And it is out of the way, so we may continue now. Does that give you a little better understanding? I've always led the charge. I've always given an example. I've never asked anyone to do anything that I would not do at our conferences. I have never eaten a bite of food until everybody there was fed. I believe if you're going to be a leader and you're going to ask somebody else to do something, you must be prepared to do it twice before they. I agree with you. And, yeah, what you've said is helping me to understand. It's a lot of information. And like I tried to say earlier, sometimes I only get it in bits and pieces. Oh, I understand. And it's hard to put it all together, but I'm headed in that direction. Yeah, and forgive me if sometimes I'm not as patient as you might wish me to be. I've been at this for many, many years, and sometimes I find it absolutely frustrating when people cannot grasp what I know so well. You've only read 10,000 books, but I haven't. Yeah, I know. I know, and I've become very impatient because I want so much for people to understand and come out of that enslavement and that mental vacuum that they live their lives in for most of their lives. And I know exactly how that is because I live most of my life that way before I begin to, quote, see the light, end quote. All right. Well, thanks, Bill. I've enjoyed talking to you. You're welcome. Thank you for calling. 520-333-4578 is the number. Where are you, Mike Mastrada? Well, you keep telling me you're going to call. I haven't heard from you yet. I bet he sat up in his chair when he heard that. Good evening. You're on the air. Bill, I've got a note stuck in my forehead. Really? Rabbits, too. Yeah. No, that's not it. Okay. You said that I was wrong. Although we did find a rabbit today in the yard that apparently a coyote had dismembered during the night and found two little girls asking us a lot of questions about those ears and stuff scattered all over the yard. That was a little tough. Bill, I think it all goes back to Scripture. In the parable of the sower, where the wayside hearer cannot get, he cannot understand the things of God. So, anything else, like you say, this really explained it for me, that these men, most of them don't believe in anything. At the highest levels. The ones in between the highest levels and the lowest levels, they do. They believe all this nonsense that they're filling their heads with. Oh, I see. Okay. You see? In other words, there is a certain amount of them that do believe in this. To get into the lodge, you have to profess a belief in a supreme being. They don't tell you what that supreme being is, nor do they ask you what you think it is. And ultimately, they say that supreme being is Lucifer. Well, during all of those years of the ceremony and the symbology and the teachings and the speeches and reading the books and the teachings of the lodge, then they take the minds of these people and twist them around to believe what they want them to believe. See, they have them for a lot of years to play with their heads. See, at the highest level. See, all of these people who join the lodges, all of these various lodges, they spend all these years looking for the secret that they've been promised. That they will be one of the elect and that they're going to learn great secrets as a member of the lodge. If they ever get to the highest levels of the lodge, the only secret that they learn that there is, is how to use the promise of a secret to lead and manipulate all of the members below them. Bill, where can you find out the symbols they use, the hand signals they use? How do you find this out? Do you go to a library? No, you're looking for a silver bullet. I told you a hundred years, there's not one. It requires work. Study. Reading hundreds of books. Sitting down and piecing together the puzzle. Because I've seen these, I've seen them use these signals, you know, in my, like I work in the building trade, you know, and you see them and you, I mean, I don't understand a lot of it. The quickest way is to join the lodge. But if you do that, you have to take oaths that, as far as I'm concerned, strip you of your soul. Right, I would not do that. No, no, no. And don't ever believe for a moment that those oaths don't mean anything. Grown men don't make oaths that don't mean anything if those grown men have any honor whatsoever. Well, I'm sure they mean something because apparently it's holding these people into the... Well, I guarantee you. It means exactly what they say. Yeah, right. Right. It means something to them. And if their oath in the lodge doesn't mean anything, what does their oath in a court of law mean? You see, they're liars. And when you ask them what they believe in and what it all means, and they stand there and lie to you for about two hours and tell you it doesn't mean anything, they're under oath they cannot ever tell you the secrets of the lodge. They