feasts lights out upon VANESSA of the fire lights out for the gloom of your light sizzling fire so oh The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End The End Well, ladies and gentlemen, you might be listening to the hour of the time. Apparently, something is burned out in the phone patch board at WBCQ. And I don't know if we're on the air or not. But yes, I just heard that we are. Okay. Well, we're on the air. So while you're listening to this music, we'll try to figure out what we're doing here. Because this has just thrown a monkey wrench into the whole broadcast. Sorry about that, we're on the air. Well, good evening, ladies and gentlemen. We're going to find out. Mark in Texas. Okay, Mark. Okay, Mark. We've got one listener, Doyle. So here it comes, folks, and we're on the air. So here it comes, folks, and we're on the air. So here it comes, folks. Get ready. I am now inserting my hand into the microphone. Oh, man, this is tough. Oh, that's a tight squeeze, man. It's going down. Oh, that's a tight squeeze, man. It's going down. Gotcha. Here we go. All right. Well, you know, Doyle has a job. As opposed to me, who also has a job, but I work for myself. Doyle is working for somebody else. And every day, he comes home. And every day, he comes home with the most incredible stories of how the welfare mentality has taken over this community. We're talking about a small, rural, Arizona, mountain community of what I consider to be pretty good folks. All of the people that I've met and know and have dealt with in this valley, except for maybe one or two, are just incredibly wonderful people. And why don't you get that in there, Doyle? We haven't opened the phones, folks. So you should not be calling. But apparently, these people, a good percentage of them, apparently, have been afflicted with the socialist mentality, and you would never know it until you turn off their television set. Remember, ladies and gentlemen, I told you that nothing is going to bother the American people until you turn off their television set, take one of their cars, or take the chicken out of their pot. Well, that's true. And what in the world is going on now? I wonder if they've lost the feed again. We shall find out. Just ignore it, Doyle. Yeah, someone... Ignore it. Playing around. Ignore it. Just ignore it. Ignore it. We are not taking calls. Don't call. We're not going to answer the phone. So anyway, a good portion of these people are afflicted with the socialist welfare mentality. And we don't have a television station here. So there are no TV antennas on rooftops. Anywhere. At least I've never seen one. Have you seen any of them? No. No, I haven't. Cable and satellite. Cable, satellite, DSS. That's about it. I'm grabbing him and jerking into the mic because he keeps standing six feet away and he thinks everybody can hear what he's saying. And if they're listening real close, they might be able to, but I doubt it. So I'm yanking him over here to the microphone so that you can hear his repertoire. So Doyle works for the local cable company. And he has to deal with people all day long who have not paid their bills. Yeah. And we're not going to mention anybody's name. So if you're listening in the Round Valley and you're one of these people that we're talking about, don't get upset because we're not going to embarrass you on the air. No. Although we could if we wanted to, but it wouldn't be ethical. And we're not that kind of people. So don't even worry about it. Very. Nobody's going to know who you are. Except Doyle. He doesn't even tell me your names. And that's the way it should be. He shouldn't do that and he doesn't. But he does tell me the stories. Stories. And oh, what stories he tells. It seems that a lot of people don't pay their cable bill. And I don't mean just a few. I mean a lot of people try to skate by without paying their cable television bill. And is this true? Yeah, this is true. Today I printed out past due, I guess they're called notices. And they're two to a page, double folded, chainset through the printer. And the stack was almost two foot tall. So you had that many people who weren't paying their cable bill. Yeah. Just a month alone, yeah. And so yesterday you had to give a disconnect order to how many people? I think it was around 90. 90 people got their television sets disconnected yesterday. Now, ladies and gentlemen, you have no idea what happens when you disconnect 90 people's television sets. It seems that's more important than anything. Anything in the entire world. They cannot live without it. What are some of the things that happen? Well, I've been told I haven't paid my water bill or any other bills yet, but don't disconnect my cable. So I'm going to be right in to pay. And that's after how many months of not paying? It was July, August, somewhere around there. So that's about three months they haven't paid. And they're not going to pay their water bill. They're not going to pay their rent. They're not going to pay any other. They're going to come in and pay their cable bill. Pay the cable bill. And do they pay all of it? No. And, in fact, one that I had today, just one of many, but one that was particularly interesting, was it was a pretty high amount, pushing a couple hundred. And came in and disconnected and wanted to put down 40 and demand a reconnection right now. Demanded a reconnection. Didn't ask nicely. Didn't say, I know I'm in arrears, and I know that you've earned this money, and I've contracted to pay it. And I'm only going to pay just a little tiny portion of what I owe. And I demand that you reconnect my cable television right now. One was told about 4.30, 5 o'clock, at a phone call, where's your technician at? Half an hour, they pay maybe 20% of the bill. And it's a half hour late. And the poor guy's working overtime already. He should have been home. And you've even been threatened over this. Oh, yeah. I'm not going to pay beating fists on counters. I'm not going to put up with this. I refuse to put up with this treatment. And what kind of treatment is that that they're putting up with? I don't know. I'm pretty congenial with everybody. Well, what are they talking about? They say, I'm not going to put up with this treatment. I'm going to bang on the counter. And you guys are in big trouble. And, you know. Oh, type like that. Even some physical threats, maybe. Yeah, it looked like it to me. One instance was a past due, disconnected, past due a couple, three months. I hadn't been getting a bill I didn't think I had to pay, was what I was told. Mm-hmm. And just through an utter fit that it was our fault and they should get all of the rest of the month free. And even though it was posed to them, well, you only lost since this morning so far. But they won the rest of the month free. But they didn't lose this morning. They never paid for this morning. They didn't pay, yeah. They weren't entitled to this year. No. So they didn't suffer any damages or any loss, did they? No. And then the excuses that we would hear were like, well, I quit getting a bill. So I just figured I didn't have to pay or I figured I'd wait. Mm-hmm. And that seems awfully strange with the amount of request letters for address changes if there was a problem, phone calls, letters, past due notices, door tags, physical door tags on their doorknob. Yeah. So this isn't something that just happened, I mean, with no warning or anything. No, no, no. Everybody was door tagged last week. The technicians had, we had to lose a day of work, productive work, and have the technicians go around all these people's physical addresses and hands, like a solicitation sign on the doorknob. So notice, we missed you. Please call so-and-so at so-and-so. And this is after how many letters? Mm-hmm. Two and three. Some of the, what I do is I write the number of phone calls to date, the response on the bill. Mm-hmm. I've got lists so full that I cover the whole face of a mailing, of a number 10 envelope. Yeah. From top to bottom, two or three inches. With the little lines that say, uh, 10-15, the time, and then whatever, the response or whatever. Yeah. Yeah, I've been playing over. And sometimes you even call them. Yeah, constantly. Constantly. And, and, yeah, they don't want to pay the bill, but they've contracted to pay for it for the television. But they don't want to lose their television. No, they don't want to lose it either. And when it gets cut off, all of a sudden they are irate because you owe it to them. Yes, we owe it to them. Owe them television. And, uh, ladies and gentlemen, this is how low we've sunk in this country that now we owe everybody. This is according to Johnny Lightning. Yeah. We owe them freedom from want and freedom from fear. And people. Now, this is from the socialists. We owe them, uh, a house. Not just a shelter, but a good house with three bedrooms and hot and cold running water, two baths, a two-car garage, and all this kind of stuff. We owe them food, all they can eat. We owe them a job. We owe them unemployment benefits. We owe them medical insurance and life insurance. We owe them clothing. And now, ladies and gentlemen, we owe them television. Oh, is this, is this incredible. Yes. The guy yesterday. Yes. This gentleman yesterday is in a very esteemed position, which I look up to as far as his line of work in the educational field. Uh, he's the top man at this institution. And his son calls. Hey, man. Dad, your, uh, place is getting cut off. So he runs down. Pays it. Uh, it's at a place, what, an hour away? 45 minutes away. Pays it where he works next door to. Two doors down, by the way, this whole time. And, uh, he has this cable. And this, our local community, is that, he lives in this local community. His PO box is in this local community. And wants to know why he's not getting his bill at work. Because he would have paid it otherwise. He wants to know. He wants to know why he's not getting his cable bill at work. What address did he give to you to send the bill to? Here. Here. Yeah. At home. Yeah. He gave you his address at home. Yeah, here in the PO box. And now he's irate because he didn't get his bill at his work. Yeah. But he knows what address he gave you. Yeah, he knows. And then, in fact, I said, well. And he's teaching our children. This guy is teaching our children, ladies and gentlemen. Yeah, the head honcho. Not only that, he's teaching the teachers who teach our children. And then, uh, I offered, I said, hey. And don't worry, we didn't give him away because there's several schools here. Nobody knows exactly who we're talking about. And, uh, then I, uh, I said, well, hey, you know, tomorrow I'm going to be back here. And, by the way, I don't know who it is either. Doyle has never, ever, uh, told me any names of anybody. He wouldn't do that. But he does tell me the stories. And they are hilarious. So, go ahead. Tell us. I offer. I'm saying, hey, I will hand carry today. And I'm not getting paid for this once I leave. Mm-hmm. And go over and fix it if you want some other address. Uh, well, I don't know. I'll try to keep on top of it. So, I'm