transcript of video https://youtu.be/TzR---YDDIQ Victoria Nuland Streamed live on Mar 27, 2022 Gonzalo Lira HHHH--------------------------------------------------- 0:00 they where is tiffany dover i'd appreciate it hang on a second 0:10 there we go better i'd actually prefer if i didn't use the 0:16 camera if i just had like a still image because you guys don't really need to see me but anyway um 0:23 and i'm not showing you anything particularly interesting now am i you know i've been very remiss in so far as 0:28 as uh as my channel is concerned you know the the content has been kind of crappy like no exploding bombs or anything like 0:36 that no tanks or stuff like that 0:42 i'm just um you know shooting the breeze a little bit before we get going i just want to make sure that everybody can 0:47 hear me properly where is hunter biden and some injections and lines of uh some 0:53 white powder substance-like thing where is tiffany dover remember tiffany dover please 0:59 see when we forget the names of the important people when we don't when we fail to mention 1:04 them they disappear and they disappear and you know whatever tragedy has to be 1:10 following them was for nothing okay so don't let that happen okay 1:15 okay so uh i'm gonna be talking about victoria newland victoria newland is a 1:21 um currently the undersecretary of state for political affairs in the united states 1:27 state department she is a career bureaucrat a career foreign service officer 1:34 and she is the woman most responsible for the current war that is going on 1:39 here in ukraine one could argue as i will argue here that she directly led to this war 1:46 she instigated it and she manipulated and bullied and 1:51 cajoled all of the players to get into this war that will result in the destruction of 1:59 the ukrainian nation the scattering of the ukrainian people and 2:04 just misery all around she is the one responsible she is why there is a war here in 2:11 ukraine and i'm going to explain how this happened why she's the one who made it happen 2:18 what were her goals and objectives see you have to understand people don't wake up and decide you know something 2:25 i'm going to be really evil today it doesn't work that way people don't think that way people don't 2:32 say to themselves that they're just going to do something arbitrarily that's going to negatively affect a whole host 2:37 of people for no good reason whatsoever they always have good reasons now one 2:42 can disagree with those reasons one can say that those reasons are bad they're selfish that they're they're just not 2:48 worth the cost the consequences that's very different but nobody acts arbitrarily 2:56 and many times the things that drive us to action especially those people who are extremely smart 3:03 but lack any self-awareness they often are driven to their actions 3:08 their hatreds and their visceral reactions to different events by things that happened 3:14 long ago in some cases by things that happened before they were born 3:20 and i'm going to argue that in so far as victoria newlin is concerned because when you start looking into her biography you realize all kinds of very 3:27 very interesting things about her her background the hatred and rage that she carries in 3:33 her heart which she is expressing by way of this destruction of ukraine in hopes of ultimately destroying russia which is 3:39 her real aim well i don't think that she's aware of it 3:46 it's really fascinating because if she were aware of it she wouldn't have allowed this to happen 3:53 but she's blind 4:00 so let's get started okay as i said victoria nuland essentially runs american foreign policy 4:05 in so far as russia is concerned see because she has started her career back 4:12 in the early 90s okay and she worked her way she started working under 4:18 strobe talbot in the clinton administration strobe tower was a very important uh foreign service official in 4:23 the 90s she then worked as an assistant to dick 4:28 cheney as a deputy assistant in so far as foreign affairs was concerned and she was the ambassador the u.s 4:35 ambassador to nato which is a very important position and she's done different jobs over the 4:41 years that have eventually led her to this position of under secretary of state for political affairs which when 4:47 you hear the title it seems so obscure but she is very clearly a woman who much 4:53 prefers to have the the to be in the background to maintain a very low profile 4:59 and i'm sure that one of her minions and the state department or on our staff is watching this right now as we're 5:05 speaking you know and hi there how's it going i hope you're uh you're having a good sunday wasting it on me 5:12 poor bastard or or bored dumb girl you know but anyway 5:18 victoria newland um is carrying out a policy which is very 5:25 very very simple the american goal foreign policy goal is to have a weak and preferably divided russia either 5:32 actually divided into smaller balkanized countries or politically so divided that it's 5:39 essentially inert basically the american goal is to have a russia like the good old days in the 90s 5:46 because in the 90s after the collapse of the soviet union the united states was able to enter 5:52 russia and exploit it to a degree that is unprecedented exploit it steal from it 5:59 i mean really just it's not too strong a word to say that 6:06 that russia as a country was raped by american bureaucrats and american 6:12 financiers and just the whole neoliberal ideology that 6:17 was imported wholesale into russia which eviscerated the country created these 6:23 obscenely rich oligarchs even as the people were starving even as their retirees and veterans of 6:30 the second world war were destitute in the streets the americans created the horrible 90s 6:37 for the russians and it is with some amazement that we can see how far russia has come from 6:43 those dark days of the 90s but that's the russia that the american establishment 6:48 wants to see again that's the russia that people like victoria nuland and the 6:54 class of people that she represents in the american bureaucratic establishment want to see imposed on russia again they 7:01 want a russia that is prostate they want a russia that is broken they want a 7:07 russia that they can exploit like vultures that is their goal 7:12 and they state it they don't have any problem stating it because their goal is to break russia 7:19 and then turn their full attention to china and break china and the thing is see in in their 7:25 arrogance they do not realize the weakness of the united states they do not realize that the united states has 7:30 become a hollow empire its people are dispirited and broken or else they are 7:36 degenerate and decadent they do not realize that the united states has no industrial base that 7:42 these people themselves created the conditions for the for the destruction of the industrial base in the united 7:48 states okay people like victoria newland's husband who i'll get to in just a moment say but 7:55 what's important is to understand their goals the goal of victoria newland and her class of leaders 8:02 is to break russia by any means necessary and at any cost that is necessary 8:09 so as to later focus on china and do exactly the same thing to china break china 8:15 because they have come to the conclusion that they can never allow a peer a peer nation 8:20 to rise again appear nation p e 8:28 in the sense that a nation that can match the united states militarily or 8:33 economically at this time china matches the united states economically and one 8:39 can argue that in certain regards russia not only matches the united states militarily but 8:44 outpaces it in certain technologies that will prove to be crucial probably 8:50 and so at this time the americans the american political establishment bureaucratic establishment 8:56 excuse me bureaucratic establishment because all these people are bureaucrats they're they're locked into their 9:01 positions and they don't need to go to the people to ask permission to have their jobs well these people 9:06 they mean to break russia break china and never again allow a peer nation to rise and that is why we are about to 9:13 experience a global war in fact i would argue that we are already in this global war this is a hybrid war fought on 9:21 multiple fronts economic military political informational 9:26 and i realized that in my own case i am one of the people involved in this information war 9:32 and so i've tried to make it to decide i mean i have tried and i'm trying to be 9:39 switzerland insofar as this is concerned to call them like i see them okay and right now my focus is on the united 9:45 states and western europe and so here you have me giving you this discussion of victoria newland whom you 9:52 will see is a key player now ukraine since 1991 the collapse of the 9:59 soviet union has been a cesspool of western corruption it's very important that you understand this it's western 10:05 corruption because you see when the soviet union collapsed there was a power vacuum and into this power vacuum very 10:11 ambitious people uh uh rapacious people came and stole the goods of the state of the soviet 10:18 union the soviet union was broken up into several republics uh the russian federation belarus ukraine and so forth 10:26 the kawasaki stand and the rest and what happened was that in these different countries oligarchs were not only 10:32 allowed to rise but were in fact encouraged to rise by the western powers in particular the united states because 10:39 the united states figured that by way of these oligarchs these countries could be controlled 10:47 and so they outsourced tyranny to oligarchs and they created a kleptocracy 10:52 in each of these nations by prioritizing and giving attention diplomatic attention political attention 10:58 and even economic attention to these various oligarchs and so in the starting line of 1991 11:06 ukraine and russia were in the same position ukraine became a cesspool of corruption because 11:12 it was in the interest of the westerners to maintain a corrupt ukraine to 11:17 maintain a corrupt russia if russia was corrupt if ukraine was corrupt it would be easy for western 11:25 interests to go into these countries ukraine and russia and steal steal by way of crooked deals no-show 11:32 jobs and all the rest of it all the things that we understand take the assets of the state and strip them and 11:39 take away all the riches that these countries have russia ukraine kazakhstan belarus they 11:47 are all incredibly rich in so far as natural resources but they are also incredibly rich in terms of human 11:53 resources and yet these oligarchs from the west these financiers these horrifying people these bureaucrats from 12:00 the state department that assisted them they cared nothing for the people of the former soviet union they cared only 12:07 about stripping the assets and the money from the broken soviet union 12:14 and so ukraine and russia started at the same spot okay 12:19 and if you look at ukraine let's look at ukraine for a little bit in terms of its people who are highly 12:25 educated and very decent and hardworking people there are some countries let's face facts many countries in africa 12:31 where the populace is not so hard working they do not try to improve themselves educate themselves 12:37 better their lives it's a reality of life and you know to pretend otherwise it's just stupid if 12:42 you want to call that racist you know it doesn't matter i mean i can speak about latin america and there are countries in latin america where i am from 12:49 such as bolivia such as ecuador where the people simply do not have the initiative or the desire to improve 12:56 their lives they're happy with just good enough tranquilo and they don't really do anything but 13:01 the ukrainian people are very hard working they're very stoic and they are highly educated 13:08 you will meet people in ukraine who are taxi drivers and they can talk to you in 13:14 english and discuss things that you would be surprised to be discussing with a university professor in the united 13:20 states they are wonderful wonderful people and this is a truism 13:25 now why is ukraine so poor it's because of western corruption 13:30 because the various oligarchs that control the country and these oligarchs tend to control it by by areas of the 13:37 country the so-called oblast oblasts are basically like states or regions and in the different all blasts there 13:42 are different oligarchs that control that area that physical area and they control the industries in that area and 13:48 these oligarchs are often as not a thuggish thuggish mafia type 13:54 who will have no trouble at all going up to some successful businessman who's a legitimately successful businessman 14:00 totally above board and tell them hey give me your business give it to me for free or i'll kill your family 14:06 which is they do they've done and i know people that this has happened to personally 14:12 that they have gone up to them and said give me your entire business or i will kill your family that's the kind of people we're talking 14:19 about here okay okay so ukraine should not be