The Sunday Punch Podcast

We talked about the Georgia Guidestones and then they were bombed weeks later... a coincidence?

Show Notes

In this episode, Aidan joins the show to discuss the bombing of the Georgia Guidestones (2:00). We then break down the January 6th hearings about the Capitol Riot (16:34) which attempts to show that Donald Trump was responsible for summoning supporters to Washington on Jan. 6 for his Stop the Steal rally and then directing a mob toward the Capitol. Finally, we talk about all of the Conspiracy theories Donald Trump has promoted, including QAnon (31:40)

Sunday Punch is a Chicago podcast that talks about sports, pop culture, and politics.

What is The Sunday Punch Podcast?

Hosted by a Doctor and a Degenerate, Sunday Punch is a Chicago podcast that talks about sports, pop culture, and politics.
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Georgia Guidestones:

 In 1979, an anonymous man using the pseudonym Robert C. Christian commissioned the project from a local granite company on behalf of “a small group of loyal Americans.” That kicked off the construction of five, 16-foot tall slabs of polished granite arranged in a starlike pattern—with a 25,000lb capstone.

The slabs feature a 10-part message in eight different languages about how to live in an “age of reason.” One note recommends keeping the world population under 500 million and only reproducing wisely.

Fun fact, he said to the builder, apparently, through my Youtube Wikipedia research that he wanted them to be able to withstand catastrophic events, I.e an apocalypse.

So what does this all mean Aidan?

No suspects have been identified in the bombing, but a Georgia district attorney said the perp(s) would face a minimum of 20 years in prison

Here’s my thing after I researched this a bit more. If you were trying to plan this globalistic takeover and guide people to eugenics and other sinister stuff, why would you publish it on 10 foot stones

Christian J. Pinto. In his documentary Dark Clouds Over Elberton,
Pinto interviewed Wyatt Martin, and was allowed to view one of Christian’s letters to Martin, as well as a glimpse of the papers in the box where Martin stored his paperwork and correspondences relating to the Guidestones. Upon analysis of the footage, he spied a post mark upon one of the letters: Fort Dodge, Iowa. Another envelope had a return address from that same city in Iowa. 
That address, Pinto discovered, was associated with a Doctor Herbert Hinzie Kersten. He lived there both when the Guidestones were commissioned in 1979, as well as in 1998, the date on the letter shown to Pinto. 

Kersten was additionally a self-proclaimed conservationist (indeed, it’s literally engraved on his headstone), and was deeply concerned with human population growth. He was of the belief, among other things, that people with lower IQs should be paid to be sterilized to improve future generations of humans, very in keeping with the tenants of the Guidestones. 

Trump's actions in the January 6th riot: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/jun/19/january-6-republican-adam-kinzinger-trump-actions-seditious-conspiracy

The hearing, the second in a series planned for this month, marked a further attempt by the committee to show that Mr. Trump was responsible for summoning supporters to Washington on Jan. 6 for his Stop the Steal rally and then directing a mob toward the Capitol.

By showing that Mr. Trump was repeatedly informed by some of his closest advisers that he had lost the election, the committee hopes to establish that his true goal was to maintain power at any cost.

When it finishes its investigation later this year, the committee will have to decide whether to refer a criminal case to the Justice Department.

As Kinzinger told This Week’s host George Stephanopoulos, the January 6 committee cannot file criminal charges against Trump. And the Democratic panel chairman, Mississippi congressman Bennie Thompson, said he does not expect he and his colleagues to make a referral for charges to the justice department, which is the sole entity with the power to prosecute Trump.

It’s been brought to light that that Congress had intelligence days before Jan. 6, 2021, that there might be violence. Yet Democratic Party leadership didn’t take measures to prepare Capitol security for violence.

Former Trump campaign manager Bill Stepien, in taped testimony, said his recommendation that evening had been “to say that votes were still being counted, it’s too early to tell, too early to call the race.”
Mr. Stepien had been scheduled to appear in person but was absent because his wife was in labor. After the hearing, Ms. Lofgren said that Mr. Stepien wouldn’t appear before the committee in person; his video deposition was sufficient.
“I don’t know that I had a firm view as to what he should say in that circumstance,” said Ivanka Trump, the president’s daughter and adviser, in taped testimony. “It was becoming clear that the race would not be called on election night.”
Former Trump adviser Jason Miller, in taped testimony, said he said the campaign should wait until it had a better sense of the results before declaring victory.
He said another top Trump official, former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, was pushing for an aggressive posture. He “was saying, ‘We won it, they’re stealing it from us,’ and anyone who didn’t agree with this position was being weak,” Mr. Miller said. He also said Mr. Giuliani appeared to be intoxicated.