must lie to you. And they do. And the books in the lodge tell them to lie. And I'll read the oaths to you that says that they have to protect and shelter a brother even if he's committed murder and treason. Except for the murder and treason, right? No. Murder and treason not accepted. Oh, I thought it was the other way around. Oh, no. See, that's how they get away with what they get away with. Okay. All right. Now, you know, I heard someone recently teaching about the Knights of Columbus. And their oath, you know. And now, I don't know if this was, you probably know more about this than this man did. But he said that, you know, they put that fourth degree thing where they get the sword, you know, that they put it to like a woman's body and kill the baby, you know, for the Pope or whatever, you know. I mean, does that sound familiar to him? Unless I have the oath and can read it on the air, I'm not going to say anything because anything I say could be misconstrued. In other words, you're familiar with it then? Yes, I am familiar with it. But I'm not going to comment on it. Did you hear what I said? Yeah. Unless I can read the oath verbatim. Okay. Okay. And the ceremony. So the people understand. Do you think you might want to do that sometime? I don't know. I've done a lot of it on past episodes. I read what I think is necessary for people to know. All secret societies are subversive. I don't care what you call them. Right. It doesn't matter. It doesn't matter what religion they pretend to belong to or what religion condones their lodge or whether they are condoned by a religion or not. It doesn't make any difference to me. All secret societies, I've studied them all. They're all subversive. I don't care what their name is. Period. If they weren't subversive, they wouldn't be secret. I've learned that. There is no need for secrecy when people are not doing anything that requires secrecy. There is no need for secrecy if people are not doing something that they know the community would not approve of. Exactly. It's like you turn the light on and all the rats take off. Hey, Phil, thanks a lot. You're welcome. Talk to you later. 520-333-4578 is the number. The number. The number. By the way, the little lesson that I gave you at the beginning of the broadcast tonight was taken from The Lost Light by Alvin Boyd Kuhn. It was taken from the writings of Manny P. Hall. Albert Pike was taken from my own research. Quite a bit of which was interjected in the, what would you call it? The teaching? The lecture? Whatever you want to call it. And, gee, how did we get all the way around there? That's a numero tres, huh? Well, we'll just get over here and see what we can do with it. And, yeah, let's do that. Okay, folks. A little thinking music. A little thinking music. A little thinking music. A little thinking music. You're listening to the Hour of the Time. I'm William Cooper. Whenever I do lectures or teachings on the mysteries, I like to play this sort of esoteric sounding music to give you some room for some mental machination, if you so choose. 520-333-4578 is the number. Let's do it. I do what you do. Thank you. Thank you. There's something there? Because I know you said that every music you play on your show, there's something there. Has meaning, yes. Okay. Most of the time you can't even hear what she's saying because of so much reverb and echo, but it's very peaceful music. Very peaceful. If you listen to what she's saying, there are messages there, and there are pagan messages from the Celt religion. That's what I was telling my wife. And, I mean, that's one of her favorite little groups there. It doesn't mean they're bad messages. Some of them are really good messages. Okay. You know, all peoples and all religions, it doesn't matter what they believe in, teach good things. They just don't always teach what other religions and other peoples consider to be good things. And some of them, from time to time, teach bad things, including Christianity. Christianity when they taught that it was good to burn at the stake people who did not believe what other Christians believed or what the Catholic Church dictated should be believed. I totally agree, sir. But, personally, I like the music, the melody, whether you listen to the words or not. Oh, I do, too. I think it's some of the most beautiful music ever written. Okay, sir. And not only that. That's one of the reasons I use it. Okay. I try to use music that not only carries a message with it, but is aesthetically pleasing to not only me, but the listening audience. And I also use a lot of music that I know my audience has never heard in their life in order to sort of expand their feeling for music. Well, personally, I've heard at least a few of the music you've played. Oh, good. Some of the older stuff, I'm catching up with that. But, Enya, yes, and even the Rose by Seal, yep. I remember that back in WWCR, you swear on