this poor but 14:24 because of corruption it is poor it is the poorest nation of europe at this time and quite apart from the fact of 14:30 the war just without the war it was the poorest nation or perhaps the second poorest of europe it doesn't matter a country of 45 14:36 million people that is the second or most poor country of europe it's a disaster they should be far wealthier 14:43 because they have everything going for it they have wheat they have various minerals various 14:49 necessary gases neon gas is produced here and they have people the people here 14:56 but they're so poor it's because they're exploited now what's interesting is that ukraine is this corrupt backwater 15:04 because it is and it is what russia would have been 15:10 had we not had vladimir putin in russia and this is something 15:15 that deeply bothers the american bureaucratic class because when when putin arose the people 15:23 in the west thought oh he's one of our guys they saw him as a former kgb agent they 15:29 saw him as a guy who would go along to get along kind of guy they saw him as a young man educated 15:36 spent time in germany spoke fluent german fluent english a few people know this but he does 15:42 and they thought that you know he's a man we can work with but what they discovered to their dismay 15:48 was that when putin took power in roughly 1999 he cut a deal with his oligarchs and he 15:54 and the deal was very simple you stay out of politics and i'll stay out of your grift and the oligarchs were like okay 16:01 perfectly fine but what happened was that slowly over the years putin started edging out the 16:07 oligarchs and putting on putting in his own oligarchs and even as he put in his own oligarchs he started making those 16:12 oligarchs smaller and weaker see because he understood 16:18 that he could not wipe out the oligarchs and all the corruption in russia with the snap of his fingers it had to be 16:25 a slow grinding process which is what he's been doing for the past 23 years 16:30 and the proof of this is very simple the oligarchs who exist today none of them had any power in 1999. the 16:36 oligarchs of 1999 who remained in russia they're all gone they're irrelevant at this time 16:42 and the oligarchs back in 1999 who disagreed with putin they're outside of the country and in 16:48 fact many of them virulently disagree with putin and what he has done and they're just allowed to exist 16:54 outside of russia but they don't really have much connection with russia abramovic for instance is an example 16:59 he's not completely on the outs with putin but he's not besties either and so that's what putin has done and if 17:07 you look at the backwardness of ukraine you realize that had put not existed in russia russia 17:14 would be what ukraine is today backwards poor destitute just a shell of a country 17:22 and this is the truth and if you don't like putin or you love him it's irrelevant this is a realistic 17:27 assessment of the situation in russia 17:35 now americans started realizing this in the late 2000s 17:41 early 2010s they started realizing that putin was subtly resisting them 17:46 resisting their attempts to turn russia into a [ __ ] the way that they had turned ukraine into a [ __ ] 17:54 into a corrupt destitute backwater that's what they wanted for russia and 17:59 putin very effectively subtly quietly resisted them and went 18:04 against them and this became quite obvious in the early 2010s 18:11 and it peaked out i mean masks off with the 2014 revolution okay 18:18 i'm going to get to that in just a moment but first let's look at victoria nuland because it's very important that you understand victorian newland 18:25 in order to understand what has happened today okay and you have to understand that she 18:32 is very much a template of the kind of bureaucrat in the foreign policy 18:39 establishment in the state department of the united states she is very stereotypical in terms of 18:45 background in terms of ethno-religious origin in terms of obsession with russia because of long 18:53 historical grievances you must understand that she is not an outlier 18:58 she is very much within the the norm of the distribution curve 19:04 you see what i'm saying it's very important that you understand that she is not extreme 19:09 she is the norm understand that okay so victoria nuland if you look at a 19:15 picture of her she's actually a very attractive woman now she's um you know she's about to turn 61 later in the 19:21 middle of this year she was born in 1961. uh when she was young she was very attractive woman she's just gained 19:27 weight with age normal her father was a man named sherwin newland now if that name rings a bell it 19:33 actually did ring a bell with me and i was trying to remember how i heard that name it was because of a book called how 19:39 we die it was a national book award winner in 1994 when i was in college and that's why i remembered it because i do 19:45 believe that sherwin william newland her father went to dartmouth to give a chat about 19:52 his book his book was a very big thing okay and it would not have been unusual for him to have gone to dartmouth i'm 19:59 almost positive that he did um other authors that were big at the time like for instance francis fukuyama 20:05 when he came out with uh the end of history and the last man he gave a a talk at dartmouth i got him to 20:11 autophotograph my books so anyway uh the point is it would have been normal but i can't i can't i didn't go that's the 20:18 thing and now i regret it so but anyway sherwin newland was a yale surgeon and a 20:24 popular writer of science and he wrote this book as i said how we die which is a big bestseller in 1994. he was born 20:31 shep cell noodleman was born in 1930 in the bronx new york and he was a very 20:39 typical man of his class he was the child of first generation 20:44 immigrants his father victoria nuland's grandfather was a man named meyer 20:49 noodleman who was a tailor now he fled bessarabia 20:55 in 1907. now this is a very interesting 21:02 date bess arabia is the area between um odessa 21:08 and moldova it's a little sliver of land that exits on the black sea in fact 21:14 meyer noodleman worked in odessa as i understand it or just outside about this 21:21 i've read several accounts and it seems to be a little ambiguous but the point is that see he lived there um 21:27 he was born in uh oh [ __ ] i forgot to write down the date he was born in uh 21:34 uh it doesn't matter i i want to say uh 1890 or something like that but anyway 21:39 the point is that he fled mess arabia in 1907 and this was immediately after the 21:45 kishinev pogrom now the kishinev pogrom was the systematic persecution of jews 21:53 by russians by ethnic orthodox christian russians 21:58 in bess arabia at that time do keep in mind mess arabia was a part of the 22:05 um of the russian empire and what's really interesting if you look at bess arabia historically 22:12 you look at their flag and it's kind of shocking because it's the russian flag 22:18 bes arabia is the homeland of victoria nuland's family 22:24 in fact she speaks um english of course she speaks russian because she studied russian literature and she speaks 22:31 yiddish she possibly speaks ukrainian although that's not clear and other languages i have not actually been able 22:37 to find out but that's not really important what's important is that see meyer noodleman had an enormous impact 22:43 on his son sherwin or shepzell noodleman as he was called 22:50 he changed his name when he was in high school before applying to university went to yale uh and eventually became a 22:55 surgeon at yale uh as i said before and uh meyer noodleman seems to have been a 23:02 a petty man a little man but filled with resentment a a small man with gigantic 23:09 resentments which he inflicted on his son his son wrote uh some memoirs about his father which are kind of horrifying 23:17 psychological abuse that sort of thing mild physical abuse but not so important as a psychological abuse you know 23:24 screaming fits and all the rest of it that kind of thing sherwin newland uh describes it how he felt his soul was 23:30 flayed a striking imagery if you think about it now what's extremely interesting is that 23:37 sherman newland in 1970 when victoria nuland was eight years old nine years old he started 23:44 suffering a severe depression in fact he was hospitalized for a year so you can 23:50 see the impact that meyer noodleman the grandfather of victoria newland had 23:56 on victoria nuland's life noodleman had long since died by this point but of course 24:01 i mean her grandfather had long since died by the time sherwin newland in 1970 checked himself into psychiatric 24:07 hospital his depression was so severe that his doctors recommended that he have a lobotomy which 24:13 jesus christ talked about you know burning the village to save it you know i mean holy cow but 24:19 so um the impact of meyer noodleman is very important 24:27 i think i'm a nine-year-old girl whose father has gone to a 24:33 psychiatric hospital for over a year with this intense depression and this intense misery 24:39 and you know for a fact you know that it's because of your grandfather and the resentments of your grandfather and your 24:45 grandfather of course he's filled with resentment because he was kicked out of his homeland because meyer nudelman by 24:53 the accounts of his own son never learned to speak english properly and he felt a man of nowhere because he 24:59 couldn't go back home to bess arabia because of the pogroms during the reign of the tsar 25:05 and he couldn't integrate into america in a way that sherwin newland certainly 25:10 did sherwin newland integrated himself into america quite brilliantly he became 25:16 this extremely successful doctor and professor of surgery this extremely successful writer i mean getting a 25:22 national book award not many people can claim that you know it's quite remarkable 25:27 and so this this dichotomy but ultimately it all comes back to 25:33 meyer noodles and noodleman's rage the fact that he was persecuted 25:39 in russia under that uh white blue and red flag of bessarapia 25:46 that is now the white blue and red flag of russia 25:52 very striking if you think about it you see what i'm saying the resentments of the grandfather 26:00 are buried deep in the heart of victoria newland the resentments and hatred and ancient 26:07 ancestral hatreds towards russia that find in kuwait expression and just 26:13 rage and anger and wanting to destroy you have to understand that 26:19 you have to understand the emotional motivation of victoria newland her father's depression that lasted over 26:26 a year that he was only able to get out of it with electroshock therapy and of course it 26:32 wasn't like he just took an electroshock therapy and presto he was better again it was a long road apparently 26:39 so as she grew up a nine-year-old girl and this must have started before then a seven eight-year-old girl nine-year-old 26:45 girl while her father was away in this psychiatric hospital 10 11 12 the most 26:50 formative years of her young life and she saw the broken man that was her father the product of the broken man 26:57 that was her grandfather and her grandfather why was he broken 27:03 because of the pogrom the kishinev that drove him out of russia 27:09 that drove him out of their homeland you see 27:15 you see what's going on so anyway victoria nuland she was a very 27:20 successful student she went to rosemary choute then she went to brown where she studied russian literature 27:25 that's pretty interesting what don't you think yeah she's the granddaughter 27:31 of um jews who fled russia and she studies russian literature political 27:36 science and history [Laughter] i mean come on dude you know and you can 27:42 say oh this is just armchair psychology no you know sometimes you know these very obvious things are just 27:48 expressions of what's really going on it's not complicated her interests 27:54 express her drives i mean in my own case for instance i studied history and philosophy 28:02 it's very obvious why i wanted to understand why things were and i wanted to understand the logic 28:07 behind things i wanted to understand what had happened and what were the logical steps that had led 28:14 to each of those things it's no trick at all why i studied those two topics 28:20 she studied russian literature she studied political science and she studied history 28:25 about russia it's pretty fascinating stuff 28:31 um she married a man named robert kagan she has no children by the way and that's always a bad sign when a woman a 28:37 professional woman an accomplice woman has no children you know she's 28:42 messed up in the head okay because i'll i'll say it i don't care if i sound sexist or whatever i do 28:49 believe that a woman who with children the fact of having children relieves 28:55 them of some psychic burden and i think it has a hormonal effect of 29:01 calming them down also children since they suck up so so much attention 29:07 it paradoxically reduces a woman's neuroticism i've noticed women who were extremely 29:14 neurotic before they had their child and after that the fact that