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My guest today is Gabriel Shipton, an Australian filmmaker and the half-brother of Julian Assange, founder of WikiLeaks. Gabriel has been a tireless advocate for his brother's release and a powerful voice for press freedom, free speech, and the right to dissent. From the Ecuadorian embassy to a maximum-security prison, Julian's 14-year ordeal became a global symbol for the criminalization of truth-telling. While his release was a major milestone, Gabriel warns that the fight is far from over, while reflecting on the emotional toll of Julian's imprisonment and the bittersweet terms of his release, which involved pleading guilty to the very act of journalism. We explore the dangerous precedent this sets for free press worldwide and the need to secure a full pardon. We also dive into Gabriel's connection to the Bitcoin community, a movement that stood firmly behind Julian, both financially and ideologically, and stress decentralized platforms such as Bitcoin & Nostr as freedom enablers.► If you got value, please like, comment, share, follow and support my work. Thank you!-- SPONSORS --►► Get your TREZOR wallet & accessories, with a 5% discount, using my code at checkout (get my discount code from the episode - yep, you'll have to watch it): https://affil.trezor.io/SHUn ►► Join me on June 19-21 at BTC Prague! Code EFRAT = 10% discount: https://pages.btcprague.com/ambassador-efrat-fenigson -- SPECIAL OFFERS –►► Watch “New Totalitarian Order” conference with Prof. Mattias Desmet & Efrat: https://efenigson.gumroad.com/l/desmet_efrat ►► Enjoy the Little HODLer products, learn about sound money while having fun! use code EFRAT for 10% off on non-sale items: https://thelittlehodler.com/ ►► 10% off on all books & accessories at the “Bitcoin Infinity Store” - use code EFRAT►► Join me in any of these upcoming events: https://www.efrat.blog/p/upcoming-events -- LINKS –Gabriel's Twitter: https://x.com/GabrielShipton Gabriel's npub: npub1dcgppk89h9flnffrznvhhj2vt9a0ym23ht5gk07l9j8m6l5k95qsze06js Efrat's Twitter: https://twitter.com/efenigsonEfrat's Telegram: https://t.me/efenigsonWatch/listen on all platforms: https://linktr.ee/yourethevoiceSupport Efrat's work: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/efenigson Support Efrat with Bitcoin: https://geyser.fund/project/efenigson-- CHAPTERS –0:00 Coming Up…1:05 Intro to Gabriel Shipton2:20 Stella Assange & Westminster Declaration [& Censorship]5:00 Julian Assange's Release and Ongoing Legal Battle7:30 The Fight for a Pardon, Trump's Role & Political Shifts in Julian's Case12:20 USAID Exposé, Deep State, NGOs Funding & Journalistic Integrity16:17 When Was Gabriel's Introduction to Bitcoin?18:00 Political Power of Bitcoiners and Their Ethos20:30 Navigating Between Political Engagement and Technological Freedom22:30 Gabriel's Mission and Projects of Media and Speech24:30 Freedom of Speech as a Human Right28:00 The Power of Decentralized Protocols, inc. Nostr30:30 Julian's Homecoming & Public Support32:45 Gabriel's Words of Hope
The real reason Wikileaks founder and self-styled freedom fighter Julian Assange was in self-imposed custody. Find out more about The Front podcast here. You can read about this story and more on The Australian's website or on The Australian’s app. This episode of The Front is presented by Claire Harvey, produced by Kristen Amiet and edited by Josh Burton with Jasper Leak. Our team includes Tiffany Dimmack, Lia Tsamoglou and Stephanie Coombes and our original music is composed by Jasper Leak. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In questa speciale puntata Vito Lops intervista la moglie di Julian Assange, il giornalista attivista recentemente liberato dopo cinque anni di prigione a Belmarsh, seguiti a sette anni da rifugiato nell'ambasciata dell'Ecuador a Londra. Stella racconta l'emozione la liberazione del marito, le cicatrici e gli insegnamenti per tutti che una vicenda del genere ha lasciato. E racconta anche il ruolo di Bitcoin nella vicenda e quali sono le sfide del futuro per la community e la tecnologia. Risponde anche alla domanda sull'identità di Satoshi Nakamoto
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In questa speciale puntata Vito Lops intervista la moglie di Julian Assange, il giornalista attivista recentemente liberato dopo cinque anni di prigione a Belmarsh, seguiti a sette anni da rifugiato nell'ambasciata dell'Ecuador a Londra. Stella racconta l'emozione la liberazione del marito, le cicatrici e gli insegnamenti per tutti che una vicenda del genere ha lasciato. E racconta anche il ruolo di Bitcoin nella vicenda e quali sono le sfide del futuro per la community e la tecnologia. Risponde anche alla domanda sull'identità di Satoshi Nakamoto
This Week In Cyberspace, Julian Assange was brought back home to Australian soil in Canberra after a 14 year trial. The following morning, Senator David Shoebridge organised a press conference in Parliament House with Assange's wife Stella Assange, legal team Jennifer Robinson and Barry Pollock, Senators Zoe Daniel, Murray Watt, Peter Wish-Wilson, and former Senator Scott Ludlam. TWICS was on the sideline.
CEOs say staff need to 'prepare to go to war' and are bemoaning work-life balance. We discuss the trend plus much more, including the salary bump for Australia's next Governor General and the media reactions, pay rises for nurses, and Sarah Ferguson taking on a far-right MAGA supporter and winning. Also in the week that Julian Assange came home to Australia, we discuss some of the women who've been instrumental in his plight including Jennifer Robinson and Stella Assange. You can subscribe to our daily update here. This week's episode of The Crux is produced by Allison Ho, with Tarla Lambert and Angela Priestley talking through the stories. Stories discussed this week include: Is it ‘indefensible'? Sam Mostyn to receive $214,000 more than predecessorVictorian nurses and midwives to receive 28 per cent pay rise in massive deal‘Are you even a serious interviewer?' Sarah Ferguson meets a far-right congresswoman and shows how to stay cool in the face of personal attacksJen Robinson and Stella Assange: The women who worked to bring Julian Assange homeSenator Fatima Payman says she is not a ‘token representative of diversity' as she crosses the floor over Palestine motionPrepared to ‘go to war' and quit the balance myth? These founders want you Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Die Wikileaks stigter Julian Assange het in Canberra in Australië aangekom in wat beskryf word as sy eerste dag van vryheid. Dit kom na 14 jaar se regstryd. Hy is deur familie verwelkom en sal nou ook vir die eerste keer sy kinders sonder tralies kan sien. Sy vrou Stella Assange het met die media gepraat.
In this 231st in a series of live discussions with Bret Weinstein and Heather Heying (both PhDs in Biology), we talk about the state of the world through an evolutionary lens.In this week's episode, we discuss the Supreme Court's decision in Biden v Missouri, and its implications for free speech and censorship; the presidential debate that will exclude Kennedy; and the release of Julian Assange—all possible tactics to control public conversation. Also: what does an AI deep fake of Dave Chappelle suggest about the future of comedy, and the role of humor in human interactions? Finally: a meandering tale of cars, border guards, and leaping water vipers, culminating in discussion of new research out of Madagascar on jumping leeches.*****Our sponsors:Pique's Nandaka is a delicious mushroom, tea, and chocolate drink that provides all day energy. Up to 20% off + free frother & beaker at www.Piquelife.com/darkhorse.Timeline: Accelerate the clearing of damaged mitochondria to improve strength and endurance: Go towww.timeline.com/darkhorse and use code darkhorse for 10% off your order. VanMan: Tallow and honey balm, deodorant, and many other amazing animal based personal care products.Go to www.vanmanscompany.com/darkhorse and use code darkhorse for 10% off your first order.*****Join us on Locals! Get access to our Discord server, exclusive live streams, live chats for all streams, and early access to many podcasts: https://darkhorse.locals.com/Heather's newsletter, Natural Selections (subscribe to get free weekly essays in your inbox): https://naturalselections.substack.comOur book, A Hunter-Gatherer's Guide to the 21st Century, is available everywhere books are sold, including from Amazon: https://a.co/d/dunx3atCheck out our store! Epic tabby, digital book burning, saddle up the dire wolves, and more: https://darkhorsestore.org*****Mentioned in this episode:Supreme Court Opinion, Missouri v Biden: https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/23pdf/23-411_3dq3.pdfKennedy's simulcast during the presidential debate: https://therealdebate.comJulian Assange released: https://x.com/Stella_Assange/status/1805912602482291195AI deep fake of Dave Chappelle: https://x.com/BretWeinstein/status/1804609027911147675Fahmy & Tessler 2024. A jumping terrestrial leech from Madagascar. Biotropica:https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/btp.13340Support the Show.
Julian Assange ist vor kurzer Zeit in der australischen Hauptstadt Canberra angekommen, wo er von seiner Familie und Unterstützern erwartet wurde. Zuvor hatte er sich in den frühen Morgenstunden vor einem US-Gericht auf den Marianen in einem Punkt der Anklage gegen ihn für schuldig erklärt. Verurteilt wurde er zu 62 Monaten Haft, genauWeiterlesen
Julian Assange es libre. Tras un viacrucis judicial de 14 años, el hombre que dividió al mundo entre los que pensaban que era un héroe por liberar información contra el poder y los que creían que era un hacker sin escrúpulos se librará de la cárcel y podrá volver a Australia, su país natal, con su familia. El periodista ha llegado a un acuerdo con el Departamento de Justicia de Estados Unidos.Assange, el fundador de WikiLeaks que enarboló la bandera del derecho de la información, se declara culpable de espionaje dejando un debate social y periodístico. ¿Han merecido la pena todos estos años para acabar pactando o es un acto por la verdadera libertad? Desde la cuenta de la cuenta de WikiLeaks han publicado un video en el que se ve a Julian Assange subir la escalera destino a las islas Marianas, territorio estadounidense en. En el capítulo de hoy hablamos con su abogado mientras que Assange viaja a las Islas Marianas para que el juez ratifique el acuerdo. Aitor Martínez nos cuenta los detalles de un acuerdo del que se muestra satisfecho. “No es una cesión, se pone fin a un larguísimo proceso judicial que nunca debería haber sucedido”, comenta. Edith Rodríguez, vicepresidenta del Consejo Internacional de Reporteros Sin Fronteras, la única organización que ha tenido acceso a la cárcel británica de alta seguridad donde Assange ha pasado los últimos cinco años de su vida. Hace dos semanas falleció a causa de un cáncer uno de los principales apoyos de Assange en su causa, Christophe Deloire, el secretario general de RSF. En conversación con este pódcast Rodríguez relata que Stella Assange acudió al homenaje celebrado en París y lamentó que no estuviera vivo para ver al fundador de WikiLeaks en libertad. "Pensamos, a ver si esto está en ciernes". La vicepresidenta de Reporteros Sin Fronteras cree que su liberación no es una mala noticia para el periodismo. “Pensar que Estados Unidos retiraría los cargos no sería realista” y lo enmarca dentro de un contexto que incluye uno o electoral estadounidense.
Julian Assange has for years fought extradition to the United States, accused of leaking a huge quantity of classified defence documents. He will now return to Australia, where his wife Stella Assange is waiting for him. But first, he has to appear in court in a United States territory in the pacific. Also on this podcast, protests erupt in Kenya over new tax proposals, Israel's supreme court orders ultra-orthodox religious students can no longer avoid being drafted into the military, and why a sample of dirt and rocks from the far side of the moon has scientists excited.
Wikileaks founder Julian Assange has left the UK after agreeing a US plea deal that will see him plead guilty to criminal charges and go free. Speaking to Today's Mishal Husain, Stella Assange says her children have never seen their father outside of prison and she's "not used to talking about Julian free in the present tense".Listen to the Today programme on Radio 4 and BBC Sounds: 6-9am Monday-Friday; and 7-9am on Saturdays.
Casi tres lustros después de que comenzasen sus problemas legales, el activista Julian Assange recuperará la libertad. Lo hará a cambio de reconocer su culpabilidad por haber vulnerado la Ley de Espionaje. Tras ello será liberado y podrá regresar a Australia, su país natal. Julian Assange que tiene ya 52 años (53 cumplirá a principios de julio) fue acusado hace más de diez años de liderar una conspiración para obtener y revelar información reservada de la defensa estadounidense. Para ello se valió de Wikileaks, una organización que fundó y que dirige desde entonces. Hoy Wikileaks se habla poco, pero hace unos años era la estrella de los servicios informativos. Entre 2010 y 2011 hizo honor a su nombre filtrando información confidencial sobre el ejército de Estados Unidos en las guerras de Irak y Afganistán lo que ocasionó un escándalo de primer nivel que afectó de lleno a Barack Obama. Los problemas de Assange empezaron en Suecia en 2010, donde fue acusado de violación por una joven con la que había mantenido relaciones íntimas. Temiendo que le extraditasen a Estados Unidos, burló a la Justicia sueca huyendo a Londres, donde sería arrestado poco después y puesto a disposición judicial. Aprovechando que estaba en libertad condicional se refugió en la embajada de Ecuador y solicitó asilo político, algo que le concedió sin dudarlo el entonces presidente Rafael Correa. En esta embajada, ubicada en un edificio de apartamentos del barrio de Knightsbridge, pasó casi siete años hasta que en abril de 2019 el presidente Lenín Moreno le retiró el asilo y permitió que la policía británica accediese a la legación diplomática para detenerle. En la embajada ecuatoriana siguió dirigiendo Wikileaks al tiempo que se ponía en marcha un movimiento internacional que reclamaba su liberación. En estos años de reclusión en la embajada y con el objetivo de que su caso no fuese olvidado, se dedicó a recibir a celebridades como Pamela Anderson o Lady Gaga, con quienes se fotografiaba en las dependencias de la embajada. Decidió también intervenir con filtraciones en las elecciones estadounidenses de 2016, y alinearse con el independentismo catalán a pesar de que lo desconocía todo de España y de la propia Cataluña. En aquel entonces Assange se había convertido ya en un problema para Ecuador. Su protector Rafael Correa ya no era presidente y su sucesor, Lenín Moreno, no simpatizaba con su causa y entendía que era una fuente continua de dolores de cabeza con Estados Unidos, que reclamaba su extradición, con el Reino Unido, a cuyo sistema judicial estaba Assange evitando, y con España a causa de su apoyo a los independentistas catalanes. Los últimos cinco años los ha pasado en una prisión de alta seguridad a las afueras de Londres donde los problemas de salud que ya traía de la reclusión en la embajada se han agravado. El de Assange era un problema enquistado, pero ya no preocupaba a demasiada gente más allá de su familia y los seguidores que le han defendido durante todos estos años. El Gobierno de Joe Biden quería acabar ya con este asunto y se ha avenido a negociar con él. Los términos son satisfactorios para ambas partes. Assange reconoce su culpabilidad a cambio de una pena de cinco años que ya ha cumplido en el Reino Unido. El espinoso asunto de la extradición se ha resuelto con el compromiso de que Assange vuele hasta Saipán, capital de las islas Marianas del Norte, un territorio no incorporado de Estados Unidos, para rematar allí la entrega y los flecos legales. Tras ello podrá volver a Australia donde le espera su esposa, Stella Assange, una abogada de origen español con quien se casó en prisión. Con esto pone punto final a una historia rocambolesca, digna de una película en la que el protagonista pasó primero de héroe a villano y luego a personaje intrascendente sacado de una época de la que ya nadie se acuerda. En La ContraReplica: 0:00 Programa 29:25 Milei en las legislativas 37:37 Impuestos al automóvil 42:15 Jano García y Rubén Arranz · Canal de Telegram: https://t.me/lacontracronica · “Contra la Revolución Francesa”… https://amzn.to/4aF0LpZ · “Hispanos. Breve historia de los pueblos de habla hispana”… https://amzn.to/428js1G · “La ContraHistoria de España. Auge, caída y vuelta a empezar de un país en 28 episodios”… https://amzn.to/3kXcZ6i · “Lutero, Calvino y Trento, la Reforma que no fue”… https://amzn.to/3shKOlK · “La ContraHistoria del comunismo”… https://amzn.to/39QP2KE Apoya La Contra en: · Patreon... https://www.patreon.com/diazvillanueva · iVoox... https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-contracronica_sq_f1267769_1.html · Paypal... https://www.paypal.me/diazvillanueva Sígueme en: · Web... https://diazvillanueva.com · Twitter... https://twitter.com/diazvillanueva · Facebook... https://www.facebook.com/fernandodiazvillanueva1/ · Instagram... https://www.instagram.com/diazvillanueva · Linkedin… https://www.linkedin.com/in/fernando-d%C3%ADaz-villanueva-7303865/ · Flickr... https://www.flickr.com/photos/147276463@N05/?/ · Pinterest... https://www.pinterest.com/fernandodiazvillanueva Encuentra mis libros en: · Amazon... https://www.amazon.es/Fernando-Diaz-Villanueva/e/B00J2ASBXM #FernandoDiazVillanueva #fdv #assange Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals
As the Wikileaks founder heads for Australia, we go back to the start - two women's allegations they were raped by Julian Assange. Find out more about The Front podcast here. You can read about this story and more on The Australian's website or on The Australian's app. This episode of The Front is presented by Claire Harvey, produced by Kristen Amiet and edited by Josh Burton. The multimedia editor is Lia Tsamoglou and original music is composed by Jasper Leak.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
„Ich habe Ihnen nur gesagt, dass es eine große Überraschung gibt“ Das hat Stella Assange in einem BBC-Interview gesagt. Sie hat ihren beiden Kindern noch nicht verraten, dass ihr Vater Julian Assange freikommen soll. Stella Assange wartet derzeit mit den gemeinsamen Kindern in Australien auf ihren Mann, den Gründer der Enthüllungsplattform Wikilieaks. Jahrelang hatte er sich gegen seien Auslieferung an die USA gewehrt. Jetzt hat er einen Deal mit der US-Regierung gemacht. Darüber sprechen wir im SWR3-Topthema.