that. Yep. I was also wanting to tell you, I'm calling from Texas here. Uh-huh. And we got them preparing this expo. Yeah. And Bo Grimes, I'm about to show you himself. He's on the list. He's supposed to show up. You've got something. Oh, me? Maybe I need to... No, I can't say that. He must have been... He must not have been too upset. I'm not sure what a 45 should do, but I didn't say that. No, no, no, no, no. I'm just kidding. No, no. We don't even want to joke about things like that. I know. Not on air. I'm sorry. No, not anywhere. We don't want to joke about things like that. I wish him well. I wish he would figure out what he wants to do in life. Well, I know what he wants to do in life. He wants to enslave the rest of us. Okay, sir. Well, I appreciate it. My wife was interested because it's been in you every song. And that's our favorite band. And I said, Teddy, grab all our cassettes. There's no words there in English. Because I could read the words. And knowing what I know, knowing what she knows, hmm. You know, I knew there was something there. There's a reason for that. But the music is awesome. I mean, it's laid back. It's good work. But, yep. I guarantee you. If anybody can understand the words she says, because there's so much reverb and everything else in speech and whatever. Well, you can if you're listening to it in your home on your own CD or tape player. You're listening to it over shortwave. I mean, you're lucky to understand what I say half the time. Well, that's true. But at the same time, we have all our cassettes. But they don't put her words in there. You know, like a lot of bands actually put their... Oh, well, you need to sit down and concentrate. I don't have any trouble hearing what she says. And you also have to understand that on a lot of these, the music that she does, she's not singing it in English. She's singing it in Old English or Celtic. Celtic, yes. Yes. That's what I was saying. I'm telling you that you watch, it'll blow your mind. If you really know what she's saying, you might have a different perspective. But the music she loves, and I like it too, you know. But that's just music. I don't think there's nothing evil with music, per se. Depends on the intent of the person who wrote it, what it says, and who it's aimed at. Exactly. But you have a right to... There's a modus operandi there. Yeah. You're correct. I just want to double-check that, because I've never understood a word she ever said. So, but I like her made back music. So, I will relate that to my wife of 15 years, very happily married. And you are a blessing there. And Joel, I wish you the best, and you're a good apprentice. Pay attention to this man. But, Peter Cooper has woken me up in what I thought was freedom. And I thought I was ahead of time, and all of a sudden I hear this one. So, I want to congratulate you people and continue on. I'll support you all again. Thank you very much. Thank you. Have a good night. Thank you for calling. 520-333-4578. Let me see. Where am I at here? I don't know. Good evening. You're on the air. Hi. This is Steve from 4 Byers, Florida. I just wanted to call and say thank you for risking so much to give the truth to the American people and the world. Thank you. Thanks. All right. Bye. That's it? Thank you. 520-333-4578. Thank you very much. And thank you for calling. Well, don't put me on a pedestal, folks. I'm human just like you. And believe me, I'll be the first one to fall off. I've always told you that. I don't want to be what I'm trying to get you away from. I don't want to be the person that you blindly follow. Never wanted that. Don't want it. Don't ever. Don't do it. Okay? Good evening. You're on the air. Hello? Mr. Kipper. Yes, sir. I've been pushing the replay over and over. I'm sorry. I'm happy I got back on. I was going to ask you a question also. Got back on? When were you on before? I was just on right before the last cover. Oh. The one that's on by Enya? Uh-huh. I got the Texas draw. So what can I do for you? Okay, sir. I was going to ask you about FM broadcasting. Yeah? One small question about, I understand that you guys turned your 101.1 off? Yes. Advertised? Yes. Okay. Well, what would I do if I rebroadcast a show of yours or anybody else's? You got to do that. Why are you asking me? It would be your station. You do whatever you want to do. Okay. I just thought it was something legal. I'm not putting it inside. 