the child sucks up so much attention because all 29:20 children do it's perfectly natural they became far less neurotic and concerned about other things in their 29:26 lives they were very focused on their child and very concerned but their neuroticism generally was just sort of 29:32 like their concern focused on their child and the rest of their life it was much more 29:37 mellow much more balanced but a woman without children she doesn't have that okay so she married robert 29:43 kagan now robert kagan is a very interesting character robert carey kagan is of course a jewish american and he 29:49 founded in 1997 a thing called the project for the new 29:54 american century with another uh jewish uh successful jewish 30:01 intellectual with uh new york roots and first generation jewish immigrants called bill 30:06 crystal now the goal of the project for the new american century which lasted less than 30:12 10 years but it was very influential it was to quote promote american global 30:18 leadership that's just a euphemism for american global dominance that's what they were 30:23 talking about and they wanted to have a reaganite policy of military strength and moral 30:29 clarity military strength that's pretty obvious it finds expression in the doctrine of 30:35 full spectrum dominance that the american military tries to impose everywhere but the moral clarity issue 30:41 that's that's slippery what they really want is to be able to reduce morally reduce everything to good guys bad guys 30:49 we're good we are white hats and they they are bad and we have to kill them with our great 30:56 full spectrum dominance military that was basically the the project the 31:02 new of the for the new american century like i said twofold promote american 31:07 global leadership and uh military strength and moral 31:12 clarity they push for regime change that's how they found the way for global leadership and and 31:19 moral clarity the whole notion was to regime change any country that didn't 31:25 toe the american line if it towed the american line and did whatever the united states wanted then 31:31 it was allowed to exist but if their leaders strove for any kind of regional 31:37 dominance or or had aspirations that went against or opposed american interests that 31:44 regime had to go iran for instance a typical example iran has been a bugaboo for years and they've tried to start a 31:51 war with it and all kinds of things because iran poses a challenge twofold number one 31:57 it's the implacable enemy of israel and as you can see most of these people of the foreign 32:04 policy establishment and not just the ones i've mentioned there are tons more they are mostly jewish and many of them 32:10 come from families that were zionists that were that were fundamentally 32:16 fundamental to the conception of israel and they have strong ties to the israeli state both on the political level and on 32:22 the personal level okay and so of course they are very much against the iran regime and want regime change they want 32:28 iran to have a friendly regime and the other thing too is that they want to be able to control iran's oil 32:35 its resources just as they did during the period of the shah before january of 1979 32:43 that fact that iran threatens israel by its mere existence 32:49 and that it has oil an unfathomable wealth 32:54 that it does not share with uh american companies and american financiers 33:01 that's enough to want regime change in iran and to get rid of saddam hussein in iraq 33:07 was just the first step well the very first step was it was afghanistan but afghanistan was sort of like a like a prelude it was merely uh based on the 33:14 excuse of the world trade center the world trade center the 911 situation 33:20 and that's why afghanistan was taken over um this the real regime change came with 33:27 iraq in 2003. the war in iraq was started under false pretense pretext there were known 33:34 weapons of mass destruction and um scott ritter who i've been in touch with and hopefully i'll be able to do a 33:40 uh a broadcast with because he's a very interesting fellow uh he was the weapons inspector and 33:46 there were no weapons of mass destruction there uh but you know they pushed that in order to have the justification for the 33:53 war the project for the new american century was pivotal to that now robert kagan today he's a senior fellow at the 34:00 brookings institute he's also on the council of foreign relationships on foreign relations rather and he is a 34:06 pivotal figure he is the man who pushes this extremely aggressive 34:12 extremely arrogant uh american foreign policy he's the intellectual architect of it he doesn't 34:19 actually execute it he's actually never held as far as i can understand it any kind 34:24 of formal position in the foreign policy establishment but he is extraordinarily 34:29 influential because he and to a lesser extent bill crystal are the nexus 34:34 between money interests corporate interest and government interests 34:40 and he pivots between them and takes these different interests and 34:45 guides them towards aggressive american foreign policy 34:51 decide designed to destabilize nations so that they can be easily exploited 34:57 economically and pushed around in terms of doing what the american 35:02 bureaucrats at the u.s state department want for their own benefit or for the benefit 35:08 of the various financiers that they are attached to the various 35:13 financiers of the various corporate interests corporate interests in security and weapons manufacturing you 35:19 see so robert kagan is this very pivotal figure and victoria nuland is of course married to 35:25 and since they don't have any children i find it laughable because a man without a children is 35:31 nothing as far as i'm concerned but since they don't have children they have all the time in the world to 35:38 pursue their fairly nefarious agenda if you think about it because ultimately what 35:44 they want is american global dominance but it's arrogant it's it's not uh benign it's not a an 35:51 american dominance whereby yes the united states is the biggest gorilla in the jungle but the gorilla doesn't want 35:58 to mess with you unless you mess with him there have been other empires in past history the roman empire to give a very 36:04 easy example so long as you didn't mess with them they didn't mess with you you know if you paid them tribute 36:10 and did what they wanted in so far as major foreign policy issues fine 36:15 but this state department cabal if you want to 36:20 call it that foreign policy cabal they insist on micromanaging everything now that's the thing they want things just 36:27 like they want it and they come in insect-like and try to steer everything every last little thing and 36:35 we'll see how this happened with victoria nuland in 2014 just a little bit but um before i keep on going do you 36:42 guys more or less follow what i'm saying and understand what i'm saying you know hit me with a uh 36:48 you know plus 333 if everything is okay if you guys are following what i'm saying okay 36:54 um it's important that you understand this background before we dive into what's currently happening okay 37:01 okay uh isn't robert newland also of polish i don't know 37:06 uh i don't know who um you're talking about robert kagan kagan i don't know but kagan is jewish 37:13 okay um i do believe that he is from uh his family comes from north of belarus 37:18 northern belarus rather uh around the baltic states someplace like that um okay so victoria nuland she started 37:26 out um the first important job she had was a strobe talbot's assistant a strobe 37:31 talbot was a foreign policy advisor to bill clinton and a close friend of bill clinton's 37:37 uh since donkey's years and she worked for him from 93 to 96 37:42 and then she was the deputy director for former soviet union affairs from 96 to 2003 as i understand it now 37:50 this this position is very interesting she basically looked after the 37:55 the the countries of the former soviet union and of course her job was to keep them weak 38:00 that was the point okay that's what america strove to do during all of the 90s to keep 38:07 the former soviet union countries weak broken uh dispirited 38:13 so that american and to a lesser extent european financiers and and and uh busy 38:19 bodies and whatnot could go in and exploit them exploit them and steal 38:25 that was the whole point of it see and what ukraine is today the cesspool of corruption 38:31 this backwater where uh western politicians you know like the biden family like the kerry family the 38:37 pelosi family all these people they come to ukraine and they steal did you know 38:42 that uh joe biden when he was vice president under obama he came to ukraine 38:48 every three months do you have any idea how often that is to go to one damn country 38:54 every three months why do you think he probably walked out with the equivalent if not an actual suitcase full of money 39:01 that was the point of it see because he was stealing and he actually bragged about it he bragged about how he 39:09 had gotten a prosecutor fired his famous footage of that you should look it up he bragged about it and everybody 39:15 laughed and thought it was so funny such a funny quip but basically he said in that quip he was saying look if you 39:20 don't get this prosecutor to stop investigating the company that's paying me off i will keep 39:27 the obama loan guarantees for over a billion dollars from being approved for you 39:32 and you're going to do it now in the next half hour and he got his way and he made a joke 39:38 about it huh i mean it's pretty damn despicable that is open blatant corruption and 39:43 nobody called him out on it certainly not the people from the council on foreign relations or the 39:49 brookings institute where robert kagan is of course not see because that's the 39:55 job of these people to exploit ukraine 40:00 and victoria nuland's job as deputy director for former soviet union affairs was to 40:06 exploit russia and to a lesser extent ukraine and kazakhstan and belarus that 40:12 was the point of it to exploit them and suck as much money 40:17 as they possibly could out of it to the benefit of american companies american interests american oligarchs because 40:24 there are oligarchs in the united states don't give me this nonsense huh and you think that elon musk is your friend oh 40:29 elon musk is so cool look at his tweet isn't he cool he's just like all the others 40:35 he just wants to suck you dry he looks at you the exact same way 40:41 that a spider looks at a bumblebee as food to suck out all the juices from 40:48 you and leave you an empty husk you ever seen a bumble me after it's been eaten 40:54 by uh by a spider it's this big thing and you and you pick it up right it's totally hollow it's 41:00 been sucked out that's america america is hollowed out because of these insects 41:11 her job was to help these insects suck out the juices from the former 41:17 soviet union and they were very successful in ukraine and that's why ukraine is a [ __ ] a backwater 41:23 a broken nation that's the reason because of her efforts 41:28 she assisted in the corruption because of course in order for corruption to work you have to create the conditions 41:34 of corruption pedro escobar in colombia 41:40 the famous drug lord he had a saying 41:45 you know to any corrupt official he would send a little uh a little piece of paper okay and in the piece of paper 41:52 there's a little bundle in the piece of paper there'd be a bullet and a silver coin 41:57 okay and and the the bullet is plomo plomo means lead in spanish and 42:03 the and the coin was a silver coin which is in spanish plata plomo plata the bullet or the coin 42:12 which is it going to be that was victoria nuland's job to make sure that it was the coin 42:19 the corruption the grift and they exploited ukraine and they exploited the other countries for the 42:25 benefit of american companies and what happened and what she started 42:31 noticing probably um is that putin was playing ball but not quite 42:37 really and my guess this is a guess okay it's pure 42:42 speculation on my part i think that you know in this time in the early 2000s into the mid and late 2000s she wasn't 42:48 paying that much attention to putin because she got a lot of stuff on her plate all of a sudden because she became 42:54 assistant to dick cheney in 2003 and she lasted there a couple of years before becoming us ambassador to nato in 2005 43:01 through 2008 and uh you know during these times under cheney and then when cheney put her in 43:07 nato because he put her it's not that she got kicked out or fired no no she's too good of a suck-up to get fired no no 43:13 she was transferred over eased into the nato position and it was all to mobilize support for 43:19 regime change regime change in iraq and support the afghanistan occupation she 43:24 was pivotal in the support of the occupation of afghanistan and so anyway because of this this 43:31 probably distracted her from her main job which was looking after the former soviet union making sure that they 43:37 remained as corrupt as possible but putin kind of like