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Police Veteran Alex Scott, Part 1 Light On Conspiracies
Ole Dammegård interviews US Police Officer Alex Scott, a veteran with more than 24 years on duty, 15 spent as a general detective. Aside from homicides, sex crimes and undercover drug operations, Alex Scott has investigated everything from petty thefts to fraud and forgeries to stalking and armed robbery. He also has an extensive background in music where he earned an associate's degree in music-fine arts, a bachelor's degree in music theory/education and a master's in music multimedia.
Along with his extensive training in law enforcement, Scott also studies and writes about the many ways music affects the brain and how Hollywood, the music industry and the mainstream media use music to shape our emotional response to many of today's current events. He is therefore adept at providing unique insight with regard to the myriad ways psychological conditioning and propaganda are currently being used to manipulate and shape the way we think about the world around us.
Police Veteran Alex Scott Part 1 Light On Conspiracies, May 14, 2017.
FAKE STORY OF THE DAY
http://fakestoryoftheday.com/author/alex-scott/
https://www.lightonconspiracies.com/
- Category: Interview,Psyop, Psychological Operation,Undercover / Wallraff
- Duration: 01:02:00
- Date: 2018-03-19 11:34:01
- Tags: police, officer, alex scott, general, detective, homicides, sex crimes, undercover, drug operations, investigate
7 Comments
Video Transcript:
Ladies and gentlemen, the red or the blue pill. The choice is yours. Welcome to Light on Conspiracies, the place where truth and love transcend the darkness. Your host, peace award-winning researcher, Ole Damagad. To listen to this full interview, just go to lightonconspiracies.com and subscribe. I'm here today with my friend, Alexander Scott, who is an American police officer with more than 20 years in active beauty. Also, as a crime investigator, I've had a very big pleasure of being part of some of the same books. One of them were from Orlando to Dallas and beyond on the series published by Jim Fetzer. A series where we go through many, many of these alleged attacks like Sandy Hook, Orlando, and many, many others. And some of the chapters have been written by Alex and I must say I've been very deeply impressed by his feeling for details and to see the bigger picture also how things are connected. I strongly feel that it's because of his background as a detective and with so many years of experience looking at real crime scenes that it's very, very useful for someone like me to get a point of view from a professional. So it's a great honor and pleasure to welcome you to the show, Alex. Well, thank you, Ollie. It's great that you're doing your own show and I'm just I'm I'm privileged to be here. I followed your work for for a long time. That's so kind of you. Listen Alex, it's I want to start with one thing because people say to me quite a few people say to me, listen, you have to calm down a little bit. It's not it's not good if you claim that everything is a false flag as soon as something you happen, you're there saying false like false flag, false flag. And I say, but what can I do when you when I look into the evidence, it just points right back to the same, the same, the same, the same, the same. And I would very much like to get your opinion on that my statement when it comes to that. Well, you know, I think people who who look into these things, Ollie, you know, I think we're all in that in that same boat because I get that a lot too. You know, the you think everything is a conspiracy or you think everything is fake met, but like you said, when you when you start looking at all the evidence and you start piecing things together, it's in and I'm sure you're at this point as well as I look at something like the recent Manchester attack or the one thing that you're going to do. And I'm not going to be a pun in the tack or the time square attack and more often than not. Now I'm, I want to disprove that it's not a staged event. Not that I want these events to happen. And it seems like every week they're just rolling out something and and you know people, especially here in the States, they have this normalcy bias and they have this cognitive dissidents and we've been inundated with these attacks to where they have become normal and people, people are busy, you know, they're going about their day and all they do is watch the mainstream media. And that same what I call negative reinforcement from the media because you know they're they're obviously saying this is real, this is real, this is real. And then when someone comes along and says, no, this is fake, then those defenses, you know, they just automatically go up and it is a hard to fight through. Even in my own profession, you know, and I was I was a detective for 15 years, a general detective. And even people within my own department who are trained observers, I mean, that's that's what we do. We go in and we look at clues and and we look at things and people in my own profession don't see it and and scoff at me. And you know, one one of the big comments, and I'm sure you heard this too, is well, if that was fake, it would be on the news. And then you know, then you have to go back and you have to try and tell them, okay, let me tell you about the mainstream media that 90% of it is owned by six major corporations. So, you know, it just becomes a sort of argument in a way with them, only and it is very frustrating. Alex, could you could you give us a little bit about your background, your years in the police force and and how it is to work as a crime investigator and what you experienced and so on. Sure. I've been in my 2050 year in law enforcement. Five years prior to that, I actually did welfare fraud investigations, which is a whole nother area. I mean, it's you don't have law enforcement powers, but