101.1 FM Eager is not owned by me. It's owned by a charitable trust. Okay. Okay. That belongs to my daughters. It is a non-profit foundation. Therefore, there can be no commercials on 101.1 FM Eager. It's a community service non-profit station. Okay, sir. Well. But what you do with your station is your business, not mine. All right. Well, I'm just asking advice. So I really need to have a trust there. But I don't have the funds to do that. I understand. But I'm just wondering, because if I rebroadcast a certain station. You don't have to have a trust. Well, I followed your rules as far as rebroadcasting yours. Mm-hmm. Everything, Swiss America, everything's off there. So. Swiss America? We haven't done anything with Swiss America in a long way. Actually, I've got some old tanks there. Oh, I see. You're talking about the rules off the Internet. Just now, yes. I'm just now catching up with the time. Okay, good. But I'm just asking if I rebroadcast another show that actually was saying buy this video or buy this tag. That's up to you. That's up to me? Yeah. Okay, I thought that would be. Okay. Okay, sir. Sorry to bother you again. We're on the air here. Yeah, you're on the air. We're in Lake Dallas, 89.7. Oh, okay. Very good. 89.7. Dallas, Texas. That is. FM. FM. FM. FM stereo. Yeah. Excellent. Y'all have a good one. You too. Thanks for calling. All right. Very good. 89.7. In Dallas, Texas. So if you're listening in shortwave and you are in Dallas, Texas, tune in FM 89.7 and you can listen to that station. I'm sure he has some other good programming also. 520-333-4578 is the number. He has some other good ideas that you can take from. W Chopx W Chopx W Chopx W Chopx W Chopx Oаете muita wimpinación Muy bien rara new women Nudiendo Zoro No, no, no. No, no. No, no. They haven't guessed what we had for supper tonight. Think they will? I don't know. If they don't, I'm not going to tell them. If they do, we'll give them a night. There you go. I will tell them they may wear a cell's hand. Them fourors dinero. These are really so reforms and life. Thin six years ago would duas. The clan's bonking open. Had fifty ages nine years. I have promised my secret home. Of them as you swaudaze and the few months pulled one哪裡 from the clinic. They'll turn the map to go to ballou carbs. Then they join the people like that. As they can find. They'll turn the map. They'll turn the map to go to my family. It's the beginning. Good evening. You're on the air. Hi, this is Doug. I'm from South Carolina. Hi, Doug. You have a strong signal here. Wonderful. With all the Celtic music you have, you guys didn't have haggis, did you? I don't think so. Okay. I just want this one. I guess some of the shows, I didn't know what other people had called in. You know what we had for supper tonight? Yeah. What? No, I don't. Want to take a guess? I just thought it was haggis. Oh, no, no, no. Oh, that was your guess. Okay. That's my guess, haggis. Oh, I thought you were referring to somebody who did Celtic music. I didn't even catch what you were saying. Yeah, right. Okay. No, no, no, that's not what we had. Okay. Yeah. Not at all. All right. But sometimes I wish we had some scones and some of that good food. Yeah. Yeah. What else can we do for you? What else can we do for you? Well, you know, I'm having trouble trying to figure out how to write my name. It sounds like a stupid question, but, you know, they want you to write it with some taps, small letters and taps. Can you talk a lot louder, please? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. The way that a fiction person is, it's all capital letters in their name. Yeah. And the way your name is supposed to be for a sovereign is just the first letters capitalized. Yes. And also some people say you should write, you know, your first name, middle name, comma, and then your last name. That's correct. You know why? Some people say you should hyphenate between your first and second name. You can do that, too, if you wish. But do you know why? I'm not exactly sure why. Your last name is not yours. Belongs to your family. Okay. Your name is your first name and your middle name. The last name is the family name. Belongs to the family collectively. Only your first name and middle name belong specifically to you. Okay. And it has to be spelled out, no abbreviation. Yes, that's correct. Okay. Well, you know, my birth certificate in 1949, evidently, they made a mistake and they didn't put it in all caps. They put it the right way. I haven't seen it. Have you seen yours? I have seen mine, yes. But, you know, it doesn't make any difference. If there is a birth certificate, you are owned by the state. You are a human resource. Right. And they can pledge all of your work and productivity to back the national debt. That's why. Yeah. I've been learning about it. That's why, in 1933, they instituted the Department of Human Resources and began the requirement that all babies born must have a birth certificate, which is then sent to the Department of Human Resources. Okay. But there's a way to get around all that. Oh, there's a way to get around all of it. Yeah. It's all fraud. You see, you cannot be held to a contract, the terms of which were never explained to you. You did not enter into it willingly. Also, in a matter of a birth certificate, you are not a party of the contract because you did not sign it. You are not even of age to be responsible to enter into a