like, hand feeding him. I don't know what you call it. Yeah, well. Well, that's what you do to all of them every day. And yet they still demand. You have people come in who admit that they haven't paid their rent in two months. Yeah. Haven't paid their water bill. Yeah. Probably are on welfare and getting food stamps. Yeah. And, but they want to make sure that their television bill is paid. Yes, yes. And today, another one that was interesting was, uh, I owe, uh, let's say it was a hundred and something. Way up there. Uh, and, uh, I don't want to be exact on any of this to embarrass anybody. And they want to pay roughly 40% of it is all. And that's because that's all the money they got. And they'll be back in two weeks. Okay, that's cool. You know, I'm trying to work with them. Be nice to them. Okay, can you fix me up tonight? Okay, well, I got to see. I got to find a technician somewhere. We're a little busy cutting people off. And, well, I need to know when you're going to hook me back up tonight. So then after all that, then I find out that they owed another fee. So I called them. Said, I will wait overtime, which you saw tonight. I didn't get home until late. Uh-huh. Didn't get paid for that. Yeah. Waited for them to bring in this extra fee. And remember, they didn't have the money an hour before. That was it. And I bought the story. And they walked in with a hundred dollar bill. Oh. Can you break this? Can you break this? Oh, you. And you got their, their service reconnected. Yeah, I did it. Yeah. Well, see. I thought I was stopped. You fell for it. Uh-huh. Ladies and gentlemen, what's wrong with this picture? What is wrong with this picture? Do you know what happens to these people when their television is cut off? They are actually forced. They're actually forced to interact with other human beings in their family. Yeah. They're forced to talk to someone. Uh-huh. They're forced to think. Uh-huh. They can no longer sit in a chair in front of the great boob tube. Yeah. And be spoon-fed their nightly ration of pablum. Uh-huh. Uh-huh. Uh-huh. Brain-washed, live manipulation, and the most ridiculous parody of human life that you could ever imagine on what is commonly known as a sitcom. Uh-huh. Uh-huh. Uh-huh. Uh-huh. Uh-huh. Uh-huh. Uh-huh. Uh-huh. Uh-huh. Uh-huh. You don't know who it is. Like you said, I don't tell you any names or anything. Yeah. It's a big business. Here. Uh-huh. Uh-huh. And he said, well, I better hurry up and pay my bills or I might have to talk to my wife. He actually said that. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And you know what? That's what I actually thought. He probably meant it. Yeah. I love that one. Oh, heaven forbid. He should have to talk to his wife. Yeah. Oh, my goodness gracious. What in the world would he say after all these years of watching television? Talk about last night's show? I don't know. Well, he could aim the remote control at her and try to change the channel, I guess. Or turn down the volume or, you know, something. I don't know. This is incredible, ladies and gentlemen. And just think, you know, if that's what's going on in a little mountain town like this, there couldn't be more than, what, 2,000 people in this town? Yeah. Maybe another 3,000 in Springerville. And then in the surrounding area, maybe another 3,000 if you count Greer and Alpine and Nutrioso and all the ranchers and the people who live out on acreages and things like that. And, you know, I guessed at one time that there's probably around 7,000 people within listening range of this broadcast, which goes out quite a ways because our antenna is way up on top of the hill. Isn't this incredible? So now we will open the phones for those of you. Just be quite eager. They heard me. For those of you who want to call and chew Doyle out because your television set was disconnected because you didn't pay your bill. And, you know, if you live in Detroit, you can also do that because, you know, Doyle is here and he will take your complaint. Yeah, I'll take your complaint. And talk about it. So if you'd like to talk about the broadcast last night or if you'd like to explore this, what happens to Americans when their TV gets cut off, what's going to happen if all over the country the lights go out and nobody has a television set to watch? Can you imagine? It could be the next baby boom. Oh, yeah. And looking at some of the people. Maybe they won't talk to their wife. Yeah. Maybe nobody will say a word. Well, I'm looking at some of the, I don't know how to say this, mental capacity. I don't know. I've experienced with irate people. Yeah. It's the type of deal it seems to me it would cause looting of TV stores because the TV at home quit working. I want you to go call WBCQ because I don't think we're on the air anymore. Okay. I really don't. I'll go check in. I really don't think so. Okay. The number is 520-333-4578 if you'd like to call. I don't think we're on shortwave anymore. WBCQ was having trouble, technical trouble on their end. And that was probably what the phone was ringing about. So I'm going to play some music until we find out. Good evening. You're on the air. Yes, Bill. You're definitely on the air on shortwave. I'm listening to you in Philadelphia on 7415. We are. Okay. Good. So, and listen, I love your program. And I try and listen. I get about an hour before I've got to go in for the third shift. Yeah. I listen to the first hours about every night. The third shift. Yeah. The third shift? Yeah, I work from 11 to 7 in the morning. Oh, I see. Hmm. I'm an old Navy man. We never had third shifts. We had port and starboard. You were at one or the other. There wasn't a third shift. Oh, okay. I like your website, too. I just found that tonight. And there's some pretty interesting stuff on there. So I was eager to hear your broadcast tonight. And I was a little concerned there in the beginning. And then I was glad to hear you guys come on the air. Well, great. Well, what we had planned to do was totally destroyed by what happened in the beginning. So we didn't get to do that. So we're just going to wing it tonight. Right. So we need the help of the listening audience. There you go. And do you have any comments about this TV thing? Do you know anybody that's so hooked on TV that they never talk to their family? Well, I can say this. Also, I need you to talk a lot louder. Okay. I think I've kind of woken up to reality a little bit ever since I stopped subscribing to people. And I went out and bought a shortwave radio. And here I am. So it's definitely been educational for me not having a television. Like you say, people just get so fixated in front of the screen. You know, they kind of don't realize what's going on elsewhere in the world. So I have no desire to get my cables back. I like listening to shortwave now. Do you know anybody who fits that bill that just goes home and falls into a trance in front of the television set until midnight or so and then sort of stumbles off in a trance to bed? Sure. My mother and my girlfriend. Your mother and your girlfriend? Yeah. They're both boot tubes I refer to as. Oh, wow. Well, it's crazy. You know, I tell them about some of the stuff right here on shortwave and they think I'm paranoid and crazy. Well, you know, I don't want to influence your love life or not, but if I were you, I'd look for another girlfriend. You might have to live with this one for the rest of your life, and you better look at what you just told us. Yeah, that's true. But she's kind of interested in shortwave stuff, and I'm into ham radio and stuff, and she's kind of interested. I've been trying to teach her some things about it. And I guess I'm going to have to buy her a shortwave radio if I want her to get off the cable. Well, you know, people don't change habits like that so easily. Yeah, that's true. So that I wish, I almost blew my ears up. I wish you luck. See, I'm trying to make up for your low voice, and so I turned the volume way up when you're talking. And then I just forgot to turn it down when I started to talk and almost blew my ears up. I'll say, I'm going to have two cordless here, so it's going on. Please don't ever call a radio station on a cordless. Okay. You have no idea. You know, we're trying as hard as we can to get your volume up so that people can hear it, and then you're on a cordless. It's just impossible. Okay. All right. Well, I like your broadcast, and I'm going to continue to listen here. Okay. Thanks for calling. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you, Phil. That's hard to do. That's hard to guess when he's going to talk, and then, you know, I turn it up, and then I start to bring it down from me, and he's still talking, and so I jam it back up there again. That's not easy to do. I have never claimed to be a psychic, and I don't do too well when I try to be with him. You take this call. You're on the air. How you doing? Yeah, all right. What's up? Oh, good. Your shortwave listeners can still hear you. Okay. I have a question. Uh-huh. Are you guys only on two hours now? Yes. Yes. It started this week, two hours, 9 to 11 Eastern time. Well, that's too bad, because I tuned in around 1130, and there was some strange fellow playing music up there. That doesn't sound like Doyle. No. Well, apparently you forgot to buy one of our products. I forgot to buy. Yes, I did. Sorry about that. That's why we're on two hours. Oh, is that because of not enough money? Yeah, I told you guys for two weeks. If you didn't support the broadcast by buying the products, we would not be on for three hours. And if enough products are not purchased to pay for two hours, we won't be on for two either. You see, it's a good thing I called so you can berate the rest of the listening audience for not buying enough stuff. Oh, I'm not berating anybody. I would never berate anybody for not purchasing products. I am, however, very disappointed when they become disappointed because we can't pay for what they want to hear, and yet they will not help by purchasing something that we offer for sale so that they can have what they want instead of demanding that we give it to them. Because we're not millionaires. We're just regular, ordinary people who are trying to do a real good job as best we can, but we're not wealthy. We just barely meet the bills every month, and if the money doesn't come in... You see, other people get on the radio, and they beg, and they cry, and they ask for donations. We don't do that. We get good products that we know are good, and we'll stand behind them, and we offer them, and if people don't buy them, then we can't pay for the airtime. It's simple as that. When do you advertise these? Every now and then. Sometimes, see, I don't listen to you all the time. We've only failed one night. Yeah, what do you say? Yeah, I can't. Oh, all right. Well, I'll have to listen a little closer. But I have a question. I want to make a comment on the TV thing now. Okay. We should talk to somebody that hasn't known the TV in seven years. Well, good for you. Which is definitely one again. I would say that the... By