Joining us now is we'll do a change away from this topic. Guard Goldsmith. Great to talk to you, Guard, thank you for joining us, Thanks for having me on David and terrific conversations. I agree with you one. Well, I won't throw you into that briar patch. But no, you know, you know, I was just sitting here having my moulick meat and meal worm on the side meal and I just thought I got to join the future. I don't know, it's just I need to learn all this
new stuff. Hey. By the way, I just wanted to compliment you again for bringing up I literally had this right next to me when you brought up cold case Christianity. I got it because of you, so thank you so much. You've done so much to help me. And well that's that's Jay Warner Wallace who did that. He did a great job, and he had an interesting journey to get to that point, really wise, a very interesting book and got there. Yeah. Yeah, we're looking at this.
Why they really do want to sent to some kind of a soilent green thing, isn't it? Isn't it amazing how they just take all these science fiction movies and they start implementing them. Whether it's yeah, I Went Green or nineteen eighty four or Brave New World. I mean, it's crazy. It's
crazy. They disconnect you from the natural world and how you might feed yourself and getting connected to the soil and getting attention to your neighbors, and as you were talking about with the psychedelics, disconnecting from God and changing your biochemical state in such a way that you're actually connected to a shaman to do something about that. It's just it's it's crazy. And you know, to bring it up, you talked about that that prime spree, the murder spree in
Maine, and whether or not the man was on psychoactive drugs. It's that's nobody's really talking about that. So why isn't that part of the conversation. And isn't it interesting that when the Washington Post says, you know, so these these psychedelics connect with a serotonin and we don't really know what's going on there, It's like, yeah, and you're not interested in finding out as
long as it's the big pharmaceutical companies doing it. You might question it when it is coming up with something as a competitor to the pharmaceutical companies, like
magic mushrooms, but you're not interested in it. When it's their SSRIs that's doing it, they don't talk about it at all, right, right, And as you said, there's a difference between mandating and compelling people not to take these things to the force of the state, engaging in aggression to tell people don't do that, and preaching to people just offering, offering what I think is a good way to go and you might want to try this.
And you know, I worked in a bookstore for many years part time, and we carried a lot of the alcoholics anonymous recovery material, the books, the recovery medallions for their twenty four hours, the one month and so on. So a lot of the anonymous guys would actually come in and I'd have great conversations with them, learning about so many of the patterns that emerged in the conversations. Now say, you know, I talked to this other guy,
is that similar with you? And it was always the things that I learned are actually very applicable to anybody, even if they don't have the classic, you know, termed addictive problems, which is that they would typically look at their opportunity to ingest some sort of a drug and get away from things as their opportunity. It's their chance. They've sacrificed so much. Now it's
my time to get away. So a mother would go into the car and drink or or you know, do something like taking heroin or something like that, because they just felt that this is my time to withdraw and get away and this is my release valve. And I found that that. You know, I think a lot of us feel those sorts of feelings. It's just if you've got those, especially if you've got that tendency, how do you guard against that and protect yourself and make it a fruitful thing to release a
little bit of pressure? How do you do it in a positive way? Can you help somebody else while you're doing it and have fun? Right and you learn something? Yeah, you know, we can do that in a lot of different ways. I mean we can get we can escape by watching TV or movies or sports or something like that. Or we can get obsessed
with it. You know, we can make it so that all we do is sit there and watch TV. Now we're not living our life or we've lost our life because we're sitting there on the couch in front of television. All the time, especially you know with sports, somebody can become a real sports fanatic or they can. There's nothing inherently wrong with it unless it becomes this thing that you lean on because it's an escape, out of out of
life. And then when it's this thing that you're trying to escape escape with it and it kind of takes over your life, that's when it becomes bad. And of course that can be anything. It could be food, you know, it could be it could be anything in your life. As it starts to dominate and take over your life and take you out of life, at that point it becomes evil. But yeah, you're you're right. We're
not trying to even things that that I would think are harmful. I'm not trying to get the government to ban them, except as I said, the m RNA, because I believe that's an outright poisonou kill shot. But in general, I don't believe in prohibition, and I'm not trying to get any force anybody into a particular religion or to agree with me in religion. And I don't want the government doing that either, because what happens is the government
winds up destroying that church that it joins. It joins the church and then destroys the church. And we know people like that too, you know, but so true, so true. Look what they've done with marriage for goodness sake, you know. And thank you again for about a year ago reading that piece that I wrote about marriage on substack. You know, don't put the state before God when it comes to marriage, you know, going into the history of it and how they tried to stop blacks and whites from marrying.