I did gather a lot of investigative experience. So I became a police officer and then I decided, you know, I think I would like to do detective work. So I became what's known as a general detective and why I describe a general detective is a general detective is kind of a jack of all trades and the detective world. So we investigate a little bit of everything without specializing in one particular area. So I've investigated just about every kind of crime other than homicides, sex crimes and undercover drug work. I've investigated everything from thefts to forgeries to frauds to stalking harassment, battery, domestic violence. So kind of well-rounded. So I've done quite a bit over the years. And it's it's a difficult profession these days. But I've enjoyed it. But at the same time, like I said, it can be frustrating because I'm one of these type of officers who I'm very big on people civil civil liberties. And I will not violate someone's civil liberties. I'm not just put those here in the United States, they put those in place for a reason to protect us from a tyrannical government. And every once in a while, I'll butt heads with other officers, especially when it comes to searching. A lot of people, especially here in the States, a lot of people assume that if a police officer wants to search your car that you have to let them. And you don't, you know, the officer doesn't have probable cause to search your car, then he can't search your car. And I told other officers that too, I'm not going on a fishing expedition. I am not violating these people's rights. And I guess from what I understand, it's kind of a rarity nowadays, but I think it's very important. But seeing from the inside, this image that a lot of people have about the police officers being very brutal and corrupt and being used as a power force to control the people in a negative way, is that also the impression you have from the inside? No, at least not from my department. I don't want to name my department for obvious reasons, because I'm still employed there. But my particular department is very good about that. We are very good at policing ourselves and getting rid of the bad eggs, so to speak. Now, other departments that are around my area, I see that more. But I don't, at least in my area, in my state, where I am, it's not that bad. I'm sure in lots of other major cities like New York or Chicago or somewhere like that, there could be a lot of corruption. But I've not seen much of that myself firsthand. It makes me really happy to hear that because the way I see it, the normal guy in the street with or without uniform is a good guy. Sometimes people can come into a situation where they are from pressure on the outside and also being part of daily life where you expose to a lot of hatred and violence and corruption or violence and different types of ways. It can get to you in a way that can affect you in a very negative aspect. And you know, we do occasionally get the officer in officers sometimes do have big egos. But we try to curtail that. I'm also a field training officer, which so the new hires that are hired within our department, I'm one of the people that helps train them. And I'm very cognizant of that. You know, you have a tremendous power when you become a police officer. You know, you have the power to take someone's liberty away from them, you know, to take to temporarily see someone's freedoms from them. And I don't think that's something that should be taken lightly ever. And when I'm out on the street or when I'm patrolling or when I'm doing my, my police work, I operate by this philosophy only there are generally two things that every human being wants. People want to be right and they want to be liked. Now that doesn't necessarily mean that those people are right. It doesn't necessarily mean that you necessarily like them. But you have to talk to them like they're a human being. Like you, you have to have an understanding and you have to see things from their point of view. Somebody might just be having a bad day and we all have those. But if you go in immediately with I'm the police and you're going to do what I say, you just got off on the wrong foot and everything from that point forward is probably not going to go the officers way. So, you know, people want to be right and they want to be liked. And so that's just kind of my personal philosophy. But don't you think that is a perfect example of what when somebody tries to control you like we're seeing here with governments and global elites and so on when they're trying to control you with force, it won't work in the long run because it just, it's just against and human nature there, they're always always cause problems in the long run. Yeah, and that is one thing that is very disturbing is the militarization of the police departments. And it's and it's all over. Our department, you know, there's a lot of departments that are giving getting you know the M wraps and you know the big artillery and the heavy machinery. We've not gotten much of that. The person who heads our department is I think very much of the same mindset that I am. He's still a type of person who believes in community policing and being visible and you know kind of the officer friendly type. But you know it is it is discouraging you know when you see police officers come in and they're all dressed in black and they're wearing the flag jackets and they and they do look like they're going into a war zone and that's that's very intimidating to people. And you know we're seeing that more and more not just here you know obviously we see that in in Europe or you are to you know even you know with the with the recent Manchester attack so to speak staged staged attack. And we can talk about that if you like but you know what's one of the first things that Theresa May said you know she's you know we're putting the military on the street where we're putting more