TUTAMÉIA apresenta informações, vídeos e fotos divulgadas pelo Wikileaks e pelo perfil de Stella Assange a respeito do acordo judicial que deve garantir a liberdade para Julian Assange, preso político do imperialismo. Inscreva-se no TUTAMÉIA TV e visite o site TUTAMÉIA, https://tutameia.jor.br, serviço jornalístico criado por Eleonora de Lucena e Rodolfo Lucena. Acesse este link para entrar no grupo AMIG@S DO TUTAMÉIA, exclusivo para divulgação e distribuição de nossa produção jornalística: https://chat.whatsapp.com/Dn10GmZP6fV... Economia, política, cultura, saúde e esporte, entrevistas com Chomsky, Lula, Dilma, Safatle, Conceição Evaristo, Boulos, Maria Rita Kehl, José Carlos Dias, João Pedro Stedile, Ailton Krenak, Nita Freire, Bresser-Pereira, Manuela Carneiro da Cunha, Zé Celso, Sérgio Ricardo e muitos outros.
JOIN THE COMMUNITY:Logos Twitter: https://twitter.com/Logos_network Logos Discord: https://discord.gg/logosnetwork Logos Press Engine: https://press.logos.co/ RESOURCES: Stella Assange X - https://twitter.com/Stella_Assange Free Assange Emergency Toolkit - https://dontextraditeassange.com/free-assange-emergency-toolkit/ Jarrad Hope X - https://twitter.com/jarradhope_ TIMESTAMPS: 0:00 Introductions - Stella's background, Apartheid, politics, the arts, Julian Assange legal team 6:35 Motivations of joining and studying law and politics – Idealism, justice, society 10:35 Growing up in the coming of age of the internet – Wikileaks, Iraq War Logs, new journalism 12:30 Jarrad's inspirations – International Subversives Magazine, Cypherpunk Mailing lists, more 14:00 The US prosecution against Julian Assange – a political test, and failure of the justice system 18:20 Information asymmetry, Edward Snowden, and the movement towards open information 20:15 Wikileaks grew out of a culture in which the government should be open 25:50 Jarrad's journey into civil libertarianism and building Logos 29:00 Carrying on the torch of Ethereum – building censorship resistant cyber states 31:20 Stella's introduction to crypto by Julian – 2011 meeting with Google about Bitcoin 34:35 Bitcoin is the real Occupy Wall Street – How cryptography can make a real world impact 37:00 Preserving reality as the tools to manipulate it become more powerful 39:55 Social media censorship and Wikileaks adoption of BTC 42:00 Arab Spring, Wikileaks utility in Tunisia, Egypt and around the world 45:15 Crypto and the need for alternative system, communities, and modes of organising 50:30 A dangerous, post-state system and surveillance capitalism 54:50 Underlying causes for a shift in behavior and the “War on Terror” 59:00 What does Julian Assange case mean for journalism, activism, liberties, and human rights 1:12:40 An update on Julian Assange's precarious legal situation 1:20:10 Free Speech, activism, and the course the world has taken since Julian's imprisonment. Logos Press Engine includes Logos Podcast and Hashing It Out. Hashing it Out dives into the mechanisms and hardware of the technology that aid in making sovereign communities.
Stella Assange, abogada y defensora de derechos humanos, habla sobre el proceso legal que enfrenta su marido, Julian Assange, el fundador de Wikileaks.
Protect yourself and your family from the perils of modern technology now with Ronin. Welcome to the Adams Archive. In this podcast we peel back the layers of official narratives to explore the intersection of advanced technology, government intrigue, and the ethics of scientific ambition. Artificial Eclipses: Uncover the startling revelations surrounding engineered celestial events, exploring the technology capable of creating artificial solar eclipses. The Dawn of De-Extinction: Step into the laboratories where the lines between past and future blur, as companies claim to possess the technology to resurrect extinct creatures. From mammoths to dinosaurs, examine the scientific breakthroughs, the dreams, and the ethical dilemmas posed by playing god with nature's design. Targeted Voices: The chilling confession of a CIA operative admitting to targeting Alex Jones sheds light on the power struggles between the state and the individuals daring to challenge it. Explore the implications of these admissions for freedom of speech, media integrity, and the right to dissent in a digital age. All the Links: For episode transcripts, bonus content, and direct engagement with the Echoes community, click here: https://linktr.ee/theaustinjadams Dive deeper into our investigations and become part of the movement unraveling the mysteries of our time. ----more---- Full Transcription Adams Archive. Hello, you beautiful people, and welcome to the Adams Archive. My name is Austin Adams, and thank you so much for listening today. On today's episode, we're going to have to cover a lot of ground, starting with the fact that Julian Assange could have his prosecution thrown away, according to Joe Biden. Biden. Now we'll talk why I think he might be saying this. Maybe it has something to do with gaining popularity in a time where your dog wouldn't want to vote for him, but that's beside the point we'll read through that article together and talk through some of the more nuanced conversations surrounding Julian Assange. From there, we're going to discuss somebody of high, Notoriety within the AI community. What some people call the Godfather of AI warning about battle robots. If that sounds terrifying to you, then we're on the same page. So we'll discuss that after that. We'll talk about how plants. allegedly scream when they're being harvested. That's a terrifying visual. Then we'll jump into the Alex Jones situation. So Alex Jones, if you don't know, had the full force of the FBI, the CIA, they completely obliterated him in court. He over the Sandy Hook. It's a crazy situation that he had. I think it was a billion dollars is what they said that he owed these defendants, which is like the most egregious of all hearings in the history of the American judicial system. So there was some updates on that, which is the fact that there was an individual from the FBI. Who came out and got caught on camera in one of the, I don't believe this was actually private project Veritas, but it was very project Veritas ask in the way that it was a gay man who somebody found on either grinder or Tinder. And apparently that's the only way that you can find these people who are willing to talk about this type of stuff. Um, but we'll actually watch the video where this man from the FBI comes out and, and admits that the FBI actually, um, Went after Alex Jones to make an example of him and how you might ask. Well, we'll talk about that in just a little bit. Uh, we'll go through a couple articles about that. Then we'll talk about this new biomedical pharmaceutical company, I guess, biomedical company that's claiming that they're going to do something that has been shown rendition of this. ever, which is the fact that this company is saying it's called Colossal Biosciences. And apparently, they're going to de extinct animals, starting with a mammoth. And if that doesn't terrify you, I don't know what will. So we'll talk about the implications of that. We'll talk a little bit about the company and the people that are behind it. All of that, and then the last discussion we'll have today, and we might have one more, but if we have time, we'll, we'll talk about that. If we don't, the last thing we're going to talk about is the solar eclipse. So everybody went crazy over the solar eclipse. There was all these conspiracy theories about how there was earthquakes and all of this craziness, and there was going to be an EMP and mass chaos was going to break out. Well, it's been kind of silent since then. That eclipse just a couple of days ago. And I held my opinion on this a little bit for a reason. Cause I don't know if I believed any of these things. Some people were saying that the solar eclipses were fake and all this crazy stuff, but then I saw this article that came out. And it talks about, I think, I believe it's a Swedish or German, German article, um, talks about a technology that could be utilized to create eclipses. Hmm. That's interesting. It's called the ESA proba three, and it's a satellite, I guess, two satellites. And we'll actually read more about this together, but two satellites that essentially can cause pseudo eclipses. Why would they want to do that? Guess what? We'll talk about it. So all of that and more. And if we have time, we'll see just how far we get into this and how deep we go, but we might have a little bit deeper, darker, conspiratorial thing to discuss just after that. So all of that and more, but the first thing I need you to do before we can dive deep into those conversations is hit that subscribe button, leave a five star review, you know, I know that you know, that I know. How much I appreciate you. I think there was something in there that, that was probably linguistically correct. So I appreciate you go ahead and hit that five star review button. It takes 10 seconds out of your day. And honestly, it means a lot to me. I read every single one of the reviews. Every time I see a new review, even if you don't write anything, it just, it, it honestly makes this worth it to see that you guys appreciate it. So if you haven't yet. Back out of this podcast while you're listening to it, hit the five star button. It takes 10 seconds out of your day. And it honestly means the world to me. I would appreciate it more than, you know, and if you feel so inspired, write something down, tell me what you love about it. Tell me what I should improve about it. Anything and everything you can think of, put it in there. Tell me your favorite. I don't know your favorite chips and salsa brand company. I don't know. I'd maybe I need some good salsa brands. I don't know. Whatever the fuck, whatever you can think of, just throw it in there. Tell me what you love about the podcast though. Seriously. And leave a five star review. I would appreciate it from the bottom of my heart. And just to remind you. I am launching Ronin Ronin is my Faraday goods company, and we are going to have backpacks baseball hats beanies phone sleeves, laptop sleeves, wallets, all of these things specifically to help you protect yourself from modern technology, whether it be EMF radiation, which Robert F. Kennedy juniors talked at length about Andrew Huberman, all of those people I've mentioned that before, whether it be a stop people from swiping your credit card, Information from you, even when you didn't know what happened with RFID blocking materials for wallets, or whether it's helping you shut off, shut down and eliminate your digital footprint with our Faraday backpacks, which essentially block all inbound and outbound signals from your phone, from your laptop stops, the government stops corporations from being able to track you all of that nasty stuff that they're constantly doing. That is what I've been working on. That's why I've. Maybe had a few less podcasts more recently is because I've been diving head first into creating the by far best Faraday goods company in existence in the world today and for the future. So keep an eye out for that. The website, if you want to go check it out, there are some products listed right now. The wallets will actually be in next week. So if you want to go check those out and buy a Ronin wallet. Again, RFID blocking. You can head to Ronan, uh, ronanbasics. com, R O N I N B A S I C S, ronanbasics. com, and you can actually get a wallet that will be shipped to you like within a week, I'll get it to you. No big deal. Now the rest of the stuff, I'm still working with the manufacturers and the suppliers and helping with the design and everything, because I want to make sure that it's perfect for you. But the hat that I have in my head right now is a Ronan hat and just a couple more tweaks to go, and it will be awesome. Chef's kiss. So keep an eye out for that. Ronan basics. com. All right. That's all I got for you. Let's go ahead and jump into it. The Adams archive. I should have been a music producer in a past life. Cause I promise you both of the intros that I've made, whether it was for red pill revolution or for the Adams archive is kind of a banger, kind of a banger should have been a music producer, but here I am talking nonetheless. All right, let's go ahead and jump into it. The very first article that we're going to discuss the very first conversation that we're going to have today is about Julian Assange, Julian Assange, the leader and whistleblower who has. Unloaded a treasure trove of government and corporate corruption over years and years and years of WikiLeaks has since fled the country, fleeing for his life while the full force of the government, the FBI, the CIA, manhunt, manhunt, manhunt going after this man. And he would be put away for life, but he's been finding himself in Australia, interesting enough, um, who has been sheltering him without extradition to the United States. And now Joe Biden is saying that he's considering dropping the prosecution against Julian Assange. After a request from Australia. Now, this man should have been pardoned long ago. This man should have been pardoned by Trump. This man should have been pardoned by Obama. Right? The list goes on. This man should have been pardoned long ago. There's no reason. Somebody The only time The true case of authoritarianism is a government that cannot be questioned. And that's what Julian Assange did. He questioned the government. He questioned their intentions. And not only did he question them, but he exposed them for what they were. He exposed them for all of the corruption, all of the surveillance activities, everything that they were doing that was horrific. You know, you go to wikileaks. com Or org or something right now. I was actually looking at their archives today. There's a unbelievable list of all of these situations where the government was doing things that it shouldn't have done. From the Guantanamo Bay, uh, interrogation, what is it, enhanced interrogation techniques. Like so many of these things that were atrocious acts by our government that he exposed. Rightfully, you were doing illegal acts. You should be exposed for those illegal acts. This man exposed you for the illegal acts that you were committing, and now you want to go throw him in jail for committing, for, for, for exposing you. That's authoritarianism. That's abuse. That's abusive behavior. That isn't the act of an abuser, right? So I would say this is the best thing that Joe Biden has considered. This is the best possible thing. If Joe Biden did this one thing, I would scream the praises of Joe Biden from a mountaintop for about two minutes, but nonetheless, I would still scream is my praise from a mountaintop and it would be that Joe Biden. Pardons Julian Assange. And so let's go ahead and read this article. It says U S president, Joe Biden says the U S is considering dropping his persecution or prosecution, same thing against WikiLeaks founder, Julian Assange. For years, Australia has called on the U S to drop its prosecution against Assange, an Australian citizen who has fought U S extradition efforts from prison in the UK asked about the request on Wednesday, as he hosted Japanese prime minister, Fumio Kishida. For an official visit, Biden said, we're considering it. Hmm. Interesting. Very interesting. Assange has been indicted on 17 espionage charges and one charge of computer misuse over his website's publication of a trove of classified U. S. documents almost 15 years ago. American prosecutors allege encouraged and helped U. S. Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning steal diplomatic cables and military files that Wikileaks Or WikiLeaks published putting lives at risk. I want you to point me to one person who died within the government as a result of Julian Assange exposing the government and their corruption. Australia argues that there is a disconnect between the US treatment of Assange and Manning. Then US President Barack Obama commuted Manning's 35 year sentence to seven years, which allowed her release in 2017. Assange's supporters say he is a journalist protected by the First Amendment, absolutely correct, who exposed US military wrongdoing in Iraq and Afghanistan that was in the public interest. Correct. Assange's wife, Stella Assange, has said that WikiLeaks founder is being persecuted because he exposed the true cost of war in human lives. Absolutely correct. She has said that his health continues to deteriorate in prison and she fears he'll die behind bars. A British court ruled last month that Assange can't be extradited to the United States on espionage charges unless U. S. authorities guarantee he won't get the death penalty. Wow. The death penalty for telling the truth. What kind of world do we live in? That's so crazy that they would even consider that for exposing the truth, exposing corruption, exposing war crimes, exposing an enhanced interrogation. Right? Hmm. So there you go. That would be amazing. That would be a great precedence to set. If you find corruption and you expose corruption, you should be celebrated, not given the death penalty. Very straightforward. So I hope that happens. I will be So excited to hear if that happens. Like I said, that is the one thing that Joe Biden could do that you would hear my praise about is pardon, Julian Assange, maybe Snowden to throw him on the list, throw him on the list, and then I'll be very happy. Right. So I hope to see it happen. I hope to see it happen soon. Joe Biden is leaving office office, you know, somewhat, uh, in the near future. And that would be pretty incredible to see that that man walks free. Alright, next situation. This is quite the segue. The godfather of AI warns us of death. Battle Robots! Now, when I think Battle Robots, I don't know if you remember this, but there used to be the Battle Bots, I think, or Battle Bots Arena, or something like that, where all these kids would like, I say kids, they were probably like 35 year old nerds, awesome nerds, by the way, because the show was Sweet, but they would create these little Circular like Roomba looking things, but they would throw razor blades on them and like little mini chainsaws and like little I don't know missiles or some shit They would have saws on the side of them and like it was the craziest thing ever game show ever where they would literally physically fight these little tiny robots on remote controllers. I mean, essentially, they were like glorified little RC cars with knives, which I guess is pretty terrifying in itself. But that's what comes to mind. When I think of this, I'm sure you remember that if you are over the age of I don't know. Twenty six. Twenty seven. I think it was even on like Nickelodeon or something at one point. Like a Nick at night. I don't know. I'm gonna have to go back and watch some of those. Anyways, the technology is becoming more intelligent than people and could take over. Geoffrey Hinton says. Hmm. The world can encounter, the world could encounter major disasters before the use of artificial intelligent weapons is regulated in a proper manner according to Turing award winning scientist Geoffrey Hinton, seen as a pioneer of the AI technology. The former Google engineer who quit the company last year compared the use of the technology for military purposes to chemical weapons deployment. And I'm going to go ahead and throw this article up for you here so you can follow along with me. And if you can't see it, that's because you're listening and not watching. And if you want to watch, you can head over to YouTube right now and type in The Adams Archive and you'll find me. Maybe not, because of all the platforms, for some reason, YouTube seems to hate me the most. But head over there, you can actually follow along on the articles as I'm scrolling through these and see them with your own eyes. But if you're driving, don't do that. Just keep listening to my silky smooth voice. The former Google engineer who quit the company last year compared the use of the technology for military purposes. I just read that, uh, to chemical weapons deployment, warning that very nasty things will occur before the global community arrives at the comprehensive agreement comparable to the Geneva conventions. And I totally agree with that. I can absolutely see that happening. The third I spoke about is the existential threat. Professor Hinton said on Tuesday in an interview with the Irish broadcaster RTE News, emphasizing that these things will get much more intelligent than us, and they will take over. I'm gonna read that again. The man who essentially is called the, the man called the Godfather of AI, just said that these things will get much more intelligent than us. And they will take over. The computer scientists highlighted the impact of AI on disinformation and job displacement and also on weapons of the future. One of the threats is battle robots, which will make it much easier for rich countries to wage war on smaller, poorer countries, and they are going to be very nasty, and I think they are inevitably going to be. And we see that kind of with the way that you see drone strikes, like the drone strike thing has completely changed the war landscape that we've seen between the war in Ukraine, uh, what we're seeing in Israel, like. Drones have changed the game. You can sit back in some hut somewhere and some, you know, trailer in a military base and fly a, fly a plastic plane over somebody and then blow them up or kill them, uh, pretty wild stuff. So yeah, if you think about how much that has changed warfare. Now think about how sentient ish AI robots armed with machine guns. With immediate reaction times and unbelievable strength and perfect accuracy. Yeah, that's terrifying. One of the threats is battle robots. Just said that he urged governments to put pressure on tech majors, and, uh, especially in California to conduct in depth research on the safety of AI technology, rather than it being an afterthought there should, there should be government incentives to ensure companies put a lot of work into safety. And some of that is happening. Now, the scientists also highlighted huge benefits that AI can bring to humanity, particularly in healthcare, adding that one does not, that he does not regret any of his contributions to the technology. Despite the mounting interest in AI, several high profile picture, uh, picture figures, wow, in the tech industry have warned about the potential dangers posed by the unregulated adoption of the technology. Hinton, who quit Google last year, has waged a media campaign to warn of the risks. Tesla CEO Elon Musk, Apple co founder Steve Wozniak and Joshua Bengio, who is considered an AI pioneer for his work on neural networks, were among the top industry figures to co sign a letter last year calling for aggressive regulation of the AI sector. Now I'll stop reading that to you and tell you this, AI battle robots could be a very bad thing for humanity. like probably humanity ending or it could also be very good for war. And by good for war, you know, my stance on war by now, I think it's useless. I think, but I also think that it will not go away. War is not going to go away. So to me, I had this thought the other day. And there was an interesting little rabbit hole I found myself down where, think about this. What if AI robots were now the only soldiers in major wars? If you think about it, if their reaction time is way better, if they're literally unkillable, if they are extremely strong compared to humans, they're way faster than us, their accuracy is perfect, they have AI algorithms telling them exactly when a threat goes to reach for anything at any time. They can kill you from like, two miles away, probably like, it's just literally not going to be a fair fight. So during the time, maybe the near future, the near ish future, we're going to develop these weapons. If we haven't already, and my hunch would be that we already have, but if we haven't developed this already in the very near future, robots, AI battle bots are essentially going to take over the battlefield. Now, if they do that, and we're in wars with other countries who have essentially replaced their entire fighting force with robots, AI robots, then what if the war was entirely fought between robots? Because essentially, what you're saying is establishing absolute dominance, because if our robots can kill your robots, and our robots could definitely kill all your people, right? There's no contest, there's no conversation, right? So if our robots just obliterate China's, then China knows that we could essentially just have our robots kill all of them instantaneously or something like that, complete control, right? So, What if wars were no longer fought with people? What if they were only fought with robots in a safe arena esque type of situation? 