The committee said no such fund existed and that many donations went to Mr. Trump’s Save America political-action committee. In the weeks following the November election, Mr. Trump raised about $250 million, the select committee said.

Do you agree with this: https://www.nytimes.com/2022/06/22/opinion/trump-conspiracy-theories.html

Look Trump definitely promotes conspiracy theories
- claimed Biden had members of SEAL Team 6 killed to cover up a purportedly failed assassination of Osama bin Laden in 2011.
- False Birther Conspiracy (Obama not born in America)
- Ted Cruz’s father and JFK’s Assassination: “His father was with Lee Harvey Oswald prior to Oswald’s being, you know, shot,” Trump said. “I mean, the whole thing is ridiculous. What — what is this right, prior to his being shot. And nobody even brings it up.”
- Trump cast suspicion on Biden by saying he is controlled by “people that you’ve never heard of. People that are in the dark shadows.” Ingraham asked, “What does that mean? That sounds like conspiracy theory. Dark shadows, what is that?”Trump responded by referring to “people that you haven’t heard of” who are “controlling the streets.” He then told a story about a plane that was “almost completely loaded with thugs wearing these dark uniforms, black uniforms with gear” and later said they “were on the plane to do big damage.”
- Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia was murdered, “But they say they found a pillow on his face, which is a pretty unusual place to find a pillow.”
- Vince Foster, who had worked with Clinton as a lawyer in Arkansas and was a deputy in the White House counsel’s office during the Clinton administration, killed himself in a Northern Virginia park in 1993. Before his death, he had told his sister he was depressed and seeking help.
- Still, though, Foster is one in a string of people who have died and become part of what is often referred to as the Clinton body count conspiracy theory, a long-circulating theory which baselessly alleges that the Clintons have killed many people to cover up alleged crimes.
- Trump for his part retweeted a post suggesting that the Clintons were somehow responsible for Epstein’s death. The tweet used the hashtag “#clintonbodycount.”
- Trump repeatedly shared the false assertion that Ukraine, or a “Ukrainian company,” had the server of the Democratic National Committee — part of a conspiracy theory that Ukraine, not Russia, interfered in the 2016 election.He told Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in a July 2019 phone call: “The server, they say Ukraine has it.” He repeated the claim in a November 2019 “Fox & Friends” interview, saying, “A lot of it had to do they say with Ukraine. …They have the server, right? From the DNC, Democratic National Committee.”But there’s absolutely no evidence of that. The DNC actually hired CrowdStrike, a U.S.-based cybersecurity firm, to investigate Russia’s hacking of its computer network in 2016, and CrowdStrike said it has “never taken physical possession of any” of the 140 servers the DNC said had to be decommissioned during the process. The company did its analysis by making an exact copy of everything on the DNC’s hard drives through a process called “imaging.”
- Trump has hailed the antimalarial drug hydroxychloroquine as a potential treatment for COVID-19,

Trump defended the post by arguing it was simply “a retweet” of someone’s “opinion.” He added, “I’ll put it out there, and people can decide for themselves.” 

Return of Q:
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/newsletters/2022-07-06/qanon-return-comes-as-web-conspiracies-thrive

Q surfaced late last month, it arrived in a very different world than the one that existed nearly two years ago, when Q’s last post appeared. 
The message, which said “Are you ready to serve your country again?” came as many Americans were following congressional hearings probing the events around the storming of the US Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Some of the participants in that insurrection were adherents of the QAnon conspiracy, a fringe movement that spreads the false belief that global liberal elites are members of a child sex abuse ring. 

Americans should be worried about the prevalence of conspiracy theories in modern life. 
“Most of the QAnon believers were not at Jan. 6,” Uscinski said. “Most of the people who believe there was rampant voter fraud were not at Jan. 6 either.”
One parallel is the wrongful arrests and convictions stemming from the Satanic Panic in the 1980s, a period in which US police took action against parents and teachers over claims of child sex abuse that later turned out to be fiction. Now, conspiracists are conflating gender and sexuality with pedophilia to fan similar flames, said Uscinski.