police officers on the street for your safety. Because it's the whole paradigm of the problem reaction solution. And going back to what I said before the vast majority of people who only get their news from from the mainstream and are scared. And when they see more police and more military they immediately think that that's a good thing but it isn't. I don't know yet it's it's it's it's very frustrating to me. I don't know I'm not in Europe I don't know how it isn't in in Spain where you are. But I obviously keep keep watch the news and I've been following the Manchester incident and it just seems like every day you know they just they just build and build and they push the fear fear fear fear fear fear. And then you go back and when you start as you very well know as you start analyzing these things you see well this this doesn't make any sense I don't know if you saw the video there was a video of a man and he's walking around with his cell phone filming himself as he's looking for his his daughter. And his daughter's name is Ellen and he's walking around and he's going Ellen Ellen. Ellen and and it's clearly staged and you know you you look at that and you think to yourself how can people believe this because he said you know I was 25 feet from from the blast and but you see the people walk around him you know they're not they're not in a hurry they aren't scared they're they're just leaving the arena after a concert. So you know it's it's these kind of things that you know you have to kind of point out to people and hopefully get people to look more more with with with their critical thinking skills but it's but it's difficult. What what I find disturbing as well is that since I spent some 30 odd years looking into these things and I tell you I have hardly ever found a real life. I have never found a real event all of these events when you really dig into them are state sponsored inside jobs to create chaos so that the population will be in demand of more protection and then boom incomes this so this whole thing with the birth of SWAT teams that we see now every I mean you you throw a cigarette in the street boom the SWAT team is there soon or you collect your own rainwater boom the SWAT team will be there I mean they came from base. From based on fake terror and fake mass shootings and all of this building up of this military power and inside your country and but I see that you know I go to France I've been on all of these locations more lessons in Europe where these things are said to happen on location and I haven't been able to find one real terrorist or one real victim either I must say it's a bizarre world to get into. But the new normal is there and that is that you see military I mean heavy armed military people with bulletproof best you know in the subway in the cities and in the classes on the buses and they want that I truly believe also because they write openly about it the new normal should be we under martial law more or less. So can I ask you Alex I know when I used to be a bus driver many years ago and I tell you it was ridiculous to see the change of people just getting a uniform bus driving uniform on and then leave the bus central in the morning where we were driving like 18 or 20 buses in a long line something happened to to us I felt as well as a well you know we we were certainly part of something that stood outside of the normal and these uniforms were a sign of that and I can only I also remember traveling a lot in the eastern block before the iron curtain went down and I mean my God when you saw what the uniform could do with a weak personality that the ego just went out of the window and they I felt dangerous dangerous people if you take the wrong person and put a uniform on them especially then arm them so that is my experience but your experience seeing people coming into to the police force and seeing what is going on over the years what is your experience when it comes to this thing. Well yeah you know to it depends on the person you know a uniform can be very intimidating to one person and then very comforting in a way to another because you know I have instances every day where people are coming up and thanking me for what for what I do you know which is which is nice. But no you know I know what you mean the you know the uniform is how do I say this for some police officers when they put on that uniform that's all they are and for some police officers they're police officers 24 seven and I've never been like that when my shift is over. I am done being a police officer I do not want to be a police officer but you have other people I remember being in the police academy and all day long you know we're obviously doing police tactics and then at the end of the day you had a group of guys sitting around watching cops and I can never say we've been doing this all day what you what you still want to do this on your off time. Not that and not necessarily that they were bad cops they I mean they they weren't they're good cops but they just have that they have that mentality and you know I think that's one of the reasons why the rate of alcoholism and divorce is so high among police officers. I have a friend who's been on for almost 40 years and he you know he had two two failed marriages because and he admitted it you know at the time he said when I was younger I I was married to the department the department came first. You know I I blood blue and it's only you know after hindsight you know where he can look back and now he realizes that that was a mistake but you know a lot of younger guys get on the department not necessarily my department but a department in general and you know they they do they get they get that power trip and that's what's giving police officers everywhere a bad name because the vast majority of police officers just want to go out they want to do their job they want to return home safely to their families at