It's supposed to be a religious ceremony. And if you're going to get the government defining what marriage is and you're going to have command and control, central control of things, you're not going to get what you want because the people who are going to be in charge won't be the people eventually that you want to be in charge. Right, And rig is a good example. It really is a good example of the mixture of church and state because it
was a religious thing and then the government gets involved in it. The next thing, you know, government has defined it and defined it in a way to match with their religion of secular humanism, for example, and then prohibited all other form all other opinions about marriage and so and that's what they do in a broad sense on any kind of religion. When you have the government getting into a religion, they're going to wind up taking in an direction that
you probably don't want. Yeah, yeah, And you know, it reminds me actually of that. It's that that statement from nineteenth century the nineteenth century economist Frederick Bossia political philosopher, where he said the state is that great fiction by which everyone endeavors to live off of everyone else. And as perhaps says this, some folks want to celebrate Halloween. It is very vampiric, and uh, you know, it's it's it is. It's an interesting thing because
it removes people because they think everything's being decided in this sandbox. Every More stuff, more toys have been thrown into the sandbox, and they don't see that it comes at the expense of their neighbor. It comes at their expense. They say that is coming as at their expense. So I have to dive into I have to decide how this is going to be steered. I've got to get aboard this ship, and no, I don't want it. This is the moral culpability that is the problem. You know, we've discussed
on my streaming show. We've discussed Israel and Hamas, and I constantly hear, especially conservative talk radio hosts, they're saying, well, what are we going to do about it? And it's the all inclusive government statist WI. It's like, no, I don't want to be part of your Wii. Why are you taking the Royal Wii and claiming that somehow it represents me? This is and I mentioned on my show as well, the New York Times bomber, the one of the very few who actually was a terrorist that they
got a number of years ago. Who's gonna yet a car? And they ended up placing the explosives that the guy thought that he was going to blow up in Times Square, not New York Times, Times Square, and they asked him, how do you plead? And he said, I'm almost quoting verbatim. He said, guilty, guilty, a thousand times guilty. And if the US government continues to do what it is doing in the Middle East, more American civilians are going to die because they buy into the same canard
that we do. It's the royal we that they've translated from you know, old royal days where the monarch was le tete samois. I am the state to now you are all the state. It's all wonderful, it's kumbaya, it's we and they've wrapped their arms around you through force. I don't just leave me alone. I don't want to be molested. Just leave me alone. I don't need Joe Biden sniffing my well. I don't have any hair. But you know what I mean. Yeah, it's you know, we
look at all the different things that the US government does. I don't want that imputed to me. Yeah, that's not my policy. I don't support that. I didn't vote for that, and I don't I don't agree with that in any way, shape or form. And yet that is that is the big issue, and so we need to understand the same thing about other
people. That's what I said from the very beginning. You understand that the things that are done by the Israeli government to the Israeli people using them as labrass, but also to the Gaza people, that is not to be imputed to all the people living in Israel. The same thing goes of Hamas and the things that it does not to be imputed to all the people living in Gaza. Just as I don't want you know what Biden does or Trump does
imputed to me, you know. I mean, if that were the case, since we created this vaccine, I guess everybody would be justified in terms of wiping America off the face of the earth because we sew those shots around the world. I mean, it's crazy when you look at it, but we have to understand, you know, what's really going on. But everybody's
getting their blood loss up, you know. And I see they brought journalists over to Israel, and Joel Pollock at Breitbart was one of the ones that they took over to to show and he was just you know, people were throwing up when they showed them the pictures of what have been done to people. I understand that. And I wanted to throw up when I saw the pictures of what bombs had done to a little kid in Gaza. But you
understand that it's not the visceral effect. We got to try to distance ourselves from that somehow and say, how do we break this cycle of violence? How do we get a lid on this thing instead of escalating it. And everybody on both sides seems to want to escalate this, and they don't want to go back and look at the long term agenda that we've had for decades with the US and with Israel as well, with Neahu. We got to get Iran, you know that is It's like, okay, so that's really
what you're you're pushing us for. You got this geopolitical goal, and you're going to use us as expendable for your geopolitical goal. And you don't care how many of your own citizens dying. You certainly don't care about the citizens in the other countries. As a matter of fact, you take that as a victory, not you know, when you kill other people in other countries.
Yeah, And you know, it's interesting. I look at it almost like a combination of pretzel logic and convoluted circus performing where they'll they have all these various convolutions and they're very subtle. So for example, they the US government will insert federal troops, US troops without any declaration of war on the ground in Israel. They'll put them on the ground in Poland. And in Poland, Joe Biden actually acknowledges to one hundred and first airborne You'll you'll find
out about the Ukrainians. Oh that's right, some of you guys have already been there. Oh really, I didn't know that you were. You had them on the ground in Ukraine. Now you told us. And then we have John Kirby talking about how well the advisors of the US military, you know, they put it in air quotes. I suppose the advisors of the US military who are on the ground in Israel they have a right to defend
themselves. But even that is is it's a circumlocution of what is really the rights because and I've mentioned this to people before, I said, listen, do they really have a right to Sure, they have the right to protect themselves, But if they're there illegitimately on somebody else's dime, and the weapons that they have they didn't buy themselves, then what right exactly are they exercising
over there? You know? Are they are they? I mean, if a mafia sends one of its mob guys to a new city with guns that they got through shaking down some of the local people in Brooklyn, does that man then have the right to use the fruits of ill gotten gains? Or is there a moral question there? You know? And I think there are major moral questions even in that sort of typical phraseology that we hear from people where they say, well, they obviously have a right there. Well,
you're not questioning the fact that you put them there illegitimately. And if we're looking at the weapons that they've got, what if I don't want to pay for their weapons? And that goes to the weapons even if the people of the United States aren't there, If we're looking at the weapons that they send over, well, take a look at Syria. Talk about justification. Okay, we could be invited into Israel, and I'm sure they would love to
have additional troops in there to work with them. We were not invited into Syria. We invaded Syria, we set up bases in Syria. And then we've had US jets do attacks today and they said they were retaliatory. Retaliatory for what retaliatory because we invaded they attacked us in response to that, and so now, oh, now we're justified to escalate that. That is the key issue, and we have done that over and over again. And so when you look at what is happening, Seria is a good example. They've
got their agenda what they want to do with oil. They got their agenda with what they want to do with oil, with Iran as well as with Iran's power base. And so this is about the geopolitics. This is about the long term animal stay between Iran and the US that goes back to the nineteen fifties when we overthrew their elected leftist leader who wanted to nationalize industries. But of course, in America, we just think it was you know,
the Shaw was always there. He wasn't put in by us. We don't know that the CIO was training his secret police, and we don't care or know anything about the about what he was doing to the people there. And then just all of a sudden, for no apparent reason, there's this radical Islamic regime that gets installed and they hate Americans and we don't can't understand why they hate us. Yeah, my formative years came without that, without that
knowledge of the foreground to all of it. So I came in with exactly those thoughts. I thought, why why do they hate Americans? You know, why is it that they've done this? Oh? I just must, I must make sure that I don't like Iranians. Then I met a woman from Iran. She goes, well, you know it used to be called Persia, Like, what are you talking about if I was a kid, and I was like, why, she goes, well, let me tell
you what happened. And I'm like, oh, I see okay. And you know, David, it's interesting, as you mentioned it, because they have all these subtle means to you know, that there's so many perverse incentives anytime that a government institution or something removed from individuals claims power. So we've got the jabs, we've got the pharmachia, we've got the perverse incentives to gin the system and make sure that their money goes towards promoting a particular so
called public health agenda. And as you brought up, there is no such thing as public health as individual health. So anytime you remove it from the individual or free association and you're applying mandates and so on to people, there's an incentive for people to get in to have those mandates steer to their benefit.