the way, we know who you are. You know, the cable company is going to try and give me a TV. I think when you talk about people not wanting to pay a water bill to get their TV, it's in our society. It's the way we're indoctrinated. Indoctrinated to television. Yeah. Since most people, including myself, do I cover the TV. Well, I've got to say, even when I'm in a room with a TV, I find it a little adipity. I mean, we're talking about a group of people that have created a system that is really quite addicted to the human being. And I think that's how they control the masses. I don't really understand that because unless there's a really good movie or a good documentary on, I find absolutely nothing redeeming or addictive about it. In fact, it makes me ill to watch what people sit down and get addicted to. It's incredible. I tried to sit through, what's her name? One of those talk shows in the day. Yeah, I forgot. Sally Jesse Raphael. I tried to sit through Sally Jesse Raphael one day. That's a lot of names. Well, I'll tell you what, it was a lot of nausea. I had to leave. I really did. I felt myself becoming physically ill. And I was a little tongue-in-cheek. Actually, I find that the commercials, when I do watch, sometimes more interesting than a show. And I think because the advertising people, I mean, they just specialize in how to, I think, grab you. Oh, yes. Billions have spent on it in research. It's a science, and they do. They spend billions of dollars to try to determine exactly what they have to do to hook you, get you to listen to the commercial, then remember it, repeat it to others, and purchase the product. That's right. That's why Super Bowl, wasn't it on your show or somewhere I heard, they say, look, give us a billion dollars or whatever it is for a minute of advertising during the Super Bowl, and we will have millions of people change to your product. So that's a powerful tool. Yes, it is. When I was in a civics class in college, they did an experiment, and most of the class could do jingles from commercials. Okay. Which one was? Okay. Well, just various jingles, whoever, Toyota, whatever. I love what you know, that crap, all that stuff. Actually, he didn't go to college. His girlfriend did. He was camping out under her bed. Yeah. Actually, he did go to college. Yeah, just a little bit, so I got kicked out. I'm sure these commercials have been off the air for years, but if you ask somebody, a cigarette commercial, I'd rather switch than fight, they'd probably be able to come to Jingle and tell you what cigarette it was. You know, we have all of those, and I used to play them on the hour at a time every once in a while. I may just go back to that. But anyway, listen, I will have to listen to your product line and to everybody else out there, buy something, because I hate to see you guys go off the air. Well, it's just Economics 101. That's all it is, you know. People just, you know, we were talking about the television, how they get addicted to television, and they won't pay the rent, but they'll pay their television bill or at least a portion of it to try and keep it from getting disconnected. And they actually believe that you owe it to them. I mean, they don't see it as a commodity or a product that they're purchasing. You owe it to them. You're talking about your show or you're talking about TV in general? I'm talking about television. Television. They come in and they sign a contractual agreement. I don't drag them in off the street. They walk in. How do I get cable? They sign a contractual agreement, which is really simple to live up to. I don't even ask SS numbers or driver's license numbers. I just want to know the physical address so it can be turned on, and here's your rate, and here's a channel card. They enter into everything. It's probably the same way, myself included, I suspect, when it comes to your show. I was like, well, it's on there. We should get it for free as opposed to... Well, you know, it's not just my show. I get calls from people, and they say, Bill, I've got an idea. I say, what's that? Why don't you do this and this and this so we can all have it? I say, well, I've got a better idea. What's that? Why don't you do it so I can have it? Guess what? They get angry. They don't like that. I don't know whether you want to consider yourself a leader or not. I owe it to them. There are leaders. I think you've been in the leadership role. By the way, what is your website? My website? Do you have a website? You're not with the Gestapo, are you? No. Are you going to take this down? Somebody trying to finish up a PhD here on the Internet. I couldn't help it because everybody's always calling us paranoid. Whenever I get a chance, I try to justify their accusations so they don't feel so bad. I don't want to shatter their illusions. Well, you don't want to tell me. That's all right. Well, it's okay. I'll tell you. I'll tell you, but I'm not going to tell anybody else. Just you? Just you. It's harvest-trust.org. Harvest-trust? Yeah. Trust. Harvest-trust.org. I tried to look up... No spaces in there, anyway. They didn't have the searches, but I couldn't get to you. But good. Well, gentlemen, good luck to you. I enjoy hearing you. Now, unfortunately, I've got to go off to the library and do some work. Okay. Take care, now. Bye-bye. Bye-bye. Thanks for calling. 520-333-4578. Yeah, I like to get calls from him. He's called several times since we've been on WBCQ. Good evening. You're on the air. Good evening, Bill Cooper. I was listening to your program last night, and I found it very interesting. By the way, I'm calling from Canada. Oh. All right. Well, that's good. Sure. I've been waiting for you to come back so I could hear you, and I'm really quite thrilled because I do like your program. Well, thank you. You know, I was quite enthralled last night, too. You didn't hear me talking very much. No, but the sad part was the second hour was totally disturbed. Oh, no. I couldn't hear it, and I was wondering if this man was selling a book that one could purchase or anything like this. This is the reason I'm calling. Yes. I don't... I don't even have it here. I didn't write anything down, and... You didn't write it down? No, I didn't. I'll tell you what. If you just go to the bookstore and ask for books by Michael Cremo... How do you spell that? C? C-R-E-M-O. C-R-E-M-O. Okay. Michael Cremo. Yeah. And he's written several books. I don't know which ones you would be interested in, but the one that I think you would probably be interested in, and if you liked last night's broadcast, was forbidden archaeology. Uh-huh. Yeah, probably. I found that almost incredible. Of course, with all the distortions that are going on in the educational system, I'm not surprised that they went into the field of archaeology, too, and tried to distort this whole thing. Oh, well, that's a prime area for them to go into, because one of the number one goals of Marxism is to kill God and destroy traditional religion of all kinds, not just Christianity, but Orthodox Judaism, the religion of Islam, and any others that would compete with the theory that man himself is God, which is the Marxist view. Right. And if these people could only go to Russia or come to Canada, see what socialism does to your country. I came to Canada in 1957, and I'm telling you, it was the land of opportunity. Has it ever gone down the troops? Yeah. Well, yes, it has. Canada has fallen to the New World Order. They have given up their guns. And you know, the people sit in front of the television, and when I talk to them, they think I'm from another planet. Well, you probably are, to them. Yeah. Probably, yes. Because they've fallen into the socialist trap, and they're probably very happy of being children to Big Daddy State. Of course, it is a sort of conditioning. You're being conditioned to rely on Big Daddy. And when I say to them, what's wrong with your initiative? Don't you have any? Even in the family, it's just incredible. It boggles the mind. I mean, sometimes I think, gee, you know, where did I get educated? What kind of food am I eating that stimulates me to all this kind of stuff? Because you're sort of on the outside. Yeah. You don't really fit in. Well, you know, Canadians were never well-known for patriotism. I mean, I don't remember a time in my life where anybody ever made the statement that Canadians were patriotic. It just doesn't seem to be that way. No, but you know, when the Europeans came in the 50s and 60s, they actually made Canada what it is today. And the average Canadian, I know I was called a DP for the longest time. What's a DP? A displaced person. Really? Because I immigrated to Canada. Oh, I see. They were so jealous, you know, because, you know, as Europeans, you're used to working and looking after yourself and all that. They just couldn't comprehend this. If they had their beer and their television, you know, they were happy for the weekend. And their socialized medicine, which doesn't work. That is really going down the tubes through here. Yeah, they all come down here to get operations. And they can't get up there because there's so many socialists waiting in line for the free operation. Right. Well, they're claiming this here that it's the other way around. I just heard that on the radio today. They can claim all they want to. You know, so this is all kinds of talk that's going on on the radio, isn't it? It's just incredible. Very interesting. So you are sort of a voice of sanity, and I'm so glad you're there. Well, thank you. It's nice talking to you. And thank you for calling. Good night. Good night. Canada. On our northern border. The socialists on our northern border, except for a few. There are a few people in Canada who are not and don't like it. Good evening. You're on the air. Apparently, she was one of those. Good evening. Hello? Hello. Land here? Yes, you are. I'm Gloria calling from Detroit. Hi, Gloria. Can you put your mouth right in front of your telephone and talk a lot louder, please? Can you hear me now? That's a little better, but I wish you would project your voice. Do what now? Talk loud. Yell at me. Yell? Yes. Okay. You see, there's all kinds of people in this world who are so used to talking soft that when you say talk louder, they go from talking soft to a whisper. So, for those people, I ask that they yell. I'll yell then. Thank you. Okay, my comment? Yes. Okay, well, your comment on the Y2K, when you said it was a bunch of baloney, it was a breath of fresh air. Well, thank you. And? It is a bunch of baloney. It is a bunch of baloney. And the other thing I wanted to add to you is, what do you think happened to Art Bell? I have no idea. I really don't. We've been trying for a couple of days to find out. By the way, the Associated Press article, which I told you I thought probably was a hoax, is a hoax. It is? Yeah. Wow. And there's also a message posted on the Sightings website on the Internet, which claims to be for Art Bell. I don't know if it is or not, but I also believe, I believe, that that is also a hoax. Well, I'm calling you from