10 on 10, let's say. 10 US robots versus 10 Chinese robots, and they just fight it out in an arena because then we essentially know we don't need hundreds of thousands of these robots. But if we could just come to a gentleman's agreement, That once the, once the octagon shuts and the robots fire, fire up their engines and whoever is the last robot standing, that country wins the war. Cause we already know the end result would be if you take that to its furthest extent, that their technology is better. And as a result of your technology being better, you could essentially kill everybody within our country, or we could kill everybody within your country. Interesting thought experiment. And I kind of just want to see AI BattleBot war arenas as a sport, like betting and like drinking on the sidelines to, you know, two different jerseys, USA flags in the background, China with their, you know, little dinky Chinese flag. And, and, you know, we're drinking beer and they're doing math equations on the sidelines. I don't know, however far you want to take that analogy. I think it's a cool one. I don't think it's the utopia that's gonna come of this, but nonetheless it's a fun thought experiment. But it does seem to make some rational sense that it could get to that point. There's a sci fi book there you could write, but if you do, at least attribute me in your, you know, your acknowledgments. Anyways, that's, that's the side tangent when it comes to AI battle bots. Uh, but that's terrifying. Robots could potentially kill us all. I don't know what I think is a bigger threat, whether it be AI or, you know, You know, nuclear bombs, the problem with that scenario that I just gave you, though, is it's not going to be nearly equal, right? There's still countries who haven't figured out nuclear bombs, right? They don't have the nuclear stockpile that we or Russia or China does. And so if we send these battle bots into, I don't know, Afghanistan or a place where they don't exactly have that much It's not fair. It's just complete dominance and control. There's nothing you can do. Go watch Terminator. You know where it goes from there. Now on a completely different note, going from non sentient metal objects that are going to act sentient and have the possibility of, I don't know. murdering us all. There's also this flip side of things, maybe equally as terrifying, which is that I came across this article the other day that said that plants scream while they're being harvested. This new study finds. Now there's something about scream and harvested in the same sentence. That just doesn't quite sit right with me. Now I'm not saying I'm going to go vegan, but I think you're given some vegans, some more ammunition. So let's go ahead and read this article. Um, I actually came across this cool website, Indy 100. com. I find a bunch of different websites to source some of my news articles and try to do some research for you guys. And this one had some, it had like the top 100 articles and discussions that are being had. Seems like a cool way to kind of source some, some interesting material and find some conversations. So check it out. Indie100. com. No association. Um, vegetarians, we're afraid we've got some news. Vegetarians, we're afraid we've got some news that you're probably not going to like. Plants emit sounds akin to screams. When they're distressed, according to a new study, I actually got it backwards in the way that I said that a little bit earlier. Yeah. I guess this is ammunition for carnivores, not vegans. It plants emit screams when they're distressed. According to a new study, I have the most terrifying visual picture in my head right now of a little baby plant, just screaming, uh, they allegedly produce clicking noises that humans can't hear without the use of scientific equipment. Research has found the research, which was published in, uh, cell back in 2023 showed that plants produce these noises in times of acute distress. Lilac Hadany is an evolutionary biologist at Tel Aviv University. Hadany said, even in a quiet field there are actually sounds that we don't hear, and those sounds carry meaning. There are animals that can hear these sounds, so there is the possibility that a lot of acoustic interaction is occurring. Plants interact with insects and other animals all the time, and many of these organisms use sound for communication. So it would be very suboptimal for plants not to use sound at all. That makes sense. The findings show that plants which are distressed have incredibly high pitched popping noises, while unstressed plants do not emit these noises. emit these noises. The study's definition of distressed includes plants that were having their stems cut or were dehydrated. However, it's not yet clear how the plants produce these noises. Now that we know that plants do emit sounds, the next question is, who does? Might be listening. We are currently investigating the responses of other organisms, both plants and animals, to these sounds and we're also exploring our ability to identify and interpret the sounds in completely natural environments. Comes after a new study suggests that Western industrial diets may be changing the ways that humans digest plants. As modern diets lack fiber, cellulose found in fruits and vegetables is changing. Hmm. All right. So, that's a terrifying mental image, and now I feel a little bad for, you know, all the, all the weeds that I ripped out of the, the concrete when I was in the military. Um, anyways, yeah, so now when a vegan comes to you and says, oh, you're hurting those animals. Well, just let them know that plants scream when they eat them, literally, according to this study. I don't really know where to take this from here. It just seemed pretty terrifying. And I had a lot of weird mental images of plants screaming while, while somebody was eating a, I don't know, one of them anyways, really not a ton of places to go from there, but I'm just letting you know, that's more of an FYI than a discussion piece. Now, it is a discussion piece is the fact that Alex Jones has now come out and said that he's going to be pursuing a lawsuit against the FBI and the CIA for conducting a essentially a hit job on him, including the 1 billion settlement that he was forced to make. Now, it says. Let's go ahead and see which one we should start with. Alright, it says that Alex Jones, Alex Jones joined Louder with Crowder Wednesday to discuss the massive expose by Sound Investigations, showing a CIA operator Or CIA operatives admission that the FBI and CIA vindictively targeted Jones for destruction. Jones explained the footage could significantly bolster a free speech lawsuit against the federal agencies for a violation of his civil rights, with which he's hoping tech entrepreneur Elon Musk could assist since the law firms coming after Jones are the same coming after Musk. Now I do want to look a little bit into the sound investigations because it was very very Project Veritas esque. So let's go ahead and we'll take a look at them in just a minute. But this is from Sound Investigations. If you go to Twitter it's Sound I N V E S T I G is their handle. So. Sound investig. Says breaking CIA officer, former FBI boss, uh, boss can put anyone in jail. Set them up. We call it a nudge. FBI did what we wanted with Alex Jones. He took his money away, chopped his legs off. Estimates 20 undercover FBI agents at January 6th, works with some of them now at the CIA. Whoa. Let's watch this video. You can kind of put anyone in jail if you know what to do. How? You set them up. Does the bureau practice entrapment a lot? Yeah. We get really close. We call it a nudge. A nudge. A nudge. Mmm. Sometimes you just gotta give them a quick little, just to see what happens. Sometimes you like to fuse and just wait for it to follow. Nothing. Sometimes you just gotta give them a quick little Just to see what happens. We're putting up a fake social media thing to like really get people mad. Alex Jones? Yeah, so, we were after him. You are? He did what we wanted. Which was what? Took his money away. Chop his legs off. Took his money away, chopped his legs, is a contracting officer at the CIAO. Lennis. Worked for the FBI in 2021 and 2022 in the San Diego office. Moved on to Homeland Security where he conducted asylum interviews at the southern border and now works for the CIA managing multimillion dollar contracts across government agencies and private. I work for, um, I work like this, um, I'm not supposed to tell people any job. If I say intelligence, what do you think? CIA? Yep. Oh, you work for the CIA? I do. That's incredible. That is the worst CIA officer ever. So I work in a field where you're like, not really supposed to tell people what to, what you do. But when I say intelligence, you say central intelligence. agency? Yeah. Wow, you're a tough cookie to crack. That is the nation's best my friend. Let's listen to that one more time because that was amazing. Sector Vendors. I work for, um, I work at this, um, I'm not supposed to tell people. You're not supposed to tell intelligence. What do you think? CIA? Yep. You work for the CIA? That's me. I do work for the contracting officer. So I deal a lot with, like, different agencies. We're contracting with, like, uh, Directorate of National Intelligence to do stuff. We do Navy, Army, many of them, really. I just, FBI, I used to work for the FBI, so. We went through the FBI, Abby. They're like, here, you used to work there. Oh, I'm permanent. I'm staff. I'm good. Well, why do they call it contracting? Because I do the contracting for them. I do all the legal contracts. I fly out to vendors and evaluate them. I love the agency. I like the Bureau too. The Bureau was a lot of fun. I got to do a lot of cool stuff at the Bureau. I was the guy in the back of the truck in the van. Oblenus spoke to an Undercover Sound Investigations reporter about his work experience involving near entrapment and his employers involvement with political commentator Alex Jones legal battles. As long as the Bureau is able to progress far enough to be able to put pro lifers in jail whenever they want. Yeah. You think that's on the agenda? We can, we can You can kind of put anyone in jail if you know what to do. How? You set them up. You create the situation to where they have no choice but to act on their impulse. And once they act on that impulse, then we call that entrapment. It's a fine line. Does the Bureau practice entrapment a lot? We get really close. Not officially? No. We get as close as we can. We get as close as we can to it without doing it. So they can entrap some of these pro lifers into doing things that they don't care about. Japan gang, yeah. We call it a nudge. A nudge. We call it a nudge. Mmm. Sometimes you just gotta get a quick little, just to see what happens, right? And how does that happen? You put a post out there, or you have someone fake it. Profile, say something that triggers, that we know is going to trigger one, right? Like, we, we already know your history. If we're to that point, we already know everything about you. So we're like, oh, this'll piss them off. Oh. Sometimes you like to fuse and just wait for it to follow, right? Like a railing. Like a, oh. So when a railing happens, then sometimes the bureau behind it Yeah, sometimes. So that's interesting. So he's saying essentially that they would put out social media posts to try to get certain individuals to bite on it. I'm not sure how you could put somebody in jail for a reaction to a social media post. Not sure what he would be alluding to there, but the fact that a CIA intelligence contracting officer just stated basically publicly and without any friction that the CIA conducts nudges or entrapment campaigns around people they disagree with the ideologies of That's pretty concerning Make an influence that you're influencer that you're after you like a I don't know like um I don't even know these names. Like a Fox News person, or like a Tucker Carlson, or like a Uh, oh, I'm sure he's Right. The youngest one's I think that's the loudest. Like that, what was his name? The one that said, uh, the, uh, San Diego didn't happen. Alex Jones. Yeah, so, we were after him. You are? Are you still after him? Yeah. Why? Because he's broke. He got found guilty. And had to pay like a hundred million dollars. So what, why were you after him? We're not anymore. Just to get the money for them? Yeah. Was that court case used? Was that a CIA case? Sure it was. That was an agency thing? Well, actually it was a defamation case. So it's a civil, not government. But we were looking at all of his followers, commenting, following, like, who's that gonna make us take the break? So, even though it's technically not our, well, not the agency, definitely, but the Bureau, for instance. Yeah, that's not our purview. It's a civil, it's a civil matter. But, since they got all this access to his stuff, and it's there, what can we go find? And did you find anything? I can't tell you. Oh, God. But, so, you know, it's just kind of like, you know, Realize the opportunity that you have so with Alex Jones So he's essentially saying that during the civil case. They got access to all of his documentation over the Sandy Hook allegations And I'm sure you can't point to one thing Alex Jones said that pissed off the CIA It was probably a lot of things but within that list of things was obviously that the ability to find the silliest things potential civil legal case to completely bankrupt a man who was just doing his job in trying to expose potential corruption and mass weaponization of proven tactics that have been absolutely leveraged and at least proposed to be leveraged, right? If you go back to Operation Northwoods with the CIA, they proposed and it went all the way up to the president. To conduct fake mass shootings, one literally on a military base. And they were actually going to pay people to conduct it. Right? So not faking a mass shooting, that's far more difficult than actually doing the mass shooting. Right? When you looked at the situation in Russia, what happened? They found people who were broke. Right? Maybe this was, maybe it wasn't the CIA. But maybe it was the CIA. Mm hmm. Who has a track record of potentially finding people who are in a position that they can then bribe to do an act that would be in line with what they would want to see happen to cause something that they want to cause. And then they find them on telegram and then they convince them to do the thing through words and money and enablement, right? Just a little nudge, just a nudge, right? So in the case of Sandy Hook, right? The dumbest thing they could have done, the dumbest thing anybody could have done, was try to fake it like a movie, right? That's just, there's so many loose ends. It's far easier to convince somebody who's already on a bunch of psychological medications, who's already, you know, maybe having some sort of mental breakdown, who's already talking about it on forums to just Yeah, what if this did happen? What if this showed up at your house tomorrow? What if I gave you plans to conduct that, right? Like, there's a lot of ways to do it without creating a Hollywood movie scene, right? This isn't the moon landing. Right? So this man is literally admitting here that what they did was they weaponized the government. Right? Weaponize the CIA. Weaponize the FBI. Weaponize the judicial system in order to gain insight, dirt, and knowledge. And then go after Alex Jones, cut him off at the legs, which means the judge who conducted it, the prosecutors, all of that should be appealed at this point with this new evidence. You were watching him long before anything ended up happening? Probably. It wasn't my office, but I mean, we would have been well aware of what he was doing. And the goal with him was what? Just to bankrupt him? Oh, pretty much. And we let the families do it. What? We let the families do it. Were they encouraged to do that by the Bureau? Like nudged? We don't encourage people, but like, we just say, there's no federal statute being broken. But you do have the option for a civil, for a civil case. And it's a pretty good case. In our opinion. So, oh, that makes so much sense. I have a cousin who's a lawyer. So that's a lot of these cases, they're kind of encouraged by the FBI? Yeah, like, there's nothing federally, federal law we can Interesting. Let's see. Just gonna kind of scrub through here so I'm not making you listen to this loud background restaurant. But, let's see if there's anything better. Oh, here we go. January 6th, then we'll move on. Alright, here we go. Maybe it won't. It essentially says, how many people do you think the FBI or the CIA had in the crowd? And he said, I'm talking, they maybe had 20, 20. You needed a thousand to get rid of that crowd. That's where we're stuck on here. So there you go. That's the situation. Now, Alex Jones responds to this on Louder with Crowder. Discusses this at length in an interview. Let's see if we at that. Lemme ask if you have a lawsuit planned yourself. Um, yes. Can you explain that to people so they understand what it is that you're Yes. And, and Steven, I apologize for going on and on, but, but I can just, just lemme just finish that last go. I'll get into that. My point is justice depart. IRS, uh, law firms, uh, rig courts, who are not allowed to defend yourself. This is the cocktail they've used against Trump. It's the cocktail that they're now using against everybody. And absolutely, the only reason I want to sue them is to get my name back. I don't even want money, but I want to be able to call Oblevis in. I want to be able to call their other lawyers in. I want to be able to call in the PR firms because the mistake they made was run their mouth. I mean, the lawyers in Connecticut and Texas. And by the way, the Texas Crips, the same ones suing Elon Musk, by the way, they got up at the courthouse steps when they won their cases, the judge had already found me guilty and then told the jury to find me guilty for a bunch of money. They said, our mission is to silence him. We don't want money. And that's now happening in the bankruptcy court where the judge is like, wait, the law says you can get money. But the law doesn't say you get to silence people. And so basically there's now findings about to be made public that they're dealing in bad faith. So that's an inside baseball. But, but yes, I've talked to several different civil rights law firms and I've had four conversations with four law firms, uh, since this just broke, uh, uh, I was talking to him before it broke. So in the last week, they just broke a day and a half ago. It seems like a million years ago now. And so it's a big deal. You know, it's all God. Yeah. You're opening up the mouths of these evil people to then expose themselves. The Bible says the pit they dig for you is the pit they will fall into. And so absolutely. I don't like taking on the FBI and the CIA, but if somebody's on top of you breaking your nose and punching your eyeballs out and gang raping you and running over you and backing over you, All you can do is fight back. That's why when I saw the targeting of you a few years ago, I called you. We're already friends then. And I said, listen, don't let it get to you because you're successful. You're one of the top talk shows. You're a populist. People love you. Do not, I know you're smart, but you haven't been through a lot of this yet. You've been through some stuff. I said, I know the cut of this jib. I know the signature. This is 100 percent the Justice Department, the CIA. They create the narrative. They look at things. They go, we'll take this and we'll take that and we'll make Alex Jones the guy that bullies kids and pees on graves. Exactly. And then we'll make Steven Crowder this guy that, you know, literally, uh, breaks women's necks and human sacrifices them and it's just all made up and then they just hype it and hype it to, to, to, to, to, to take what you're known for being smart and being funny. Alright, so there you go. That's his response. He's essentially going to go after the FBI and the CIA for conducting this, uh, this nudge operation, right? Uh, now, again, I think that was pretty good work. Like, I think that's some of the better investigative journalism that's come out more recently, even above what OMG is doing. Uh, what I've seen more recently from James O'Keefe, which is, you know, OMG media project Veritas is essentially dead in the water. I haven't seen a single project Veritas thing come out, uh, in probably a year since they got rid of him. Uh, but let's look, I just want to look at their, the sound investigations, Twitter account. Hopefully they're only 23, 000 followers. Uh, investigating corruption