Obviously rent seeking in economics, right, And we see the same thing with the military industrial complex, whether it's public health or so called public defense further away, and the founders really understood this, you know, they wanted small, decentralized localities really running their own thing. And I think that, you know, the lessons from Exodus are very clear. If you look at before they had a king, you look at the system that they had.
They had the tribes, they had the families, they had the elders and the families who were the adjudicators. It's much like ancient Ireland, much like ancient Iceland. They had these locales, localities, and it was mostly reputation.
It wasn't statutes from the state thrown down at people. And I think that this is the sort of thing that a lot of people they just just sort of blithely go along with it because they think that they've got these protective machines in the government, and the machines are just they're designed to get taken over by people who will take advantage of them, whether it's the so called defense industry or not. You know, we've got a woman running for governor.
Yeah, a woman running for governor right now named Kelly Aott here in New Hampshire. Former US senator. I used to see her around she was the state attorney general. I used to see her in a panera bread up in the state, you know, the capital. And so she was a senator for a while. She get knocked out by a Democrat. She's part of the Rhino complex. She was on the board of b A BAE Systems at the same time I believe that she was on the board of Fox News.
Yeah yeah, she went out there big military industrial corporation. Yeah, yeah, exactly. So there are all these perverse incentives that we don't realize. And one one thing I'd like to mention to you, David, to go back to what you were talking about about the pharmachea and and so on. You know, for a number of years, it's taken me a while to learn this lesson, and I'm still trying to figure it out. But I think you and I discussed this once before, you know, having worked
in television. I was at the Paramount Studios when I worked at Star Trek Voyager, and I really learned lesson coming from television. And here's that there's this fine line between consuming entertainment as a minor distraction and understanding that it is
a distraction and living, yeah, living that entertainment world completely removed. Yes, And it's a very strange thing because I think with the with the pervasive nature of media, I was one of those people who I just I thought, I live in New Hampshire, but I can go to Los Angeles, I can write, I can do all these things. And it took me a while to really understand that lesson, that entertainment is just a minor distraction
and you can't constantly live in escapism. And I really got the lesson just recently. I was watching one of the old reruns of Mission Impossible, and I knew that they had shot it. I thought, I didn't know until afterwards. I thought, you know, those look like the buildings they were pretending it was like Poland or something like that, you know, but you could tell this was a Los Angeles and and they had Greg Morris and the guy, the big guy. They're they were setting up something in a van,
some of the Mission Impossible members. It's from the sixties, and yeah, you know, and and they're pulling up the they pull up on this street and you know it's somewhere and you know, just around the corner from a sound stage or whatever. Now, because I worked at Star Trek, right and so I thought to myself, gee, I wonder if that's Paramount. And I looked at him with closely, and I scrolled back and they pull into this alcove and it literally was an alcove that was just below my
window at Paramount, and it's this it's a strange. Yeah, it's a weird thing because then you start to realize how many generations of people have gone through that particular feel to work and just you know, they've gotten a contract. They're doing a show, like a guy doing a contract to build a house or lay down pavement or whatever it is. You know, it's a place where you can do work. People invested in putting up the buildings. People come and go, they do their work, they do their shows like
any other theater. And as I've gotten older, I've become I've become much more aware of how easily you can get drawn into considering that artificial world to be real. Yeah, you know, and so now I'll be really careful about with virtual reality because it's becoming hyper real and yeah, it's going to be so controlling to people. That's that's funny. Now, you were the Paramount Studios in California, that's where you were, and yeah, yeah,
and I wish Star Trek Generation were you working with? Was it? I was at Star Trek Voyager and yeah, yeah, in fact, my claim to fame. I never got my name on the credits because I was always so low on the total. But my claim to fame is that. And I hate to say this. I hate to say this because Donald Trump. It's Operation warp Drive. But yeah, I don't have the hair. But I'm the guy who saved warp Drive. So what happened was they had this
season of Star Trek Voyager. You know, the concept, the premise for Voyager was that this crew of this Enterprise ship got teleported to some distant quadrant of the universe where nobody had ever gone, and it was going to take them years and years to get back. So they were having this adventure, a sort of lost in space sort of thing. They'd encounter new you know, new explorations as they worked their way back, and so they wanted to
sort of speed things up. They didn't they the time that they estimated at maximum warp drive to get back to the Federation space, it was gonna be like six years, and like, we're not sure the show is gonna last that long. Let's see we go faster, Like glad you're not operating an e you know, I gotta pause here and recharge it. This planet. You know, I see Jennifer grand Holmes is taking up all the spots. I don't know what's going on. So so there they had this story where
they had an alien who gave them this thing called slipstream drive. And again, this is how you know. It's it's entertaining and it's kind of fun. It's sort of like talking about if you're a baseball card collector or you know, oh I got this first edition of the Rolling Stones record or whatever. You know, it's it's entertainment and it's fun. But then you get to realize, like, okay, that's just a narrative and it's just fun to talk about it. You know, it's like talking about your favorite you
know, Jules Verne's story or something like that. It's entertaining and hopefully you can draw a lesson from it. And that's really what I've been learning, as I mentioned with you before. But so I'm literally the Writer's Guild fellow and I'm like nobody. I've been there for like two days. Nobody even knows who I am. And uh so I'm sitting there hearing them talk about, well, yeah, we've got this alien and it's gonna be called slipstream
drive, and it's gonna be so much faster than warp speed. I was like, well, at the end of this show, they're going to get back to the Federation, they're still going to have this technology. So that means like this classic thing warp is now going to be gone. They're going to get rid of it and they'll have this. So I didn't know what to say because I wasn't really in a position to talk and say, excuse me, you can't you know, nobody knew who I was, right,
So at the end I knew Brandon Barraga. He's the guy who created the Borg and he's a pretty pro liberty guy. I had lunch with him a few years ago. Nice guy, and and so Brandon, I wait. I went out. We left the meeting. It was all the writers are all together in this thing they called the Brake Session, and I was up at the board. I was the guy who had to write down all the
ideas as we broke it down to acts and scenes. So they're going through it and and so I didn't mention anything during the during the meeting, but at the end of the meeting, I waited because I knew Brandon Brogo would be the last guy to come out. So Brandon Barga comes out. He's one of the producers, and I say, he brand that was a good meeting because yeah, yeah, which think And I was like, yeah, it was good. I was like, oh, by the way, that