the Detroit area, and I'm so glad to hear you again. I didn't hear you when you were over there on the other station for a while. Well, I didn't hear me over there either. We hear you real good speech right now. Okay. Yeah, I couldn't hear me in Arizona either. That's all I got to say. Well, thanks for calling. Thank you. Bye. Bye. There are some sane people out there. Believe it or not, there really are. Good. 520-333-4578, for those of you who don't know the number. Good evening. You're on the air. Hi, Bill Boyle with Darlene. Hi, Darlene. How are you? Hey, you are talking to a true TV jokey. I've got your radio on. I've got the TV on mute. I own four TVs. Oh, Darlene. Darlene. How can you watch four TVs all at once? But I hardly ever watch them. I have a friend. His name is Gary Bourgeois, who watches 20 or 30 all at once. But I have them on. But I'm either up doing something. But it's like an addiction. You need the noise in the background. But I was going to tell you about paying bills. Uh-huh. It's funny, because it's true. We have certain things that we absolutely have to have. Now, part of us has got our priorities a little straighter than others. I have to pay my house payment, my insurance payment, things like that. But cable does come real close to be a job. Wow. And the problem is, is that we really don't talk to each other anymore. Why not? Well, I'm not sure we really like each other anymore. You're kidding. No. No, but, I mean, you can't even hardly get anybody to talk to you anywhere anymore. And if you do talk to them, they don't listen to you. Have you ever noticed we've totally lost the skill of listening? Not up here. Oh, well, you're... Hop on your horse and come on up the mountain, darling, and you can sit here. That's all we do is talk. We'll talk to you all night. Oh, hey, you and Doyle are listeners. And that's what makes you guys so special, because you are truly listeners. But another thing that is a big problem nowadays is that we have a tendency to use television as babysitters. That's... I believe that that's very true. Oh, yeah. If we can divert the children to television, then we're free. But what we don't realize is that by diverting them, we're ruining our kids. That's right. Your children. Kids are baby goats. Oh, well, mine still may be kids, then. Yeah. Let's hope not. But, and it is... I mean, whenever I grew up, I grew up on cartoons and Andy Griffith and stuff like that, but the values are gone. Well, you know what? When I was little, we didn't have a television set. We were allowed to listen to radio for a couple of hours each night, because my father said that that was good for our imagination, because we had to imagine. We couldn't see anything. When we got television, my dad would watch the news, and occasionally they would watch something like the GE Theater or the Alcoa Theater or some of those other really high-falutin, high-brow presentations, drama things. And that was it. They would turn it off, and we were not, hardly ever, allowed to go near it or to sit and watch it. Oh. And when we were, we had to behave ourselves. Oh, yeah. And that is an art that children have lost. They do not know how to behave themselves or to sit still for very long. Well, they can't lose what they never had. You see, the parents never gave them that gift, and it is a gift, and so they never had it to lose it. Oh, that's true. Oh. But I sat down with my, I've got a teenage son, and I sat down with him, and I was watching some cartoons. I almost died when I saw the thing behind it. I could not believe what they are filling our kids' heads with. Ah, you're beginning to discover the brainwashing machine. Have you seen the gargoyles, Darlene? Oh, I cannot stand them. They actually turn my stomach. Ah. Ah. But there is some stuff on TV that is absolutely, and this is what we are having our children watch. This is our babysitter. If somebody was to come in my house to watch my son and was to do the stuff that he's seeing on TV, I would do an absolute hissy fit. But yet, it's all right. What kind of fit? My hissy fit. Oh, okay. Oh, have you ever seen a mother in a total rage? Yes. Yes. Yes. Yeah, well, that would be me. But yet, I send him to his room. He stays in there for hours. I have no idea what's going on. It is definitely not a good situation. We found out what was going on yesterday. The dog went on alert, and we started, you know, posturing toward the kitchen window, and Pooh said she heard somebody outside. So, we had sent Allison to her room for misbehaving about a half hour before. We went outside and looked all around. Couldn't see anyone. Couldn't hear anything. And then we turned around and looked up to Allison's window, and she had torn a big hole in the screen and was throwing her toys out on the roof. Oh, a little bit of feminine indivisive there. Yes, and she was very proud of it and wanted us to know that she was doing that. Look, Poppy. Oh, and I wanted to thank you for the book. I plan on reading it cover to cover. Oh, well, you're welcome. Most welcome. And I will let you go, and I want to tell you that I haven't missed the show since I started listening, and I really enjoy your show. Well, thank you. Thanks, Dillian. Okay, we'll talk to you tomorrow. Thanks for calling. Bye-bye. I wonder where Mike Mastrata is. I wonder where Mike Mastrata is. He calls me every once in a while and says that he's going to call the broadcast. To my knowledge, he's never done it. Good evening. You're on the air. Yeah. I wanted to ask a question. I haven't been listening the shortwave too much here lately. I got out of it a while back. But I'm curious. What happened to Linda Thompson? I talked to her, what, two or three months ago? Mm-hmm. Two or three months ago. And she's still in Indiana, and she's still, I believe, practicing a little bit of law. Her son had run away from home or was taken from home for a while, and she had just found her son. And they were in the process of reacquainting the son with family life again. Okay. And that's, you know, that's about it. She's alive and well and living in Indiana. Is it Indiana? I'm not really sure. Indianapolis. Yes, it's Indiana. Okay, that's where she used to be. I keep trying to say WKRP in Cincinnati, but I know that she's not on the air. Yeah. I don't know, but I've listened very heavily to the shortwave for a good while, and then there were some things that caused me to sort of get turned off to a lot of the people. It's kind of like you said. You started putting two and two together and coming up at seven, you know. Yeah. Unfortunately, you're absolutely right, but I'm happy that you learned that. Oh, yeah. Very happy. And so I just sort of dropped out of a lot of it, and I started doing some exploring through other avenues, and now I listen to the shortwave, but not as much as I did by any means at all. But it's sort of, you know, one of those things is like... And probably much more selective, too. Oh, yes. Very much more so. But, you know, a lot of people never make that connection. They just get sick of the scare things, and they get sick of finding out that what they'd been told was wrong and just was, you know, wasn't true. And then they just drop out and go back to being a sheeple, and that's a very sad thing. Well, you know, one of the things that this patriotic movement has kind of turned me off about many, many, many years ago, more than we'll talk about, I was in service, and I was with a fairly good unit. Uh-huh. And we were taught that, you know, one of your comrades gets hurt. You do everything you can to bring him back. Right. You don't abandon him. Uh-huh. And it seems to me like that every time one of these people in this movement, so-called, gets hurt, the first thing they want to do is turn them back and pretend like they didn't know them or something. I don't know what you're talking about there. No, like Linda Thompson. Oh, well, we never turned our back on the other time. I'm not saying you, but a lot of the people, she became, you know, an instant non-person almost. Yes, I know. In fact, I have done whole broadcasts berating this whole country for what they did to her. Well, that's what I'm saying. You say you don't know what I'm talking about. That's exactly what I'm talking about, the way, you know, situations such as that. Yeah. A lot of them benefited very greatly from her videos and from her presence. Oh, if it hadn't been for Linda Thompson. See, nobody was listening to me. I was down there in Waco, Texas, screaming at the top of my voice that these people were going to be murdered, and I told the whole world they were going to be murdered if we didn't stop it. They burnt WWCR to the ground to shut me up, but they didn't have to do that because nobody was listening. Nobody started to listen to what we were telling them about Waco until Linda Thompson put out her videotape, Waco, the Big Lie. Well, at the time of Waco, unfortunately, I still had a TV set. Yeah. And that occupied my time a lot, just like you've been talking about this evening. Mm-hmm. Since then, I don't have to worry about that. I don't even have one. Good for you. Good for you. But, you know, I didn't really care about much of a lot of things. I had a fairly good job, and life was pretty good. Yeah. Hold on just a second. I've got to do this. You're listening to WBCQ, Monticello, Maine, USA. You may proceed. Hello. Hello. You can go ahead now. Okay. Well, you know, I've called when I realized that they were just going and kill people. Yeah. And I started watching things. Now, I live just outside of Flint, Michigan. And something that has amazed me, and I've tried to get some information about, but it's very, very hard to come up with. In Detroit, they periodically make sweeps. And they will go in, and it will be in the paper. You know, they had 150, 200, whatever arrests the night before in a drug suite. Mm-hmm. And you never hear what happens to these people. No, you don't. They're not just doing it there. They're doing it all over the country. Well, I agree. But I made an effort to try and find out about some of this stuff. And, boy, it's just like an iron door shuts on you. Well, it does, yeah. And I don't know, and I got in a very, very big argument one day with one of my coworkers because I brought up the situation how the government can seize property and assets without any recrimination on their part. And they argued vehemently the government can't do that, you know. Well, wait a minute. Wake up. I've got cases right now. They've been doing it for years. Oh, yeah. But, you know, it's amazing. These were not stupid people. Most of them were educated. In fact, hold on just a second. Girl, would you go in and get that stack of papers that are under my interview recorder? Mm-hmm. They're under there on the printer tray. Bring those in here. In fact, I've got one that, you know, I'm going to read it to you. Go ahead. Okay. Well, and these were people with, you know, above average IQ. They had good jobs. By that, I mean they were dealing with the public. They weren't just running a machine