night and they want to do the best job that they can and then you have that small percentage that want to create havoc they want to go on fishing expeditions they want to put people in jail. They want to stop cars when I stop a car say let's say someone's speeding generally unless you are just a minister society with the way you're driving if you're driving recklessly you're going to you're probably going to write your own ticket because I'm going to base what I do off of your demeanor because I look at this way only for 99% of the people out there just be able to do it. They want to be pulled over by a police officer is stressful which why is is why I always tell the the new people that I'm training. Don't go up to a person and say why are you nervous. They're nervous because they just got pulled over by the police and 95% of the public are just law abiding people trying to go about their day and now they've just been pulled over by a police officer and it's an unknown for them it's an unknown for us to but especially for them because they don't know this police officers demeanor what they're going to do they're going to write a ticket most people nowadays can afford a hundred and fifty dollar ticket so you know when I pull somebody over as long as they're respectful I'm generally not going to give them a ticket because we all make mistakes we all speed we all have those times when we forgot to use our turn signal and you know and we can make a little bit more talk about it and we can maybe get into this later a little bit if you like but so many of these laws I know there yeah they're laws on the books but they're but they're really statutes you know there's no victim you know if if someone's really not you know you just you it's a lot of where you seatbelt and if you don't then you can be fine but who's who's really the victim if I'm not wearing my seatbelt as as an adult I think that we have that right to choose whether we want to wear a seatbelt or not and I know that's contradictory because I'm supposed to be enforcing the law but you know when you got when you start to go through the the all the statutes there is a law for everything I mean we cannot leave our house without breaking three or four laws throughout the day if we're really honest with ourselves so you know in our own ways we're all silent deviance you know we're all breaking those those little laws if we don't wear a seatbelt if we don't use our turn signal when when we turn we're technically breaking the law and and it's it's been incremental over the years because I remember when the seatbelt law in my state was was first passed we were told that if you're not wearing your seatbelt police officer cannot stop you for for not wearing your seatbelt only if they stop you and then find that you're not wearing the seatbelt then you can be cited for not wearing a seatbelt so a couple of years later well they changed that now if we see someone not wearing a seatbelt we can stop them and give them a ticket for not wearing a seatbelt and I'm a big proponent of wearing a seatbelt I think you should wear your seatbelt seatbelts do save lives but the two biggest reasons why seatbelt laws were enacted the first reason was for the insurance companies the second reason was to generate revenue and the third reason yeah yeah they save lives so it all comes down to money and you know all these things are happening through the uniform commercial code they're not necessarily laws like when we think of common law like murder or rape or burglar or something something where you have a victim that's that's a criminal law these other ones not wearing your seatbelt speeding not using your turn signal those those are usually state statutes and after 1933 that's when the states in the United States started enacting everything under the uniform commercial codes because everything I don't know if you've ever covered this before but everything is corporate like the like the state where I am if you if you look up if you look up every state in the United States and done in Brad Street I don't know if you are familiar with done in Brad Street they're the company that gives the credit ratings to corporations so you can have a triple a plus credit rating or an a credit rating if you look up your state in done in Brad Street it's listed as a corporation so let's just say Oklahoma I'm not in Oklahoma but let's just say Oklahoma so if you go to Oklahoma and you would look up the Oklahoma highway patrol Oklahoma highway patrol is also a corporation on done in Brad Street and it's really fascinating I'm just now starting to get into this whole uniform commercial code thing and and you know people people don't realize how how deep that goes but everything is under uniform commercial code acts you know countries as well oh yes they're on stock on the stock market as well oh yeah it's bizarre it's it's very strange when you get into these things and even let's let's say you're in my state only and you're driving and you're speeding and I pull you over and I give you a citation I issue you a ticket technically you can really get out of that ticket using the uniform commercial code act because under the Fair Truth and Lending Act because my department is a corporation it falls under the Truth and Lending Act so under the Truth and Lending Act you have 72 hours or three business days to cancel a contract so what you would do is you would write a letter to the court and have it notarized saying that you no longer wish to contract and this has worked you know they send into the court and the judge will look at them and as long as they get that within three days you don't have to pay that ticket because you're under the uniform commercial code truth and lending so say you go out to get a mortgage for a house and you sign the mortgage and then you have second thoughts like one no I really don't want to do this as long as you are responding