slipped away and my speculation 43:42 is that she probably thought oh it's just some weird kgb [ __ ] and let's just leave him alone and figure it out but 43:48 what he was really doing was easing out the really grotesque oligarchs and slowly bringing that down see 43:55 because that's clearly his goal if you look at putin and you you read about him you realize that he is an incredibly 44:01 cynical man cynical about absolutely everything except russia russia as a concept okay 44:08 and this is very common among great leaders okay i'm not talking about great leaders in a moral sense that he was a 44:14 very good leader in in like like he was righteous okay no i'm saying great leader in terms of powerful great 44:22 leaders in terms of changing history because whatever you think of putin he is changing history and you can't deny 44:28 that okay he's a more world historical figure than say joe biden will ever be joe biden this is a 44:34 puppet he's a nothing he's a pathetic old man but vladimir putin no he's a world 44:39 historical figure and he is the man who prevented russia from becoming ukraine 44:47 but victoria nuland didn't notice this okay and so she was busy from 2003 to 2008 44:54 mobilizing support for regime change and all the rest of that [ __ ] right now what's interesting is that um 45:02 as ambassador as u.s ambassador to nato she would have been instrumental in pushing nato right up to the border 45:08 with russia she knew exactly what was going on a woman with her background not only in terms of her family but also in 45:14 terms of her education at brown uh i mean brown now is just a [ __ ] joke and it's been a joke for 20 years 45:21 but back when she graduated at least it was still you know some place to be taken seriously in terms of education 45:27 and there's no reason to think that she was not educated in the history of russia the history of nato and how 45:34 sensitive russia has always been historically to any great power encroaching on its 45:40 border and it's because of a function of geography because russia basically has no natural uh 45:46 land uh natural border with western europe and that's why you know the french and during napoleon and and the 45:53 germans under hitler were able to advance so deep into russia because there's no natural border okay there's 45:59 no natural defense not like switzerland for instance where you have the alps it's essentially a natural fortress okay 46:06 it's impossible to conquer nobody will ever conquer switzerland but it's potentially easy to conquer uh russia 46:12 because there's nothing it's just flat plains okay all the way to the ural mountains and so 46:18 she would have known how sensitive the russians be they imperial russia uh soviet russia or or russian 46:25 federation would be to nato encroachment and yet she was the one pushing it 46:30 she pushed forward this kind of encroachment and it started of course with her old boss from the 46:36 very beginning strobe talbot who also was a man who hated russia for reasons of his own that aren't important for 46:41 this conversation but um but what's what happened was that she saw 46:48 how russia was getting up and how it was evolving and pulling away 46:55 from the from the good old days of the 90s good old days for the the rapacious financiers and and and oligarchs and and 47:03 and riffraff and evil people who had been in russia during the 90s but which had destroyed russia 47:10 well putin was resurrecting russia resurrecting it and improving the standard of living of the people 47:16 the standard of living of the people between 1999 and 2013 in russia rose 47:22 phenomenally the whole country became much much more successful better off 47:28 and you compare the the fate of russia during those 14 years and the fate of 47:34 say ukraine in those 14 years it's night and day because there wasn't somebody to 47:40 halt the western corruption see that's the difference and that is a fundamental problem 47:47 because victoria nuland and robert kagan and that whole cabal in the u.s state 47:52 department in the foreign policy establishment they want a broken russia they cannot stand the 47:59 fact and it's and it's because of number one arrogance because they insist that america has to 48:05 be not only the biggest and strongest country but far and away the most powerful like like just 48:13 they want to maintain the power imbalance like the americans had after the second world war 48:19 number one and number two and this is something that is very disturbing to people but you have to face it 48:25 there are long-standing ethno-religious hatreds towards russia they hate russia 48:31 with a passion they would be happiest if russia were obliterated in a mushroom cloud 48:37 and that's a fact they hate it they hate it with a passion for the the psychological reasons that i've 48:44 explained before because you have to understand all the uh people who are running american 48:49 foreign policy are the children of jews who made it in america but the 48:55 grandchildren of jews who fled pogroms in russia in russia or belarus or 49:00 wherever in eastern europe and that that kind of generational trauma 49:08 it expresses itself in resentment and rage towards the source of that ancient 49:14 ancestral trauma you have to look at the facts and and if somebody wants to say that oh man you're being anti-semitic or 49:20 some [ __ ] like that listen uh i descend from a man named jose miguel 49:26 right and he was betrayed by a man named bernardo higgins right and i was taught 49:31 to spit at the name of brando he is you know and that all happened you know 200 years 49:37 ago i'm not kidding he he was uh he was assassinated basically in 1821 and 200 49:44 years later here we are and we my family still hates his guts but not though he's guts yeah see 49:52 you know ancestral hatreds you know they they ripple they ripple down into the future 50:00 i mean like there's that famous line from uh uh william faulkner 50:05 um the past is never over it's never even the past it's very true i think that's the line 50:11 correct me if i'm wrong chad the past is never over it's never even the past 50:17 yeah uh it's a great line it's very true americans many americans want to think 50:24 that you know you wake up in the morning and you're a blank 50:45 as obviously all of these people did and these tight-knit families they tell stories of generations before i know 50:52 stories of my own family growing up in latin america growing up every sunday 50:57 sitting around the uh my grandmother's dining room table and she would tell me stories of her mother and her 51:03 grandmother and her great grandmother the stories of how our family had come 51:08 from germany how my great-great-grandmother as a young 16 year old girl had convinced 51:15 her um her spinster older sister to 51:21 leave um celesteville holstein and chase after this handsome uh uh 51:28 german naval officer who had stopped at the port that they were uh that they were living 51:34 in and she had fallen desperately in love and she chased him and married him yeah 51:39 you know i heard those stories you know and some of them were romantic and some of them were funny and some of them were tragic you see in tight-knit families 51:46 that happens all the time and you hear these ancient stories and they mark you and a woman like 51:52 victoria newman she watches as her father whom she must have loved very much we all you know 51:58 when we are children we all love our parents and to see him so broken up by something 52:04 that had happened with his father and his father's trauma because of being persecuted 52:10 in russia in the home country and being alienated all his life 52:16 in the new world that affected her of course it did and 52:22 and that that trauma that rage that resentment it expresses itself it expresses itself today that's why 52:29 victoria nuland hates hates russia and wants it broken because it's not so much that she's a 52:34 greedy evil woman and she might be that for all i know but that's not really the reason as far as i can tell 52:40 the real reason is that she wants to get back at the russians for what they did what they did to her grandfather 52:46 which affected her father and broke her father see 52:52 because that's what really happened and that kind of rage within that woman 52:57 it can never that it's a wound that can never be solved so 53:03 so that brings us to the maidan revolution the so-called revolution of dignity in 2013-14 okay 53:10 now you have to understand that victoria nuland when when things started going topsy-turvy because they had been trying 53:16 to pull ukraine into nato for quite some time and 53:21 they were doing it by promising to pull in uh ukraine into the european union 53:28 and the european union i've been here you know and and ukrainians 53:34 god love them they think that if they join the european union all of a sudden all the streets 53:40 are going to be paved in gold they think that that that everything is going to work there will be no more 53:45 corruption no more having to pay off people everything from the from the traffic cop to the to the teacher at the 53:52 school to whomever you know they think that everything will be wonderful if they join the eu they dream about it and 53:59 they insist they insist that once they join the eu it'll be just so much better you know 54:04 they actually like made the license plates similar to the eu license plates i mean if you just glance at the 54:10 ukrainian uh license plate so you can't tell the difference if it's you know i mean it looks exactly like the ukrainian 54:16 license plates it's white with a little blue square on the side you know and the lettering and the font is exactly the 54:22 same you know they want it so badly they can taste it and nato yeah that'd be nice too but they don't really give a 54:28 [ __ ] about that they care about the prosperity and sophistication and freedom and 54:34 wonderful life and freedom from corruption that would entail being a part of the 54:39 european union project that's what they dream about of course they don't see the alienation 54:46 they don't see the decadence and degeneracy they do not see how the meaninglessness of european life 54:54 leads to not only depression but drug addiction a drug addiction of both illegal drugs and 55:00 also legal drugs antidepressants and such medications they don't see the alienation of the people within 55:06 generations and from each other they don't see how it is almost impossible now for young men and young women to 55:13 come together and form strong stable romantic and emotional bonds that will lead to flourishing families they don't 55:19 see that they don't see it at all many times they don't even believe you when you tell them that that's the way 55:26 it is in europe in the european union they don't believe you because of course 55:31 you know because when you talk to a child and you the child has grown up convinced of santa claus 55:37 nothing you tell them will dissuade them okay it will take them only at some shock 55:43 like they they like stumble upon their parent in in the closet somewhere putting together 55:48 their bicycle and then they're like oh oh my god santa claus doesn't exist 55:57 that actually happened to me by the way i stumbled upon my my dad uh building the the bicycle that i was gonna get for 56:03 christmas the one that santa claus was gonna give me and i'm not gonna tell you how old i was because it's [ __ ] embarrassing it was way too old 56:11 but anyway that's this is neither here or there but my point it's a very serious point the people in ukraine 56:17 believe fantasies okay and because of these fantasies they will not believe you if you tell them that it's not that 56:24 way and of course their leaders and people like victoria newland want them to continue to believe and so they 56:30 spew out propaganda and they pay for very very expensive propaganda that will make them believe in these lies you see 56:37 now um victoria nuland when she came to ukraine in 2014 well she'd been encouraging 56:44 ukrainians by indirect methods to join nato to join the european union and they had made all kinds of deals and monies 56:51 had gone here and there to you know to to 56:56 to have nato enter ukraine but like like underground okay and they were 57:03 all over ukraine and in fact as the bio labs issues have revealed 57:10 the united states established all kinds of stuff in ukraine and here's the thing see over the decades now 57:17 the ukraine the um there are a lot of dead bodies in ukraine i'm not talking about literal 57:23 dead bodies i'm talking figurative dead bodies there are a lot of bodies buried in ukraine okay 57:30 and the americans now are kind of desperate about that i mean it's a real issue the bio labs thing that's that's 57:36 one but it's not the only one okay the corruption issue that's the one that i think freaks them out the most 57:43 because there's so much corruption it's so grotesque and blatant you know it's like the hunter biden 57:49 laptop but you know just just magnitudes multiple magnitudes bigger 57:55 just all kinds of [ __ ] and of course we don't know it what it is but it's there okay that's