flip stream drive thing. He goes yeah. I was like, does that mean that when the ship gets back for the Federation warp drive won't be used in Star Trek from now on. He's like, oh, we got to fix that, and like, yes, you do have to fix it. So that reminds me of that sounds like wag the dog, you know, or yeah, we got this president, we're going to bring him back. Oh we can't have this guy come back. Goes kill old shoe shoe people
are throwing their shoes up. That was the funniest Well, it was funny that both sides knew that this thing was just a made up narrative, and so they're they're releasing information to change the narrative on the other side to their advantages. They're going through this made up narrative. That's that was quite a quite a movie. You know, it reminds me when you're talking about that, I know, we went out when the kids were my sons were really
small. We went out to Tahoe and uh and and I had that feeling that it was really strange because you know, I'd grown up with Bonanza and it was in the on the back in the background on Sunday nights and stuff like that, you know, And so I would see it and we're driving around there and it's like, wow, the sense of deja vu that I've
been here before was really amazing. Of Course the kids didn't have it because they didn't know what it looked like, you know, but it was this area where they had filmed it, and you know, watched it for years and years when I was a kid, and then all of a sudden, I'm there and it was it was like being on the set, although it was there had been shooting it on the natural area. I understood it is weird. I had a similar experience. UH. In another instance, my
buddy used to UH. He was staying at in one of my brother's houses, and he had a dog, and so when I would finish work, I would go over to visit with the dog and let the dog outside, and he would leave the television on for the dog. And so I went in and typically when I got there, Bonanza would be on and it was one of those old, you know, like first season bonanzas of black and
white. It was mostly sound stage with the backdrop that had been drawn, you know, with the with the prairies and the background and so on. And I was watching, I was like, I don't know why, but I just get a feeling they shot this at one of the Paramount studios. I don't know why, Like, there's no reason to think that it's just
in a sound stage. So I waited to the end. Sure enough, it was shot at Paramount, probably in the same sound stage where I was walking around, where they had built the Star Trek Voyager, you know,
toy to play in. And it really is. It's you know. The interesting thing about it was the first couple of seasons they shot it on a sound stage, but then they would do some outside shots in that area, and then they decided, well, let's let's build the real thing out there, and you know, they built a purpose built house and eventually Laurren Green and Dan Blocker and Michael Lannon all got involved in terms of a part ownership
for this thing. They set up for tourists and stuff like that, but actually did have a ponderosa that they built, physically built it, and they built in different areas where they could hide the camera. You know, already got the shots that are built into this actual building, but because they had been shooting it on the sound stage for a couple of years, they had to put the same background up, so that kind of like a sound stage
behind the actual pondurosa that they built for continuity effect. I don't know that anybody would have really noticed it, but they did it anyway. And I guess life imitating art or something like that. But yeah, you're right. It really is about moderation, you know, just because somebody is not going to become an alcoholic if they take a drink if they can do it in moderation, and so everything is about that. Entertainment can be that way,
food can be that way. Everything needs to be in moderation. That's a real challenge to all of us, and we all have a different challenge in different things. And of course, on the other side of it, even when we're talking about food, we have people who are trying to manipulate us into not doing it in moderation. You know, the food suppliers. They load that stuff up so that you don't do it in moderation. You know,
it keeps you unsatisfied and looking for more, you know. And I was thinking about the lessons of the pharmacia, not to actually cure problems and cure maladies, but to give you things that cover up the maladies and then extend the maladies. And I'm beginning to think that it's not just who is going to what party or what the nation state is going to win here or
win there. I'm almost getting the sense that this these decades and decades since World War Two, of all of these different flare ups here and there.
It's almost as if the military industrial complex knows they want to continue to push conflict, but only up to a certain point, because if they go beyond that point, then they have to move literally, you know, they would get lots of production and so on and so forth, but they reach a threshold where the where the economy would be so bad off that I think almost as if they've they've realized that they can sustain themselves at the maximum point.
And this is just my theory. I'm just I was thinking about it last night. I was like, I wonder if they know that if they just continually to have things simmer just below World War that that's their best profit margin right there, you know. And I don't know. I mean, I could be completely wrong, but you know, you see the way things are
bubbling up there in the Middle East. Oh, Hesbola is going to get involved and then attack Iran and that sort of stuff, and it couldn't lead to World War III, perhaps or maybe they'll pull back and then a few years from now, well they'll do it again. And of course we've got to have more increasing money going to the military industrial complex and perpetuate those bases rather than having a complete world war that ends up, you know, moving
all the chess pieces around once more. They just keep their chess pieces on there rather than having everything removed. They slowly advanced into our lives. I don't know, it's just speculation, yeah, And of course that all comes from standpoint of their arrogance that they are in complete control. Yeah, and they aren't. You know, they might get right up to that line and then things get a little bit out of control. You know, we're talking
about it. The other day. One person questioned it. I said, you know, it looks like we're at deaf Con two. There isn't any Yeah, there's not a public description of that. Most people agree that after the involvement in Ukraine, it took us to def Con three. Deaf Con two is the next level up. I don't know if what's going on in
the Middle East it takes us to deaf Con level two or not. But if those are general consensus that we were at deaf Con three with what was going on with Ukraine, this whole Middle East thing looks like it is quite a bit more volatile and dangerous from a global perspective. I think I agree with you, and you might have heard I think the categories with you too. She's just entered the studio. I agree with you, and you know. It troubles me greatly to see the way that you can't criticize the policies
of the State of Israel without being accused of being anti Semitic. You can't criticize the United States government overthrow of the Ukrainian government that was elected there in late twenty thirteen, and then the imposition through Victoria Neulan and Jeffrey piet and all the others. And it amazes me that you've got these fatuous characters like
Lindsey Graham talking about how they support Israel. In the meantime, he's literally in photographs with old A Tiani Bak of the Slovoda Party of Ukraine, who is a Nazi, I mean in avowed Nazi. Literally, it's just and that's not anti Semitic, mister Graham, please come on, you know, it's amazing. You got Amy Klobashar in photographs with them, Joe Biden shaking his hand, John McCain not only meeting with guys who formed the almostra Front
when they were in Turkey. They've got those photographs of them standing out there in a bright, clear day out there in the desert. But you've got him in photographs with Johnny bok Uh. It's it's just amazing, you know. And it the thing that that I often consider, David, is, you know, they say that this is for our defense and so on. I would prefer that they actually operate according to their oath to the Constitution. If they think there's the cat, sorry, the cat is very eager.
