this. We have to go back to, you know what, rather than, you know, Henry Herbert, Marcuse and Adorno. Let’s go back and look at Thomas Aquinas. Let’s look at some of the. Exactly the foundational pieces of western civilization and not this sort of post world war one psychological political hangover known as the Frankfurt school in critical theory, because we really need to reject it by that means, down in elementary schools, little kids are taught this.

It’s a trick. It’s a gimmick. An example was used, a math problem, right? Johnny’s parents want to take him to the amusement park, and they get in their car and they drive. And so it’s a word problem for math. Well, which seems pretty innocent, except that the educators are being taught to use the math problem, a word problem about driving in a car to the amusement park to be, well, some kids don’t have cars, and maybe that car is polluting, and, well, Johnny, his parents have the money to take him to an amusement park.

But what if everything’s turned into an adversarial, oppressed, oppressor, oppressed situation? And so even doing a simple math problem, you know, a fourth grader gets brainwashed into this way of thinking, and that’s incredibly damaging. And I don’t know how we. Well, I think shining a bright light on it, that’s what you and Tom are doing here. That judicial watch. I mean, shining a light on that is a big part of it.

And that’s one of the. I guess I’m a silver lining guy. There’s always something good that comes out of something horrible. What came the good that came out of the school closures in 2020, 2001? His kids went home and they said, well, let’s teach you on the computer. And the parents looked over their shoulder, and they went, oh, my God. What are you learning? Here. And all of a sudden, what was sort of behind the closed door of the schools was now known to the parents.

And that’s when we ended up with all those school board issues in northern Virginia and around the country, and the FBI monitoring parents at school board meetings, taking, well, they’re still doing that. We haven’t talked about the surveillance state much, which we reject. I’m happy to. But I think once you shine a light on that, and this notion that it’s oppressed or oppressed, and the critical race theory talks about our whiteness, and our whiteness is something we can never atone for.

You can’t say there’s no forgiveness. You’re just supposed to. I don’t know what we’re supposed to do. Give them our money, our dignity and our freedom, I suppose, and even then, they’re not going to be satisfied. There’s no solution, I think, shining a light on it. People are waking up saying, wait a second. No, this is evil and it’s wrong. But it was so romanticized. I mean, the whole marxist thing that came out of Greenwich Village, too, but it’s pervasive.

We have more DEI officers in universities. Harvard has, what, 35 or 40 different departments or colleges in Harvard, and they don’t have just a Dei head there at the university level. They’ve got a unit in every single college in Harvard, and they have thousands and thousands of people who are enforcing cultural conformity. And at the moment, people are just going along with it. But parents can do graduates of colleges, because this is not just Dei.

At Harvard, I went to Indiana. In Bloomington, we have more DEI officers per student than any other university in the country. Little old Bloomington, Indiana, has become a hotbed of racial oppression, which I never quite realized. But we need to cut off the money to this, and we can do that. This is, again, getting the right people elected into the Senate and the House. But I diverge. These are zampolite.

These are the political officers that used to the soviet government would insert into military units. You had a commander, and then you have the Zanpolit, which is the political officer, who could sometimes overrule the commander. That’s exactly what we have. That’s exactly what’s going on. The party is checking you at all times. The surreal estate. I see that you have your personal beacon with you. You’re emitting. This is direct to Beijing, I think, Silicon Valley, and your thoughts are being communicated.

Talk about the surveillance that you mentioned. But that’s an interesting issue here. We’ve got this phone here, and especially after January 6 and all this talk of insurrection and people being accused of trying to overthrow the government, things like that, totally without any basis in fact, just because they know insurrection is a word in the constitution, and therefore they can do something based on the constitution with that word.

And of course, no one’s been charged with that or convicted, especially not President Trump. Correct. But I’ve noticed this just among friends and people like that. People are beginning to be careful about what they say, because if they say, if they do something like Donald Trump says, bloodbath, well, all of a sudden that gets picked up as another call for an insurrection, even in casual social speech. I was on a Zoom call with some activists in our sovereignty coalition, and one of the people on the call said something very fiery.