within 72 hours or three business days to cancel that contract under the Fair Truth and Lending Act. Under the Fair Fair Truth and Lending Act you can cancel that contract it's really it's really pretty amazing and people people have I mean I had no idea when I when I first started studying this but yeah it's it's it's it's pretty amazing but I think it's also really really important to understand why many of these laws are put in place because they're there not to protect us but to control us and also to overload the police force so that you have so many laws that you need to control that the population abides that you can't really focus on the real crimes. Yeah exactly it's it's it's it's it's therefore control and it's there to generate revenue because that's what it's all about all it's it's it's about control and money. You know you asked about here in in Europe and so I just know he's paying and the last few years it's gone ridiculous I mean people get pulled over because they're chewing gum. We got a fine for for my suite on having her feet up on on the board what do you call it the dashboard the dashboard but this was in a van you know she just had her bare feet up they're like five feet away from me or something like that they didn't disturb in any way or form it was a big Chevy van and they didn't even pull pull us over we just received a fine saying somebody saw you with the feed up here's $150 and you can't have headsets and you can't sing in the car you're not allowed to spit and I mean the way I see it is like wait wait wait wait wait wait wait. You're not allowed to sing in the car not loud. Wow. I mean and that just shows you how absurd it is and this for me I just hear the car. I just hear the cashmassy sheen in the background. That's the only reason you're not allowed to drive in flip flops you know these to call them flip flops. Yeah yeah same. Yeah you're not allowed to drive the flip flops you're not it just keeps going and the bizarre thing is that they don't even have to pull you over you just receive a like a fine on I a few years ago Spain the Spanish economy has been really in deep shit for a few years it's coming back now but after 2008 it was really low low low and I believe that they started looking around like okay we need to get some revenue here so they went through old papers and stuff and we had moved from Mallorca the island of Mallorca some eight years earlier or eight nine years early and suddenly there was a fine where just said you have done something on an on specific date so here's $350 I'm like what what have I done and but then they're really kind because they say that if you pay the fine right away you get a 50% discount but that's that's very generous of them but I'm like what what have I done I mean show me where and we weren't even living on the island when this happened you know and it so I'm like and but to if you get into trying to I mean you have to almost go to court to prove that you're innocent to get out of the thing like that and I mean how can you say I didn't do it when I don't even know what I'm accused of so most people just resign and just pay you know oh god just get out because if you don't then they would just take from your bank account you can't stop it they can even we found out that we that they wanted to take our car in to what you call it in when they just take your car way because there was this parking ticket that hadn't been paid eight or five six years earlier on a totally different location and that apparently they have the systems here are not very good you know digitalized and the computer systems doesn't work together so I it's my responsibility to find out if I am being accused of anything and so if I hadn't reported my last change of address or something like that so that the mail hasn't come to me that's my responsibility right so it was just by luck that we found out there was a nice police officer said listen you need to look into this because really I should take your car now I was like what I had no idea so so when you're when you're when you're wife or you're your girlfriend when you got a ticket for her having her feet up did you say that the officer advised you that someone had told him that her feet were up he didn't actually see it no we didn't talk to the police they didn't stop us we received a fine saying she had had the feet up on we don't even know it was her it just said the person in the passenger seat had their feet up on the dashboard here is the two that is not remarkable so we we weren't even stopped we weren't pulled over we didn't see a police we just received a paper saying pay and for me that is mafia methods you know sure it is now one of the things here in the states and in most states especially in my in my state if I if I pull somebody over for speeding or if I pull somebody over for a traffic infraction I either have to witness it or another officer has to have witnessed it so if another officer would come to me and say hey that car that's getting ready to go by I know that driver and they're driving on suspended license then I can pull them over but so I guess that that does differ a little bit that you know the actual officer is supposed to have witnessed the the infraction but only what this all comes down to is they need our consent and people don't really know how to fight back I don't know if you have them in Europe but we have these these red light cameras here in the states where if you're speeding or you run a red light in the camera you know takes a picture of your license plate and you receive a fine in the mail because the red light camera took a picture of your license plate you were speeding or or you ran a red light and I know you're familiar with sage of kway he actually was able to fight that and when just because he did not consent you know he sent a note or a statement to him and I think it was a note or a statement and he said I did not