2 Ossoburg The End Across America and around the world, good evening. You're listening once again to the Hour of the Time. I'm William Cooper. Got some neat stuff to tell you that we're doing. And I fudged today. There was just too much stuff that had to be done on the computer, so I went to the computer. And I kept one eye closed the whole time. And I would alternate between my left eye and my right eye. As long as I do that, it doesn't mess me up. If I try to look at the screen with both eyes, I'm a goner. So I got a little bit of work done today. And somehow, I went back this evening and looked at the webpage, and it was just totally screwed up. The print was so small and the headline story, I couldn't even begin to read it with any eye. And there was a whole portion of the page that was so huge that, like, only one word would fit on one line. I have no idea how that happened, but it's being corrected, or it may have already been corrected. Ken was going to work on it. And so maybe that's fixed now. Also, 101.1 FM is back on the air, 24 hours a day, for those of you living in the Round Valley. I need to ask a favor of you. So please write this number down, 4578. It's the call-in number for the broadcast. 4578. Put that by your phone, please. And if you're listening to 101.1 FM, and you hear the disc or the music skipping, or you hear it hanging up in one place, just repeating one or two notes over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over again. Or you don't hear anything at all. If you don't hear anything at all. Are you hear the music skipping or playing the same note over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over and over again? Will you please call me and let me know so I can run in here and pull that disc? And so, you know, we can find out exactly which discs were damaged to the point where they can't be used anymore. And then I can copy those onto other discs so that we can salvage the tracks that were not ruined. And so we won't lose, you know, all of that music. So if you would please help me with that, I will certainly be most appreciative. The number is 4578. If you live in the Round Valley, just write that down. Put it near your phone, please. And give me a call. If you hear anything wrong with 101.1 FM so that I can jump in here and get it fixed right quick. I'll be right back, folks. Don't go away. We've got a lot of stuff to tell you and talk about. And we'll open the phones later and let's see what you've got to say. And I bet you've got to say a whole bunch. Thank you. Thank you. Bye. Bye. Bye. Bye. Bye. Bye. Bye. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Yeah, I bet you haven't heard that before. And if you did, it was back in the 50s. Guaranteed. I've got music here that most of you have never heard. And if you did, you probably wouldn't remember it if you heard it. Some of the best music is just not ever played on radio. It doesn't make the top ten. And I'm a great fan of the, well, all the best of all of the old genres of music. I don't care what type of music it is. If it's good, I've got it. And I can remember when I was a boy attending, well, first, I think it was Greenwood or Greenleaf or something like that, Midwest City, Oklahoma. So, the sixth grade, my father was stationed at Tinker Air Force Base, which is right outside Midwest. In fact, the main gate of Tinker Air Force Base is right across the street from what used to be the main little shopping center of Midwest City. And it used to be just right across the street. Now, there's Highway 40, is it? I think it's Highway 40, the one that took the place of Route 66. See, Route 66 used to go right through there. Now, it's Interstate 40. That's what it is. It's Interstate 40. And that's a big, wide, multi-lane freeway. So, now, you can't go across the street to Tinker Air Force Base. And we used to listen to KOMA, Oklahoma City. K-O-M-A, Oklahoma City. At that time, that was the best rock station in the whole country. K-O-M-A had all the best of the best rock music, 50s music, rhythm and blues, all of that stuff that you could find anywhere. That was the premier, except for maybe one or two stations out here in California. And I believe one memorable station in New York City. Those were the big rock stations. And K-O-M-A never stopped playing that music. Right now, it's all oldies all the time. But what's oldies now was then the top hits. It just never quit playing that music over all these years and is still playing it. And every once in a while, I like to, when I'm traveling, especially at night, tune to KOMA because you can hear it all over the country. And just listen to it. It brings back a lot of memories for me. Because at night, when I was a boy, went to sixth grade at, I don't remember the name of the song. I think it was Greenleaf Elementary or, I don't remember. But I went to seventh and eighth grade at Monroney Junior High School, which was a brand new school. And we were the first class in that school. Monroney Junior High School, Midwest City, Oklahoma. Oh, brother. While I was there, that's the first place I ever fell in love with a girl. First kiss in the chicken coop in her backyard. She wanted to show me her chickens. So we went out to the chicken coop and I thought it was strange there weren't any