We used to say all the time in our tea party speeches, we’re going to go and we’re going to throw Congress out. We’re going to take it over. We say that now, and it gets interpreted in a way. You may see the FBI showing up at your door, and there’s a case now in front of the Supreme Court involving the censorship that was going on during COVID and where the White House and the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security, CISA, this is a group, part of the homeland Security, that supposed to be overseeing infrastructure.

There were like twelve to 15 agencies. They were actively convening the social media companies to say, this person is saying this, you’ve got to shut that down, you’ve got to get this person off your site. And there were direct instructions from the White House, and we’ve got the email trail, and we know that’s happening. That’s another thing we need to call out and shine a light on, because that’s.

And the surveillance state is something I think we can defeat, but only if enough of us know what’s happening and enough people in the house, since the house controls appropriations, decide to turn the money off, and they don’t pass $1. 2 trillion spending bills that contain all kinds of things you and I and our viewing and listening audience would be very offended, highly disturbed over, but they, oh, we can’t have a shutdown.

They’re terrified of a shutdown. Oh, my goodness. We can’t possibly. We have to continue to fund things that are not in our interests. I mean, that’s the thinking. And, you know, I was having a conversation with a mutual friend, and I said, well, you know, you took an oath, right? And you took an oath to represent the people that you, your constituents and your. So how can you vote against your interests and the people that you represent, you know, that they don’t want you to fund, you know, 9th month abortions, so they don’t want you to fund radical, you know, transgender surgeries on children.

So why are you voting? Well, it’s all bundled up. Then vote. No. I mean, no is, it’s not very popular. It takes guts. But sometimes you have to actually do the hard things and not just, you know, go with the flow because that’s what’s convenient. So, you know, maybe we’ll learn that the hard way. But at a certain point, there comes a line, I guess we’re there. We’re there.

We’re there. We’re there. Bill, what else do you want to talk about before we’ve got it covered? I just, I’m thrilled to be here because, you know, what you and Tom are doing, judicial watch is just, you know, such a tremendous service. I mean, you’ve actually unearthed a lot of the bad stuff I now know about because of the work you guys have been doing. We try to, and I appreciate the.

I appreciate your compliment. And it goes to the other 50 some odd judicial watch employees who are making it all happen day in, day out. But I’m afraid a lot of things I’ve said on this show ensure I’m never going to get invited to Davos again. Most days are over. Yeah. The watch list for Davos, you remain very active, very mischievous, very aggressive in pursuing all these topics we’ve been talking about.

If folks want to follow your work and what you’re doing, where can they find you? What’s your. We’re on substack, we’re on Rumble. We’re on YouTube. We’re on all the podcast platforms, the website, the Bill Walton show. We’ve also got some of the things we’re doing with the Resolute Protector foundation. And it’s a fascinating, I think with all due modesty, we have had almost 250 shows. And if you look at the guests we’ve had on, you can learn something about everything.

We had Bob Woodson on with his 1776 project, which is knuckling back the 1619 project. That’s a full discussion of what that’s about. Fed Arthur Laffer on talking about economics and the supply side had George Gilder on talking about the next future of energy sources. So I guess what I try to do is to get sort of these subjects which are not very well covered a little bit about what you’re trying to do.

Not very well covered, even in a lot of podcasts and go a little deeper with some experts. And we will link all your stuff on your sites. We’ll link this to the episode so folks that are watching this or listening to it go to the judicial Watch site, find this episode, and we’ll link all your stuff in there as well so folks can find it. Chris, thank you.

Thank you very much, Bill. It was wonderful having you on kind of a mutual admiration society. Yeah, this is good, but this is important, completing each other’s sentences. Important stuff to talk about because, you know, frankly, there isn’t a lot of really in depth, thoughtful discussion on topics. A lot of stuff is kind of drive by superficial, what Rush Limbaugh used to call drive by media. Right. It’s very, you know, gloss and gone.

But we need to remember stuff. We need to not let go. We just need to stick together. Absolutely, we do. And so, first of all, thanks to our viewing and listening audience for tuning in. We appreciate it very much. And please be sure to check back. We try to knock out one or two of these a week, and we’re very grateful today to have Bill Walton join us.

Thank you very much, Bill. Great to have you. Good fun talk. I’m Chris Farrell on watch. .

See more of Judicial Watch on their Public Channel and the MPN Judicial Watch channel.

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