part of 58:01 the drive for the west and so far the americans especially in so far as ukraine is concerned but i'm getting ahead of 58:07 myself now um newland had been pushing you know for 58:13 uh um ukraine to be uh you know more pro-western and all the 58:18 rest of it now yanukovych was playing uh who was the president at that time in 2014 2013. he was playing the typical 58:26 double game that a lot of leaders on the borders of russia had been playing sort of like playing europe and russia off 58:33 each other for their own benefit lukashenko for instance the dictator of belarus he's been doing that since 58:39 forever he came to power in 91 and he's been in power ever since and he in before before 2020 when they tried to 58:47 color revolution him he was playing the um the russians off the europeans and 58:53 trying to get good deals from both of them you know as you do i mean if you're if you're between two great powers and they both 58:59 kind of need you well you know what's a guy going to do you know what i'm saying so that's what lukashenko was doing 59:05 that's in belarus and that's what yanukovych was doing and that's in 59:10 ukraine he was the president of ukraine he was a you know a fat old corrupt guy 59:16 nice guy i'm sure you know but uh you know good for i i bet he was good for for going out for drinks and stuff you 59:22 know and and he knew probably the best stripper clubs and [ __ ] like that probably knew a whole bunch of really 59:27 good hookers but you know what an inconsequential fellow there's this famous video that's really goddamn funny 59:34 where one time he's standing there with um dmitry medvedev and vladimir putin in some ceremony 59:40 they're all dressed up in dark clothes right the three of them right just the three of them and this is i think in russia i don't know where i mean some 59:46 ceremony is happening and the camera's focused on these three guys and and you know it wasn't bigger than the other two he 59:52 kind of like he's like looking very serious and then he sort of like reaches into his pocket and pulls out a 59:58 candy thing and he offers it to the other two and the two of them just each 1:00:04 of them in turn goes like no no thank you you know and focus back on the ceremony and they both mother's 1:00:09 like this guy's a [ __ ] idiot you know the word is that putin did think he was a [ __ ] idiot but well well it's 1:00:15 pretty funny anyway the point uh see yanukovych was trying to play both sides off the middle and um 1:00:21 and he wasn't playing ball with the west and there was a lot of political pressure in so far as you know not 1:00:29 uh um abusing the russian citizens so much because you have to understand in 1:00:34 ukraine ukraine the ukraine that exists today it's the agglomeration of two distinct 1:00:40 people the ukrainian people and the russian people the russians dominate the east and the south the ukraines dominate 1:00:47 the center and the west okay and kiev is sort of like a 50 50 split but intends 1:00:52 more towards ukrainians ethnic ingredients now the i think ukraine's have their own language uh and they are 1:00:58 ethnically different from the russians i personally find it very difficult to tell the difference um but i'm kind of 1:01:05 like starting to notice it uh because the conflict here has started to you 1:01:10 know cleave the two ethnic groups which is unfortunate and i think it's something that the americans are 1:01:15 certainly encouraging anyway uh what what happened was that the um 1:01:21 the yanukovych regime did not want to impose anti-russian measures 1:01:27 that a lot of ukrainians wanted a lot of hard right ukraines now you have to understand that the hard right and i'm 1:01:33 talking nazi hard right i mean i'm talking full-on thugs paramilitary thugs 1:01:39 okay uh involved in some criminal activity to maintain uh to get their money right but 1:01:45 ideological i'm [ __ ] nuts man i mean all these people like right sector like s14 like azerbaital and adam battalion 1:01:52 they're all [ __ ] crazy okay i mean you got to keep that in mind they're all [ __ ] nuts they're american history x 1:01:58 type neo-nazis they're not larpers they're not [ __ ] around they're for real okay 1:02:04 uh they're you know the the white nationalists of the prison gangs like that kind of neo-nazi they're the 1:02:09 [ __ ] evil okay on my telegram channel i posted videos of these [ __ ] sticks 1:02:15 uh shooting kneecapping shooting with assault rifles the knees of their prisoners of war the russian 1:02:21 prisoners of war okay now this is very important because these because the ethnic russians 1:02:28 they don't have this hatred for the ethnic ukrainians but the ethnic ukrainians have this 1:02:35 hatred for ethnic russians and that this is a kish uh um 1:02:41 the the ethnic russians they're they're there's no hatred in their heart for 1:02:47 them okay and i believe that the ethnic uh ukrainians or at least a vocal sector 1:02:53 of them have this hatred for the ethnic russians because they have always been put upon 1:03:00 they've always been the losers in the historical game and that happens with smaller people who live between bigger 1:03:07 people the ethnic ukrainians live between the poles the hungarians and the 1:03:12 russians and they're smaller they're they're fewer fewer in number and not so strong 1:03:18 as those other powerful nations those powerful ethnicities the hungarians and 1:03:23 the poles and the russians they are very uh definite as to who they are they have a strong identity and they don't put up 1:03:31 with any [ __ ] and perhaps now uh hungary and poland are not great powers in a couple of 1:03:37 centuries who knows what will happen because they have that uh wellspring of great power hungarians the same the 1:03:43 austro-hungarian empire for crying out loud you know but the ukrainians they've always been 1:03:48 the smaller people between and squeezed by these bigger people 1:03:53 these bigger powers and so perhaps that's why you have that 1:03:59 great resentment and that great resentment leads to horrifying extremists 1:04:05 and that's what we have now these extremists these ukrainian extremists they hate ethnic russians and 1:04:12 that fits very neatly with newland because newland throughout her career she has always allied herself with 1:04:18 groups that were extremely antagonistic towards russians 1:04:24 she never compromised with that throughout her career she's always allied herself with people 1:04:29 who hate russians hate them 1:04:36 and so when the maidan revolution started she supported the right sector the right sector is a key group 1:04:43 it is a group of neo-nazis and they were funded uh in part by the 1:04:49 oligarch the oligarch the ukrainian israeli cypriot oligarchy igor kolomoisky that 1:04:55 i've spoken about many times before see newland and kolomoisky worked 1:05:01 together and they worked to organize the right sector newland organized them and kolomoisky 1:05:08 financed them he also financed the azo battalion okay and i find it very difficult it's not 1:05:15 impossible to believe that newland was number one not aware of this she knew about it of course number two not in 1:05:21 very close contact with these fascist paramilitary because that's what the as of battalion is it's a fascist 1:05:26 paramilitary now um uh you see uh where's this no where'd he 1:05:33 go okay very important to understand that she cemented a relationship with a man named dimitro yarosh who is the head of 1:05:40 the right sector dimitro jarrosh and this guy's a neo-nazi fascist actually just flat out and it's like kid 1:05:48 ourselves okay and he yarosh was newlands victoria newlands guy in so far as the right 1:05:54 sector and yarosh led the right sector but newland gave him his marching papers 1:06:00 now here comes a big big this is rumor but so many people have said that this is 1:06:07 true that okay during the maidan revolution which is a very confusing set of events and i suggest you watch the 1:06:13 oliver stone documentary um ukraine burning okay or under fire ukraine i 1:06:18 forget the name of the damn thing i watched it twice and i forgot the name of the thing but in that documentary he 1:06:23 gives a very very good account of the maidan revolution and how it happened and the steps towards it and there is 1:06:29 famously there there's this period where there's there were snipers who were killing off police and killing off 1:06:35 people and just like a whole [ __ ] nightmare okay and it is um the rumor 1:06:42 unconfirmed the rumor is that they were israeli snipers they were mercenaries israeli mercenaries 1:06:48 okay that's the rumor okay and certainly somebody like kolomoisky with deep ties to various uh um 1:06:56 criminal uh groups and and and criminal subcultures in ukraine the united states 1:07:02 and israel you would have had access or or you would be able to get in touch with such israeli snipers but this is a 1:07:10 rumor okay however what uh the other rumor is that newland 1:07:16 was the woman or the person rather who came up with the idea of creating a provocation by way of snipers 1:07:23 and that's the rumor rumor okay it's said by enough people that one can 1:07:29 think that this is likely true that snipers were there is unquestioned nobody has ever been able to capture 1:07:35 them and know who they were okay so that's why when i say that it's a 1:07:41 rumor it is a rumor but something i've learned over the years see is that it's usually very very 1:07:48 difficult to keep secret okay and so the fact that there were snipers 1:07:53 in maidan square during the revolution and had they been from either side had they been right sector had they been 1:07:59 government snipers police snipers whomever that information would have filtered out because people can't keep a 1:08:05 secret the only people who can keep secrets are mercenaries that is figures from far away who are brought in to do a 1:08:12 specific task and then center on their way because since they have no social connection to the environment 1:08:19 they come in they do their task and they fly away 1:08:24 there's no way for the information to leak out you see 1:08:31 many years ago a fairly unsavory character once told me that if i really wanted something done always hire a 1:08:37 mercenary you know because there will be never any way for them to to tie it up with you have a good alibi and hire some 1:08:44 mercenaries and you're untouchable okay so good to know so 1:08:51 that's the rumor the fact is nobody's ever known which side 1:08:56 uh were the snipers on were they government forces or revolutionary forces doesn't matter 1:09:02 uh the maidan revolution came it became violent during the down revolution before 1:09:08 yanukovych had fallen famously victoria nuland uh victoria 1:09:13 newton's phone was tapped it's not clear if her phone was tapped or the phone of the other person she was speaking to who 1:09:18 was a man named jeffrey piatt jeffrey piatt was the u.s ambassador to ukraine and the tapped call that was 1:09:26 recorded and the recording released uh it was victoria newland and jeffrey pyatt discussing 1:09:33 uh how to form the successor government to the yanukovych regime even though yanukovych was still in power at the 1:09:39 time but the revolution was raging and at the time it was still like non-violent it hadn't they hadn't upped 1:09:45 up the they hadn't amped up the violence yet okay when they record this call now 1:09:50 the word is that it was the russians who did it which makes sense because it could have been that newland or piet or 1:09:56 both recorded the call but why would they release it i mean it would make sense you know for 1:10:02 both of them to record the call and hold it perhaps later as insurance in case of anything but neither one of them fell 1:10:09 out with each other and so why was it released if one of them had recorded it but the russians recording it that makes 1:10:15 a lot more sense so the russians released that recording it was clearly to undermine the the 1:10:21 revolution it was a very poor way to undermine it was interesting but it didn't really affect the outcome 1:10:27 because the revolution happened and and all of a sudden 1:10:33 in that call you had how nuland and pyat were micromanaging 1:10:38 the new regime in that call which is fairly extensive they are 1:10:43 heard discussing which political figure should head the interim government 1:10:49 and why and the newland picked yatsenyuk yatsenyukya 1:10:56 to be the new leader of ukraine the the interim prime minister rather of ukraine 1:11:02 because she wanted to save klitschko another political figure you know famous boxer 1:11:07 who wanted to save klitschko for later you know for like more long-term see i mean she micromanaged it like that thing 1:11:13 and and you know talking about different people at different positions in the government a real you know fine-tuning 1:11:19 you know she was right in the heart of it and that's really interesting that kind of micromanaging 1:11:26 it speaks of a certain type of personality because there are some people like to give an example ronald reagan ronald reagan never micromanaged 1:11:32 a