in adult industries and more. Hmm. Wow. And since they posted that, that has 6 million views on Twitter. Hmm. Very interesting. Uh, And look, they have more posts. They posted about the Pornhub, C Suite, Executive, uh, Uh, Very interesting. Okay, cool. Sound investigations. Good job. Good on, good on James O'Keefe for encouraging people to start doing this, right? That's real journalism. Absolutely incredible. Okay, let's touch on this. But before we do that, I just want to remind you that you're still here, still here listening to me. And if you haven't left a five star review, I'm watching you. Not really. Not like the CIA, but I am I am I do feel your presence right now And if you haven't done it yet, I know you want to just do it Just tippity tap that button and I also know you want to head over to Ronan Ronan basics calm and check out the website It's still a little bit of a work in progress. Most of the things are still on backorder But at least you'll be familiar, roninbasics. com, and I'll let you in on a little clue, something I'm pretty excited about, is that every single one of my order, every single one of the products that I sell will come with it in some way, shape, or form, a QR code. And on that QR code, it can lead you to become a Ronin affiliate, where you can make any a percentage of every person that you help protect themselves from modern technology. So just by buying one of my products, you'll get a QR code that will be sent to you and you will make a percentage of every single sale. That has ever made by anybody you encouraged to do so. So you can even make some money. Think about that high quality products, protect yourself from EMF radiation, get rid of corporate and government tracking. How could this get better? You ask? Well, what if you have made money off of it? What if you did that? That'd be pretty cool, huh? So, RonanBasics. com, and this will start, again, the thing that I will have go live, that will no longer be on backorder, or presale, is going to be the wallets. Alright? Um, pretty awesome designs. They look super sharp, very high quality materials, RonanBasics. com. Check out the wallets that are there and make your order today. And I can start shipping it out as early as late next week. And I will include with that a QR code for you to share the love with all of your friends and family. All right. RonanBasics. com head there right now. U. S. company hoping to bring back dead extinct animals. This article says U. S. company hoping to bring back the dodo and the mammoth. But here's why it won't be like Jurassic Park. I like how they're already going on a PR campaign. But here's why it's not going to turn into velociraptors tearing you and your children to shreds. Here's why. Let me explain. My name is James Robinson, news reporter for SkyNews. com. Let me tell you why this is a great thing for humanity. That we're going to bring back woolly mammoths. And also saber toothed tigers. And also maybe Velociraptors. Let me, let me, give me five minutes of your time and I shall convince you, sir, that bringing back extinct animals that the world no longer was able to, to need or was able to sustain at sizes much larger than animals that we have today, in an environment that is constantly surrounded by humans that are not like they were before, let me tell you why introducing Extinct animals back into the ecosystem is a great thing. Okay, I'm listening, James. Tell me. Well, the idea of scientists bringing prehistoric creatures back to life with some clever DNA trickery might sound familiar to fans of the 1993 Hollywood blockbuster Jurassic Park. Yes, it does. But for Colossal Biosciences, a company that hopes to reintroduce extinct species such as the Dodo and the Mammoth, I like how they find like the most cuddly little stupid things that they could come up with, right? We're not gonna do those big scary animals, right? We're not gonna weaponize Tyrannosaurus Rex's, right? We're just just a little Dodo. They're stupid and harmless. That's all. Maybe a little woolly mammoth So you can give it a little belly rub But not velociraptors. We would never do that. We would never. We would never. That's a terrible idea. We would never do that, guys. We would never start an island for rich people to go hunt velociraptors. To pay us millions of dollars to go start our own Jurassic Park Island, where you could view Velociraptors, T Rexes, Bronchiosauruses, Triceratops, and, and all of your childhood dreams come true. We would never do that and monetize it for our benefit. Just dodo's. And little belly rubs for the woolly mammoths. That's all we want to do, guys. Don't worry about us. Just dodos. They were stupid to begin with. We'll start there. But for, uh, it, it says it is more than just a film script. It's a reality, and one that could be just years away. We've got all the technology we need, says Ben Lamb, chief executive of the firm. Based in Dallas, Texas. It's just a focus of time and funding. And we are 100 percent confident we can bring back the Tasmanian Tiger, the Dodo, the Mammoth. The science behind the project is simple. Work out the genes that make an extinct animal what it is, and then replicate those genes using the DNA of a close existing relative. Right? We're not God. We're just creating animals out of thin air. With our bare hands. Creating life. The very existence that maybe, just maybe, we may alter a thing or two there. Maybe make a purple woolly mammoth, because people love purple. Right? But we would never. Not the big scary stuff, guys. Don't worry about it. It's almost reverse Jurassic Park, says Mr. Lamb. Right? In the film, they were film filling in the holes in the dinosaur DNA with frog DNA. We are leveraging artificial intelligence and tools to identify the core genes that make a mammoth a mammoth and then engineering them into elephant genomes. Right? We're not, we're not filling in the DNA with frog DNA. That's um, such a huge part of this and all of the concerns have to do with the frog DNA. So we're not going to do that. Wow. Uh, that is the technical part, but there are some other practical hurdles for Colossal to overcome. Namely, once you have a mammoth cells, do you birth a real life mammoth? The answer, according to Colossal, is in the womb of an Asian elephant. Hmm. But it is a process that could take nearly two years, even after they've worked out how to do it. Each of the different projects have different challenges. The mammoth is really around gestation, which is around 22 months. The dodo gestations, it's pretty great. They said we are using surrogate chickens. The hardest part is cultivating the primordial germ cells. So after about 4, 000 years. When could we see the return of the Mighty Mammoth, a creature that fell victim to human hunting? This is our fault, guys. Let's bring him back. And the changing conditions brought about by the end of the last Ice Age. We are well into the editing phase, said Mr. Lamb. We don't have mammoths yet, but we still feel very good. About 2028. Geez. Away from the lab, led by Rona Hisoli, Colossal's head of biological sciences, there are a few issues to overcome, including where the newly returned species will live once they're born. Mr. Lamb said Who gives Who the fuck gives you the right? Mr. Lamb who gave you who gave you the right to do this? How do you how do you say? Oh, I'm gonna be the guy to challenge nature to say hey I know this happened in the past in history, but guess what? Not on my watch, my name's Mr. Lamb. I'm gonna reverse engineer the cells and become God, and start to create animals that haven't been around for thousands of years. Without any regard to how this will affect our ecosystem, without any regard to what the actual predatory aspects of this might look like, without any concern for anything other than, this shit looks pretty cool, maybe I'll do that. How is there not, and also by the way, what stops them from doing this with Neanderthals? There's a weird situation. Oh, no, all you need is a surrogate mom and we have Neanderthals back Isn't there like little people too? Like we I remember I went to the museum. I think it was in San Diego Some some museum that I was at and they had a literal like little person dwarf That was another homo sapien esque type of figure What's to stop them from doing this. With that, are we gonna bring back Neanderthals and dwarf homo, you know, homo sapien esque creatures, and just see how that works out for us. I could just see, let's go. Let's go into a new scenario. We went from battle bots to Neanderthals being regenerated into life. Maybe. Maybe let's cross them both together. The battle bots. And the only way to, to combat that is to bring back to life the strong, the, the eyebrow having Neanderthals, right? We were the reason they're gone anyways. Just bring them back. We'll see. Well, they're going to back us up. Right? If, if all hell breaks loose with the AI robots, let's just keep further experiment with us being God, you know, discount the metal God that we're creating. And let's just say, Hey, we're going to bring back the enderthals to fight off the AI robot battle bots. Maybe that's the end result. Right? But literally, do you think they're going to stop a mammoths? Do you think they're going to stop at Dodo's or whatever they said, whatever the other one was. No, they're going to do everything and anything they can, which includes. Includes dinosaurs includes other, uh, Homo sapien ask creatures like the Neanderthals, right? That is going to happen if we are going down this road. We are opening up Pandora's box. Where these scientists are acting as if they're gods, where they believe they can do whatever they want without repercussions, without government oversight, because they're moving fast enough now to where we can't as humans be able to take in the information and what they're doing and have corrective measures and, and guidelines for them to follow, which says, Hey, maybe it's not a good idea to re introduce predatory species into our current state ecosystem that haven't been around for thousands of years. Maybe that's not a good idea. Maybe it's not a good idea to create a hyper intelligent Metal figure that could break every bone in your body and has no emotions. Maybe not, you know Where do we start to put where do we start to draw the line, right? If it's not hyper intelligent godlike metal creatures, and it's not bringing back extinct creatures and developing Animals from scratch and changing their genetic makeups with with the metal God filling in the blanks Right? Like, there's so many sci fi books that I could create out of this, it's ridiculous. And most of them, if not all of them, end terribly for us. Right? We better hope the aliens show up and save our asses from these dumbass scientists trying to extinct humanity while bringing back dodo's and creating metal gods like AI. Battle bots. Jeez. Our ultimate goal is to put all the animals we make back into the wild. He says new tools in the fight to protect nature. Colossal thinks the work is not just about rewilding animals previously lost to the world. The company is currently working with Dr. Paul Ling at Baylor college of medicine to create a vaccine to eradicate the deadly. E E H V virus, which kills about 20 percent of baby elephants. It is also working closely with the university of Alaska and the university of Stockholm on radiocarbon dating of American mammoths, as well as sequencing their genome, the largest study of its type ever undertaken. Now what's interesting about this is that guess what they're getting to help convince you in their propaganda campaign, that this is a good thing. They hired the guy. There's a very famous documentarian named Teton. Not named Teaton Ridge, but James Reed, you've probably heard that name before and if you hadn't go look up his IMDB and you'll probably be pretty familiar with it. You know the Documentary that was very very famous region recently The my octopus teacher is now been commissioned to create a docu series about this medical technology company The new Jurassic Park says the company has teamed up with Oscar winning my octopus teacher James Reed's underdog films and Teton Ridge Entertainment to produce a multi year docu series about Colossal's work. The firm bills itself as the world's first de extinction company has raised some 225 million dollars in funding as it works to resurrect species like the woolly mammoth and the dodo. The announcement of the docu series comes on the heels of Colossal hiring former legendary Entertainment executive Emily Castell as chief marketing officer. Among other duties, Castell will help guide the company on its foray into the entertainment world. Teton Ridge Entertainment will finance the first phase of production with the intent of finding a distribution. Coming to a Netflix near you! The real Jurassic park. I like how every time they mentioned this, they also mentioned dodo's and woolly mammoths. Like they, I guarantee you that marketing executive CMO probably did a huge survey market analysis where they tried to figure out what are the least intimidating things that we could run our campaign on to not immediately sound the public alarms around us playing God, and that just so happens to be the woolly mammoth and the dodo. Right? Transparency is core to Colossal's missions and goals. Of course it is. So working with the right filmmakers to chronicle our journey was incredibly important. Right? So this is just a big propaganda campaign. Huge money budget, big propaganda campaign to convince you that this is a good idea and we shouldn't be sounding the alarms over this. Okay, now, the last topic that we're going to discuss today is going to be that the Everybody was talking about this week about the solar eclipse, right? There was all these conspiracy theories about the solar eclipse, right? It's going to be the end of times. It's going to cause all these earthquakes that the, all of the technology is going to go out. It's there's going to be this, there's going to be that there was all these conspiracy theories. And I didn't come out and say much about it at all. One, because I was too busy, busy building Ronan and have my head buried in the sand to sit and create content about it. Yeah. But two, I didn't really see the correlation, right? I know there's a huge buildup and it's in the air. Something's going to happen very shortly, very soon. I don't disagree with you. Uh, and side note, I listened to a podcast between Theo on Theo Vaughn's podcast, uh, this past weekend where he interviewed Tucker Carlson, probably one of my favorite podcasts I've listened to in a very, very long time. And Tucker Carlson sounds the alarm. It's the third time I've said that in like three paragraphs. It really does. Sound the alarm bells around the potential for mass EMPs causing mass chaos by an external enemy. And there's some really sobering thoughts and ideas around, get a plan in place, because when all hell breaks loose and you can't call your mom, you can't call your dad, you can't get a hold of your kids, you can't get a hold of your brother, your sister, your mother, your best friend, what are you gonna do? Do you have a plan in place? Do you have a place to meet up? Do you know where to source your water from? Do you know how to get out of the city properly? Do you know where to go hide in the woods? Do you know those things? Because if you don't, and I certainly need to put together this plan as well, but you should have a plan. You should have some food storage. You should have a way to filter your water. You should have some of those things, right? Go listen to that podcast. Really, really well done. But anyways, uh, all of these conspiracy theories around what's going to happen after the eclipse. Now. Being somewhat interested in astronomy and and the cosmos and everything that's going on in the larger universe around us This eclipse is pretty cool to me I like looking up in and seeing that and and kind of being able to feel extremely small in this mathematical equation that is reality going on around us and I appreciate being able to witness that and I think it's pretty damn cool People that shit on the Eclipse are the same people that shit on New Year's resolutions. Like, you're just, you're just lame. So, I wrote off all these conspiracy theories. And, I didn't find any of them interesting. I didn't see any one of them that convinced me there was going to be something that went down. But what I did see, after the fact, excuse me, is this article. And I saw a video about it, that was pretty well done. And it explains how the Eclipse could have potentially been artificially created. And that sounds crazy. But let me tell you how this article comes from the European Space Agency, and it says face to face with sun eclipsing proba three, there is a satellite technology rotating around the earth right now that has the capability to cause a pseudo solar eclipse. This is real technology. It's online. Look it up, the article is face to face with sun eclipsing Proba 3. And here's what it says. It says, through exquisite millimeter scale formation flying the dual satellite making up ESA's Proba 3 will accomplish what was previously a space mission impossible. Cast a precisely held shadow from one platform to the other in the process of blocking out the fiery sun to observe its ghostly surrounding atmosphere Now this should be fairly easy and simplistic to go back and see if prior to this thing being created was there a projected solar eclipse. It's just a mathematical equation, right? I'm sure somebody way smarter than me knows how to calculate it. But this should be able to be validated. I haven't done that math myself because it would take me 20 years of learning math and you know, maybe getting Neuralink in the, in the process to help me understand it. But there's probably a way to validate this. So I just haven't gotten that far, but there are some interesting names for these things. One of them is called the Occulter Spacecraft because there's two satellites that make this up. And it says, ahead of the Proba pair launching together later this year, the scientists who will make use of Proba 3 observations were able to see the satellites with their own eyes. Members of this team will test hardware developed for the mission during an actual terrestrial solar eclipse over North America. Next. April dun dun dun. The two satellites are currently undergoing final integration in the premises of RedWire near Antwerp in Belgium. They are paid a visit by Proba3 science working team, a 45 strong group of solar physicists coming from all over Europe and the wider world. Many of these experts are regular visitors to terrestrial solar eclipse around the globe, but looking forward to the new perspective Proba3 will open up on the faint solar corona. This mysterious region is important as the place where coronal mass ejections are created, vast eruptions of charged particles that trigger solar storms, as well as influencing the velocity of the solar wind, which is central to determining space weather. The satellite hardware was quite something to in close up, or in close up. I was particularly struck by how close the camera had on the coronagraph spacecraft is to the solar array. So those are the two names of it. Coronagraph? And the other satellite's name is Occulter. While the array relies on high solar illumination, the camera has to remain in complete darkness with no stray light whatsoever. It really brings it home how precisely that small shadow cast by the Occulter will need to be maintained in place. We also got to peek at the carefully machined edge of the Occulter spacecraft's disk, normally kept under protective cover before launch. Interesting. Now this is pretty long. Let's see if we can find out and explain how it goes. Exactly does what it's supposed to do. So it says there are telescopes that incorporate internal occulting discs to obscure the solar disc. The problem is that these internal occulters still experienced light spilling around their edges known as diffraction, blotting out the extremely faint signals of interest, right? So it looks like one, uh, one satellite in front of the other, both positioning itself in front of the sun and creating this. Pseudo eclipse, right? An artificial eclipse, it says. It says Damian Galeno, ESA's Proba 3 project manager, notes the best way to reduce diffraction, uh, is to increase the distance between the occulter and the chronograph, which is precisely what Proba 3 is going to do. Interesting. By definition, full scale end to end testing of PROBA3 is impossible here on Earth, but the meeting here heard how the same set of filter wheels developed by PROBA3 will be used to observe the solar eclipse over North America on the 8th of April 2024 along the Liquid Parallel Crystal Imaging Technology. The filter wheels allow observation of the corona in different polarization angles, like switching between different polarized glasses. Uh, the nice about observing during an actual eclipse is we won't need any occulter to gain insight of exactly the kind of results we are going to get back from Proba 3. Now why would they want to do this? Right, why would they want to cause proba 3? A solar eclipse. It says, uh, Assuming the sun's output influences Earth's climate, it's important to measure any variations we precisely can. Probe 3 is due for launch this autumn. Like, what's the purpose of this? Why are you doing that? Why do you want to? And here's a actual good, uh, Explanation as to what it's doing and how it's doing it and so you can go check that out Look up the article name, but the last thing I'll show you is a video here This is a two and a half three minute video that explains h
Prössl, Christoph www.deutschlandfunk.de, @mediasres
Episode 231 - Blockzeit 834644- von und mit Markus und Netdiver https://twitter.com/BITpARTIKEL/status/1775742551749808255 https://x.com/JanWues/status/1777401619400831368 https://twitter.com/BITpARTIKEL/status/1776102765141315838 https://twitter.com/danielwingen/status/1777284777772486786 https://twitter.com/BITpARTIKEL/status/1777063927832015197 https://twitter.com/thetrustfalldoc/status/1775717539471102259 https://twitter.com/Stella_Assange/status/1778111931330535488 Sponsoren und Freunde BitBox02 Bitcoin-only Edition - 5% Rabatt für die Einundzwanzig Community mit Code “einundzwanzig” — 10% für 10 BitBoxes mit Code “einundzwanzig10”. Stack Deine Sats mit Pocket Bitcoin. Einundzwanzig Merch bei Copiaro. Bei ShopinBit kannst du über 1.000.000 Produkte mit Bitcoin kaufen. Weitere Links Besuche unsere Website und diskutiere mit, in unserer Telegram-Community. Verfolge die neusten Schlagzeilen im Newsfeed. Die Community-Tutorials auf YouTube. Lass uns einen Shoutout da.