chickens. And then all of a sudden she grabbed me and kissed me and ran out the chicken coop door. Left me standing there perplexed. And a little bowled over, I've got to tell you. Her name was Betty McGivoney. Betty McGivoney. Her sister was a pop recording star. Met her at her house. Her name was Wanda Jackson. Wanda Jackson. And I met Wanda Jackson at Betty's house. I was just a boy. It wasn't any big deal to me. Because I really was... I don't think I really understood who she was when I met her, to tell you the truth. But I liked her music. She had some hip tunes. And I used to tune my radio. I had a radio by my bed. My brother and I shared a bedroom together. I had a radio by my bed. And I would tune into KOMA and turn it real low. And I would listen to that music. And then drift off to sleep. And the music and the lyrics of the music would somehow intertwine with my dreams. Quite pleasant, I've got to tell you. And last night, after putting 101.1 FM back on the air, when I went to bed, I didn't know how Crusher was going to take it. Crusher sleeps by my bed in the bedroom. And I put on 101.1 FM. Because we play all that music too. And I watched Crusher for a little bit to see if he was going to handle that okay. Because usually, you know, it's quiet. And I didn't know if he was going to like having that music on. But he just curled up and went right to sleep. No problem. So, I turned out the light and I lay there. And folks, I've got to tell you, it was really strange. Because it was snowing outside. And when it snows, even when it's pitch dark and it's overcast and you can't see any moon or stars, it's still kind of glowy outside. And that's from the lights in the valley around the mountain where I live. reflecting off of the clouds and the falling snow. When I went to bed, we had about three inches of snow. When I got up this morning, there was about six inches. And that sort of glow coming through the windows and listening to the same music I used to listen to in bed when I was a boy. And I haven't done it since. It's the first time last night. It was very, very strange. It was like I was in some kind of a time warp. It was like, all of a sudden, I was 12 years old again. Just lying there in bed, listening to that music. It was so pleasant. And so strange at the same time. And kind of eerie with the light. It sort of, you know, outside was kind of glowing. And just like when I was a boy, as I drifted off to sleep, the lyrics of the songs came into my dreams. I slept like a baby. Slept like a rock. You ever sleep like a rock? Well, I did last night and had some of the most pleasant dreams I've had in many, many years. Many, many years. It was wonderful. Just wonderful. And I was sleeping so deep that when I woke up, it was like trying to, you know, come up from deep in the ocean. And trying to get to the surface. And you just keep swimming and swimming and swimming. And then finally, bam, you burst through. And there you are. And the radio was playing that music. It was great. I've got to tell you, folks, it was just absolutely wonderful. I really liked having this with us. I liked being able to, we all, the whole family, have always enjoyed making this space and work for the people here in the Round Valley. To give them the gift of this wonderful music. And, of course, if they get used to listening to music, then some of them keep it on that station and listen to the broadcast, which I think is very important, too. But that's not the reason for the station. It really isn't. But we have always tried to do things for other people, especially for the community in which we live, wherever we've ever been. Just simply because I believe that it's our duty to try to give as much as we can to the communities in which we live. And so that was the real idea for the station when the family was here. A crew even had her own Saturday morning program. She called it Poo and Aggie Saturday Morning Show. And Aggie was her favorite doll. She's had that doll since she was roughly one year old. I think it was her first doll. It was always her favorite. And she would bring her doll in on Saturday morning. She would set up the board. And the first couple of times, Dora and I helped her. And after that, she did it all by herself. And I was so proud of her. And she developed quite a listenership on Saturday morning. A lot of people tuned in and were disappointed when they didn't hear her. I think if everybody did those kinds of things for the community in which they live, we'd do a lot more. Most of what we do, we don't talk about. And I think that's necessary. That you do things for people that you don't run around and tell other people about. I think it's so important for your spiritual welfare. I know it is for mine. And it's always been for my family. And 101.1 is something that we just openly did. Non-profit community service station. And in the beginning, we just made announcements that it would be available. You know, if people wanted to make announcements, they could send them up here. Or on Sunday morning, if some of the religious institutions around the valley wanted to do a broadcast. That would be fine, too. Of course, that's out of the question now. Simply because of the filtration I'm in, I cannot allow anyone who I don't personally