goddamn thing okay what he did was he just gave general because we want to go that direction and you you boys figure 1:11:38 it out we're going that way and and his boys you know george schultz and casper weinberger and whomever would 1:11:44 say but why don't we go over there no no we're going that way that's where i want us to go how do we get there you figure 1:11:50 it out but that way that is actually a better way to lead i've noticed i mean just studying other 1:11:56 people because when you micromanage you start getting stressed out you get all neurotic and stressed and all the rest of it it's stupid it's better to just 1:12:02 sort of like give a big direction and sort of go that way the ship is going that direction and let other people 1:12:07 figure it out uh but newlin isn't like that she likes to micromanage every [ __ ] little thing 1:12:12 and she did she micromanaged the maidan revolution and that implicated her that's the important thing the fact that 1:12:18 she so micromanaged the uh maidan revolution made it clear that she was the person her fingers her fingerprints 1:12:25 were all over that thing and it was clear that it was a coup d'etat it was the violent overthrow of the 1:12:31 yanukovych regime whatever you might think of the yanukovych regime it was legitimately 1:12:37 elected nobody disputed the election but what was key about it was that it showed the split 1:12:43 the ethnic split through the regional split between the center west of the country and the east south of the 1:12:50 country between the the um ethnic ukrainians and the ethnic 1:12:56 russians and newlands sided with the ethnic ukrainians against the ethnic russians 1:13:07 came to power the next president she made sure that that government abused the russians and of course she made sure 1:13:15 that the ukrainian army started getting seriously supplied with weapons and she used that ukrainian army 1:13:21 and she micromanaged this to attack the donbass see you have to understand that in a 1:13:28 very real sense victoria nuland has been president of ukraine since 2014. 1:13:35 she's the person calling the shots she's the one pulling the strings she doesn't care about domestic policy in ukraine 1:13:41 whatever happens in ukraine she could give a rat's ass she gives free speeches once in a while and we have to end you 1:13:46 know corruption in ukraine but of course she doesn't really mean it because so many of the washington people 1:13:53 benefit from the corruption see that's the key issue so she might claim that she wants to end the 1:13:59 corruption but in fact she is helping it she's facilitating the corruption in ukraine because 1:14:05 her political masters back in washington the people in politics like nancy pelosi 1:14:11 like john kerry the secretary of the former secretary of state under obama and her boss when all this [ __ ] was 1:14:16 going down um what's his name mitt romney he even though he's a republican he's a key 1:14:21 figure in the money circles i mean he's an all mckinsey hand and all kinds of money flows around mitt romney and is 1:14:28 directed to people like kagan and the other foreign policy people at the council of foreign relations you see so 1:14:36 her job is to make sure that the political support back in washington 1:14:41 keeps her afloat so the only way that they keep her afloat is that she continues to facilitate the corruption 1:14:48 because the people i've mentioned pelosi biden uh kerry and uh what's his face romney 1:14:55 all of them have sons who are have no show jobs in gas companies ukraine clown world 1:15:02 that it is but it's not just that there are all kinds of shady little deals and [ __ ] like that and like the bio labs for 1:15:08 instance the bio labs and we're coming out and it came out in the daily mail a couple of days ago 1:15:14 that these bio labs not only were run by the department of defense they were funded by companies attached to hunter 1:15:21 biden uh dude what the [ __ ] see i mean this is 1:15:27 this kind of corruption they're all like in bed together at all like and her job is to keep this money train 1:15:35 going see and at the same time destroy russia see she uses a corrupt government 1:15:42 to destroy russia and so the weapons flowed into ukraine from starting in 2014 after the coup 1:15:49 d'etat after the maidan revolution the revolution of dignity the coup d'etat that's what i call that well she brought 1:15:56 in the um the weapons you know and this of course made raytheon and all these weapons 1:16:02 manufacturers so goddamn happy and she also brought in the military contractors 1:16:10 the military contractors showed up and trained the ukrainian armed forces in nato communications 1:16:16 techniques and all kinds of other nato uh nato appropriate 1:16:22 maneuvers and tactics and strategies and all the rest of it see and 1:16:28 uh why contractors by the way well because contractors are private individuals they're just a private company right but of course all of them 1:16:33 have deep ties to to intelligence and to the nato countries and especially the american 1:16:40 military okay so even though they're private contractors they're for all intents and purposes department of 1:16:45 defense officials who are in ukraine training ukrainian troops nato tactics 1:16:51 okay for a potential war with russia to be like this knife in the gut of russia 1:16:57 waiting waiting to be stuck see and this army in uh this ukrainian army 1:17:04 which in 2014 was trivial size i do believe it was something like 30 thousand men or something like that i mean it's like really trivial now just 1:17:11 before this war rather it was at uh i do believe it was 260 000 men and roughly 75 000 frontline fighters 1:17:21 that's what i understand and so uh that happened because of victoria newley see so she she's like the nexus 1:17:29 of all these different interests that want to exploit ukraine and use ukraine to attack russia with the 1:17:35 ultimate goal of breaking up russia and bringing back the good old days of the 90s the good old days for the westerners 1:17:42 the very very bad old days for the russians the russians don't want a repeat of the 90s that was traumatic for 1:17:47 them as it would for any country to be violated that way by western interest but 1:17:53 and that violation has continued in ukraine that's why ukrainian is so poor understand that see 1:18:00 but they need to maintain corruption like i said blah blah blah if you keep everybody corrupt then they 1:18:06 are never going to interfere with your corruption if i'm paying you money for whatever and 1:18:13 then you see me stealing from someplace else or one of my buddies stealing you're not gonna say a [ __ ] thing 1:18:18 because you're gonna you're you're gonna feel complicit and that's the whole point of corruption to make everybody feel complicit so that nobody stomps any 1:18:25 theft and that's why ukraine is so poor and broken because it could be a rich country it 1:18:30 has everything to be poland a very respectable country that was poor 1:18:36 in 1991 and has pulled itself out and is rising up like a phoenix 1:18:41 poland is a wonderful country i've been there a couple of times wonderful people and it is a country that is ascendant 1:18:49 good on them ukraine could be an ascendant country but the problem is corruption number one and number two 1:18:56 this ethnic hatred between ukrainians towards the russian half of the country 1:19:01 and that's the other problem of course it's exactly half okay half the country is russian 1:19:08 ukraine would be happier everybody would be happier if ukraine were split up into a couple of countries okay at least a 1:19:13 couple of countries but that's for another conversation let's focus back now on victoria nuland 1:19:19 now victoria nuland when you listen to her she's this tidy little woman 1:19:24 and like i said in pictures of her when she was younger she looked very cute like adorable actually she 1:19:30 looked like an adorable person but the word is that she is a [ __ ] nightmare i mean just a really 1:19:37 piece of [ __ ] kind of person and the word i've heard is that she treats her assistants like garbage 1:19:42 you know and that's always a bad sign see see you always want a person in one line 1:19:49 a person of one line is a person who treats everybody the same i mean they're differential and 1:19:55 respectful towards older people or important people but their fundamental attitude is always the same but the word 1:20:01 is that victoria nuland is very differential if not a suck-up to people that she considers more powerful than 1:20:06 herself and an absolute beast an arrogant just horrifying person to anybody that she 1:20:13 considers weaker than her or lesser than her or who does not have the ability to 1:20:20 you know give her an answer i mean that's a horrible person huh it's a bully it's the mentality of a bully 1:20:26 and that's victoria newlin that's that's her personality huh she's got this uh 1:20:31 voice very melodious voice if you ask me when you hear her speaking 1:20:37 uh she's certainly educated she's she's certainly somebody who sounds uh uh 1:20:42 prepared and her voice is so sweet and and and that is kind of like kind of 1:20:48 shocking when you realize what an awful person she is i mean i'd love to be there when she lashes out at people i i 1:20:55 haven't been able to catch any kind of recording of it although that recording with payet was kind of indicative when 1:21:01 she said [ __ ] the eu and and with such disdain and arrogance 1:21:06 and resentment she must be something else man she'd 1:21:11 probably make a very good dominatrix yeah those of you who are into s m i'm not but if you are you should be 1:21:19 dreaming of um victoria nuland in a latex suit and a whip 1:21:24 and that mellifluous voice of hers yeah because she sounds mellifluous but [ __ ] evil 1:21:33 anyway um one of the interesting things okay now we're coming up to the bite 1:21:38 administration in our timeline here okay um 1:21:44 as the biden administration came together i mean basically the trump administration was a pause in this whole 1:21:50 scheme and the scheme was very simple to get ukraine into nato and cause a 1:21:56 provocation that would lead to regime change in russia that was the goal 1:22:02 now here's what's really interesting russia had the great good luck to have 1:22:08 trump win now don't give me this [ __ ] that uh you know that that russian hackers hacked the election 1:22:14 that's how trump won that's [ __ ] it was basically that you know hillary clinton didn't win wisconsin that's 1:22:20 basically the reason you know because she didn't pay attention she thought it was in the bag okay she thought it was hers by divine right 1:22:26 and by the way of course hillary clinton and newland are buddy buddies you know i mean you know they're they're very very close 1:22:32 uh of course because somebody like um like hillary clinton would know what to do with a woman like victoria nuland and 1:22:38 victoria nuland with you know with her eye on the main chance as she always has in her entire career she would know that 1:22:44 hillary clinton is somebody that she wants to kiss the ring of right so anyway they're buddy buddies and she was 1:22:50 supposed to be uh the president in 2016 but she lost you know shockingly 1:22:56 they they didn't fix the election well enough basically it was their own stupid fault they blamed it on the russians but now we know that russians didn't have 1:23:03 any [ __ ] thing to do with it right it was just stupid as incompetence of the dnc but the point 1:23:10 those four years had it not been for those four years russia would not be in a position to be 1:23:15 able to invade ukraine and all of the events that were happening now would have happened four years earlier and 1:23:20 russia would have lost and potentially putin would have been overthrown because had he lost the donbass which is 1:23:28 what would have happened in back in 2017 you know his position in moscow in the 1:23:35 kremlin would have been so weakened that he probably would have fallen okay that four-year pause allowed multiple 1:23:42 things to happen on the one hand uh putin was able to fortify the economy of russia to 1:23:48 withstand further more aggressive sanctions because that's what happened in 2014 1:23:54 as you will recall and i'm just skip ahead you know quickly because i'm assuming that you all know this history the russians in the face of this um you 1:24:01 know coup d'etat in ukraine they went and grabbed crimea which of course 1:24:08 robbed nato of the you know of the of the jewel that they really wanted they 1:24:13 wanted crimea because they wanted sebastopol the naval base and they figured that if they overthrew 1:24:19 yanukovych and put in their own people and newlin micromanaged it nato would be able to grab the military base the naval 1:24:25 base at sevastopol and deprive russia of a needed naval base and and the black 1:24:31 sea would no longer uh be russia's lake it would be nato's lake and russia would become landlocked 1:24:38 which is something that the russians could not afford that's why they they went grabbed it they went and grabbed crimea 1:24:44 and