Djamila le Pair doet verslag van het vonnis in de uitleveringszaak van Julian Assange vanaf de demonstratie voor het gerechtshof in Londen. In deze reportage eerst de persconferentie van Stella Assange, daarna straatinterviews met journalist John Rees en voormalig ambassadeur van Ecuador Fidel Narvaez. opgenomen op 26 maart 2024reportage op Potkaars: https://potkaars.nl/blog/2024/3/26/besluit-hoger-beroep-julian-assange-26-maart-2024
Stella Assange, the wife of Julian Assange joined Pat this morning on the show to speak about the appeal her husband will now take against his extradition to the States.
This week's show features stories from Radio Deutsche-Welle, Radio Havana Cuba, France 24, and NHK Japan. http://youthspeaksout.net/swr240329.mp3 (29:00) From GERMANY- Following the massacre of 137 people in Russia at a concert, the so-called ISIS-K claimed responsibility- but Putin and his government believe they were commissioned by Ukraine and the US. On Monday the UN Security Council passed a resolution calling for the release of hostages and a ceasefire in Gaza- the US abstained from vetoing the unanimous decision, much to Israeli disappointment. From CUBA- Hamas denounced the international silence on the continuing attacks on and destruction of hospitals in Gaza. UN Secretary-General Guterres spoke in Egypt saying the only way to reduce the famine occurring in Gaza is to allow the relief trucks in, and calling for an immediate ceasefire and release of hostages. Venezuela has created a High Commission on Fascism to be presented as a bill in the UN. In 1990 the US government began transmissions of anti-Cuban propaganda called Radio and TV Marti. A british court ruled that Julian Assange cannot be extradited to the US without a guarantee that he will receive First Amendment rights and will not face the death penalty. From FRANCE- First a speech by Stella Assange, wife of Julian, given after the judges ruling in the case on Tuesday. Then a brief synopsis of what Assange says was the purpose of Wikileaks. France 24 From JAPAN- Japanese defense forces are being trained on a US destroyer to use the 400 US made Tomahawk cruise missiles they are purchasing. Taiwan has finished building 6 warships, dubbed aircraft carrier killers. China filed a complaint at the WTO over US government tax incentives for buyers of electric vehicles. People in India are protesting the incarceration of a key opposition leader before general elections. Available in 3 forms- (new) HIGHEST QUALITY (160kb)(33MB), broadcast quality (13MB), and quickdownload or streaming form (6MB) (28:59) Links at outfarpress.com/shortwave.shtml PODCAST!!!- https://feed.podbean.com/outFarpress/feed.xml (160kb Highest Quality) Website Page- < http://www.outfarpress.com/shortwave.shtml ¡FurthuR! Dan Roberts "One of the best ways to achieve justice is to expose injustice." -- Julian Assange Dan Roberts Shortwave Report- www.outfarpress.com YouthSpeaksOut!- www.youthspeaksout.net
TIMESTAMPS: Intro (0:00) Assange Wins Partial Victory (6:44) Interview with Stella Assange (26:41) Documenting Israeli War Crimes (36:52) Interview with Jeremy Loffredo (50:46) Outro (1:08:21) - - - Watch full episodes on Rumble, streamed LIVE 7pm ET: https://rumble.com/c/GGreenwald Become part of our Locals community: https://greenwald.locals.com/ - - - Follow Glenn: Twitter: https://twitter.com/ggreenwald Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/glenn.11.greenwald/ Follow System Update: Twitter: https://twitter.com/SystemUpdate_ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/systemupdate__/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@systemupdate__ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/systemupdate.tv/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/systemupdate/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This Day in Legal History: Biological Weapons Convention Goes into Force This day in legal history, March 26, 1975, marked a seminal moment in the global effort to curtail the proliferation of some of the most dangerous weapons known to humanity. The Convention on the Prohibition of the Development, Production and Stockpiling of Bacteriological (Biological) and Toxin Weapons and on their Destruction, more commonly known as the Biological Weapons Convention (BWC), officially went into force. This landmark treaty represented the first multilateral disarmament agreement banning an entire category of weapons of mass destruction. As of today, 162 countries have joined the Convention, committing themselves to a world free of biological threats by agreeing never to "develop, produce, stockpile or otherwise acquire or retain" biological weapons.The Convention not only prohibits the development and stockpiling of biological and toxin weapons but also mandates the destruction of any existing stockpiles, thereby setting a precedent for future disarmament treaties. Despite the widespread support, some signatory nations have maintained the right to possess certain biological agents and toxins for "prophylactic" purposes, a stipulation that underscores the complexities involved in the treaty's implementation and verification.Over the years, the BWC has faced challenges, including accusations of non-compliance and the difficulty of ensuring verification without an official monitoring body. Nonetheless, the Convention remains a critical component of the international security architecture, reflecting the global consensus against the use of disease as a weapon. On this anniversary, the international community continues to grapple with evolving threats in the realm of biological warfare, making the principles enshrined in the BWC as relevant as ever. As we reflect on the progress made since 1975, the ongoing commitment of signatory nations to the Convention's objectives is crucial for addressing contemporary and future biosecurity challenges.Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, has been granted a temporary reprieve from extradition to the United States by London's High Court. This decision came after the court required the U.S. to assure that Assange would not face the death penalty if extradited. Assange is wanted in the U.S. on 18 counts, primarily under the Espionage Act, related to WikiLeaks' publication of confidential military and diplomatic documents. His legal battle in English courts has spanned over 13 years, with his lawyers recently challenging the UK's approval of his extradition. The High Court ruled that Assange could have a successful appeal based on several grounds, including the risk of being charged with a capital offense like treason in the future, despite current charges not carrying the death penalty.The court highlighted concerns, notably a past comment by former U.S. President Donald Trump suggesting the death penalty for WikiLeaks' activities, as indicative of the potential risks Assange faces. As a result, the U.S. has been given until April 16 to provide the necessary assurances, delaying Assange's extradition and scheduling a further hearing for May 20. Stella Assange, Julian's wife, praised the decision, calling for the Biden administration to drop the case altogether, which she deemed "shameful." While the court rejected Assange's appeal on claims of political motivation and unfair trial fears, his supporters continue to view him as a journalistic figure persecuted for exposing U.S. misconduct, despite U.S. authorities arguing his actions endangered lives by recklessly publishing sensitive information.Julian Assange wins temporary reprieve from extradition to US | ReutersRepublican donors rallied behind former U.S. President and presidential candidate Donald Trump to aid in funding the bond required for a $454 million civil fraud judgment against him. Before securing a reduction in the bond amount to $175 million, Trump faced the challenge of raising the full amount to avoid the seizure of his properties. Among the benefactors were billionaire hedge fund founder John Paulson and oil magnate Harold Hamm, although their exact contributions and the total amount raised were not disclosed. Also not disclosed, what they hoped to receive in return for bailing out the former president. Trump's legal battle centers on accusations of fraudulently inflating his net worth to obtain better terms for loans and insurance. Despite claims from Trump's campaign that there was no coordinated fundraising effort and assertions of possessing sufficient funds to cover the judgment, reports surfaced of significant offers from donors, including one who proposed over $10 million towards the bond. Following a court decision allowing for a smaller bond, Trump confirmed his capability to meet the requirement promptly, emphasizing his readiness to post the necessary cash, bonds, or securities.This situation underscores Trump's enduring support among wealthy allies as he navigates financial pressures from legal judgments and campaign expenses ahead of the November presidential election against Democrat Joe Biden. Notably, both Paulson and Hamm are actively involved in fundraising efforts for Trump's campaign, highlighting the complex role of big-money contributions in the political landscape. Additionally, Trump has hinted at considering Paulson for the Treasury Secretary position if reelected.The saga of funding Trump's bond raises questions about transparency and the potential for scrutiny from election regulators or federal prosecutors, given the limits on campaign contributions and the broad definition of political donations. The difficulty in securing a surety company for the original bond and the implications of asset seizure by the New York Attorney General add layers of complexity to Trump's ongoing legal and financial challenges.Billionaires sought to help fund Trump bond in civil fraud case, sources say | ReutersAndreas Bechtolsheim, the founder and former chairman of Arista Networks, has settled insider trading charges with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) by agreeing to pay a civil penalty of nearly $1 million. The settlement, which Bechtolsheim has entered without either admitting or denying the SEC's allegations, also includes a significant restriction on his future professional engagements. Specifically, Bechtolsheim will be barred from serving as an officer or director of any public company for the next five years, as detailed in the SEC's official statement. This resolution addresses the SEC's concerns regarding Bechtolsheim's conduct related to insider trading, marking the conclusion of the regulatory scrutiny he faced. The underlying alleged misconduct involved trading on Cisco's offer to purchase Acacia Communications in 2019. The agreement underscores the SEC's continued efforts to enforce securities laws and maintain fair trading practices within the U.S. financial markets.Former Arista Networks chairman settles insider trading charges, US SEC says | ReutersSun Founder Bechtolsheim Insider-Traded on Tech Deal, SEC Claims - BloombergIn my column this week, I delve into the expanding landscape of digital government services and the imperative it places on the government to ensure universal broadband access, particularly for individuals with lower income.The IRS Direct File pilot program represents a significant step towards offering a free, government-run electronic filing system to the public, aiming to address the long-standing demand fueled by the limitations and costs associated with for-profit tax preparation software. This initiative, however, faces considerable hurdles, notably in ensuring equitable broadband access, especially in rural areas, and the widespread availability of internet-capable devices. It also highlights the critical role of public libraries and their staff in facilitating access to digital tax services, underpinning the broader challenge of digital inclusivity and equity.As the success of Direct File is contingent upon robust and equitable internet access, the urgency to bridge the digital divide is accentuated, with a particular emphasis on innovative solutions and increased funding to enhance broadband connectivity. This includes exploring short-term alternatives such as subsidized satellite internet and bolstering public library resources to serve as pivotal access points for digital tax services.Despite nearly universal ownership of computers or smartphones in U.S. homes, disparities persist in broadband access across different demographic and regional groups, with a notable divide along age and racial lines, as well as significant gaps in rural areas and on American Tribal lands. These disparities underscore the challenges some individuals may face in accessing the Direct File portal, despite its mobile-friendly design.Further, the expiration and depletion of funding for the Affordable Connectivity Program in the coming months may kick as many as 23 million households offline–these households, as you might imagine, trend towards lower income. The very groups for which Direct File can provide the most benefit. In light of this, the importance of public libraries as access points for the internet and tax assistance cannot be overstated, with the Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) program poised to play a crucial role in expanding Direct File's reach. However, the reliance on library resources and staff underscores the need for targeted training and increased support for VITA volunteers, ensuring they are equipped to assist taxpayers with Direct File and other digital government services.Looking ahead, the expansion of government digital services, like Direct File, highlights the necessity of not only making these services accessible but ensuring equitable internet access to prevent digital exclusion. As the government moves more services online, it is imperative to address the digital divide and ensure that all individuals, regardless of their socioeconomic status or geographic location, can benefit from these advancements.IRS Direct File Should Ignite Push for Universal Internet Access Get full access to Minimum Competence - Daily Legal News Podcast at www.minimumcomp.com/subscribe
We have a 'Special Edition' of @EchoChamberFP https://www.instagram.com/echochamberfp/ for you today!!! Truth seeking is this episode's goal, and thanks to Films For Change, Journeyman Pictures & ARPR we got to explore the story of Julian Assange through a new documentary. People finally get to see an unvarnished look at the facts of what happened with WikiLeaks and Assange, which is eye opening! THEN, we have a brief chat with the writer, director of the piece. Who put together a highly engaging exposé, so much so, not even the flu could act as a distraction (though, definitely not on top form)!!! Watch the conversation: HERE! https://youtu.be/ihJo9_dI8xY 'The Trust Fall: Julian Assange' is written & directed by Kym Staton. Despite being detained, silenced, and hidden from public view in maximum security Belmarsh Prison, multi-award-winning Australian journalist and publisher Julian Assange has become one of the loudest voices for free speech of our times. The disclosures of WikiLeaks from 2010 ignited a firestorm of controversy and a relentless ongoing pursuit by the most powerful state on the planet. Today we have: The Trust Fall: Julian Assange Watch Review: Here. https://youtu.be/XLMuX8OZL48 Cinema Nova Melbourne, World Premiere: 30th July 2023 OZ Theatrical Release Date: 6th March 2024 UK Theatrical Release Date: 15th March 2024 Director: Kym Staton Cast: Daniel Ellsberg, John Pilger, Tariq Ali, Chris Hedges, Jennifer Robinson, Jill Stein, Stefania Maurizi, Nils Melzer, Stella Assange, John Shipton, Gabriel Shipton, Roger Waters, M.I.A, Tom Morello, Jonathan Oldham Credit: Films For Change, Journeyman Pictures Genre: Documentary Running Time: 128 min Cert: 15 Trailer: Here. https://youtu.be/wcYOv2SorgY?si=amqpwt-WCI7tC1Aj Website: Here. https://www.thetrustfall.org/ X: @thetrustfalldoc https://twitter.com/thetrustfalldoc?lang=en-GB Facebook: Here. https://www.facebook.com/thetrustfalldoc/ Instagram: @thetrustfalldoc https://www.instagram.com/thetrustfalldoc/ ------------ *(Music) 'Strictly Business (Instrumental)' by EPMD - 2020 --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/eftv/message
„Was mit Nawalny geschehen ist, kann auch Julian passieren,“ meint Stella Assange, Ehefrau des in London inhaftierten Wikileaks-Gründers Julian Assange und Menschenrechtsanwältin. Hat Stella Assange recht? Sind der russische Kreml-Kritiker Alexej Nawalny und der australischen Whistleblower Julian Assange miteinander vergleichbar? Darüber diskutieren Markus Lanz und Richard David Precht in diesem Podcast. Sie beleuchten die unterschiedlichen Aspekte des Falls Julian Assange, dessen Auslieferung an die USA gerade vor dem britischen High Court verhandelt wird und dessen Veröffentlichung auf der Internetplattform Wikileaks 2010 schwere amerikanische Kriegsverbrechen aufdeckte. Hat Assange mit der Veröffentlichung das Leben von Informanden gefährdet? Das ist nur eine der zahlreichen Fragen über die demnächst in London entschieden wird.
Stella Assange is now waiting for a decision on the extradition of her husband Julian, the founder of WikiLeaks, from the United Kingdom to the United States on charges of espionage. If he's transferred to the US, Stella says it's not just Julian that faces grave consequences, but journalism itself. In this episode: Stella Assange (@Stella_Assange), Human Rights Lawyer Episode credits: This episode was produced by Sarí el-Khalili and Sonia Bhagat with our host Malika Bilal. Ashish Malhotra and Miranda Lin fact-checked this episode. Our sound designer is Alex Roldan. Our lead of audience development and engagement is Aya Elmileik and Adam Abou-Gad is our engagement producer. Alexandra Locke is The Take's executive producer. Ney Alvarez is Al Jazeera's head of audio. Connect with us: @AJEPodcasts on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, Threads and YouTube
Ihre Aufgabe war es bisher vor allem, ihre Partner zu unterstützen: Julija Nawalnaja und Stella Assange erben dabei aber mehr und mehr den Heldenstatus ihrer bekämpften Ehemänner. Wie inszenieren sie sich selbst und welche Rolle nehmen sie dabei ein? Watty, Christine; Specht, Heike
As they lecture us endlessly about human rights in other countries, the Biden administration is trying to kill journalist Julian Assange for the crime of embarrassing the CIA. His wife Stella joins us from his extradition hearing. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Mighty 200 5 year delta review (2019), 2/22 delta warning of outage, DJT's Phase 2 Truth decode, Ingraham interviews President Trump, Undecided voters realize that Trump is the answer after Town Hall, Telescope Fund and Arabella Advisors plan to bring in another 200 million a year, Stella Assange on Tucker, and much much more...
Torniamo sul caso Assange, dopo due giorni di udienze dell'Alta Corte di Giustizia britannica chiamata a decidere sull'istanza d'appello presentata dal co-fondatore di Wikileaks contro la sua estradizione negli Stati Uniti, dove è accusato di spionaggio e rischia fino a 175 anni di carcere. Per una decisione dei magistrati britannici occorrerà verosimilmente attendere qualche giorno, ma questa interminabile vicenda giudiziaria, tornata sotto i riflettori dell'attualità, ripropone interrogativi fondamentali sui principi della giustizia e della democrazia, sulla libertà dell'informazione, ed ora anche e sempre più sul rispetto dei diritti umani. Per l'avvocata e attivista per i diritti umani, Stella Assange, moglie di Julian, detenuto da quasi cinque anni in Inghilterra si tratta di una persecuzione politica. In America Assange deve rispondere della pubblicazione di decine di migliaia di documenti militari e diplomatici segreti, trafugati da Chelsea Manning, un'analista dell'intelligence dell'esercito statunitense condannata a 35 anni di prigione, poi “graziata” da Barack Obama dopo sette anni di carcere. I file rivelavano rapporti diplomatici nascosti e rivelazioni sulle morti di civili nelle guerre USA in Iraq e Afghanistan, così come i nomi di coloro che, sul posto, stavano collaborando con i servizi e le forze armate statunitensi. Un'estradizione giustificata o un attacco alla libertà di informare? Ne discutiamo con: Mauro Barberis, professore di filosofia e teoria del diritto all'Università degli Studi di Trieste; Philip Di Salvo, ricercatore all'Università di San Gallo; Stefania Maurizi, giornalista d'inchiesta.
"Julian come Navalny" dice Stella Assange (nella foto), la moglie del fondatore di Wikileaks che, in attesa del verdetto finale della Corte di Londra, insiste sul pericolo per il marito di un ritorno negli Stati Uniti e sulla necessità di proteggere il giornalismo libero. Ne parliamo con Giorgia Scaturro, nostra collaboratrice a Londra.