or anything. Not that that doesn't take some people a lot more brains to run a machine. They were kind of people that were articulate and everything. And they just couldn't believe that their government could do something like that. Well, most American sheeple don't believe and won't listen and don't pay any attention to the proof when it presents itself right before their eyes. This is called denial. And it's because if they admit that they know it, then they are responsible to do something about it. That requires personal risk. And that is something that is a big no-no in this country anymore. The sheriff that would face the lynch mob? Yeah. Not today. Mm-hmm. Oh, I agree with that. High noon is just in the movies. Yep. No, I knew one of the local boys in blue here, one of the, I won't tell you which municipality it was, but he admitted to me that he liked the idea of being called to certain areas of town because then he could pull his pistol and maybe shoot it. And this is one who is, you know, sworn to uphold our safety. Well, actually, we've talked about this many times on this broadcast. Police are not hired the way they used to be hired. They're chosen according to a psychological profile today, a very dangerous psychological profile. Police officers are chosen today according to a psychological profile that Hitler would have been proud to use to choose his SS during World War II. I can believe that. And they can't wait. I put out in Lynch Thompson. I couldn't find out very many ways. I tried looking on the Internet, and I couldn't find anything that, you know, was definitive on it. And I couldn't find anybody else that would give me information. So I really appreciate that. Well, you're welcome. Listen to this. Uh-huh. Police seize money. A lawsuit filed Wednesday in federal court alleges that Cincinnati police are stopping citizens, searching them, and seizing their cash between $1,131 and $8,500 in the six instances detailed. Constitutional rights lawyer Scott Greenwood, who filed the complaint, also said Cincinnati police are reporting less money confiscated in almost every case than his clients actually had. Yes. I've heard that, too. Yeah. Whose word are they going to take, yours or cops? And you know why they say they're taking this money? Why is that? Because you're not supposed to have cash today. If you have cash, you're a drug dealer. Yeah. Anything over, I don't know, depending on the place, I know in certain areas that it was anything over a couple hundred dollars, they would consider you a person with a dealer in a drug sum because nobody carries that kind of money. Well, you see, that's wrong because a lot of people do carry that much money. Same people who understand what paper assets are doing to us. Well, I am at this point... I carry nothing but cash, and if any police officer ever tried to steal my cash because he claimed that I was a drug dealer without having any proof that I ever dealt any drugs and I never have in my entire life, then I'd have to shoot the son of a bitch, and that's the truth. Well, I can't say that I would... I'll just put it this way. I'm terrified right now of... That's why they got you. ...of the cops, but I'm also terrified of credit. Well, see, that's why they got you. Yeah. You're terrified. Because I don't want to get in debt to anybody. Well, you're afraid, and they've got you. Well, by that... And so everybody in this country stops being afraid they've got you. Well, what I mean by that is if I get in debt to someone, if I turn myself over to credit... Yeah. ...and I get in debt to them, at that point I become their servant. Why would you want to get into debt, though? I don't. That's what I said. I'm terrified of getting in debt. I will do whatever I can to keep out of debt. Yeah, you should. And you are right in being terrified of police officers. Yeah. Now, not all police officers are bad. I understand that. I know at least one who's very good. And there are probably a lot more. But most police officers today are dangerous. Very, very dangerous. And they do not have the best interest of the public in mind. I agree with that. They are serving an agenda that they're not even aware of. They break the law every day. They are performing unconstitutional acts. And they have terrified the public. I agree with that. Because everybody I know of, even the people that don't agree with my position, it kind of pulls them behind them. They start getting nervous. Oh, yeah. And it didn't used to be that way. No. I can remember a time not too long ago when nobody in this country was afraid of the police. Yeah. In fact, they looked forward to the police coming around. And it was good to have a police officer as your neighbor. If a police officer moved in next door to me now, I would watch that guy 24 hours a day. I agree. In fact, I would probably videotape his every movement. I agree with that. Well, listen, I've got to get going. Okay. I appreciate taking my call. Well, you're welcome. And thank you for calling. Thank you for calling. And again, folks, I want to reiterate, not all police officers are bad people, nor are they bad police officers. But every police officer, I don't care who it is, and I get calls and they claim, well, I've never done that. And when they tell me that, I just tell them, you're lying to me because I know better than that. I know that you have done some of these things. They have broken down doors without warrants. They have stopped people and hassled them just because they didn't like the way they looked or they didn't like the car that they were driving. They have hassled people and terrified people and even arrested people simply because they talked back to them. Oh, yeah. As if they're some little gods or something, you know. And a lot worse. And a lot worse. A lot, lot worse. When I lived in California, I knew many police officers because at one time, I was the head of the mixed gas deep saturation diving department of the College of Oceaneering in Wilmington. And we had to teach the bomb squads of all the different departments how to dive using scuba and surface supplied hookah gear and all kinds of different things. We had to teach them how to use recirculating mixed gas gear and all kinds of things. So I got to know these guys. And we would, you know, they would invite us to parties and stuff and we would go. And boy, I tell you what, when these guys get drunk and start talking, I heard some of the most terrible, terrifying tales you would ever want to hear. And not a single one of them, there was not one of them who did not carry what they call a throwaway. And that was a gun that they could use to murder somebody. Or if they accidentally shot the wrong person, they would put this gun in that person's hand so they wouldn't have to pay for what they did. And they believe that the public is their enemy. Now, once again, I'm going to say this again so you all understand it. Not all police officers are this way. There are some good men out there wearing police officers' uniforms. And there are some good men out there trying to do a good job. But you see, once they're hooked into the force for a certain number of years, and they're married and they have children, they get in the same mentality as everybody else and they begin to do things that they know they shouldn't do because they're afraid that if they don't, they'll lose their job or they won't get a promotion. And they don't believe that they can do anything else besides police work because they bought into the socialist mentality that you're worthless and you're only good for what you've been trained to do and that your brain won't work for anything else and it's a lie. The good police officers need to start saying no to bad police commanders who order them to do unconstitutional things and things that they know are wrong. And they have to stop lying on the witness stand. If you can't convict somebody honestly, then you shouldn't be convicting them at all. Because what it means is you have convicted them, not a jury of their peers. And when you do that, you have subverted the entire system of justice in this country. And almost every police officer that there is lies on the witness stand as a matter of routine. And that's the truth. In California, I knew police officers who if they couldn't get somebody any other way, even if they didn't even know that they had ever committed a crime, they'll frame them. They'll rouse them and put some drugs in their pocket or throw some drugs in their back seat and then have another police officer search the car. So the one that searches the car can honestly say he didn't put it there. Oh, I've heard all the tricks. You see, I've drank way into the wee hours of the morning with some of Los Angeles' best. And I've heard it all. And I'm telling you right now, Hitler didn't have nothing on the police in America today. Nothing at all. 520-333-4578. Good evening. You're on the air. Good morning, Phil. This is Bob from New York. Hi, Bob. Hey, my... Bob. I enjoyed being with you this past summer. It was a great experience. And the seminar that we had down there. Well, we enjoyed having you, Bob. And I've got to tell you, man, finding my way through that maze and forest of wires and microphones and little boxes that you had strung all over there in the middle of the night. Oh, yeah. That was a killer. Well, it was a matter that I needed that... Do I have to do that again next year? I'm just joking, Bob. I know. Here's my wife. Remember, for the longest time, you've been asking me, where is... Yeah. You never bring her when you come. Hi, Phil. Hi. This family matters. I'm not able to go with him very often. Oh, I was beginning to think you were a myth. No, no, no. I hold that on the porch so he can get to go. See, I thought that was the way that he fought off all those good-looking women at the conference. Oh. Maybe I better go next time. Oh, there you go. But we've been listening to you and we've been listening to you for a while now, several years. And interestingly enough, getting back to what Doyle was talking about before, we had a management issue came up at work. Yeah. And one of the issues, the issue that came up was a manager's right to transfer people in to an organization that he felt, he or she felt, was were the best people to do the job. Instead of promoting somebody. Yeah, instead of promoting people. And it got into the, if people vehemently defended promotion as a right, regardless whether or not it was related to productivity. Uh-huh. And it's, it's still, it's still an issue that hasn't been resolved yet, but it's amazing, it was amazing to me, it was a real aisle scenario that people who really don't really produce that much thought that they were entitled to a raise and a promotion. As if, it's almost like a birthright. Yeah, I know. If you're not long enough, you're entitled to a promotion regardless of what you do. Uh-huh. And it just was a real eye-opener to me. Yeah, that's, that's the socialist position, all right. It's also the labor union position. He's been there 12 