It's warm here, she wants to go outside. So anyway, you know, I'd rather rather than coming up with all these flimsy excuses that they're defending America and that if they don't continue to give weapons to Israel, Israel will somehow when they've been giving them three point eight billion dollars of weapons a year for years. I'd rather just be disconnected and protect myself. And you know, you talked a little bit about that story out of Maine, and it's
it's not that far from my home. And when I look at the forces of government on a on a regional level in the United States or state level in the United States, and I think about what they do to disarm us and make us more vulnerable here against criminals, it is it blows me away. I've got even conservatives now on talk radio here are saying first first, they're saying, well, you know, they seem to think that everybody in
Maine is carrying a weapon, right, which is absurd. Right with Governor Janet Mills there, they've got a lot of people who moved up there, especially from Massachusetts. It's not old time Maine. Yeah, there's a lot of wilderness there, but if you go to a lot of the cities,
they've gone very purple. The other thing about it is that the place where that man committed his murders and alleged but you know the people died this particular man is alleged to have committed these murders was a bowling alley and a bar, and the bowling alley serves beer. I looked up their website. Maine has a statute that prohibits anyone who owns a bar or any place that's serving
alcohol from allowing anybody into their premises to carry a firearm. That's an infringement on property right since the infringement on the freedom of contract, and it's an infringement on the right to keep him bare arms in all those areas. So this guy picked soft targets and no one had firearms there. So that's the first lesson. Then the second lesson is I'm hearing conservatives. Actually they're insinuating
that, well, this man had mental s stability problems. He threatened people on the military base, So why wasn't somebody taking away his farm arms? Like you're a conservative. Now you're talking like Donald Trump, and we do the due process later, which isn't due process at all. Now you're actually saying, without the terminology, red flagged the guy. How about this.
If he threatened people, you charge him with criminal threatening and then you put him in jail and you have a trial about that, and you say, yeah, so did he threaten people? You know, what's his motivation for that? Oh he's crazy? Also, okay, well we'll deal with that as well. Yeah, exactly, you give him due process and so it just like with hate crimes. I'm hearing conservatives now, especially in New England because it's so close to home, people are talking about how well something's got
to be done. Well, if something had to be done, clearly there was a problem with the guy. If there was a problem with the guy, he's either bad enough to be put in jail and you can prosecute him, or he's not. That's it. You put him on trial. And if you don't have him in jail, then clearly you think he's safe enough to be out on the streets. Yeah. Yeah, And of course, you know, besides the alcohol being there and it's it's not legal for them
to take it. They had a sign at the bowling alley, you know, right above the sign that says choose your weapon. They said, don't bring your firearm in and it's like, choose your weapon you want a small bowling ball, you want a big bowling ball. You want to a small caliber or a big caliber. Choose, but don't bring your weapon in here. And so again, as you point out, it's a soft target. And that sign didn't stop anything, did it, you know. I mean,
that's that's the key. What they did was they kept people who were law abiding, rational citizens from having weapons that they could use to protect themselves. It's just like the Louby cafeterion and in Texas and and what happened with that woman who was a dentist and she left her you know, so you
can't bring it in here. It's like, all right, left her, left her firearm in the glove compartment, and then this guy dry it was this truck through the side of the of the building there and start shooting people. And she I don't have my weapon with me because they call it there was a sign there telling me I couldn't protect myself. Yeah, yeah, absolutely. It's it's troubling and and you know, thank goodness we can talk
about these things and try to set the record straight. And I think that you know, with with your program, you have tremendous, tremendous capacity to be able to cover all these different stories. And you know my work at m RCTV, I throw stories up to the editors and things like that, and sometimes we have disagreements. You know, the folks at m RCTV,
Brent Bozella and Mark Levin are very good friends. And I have massive problems with many of Mark Levin's positions, especially you know, some of his sort of rhetoric and so on, and you know, and but but they're very very good to allow me. I mentioned in a recent piece about Joe Biden throwing weapons around the world at the same time then he's starting a new White House Bureau of Gun Violence Prevention. I was like, the hypocrisy of this
guy is unbelievable. He wants to give billions of dollars and weapons to Ukraine, and they did allow me to hyperlink to Israel in my piece, So I thought, Okay, you know, there's there's a given take here, and I'm very glad to be able to you know, chat with you and and and the opportunities you've given me to fill in for you, and then you know, doing my my streaming show to get this information out that that you know, even when you have some conservatives. You say, no,
we've got to disagree here. You know, let me bring up a different perspective for you. And I heard one of my acquaintances in Boston talk radio she says, what are we going to do about what's happening in Israel? And again I say, you know, why what is this we? Why do I have to have anything to do with that? You know? So
to me, that's a really big deal. And and it's great also to think that we can sort of circumvent some of the some of the sensors that have been brought up against us. And with the listenership and how supportive they've been, you know, I've been able to start off my Liberty Conspiracy show and my sub stack, and it'd been able to sustain it pretty well. With all the people who came over from your show and they're in my chat and they're saying, Hi, Gardner, I'm like, wow, you folks
are just great. It's so fantastic, And you're their Liberty Conspiracy or on rock Fan Monday through Friday at what time Monday through Friday is starting at six pm Eastern and then yep, and we're streaming live at Rumble and rock fin and on my Twitter feed at guard Goldsmith. And in addition to that, I have the Substack and I'm taking little video pieces and I'll put them out at Substack and so on and so forth. The latest one was about Halloween.