consent to this traffic light I knew nothing about it show me the document that I signed or the documentation that gives you the right to charge me for this and I don't know exactly how he word it worded it but he got out of pain it he didn't have to pay it and it all comes down to consent this is what the whole UCC code is based upon it's based on our consent and most people don't know how to fight back but the best way to start fighting back is to just say prove it now you have to arm yourself with the proper tools otherwise you find yourself getting in even more trouble but everybody needs to there's a book called fruit from the poisonous tree and it was written by a lawyer and it covers everything UCC related now and I'm reading it now you can get it as a free PDF online it's called the fruit from a poisonous tree and how you respond to that is you you have to know how to first of all and this book helps explain how to but the one thing that you definitely do not want to do usually is is go to court because that becomes a whole nother issue but especially in small claims court if you really know how the UCC how the uniform commercial code works and you can get them to prove that you owe something usually when someone goes to court here in the States I'm not sure how it works in Europe but you walk into a courtroom and the bailiff or the judge comes in and they say please rise and everybody stands up well you don't have to stand up they're not they're not giving you an order to stand up it's it's a courtesy they're asking you to please stand to show respect but you don't have to because once you stand you've just given partial consent to the to the proceedings so what you want to do is when a bailiff or just ask you to stand just just stay seated and then they'll ask you again sir could you please stand or the judge will say sir would you please stand and what you want to say is I shall stand your honor however I do not surrender any common law rights nor do I waive in personam jurisdiction and a good judge will go uh oh this guy knows what it's all about doing because by your standing you're giving your authority to that judge that judge now has in personam jurisdiction over you they have jurisdiction over your person but when you say now you aren't being disrespectful to the court you're actually you are showing respect because you're abiding you're actually abiding by the law by by doing that and then the next thing the judge will say is would you please state your name you say I shall state my name your honor upon proof of claim that there is a valid argument before this court now you do run the risk of getting the judge that you know is not going to tolerate any of that but if that's the case then you have to you know you have to file an appeal and you have to go through I mean eventually if you know what you're doing you will win but usually when a judge gets somebody in court room like that the judge will perk up and think okay mine my peace and queues now they'll test you because you may just know that one phrase and not anything else but you know as long as you can respond with with the proper response to the court while still showing respect you have to show respect to the court but you know that's that's just one of the ways that that we stop giving our consent and that's what it's all about they they have to get our consent only and it's only by getting our consent that that they can do all these things that they that they're doing but if you don't mind I kind of like to go back to these to these staged events because you were you know you were saying that you know you've done this for 30 years and you're having a hard time finding any one of these that's real and if you don't like do you mind if I plug my website no please please okay so I've I started a website is called fake story of the day dot com fake story good type of big story of the day dot com and you know we we see these incidents like Manchester and the Boston bombing in Sandy Hook and for those who have looked into these we know that these are false flags that they're staged events but what I'm doing with fake story of the day is it's not just these big events that that they're staging only they're staging everything I can go through every state in the union every day and finally one or two stories the more I look into it this is a fake story even even tug at your heart human interest stories there is if you go to my website there is a story about this girl in Florida it's called the alligator I call it the alligator whisperer and her name was Juliana osa and I think she was 10 years old but she was in Florida at a lake where there are alligators near the Everglades and an alligator bit onto her leg now for for a 10 year old girl to be bitten by an alligator for anybody to be bitten by an alligator you're probably going to freak out first of all because the alligator is just bit your leg but Juliana osa had recently been to gator land and where she listened to the instructor and the instructor was telling the people there if you're ever attacked by an alligator this is what you do so Juliana osa very calmly she's being interviewed says I knew what to do when the alligator bit my leg I just took by two fingers and I put it in its nostrils and the alligator let go of my leg and you're thinking okay wait a second a 10 year old girl put her fingers in the nostril of the alligator but it gets even more absurd than that so they take this girl to a children's hospital and they film it there's already the news crew is already at the children's hospital and she was on the today show here in the States on NBC so they had an NBC reporter from the today show already at the hospital waiting for this girl like they had some sort of ESP that they knew this girl is going to be bitten by an alligator so they needed to do a human interest story. So it's things like that that I'm that I'm wanting to point