the um russians also encouraged the separatists in lugansk 1:24:50 and donetsk and of course encouraged them and and funded them with weapons and all the rest of it to keep that 1:24:55 going because had it not been for the russians that would have ended long ago and so what happened was that um 1:25:03 that four-year pause of the trump administration allowed the oh and because of this because of grabbing crimea and the 1:25:09 donetsk and lugan's problems the separatists all kinds of sanctions were thrown on 1:25:14 putin because that's when the u.s state department the the foreign policy establishment 1:25:21 of all these people that i've mentioned before kagan and all the rest of it that's when they realized that putin was 1:25:26 not their guy because right up until 2012 or so they thought he's he's our guy isn't he isn't 1:25:33 he yeah because they certainly thought that in 99 and they they thought that through the 2000s but then slowly they 1:25:40 they're like is he really our guy or is he sort of like you know doing things that aren't really to our liking and you 1:25:46 know in 2014 he went and grabbed crimea and that's what that really pissed him off because they wanted crimea it was it 1:25:52 was the big jewel okay the the cherry on the sunday and they wanted it badly and she stole it from 1:25:58 them so they slapped him with sanctions and of course crimea is a peninsula such that it's very easy for the russians to 1:26:04 defend it the idea of invading it kind of laughable okay but anyway uh the 1:26:09 russians grabbed crimea and for their pains they were slapped with sanctions that really hurt the russian economy at 1:26:16 that time much more than sanctions are hurting them now okay that's something that people don't seem to realize yes there was a big fall 1:26:24 in the ruble and yes there was a big fall in the moscow stock market and all the rest of it 1:26:29 but it bounced back very quickly okay extremely quickly and we're pretty much getting to status 1:26:35 quo ante and so far as russian financial markets are concerned and their ability to issue debt no problem because they're 1:26:41 issuing it internally because they've really battened down the hatches of their economy starting in 1:26:47 2014. see yes of course the shock of the war the surprise of it okay and the 1:26:53 immediate effects in so far as foreign sanctions panicked the market the market dropped all the rest of it but people 1:26:59 are suddenly realizing you know this is not bad especially since china and india you know the two largest countries in 1:27:05 the world by population and the largest economy in the world they're backing russia there's no 1:27:11 daylight not between russia and china not between russia and india not between russia and 1:27:17 iran and not between russia and venezuela the other big oil producer the country that 1:27:23 has the largest proven natural uh excuse me the world's largest proven reserves 1:27:29 of oil on the planet no you know no daylight between those countries and the possibility of trading rupees 1:27:35 and rubles all of a sudden people are investors are realizing no the russians are okay they 1:27:40 are but in 2014 they weren't and so the russian economy took a big hit 1:27:47 putin immediately started on two things because he knew that this [ __ ] was gonna hit a crescendo at some point he started 1:27:53 um protecting his economy and creating autarky that is 1:27:59 total independence which is a very difficult process but that's the aim that he had number one and the other was 1:28:06 to have a military that'd be up to snuff even though he'd been working on that project since at least 2007 with the 1:28:12 previous uh defense minister his name slips my mind right now it's not important he'd been working at that very 1:28:18 diligently of cleaning out the corruption in the uh military and the military procurement of course which is 1:28:23 where the corruption usually is um look at the f-35 that's all corruption man that's why the plane 1:28:29 sucks and it's you know it's going to be a [ __ ] disaster when it's actually deployed in a war in a combat area that 1:28:35 plane is not going to [ __ ] fly no you heard it here first 1:28:40 boys but anyway uh the um the russians 1:28:46 they started preparing from 2016 to 2020 okay really preparing battening down the 1:28:52 hatches because they knew what was coming and what happened is finally by 1:28:58 administration came in and all these [ __ ] people showed up it's not just victoria newland people 1:29:04 like jake sullivan like anthony blinken anthony blinken was instrumental in so far as the the iran deal is concerned he was 1:29:11 instrumental in all kinds of fishy [ __ ] going on okay jake sullivan he's a specialist in regime change he was all 1:29:18 over the place and so far as libya is concerned iraq syria these people are all about regime change 1:29:25 and destroying countries for the benefit of the united states and of american corporate interest and american 1:29:31 political corruption jake sullivan and anthony blinken were the people who put hunter biden 1:29:38 in burisma yeah those were the two guys jake sullivan if 1:29:43 you don't know is the national security the national security council 1:29:49 and anthony blinken is the u.s secretary of state the highest foreign policy uh foreign affairs official in the united 1:29:56 states and so they're the ones who put hunter biden in barisma as well as all of 1:30:01 hunter biden's drug dealing and taking friends because hunter biden has apparently a whole 1:30:07 coterie of druggy friends because he's a drug he's a junkie right and all these junkies you know they're they're 1:30:13 highfalutin sophisticated you know well-dressed but they're junkies you know you ever seen a picture of hunter 1:30:19 biden without his fake teeth you know he's got the teeth of a junkie he is a [ __ ] junkie right 1:30:25 but he's the junky son of the former vice president and now president and so jake sullivan and anthony blinken were 1:30:31 the ones who put him with um in burisma and along with all the junky friends and 1:30:37 that's why um you know when when uh what's his name vladimir putin was talking about all the drug addicts 1:30:44 um i think he was referring to zelensky and also uh the hunter biden coterie 1:30:49 okay but i mean and they're all in ukraine that's the thing man 1:30:54 yeah you know you drive around kiev right and they're a bunch of men's clubs and they're huge they're enormous and 1:31:01 extremely expensive i mean you you walk in and you got to drop a couple of grand at least okay 1:31:06 dollars they're extremely expensive why the [ __ ] you think that they exist in like downtown kiev 1:31:12 beautiful hookers i mean incredible right and uh and and very 1:31:17 expensive and very tasteful but a nightclub and so it's fundamentally gaudy uh i mean it's in the dna of the place 1:31:24 right but why do you think that there's so many of them because these westerners these sons of 1:31:30 politicians and all the rest of it they go to ukraine to play 1:31:35 cocaine hookers all kinds of stuff and of course there's all kinds of videotape 1:31:42 that's the thing that's the key issue see see all these guys are are compromised 1:31:48 compromised as the russians call it and and you know the chinese have this compromise you know the russians have it 1:31:55 the ukrainians have it there's all kinds of [ __ ] on these people okay 1:32:01 and you know that's the terror the panic of the people in washington 1:32:08 because most of them i mean like see if you're a fairly squeaky clean guy i mean take my case yeah i like to [ __ ] 1:32:15 around as much as the next guy right i've never done anything like really egregious if anything came out like 1:32:20 publicly and be like yeah it's no big deal um yeah because you lead a fairly 1:32:27 straight and narrow kind of life but these guys don't you know all kinds of decadences and degeneracies 1:32:33 you know and if some of the pictures that were on the hunter biden laptop are true 1:32:39 you know we're talking about uh um beyond merely you know corruption we're talking you know 1:32:46 uh um how can i put it in a way that youtube won't get me banned or stripped 1:32:51 or whatever deplatformed uh we're talking about um trafficking in sex in c-h-i-l-d 1:32:59 okay i mean just really disgusting stuff and there are pictures okay they kind of 1:33:05 like prove that [ __ ] and that implicate other people yeah it's all kinds of ugly 1:33:12 okay and so the point is that see all these people 1:33:17 are all wrapped up in this ball of corruption around ukraine because ukraine is this 1:33:24 trough where they can feed feed on money and drugs and women and ecstasy not the 1:33:31 pill but the feeling the vibe of ecstasy of just lawlessness 1:33:36 what russia used to be back in the 90s which they want to reimpose on russia 1:33:43 and of course which putin doesn't want you know for selfish reasons of his own the bastard 1:33:49 anyway that's what's going on and so um yeah so we're up to october 2021. 1:33:56 so what's going on as soon as the biden administration comes to office in january of 2020 of 1:34:02 2021 right they start implementing a plan victoria newman starts implementing a plan and the plan is very simple 1:34:09 they're going to invade the donbass and they're going to take it back from the separatists right now i'm not going to go into the whole 1:34:15 history of it because you all know it if you don't know i'd go and see plenty of videos i've made it so they're going to go back in and take 1:34:21 back the separatist republics of lugansk and donetsk right and 1:34:26 here's something i've noticed about women [Music] see if you're with a girlfriend or a 1:34:32 wife and she starts saying to you are you cheating on me you know and she starts like checking your clothes and and stuff 1:34:38 to see if you're cheating on her she's [ __ ] around on you 1:34:43 it's a tick women have this and it's true and every guy can tell you the exact same thing when a woman accuses 1:34:51 you of anything it's because she's doing it to you right now 1:34:56 she says you don't listen to me enough it's because she doesn't pay attention to you at all you know you don't love me 1:35:02 enough are you cheating on me i'm telling you it's it's just it's the 1:35:09 way of women man and and you know feminists and you know whatever whomever loser is watching this and having like a 1:35:15 little hissy fit i'm sorry but it's the truth okay victorian helen started saying that the 1:35:21 russians were surrounded where were putting troops on the border with ukraine blah blah blah getting like a whole hissy fit about it and what was 1:35:28 really going on was that she was encouraging zielinski that she had hand-picked 1:35:34 by way of our association with igor kolomoisky they were the ones who decided that zelinski would be the president 1:35:41 this perfect vehicle an actor who would do exactly what they wanted 1:35:47 that's what happened that's how zolansky got picked it wasn't just igor kolomoisky which is what i thought 1:35:52 earlier i started looking into this [ __ ] and victoria nuland is all over this [ __ ] 1:35:58 she's right there with kolomoisky they practically had a casting session to decide who was going 1:36:05 to be the next president of ukraine and they made up their minds and they micromanaged it so that 1:36:12 uh zielinski became president you know but he's a puppet and he's controlled by 1:36:18 victoria nuland and by igor kolomoiski or he used to be now he no longer is controlled by your collar moisture and 1:36:25 i'll tell you who controls them now in just a second okay so anyway um in 1:36:31 in january the the the word is that now that the binder demonstration is in power they're going to set up the 1:36:37 conditions for ukraine to go into the dawn mass take back lugansk and natsuki you know big 1:36:43 [ __ ] you very much to the russians in february of 2021 they even went so far the ukrainians even went so far as to 1:36:49 declare that they were going to take back crimea by any means necessary leaving the door open to the use of 1:36:55 force to take back crimea and who do you think encouraged that 1:37:02 victoria nuland of course see so victoria nuland is pushing the 1:37:08 zalenski regime to confront the russians and egging them on and they decide to 1:37:14 assemble an army okay there there's the crisis in april in the in the spring of 2021 but things 1:37:21 really start going into in october of 2021 where newland goes to the kremlin 1:37:26 and in the kremlin and the word is that this was in russian she spoke to them in russian and the 1:37:33 word is that she used the most you know sailor-like language imaginable i mean really really vulgar [ __ ] 1:37:40 he basically told the russians to their faces told lavrov to his face that she would crush his economy unless you do 1:37:48 unless they did exactly what she wanted which was no more support for the donbass to pull out of the dawn bash so 1:37:53 that the ukrainian army could sweep in and take it and she threatened them to their faith 1:37:58 you got to say that she had balls okay i mean not many people go into the kremlin and just