Julian Assange will die if he loses his appeal for extradition this week and is sent to the United States. That is what his wife and lawyer Stella Assange said about the appeal that starts this week. GBNews Journalist Neil Oliver joins Redacted to discuss the very latest.
Uoči žalbenog saslušanja osnivača Wikileaksa Juliana Assangea, koje se održava danas u Londonu, za SBS je govorila njegova supruga Stella Assange izrazivši slabu nadu da će njegovo poslednje žalbeno ročiste u Britaniji biti uspješno. Ona je rekla da će njen suprug umrijeti ako bude izručen Sjedinjenim Državama, gdje ga traže zbog objavljivanja povjerljivih diplomatskih i vojnih dosijea prije više od deset godina.
Une audience publique de deux jours se tient à Londres les 20 et 21 février, où un panel de deux juges de la Haute Cour du Royaume-Uni examinera la dernière tentative d'appel de Julian Assange contre son extradition vers les États-Unis. S'il est extradé, Assange risque une peine de 175 ans pour avoir exposé des crimes de guerre américains en Afghanistan et en Irak. Sa femme, Stella Assange, et Denis Masmejan de Reporters Sans Frontières appellent à la fin de sa persécution. La campagne de liberté d'Assange est soutenue par diverses organisations internationales dont RSF. Denis Masmejan est au micro d'Epiphane Amanfo pour nous en parler.
"If he is extradited... he won't survive in a US prison." This Wednesday, a British high court will decide on whether or not to extradite journalist Julian Assange. His crime? Exposing alleged war crimes committed by the US in Afghanistan. This week's difficult woman is Stella Assange, a human rights activist and lawyer, who married Julian in 2022. Stella and Julian met whilst he was trapped in the Ecuadorian embassy, a political prisoner unable to leave under threat of extradition. She may well be one of the bravest women I have ever interviewed...
Vợ của Julian Assange nói rằng bà “không có hy vọng” về phiên điều trần kháng cáo sắp tới của ông sẽ thành công. Đây cũng có thể là phiên tòa cuối cùng ở Anh. Stella Assange nói rằng chồng bà sẽ chết nếu bị dẫn độ sang Hoa Kỳ, nơi ông bị truy nã vì tiết lộ các hồ sơ mật ngoại giao và quân sự hơn một thập niên trước.
Żona Juliana Assange'a mówi, że "nie ma nadziei", że jego zbliżająca się rozprawa apelacyjna – która może być ostatnią w Wielkiej Brytanii – zakończy się sukcesem. Stella Assange powiedziała, że jej mąż umrze, jeśli zostanie poddany ekstradycji do Stanów Zjednoczonych, gdzie jest poszukiwany w związku z ujawnieniem tajnych dokumentów dyplomatycznych i wojskowych ponad dekadę temu.
The wife of Julian Assange says she does “not have hope” his upcoming appeal hearing - which could be the final one in Britain - will be successful. Stella Assange says her husband will die if extradited to the United States, where he's wanted over the release of classified diplomatic and military files more than a decade ago.
Stella Assange is petrified that her husband WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange - is about to go the same way of Jeffrey Epstein. Currently held in Belmarsh Prison in London after a stint in the Ecuadorian Embassy, his last ever appeal against extradition to the US is coming up at the Royal Court of Justice on the 20th and 21st February 2024, and she believes the CIA will finish him off. #julianassange #wikileaks #freespeech Follow Stella on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/stellaassange/?hl=en Follow Stella on X: https://twitter.com/Stella_Assange Support Andrew's podcast: http://andrewgold.locals.com Andrew on X: https://twitter.com/andrewgold_ok Insta: https://www.instagram.com/andrewgold_ok Heretics YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@andrewgoldheretics Discover your inner detective when you download June's Journey for free today on iOS and Android. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
International lawyer and political activist Stella Assange has been working since 2011 to free her now husband Julian Assange from prosecution on charges of espionage, imprisonment in England and extradition to the United States for trial. Guest host Russell Dobular and Due Dissidence's Keaton Weiss speak with Stella Assange about Julian's condition, their wedding day and the last ditch efforts to save him from prosecution in the United States. Plus segments on the British government's recent £500 million investment in a steel company that promptly cut 3,000 steelworker jobs in Wales and GOP Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene's threat to call for a vote to oust Speaker Mike Johnson.
Stella Assange joins me to discuss her involvement with WikiLeaks, her relationship with Julian Assange, the fight against the state's corruption, and the ways to help free Julian Assange. Stella Assange is a human rights lawyer. She is the wife of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. She is currently running a campaign to free Julian from prison. // GUEST // Twitter: https://twitter.com/Stella_Assange Website: https://freeassange.org/// SPONSORS // In Wolf's Clothing: https://wolfnyc.com/NetSuite: https://netsuite.com/whatismoneyiCoin Hardware Wallet (use discount code BITCOIN23): https://www.icointechnology.com/Mind Lab Pro: https://mindlabpro.com/breedloveCrowdHealth: https://www.joincrowdhealth.com/breedloveBitcoin Apparel (use discount code BREEDLOVE): https://thebitcoinclothingcompany.com/Feel Free Tonics (use discount code BREEDLOVE): https://botanictonics.comCarnivore Bar (use discount code BREEDLOVE): https://carnivorebar.com/// OUTLINE // 00:00:00 - Coming up 00:00:30 - Intro 00:02:03 - Helping Lightning Startups with In Wolf's Clothing 00:02:49 - Introducing Stella Assange 00:03:16 - Personal Background 00:06:10 - Getting Involved in WikiLeaks 00:10:00 - Meeting with Julian Assange 00:11:35 - Totally New Media Paradigm 00:13:10 - Introduction to WikiLeaks 00:14:45 - Universal Criticism of WikiLeaks by Governments 00:23:00 - Personal Relationship with Julian 00:30:03 - Run Your Business from Anywhere with NetSuite 00:31:08 - Secure Your Bitcoin Stash with the iCoin Hardware Wallet 00:32:18 - Legal Battle of Julian's Case 00:44:22 - The Espionage Act 00:46:00 - The Fight Against State's Corruption 00:53:24 - Enhance Your Brain Power with Mind Lab Pro 00:54:27 - Take Control of Your Healthcare with CrowdHealth 00:55:35 - Confining the Free Speech 01:01:18 - Contributing to the Campaign to Free Julian 01:09:39 - Where to Find Stella on the Internet// PODCAST // Podcast Website: https://whatismoneypodcast.com/Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-what-is-money-show/id1541404400Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/25LPvm8EewBGyfQQ1abIsE?RSS Feed: https://feeds.simplecast.com/MLdpYXYI// SUPPORT THIS CHANNEL // Bitcoin: 3D1gfxKZKMtfWaD1bkwiR6JsDzu6e9bZQ7 Sats via Strike: https://strike.me/breedlove22Sats via Tippin.me: https://tippin.me/@Breedlove22Dollars via Paypal: https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/RBreedlove// WRITTEN WORK // Medium: https://breedlove22.medium.com/Substack: https://breedlove22.substack.com/// SOCIAL // Twitter: https://twitter.com/Breedlove22WiM? Twitter: https://twitter.com/WhatisMoneyShowRumble: https://rumble.com/c/BreedloveInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/breedlove_22/TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@breedlove22LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/breedlove22/All My Current Work: https://vida.page/breedlove22
Stella Assange discusses the imprisonment of her husband on the third episode of Just Asking Questions.
Stella talks about her experience working on Julian Assange's legal team, her introduction to new technologies including Bitcoin, and the current surveillance state that has emerged since the rise of the open internet. JOIN THE COMMUNITYLogos X (Formerly Twitter)Logos DiscordLogos Press Engine RESOURCES: Stella Assange X (Formerly Twitter)Free Assange Emergency Toolkit Jarrad Hope X (Formerly Twitter) TIMESTAMPS 0:00 Introductions - Stella's background, Apartheid, politics, the arts, Julian Assange legal team 6:35 Motivations of joining and studying law and politics – Idealism, justice, society 10:35 Growing up in the coming of age of the internet – Wikileaks, Iraq War Logs, new journalism 12:30 Jarrad's inspirations – International Subversives Magazine, Cypherpunk Mailing lists, more 14:00 The US prosecution against Julian Assange – a political test, and failure of the justice system 18:20 Information asymmetry, Edward Snowden, and the movement towards open information 20:15 Wikileaks grew out of a culture in which the government should be open 25:50 Jarrad's journey into civil libertarianism and building Logos 29:00 Carrying on the torch of Ethereum – building censorship resistant cyber states31:20 Stella's introduction to crypto by Julian – 2011 meeting with Google about Bitcoin 34:35 Bitcoin is the real Occupy Wall Street – How cryptography can make a real world impact 37:00 Preserving reality as the tools to manipulate it become more powerful 39:55 Social media censorship and Wikileaks adoption of BTC 42:00 Arab Spring, Wikileaks utility in Tunisia, Egypt and around the world 45:15 Crypto and the need for alternative system, communities, and modes of organising 50:30 A dangerous, post-state system and surveillance capitalism 54:50 Underlying causes for a shift in behavior and the “War on Terror” 59:00 What does Julian Assange case mean for journalism, activism, liberties, and human rights 1:12:40 An update on Julian Assange's precarious legal situation 1:20:10 Free Speech, activism, and the course the world has taken since Julian's imprisonment.
Dave Rubin of “The Rubin Report” talks to Stella Assange, wife of Julian Assange, about her husband's current situation in a high-security prison in southeast London; the scandalous reasons that he's been imprisoned since April 11, 2019, for his involvement with Wikileaks; how he is kept locked up for 20 hours a day; his current physical and emotional state; the implications of her husband's case on journalism and free speech; how people can contact their representatives and join initiatives to help free Assange; and much more. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Stella Assange is a lawyer and human rights defender. Throughout her career, she has been an international advocate for human rights, most prominently in the case of her husband. We are really pleased to welcome Stella to our podcast . Stella is a human rights lawyer who was born in South Africa and she's the wife of Julian Assange who's the founder of WikiLeaks and a prisoner at HMP Belmarsh and Stella and Julian have two children. Julian Assange is held in the high security Belmarsh prison with the expectation that he will be extradited to the USA on charges related to the publication of government lies relating to, among others, the Iraq war. Donate to Julian's legal costs here; https://www.crowdjustice.com/case/assangeappeal/ Donate to the UK campaign here; https://dontextraditeassange.com/donate/ Sign up here if ypu want to receive a text message on the upcoming hearing, when the date is known - https://dontextraditeassange.com/day-x/ Lobby your MP; https://dontextraditeassange.com/email-mp/ Other ways to help; http://www.freeassangeemergencytoolkit.com/
Zensur? Gibt es in China, in Russland, in Korea. Dass wir weltweit mit immer stärkeren Meinungs- und freien Rede-Einschränkungen zu tun haben, davon sind 137 renommierte Intellektuelle und Akademiker aus aller Welt überzeugt und sorgen sich sehr. Erleichtert würden die Einschränkungen durch die anhaltende digitale Transformation. Sie sehen das Menschenrecht auf freie Meinungsäußerung in Gefahr. In Europa trat im August diesen Jahres beispielsweise ein neues Zensurgesetz für Soziale Medien in Kraft, mit dem die Kommission in die Lage versetzt wird, den Zugang zu sozialen Netzwerken vollständig sperren lassen zu können. Einige der Intellektuellen und Akademiker versammelten sich bereits Ende Juni 2023 in Westminster und verfassten die sogenannte Westminster Declaration. Sie wurde am 18. Oktober 2023 veröffentlicht. Bei den Erstunterzeichnern waren unter anderen: Chris Hedges, Robert W. Malone, Julien und Stella Assange, Slavoy Žižek, Jeffrey Sachs, Oliver Stone, Edward Snowden, Glenn Greenwald, Niall Ferguson, Yanis Varoufakis und Martin Kulldorf. Dass mittlerweile ein Wikipedia-Redakteur den Artikel über die Westminster-Erklärung zur Löschung vorschlug, spricht seine eigene Sprache. Hören Sie die Westminster Erklärung, gelesen von Sabrina Khalil.
Nel nuovo episodio del BIP SHOW festeggiamo l'inizio del PlanB Forum di Lugano e l'apertura del glorioso Palco21. Commentiamo i momenti salienti della conferenza di Amsterdam, gli interventi di Edward Snowden e Stella Assange, l'annuncio di Madeira, e Giacomo Zucco che demolisce (ancora una volta) gli Ordinals. Infine: l'insider trading di CoinTelegraph e un report che dimostra come MasterCard venda tutti i dati degli utenti indiscriminatamente.It's showtime!
Russell chats to Stella Assange to discuss her recent visit to see Julian Assange, joined by Roger Waters and Yanis Varoufakis. Together they talk about the pressing issues surrounding Julian's potential extradition to the US, where he faces a staggering 175-year sentence. Stella reflects on the international support Julian has garnered, from the likes of President Lula of Brazil. Plus, what are the implications of Julian's case on the future of journalism and press freedom. WATCH THE FULL SHOW ON RUMBLE Follow Stella Assange's Campaign Guided-Meditation: Stay Awake with Russell Brand Stay Free Foundation: https://www.russellbrand.com/stay-free-foundation/
In deze bonus aflevering gaat het over "Bitcoin Amsterdam". Samen met Maya hebben wij als vertegenwoordigers van de EENENTWINTIG community een podcast booth op de Bitcoin conferentie in Amsterdam. We bespreken wat je van de conferentie kan verwachten. Er zullen verschillende sprekers zijn waaronder Edward Snowden, Stella Assange en Adam Back. Verder worden er interactieve workshops rondom Bitcoin gehouden en wordt er feest gevierd. Wij zullen tijdens deze conferentie verschillende podcasts opnemen en deze later met jullie delen.Extra aantekeningen/links uit deze aflevering:Link naar de conferentie: https://b.tc/conference/amsterdamKortingscode voor de tickets: EENENTWINTIG10EENENTWINTIG website: https://eenentwintig.net/EENENTWINTIG YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCg9nqjQTP8hQz4XpCWcbEMQLink naar DerGigi: https://dergigi.com/
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Danielle DiMartino Booth is CEO and Chief Strategist for QI Research, an independent research firm. She spent 9 years at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas as Advisor to President Richard W. Fisher throughout the financial crisis until he retired in 2015. DiMartino Booth's work at the Fed focused on financial stability and the efficacy of unconventional monetary policy. She's also the author of "Fed Up: An Insider's Take on Why the Federal Reserve is Bad for America." DiMartino Booth earned her BBA at the University of Texas at San Antonio, holds an MBA in Finance and International Business from the University of Texas at Austin, and an MS in Journalism from Columbia University. Danielle's research firm: https://quillintelligence.com -- Follow Danielle on X https://x.com/DiMartinoBooth -- Partners: Coin Stories is powered by Swan Bitcoin the best way to build your Bitcoin stack with automated Bitcoin savings plans and instant purchases. Swan serves clients of any size, from $10 to $10M+. Visit https://www.swanbitcoin.com/nataliebrunell for $10 in Bitcoin when you sign up. If you are planning to buy more than $100,000 of Bitcoin over the next year, the Swan Private team can help. — BITCOIN AMSTERDAM is just around the corner. The biggest Bitcoin conference in Europe will host incredible speakers including Edward Snowden, Stella Assange, Adam Back and more. Get your tickets at b.tc/conference and use the code HODL for at least 10% off both Bitcoin Amsterdam and Bitcoin Nashville 2024 which will be held next July 25-27. — Fold is the best Bitcoin rewards debit card and shopping app in the world. Earn Bitcoin on everything you purchase with Fold's Bitcoin cash back debit card, and spin the Daily Wheel to earn free Bitcoin. Head to https://www.foldapp.com/natalie and for a limited time you can get 10,000 satoshis when you sign up for Fold and Fold+ and spend $20 on the card. — I'm proud to partner with Coinkite, your go-to tech company for top-notch Bitcoin custody solutions. The ColdCard wallet offers a safe haven for your Bitcoin, securely storing your digital assets offline. Coinkite recently introduced Tapsigner, an NFC wallet key ideal for easily setting up multisig wallets or Satscard, the best gift you can give to someone brand new to Bitcoin. And keep an eye on the Bitcoin sphere with the BlockClock, a custom desk clock displaying real-time Bitcoin blockchain stats. Coinkite's mission? Making Bitcoin user-friendly while championing decentralization. Remember, your financial control matters. Check out Coinkite's offerings, and take the step towards accessible Bitcoin management. Get 5% off using my link: https://store.coinkite.com/promo/COINSTORIES — CrowdHealth offers the Bitcoin alternative to health insurance. Instead of sending money to a fiat health insurance company, save it and help crowdfund the Bitcoin community's medical care. When someone in the community has a health need, you help them out directly. And if you need care, CrowdHealth negotiates down your medical bill (lower than what insurance would be) and the community helps you cover it. https://www.joincrowdhealth.com/natalie to sign up. The Orange Pill App is building the social layer for Bitcoin and creating opportunities for in-person connections and building community. Connect with HODLers and Bitcoin events based on your location. Download The Orange Pill App and get more information at https://www.TheOrangePillApp.com. -- OTHER RESOURCES Natalie's website https://talkingbitcoin.com/ -- VALUE FOR VALUE — SUPPORT NATALIE'S SHOWS Strike ID https://strike.me/coinstoriesnat/ Cash App $CoinStories BTC wallet bc1ql8dqjp46s4eq9k3lxt0lxzh6f2wcu35cl6944d -- FOLLOW NATALIE ON SOCIAL MEDIA Twitter https://twitter.com/natbrunell Instagram https://www.instagram.com/nataliebrunell Linkedin https://www.linkedin.com/in/nataliebrunell -- PRODUCER: Aron Bender https://www.linkedin.com/in/aron-bender/ -- DISCLAIMER This show is for entertainment purposes only and does not give financial advice. Before making any decisions consult a professional. #bitcoin #cryptocurrency #money