years, you've got to give him a raise, you've got to give him a promotion, doesn't matter what he does. Yes. He's been loyal to your company. Or it's an empowered workforce. An empowered workforce. Oh my God. It was just incredible to me. Oh, another thing is, I was driving to work the other day, and I heard, on one of the news programs, and they just kind of gawped over it lightly, and I'm sure a lot of people didn't realize the significance of what they were saying. But we heard, but I had heard, that they're taking the, the Secretary of the Treasury had approved a bill to take the American Eagle up the corner. And then he's looking at two or three different designs of something, and they haven't even decided on a new design yet. And so one of them is Howdy Doody, and what's the other two? Oh, I don't know. They didn't go into it. I know what they're doing. What are they doing, Doyle? What they said was that he had approved a bill to take the, or he had approved the new, he was looking at new designs, that he had signed something that authorized the removal of the American Eagle from the corner. Uh-huh. Doyle, what are the other designs? What are the designs? Well, they have, they have a plan to remove the American Eagle off the back, and some odd amount of states are going to have a commemorative back, you know, like an outline in California or whatever they choose, and they're going to knock out so many states each year until all 50 states have this, haven't, had their emblem every one. Have their own quarter. Yeah. Every state's going to have their own quarter. Remember the new money pamphlet? And that's it? That's what they're going to do? Yeah, that's, and then in fact, you can find it in like a coin world and in your better coin collecting magazines and the pamphlet available from the Federal Reserve, I brought one up here, remember? Yeah. The new gimmick of money, I forgot what they titled it, but talking about the changes in the paper and whatnot. Uh-huh. That was, that was news to me. I hadn't heard that one before, but I'm like, you know, the American Eagle, it's all, it's just the liberty. Yeah, well, you know, the traditions are falling by the wayside. traditions are what hold a country and a people together and, and they don't want traditions. Uh-huh. Because, uh, we hold together, then, you know, uh-huh. They won't have their socialist utopian world. Yeah. And the sad thing is, I'm sure a lot of people heard it and never even said it or not. Uh-huh. No. No. No. Yeah. So, I just want to tell you that are we, do we enjoy your program? You're coming in nice and clear tonight. Well, thanks, that's good, that's great. So, uh, sometimes, sometimes it sounds like somebody's broadcasting over you or something, but you're coming in loud and clear tonight. Uh-huh. All right, good. Well, I'll tell you what, open the door, we'll, we'll watch for those suckers and when they start to broadcast over us, we'll get one of those poles in the backyard and we'll knock them right out of the air. That's right. If they go over us, we're going to knock them down. We're not going to, we're not going to stand for that. We visit your website often. Good. Yeah. We've downloaded a lot of material and, We have about 700,000 people a month on the website now. Yeah. Yeah, we turn in, I'd say at least once a week. Yesterday, there were 40,000 people on the website. It was incredible. Yeah. And it's just growing and growing by leaps and bounds. I mean, the word is spreading. You have an incredible amount of information on it. Well, that's what we're all about. Information is the power now, not money. See, there's still people who believe that money is the power. Uh-uh. Not anymore. It's information. And the people who have the truth and know how to find the truth, know how to hold the truth and use the truth, can beat money today easily. I can see that. Like I say, you're doing a wonderful job and we, Bob and I really appreciate everything you do. Well, thank you. This year, we have a conference. Yes. When he's not looking, you crawl in that suitcase and make him work. Okay. Make him work. He's going to have to carry you all the way to Arizona. Okay. And don't give him any tip money for red caps or anybody. Make him carry that suitcase. I'll have to try that. Okay. Okay. Take care now. You too. Bye-bye. Bye-bye. Bye. Bye-bye. Five, two, zero, three, three, three, four, five, seven, eight. Gee, you know. I really did think Bob Boyd was kidding me. It's been so many years. Good evening. You're on the air. Yes. Hello, Bill Cooper. Hello. I just wanted to call and also voice my... I need you to talk a lot louder, please. How's this? Better? That's much better. Okay. I want to call and voice my appreciation for the information. Thank you. And I agree that the information is power. I just had a couple of questions for you. Sure. Whatever became of Linda Thompson? There's a lot of mythology surrounding her disappearance. I just covered that about two calls ago. She's alive and well in Indianapolis, Indiana, tending to her family. Excellent. All right. Good for her. And also this George Bush laying in a coffin. And how do we know that that happened? It's not that I don't believe. It's just that how do we, what is the story? That's the, well, there was a thorough investigation into the skull of bones done by several different people. There was a group of students who actually broke into the crypt at Yale. And went around and stole some books and took some pictures and wrote an expose, which was passed around the campus. And, of course, you know, passed into other hands as well. Mr. Sutton did, wrote a book. Anthony Sutton. Anthony Sutton wrote a book based upon many years of research, which has uncovered an awful lot of the truth about the skull and bones. And there have been articles and things written in the, I forget the name of the Yale newspaper, but over the years. And there have been students who have been members of skull and bones who have also talked a little bit here and there about what it's all about. So it comes from many different sources. You don't get information about these secret societies from any one source. In my efforts to understand their secret religion and their ritual and what they really believe rather than the literal or exoteric interpretation of what they write that they believe. I had to read literally hundreds and hundreds of books over a period of about 26 years. And it's like a huge puzzle that you have to put together. And then I read so much and I thought that it was never going to come together. And then one day I broke the code of their symbolism and it all became very clear to me. And then I was able to read the real message that is hidden in the symbolism. They write in a symbolic language. And they also erect these symbols as architecture. And then in, well, if you go to the website and click on the Art BS bell page from our home page, you'll get a real quick and real good education in some of the symbolism and you will be able to see it right away. But if nobody ever explains it to you, you'll never understand it in a million years. Well, I'm a listener that goes so far back that I picked up your Mystery Babylon set. Uh-huh. I'm sure it is a good and brief education. But I also had a question. Do you know the Bohemian Grove, the infamous photograph of the 40-foot owl and the pit of fire and all living presidents dressed in black? Was that ever published in a book? I don't know. Oh, gee. I have a copy of that. Oh, I know. I'm sure you have, I mean, multiple copies of many things that people have never seen. I have a lot of those things, too. Yeah, things like that. People would be willing to purchase that stuff, too, as resource materials for themselves and research. And I know that you like people to dig for themselves because part of the lesson of all this is really empowering yourself. Well, if it doesn't serve to get people to empower themselves, then it's all worthless. Exactly. But like on occasion, like I heard you speak to the woman a few nights ago, actually just last night again. Yeah. And you were told that you can't really spoon-feed her the stuff and that she's a citizen and she can go get it. But likewise, if you were to, let's say, offer the Privacy Act for, you know, a photocopy version of it for five bucks, that would help you out and help the people listening? No, because then nobody would ever discover the United States Code and nobody would ever learn how to find it for themselves. They would all send me five bucks. And then they would try to use it as a magic bullet rather than learning how it should be properly used. That's what's wrong with all these seminars around the country. I know people who just go to these seminars. The only reason they go is not to learn the law. They go to get these forms that are passed out that they think they can just fill in their name and address and phone number and sign it, and that's going to solve all their problems. And that's crap. Well, but sometimes, yeah, that is, but like in the case of the treason document, that's been very convincing. Well, we had to do that because if we hadn't have done that, nobody would have ever found it. Oh, sure. I mean, that was the product of about 30 years of my personal research, which was then duplicated by a real good person who sort of apprenticed himself to me to duplicate my research. And I taught him how to go and where to go and how to, you know, how to make friends with the librarians and take them flowers and offer to go get them lunch if they couldn't go out at lunchtime and all this kind of stuff. And he duplicated it. So someone has gone and double-proofed every document he found? Every single one of them and more. He found more. That is amazing. Yes, he found more. How long did that take him? Well, with a little bit of help from me in how to handle librarians who are not normally that helpful when you're seeking out this kind of information, I think it took him about a year to duplicate the research on the treason documents, and then about another seven or eight months to come up with another whole stack of documents on his own based upon what he had learned duplicating my original research. Would you feel comfortable telling us his name? Better than that. Next week, during the first hour, we'll play a broadcast where I interviewed him, and he went over how he had duplicated it. That's cool. And that's an old broadcast from several years ago. Yeah, I remember the old. That must have been on the other station. Yeah. Well, listen, Bill, I'm glad to hear that you beat that strange accelerated cancer tumor thing, and I want you around as long as the good Lord will have you because I think you're just such an asset. And I can't tell you how much I look forward to this broadcast at the end of the day. Well, thank you. Well, you take care now. Thank you very much. Bye. Thanks. Yeah, that cancer had me going, I've got to tell you. I thought it was. I thought the jig was up. But thanks to all my good friends who know how to handle that sort of thing, the