contract. See, they scam people. They lie to us. They cheat us. They defraud us of our birthright. And it's all done by sneaky, underhanded lies. Because that's the kind of people they are. They are scum, puke, faith, lying, manipulating cowards. It's quite a shock to learn all this stuff. Sure it is. It was a shock to me. When I found out I'd been serving a system that was enslaving me for most of my life, I was incensed. Absolutely incensed. I was so angry you wouldn't even believe how angry I was. I jumped in a bottle of scotch for a couple of weeks. Yeah. It will take me a little while to get out of this stuff. Won't it? Yes, it will. But you can do it. And as a last resort, if they absolutely refuse to let you out, you can do what I've done. You can say, my rights come from God, not from you. I refuse to bow to your tyranny. I refuse to pay your tribute. And if you come against me and mine, I will defend myself with what the founding fathers gave me as a last resort against tyranny. And I'll die on my doorstep rather than to submit to you scum. You know, you don't go out and kill them. You defend your creator-endowed rights against them should they come to kill you or take your property. That's what we all must do. If every single person in this country would take that stand and take their stand with and for their neighbor, it would be all over. And we would have the restoration of Republican constitutional government. Yeah, if we all woke up. Right. Unfortunately, most people are cowards. Yeah. Seems to be the state. Well, we've been dumbed down, too. Dumbing down is no excuse for cowardice. No, that's true. Once you've received the truth, if you continue to live in the fantasy, that's cowardice. But that's up to you. Yeah. Yeah, right. Right. I understand. Well, I appreciate what you're doing. Thank you. Thank you. And thank you for calling. Thank you for calling. 520-333-4578. We've got enough time for, I don't know, a couple more calls, whatever we want to do, I'll get. For the next, however, mini, whatever it is. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. they both seem to talk about the same thing. Shimon Peres kept mentioning, of course he said democracy about 30 times, but he kept mentioning about what he was talking about at a university, and he said he wanted to talk to the young people. That's one reason he came here. He talked about getting, that they need to get ready and start changing their way of thinking about things. Of course he mentioned globalization a whole lot. Yeah, well, you know what he believes in. Oh, yes. And I made a copy of a page out of your book, and I'm a teacher. I teach at a middle school. I'm trying to work my way up to teaching political science high school. But anyway, I made a copy out of your book. You have a copy from a Look Magazine, 1962, of David Ben-Gurion. His view of the world in 1987. Uh-huh. Now, next to that I put the biography that they gave us at the lecture of Shimon Peres, how he was hand-picked in his 20s to be the minister of defense of Israel by David Ben-Gurion. Uh-huh. So, I mean, I just see a connection there about, you know, one of the men who groomed him, and, of course, his view of the world. I guess if people don't have your book, Ben-Gurion's view of the world in 1962, looking ahead 25 years, was a, well, he looked at the United States as having a planned economy, being a welfare state, being a planned economy, and that the world, there would be a world system that would be ruled from Jerusalem. And they would build a temple, no, a, I can't remember the wording, a shrine of the prophets. Yeah. And they would have an international court there to settle all disputes. And, of course, there would be an international police force, and there would be no more armies and no more wars. Yeah, his was the Zionist goal. The Zionist goal. Now, Lech Walesa, I can't mispronounce his name, he doesn't speak any English yet, an interpreter. He's a devout Catholic, and I believe he was born and raised not far from where Pope John Paul is from. Uh-huh. And he mentioned, well, of course, he mentioned a lot about the Pope, or the Holy Father, as he called him. Uh-huh. Uh-huh. Okay. Communists do not believe in God or Jesus Christ or anything else. But communism is atheism. But they do believe in world government, and so does the Pope. Right. That's the key. The Pope does. Now, what's funny is I have a book, well, I mentioned it the other night, about J.S. Gruber's study of communism. And I was sort of perusing it right before the lecture, and I got to the point where the Karl Marx and the Communist Manifesto, one of the last slogans or lines is, workers of the world unite. Yeah, that's right. That's solidarity. That's solidarity. Right. Absolutely. Absolutely. Yeah. And the notes to the lecture, the wording was almost exactly the same. Yeah. Now, let me say how these lectures work. Well, I'm sure you know. They