There's a second part about that coming out. And I just got asked, and this is something I want to mention to you, David. I'm just gonna ask you know how Ian Freeman was convicted and he's going to be appealing the conviction, but yeah, he's gonna tell people I Freman. They may not be familiar with a name because it hasn't been covered by the mainstream media much, but no important precedent that's being set there. Tell people at
Ian Freeman. Well. Ian Freeman and his business partner Mark Edge came up from Florida with the Free State Project to join fellow libertarians. They moved to Key, New Hampshire, and they started their radio show decades ago in New Hampshire. And I was doing a separate radio show in New Hampshire and they were so kind they invited me over. They said, Hey, how'd you like to sit in with us on Wednesday nights. I said sure, so
I would go and sit in with them and terrific people. And Ian got started very early in bigcoin and made amazing profits off it and started his own Bigcoin exchange and also got some of the big Coin kiosks for people locally,
other Freestate Project members might want to start their own. Ian was prosecuted because he was dealing with a guy who wanted crypto and that guy was defrauding people, and they said that Ian wasn't looking closely enough into sort of know your customer type pattern which are now putting on steroids, and they've ramped this up.
They got three hundred pages of regulations. Congress said, we want you to do it, but of course the devil is going to be in the details, and the details are going to be created by the regulatory state and the IRS has got huge three hundred pages to basically end anonymity for anybody that's got crypto in any way, shape or form, but also exposing people to a lot of identity theft risk because that is so pervasive and broad based, and it also is set up as I think that's one of the reasons they
came after Ian was because they said, well, it's kind of this vague thing as to whether or not you're able to get this. If you have the ability to get all this information on people, then you got to do it. And it's like, well that's kind of vague, that kind of and so you know, to have that case there with Ian Freeman said, well, if you don't collect this information, we may at some point in time determine that you were able and now we're going to give you the Ian
Freeman treatment. Oh yeah, oh yeah, absolutely, And that's one of the ways. You know, the appeal is going to be very complex. There's some question as to whether or not this is bitcoin is a security or a currency, so whether it's the sec it is all confused, and it's all based again, it's how many angels can dance on the head of a deadly pin. The pin shouldn't exist, The federal government should had nothing,
absolutely nothing to do with this, and and agents of the state. You know, if people, if people want to police this, then let them go ahead and invest in something to police it first. Getting the state involved means that they're forcing their neighbor to pay for what they think should be necessary enforcement of something that's immoral perioding. There's nothing that excuses that, and so Ian has to looks like he has to go to federal prison for eight years.
Right now, he's in a state penitentiary and he can make phone calls and so on, and so I've gotten a number of phone calls from him literally from he's in his cell. You can hear it echoing, and he's talking to me on a tablet. He called yesterday and he has asked me on Friday nights now, so their free talk live show goes seven days a week, and he asked me if on Friday nights, I can provide recorded segments that will go out on the stations that they've connected to to leaver preposition
dangling. That's one hundred and seventy five stations. And yeah, I guess they're on the GCN network. So yeah, so you know our interviews when you want to hop on, when Tony Rdiburn wants to hop on, just had Eric Peters, Yeah, and so yeah, it'll go out. I think you know it's up to me. They're going to be recorded. It won't be live, but it is because of you helping to keep me in
the game, and not game, but in this line of work. In addition to MRCTV that I've been able to do, you know, these little pieces here and there to just get these get these messages out there, you know, to get around these these these censorious minds. Uh. Well, you keep yourself in the game because you keep yourself informed. And I know you work really hard to do that. And and that's the key thing. You know, you have a lot of information. People subscribe to your sub
stack. You put out a thing every Sunday night, uh, and and pick up some key stories and you have a really good sense of a broad base of stories. And it's not a repetition of what you typically see or even what I have here. It's it's things that you found on your own doing a lot of research. So I highly recommend yourself Stack for people as well. Oh thanks David. And you know, one of the things that
really gets me is when you know you've got allies. Not to stress this too much, but when you know you've got allies who are helping you out and who believe in the principles that you believe in. That's the main thing. It's the principles that you believe in. And what really amazes me is when I think about the forces that are arrayed against us, and you brought up NewsGuard and I gave a comment, and you're like, oh, well,
he's the news Guard, you know. And we've got Michael Hayden on the board of NewsGuard, a man who openly admits to you know, overthrowing people, to being involved with spying, lying this sort of thing. It's just incredible to think about the fact that they were getting my tax money and they were sending MRCTV messages to say, okay, have you know Gardner Goldsmith respond to us about this article that were If you don't respond to us,
we're gonna claim that it's false. And all they have to do is click on the hyperlinks that are in my articles and they'll get the information. It's amazing how many tentacles they've got. I saw something about Sidney Powell, who has now flipped and well, we don't know if she's flipped or not. Maybe she flipped a long time ago, but they flipped her lip. But she was getting you know, even after she said, you know, pleaded guilty of this, she came back out and still pushing her narrative about the
election. And I noticed in one article there was a guy that she relied on. There was a former CIA guy, and it's like they've got their tentacles and everything, pushing these kind of like what Patinna did with this thing. This guy's pushing stuff to Sidney Powell. Maybe she believed it. I don't know, but you know, they've got their stuff there. You talk about Michael Hayden. These are the guys who created the Ayatola command as blowback,
as Ron Paul always talks about. You know, they're constantly doing coups and assassinations, censorship, fake narratives, and it's just amazing how destructive and evil they are and how they're everywhere. You know, it's not just a you know, Operation mocking Bird where they're feeding stuff to Walter Cronkite or whatever. They're everywhere. They're pushing this stuff to everybody at every level, even an alternative media, even to somebody like Sydney Powell pushing stuff to her.