know to get anywhere near me. Because I don't know who they are. And I don't want anybody to get hurt accidentally because of the manipulations of the traitors in Washington. Not even, I don't even want a remote opportunity for accidents to happen. So, we don't do those things. But at one time, you know, it was an opportunity for people to do those things. And now, we're going to the Internet. This thing is, for all of you who have a computer, who have the capability, to go to our website, ringcooper.net, and download the Apple player. You click on that little QuickTime logo there. Or the link that's provided. Either one. And if you go to a website, you can download a QuickTime player for either Windows 95, Windows 98, Windows NT, or for Apple computers. You don't have to have an Apple to get QuickTime. There's an Apple player, or excuse me, a QuickTime player for a PC's offer. If you have Windows 95, 98, or Windows NT, you can get an Apple or a QuickTime. Apple makes it, but it's called QuickTime. And that's why I'm getting tongue-tied and confused here. It's called QuickTime. Get the QuickTime player for whatever type of PC you have. Download it. Install it. And Thursday night, we're going to do the first test of a live broadcast from this studio over the Internet. The software is incredible. Ken and I have been testing it all day today. Not all day, but all afternoon. We've been testing it. And it works beautifully. We have terrible phone lines out here. So I thought, you know, this is, until we get our T1 line in, this is an exercise in futility. And it is, as far as trying to provide really, you know, great quality. We can't do that over these phone lines. When we get our T1 line in, we will be able to broadcast excellent quality and even video. You'll get to watch video of the hour of the time over the Internet. And, no, it will not be like right there. You know, somebody told me that right there was doing it. So I went to his website and I watched during one of his broadcasts. And it's like a series of terrible spare pictures. This won't be like that. This will be much better than that. Much, much, much, much better than that. So you can look forward to that. But we won't be able to do the video until we get the T1 line. Right now we can do excellent voice, audio, music, you know, sort of sounds like a good shortwave radio, if you know what I mean. But this is mainly an information broadcast anyway. So the voice is what's important. When we get the T1 line, we can make the music sound beautiful too. But over these terrible phone lines, with the slow connection speed of our Internet provider, which is usually around 28.8, no matter what speed your modem is, it's disgusting. And we tested today and were able to stream video, excuse me, stream audio, music, in fact, with no problem. And it sounded good. Didn't sound great. It sounded good. Voice sounds excellent. Sounds absolutely excellent. And we streamed for, you know, a few hours, just to make sure that the stream wouldn't break up and it wouldn't, you know, be all buffered and, you know, all that kind of stuff. It was great. It was wonderful. And unlike Shoutcast or Live 365, you know, a couple of thousand people can listen to it at the same time. So Thursday night, the hour of the time, will be broadcast live on the Internet. And either tomorrow night or Thursday night, I'm going to tell you how to hook up and listen to it. And we'd like to hear your feedback. So all of you with a computer, go to williamcooper.net. Click on the QuickTime link or the QuickTime logo. Go get your QuickTime player. And get ready for Thursday night. And we'll tell you where to go and how to link up so that you can hear the broadcast live on Thursday night on the Internet, broadcast directly from this studio. Now, for those of you who don't want to do that, you can still listen to it on Shoutcast or Live 365. It'll still be there. And it'll still be streaming from WBCQ and Scott Becker Internet Network or whatever he calls it, Becker Broadcast Network. I'm not sure what he calls it. But Scott will be also streaming over Live 365. So there you have it. Thursday night will be our first live test of a live broadcast being broadcast directly from this studio, not from WBCQ or anywhere else. I mean, they'll be broadcasting also live. But I'm going to be broadcasting live over the Internet from this studio Thursday night. And it's going to blow you away. It's just absolutely incredible what we can do today that we couldn't even do six months ago. That we couldn't even do six months ago. And a year ago, Rick and I were planning to broadcast the first television network over the Internet. We're still going to do that. And I warned Rick, you know, and everybody concerned that there's lots of people working on this streaming stuff. And if they didn't hurry up and get their ducks in a row, they're going to get passed up in the technology end. And that seems to be exactly what's happened. So Thursday night, first live Internet broadcast directly from this studio over my computer to the Internet and around the world. And that's going to be a significant event. That's what we'll call it. A significant event. And it's going to change an awful lot of a lot of things. It's not going to cost you a penny. The testing