out to people is don't just look at these stories and go oh that was such a sweet story. Use your critical thinking skills why if she was bit by an alligator was there a news crew already at the hospital waiting and they they show her leg and it looks like she's got some like some little fake puncture marks that were put on there with with how they would make up or or something and then instead of just putting a simple bandage over the they they wrap her entire leg and white gauze and they do that for emotional impact because most especially parents are going to go oh they really took such good care of her and she's such a brave girl. But yeah these these types of stories are occurring all of the time. Can I can I just say a little thing just when it comes to alligators I believe that the power of an alligator bite is three times the force on a lion. So I mean we're talking massive damages. Oh yeah yeah yeah but other than that I spend many many years buried in in what you call it the like library the old dusty rooms you know going through newspaper cuttings and so on. When I was investigating the will of palm assassination the Swedish prime minister and I just happened to see that in Sweden there are quite a few of the big newspapers that have different editions for different parts of the country because Sweden is like 2000 kilometers the length of the country is very narrow but very long sort of so they had like three different editions for the different parts. Some of the pages were all the same for all three editions but some of it was different and just by coincidence I started noticing that some of the stories you know like this was in the nineteen early 90s. For instance there was this school I remember where they said that now to avoid the people going to the schools cafeteria and you know for the school lunch and take seconds you know eat too much they just installed this hand print scanner that cost like several millions to save the cost of a few more meatballs. Yeah like these other things they make me like whoa and that said in that article it said that this was in a city in the south of Sweden so I checked the this was the addition from the north of Sweden so I checked the south of Sweden that edition and it was the exact same story but the location was up in the north. This is how they do it this is how they do it I believe because they always wanted to be far away from you so that you can't just take the car go down the road and say whoops is this true or not it's always in a distance so that they can manipulate you. And but I find it's so it is very bizarre once you start getting into these things because there are so many of these stories that are not true like bus crashes and train rate de railings and you know homicides and you know like beatings up of Muslims or the other way around immigrants or fight knife fights and you go on location it's like I live in a in a spot here. And this is where I can see across the water and we see Morocco on on a clear day okay this is where I've seen documentaries where people are crawling on board on really awful small boats trying to get to Europe drowning it's very dramatic and children are not we've been living here for now 17 years I have not seen one refugee I'm not seen one boat I'm not seen anything like we're being told at all but in the rest of Europe the rest of Europe is not seen. That's what that's what it's that's truth. It's not. Yeah yeah so so much of our lives and so much that we see on the mainstream media is scripted and you can have you can have one story and you can go to to Alabama and you're the newscast you can go to Alaska you can go to Wyoming. And it's the same story and it's but the newscasters are reading the exact same script. There are several really good videos on online that that show that they're the same exact story written written the exact same way and read the exact same way by dozens of news anchors because it's just all pre-packaged and that's what you know that's what happens when six corporations own 9% in the media in 1983 there were 50 corporations or businesses that own media so now with only six now they can consolidate that they can script the news how ever they want they can involve the CIA we know that the CIA's heavily involved in in the mainstream media as well as the most sought as well as my five am I six. And you know there's a you may have heard heard this quote for your listeners who have not. William Casey who was the CIA director under George H. W. Bush had a famous quote and he said we know our disinformation campaign will have been a success when everything the American public believes is false. And we're almost there we are almost there and then Richard Nixon kind of backed that up before then and he said people will not believe anything until they see it on television. So I always remember those two quotes because a CIA director would would not say something like that if he didn't mean it. So you know and it all goes back to the control and the consent. But yeah all these. So why do you think they make like this alligator story and so many others what is the reason for that. You know this is this is something I struggle with I can I can understand the large states attacks like a 9 11 or Boston bombing or a Sandy hook take Sandy hook for instance you know children you know what most most people have children and they're going to be concerned. So and that was one of the main things behind the whole Sandy hit thing was was a further demization of guns to further chip away at America's second amendment our right to bear arms. So you know the big stage defense we can we can get a handle on and say okay well you know they're trying to do this right now with a lot of the events they're pushing them they're pushing mental illness really heavily. There was just I'm writing a story right now about there was a man by the name of Willie Godbolt they always