Dr. Susie Reilly, DDS is a wife, mother of four and dentist who retired recently with her husband in Hawaii. She found success and financial security through her dentistry business, but going down the rabbit hole made her question the way she was spending and saving money. Her 17-year-old son told her about Bitcoin in 2019, and began to buy. After studying Bitcoin for several years, she and her husband decided that it was time to retire, sell their business and home, and dollar cost average into more Bitcoin. Susie recently launched a medical clinic in El Zone, El Salvador and is looking for volunteers with work with patients there. You can DM her on Twitter for more information. You can donate to the victims of the Lahaina wildfires in Maui at www.lahainafirefund.com -- Twitter: https://twitter.com/susiebdds -- Partners: Coin Stories is powered by @Swan_Bitcoin the best way to build your Bitcoin stack with automated Bitcoin savings plans and instant purchases. Swan serves clients of any size, from $10 to $10M+. Visit https://www.swanbitcoin.com/nataliebrunell for $10 in Bitcoin when you sign up. -- Bitcoin Amsterdam is returning to Europe October 12-13th! Speakers include Edward Snowden, Stella Assange and Adam Back. And next year come join us at Bitcoin 2024 on July 25-27 in Nashville! Get your early bird pass at a steep discount at https://b.tc/conference. Use code HODL for 10% off both events. -- Fold is the best Bitcoin rewards debit card and shopping app in the world. Earn Bitcoin on everything you purchase with Fold's Bitcoin cash back debit card, and spin the Daily Wheel to earn free Bitcoin. Head to https://www.foldapp.com/natalie and you can get up to 10,000 satoshis when you sign up. -- I'm proud to partner with @CoinkiteInc your go-to tech company for top-notch Bitcoin custody solutions. The ColdCard wallet offers a safe haven for your Bitcoin, securely storing your digital assets offline. Check out Coinkite's offerings, and take the step towards accessible Bitcoin management. Get 5% off using my link https://store.coinkite.com/promo/COINSTORIES -- CrowdHealth offers the Bitcoin alternative to health insurance. When you have a health need, CrowdHealth negotiates down the cost of your medical bill and then crowdfunds the balance from the community. The rest of the money you would have spent on insurance and healthcare costs? Yours to keep! https://www.joincrowdhealth.com/natalie to sign up. -- The Orange Pill App is building the social layer for Bitcoin and creating opportunities for in-person connections and building community. Connect with HODLers and Bitcoin events based on your location. Download The Orange Pill App and more at http://signup.theorangepillapp.com/opa/natbrunell. -- If you're looking for the highest-quality sustainable pork, steak and seafood products, look no further than Campo Grande. Their animals are raised on family-owned farms and are antibiotic-free, hormone-free, slow-growth, and carbon negative. For $20 off Campo Grande boxes use code HODL: https://eatcampogrande.com/HODL -- OTHER RESOURCES Natalie's website https://talkingbitcoin.com/ -- VALUE FOR VALUE — SUPPORT NATALIE'S SHOWS Strike ID https://strike.me/coinstoriesnat/ Cash App $CoinStories BTC wallet bc1ql8dqjp46s4eq9k3lxt0lxzh6f2wcu35cl6944d -- FOLLOW NATALIE ON SOCIAL MEDIA Twitter https://twitter.com/natbrunell Instagram https://www.instagram.com/nataliebrunell Linkedin https://www.linkedin.com/in/nataliebrunell -- Producer: Aron Bender https://www.linkedin.com/in/aron-bender/ -- DISCLAIMER This show is for entertainment purposes only and does not give financial advice. Before making any decisions consult a professional. #bitcoin #cryptocurrency #money
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit public.substack.comJulian Assange is such a threat to America's national security that he should die in prison, according to the United States government. Joe Biden, when he was vice president, called Assange a “high-tech terrorist.” Secretary of State under President Donald J. Trump, Mike Pompeo, likened Assange's Wikileaks organization to a “non-state hostile intelligence service.”According to U.S. government investigators and prosecutors, Assange conspired to steal classified documents and, by publishing them, put the lives of innocent American allies in danger. U.S. Secretary of State Anthony Blinken, who denounced Assange again recently, pointed out the US government is charging him with “very serious criminal conduct.” If Britain extradites Assange to the U.S., he will likely be tried, found guilty, and could be sentenced to 175 years in prison. And yet there is no evidence that what Assange did resulted in any deaths or compromising of the national security of the United States or its allies. The U.S. admitted in court in 2013 and in 2020 that it can not tie a single death or instance of harm to the Wikileaks disclosure of confidential human sources. In 2010, the day before Biden called Assage a “high-tech terrorist,” Biden said, “I don't think there's any substantive damage.”Pompeo's view of Assange is not universally held among Trump supporters, many of whom lobbied Trump to pardon Assange and were disappointed when he didn't. Meanwhile, independent observers agree Assange's actions hurt no one. "Mr. Assange is not a criminal convict and poses no threat to anyone,” said the UN Special Rapporteur on Torture Nils Meltzer in his 2020 appeal to British Authorities, “so his prolonged solitary confinement in a high-security prison is neither necessary nor proportionate and clearly lacks any legal basis.”Assange rose to international prominence in 2010 when he published a series of leaks, which exposed the reality of the U.S. government's war crimes, its habit of spying on friends – and the rampant corruption that fuels global politics. In all, Wikileaks published hundreds of thousands of classified diplomatic and military documents – including the “Iraq War Logs,” the “Afghan War Diaries,” and the “Embassy Cables,” leaked by U.S. Army Intelligence Analyst Chelsea Manning. The leaks enraged the government, but the Obama Administration stopped short of extraditing and prosecuting Assange. Now, under an indictment issued by the Trump Administration and updated by Biden's Department of Justice, Assange stands accused of doing what is essentially the mandate of national security journalists everywhere: to acquire and publish government secrets.The US government's allegation that Assange unsuccessfully conspired to help a US soldier crack a password to access files is also problematic. The evidence shows the soldier didn't need Assange's help because she had Top Secret security clearance and legitimate access to the files in question. As such, Assange stands accused of conspiring to help his source conceal their identity – a core tenet of good journalism. Journalists are obliged to employ measures to limit their source's risk of exposure and retaliation – things like using a pseudonym to protect someone's identity, communicating over encrypted messaging platforms, or redacting sensitive documents before publication.We at Public agree that revealing confidential human sources or other sensitive information is wrong in most instances. Assange should have redacted the information he released to protect people. Any journalist or publisher should consider the impact of their behavior on a wide variety of other people. But Assange's missteps do not warrant the punishment of death in prison. There is a good reason that “No harm, no foul” remains the standard in many criminal cases. And whatever harm Assange may have caused, he has more than repaid it in the punishment of being either on the run or incarcerated for 12 years.Moreover, what Assange and Wikileaks exposed — serious war crimes and U.S. government spying on its allies — is of great importance. Assange played the same constitutionally protected role of journalist-publisher that the New York Times and Washington Post did when they published a classified history of the Vietnam War. These documents, stolen by Defense Department analyst Daniel Ellsberg in 1969, came to be known as the “Pentagon Papers.” In 1971, the Supreme Court ruled that the Nixon Administration could not prevent publication, offering a deep precedent and robust defense of the First Amendment that arguably protects Assange, too.The indictment criminalizes practices that are routine to good journalism and essential to the ethical framework that makes it possible. Even the New York Times acknowledges that news organizations received exactly the same archive of documents from Wikileaks without government permission. President Biden can't champion values like due process, free speech, and the right to asylum only when it's convenient. Given that, why is the Biden administration still threatening Assange with 175 years in prison?To answer that question, we sat down with a woman who is a member of Assange's legal team and the mother of his children, Stella Assange. What she told us is of great importance, not just for a single person but also for the future of free speech and journalism.The War On Journalism
Brian Roemmele is the founder, editor and CEO of Multiplex, a publication focusing on artificial intelligence and existing and emerging technologies. The scientist, researcher and analyst, has been exploring AI since he was a teenager in the 70's and 80's, and has built and run hundreds of payments and tech businesses. Follow Brian on Twitter https://twitter.com/BrianRoemmele -- In this episode we discuss: Human intelligence vs machines How does ChatGPT work? Will AI harm humans? Will the first trillion dollar company be AI? Deepfake concerns Bitcoin as a truth network and currency of AI Downloading your experiences into AI "wisdom keepers" Can you live forever through AI? -- Partners: Coin Stories is powered by @Swan_Bitcoin the best way to build your Bitcoin stack with automated Bitcoin savings plans and instant purchases. Swan serves clients of any size, from $10 to $10M+. Visit https://www.swanbitcoin.com/nataliebrunell for $10 in Bitcoin when you sign up. -- Bitcoin Amsterdam is returning to Europe October 12-13th! Speakers include Edward Snowden, Stella Assange and Adam Back. And next year come join us at Bitcoin 2024 on July 25-27 in Nashville! Get your early bird pass at a steep discount at https://b.tc/conference. Use code HODL for 10% off both events. -- Fold is the best Bitcoin rewards debit card and shopping app in the world. Earn Bitcoin on everything you purchase with Fold's Bitcoin cash back debit card, and spin the Daily Wheel to earn free Bitcoin. Head to https://www.foldapp.com/natalie and you can get up to 10,000 satoshis when you sign up. -- I'm proud to partner with @CoinkiteInc your go-to tech company for top-notch Bitcoin custody solutions. The ColdCard wallet offers a safe haven for your Bitcoin, securely storing your digital assets offline. Check out Coinkite's offerings, and take the step towards accessible Bitcoin management. Get 5% off using my link https://store.coinkite.com/promo/COINSTORIES -- CrowdHealth offers the Bitcoin alternative to health insurance. When you have a health need, CrowdHealth negotiates down the cost of your medical bill and then crowdfunds the balance from the community. The rest of the money you would have spent on insurance and healthcare costs? Yours to keep! https://www.joincrowdhealth.com/natalie to sign up. -- The Orange Pill App is building the social layer for Bitcoin and creating opportunities for in-person connections and building community. Connect with HODLers and Bitcoin events based on your location. Download The Orange Pill App and more at http://signup.theorangepillapp.com/opa/natbrunell. -- If you're looking for the highest-quality sustainable pork, steak and seafood products, look no further than Campo Grande. Their animals are raised on family-owned farms and are antibiotic-free, hormone-free, slow-growth, and carbon negative. For $20 off Campo Grande boxes use code HODL: https://eatcampogrande.com/HODL -- OTHER RESOURCES Natalie's website https://talkingbitcoin.com/ -- VALUE FOR VALUE — SUPPORT NATALIE'S SHOWS Strike ID https://strike.me/coinstoriesnat/ Cash App $CoinStories BTC wallet bc1ql8dqjp46s4eq9k3lxt0lxzh6f2wcu35cl6944d -- FOLLOW NATALIE ON SOCIAL MEDIA Twitter https://twitter.com/natbrunell Instagram https://www.instagram.com/nataliebrunell Linkedin https://www.linkedin.com/in/nataliebrunell -- Producer: Aron Bender https://www.linkedin.com/in/aron-bender/ -- DISCLAIMER This show is for entertainment purposes only and does not give financial advice. Before making any decisions consult a professional. #bitcoin #cryptocurrency #money
In this gripping and eye-opening episode, Niall sits down with Stella Assange, the wife of Julian Assange, to discuss the tumultuous life Julian has faced since his arrest in 2019. With the looming threat of extradition to the U.S., Stella opens up about the challenges and difficulties they have encountered during this trying time. Stella passionately speaks about Julian's significant contributions to journalism, highlighting his brave decision to release vital information and the impactful "Collateral Murder" video. This classified video, leaked by WikiLeaks in April 2010, exposed a tragic incident during the Iraq War where civilians, including Reuters journalists, were killed by a U.S. Army Apache helicopter crew in Baghdad. The shocking video sparked global controversy, leading to debates on military conduct, transparency, and accountability. The release of the "Collateral Murder" video brought immense attention to WikiLeaks and its founder, Julian Assange. It ignited discussions on the role of whistleblowers in revealing classified information and the delicate balance between national security and the public's right to be informed about government actions. Throughout the episode, Stella sheds light on the corruption within the U.S. government and expresses grave concerns about Julian's safety and well-being if he were to be deported to the U.S. The implications of Julian's potential extradition raise serious questions about justice, freedom of the press, and the potential risks he may face if handed over. As Stella shares her deeply personal perspective on Julian's life after arrest, listeners gain profound insights into the complexities and challenges surrounding his situation. The episode delves into the importance of journalistic integrity, transparency in government actions, and the critical role whistleblowers play in holding those in power accountable. In a bold and resolute stance, Stella has publicly voiced her vehement disapproval and condemnation of Ireland's newly enacted hate speech legislation. With unwavering determination, Stella has emerged as a vocal advocate for free speech rights and has expressed deep concerns about the potential consequences that this legislation may have on the fundamental liberties of individuals. Don't miss this explosive and heartfelt episode, as Stella Assange's voice adds a powerful dimension to the ongoing global conversation about press freedom, government transparency, and the protection of whistleblowers. It serves as a poignant reminder of the significance of a free press in a democratic society and the need to safeguard those who dare to expose the truth.
In this gripping and eye-opening episode, Niall sits down with Stella Assange, the wife of Julian Assange, to discuss the tumultuous life Julian has faced since his arrest in 2019. With the looming threat of extradition to the U.S., Stella opens up about the challenges and difficulties they have encountered during this trying time. Stella passionately speaks about Julian's significant contributions to journalism, highlighting his brave decision to release vital information and the impactful "Collateral Murder" video. This classified video, leaked by WikiLeaks in April 2010, exposed a tragic incident during the Iraq War where civilians, including Reuters journalists, were killed by a U.S. Army Apache helicopter crew in Baghdad. The shocking video sparked global controversy, leading to debates on military conduct, transparency, and accountability. The release of the "Collateral Murder" video brought immense attention to WikiLeaks and its founder, Julian Assange. It ignited discussions on the role of whistleblowers in revealing classified information and the delicate balance between national security and the public's right to be informed about government actions. Throughout the episode, Stella sheds light on the corruption within the U.S. government and expresses grave concerns about Julian's safety and well-being if he were to be deported to the U.S. The implications of Julian's potential extradition raise serious questions about justice, freedom of the press, and the potential risks he may face if handed over. As Stella shares her deeply personal perspective on Julian's life after arrest, listeners gain profound insights into the complexities and challenges surrounding his situation. The episode delves into the importance of journalistic integrity, transparency in government actions, and the critical role whistleblowers play in holding those in power accountable. In a bold and resolute stance, Stella has publicly voiced her vehement disapproval and condemnation of Ireland's newly enacted hate speech legislation. With unwavering determination, Stella has emerged as a vocal advocate for free speech rights and has expressed deep concerns about the potential consequences that this legislation may have on the fundamental liberties of individuals. Don't miss this explosive and heartfelt episode, as Stella Assange's voice adds a powerful dimension to the ongoing global conversation about press freedom, government transparency, and the protection of whistleblowers. It serves as a poignant reminder of the significance of a free press in a democratic society and the need to safeguard those who dare to expose the truth.
Today in “The Watchdog” studio, Lowkey is joined by Assange's wife Stella. Stella Assange is a South-African born lawyer and human rights defender. Her most famous case is undoubtedly that of her husband, whom she married in 2022. For years, Stella has tirelessly traveled the world raising awareness of Julian's situation. Before marrying Julian, she attained degrees from the School of African and Oriental Studies (SOAS) in London and from the University of Oxford. Earlier this year, she met with Pope Francis to discuss the situation of whom Lowkey described as “the political prisoner of our time.”For Lowkey, Assange's brilliance was taking his anti-war passions and finding a way to directly work with units within the U.S. military to make the public aware of the illegal, immoral, and deeply unpopular decisions being taken in our name. As he said today:Some of the most deeply heinous and hideous aspects of the Iraqi and Afghan occupations by the U.S., Britain and their allies, have been revealed within the WikiLeaks files. We are talking about millions of documents being made available to the public to understand truly what was happening.”Despite this, the media cheered Assange's arrest. The Washington Post's editorial board, for example, claimed Assange was “no free-press hero” and insisted the arrest was “long overdue.” Likewise, The Wall Street Journal demanded he faces some “accountability,” claiming, “His targets always seem to be democratic institutions or governments.” Yet, as Lowkey and Stella discussed today, the implications for a free press from this case are extraordinary and perilous.Stella also put a human face to the story, discussing how difficult her husband's persecution has been. “It's a daily struggle. It is up and down… Prison life is part of our daily life,” she said, noting that prison authorities limit how much they can speak. When she first met Julian, he was 39. He is now 52, and his health has seriously deteriorated.Yet even if Assange is somehow liberated, he has still suffered greatly, as Stella told Lowkey. “We will still have been robbed of our lives together. Our children will have been robbed of their early childhood with their father. We are never going to get that back,” she said.Support the showThe MintPress podcast, “The Watchdog,” hosted by British-Iraqi hip hop artist Lowkey, closely examines organizations about which it is in the public interest to know – including intelligence, lobby and special interest groups influencing policies that infringe on free speech and target dissent. The Watchdog goes against the grain by casting a light on stories largely ignored by the mainstream, corporate media.Lowkey is a British-Iraqi hip-hop artist, academic and political campaigner. As a musician, he has collaborated with the Arctic Monkeys, Wretch 32, Immortal Technique and Akala. He is a patron of Stop The War Coalition, Palestine Solidarity Campaign, the Racial Justice Network and The Peace and Justice Project, founded by Jeremy Corbyn. He has spoken and performed on platforms from the Oxford Union to the Royal Albert Hall and Glastonbury. His latest album, Soundtrack To The Struggle 2, featured Noam Chomsky and Frankie Boyle and has been streamed millions of times.
In this episode of CODEPINK Radio, Marcy Winograd covers the arrest of CODEPINK activists to free Julian Assange, and shares interviews with journalist Glenn Greenwald and Stella Assange on why the US attempt to extradite and prosecute Assange threatens freedom of the press. On the second half of the program, Marcy discusses with CODEPINK Co-founder Medea Benjamin congressional efforts to stop President Biden from sending banned cluster bombs to Ukraine, and shares a presentation by Seviim Degdelen, a member of the German Left Party, on the need for Germany to exit NATO and support a ceasefire in Ukraine.