that we do will not cost you anything. And when we get all set up with the prices and stuff for streaming our broadcasts and video, we'll let you know exactly what that's going to cost. I think you're going to be pleased because we've worked out some things that I think will make you all very happy, will make us happy. And we'll be able to provide a lot of information to a lot of people that never even listened to the broadcast before. So, now, all those of you who ordered the CD, remember the CD? The CD? Remember that? Oh, boy. I'll tell you how screwed up my eyes are. I turned around, looked at the CD player with both eyes open, looked directly at the button I wanted to punch, went to punch it, and punched a button on a cassette deck about two racks above it. That's how my eyes are working right now. They're not seeing things where they're supposed to be. But here's the CD right here. Listen, folks. I want you to listen to this because if you haven't ordered your copy, you need to do this. $16 postpaid. So, check it out. Thank you. Welcome to the New World Order. Our New World Order. That's the first cut. And here's the third cut. A. M. M. E. R. I. K. A. Comrade Clinton is marching us towards the millennium. His agenda? A new world order. That was cut number three. And here comes cut number two. I think. If I can. Where am I? A-ha. Here comes, uh, I really have to concentrate. When I go to push a button, I'm not even going to get anywhere near a button. Here we go. Here we go. All of a sudden, in the middle of the night, there's a loud knock on the door. Hey. Something's not right. I'm not even going to get anywhere near a button. I'm not even going to get anywhere near a button. I'm not even going to get anywhere near a button. When you're from the government, you're here to help you. And I'm from the wire arrest with a fire attack. You've got to complain. Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha. We will be back. That's cut number two. Now, folks, when I'm doing a broadcast, don't ever call unless I open the phones. Please, please, just don't ever call this broadcast unless I open the phones during the broadcast. It's not cruel. But I will never be happy when you do that. If I don't say the phones are open, please don't call. Okay? We now have an answering machine. It is really, really disturbing to all of a sudden hear the answering machine going and somebody yelling. They're calling into the phone trying to get on the air or leave some message or something. Just please don't do it. It's just not cool. Okay? For those of you who have already ordered the CD, they're on the way to you right now. They are in the mail on the way to you right now. And I think you're going to be very pleased with what you get. The quality is outstanding. It's stereo. It is top notch. It was produced in Hollywood. Or I should say Los Angeles. I don't know if it's exactly Hollywood or not. But Los Angeles. By professionals. And I should say by a professional. Evan Sweetwater. Anthony Hilder did the voice. Evan Sweetwater put the whole thing together. Did all the music. All the mixing. All the mastering and recording. I mean, he really is a professional. That's what he does for a living. And he's real good at it. And we're working on some things to do in the future. He's going to do the music for the video. Evan wants to do all the music for the radio and television projects that we're going to be involved in. He's really good at it. He writes the music. He arranges the music. He plays the music. He masters the music. He does everything. He's an incredible person. And a long, long time friend. And we've got a whole bunch of other people in the music business who have been helping us over the years. You've heard a lot of the stuff that they've done just for this broadcast. And sent to us. In fact, the theme music for the Hour of the Time was... Let me... Let me get it out here. So I can tell you about it. The theme music for the Hour of the Time was done by the Brothers of Rebellion. It's a black group who heard the Hour of the Time and liked it so much that they actually created the theme song for this broadcast. And a lot of other things. A lot of music you've heard on this broadcast was done just for this broadcast by some of the best musicians in this country. Black, white, Asian. I don't believe we've had any Native Americans do any music for us, but they've done other things for us. And everybody... Everybody... You see, what I do cuts across all the traditional lines of contention and discontent and hatred and all the bullshit. We just cut right across it because there's one thing that every single American has in common. I don't care who you are. I don't care where you live. I don't care what color your skin is. I don't care what church you go to. I don't care what religion you belong to. I don't care where your ancestors came from. And that's freedom. This is a ministry of freedom. That's what we preach here. That's what we talk about here. That's what we teach here. That's what it's always been about. That's what it's always going to be about. And so because of that, everybody understands what I'm talking about. They understand it. People on the right wing, on the left wing, in the middle, they all understand it. The only people