『The Global Freedom Report, June 14, 2026』のカバーアート

The Global Freedom Report, June 14, 2026

The Global Freedom Report, June 14, 2026

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The Global Freedom Report with Brent Johnson The Federal Reserve, Red Pill Resistance, and the Battle Over Liberty, Money, and Control Guest G. Edward Griffin A Freedom-Focused Broadcast In this episode of The Global Freedom Report, host Brent Johnson presents a wide-ranging liberty-themed program featuring G. Edward Griffin as the central guest. The episode content centers on Brent’s commentary, his recurring listener question about government lists, his warning about artificial intelligence and school surveillance, the extended interview with Griffin about the Federal Reserve, and later segments on individual rights, property, government power, and propaganda. The transcript also reflects the user’s note that Brent’s audio echo created some garbled or repetitive wording, so the clearest content comes from the structured interview and repeated show themes. Government Lists, Rants and Raves, and Audience Participation Brent opens the main content by inviting listeners to participate in the show’s “Rants and Raves” segment, where callers can speak about issues that matter to them. He also introduces the episode’s question of the week: whether listeners are concerned about appearing on government lists, and if so, which lists concern them. This question frames the episode’s larger concern with surveillance, government tracking, privacy, and the fear that ordinary citizens may be cataloged or targeted by bureaucratic systems. AI in the Classroom and a Warning About Children’s Privacy Brent discusses a report involving parents in Washington state objecting to an artificial-intelligence experiment connected to preschool classrooms. He says the proposed program involved teachers wearing cameras to capture classroom activity and use that footage to train AI models. Brent presents this as a serious privacy issue, warning that children’s speech, expressions, behavior, and reactions could be turned into data for predictive systems. His commentary becomes intense and confrontational, but the core point is his concern that artificial intelligence could be used in schools without adequate parental knowledge or protection. G. Edward Griffin Joins to Discuss the Federal Reserve The featured interview begins with technical difficulties, including Griffin sounding distorted at first and then being brought back by phone. Brent introduces G. Edward Griffin as a writer, documentary filmmaker, and author of The Creature from Jekyll Island. The main topic is the Federal Reserve. Brent asks how the Federal Reserve Act could have passed if a private central bank was contrary to constitutional principles. Griffin responds that while the Christmas-holiday passage story may be historically true, he believes the deeper issue is that bankers had already persuaded, influenced, or controlled enough members of Congress for the legislation to pass regardless. The Banking Cartel and Congressional Dependence Griffin argues that Congress has not abolished the Federal Reserve because elected officials are financially and politically dependent on the banking system and its surrounding institutions. In his view, Congress, media, corporations, and political actors are tied to a broader banking cartel. He says that many politicians either do not understand the system or are dependent on it for campaign support, influence, and career protection. Brent and Griffin frame the Federal Reserve not simply as a monetary institution, but as a central mechanism of control over American life. Gold, Silver, Fiat Money, and Constitutional Questions Brent asks why Federal Reserve notes have not been ruled invalid if the Constitution identifies gold and silver as lawful money. Griffin replies that the same forces that allowed the Federal Reserve to exist continue to protect it. He broadens the discussion into a claim that the United States and other nations are influenced by a global cabal or cartel that extends beyond banking into education, media, churches, and government. Griffin says modern citizens are often kept afraid through wars, crises, epidemics, and economic instability, leading them to seek more government control rather than less. Violence, Strategy, and the Need to Retake Institutions A key part of the interview involves disagreement over tactics. Brent suggests that government systems may be so corrupt that ordinary legal or judicial solutions may not work. Griffin pushes back against the idea that violent resistance is the answer, arguing that modern governments possess overwhelming technological and military power. Instead, Griffin says people must retake the systems that were captured through propaganda, political organization, and institutional infiltration. He argues that citizens must become active in political parties, schools, local offices, media, and community institutions rather than merely complain or prepare defensively. Collectivism, Individualism, and the Ideological Battle Griffin identifies the deeper ...
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