jig wasn't up. But I hope I never in my life have to drink that much tea and take that many pills and capsules and grind that many chaparral leaves. I just hope I never have to do that again. Good evening. You're on the air. Hello, Mr. Cooper. I'm so glad to hear you back on. Well, thank you. Don Dolly from Illinois. Hi. And I've met you in Michigan. Uh-huh. Good hearing you. You were talking about things, products that you put out. Well, we just tuned in again. We just found out you were back on. So if you could tell us what you have or if there's a way to get a listing. Well, in exactly two or three minutes, Doyle's going to take the rest of the broadcast to do exactly that. Okay. And the other thing is, on the way to K, I wish it would crash because then maybe people would wake up and have to use their brains again. Well, you've got a point there. Although I don't think that that's what they would learn to do. I think utter chaos would result. And in large population areas like New York City, Chicago, Cincinnati, Detroit, Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego, places like that, it would be worse than the L.A. riots ever could have thought of being. Yeah. And on the new bills that they put out, the $100 bills in the 50s and the 20s, it no longer says Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago or New York. It says Federal Reserve System. Yes. You see, they're getting ready to convert to a global economic system with a world Federal Reserve Board. Wouldn't that be the world currency right there? Well, I said that when they first began the change that the new bills are made this way so that they will be recognized by Europeans as well as Americans who are used to seeing bills exactly like that with a large portrait offset to one side. If you go to Europe, that's all you see. Yeah. Well, I think it's funny money and I try not to take it. Well, it is funny money. It certainly is funny money. The only real money is gold and silver coin. That's right. Okay. Take care, Mr. Cooper. Thanks for being back on. Well, you're welcome. And thank you for calling. Okay. Ladies and gentlemen, it's time for Doyle to do his thing. And so, once again, put your hands together. Here's Doyle. Hello. Hello. I'm going to get the amp. Are you going to do it? Yeah. Go ahead. How about the amp bill? Oh, yeah. We've got to do this. We've got to take 101.1 FM Eager off the air until after the commercials have finished. And we will not be taking calls for the rest of the broadcast. So, please do not call. We're going. All right. Okay. Everybody, you've got to deal with me now. Okay. I want to start out first with the address. If you have any inquiries you would like to make, a list of the books, videos, audio tapes, a complete listing with descriptions. As far as the shows, what it gives you is the date of the show, the program or broadcast number, and the topic or the title that was assigned to that show. By us. Okay. If you want to write, you can write hour of the time, care of 101.1 FM, P.O. Box 940, Eager, E-A-G-A-R, Arizona, 85925. If you wish to call, you can call any time of the day and leave a voicemail message. We will do our best to answer in person in the afternoons, Monday through Friday. But we have a voicemail system. You can leave a message or fax us at 520-333-4578. And I'll repeat those again at the end in case you didn't get all that. Okay. I want to start off first with the information packet. If you want an information packet, I can say it's a big healthy chunk of stuff. You get descriptions of the books, audio book, Veritas, the videos that are available, the audio tapes, the special selections, and the 98 list. If you want an information packet, you need to send a number 10 size SASE. Please put your address on it with 75 cents postage on the envelope. And if you send that to us, it's $1 so we can cover the coffees and whatnot. We will send you out an information packet. It's very thick. We just added some more to it just this week and finished some more stuff and added to it just today. Okay. It's constantly expanding. But it's 75 cents postage on number 10 SASE to the address I gave earlier. I'll give it again at the end. And 75 cents postage on it with $1 included inside, please. And we will get that right out to you. Okay. Next, I want to give a more detailed description of some of these items. Start off with Behold a Pale Horse written by William Cooper. Remember, 500 pages of the most well-documented, most suppressed information ever published. It's an excellent book. The price for Behold a Pale Horse is $30 posters paid. It's a really good book. $30 posters paid for Behold a Pale Horse. The next item I'd like to cover. Excuse us, I need a drink. Is the alternative audio, audiobook version of Behold a Pale Horse. This is a two-tapes set, three hours long with 10 minutes of new material. It's read by the author himself, William Cooper. Obviously, it's a bridge from the book. But it's a very good tape set. It's very good for people who have a long commute or don't feel they have the patience or time to read. Or it makes a good gift, too. This is the audiobook of Behold a Pale Horse. The price is $19.95. Postage paid. Okay, that's $19.95. Postage paid for Behold a Pale Horse, audiobook. Okay. The next item I'd like to cover is the Veritas. Veritas is an international newspaper. It's the only newspaper that addresses issues that affect your individuality. It fully documents sources for readers to confirm. It's hand-delivered to key representatives and media bureaus in Washington, D.C. Veritas presents the facts. You make your own decisions. And it challenges the readers to think for themselves. It's an excellent newspaper. Full-size. Not a newsletter. Not a memo. Not a handbook. It's a full-size newspaper. It's Veritas. A 12-issue subscription is $55. That's $55 for a 12-issue subscription of Veritas. And if you would like a sample to see what it's all about, to get an idea of what you might be subscribing to, you can send for a current issue, just one current issue, $5, and you can get a sample and see what makes up a Veritas newspaper. Okay. Next item. Okay. Okay. Next item. Oklahoma City Day 1. It's a detailed account of the bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, April 19, 1995. It was written by Michelle Marie Moore with a Ford by William Cooper. It's a really good book. I believe it's 640 pages. I read it about a year and a half ago, so I don't remember the exact number of pages, and it's a very thick, healthy book. It's a detailed account of the happenings around the Oklahoma City bombing. It's a really good book. I just today gave one to a dear friend of ours here locally, and they were reading it within minutes and couldn't believe it. She called in and mentioned it, in fact. It's Oklahoma City Day 1. It's a detailed account of the bombing of the Murrah Federal Building, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, April 19, 1995. It's written by Michelle Marie Moore with a Ford by William Cooper. The price is $16. Post is paid. Okay. So if you would like that, it's $16. Post was paid for Oklahoma City Day 1. The next item is the Branch Davidians' Last Will and Testament. This is a video that was made by the people within the Branch Davidian home, the church. It's an actual two-hour videotape. It was made by the Branch Davidians for the BATF and FBI to prove that none of them were being held there against their will. Okay. The church members, unfortunately, were not aware that this tape would turn out to be their only chance to tell their story to the world. All but one of the people on this videotape are now dead. It's a really heart-wrenching video. It's the Branch Davidians' Last Will and Testament. You see these people with their families and their children. And it's real. They aren't just some demon as the media made them out to be. It's an excellent video. The price of $30. Post is paid for the Branch Davidians' Last Will and Testament. And this was made by them. Most people don't realize they ever did this tape, but it was a videotape they made themselves to prove they weren't being held there against their will by any martyr or Mariah. It's $30. Post is paid. Branch Davidians' Last Will and Testament. Just reference that. The next videotape is the Zapruder tape or Zapruder film. On October 22, 1963, Abraham Zapruder stood on a concrete abutment near the famous grassy knoll, as it's called, in Dallas, Texas, and turned to film the president's motorcade. Instead, he filmed the assassination of President John Fitzgerald Kennedy. Zapruder rushed the film to a lab where it was developed. A local TV station aired what became known as the Zapruder film that night. The film was confiscated shortly thereafter and transported to the National Photographic Laboratory in Washington, D.C. The film was eventually returned to Abraham Zapruder, who promptly auctioned it off to the highest bidder, Time Life Incorporated. In 1992, William Cooper acquired a first-generation copy on 35mm color-positive film. The copy was immediately made on one-inch videotape. The first-generation copy of the now-famous Zapruder film on VHS videotape. It's played at its normal speed as it was filmed. Quarter speed, one-tenth speed, and then frame-by-frame, stop-gap type, all on the same videotape. You can't find this anywhere else. And the frames are full-sized. They aren't cropped. The tops or bottoms are sized into full-size frames. Again, it's played at normal speed, quarter speed, tenth speed, and then frame-by-frame. This is the Zapruder film. This is your chance to acquire a very rare part of our history. The price of this is $40 postage paid for the Zapruder film. Yes, sir. Can I have something for you? Ah. We just got this in today. Yeah. This is all our radios, and these are all our prices. I have marked prices right here. Okay. For instance, the ATS-909. Mm-hmm. Retails for $339. Our price is $274.99, so you can look at them down there. All right. It's a clock radio. We've got all kinds of stuff. And here's the whole descriptions of them right there. Cool. Thank you. You're welcome. All righty. We've got some new stuff. All right. Don't forget to mention, it's time to buy Christmas gifts. Yes, it's time to buy Christmas gifts. Buy something that is useful and educational, and it will be remembered very well. Some of the best gifts I ever had were just such things, things I could use, learn by, remember, for the people for years to come that bought them for me. Okay. Remember the last time the Zaff Ruter film was $40, posters paid, really good tape, no narration on it, so we won't be accused of telling you what to think. You watch the film, come up with your own research and ideas. It's $40, posters paid for Zaff Ruter. Okay. So I could cover the, and then again, the audio tapes are available for all the broadcasts of 1998, starting from January 5th to present. A lot of shows, a lot of topics. The list gives a full account of them, so you can look through and get the tape you might want exactly, or an old show you may have