who hate it and can't absolutely, will not put up with it, are devout Marxists, socialists, Leninists, Totskyites, people who worship Mao Zedong, communists, Nazis, and racists. Those people can't stand what I do here. And all of the problems that we ever have come from those people and no one else. You'd be absolutely amazed how many people understand freedom and what it's all about and understand the mission of this broadcast. It took a lot of years to get that point across because there was a lot of years when, you know, people have been taught that if they hear certain words, that they're supposed to condemn you and go after you and destroy you and beat you up and kill you and disrupt your work and your broadcast and all that kind of stuff. So in the beginning years we had a lot of that until they discovered by listening over a long period of time and applying the tenet, you know, what I tell people, don't believe anything I say, don't believe anything anyone says, listen to everyone, read everything, don't believe anything unless you can prove it in your own research. And they began to apply that and began to find out that I'm right. There's not a nickel's worth of difference between the Republican and the Democrat Party. Most of the third parties were created in order to provide a disruption or split blocks of votes. And they do that very well. What we need to be as Americans, we need to understand, believe in, promote, and give to others freedom. Because if we don't give freedom to others, then we don't have it for ourselves. And if we think that we can take freedom away from other people, then they might think they can take freedom away from us. See, it's all about freedom. We're either going to be enslaved or we're going to be free. And believe it or not, folks, there is no middle ground. There is no middle ground. People throughout the history of the world have discovered that. And that's what this CD is all about. That's what the music is all about. That Evan and my friend Anthony Hilder have put together. These three cuts on this CD. And it's about freedom. It's about warning. It's about waking you up. It's about letting you know what's going on. And over the years, many people have asked me how they can get a copy. Well, you can get a copy now. It's $16 postpaid. We only accept cash or blank money orders. Everybody who's ordered up to this point, except for the last two orders that we just received, their orders are in the mail. On the way to them, right now. Beautiful CD. You'll like the label. You'll like everything about it. And we're not out. We're not going to be out. As long as you continue to order the CDs, Evan will continue to produce them. So if you would like to order your copy of this CD, produced and performed by my good friend Evan Sweetwater and Anthony J. Hilder, send $16 cash or blank money order to the hour of the time or just hot, H-O-T-T, H-O-T-T, and care of 101.1 FM. That's 101.1 FM. P.O. Box 940. P.O. Box 940. Eager. Eager. Spelled E-A-G-A-R. And it doesn't matter as long as you get the zip code right. Spell it any way you want. Arizona. 85925. That's 85925. Once again, the hour of the time or just hot, H-O-T-T, and care of 101.1 FM. P.O. Box 940. Eager, Arizona. 85925. 85925. 85925. 85925. 85925. 85925. 85925. 85925.cut 5. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Yeah, right? The first day, she said it's 848 when you're calling. Is that the correct time? Yep. Sure. You were lecturing us last night to learn, Ed. I guess I should have known that before I called, but you opened the line, so I'll call it in. Well, that was nice of it. I mean, she probably needed to know that. Maybe. Hey, great show tonight. I really enjoyed it a lot. Well, thank you. I haven't talked to you in several months, but it made me feel good. I'm a musician myself, and I was down in Texas last week performing. Uh-huh. And two buddies of mine I hadn't seen in a long time, one from Arizona, one from Kentucky. They come up to me independent of each other and said, hey, I heard you a few months back on the Bill Cooper show. So they recognized me with my voice, and I gave my name, Joe from North Carolina. Uh-huh. That made me feel good. It was interesting what you were talking about tonight with Wanda Jackson. Yeah. Because for years, I'd not heard any of her music, didn't know anything about her. And four or five years ago, I was in Europe playing. We were in Amsterdam at the time, and I was kind of in a dream state myself. I was dozing off that night. I'd hurt my back, and I was doing good. You know, I'd give back with my back, and I'd start press reading. Uh-huh. Somebody put on a CD of hers, and all I knew by her was that, let's have a party. Yeah. Uh-huh. Well, that CD, I was in a dream state, and I heard it over and over. The next morning, I woke up, went through that guy's house, and said, where's that CD? He turned me on to that when it said, well, there's a message that got off for music at all. Yeah, she's done an opera lot. She did a lot of punky wrestling music, too. Wanda Jackson was, I don't remember exactly what her relation was, but she was a relative of the little girl that I first kissed, first ever dated. I met her at her house. I didn't really know who she was until a few years later when I, I mean, they