Reed Sainsbury, author of Exposing the Lies of History: Deprogramming 101, takes up where Ye leaves off. If the ADL ever reviews Sainsbury’s book they’ll probably call it “an exhaustive, profusely-illustrated compendium of anti-Semitic conspiracy theories.” What they won’t tell you is that some of them are true, others partly true, still others possibly true—and that the best way to sort out what’s true and what isn’t is to have a free and open discussion.
This is really all digress. The real issue is whether the wasp/black goyim will be conned into cannon fodder, war with China which constitutes an existential threat to the ashkenazi fake jews chosen narrative under which he now rules the goyim.
That's true, but on the other side of the equation, it pushes the Overton window further open and desensitizes mass audiences to oversensitive topics. I don't agree all that much with Jones, Ye, or Fuentes, much less Milo Y., but I found the actual show funny and kind of liberating to watch. It highlighted the absurdity of the situation, and violated taboos in what struck me as a courageous and entertaining way.
Where were the Germans when writing and architecture were invented?
The search for the truth is a noble deed.
The banksters and the great reset seem to be related to where ww2 left off ..and possibly ww3 wiil usher in the job of mission accomplished.
Kevin and Reed weave an interesting tapestry of research and beg the question of the truth .
History is a science and some historians in the past have turned it into a Propaganda.
thx u Guys.
Very skillful interview
This is really all digress. The real issue is whether the wasp/black goyim will be conned into cannon fodder, war with China which constitutes an existential threat to the ashkenazi fake jews chosen narrative under which he now rules the goyim.
That's true, but on the other side of the equation, it pushes the Overton window further open and desensitizes mass audiences to oversensitive topics. I don't agree all that much with Jones, Ye, or Fuentes, much less Milo Y., but I found the actual show funny and kind of liberating to watch. It highlighted the absurdity of the situation, and violated taboos in what struck me as a courageous and entertaining way.