So true, so true. And and it's it's funny, David, because I can get frustrated, and you know, you get angry sometimes when or one gets angry. Sometimes I do, yeah, you know, okay, yah yeah. And the other thing about it is, you know, working in this field. I think a lot of times, especially I'll listen to a talk radio host in the morning, or you get a Michael Savage who sort of tone things down. But you know a lot of times bluster and
expression of this anger can gin up better ratings sometimes. Or you know, sometimes maybe people feel like they have to emote that much more that sort of thing. And and you don't want to be too manipulative and too self analytic and things like that. You just want to be yourself. Sometimes you naturally
will get angry. But I get so tired of this shrill you know, like Mark Levin, I get so tired of these people who oftentimes, if you were to sit down in conversation with them, you might agree on a number of things. And and and this is the problem that I see so often in politics and commentary about politics, where there's a there's this fine line between attack attack attack and I'd rather win over somebody, and I don't know
where that line is. Many times, you know, to to say, look, this this person is an enemy, you know, versus how can I win this person over? But what the people want to see conflict. And I think that you know, Trump understands that the Democrats understand it, you know. Martin James Carvell said, well, they're going to impeach Trump. How do we get this lucky Trump thrives on this persecution and it is persecurred. Everybody sees that it's unequal application of the law, and he thrives
on it, and he invites it. You know, we just look at what he's doing in court. You know, the judge says, don't say anything about me or that people. He says, somebody gets a ten thousand dollars fine and immediately does it again on true social he wants ten thousand dollars is nothing to him. You'll make a lot more than that with donations if everybody gets angry. And so that's a key part of it, is getting
everybody on both sides of this angry. That's why I said, even when you look at something as horrific as the deliberate mutilation by these terrorists of children killing them, and and or the the you know, kid with half of his brain blown out of his skull from a bomb or whatever, you can get yourself to the point where you can fall into the trap of getting so emotionally involved in it that and you know, we should be emotionally involved.
We shouldn't be so you know, cold to all this stuff. But we have to also try to keep our head and say, well, how do we this is awful? How do we try to minimize this? Right? Instead of just running off with a bloody shirt and a you know, I'm going to get even I'm going to get vengeance for this or whatever we have to under we have to try to pull back and say, all right, but how do is there anything that we can do to try to minimize this.
I don't really share any good decisions there of what we do about this stuff, frankly, but I know that you know, if we just get ourselvesselves ramped up and psyched up to kill the other side, whichever side we want, that is definitely going to be the wrong way to go. David. I'm curious, you know, as a as a father who you and
your wife raised children. You know, I've only experienced it as an uncle, but to how you go about how you went about that balance between showing the kids the dangerous, the malicious people out there and not getting too wrapped up in that attack mode when because you want to teach people, you know, youngsters look that's bad, that behavior is bad. And how you make sure that they don't get cynical, they don't get jaded as you're giving them
these examples, because there's so many examples throughout history. I'm sure a lot of that has to do with faith in God, I would assume, but I you know, I don't know if I'm expressing it right, David. But I was just thinking about it as I was watching you, and I
thought, gee, you know, you've raised kids. You've done such a great job as a father and your wife as a mother, And I think to myself, you know, to allow the children to see the dark side and not become cynical, to know, hey, watch out, this is bad stuff. Well, you know, I don't know it is it is difficult to not become cynical. But I think another part of it is is that we have to we have to focus on positive things, right, and
if all we do is look at negative things. This is one of the reasons why when I go through the news, I really do feel compelled to get preachy, as Keith called it. You know, I feel like I got to give people some good news and some good hope, and there really is a good hope out there, and it's not all doom and gloom, you know. So there's evil, but we don't have desperation, you know. And all around us there's darkness and evil, but we don't have to
be overcome by that. And so we overcome evil with good. And one of the ways that we do that is by focusing on what is good and pure and right and just. And that is a real healing thing to us, better than any psilocybin, mushrooms or anything else. Is to look at what is true and just and eternal. And we have to focus on that.
And and that's why, you know, when I talk about this stuff, and I have to do it for my own benefit, because I can't look at this abyss on a day to day basis as much as I do, and you know, it would just drive me nuts if I didn't have something that was good and pure to look at. And so I don't want to leave people without anything any good news when we look at all this bad news. That's y's that's that's well stated. You know. It's funny,
David. We have some neighbors who were they moved into this area before my family did, about a year before, and They had an old farmhouse and named the Driscolls. And they had three kids, all before before born before I and they were more of my brother and sister's age. My sister's five years my elder, my brother seven years my elder. And you make me think about I went to visit mister and missus Driscoll recently, and they were
always just one wonderful hosts. They were just great. You know, you'd go over playing baseball in the little field that they had that no longer had crops on it and most of it, but you know, we'd be playing softball or whatever and going sledding down the hill and that sort of stuff. And mister Driscoll actually did cartooning for NASA during the Apollo mission. He was
part of their like pr team and stuff. Very very good artist, and he brought out drawings that he had done of us as kids playing baseball. Cartoon, yeah, little spoofy cartoons with the dog chasing running away with the ball and things like that. And he had been in the military, and I mean he was in his nineties. He was in Korea, and you
think about some of the terrible things that those people saw. You know, my dad was in World War Two, he saw man burned to death in Australian pilot burned to death inside his plane on the tarmac, and my dad went to try to get him out. My dad was burning his hands.