told me who she was, but that's not why I was there. Yeah, I understand. So it didn't make a big impression then, but it did, you know, sometime later that I had met Wanda Jackson, and when I was a young person, you know, that was kind of important. Yes, sir. I've met a couple people like that, and it didn't dawn on me until years and years later, really, the significance of it or whatever. And speaking of, did you hear that old snake rush today to talking about music and playing music? No, uh-uh. What's he up to? He liked to play music, too, by coincidence, and I've heard him use the term sheeple two or three times in the last few months. I don't know where he got that from. Well, you'd be absolutely amazed at who listens to this broadcast. Yes, sir. I think I know. I do. But he played a great song today called The Snake. If I can take me in. The Snake is by Al Wilson. Never heard it. The song had a great message and lyrics to it, and it was a, I thought I knew a lot of oldies, but this one took me by surprise, kind of like that Wanda Jackson thing when I first heard it. Uh-huh. The premise of the song was, do you remember that scene in the movie Natural Born Killers where the Indian, he's telling the story about the woman that picks up and takes in the snake and it thaws out and bites her, and the snake says, Bitch, you knew I was a snake. Do you remember that scene in the movie? No. Well, I did see the movie, though. The reason I watched it was to see what all the fuss was about. Me too. My wife loves it. She's seen it a couple times, but I didn't care for it. Well, it's certainly not a movie for young children, but it was obviously done tongue-in-cheek. Yes, sir. This was not done to make people go out and kill other people. This was done sort of to poke at society and say, look what you're creating. It was obvious to me that whoever produced and directed that movie were doing it sort of tongue-in-cheek as a wake-up call, sort of. That was when Oliver Stone produced it. I think it was Quentin Tarantino that wrote it. Yeah. Well, you know, Oliver Stone does all these social engineering things. Yes, sir. He did platoon to make people hate war and think that the Vietnam War was something, but it wasn't. Nobody in Vietnam did what those guys did in that movie. Well, he did the movie JFK, but he left out two, three or four most important stuff. Well, no, he didn't. He told you exactly who killed John F. Kennedy in that movie. Did he really? Did he really? Yes, he did. But you have to understand the symbology of the mystery stories. Oh, yes, sir. Well, he didn't say William Miller, did he? I mean, he said a lot of stuff. No. It doesn't matter what the name of the individual was. What matters is the power that sent him to do it. Yes, sir. He did a good job in that respect. I've got to agree with that in the film. He did because he tied all those loose ends together. That's right. You're right. You're right. I should have put it that way, too, because the name of the person individual is not important. No, it's not. It's the power behind it. Yes, sir. Well, I'm going to let other people get in, but I want to say one last thing before I go. That comment you made tonight about interstates was very profound. You can't walk across the street anymore, like you said, to that old Air Force base where you lived or whatever. Yeah, that's right. But the interstates brought the whole country together and everything. They did a great job on that, but they sure chopped up a lot of neighborhoods and communities. And they also destroyed a lot of small communities and towns that were bustling and had great futures if the interstate hadn't bypassed them. A lot of that was done intentionally to hurt their plans. I was going to try. I was going to try. I was going to try. I was going to try. My wife just read your book for the first time. I read it two or three times. I've been listening since, I guess, 92 or 93. She read your book and is enjoying it for the first time and everything. I'm so glad she's reading it because she's got a big life in it. A big one. I was digging yours, but she was a book writer. If she wanted me to ask you to handle my notes, if there's any good stuff out of anything that you can recommend to her besides Behold the Pale Horse, there's anything else along that line that might help her out that would be easy to get. Yeah, read Patriots by Langroup. Patriots by Langroup. Yeah. Thank you, sir. God bless you, and we'll talk to you some other time. You're welcome. Bye-bye. Thanks for calling. Well, that was a nice call. I really enjoyed that. 520-333-4578 is the number. Good evening. You're on the air. Yeah, this is Wayne from Texas. Hi, Wayne. How are you doing? From Texas. Good. I was wanting to get your honest opinion on we've been having a lot of flights in the air, if you know what I mean. No, I don't know what you mean. What do you mean? I can't read your mind. Well, we've been having a lot of military aircraft flying overhead, and they're spraying out a chemical. No, they're not. Okay. What makes you think they're not? Prove it to me. Can you prove they're spraying out a chemical? Well, I can prove they're spraying out a chemical. No, what you can prove is that you can see contrails in the air. Well. That's what you can