Lawyer and human rights defender Stella Assange joins Alan Rusbridger to discuss the US government's attempts to extradite her husband Julian, his imprisonment in HMP Belmarsh, her recent meeting with the Pope and the threat to journalism posed by secrecy laws.Music Credit: "JUMBO" from the album "MUSIC FOR THE LEFT-HANDED" by Mick Bass & Tot Taylor Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This is a LIVE recording from a special event with me, Michael Shellenberger and Matt Taibbi, exposing the Censorship Industrial Complex at Westminster Hall in London. What is the Censorship Industrial Complex? And how did government agencies, academic institutions and private groups begin censoring you? Listen out for surprise guests, including Shawshank Redemption star Tim Robbins and Stella Assange, wife of Julian Assange. My comedy special 'Brandemic' is out now! https://moment.co/russellbrand For a bit more from us join our Stay Free Community here: https://russellbrand.locals.com/ Come to my festival COMMUNITY - https://www.russellbrand.com/community-2023/ NEW MERCH! https://stuff.russellbrand.com/
The QUAD summit scheduled in Sydney on 24 May was cancelled due to the last minute announcement that US president Biden will not be attending. AUKUS: The Australian Anti-AUKUS Coalition calls on the Australian government to withdraw from any future Quad meetings and will oppose any future meetings of the QUAD in Australia.Labour, Greens & Defence Experts have published and open letter calling for an AUKUS Parliamentary Inquiry.The White house responded to the threat of imminent defeat of UKRAINE.Stella Assange addressed the National Press Club in Canberra.
Jens Fischer Rodrian ist Musiker, Lyriker und Autor. Er doziert für Filmmusik im Masterstudiengang Film an der Hamburg Media School. Seine Filmmusiken wurden mehrmals ausgezeichnet. In New York wurde er Mitglied der bekannten Blue Man Group und arbeitete als Musiker und Produzent für die Blue Man Group Berlin. Mit Konstantin Wecker verband ihn eine jahrelange Zusammenarbeit.In diesem Gespräch tauschen sich Jens Fischer Rodrian und Rüdiger Lenz unter anderem über Frieden, Corona, den Krieg in der Ukraine, über Rodrians Weg als Musiker und Lyriker, über die Aufarbeitung der Pandemie-Zeit sowie über die Medien aus.Jens Fischer Rodrian ist ein bescheidener Mensch, der sich für Gerechtigkeit, Frieden, Freiheit und Gleichstellung einsetzt. Seine Lieder sind voll von Texten, die berühren.Mehr über Jens Fischer Rodrian hier: https://www.wahnundsinn.comJens Fischer Rodrian und mit ihm befreundete Musiker laden zu einem weiteren Solidaritätskonzert für den in politischer Haft freiheitsberaubten Investigativjournalisten Julian Assange ein. Die Einnahmen des Abends gehen an die Rechtsanwältin Stella Assange. Hier weitere Informationen zum Konzert: https://protestnoten.de/protestnoten-2-0-assange/Ort: Musikbrauerei, Greifswalder Str. 23a, 10405 BerlinZeitpunkt: Freitag, 02.06.2023 / Einlass 18:30 Uhr / Beginn 19:30 UhrKarten für das Konzert können hier erworben werden. https://protestnoten.de/produkt/ticket-solidaritaetskonzert/Außerdem gibt es eine Crowdfunding-Kampagne für das zugehörige Album. https://protestnoten.de/crowdfunding-assange/Das Konzert wird von apolut.net mitgeschnitten.+++Apolut ist auch als kostenlose App für Android- und iOS-Geräte verfügbar! Über unsere Homepage kommen Sie zu den Stores von Apple und Huawei. Hier der Link: https://apolut.net/app/Die apolut-App steht auch zum Download (als sogenannte Standalone- oder APK-App) auf unserer Homepage zur Verfügung. Mit diesem Link können Sie die App auf Ihr Smartphone herunterladen: https://apolut.net/apolut_app.apk+++Abonnieren Sie jetzt den apolut-Newsletter: https://apolut.net/newsletter/+++Ihnen gefällt unser Programm? Informationen zu Unterstützungsmöglichkeiten finden Sie hier: https://apolut.net/unterstuetzen/+++Unterstützung für apolut kann auch als Kleidung getragen werden! Hier der Link zu unserem Fan-Shop: https://harlekinshop.com/pages/apolut+++Website und Social Media:Website: https://apolut.net/Odysee: https://odysee.com/@apolut:aRumble: https://rumble.com/Apoluthttps://twitter.com/apolut_netInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/apolut_net/Gettr: https://gettr.com/user/apolut_netTelegram: https://t.me/s/apolutFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/apolut/ Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Stella Assange, wife of Wikileaks founder Julian Assange, reveals that his release from prison may be imminent, calling on Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to secure his freedom. Amidst this development, we delve into the market's recent downtrend, breaking through long-held support levels, signaling a potential downturn. Join us as we explore these pressing topics and discuss the implications. Join us on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@unspokentruthofficial Join our community: https://theunspokentruth.com.au/ --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/unspokentruthofficial/message
Political reporter Sara Tomevska interviews Julian Assange's Lawyer Jennifer Robinson, following Stella Assange's address to the National Press Club in Canberra.
Stella Assange is the wife of Julian Assange, the founder of Wikileaks, a whistle-blowing platform that publishes classified material provided by anonymous sources. He is currently being held in Belmarsh Prison pending extradition to the US, where he is wanted for 18 criminal charges related to obtaining and publishing classified information. Stella is leading a campaign to fight his extradition, which has been depicted in a new documentary, Ithaka. She tells Nuala why she thinks Julian should be released, how they first met and the impact of the campaign on their two young children. Award-winning comedian Zoe Lyons tells Nuala about her ‘monumental' midlife crisis. It involved buying a sports car, having a brief marital separation and running a 100k ultra marathon… badly. Along the way, her hair started to fall out. Thankfully, Zoe has been able to explore the funny side and create her stand-up show Bald Ambition. Nurses are set to be given body-worn cameras in a crackdown on hospital sexual assaults under new government plans. A recent report published by The Women's Rights Network revealed that thousands of sex attacks have been reported in hospitals across England and Wales in the past 4 years. Nuala is joined by Heather Binning, Founder of The Women's Rights Network, and Catriona Rubens, a solicitor at human rights law firm Leigh Day. Dr Lil Stevens recently found out that her grandfather, Captain Leicester Stevens, had taken part in an expedition to find a dinosaur in the rainforests of the Congo known as the Congo 'thunder lizard' (later dismissed as a hoax) following World War 1. Lil, who works at a palaeontologist, has dedicated her career to studying fossils and was amazed to discover the family connection. Presenter: Nuala McGovern Producer: Lucinda Montefiore
Julian Assange legde met zijn mediaplatform WikiLeaks de oorlogsmisdaden van Amerikaanse en Europese legers in Irak en Afghanistan bloot. Ooit aanleiding voor een nominatie voor de Nobelprijs voor de Vrede, wordt zijn journalistieke werk vandaag beloond met een heksenjacht en gevangenschap. Buiten strijdt zijn vrouw Stella voor zijn vrijheid. Peter Mertens gaat met haar in gesprek. Opgelet! Deze podcast is in het Engels.
Joining Gavan On the Record is Stella Assange. Together they discuss the ongoing fight for Julian's release from prison, the circumstances surrounding his arrest, as well as her new documentary film 'Ithaka'.
Die Ehefrau des in London inhaftierten WikiLeaks-Gründers stellte sich am Freitag, den 14. Oktober, bei der Berliner NoisyLeaks-Ausstellung den Fragen des Publikums. Dominik Wetzel hatte dabei Gelegenheit, ihr für die NachDenkSeiten einige Frage zu stellen und hat für unsere Leser Auszüge aus dem Gespräch mit der Öffentlichkeit niedergeschrieben. Ihre Antworten lassen tief blicken. DieserWeiterlesen
Before they went after Assange, they locked out Wikileaks from using their crowd funding platforms. The one that did not censor remained; Bitcoin. There's a special relationship between the early adopters of Bitcoin and Julian Assange. Stella Assange, Julian's wife, and Gabriel Shipton, his brother, appeared as guest speakers at the Bitcoin Amsterdam conference October 12th in Amsterdam. In this report we first see Dutch activist Djamila le Pair interview Gabriel about recent developments in the case of Assange, in front of the information booth she was allowed to host in the exhibition hall. Followed by a part of Stella's address in the main auditorium, as taken from the live stream.article/links: https://potkaars.nl/blog/2022/10/12/report-from-bitcoin-conference-amsterdam-2022-with-gabriel-shipton-and-stella-assange
Julian Assange faces up to 175 years behind bars if he's extradited to the United States. Why? Because he embarrassed the world's remaining superpower by exposing its war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan. His wife, Stella, joins us to explain why what Assange did is so important, why he has suffered persecution, the human impact on both of them - and why everyone should join a human chain around Parliament on Saturday 8th October: https://www.nuj.org.uk/learn/ems-event-calendar/free-assange-human-chain.htmlPlease subscribe - and helps us take on the right-wing media here: https://patreon.com/owenjones84Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/the-owen-jones-podcast. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Dr. Peterson's extensive catalog is available now on DailyWire+: https://utm.io/ueSXh Stella Assange and Dr Jordan B Peterson discuss the freedom of information, the age of journalism on the internet, and the foremost political prisoner in the west: Julian Assange. Stella Assange is a lawyer with a degree in law and politics from the SOAS University in London, an MSC in refugee law from Oxford, and a masters degree in public International law from Madrid. Her husband, Julian Assange, is somewhat infamous not only for founding Wikileaks, but for publishing classified government documents that lead to his unlawful imprisonment. Today, Stella leads the charge for his freedom and for the freedom of information. —Links— For Stella Assange: Twitter: @STELLAMORIS1 For US/Canada: https://assangedefense.org/take-action/ For UK viewers: https://dontextraditeassange.com/take-action/ The Trial of Julian Assange: A Story of Persecution by Nils Melzer https://www.amazon.com/Trial-Julian-Assange-Story-Persecution/dp/1839766220/ —Chapters— (0:00) Coming up(1:04) Intro(7:30) 750 thousand pages of trouble(15:14) Incautious journalism(24:32) Sexual misconduct allegations(38:37) The Ecuadorian embassy(47:26) The US enters the fold, fault 7(58:28) Has the US prosecution achieved their goals?(1:04:05) Moving the goal post, 17 charges(1:12:45) Why the battle cannot be waged in a US court(1:22:13) The constitutionality of the espionage act(1:27:50) What this means going forward(1:37:41) To stand one's ground // SUPPORT THIS CHANNEL //Newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/jordanbpeterson.com/youtubesignupDonations: https://jordanbpeterson.com/donate // COURSES //Discovering Personality: https://jordanbpeterson.com/personalitySelf Authoring Suite: https://selfauthoring.comUnderstand Myself (personality test): https://understandmyself.com // BOOKS //Beyond Order: 12 More Rules for Life: https://jordanbpeterson.com/Beyond-Order12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos: https://jordanbpeterson.com/12-rules-for-lifeMaps of Meaning: The Architecture of Belief: https://jordanbpeterson.com/maps-of-meaning // LINKS //Website: https://jordanbpeterson.comEvents: https://jordanbpeterson.com/eventsBlog: https://jordanbpeterson.com/blogPodcast: https://jordanbpeterson.com/podcast // SOCIAL //Twitter: https://twitter.com/jordanbpetersonInstagram: https://instagram.com/jordan.b.petersonFacebook: https://facebook.com/drjordanpetersonTelegram: https://t.me/DrJordanPetersonAll socials: https://linktr.ee/drjordanbpeterson #JordanPeterson #JordanBPeterson #DrJordanPeterson #DrJordanBPeterson #DailyWirePlus
Stella Assange, the wife of the WikiLeaks co-founder Julian Assange, says she will appeal against Britain's decision to approve his extradition to the US to face criminal charges. The Wikileaks co-founder is charged with breaching the Espionage Act and faces up to 175 years in jail if convicted.
jQuery(document).ready(function(){ cab.clickify(); }); Original Podcast with clickable words https://tinyurl.com/2bqm7ryw Contact: irishlingos@gmail.com Julian Assange's extradition to the United States approved. Eiseachadadh Julian Assange chun na Stát Aontaithe ceadaithe. The extradition of Julian Assange, founder of WikiLeaks, to the United States for trial on criminal charges has been approved by UK Home Secretary Priti Patel. Tá eiseachadadh Julian Assange, bunaitheoir WikiLeaks, chun na Stát Aontaithe chun gur féidir é a chur ar a thriail maidir le cúiseanna coiriúla, ceadaithe ag Rúnaí Baile na Ríochta Aontaithe, Priti Patel. Authorities in the United States are pursuing Assange for 18 counts, including spying on leaked secret US military documents by WikiLeaks. Tá na hÚdaráis sna Stáit Aontaihe sa tóir ar Assange maidir le 18 cúis, ina measc, cúis spiaireachta maidir le cáipéisí rúnda míleata de chuid na Stát Aontaithe a sceith WikiLeaks. Judges in London ruled that his extradition would not be a violation of his human rights and that he would be treated fairly in the United States. Chinn breithiúna i Londain nach sárú ar a chearta daonna a bheadh ann dá ndéanfaí é a eiseachadadh agus go gcaithfí go cóir leis sna Stáit Aontaithe. Authorities in America have long wanted to extradite him in connection with documents leaked by Wikileaks in 2010 and 2011 that have endangered people as well as breaking the law, they say. Tá na húdaráis i Meiriceá ag iarraidh é a eiseachadadh le fada an lá maidir le cáipéisí a sceith Wikileaks in 2010 agus 2011 agus ar cuireadh daoine i gcontúirt mar gheall air chomh maith leis an dlí a bhriseadh, a deir siad. Supporters of Julian Assange say he is an anti-establishment hero and has been discriminated against because he exposed the injustices of conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan and say the prosecution is a political attack on journalism and freedom of speech. Deir lucht tacaíochta Julian Assange gur laoch frithbhunaíochta atá ann agus gur déanadh leatrom a imirt air toisc gur nocht sé éagóracha a bhain le coimhlintí san Iaráic agus san Afganastáin agus deir siad gur ionsaí polaitiúil atá san ionchúiseamh ar iriseoireacht agus saoirse cainte. Julian Assange's wife Stella Assange has said they are to appeal. Tá sé ráite ag Stella Assange, bean chéile Julian Assange go bhfuil siad chun achomharc a dhéanamh. Julian Assange has 14 days to appeal. Tá 14 lá ag Julian Assange achomharc a dhéanamh. Julian Assange's extradition to the United States approved Eiseachadadh Julian Assange chun na Stát Aontaithe ceadaithe
Nakba Melb vox pop here II We asked people at the recent Melbourne rally marking the 1948 expulsion and murder of Palestinians by Zions why they came to the rally. Why is it important to stand up.Stella Assange Speaks here II Stella Assange's speech outside the UK Home Office on May 17th. The extradiction ruling for Julian Assange is expected by May 31.This is the Week here II Kevin Healy runs through the week - if it wasn't so serious it would be funny.Climate Goals Held to Ransom here II Voices from a recent on-line rally around the use of the insidious ECT, Energy Charter Treaty, to gouge money from countries putting in legislation to protect the environment. We feature a small snippet from a UK Union Caucus meeting that looks at the upcoming COP27 meetings.
None of the organisers had ever dreamt it would be this much of a success. The Free Assange Wave in Brussels kicked off with a panel session on Friday evening, the 22nd of April 2022, and continued the next day with a protest rally, laced with high-profile speakers and dedicated artists. In this podcast, Potkaars interviews the organisers who describe how seemingly out of nowhere, a bunch of unaffiliated Europe-based Assange campaigners got together online and organised it. This is a twently minute edit of ther full 70 minute interview that can be viewed here: https://youtu.be/s2Lb4iuLPqgThe organisers discuss the travelling statue 'Anything to say' with its creator and a new rally and art exhibition event coming up in Leipzig Germany on July 2nd and 3rd. They call artists to action on every stage, much like they did themselves in Brussels april 22nd where guest speakers included Christophe Marchand, Assange's Belgian human rights lawyer and member of Assange's international legal team. Musician David Rovics, and speeches by UK MP Jeremy Corbyn, Iceland's ex-minister Ögmundur Jonásson, EU MP Mick Wallace, Annie Machon (ex-MI5) and German MP Andrej Hunko. Throughout this interview you'll see images from the event and of a performace blending into Assange's voice chiming over La Place de la Monnaie where Stella Assange voiced a heart-breaking and hopeful ‘Thank You' to all present, while her husband's words resonated:“If you give up what is uniquely yours, as a human being, if you surrender your consciousness, your independence, your sense of what is right and what is wrong, in other words, perhaps, without knowing it, you become passive and controlled, unable to defend yourselves and those you love. We have to educate each other. We have to celebrate those who reveal the truth. Denounce those who poison our ability to comprehend the world that we live in.”Please sign RSF's petition: https://rsf.org/en/petition/freeassange-sign-urge-uk-home-secretary-priti-patel-reject-julian-assange's-extraditionthe dance/speech performance on April 22nd in Brussels can be seen here in full source https://youtu.be/s2Lb4iuLPqgreport/article (in Dutch) https://potkaars.nl/blog/2022/5/10/julians-vrijheid-is-jouw-vrijheid-verslag-van-assange-rallies-in-europa-engelsguests: Davide Dormino, James Andrew, Marie France Deprez, Manja McCade, Michelle Aslanides, Kamila, Djamila le Pairhost: Rico Brouwer
The EU Free Assange Rally and Concert will be Saturday, April 23rd at 2 pm in front of EU HQ at the Place de la Monnaie in Brussels, Belgium. Jeremy Corbyn, Stella Assange, and loads of other great folks will be speaking, along with lots of live music as well, including the musicians featured in this little set.