filter the questions. They don't allow you to walk up to the microphone. They give you a card unless you write your question. Yeah, that's so that they can make sure that they're not asked anything that might be embarrassing or might actually tip the hand of what's really going on there. Yeah, they never ask my questions. It's weird. But anyway, but Valessa said this because these were all such softball questions, you know, about, you know, how great you were in solidarity. He said to the interpreter, now he has a very, he's got a really good sense of humor, but he said to the interpreter, you know, what are you scared to ask me some hard questions? So the college professor filtering the questions there, he even said, what is this, some kind of censorship? And so he read a hard question and it was some, I don't know who it was, it's the auditorium is packed, but they basically said, well, your ideas of this globalism, you sound like a socialist. And that was basically the question and Valessa went into this long spiel to basically talk about how evil communism was. And he basically, in the last days he said, I am not a socialist. But I'll tell you what, everything he said sounds like he's... Well, he is a socialist. He's also a communist. He's also a liar. Yes, that's what I was trying to tell people. And what's very interesting, there was a man who made his way to the microphone now, and I noticed on his arm a tattoo. And this man had white hair and he looked European. And he made his way to the microphone. And of course, you know what that tattoo was? It was about, it was a five-digit number. I didn't see it. How could I know? Oh, I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I have the picture in my mind. But what I'm saying is, when you see an older man with white hair and he's got a five-digit number in his arm, I mean, you think of a concentration camp survivor. That's what I was trying to say. Could be, but not necessarily. Not necessarily. Okay. But he got up and he spoke Polish to Valessa. Uh-huh. And then he spoke English, too, and the interpreter spoke. And he basically said, you know, I'm from a place not far from where you're from, and I have property there, but it was taken away from me. And then he mentioned, and I ended up in, you know, started in Auschwitz and ended up in Buchenwald, I believe you pronounce it. Uh-huh. Buchenwald. And he was a concentration camp survivor. Yeah. And he's been in America since 1945. And I talked to him right after the lecture. And I heard him talk to somebody else. And what struck me was he said, they were asking what they thought of Valessa, and he says, I don't see eye to eye with this man. And he's talking about one thing, and he goes, what I really am about is, what I've got from being here in America is freedom. And that's something he doesn't understand. That's right. And so I had to talk to this man. He was very interesting. He's been here since the 40s. He got a sponsor to send him over here to Texas, and he said he was telling people about freedom. Yeah. And he didn't go see Shimon Torres because he doesn't see eye to eye with this man either. Yeah, I've got to cut you off and get into the last comment here. Most people who immigrate to this country from other countries come here for freedom. And when they get here, they're absolutely amazed to find that most Americans are in the process of giving it up for what they left. Yeah. Good night, folks. Thanks, Bill. We've got to head on out of here because we're out of time. Thank you for calling. And I don't know who. I wasn't even thinking about this. So I think we can do this. We can do this one right here. Okay, folks. Good night. God bless each and every single one of you. Thank you. Thank you. Got another question for you, folks. Just exactly who is Mike Mistrada? What in the hell is he doing? And for supper tonight, we had what, Doyle? Tempura vegetables. We had tempura vegetables and it was absolutely delicious. Thanks, Danny. Included green tomatoes, carrots, mushrooms, eggplant, broccoli. Oh, man. Everything good and wonderful. Oh, and man, was it delicious. Absolutely mouth-watering. I got so full, I almost couldn't do this podcast. Yes. Hey, Doyle, you want this knife? We couldn't give it to anybody. I'll take it. Okay. Okay. It's yours. And good night, Randy Steele, wherever you are. Thank you. So, sir. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Whoever that was that just called, I didn't mean to hang up on you. It was an accident. Call again. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. I'm going to do my life. I open up my eyes. And I'm with you. You are today. You won't let me imagine. My dear. I'll be alone. It is. It is my dear. Then magic is mine. Could there be magic? Then magic is mine. thin imaging. Yeah. You don't let magic oil in the world. Pinkerinā is my Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.