prove, isn't it? What do you consider contrails? What do you consider contrails? Well, actually. I've been through this before. You're going to lose this argument, my friend. What you have is emotionalism and rumor. When you have some proof, I'll be happy to sit down and see it. Until then. Well, I have it on film. Is that good enough? I can go out all day long and film airplanes flying over making contrails in the sky. Is that good enough? Well. What does it prove? What does it prove? Yeah. Well, it proves quite a few things here. Proves that airplanes leave contrails in the sky. Well, it proves a lot of different things. Like what? A lot of different theories. No. It's basically not vapor. How do you know? Well, because the chemicals that's coming out of the cloud is coming down in a round ball. And the camera got up close enough to where it could see the gases. How high is this airplane? Oh. Most of them were flying about 5,000 feet. 5,000 feet? And they're spraying? Yeah. And they're right over the top of you. Right over the top. I guarantee you that even if they were spraying right over the top of you, not one single bit of it would fall down on you. Not one single piece. Period. Well, where would it go? It would go wherever the wind blew it. Most of it would evaporate before it even got near the ground. Hmm. Well. I mean, this is all scientific facts. This is not conjecture. It's not rumor. It's not emotionalism. I don't know where these balls or whatever it is that you're seeing are coming from. But they're definitely not coming from an airplane flying directly over you at 5,000 feet. And I doubt if you're very good at estimating altitude anyway. Well, we've got pictures of it. And basically what we're seeing was we've seen a cloud coming down from them. And, you know, with the sun kind of shining through the rays. And there was a lot of people coming down with upper respiratory infections. Oh, God. And we were just kind of wondering what that was about. What it's about is you're the victim of a bullshit hoax that's been flying across this country for a long time. Airplanes make contrails. They're not killing you. Upper respiratory diseases come from usually contamination spread by other people who are infected. It's called contagious disease. Okay. That's normal in wintertime, by the way. Well, we were just kind of wondering why so much activity, you know, basically. I'll tell you why. It hasn't been mentioned on the TV news. Why should it? There's nothing to it. When you have some absolute proof, when you can prove something beyond any shadow of a doubt, that's when it will be on TV. Until then, it's not. You can't. And I'll tell you exactly what's happening. 20 years ago, how old were you? 20 years ago, I was 32. You were 32. Mm-hmm. And do you have any idea how much the population has increased since then? Oh, quite a bit. Do you have any idea whatsoever how many more airplanes are flying in the sky since then? Well, you know, I'll tell you what. A lot of people don't look up in the sky anymore. A lot of people never did look up in the sky in their life until somebody said, They're killing us. Airplanes are putting out clouds of chemicals, and it's falling on us. It's killing us, and everybody's done. Do you see any dead bodies laying around? Well, what do you think about the New World Order? Stay tuned, my friend. That's what we talk about a lot of the time. But don't get caught up in all this bullshit, because that's exactly what it is. Well, God bless you, my friend. I hope you make it through it. God bless you, too. Bye-bye. Bye. You see how easy it is to get people caught in a cul-de-sac chasing their own tail over nothing? Good evening. You're on the air. Good evening, Bill. This is Nick from New York. Hi, Nick. You need to talk a lot louder, like I've told you every time you've called for the past I don't know how many months. When are you going to get the message? I've always had that problem, though. Well, stop having the problem and start talking louder in your phone. Please. No problem. How are you this evening? You haven't raised your voice one single bit. Yes, I have, though. I truly have. Maybe there's a bad line connection, but I truly have. I just want to add one question for you. In New York City, they're going to be doing a lot of spraying for the West Nile-like virus. Yeah. Have you heard anything about that? Nope, except that insecticides don't kill viruses. Well, it's for the mosquito, actually, that carries it. Well, then it'll kill the mosquito. When I was a boy, they used to spray all the time. All the time. They'd go around with trucks and spray DDT to kill mosquitoes. All over the country. But my question is, you haven't heard anything else about this at all? No. Only that they found some hawk or buzzard or something up there that had the virus. Yeah, well, they had it, like, last year, too, and stuff. But, you know, it's not like the West Nile virus. It's the West Nile-like virus. Well, where are they spraying? Malapion. Where are they spraying? Are they going to be spraying it in different communities and stuff? It depends. They're going to be testing and finding out where things are located and where they're going to spray the best at. Well, if you see them spraying only in black communities and