heard and couldn't hear it that good or really like the topic or the information contained in it. Tapes, the prices are for a US $10, posters paid for one hour. Okay. And three-hour tape is $13, posters paid. Two-hour tape is $12, posters paid for the audio tapes. If you want a list of these, just ask for the information packet. It's in everything like I told you earlier. Next, I'd like to go into the new stuff. What do we have? I may really mess this one up because I'm looking at it for the first time. I was at work all day, like we talked about earlier. Let me see. Okay. We'll start off with the, I want to start off with the radios, Sanjum radios. First, we have various models available. I have a couple of them right here. The ATS-808 Sanjum radio. It's an excellent radio. Yes, ma'am. So I don't forget, I told you to come get it. Yes. Uh-huh. Thank you. You're welcome. You're going to come and join me, too? Okay, go ahead. Thanks. The Sanjum. The first one I'd like to start off with is the ATS-808. It's an all-band AM-FM stereo world band receiver. It has AM-FM stereo long wave, short wave. It's phase loop locked. This is a PLL synthesized receiver. It's got 45 memory presets. It covers the short wave bands from 120 meter down to 11 meter. It comes in a full kit. Suede pouch, stereo headphones, short wave handbook, extended antenna. It runs on AA batteries. It's a really good radio. It's a Sanjum ATS-808. And it's a, um, this is a really sharp deal right here. The Sanjum ATS-808 is $149.95 plus postage. Okay. Six dollars postage. ATS-808, $149.95. Okay. Okay. Uh, the next one I'd like to cover is the, uh, Panasonic that we carry. Uh, let me get to this. Let me knock this Panasonic radio out. It's the only Panasonic we carry. It's a nice radio. It's got nine short wave bands. FM, medium, long wave. FM stereo headphone jack. Tone controls. It's a DC jack to run it off a 110 wall outlet. Runs on AA batteries again. It's an N-log tuning radio. Uh, you dial a needle type, just so you know up front. Um, it's a nice radio. We have this, uh, Panasonic. It's the RF-B11. That's RF-B11. It's a Panasonic short wave radio for $58.95 plus postage. Six dollars postage. $58.95 plus six dollars postage and handling. Okay. And let me get on and stumble through some of these other things. Let me go here. Holy cow. Okay. The, uh, ATS-909 Sanjean. It's all band digital short wave receiver. This is the one that, uh, we use right here in our own backyard. Um, it's a nice radio. All band digital short wave receiver. 306 memories. Five tuning methods. It's got an ATS tuning system. AM, FM. FM stereo, auto search, manual search. It's switchable to upper and lower side band both. It's, uh, got a 42 World City time. Display editing. Three different timers. An adjustable sleep time. It's a nice radio. Uh, I can personally attest to the quality of these. I have dropped mine, stepped on it. It was packed in a duffel bag for four years in the Army. It's had stuff spilled on it. It's been watered and rained on. It's a good radio. You can still use it. Uh, the ATS-909 is $274.95. The ATS-909 Sanjean radio for $274.95. It's a really nice radio. Picks up stations really well. In fact, just last night with no antenna aerial up or anything inside the house, I was listening to AM Station out of Omaha. From Omaha, Florida, Arizona with no antennas inside the house in the middle of the night. Okay. Next one I'd like to go to is the ATS-818-CS. CS cassette. Okay. ATS-818-CS. 16-band digital shortwave receiver with a programmable cassette recorder. BFO for SSB reception. That means sometimes you'll just hear strictly SSB or single sideband, which is what it stands for. BFO is the same thing. I have no idea what BFO stands for. I will find out. But it's single sideband. Okay. And I want to make that clear because some companies advertise this as if it's two different features. It is not. Okay. Single sideband, upper and lower, switchable. AM, FM, FM stereo. It's got 45 presets. Color display. LCD display. Very large. Easy to read. Dual time display. FM stereo signal and battery indicator. It's got a sleep timer. Tone controls. The AC adapter is included. So if you don't want to run it on AA batteries, you can plug it into the wall and run it off an AC 110 outlet. Okay. The price for the ATS-818-CS is $249.95. $249.95 for the ATS-818-CS plus shipping and handling. Okay. I'd like to go to another one. This is a really nice radio right here. It's a really nice middle-of-the-road radio. And I say that for lack of a better word right now. As far as price goes, it's got a lot of features. It's one of their newest models from Sanjean. It's the ATS-404. 16-band digital shortwave. AMS and FM stereo. It's got 54 presets. Color displays. Dual time readout. Okay. Sorry. I got sidetracked by something else here. Dual time display. 12 and 24-hour display as far as clocks. You can use the military time or conventional 12-hour AM, PM. Auto memory scans. Auto manual search. News control. Continuous coverage on the shortwave bands. The display is fully illuminated. And it's a really nice radio. It's ATS-404. Okay. $99.95 plus postage. $99.95 plus postage. $6 postage and handling. Okay. And remember, you can call or write for information about any of this stuff. All this is included in the information pack now. Just finish knocking it out today. Expanding it. It's a really good deal. You can read all this stuff. Just try to memorize everything here. Okay. Another one here I'd like to cover is the ATS-818. Okay. It's the, it's, all the features are the same as the 818 CS, which I described earlier, except it does not have the programmable cassette recorder. Okay. So, without the cassette, it's ATS-818. That's the model. $194.95. $194.95 for the ATS-818 SanGene shortwave radio. Let me see what else implies here. Let me see what else we got here. Okay. And the 808. Ah. Okay. We also have, I have some questions. And this is really good. I'm seeing this here. I had some people call that have wanted to know, well, I've got a SanGene or I've got this model, that model. But I have this SanGene model predominantly. And the 808 is the predominant number of questions. And I'm tired of burning up batteries. Okay. We have the AC adapters for these. It saves a lot of money. Because if you're listening inside, we're in a room where you're close to a wall outlet anyway. Plug it in. It's a lot easier than changing batteries. Or having them go dead in the middle of a broadcast and go rummaging to find a dead one and replace it and get back on to listening. We fight that a lot here when we're listening outside to enjoy the beautiful scenery, especially at the sunset time. It's the AC adapter for the ATS-808. It's $12 plus postage. Okay. You can either just write, I want the AC adapter. Or you can reference its model number, which is ADP-808. I would probably be a lot easier to just say AC adapter for the ATS-808 radio. It's $12 plus postage. Okay. One thing I need to cover now. If you wish to order anything, anything whatsoever, there's only a few ways to pay for it. Cash, completely blank money order. Completely blank money order. Gold or silver coin. Cash, blank money order. Gold or silver coin. Okay. And that is the only method of payment we will accept. If we get a filled out money order, we will send it back. I've been doing that. And so please send a blank one. Okay. Because then I, and then I, it takes up time, you know, obviously to write a quick note of why you're getting your money order back and postage and everything else to deal with it. So we don't want to do that. And if you are going to send the money or for donation or whatever, or an order, please be detailed in your description. Sometimes it's a little hard to tell exactly what I need to do or what we all need to do here to get this filled promptly. So please be very detailed. Help us out. If we get money, which is, you know, like a blank money order with no description, we don't know what it's for. And so then we've got to try to deal with it as far as getting hold of the person and whatnot to see what the money was for. And we, and sometimes people send money without the note. I've seen that many times. And so that's why we can't just assume ourselves why it's there. Okay. Okay. To go over, let's see what we've got here. It's ATS-404. I wanted to really cover this new radio as far as the SanGene line goes of one of their newest models. I was speaking with the people at SanGene for some technical questions I had about my radio and the circuitry inside of it. And they were telling me about this ATS-404. It's the full performance, full feature, digital AM, FM, stereo shortwave receiver. It offers many of the features that are on the most expensive tabletop models at a much more affordable price. I covered certain terms like continuous coverage or auto memory scan. I want to go into these terms and give you definitions real quick. Take any time. And that way you fully understand what you were hearing. Continuous coverage means that it tunes continuously all shortwave bands and any frequency in between. Sometimes there are gaps on some radios. Okay. Auto memory scan is it means it automatically scans every memory preset and plays each in sequence for seven seconds. You can hear what you may be looking for or just hear what is on the air to find something. So you've got an illuminated display. Auto or manual searches. A lockable, a lock switch it's called. Seconds display, time display. It's got 12 and 24 hour clocks. Auto preset system. And that's, it automatically determines all the memory presets based upon signal strength of the station. That helps out a lot. So it doesn't get stuck on a very weak signal that you probably can't hear very well anyway. And then it's got, it's keypad entry. You just type in the frequency. If you want to hear WBCQ, you type 7.415. Enter. And boom, the frequency's in there. And because the display goes out to the thousandth position, it's really easy to see what you've tuned in and what you're listening to. It's got tone controls. AM, FM stereo. It's a really nice radio. It comes with a carrying case and stereo. Ear buzzes, they're called. SanGene makes some of the best stereo earbuds. Those are little headphones you stick kind of like in your outer part of your ear. They don't really go over your head or anything. It comes with all that. That's the ATS 404, and that is $99.95 plus shipping. Okay, one more time real quick. If you want to write, order, inquire, whatever, it's hour of the time. Care of, 101.1 FM, PO Box 940, Eager, EAGAR, Arizona, 85925. And the voicemail and fax system is 520-333-4578. That's it. All right. Good night, folks. And God bless each and every single one of you. things like that. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. You've been listening to the Hour of the Time. I'm William Cooper. Be sure and tune in again on Monday when we'll be right back here on WBCQ, The Planets. The Planets. Two Planets. Two Planets. Two Planets. Two Planets. Whatever I'm William Cooper. All right, together. Thank you. Thank you.