He couldn't he couldn't get the conckpit open. And you think about some of these terrible things that people see and yet they find the positive and it's through well, I would hope that it's through their soul and recognizing who is there
behind it all. And just a little while ago, so I went to visit the Driscolls and it was like it was like a second hadn't gone by, and I was in their house and enjoying the smells and the sense walking across that doorstep that I had walked across so many times as a kid, and I saw mister Driscoll. He was going to be going in for heart surgery, and so he did and he got out, but unfortunately he passed
away just a few weeks ago. So we were at the memorial service, and I was on Saturday, and I thought about how when they found out that there was a new house that was built just through the woods behind their house, mister Driscoll got a lawnmower and he cut away branches and stuff, and he created a path so that we could walk over to the house because he knew, yeah, he knew there were going to be kids there,
and he maintained it and then our eventually our footsteps maintained it. And there were other friends beyond that, five kids, and we had gangs of kids, just so much fun, you know, flashlight tag and all sorts of stuff. And I said, and so we were at we're out there at their at their Methodist church, and I got up to say something at the memorial Saturday. They asked if anybody would like to come up, and I said, you know, mister Driscoll had an artistic eye and he somehow he
could see that landscape in the woods and he could see a trail. I was like, but he saw a greater trail. He saw a trail that was given to us by Christ, and it was It just made me think about that, if you can just see that trail, you're on the you're on the path, you know, and and it's okay. So anyway, well that's what a great story that is. Before we run out of time. I know that you are a writer as well, and you've got a book that is coming up. Has it been published it or is it still
coming up? Well, yeah, interestingly enough, you know, as we come towards Halloween. So I have three novellas that are out. One is called Bite and that's about a vampire hunter in Las Vegas. It's sort of a cold check the night Stalker takeoff. Then there's Wall, which is crypto archaeology about a Great Wall of China before ten thousand years before the Great Wall
of China. And there's another one called Fishing, and that's a dark mass murderer on the loose in western Massachusetts in the seventies pot just around the end of the hippie era, and that's got a lot of dark stuff in it, so if people are they want to be careful, and that's some violent scenes in that. But the sequel to Bite has been done for ages. And I actually had a book contract that was the one where it was.
It was actually Swin Publishing Sam Hayne as some people might call it, so as we come to Halloween, it's appropriate, and it was a mid size publishing company. But they wanted me to split my writing name from my political name, and I said why would I do that. I'm not going to do that, So I declined the contract and it has not been published. So there's that, which is the sequel to Bite the novella. And then I have this other one called Team Miser, which I actually started in nineteen
eighty four when I was a student at Boston University. I came up with this idea that the Tea was an evil underground dystopian empire, and it was it had gas that was making people ride to the end of the line, sort of like he will ride foreverneath the streets of Boston. He's the man who never returned. You know, Charlie the guy, and their cards are actually their Tea cards. Their passes are called Charlie cards. They got those
ever getting off this thing? See yeah, yeah, Kingston Trio. So so that's called Team Miser and it happens in nineteen eighty eight, and Mike Ducoccus is a dystopian bad guy who's trying to take over the planet by getting everybody out of their regular cars into attaining public transportation. And I came up with it. I didn't have the idea for like, you know how they had cash for clunkers. Well, I had that concept in there in nineteen
eighty eight. I started writing this novel in nineteen eighty eight, the Team Isser novel, and he's called Team Miser, like heat Miser and snow Miser. They miser their tokens. They won't pay their tokens because they have fingerprints on them and they track them. So so I had this idea that, yeah, they will give everybody a pass for the public transit because he wants everybody on public transit. It's infused with gas and hypnotizes everybody to love the
government. And they'll have people trade in their gas guzzling carbon mission cars for these public transit things. And I was thinking about that in nineteen eighty eight, right, but I didn't have a title for it. Wait ahead of your time, that's great. Oh yeah, it's nuts. And so when they had the cash for clunkers, I came up. I wrote after the fact, I went back in and call it tea for trashers, the Tea
Pass, the Boston Tea Pass. It's t for trashers. So the guy comes back, Yeah, this The main character comes back from vacation and his girlfriend has sold his car. He's like, I gotta get to work. Where's my car? She's like, I sold it, man, you got a t pass? Like, yeah, that's that's that's where we're headed.
For sure, we're almost out of time. Tell everybody where they can find you, and again, I would also recommend people to go to the Knights of the Storm dot com and they'll see schedules for Guard for this show, for many shows as well as their many shows. But tell people where they can find you again, Guard. Okay, yeah, well, first thing
I'll say I'm mentioned again. It looks like tonight I will and night I'll be going live at Liberty Conspiracy as I do every Monday through Friday, starting at six on Rumble and Rock Finn and on my Twitter feed at Guard Goldsmith g r D Goldsmith not NewsGuard, thank goodness, and yes and no Michael Hayden behind me, that's for sure, although we're both bald, but so six o'clock Monday through Friday, Rockfinn and Rumble for Liberty Conspiracy and also my
substack, Guard Gardner Goldsmith Substack. Great. Then I should know by six o'clock tonight if the Free Talk Live stuff goes out there, that'll be on all GCN network affiliated stations as long as they pick it up at seven o'clock tonight. And I have to say before we close off, I've got to say thank you to a couple of people left tips. Thank you Sean E very much for the tip on Rock Finn and on Rumble Chris M ninety,
thank you and thank you to all of you. As a matter of fact, I had a list that I wanted to read to people, read off the names of people who have contributed to us on zel. I'll do that on Monday because we're out of time, but I just wanted to thank you all. Thank you for the support this month. We are donor supported. That is the bulk of what happens with this, especially since the advertising thing with Pride month. So thank you so much for the support and I'll get
those names. I'll read those out on Monday. Thank you all. Have a great weekend and thank you. Guard appreciate it. Thank you, thank you. David the common Man. They created common Core, dumb down our children. They created common past, track and control us their Commons project to make sure the commoners own nothing and the communist future they see them and man is simple, unsophisticated, ordinary, but each of us has worth and dignity created in the image of God. That is what we have in common.
That is what they want to take away. Their most powerful weapons are isolation, deception, intimidation. They desire to know everything about us, while they hide everything from us. It's time to turn that around and expose what they want to hide. Please share the information and links you'll find at the davidknightshow dot com. Thank you for listening, Thank you for sharing. If you can't support us financially, please keep us in your prayers. Davidknightshow dot com