Hispanic communities, you know something. Well, they did that last year to a certain degree. Well, I wonder why. You see, if you see them spraying in John D. Rockefeller's neighborhood, well, then, you know, there might be some reason to be concerned about it. Because mosquitoes fly over there, too. I've been trying to get some information. If you hear anything or anything like that, bring it out on your show, please. Well, if I do, I will. But I just told you what I know, and what I know isn't very much, and it's not worth discussing on the radio. No, I'm just saying, if you do hear anything that's of interest. Yeah, I just told you that if I do, I will. Okay, I appreciate that. Thank you. You're welcome. You too. Bye. And you never did raise your voice, not even one single decibel. You see, I have a meter here. It tells me if you do or not, and it doesn't lie. 520-333-4578 is the number. That's 520-333-4578. Good evening. You're on the air. Bill, how are you doing? I'm doing fine. How are you doing? I'm doing good. And I'm amazed that gun owners in this country have not figured out what this last little deal is with Smith & Wesson. Well, I saw it coming and predicted it several years ago. Well, what I can't believe is. I told you on the air, on this broadcast, that the gun dealers would eventually be forced to make a deal with the government. Well, what I can't believe is that they got this little commission, right, that they're doing. That's not what it's about. You see, if you file a whole bunch of lawsuits against one company, you can destroy the company just by them having to pay the legal fees to defend themselves. Right. Whether they're right or wrong doesn't make any difference. They will be nibbled to death and destroyed just because they've got to pay the legal fees. Smith & Wesson isn't doing this because they want to. They're doing it because if they don't do it, they'll be forced out of business by all these lawsuits. Well, and now Smith & Wesson, they're owned by a British corporation. They'll be on this little commission. Isn't that wonderful? Did you just hear what I said? Yes, I heard what you said. They have no choice. It's either go along with it or be forced out of business. Well. Do you understand that? Yeah, I understand that. They have families to feed. They have mouths to feed just like you. You would compromise, too, if all of a sudden you couldn't get any work anywhere and you couldn't have a business and you couldn't earn a nickel to feed your family unless you made a compromise with somebody. Well, the fact of the matter is, I mean, we've got, I mean, this little commission here, this is a private-public partnership like all the other private-public partnerships. I'm not saying it's right. I'm just saying understand it. And nobody's saying a damn thing about it. That's the whole thing, Bill. That's not true. I've been talking about it for years. I predicted it would happen. Well, you know, I'm talking about there should be an uproar in this country right now. You should have uproared when I warned you that it was coming and done something to stop it instead of waiting until it happens and bitching and moaning. That's what most Americans do all the time. They sit around with their thumb in their ear. Okay? Well, they're not even saying anything about it now. You can't say anything about it now. It's happened and it ain't going to go back the way it used to be. The time to do something about it is before it happens. But Americans never want to do that. They want to wait until it happens and bitch and complain and moan and whine and cry. And I've got to tell you, I'm sick of hearing it and we're out of time. Good night. Good night, folks. God bless each and every single one of you. Good night, Annie, Poo, and Allison. I love you. Good night. Good night. Good night. Good night. Good night. Good night. I let my death leave me in the way I walk down my knees, yes And this is what I say I was found, oh, oh, oh Baby, oh, oh, oh, oh Baby, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh Baby, don't let go No matter what you mean No matter what you say Do me what you say Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh Baby, oh, oh, oh, oh Oh, baby, oh, yeah Oh, baby, baby Baby, don't you know Oh, baby, oh, baby Oh, baby, oh, baby Oh, baby, oh, baby Don't do it Oh, baby, oh Baby, don't do it Oh, baby, oh, baby Oh, baby. Oh, baby. Oh, baby. You're listening to 101.1 FM Eager. Classic radio like you always wished it could be. 101.1 FM is your non-profit community service radio station. Stay tuned now for all oldies most of the time. And, folks, I've got a favor to ask of you. If you hear a CD skipping or stuck in one spot just playing the same note or notes over and over and over and over and over and over again, or if you tune in and hear nothing playing at all, write down this number, 4578. Put it by your phone. And if you hear or don't hear, as the case may be, give me a call. Let me know so I can take that CD out or fix whatever the problem is so that we can get everything back to normal. I would really appreciate that. Thank you very much for your patience and for your understanding during our equipment failure and for your help along these lines also. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.