threaten them right to their 1:38:04 face man you gotta admire that you know i mean well 1:38:09 see you can remember well you probably don't remember when in 79 uh 79 at the end of 1:38:16 1979 time magazine said that the agitola khomeini was the man of the year and everybody had a hissy fit and i'm like 1:38:23 why i remember i was like 11 years old not quite 12 years old i was thinking why is everybody getting upset he was 1:38:28 the most influential man of of the year whether you like him or not whether you think he's a moral man or an evil man 1:38:34 but he was the man most influential by the same token you know i look at nuland going to the kremlin 1:38:40 and threatening them like that to their [ __ ] face balls i respect that you 1:38:45 know i don't like her i think she's [ __ ] evil but i can respect that it was a 1:38:50 power move man and it must have rattled the russians because they kept talking about it for months after word right but also i put 1:38:58 them on notice and so um all the time the americans were talking 1:39:05 about russians putting troops on the border with ukraine but what was really going on was that ukraine was putting its 1:39:11 frontline fighters on the contact line with the donbass and they were preparing for a lightning strike it was going to 1:39:16 be an invasion two days four days tops just sweep through and take over the whole [ __ ] 1:39:22 thing and level the whole [ __ ] place because they were going to do nato tactics nato tactics or american tactics 1:39:28 and the american mode of war is to destroy everything kill them all let god sort them out 1:39:33 kill all the civilians every man woman and child doesn't matter 1:39:38 kill them all turn the whole place to [ __ ] rubble and declare it victory 1:39:43 that's what they were going to do right and what happened was that and they were to do that in march the word is that the 1:39:49 order was going to go on the the invasion was going to happen in mid-march 1:39:55 and the russians simply beat them to it because one of the things that freaked out nato back in the spring of 2021 1:40:02 was that there were some problems and and the russians moved about 150 000 soldiers in 72 hours 1:40:08 it freaked the [ __ ] out of the out of nato because that's a lot of [ __ ] men to move in that short time okay 1:40:15 and yeah there's been a lot of issues like logistics now in this invasion be that as may but moving the troops around 1:40:21 like that the russians did it and they accomplished it and so the word is that um 1:40:27 basically putin realized that the the the um ukrainian army was going to sweep 1:40:34 into the dawn passing was going to let that happen because what happened was of course and what we're seeing with some of the atrocities of the ukrainian armed 1:40:41 forces you see after the 2014 uh coup d'etat right all 1:40:47 these extremist groups yeah you know the right sector and all those people they were disbanded nominally 1:40:54 and they were integrated into the ukrainian armed forces okay but they were spread out throughout 1:41:01 and so they acted as stiffeners insofar as extremism within the ukrainian armed 1:41:07 forces because there's a concept of stiffening which is in in military uh sometimes what's good is that you 1:41:14 have like for instance you have a fuck-up unit or a platoon a platoon that's not very good and so you bring in like a really really good soldier and he 1:41:21 acts as a stiffener a stiffening agent to make the whole unit stronger and he 1:41:26 bring comes in and sort of like imposes diff discipline he's not a sergeant he's not a non-commissioned officer he's 1:41:32 simply a soldier that has been given direction to bring up the standards of the holy unit 1:41:39 and that helps a lot and that's why for instance professional um mercenaries are often used and have 1:41:45 historically been used as stiffeners for large armies of less disciplined 1:41:51 soldiers because they are brought in and spread out around and they bring up the morale and the discipline of all the 1:41:57 units you see instead of having to train each individual unit you just spread out these people but the same thing happened 1:42:03 essentially ideologically with these extremist uh groups right 1:42:09 sector and s14 and all the rest of it they were spread out throughout the ukrainian armed forces and so all of the 1:42:15 ukrainian armed forces have this extremist bias 1:42:20 this this hyper nationalist pro-ukrainian anti-russian 1:42:25 attitude that devolves into um atrocities and human rights 1:42:31 violations which we started to see i mean i posted those videos today as a matter of fact okay and so what happens 1:42:36 is that um after 2015 these men were spread out throughout the entire ukrainian armed 1:42:43 forces and the ukraine armed forces were indeed grown and better equipped and supplied and they became 1:42:50 an extremist army and they were planning on sweeping into the dawn bass and just annihilating 1:42:55 everything and that's when putin pulled pulled the trigger and said we're going to beat them to the punch 1:43:00 and that's where we're in the situation we're in now victoria nuland was instrumental in 1:43:06 pushing for this invasion of the and she now has dmitrio yarosh remember that 1:43:14 guy from 2014 the head of the right sector well he is the guy who is 1:43:20 advising zelinski about how to conduct the war and errors controls the current 1:43:25 army chief whose name i neglected to write down in the in my notes but it's not important 1:43:31 yarosh is an extremist a hardcore extremist you know as to whether he's an anti-semite or not 1:43:37 i don't know but there he is working with a jewish woman out in washington a small petite tidy little jewish woman 1:43:44 in washington named victoria newland and he takes his orders from her 1:43:50 and he passes along to her all of the information from the negotiations i mean she's micromanaging this whole [ __ ] 1:43:56 thing okay now she newland admitted recently uh in congressional testimony uh about the 1:44:03 biolabs and she said that you know the bio labs indeed it was american 1:44:09 biological laboratories in ukraine 26 of them or 30 of them and i should pin down that number i 1:44:15 always keep forgetting to pin that number down but it doesn't matter it's roughly the same number and 1:44:21 and those bile labs um she's very concerned that the russians will capture them because the russians might use that 1:44:27 against them and commit some atrocity not so basically she's admitting that they're bioweapons all kinds of nasty 1:44:34 [ __ ] okay and she admitted it i don't know if it was on purpose or slip with the tongue and i suspect it might have been a slip 1:44:40 of the tongue because she looked shocked and surprised you know i just like it was a question that marco rubio tossed 1:44:47 it or it was supposed to be a softball but it caught her flat-footed and i think that she panicked and it happens to the best of us okay 1:44:53 and you know especially when you're juggling a lot of lies like victoria newland is 1:44:58 and she let loose at the biolabs or like real american yeah and more information is coming on that whole [ __ ] show right 1:45:05 but basically she is the one insisting that there is going to be a chemical attack first it was biological attack 1:45:11 but now it's chemical attack and she's pushing that story and she's the one who's micromanaging apparently 1:45:19 the the whole um the whole uh uh pr campaign 1:45:24 that is convincing everybody in the west that the russians are losing the ukrainians are winning which will give the justification for the false flag 1:45:32 now what's interesting is that anthony blinken and um anthony blinken i mean we don't have to 1:45:38 worry about wendy sherman anthony blink and also of course jake sullivan they are taking you know 1:45:43 uh supporting roles victoria newland is the one running this show because she's 1:45:49 first of all she's the only one who knows russian she knows the history intimately and because of her own 1:45:55 uh uh you know psychodrama you know she's the perfect person to be reading leading this whole [ __ ] show 1:46:01 this is hers she's the person in charge you know uh you know in war games they 1:46:06 talk about team red and team blue well if team red is the leader is putin team blue it's victoria nuland and she's 1:46:13 running this whole show okay even though she's just an undersecretary of state for political affairs which seems very 1:46:19 obscure and trivial she's the woman she's the woman driving this war she's the woman who's creating the conditions 1:46:26 for a false flag attack and it's coming no question about it it's coming and 1:46:32 it's going to be something awful and they're going to be a lot of dead people it's no different from the snipers 1:46:38 that i am convinced that she organized okay now there's no proof of this there's no proof 1:46:44 okay but circumstantially and you know we're all grown-ups we can make the obvious inference who would benefit from this 1:46:50 [ __ ] victoria newland she had the goal of overthrowing the um yanukovych regime 1:46:57 and so she used these snipers huh and were they israeli snipers it seems logical if they weren't if they weren't 1:47:03 israeli snipers then there were some private military contractor snipers american you know from wherever 1:47:10 uh black um blackwater or whatever the name of the successor is you know 1:47:15 um yeah and so she's used to that she's used to that kind of game 1:47:21 okay now you got to keep in mind dimitro yarosh this crazy guy from right sector he's the guy 1:47:28 who's actually in control in ukraine it's not zelinski okay he's the guy and he takes his marching 1:47:35 orders he's got a little earpiece and he gets the word from victoria nuland okay and she's 1:47:40 micromanaging this whole [ __ ] thing okay and the destiny of tens of millions of 1:47:47 people depend on her and whether the united states goes to nuclear war depends on her 1:47:55 and this this woman because of these ancient ancestral hatreds 1:48:01 that she carries in her heart that burned in her in her soul as a girl of 8 9 10 years old 1:48:11 yeah this is where we're at 1:48:17 it's [ __ ] frightening if you ask me but yeah anyway i've talked long enough and i 1:48:23 don't really have anything else to say i don't know how to think this is going to end uh i hope it ends peacefully 1:48:30 i hope that victoria nuland's desire for a horrifying attack that will kill 1:48:36 tens or hundreds or thousands of civilians that will justify a nato invasion i hope that that does not come 1:48:41 to pass but i am extremely pessimistic because one of the things about victoria nuland that you realize that she is 1:48:46 extremely effective and remember she's not alone 1:48:51 she's got her husband robert kagan and that whole cabal 1:48:57 of people all of them carrying this ancient ancestral resentment towards russia they 1:49:03 hate russia so much they want it destroyed and i insist it's not because of money 1:49:09 it's because of you know this psychodrama that is over a 1:49:15 century old at this point uh you have to understand that you have to understand how 1:49:22 uh um the persecution of jews in russia 1:49:31 115 years ago 120 years ago is the cause of this war 1:49:38 you have to understand that okay and they will not rest they will not rest until 1:49:44 russia is destroyed the only thing that will keep them at 1:49:50 bay is a collapsing america where they have to 1:49:56 figure out what the hell is going on okay and the amount uh collapsing america is happening awfully quickly okay so it 1:50:02 might actually be you know a race to see which happens first but you know it's an ugly ugly situation 1:50:09 and what's most important of all is that these people feel that they are so close to destroying russia 1:50:15 so close and that's why they you know it's not only that the masks are off any kind of 1:50:22 limitation is off everything is on the table and the biden slips that have been happening 1:50:28 where biden has said to the 82nd airborne that you're gonna see when you get to ukraine like they're gonna invade 1:50:34 ukraine and uh you know putin we gotta get rid of him he's a bad man you know regime change 1:50:40 it's on the table man this is total war the americans have not fired weapons yet 1:50:46 at the russians but they fired virtual weapons every single one and right now you know do you have 1:50:51 any idea what kind of virtual cyber warfare that must be going on man 1:50:56 it must be all over the [ __ ] place okay i'm telling you this war is going on 1:51:02 victoria nuland is the commanding general of teen blue 1:51:07 and she's relentless okay but the thing is see putin is a crafty 1:51:13 [ __ ] that's that's a fact okay i mean the [ __ ] is not survived 23 years 1:51:19 as president of ukraine as the undisputed leader of ukraine the undisputed leader of russia for 23 years 1:51:26 unless he's crafty as a fox okay so we're going to see how these two competitors 1:51:32 match up okay but it's going to be close it's going to be goddamn close 1:51:38 so anyway thanks for listening i hope you enjoyed it and i'll catch you next time