come up with this really strange name Godbolt so really Godbolt is in bogacito Mississippi he kills he murders seven members of his family at three different homes and he kills a sheriff's deputy. And one of the first things that they say is this is a domestic violence issue and it's also a mental illness issue they immediately start pushing that this gentleman you know had suffered mental illness. You may have heard about the recent stabbing on the commuter train in Portland Oregon. There was a gentleman who they say is a white supremacist who was on a train and there was a Muslim woman and her friend and he started saying all kinds of racist things to this Muslim woman supposedly telling him you know you need to get out of my country. So these two or three good Samaritans intervene and said hey you know you can't talk to her like that and so he stabbed them he killed two of them supposedly and slash another one on the neck but then you know when you when you start looking into this it's like it's like you say oh here we go again. But so this guy has a background he's he's mentally ill there's news clips of him at these rallies and he's just I mean you can tell he's acting it's just over the top and they bring him out for his first court appearance and he starts screaming you call it terrorism I call it patriotism there is no judge in the United States is going to let allow man to stand in his court and start raining he's going to say bailiff. Contemptive court remove that man but they let you know they just let this guy go on and on and on and in rat rate you know to build it up you know that this guy is mentally ill he's obviously mentally ill and then later after the attack one of the the girl that was with the Muslim woman the Muslims woman's friend immediately goes to Facebook this is another thing now too everybody immediately goes to social media my son just was tragically murdered the first thing I need to do is go to Facebook and write something about it that's that's not a normal response only if a loved one is tragically killed you are distra you are in shock you don't feel like talking to the media you don't feel like going on Facebook and saying oh I love him so much he was such a great human being everybody you know the world needs to know how great he was it's it's not congruent with with normal being. I'm trying to get people to see these things and they say well you know Alex everybody griefs differently in my response is no they really don't there are stages of grief that psychologists and sociologists and psychiatrists have come up with shock denial anger bargaining acceptance our grief is not a real threat to the world. It's so universal that we actually have a set standard for it and so now people traverse those levels of grief in different ways but the only people who who don't grieve normally there's only three or four kinds of classes of people autistic people psychopaths sociopaths and actors and most of these people are the latter their actors they're acting they get on and they act like they're crying there's never any tears you see it over and over and over if my wife or my child had just been murdered and tragically killed. First of all there's no way I could even go on camera two three four six hours later and if I did I I would be absolutely inconsolable my eyes would be read from crying I would be crying tears would be rolling I wouldn't be out there I wouldn't be fresh faced you know these people never have read eyes of puffy eyes like like like they've been crying. But with with my website fake story the day calm this is these are the kind of things that that I'm that I'm wanting to point out and you know and my hope is people can go there and I spend a lot of time going through these articles. I don't just write little blows about am I right seven or eight pages on my include pictures I include videos because I want people to begin to start using the critical thinking skills only so they can go to their friends and their family. Now excuse me some of those people are going to be a lost cause you are not going to get to everybody the worst thing that you can do is when someone comes up to you and says something to be effective oh it wasn't terrible what happened to Manchester. The worst thing that you can do is go seriously dude no that was completely staged nobody died nobody was hurt because they immediately shut down they think you're an awful person. So what you have to do is you have to respond like you have sympathy but with a question yeah I saw that that is really it's really awful but did you have to see the video of the guy that was walking through with the video camera and he was looking for his daughter but everybody around him didn't look like they were panicking at all. I just thought that was kind of strange but yeah people dying like that that's awful you know just start playing those little bit of seeds because you know I've found if you just go if you just go charging with that's fake nobody died especially when children are are involved because they they like to play on the sympathy of parents especially. So and that's that's why they're starting to use more and more children but if if these terrorist attacks really were happening and it really was a problem why aren't they going into the Capitol and Washington DC why aren't they going into parliament why aren't they going to gatherings where political leaders are. It's always some isolated event or some event where nobody really I mean everybody is important everybody's life has value but what I'm getting at is they aren't going after the big fish that you think that they will be going these people at Manchester you know none of them are sending troops to their countries to kill their countrymen you know these people just want to go enjoy a concert why aren't we seeing these so called. Terrorist groups actually going after our political leaders they are they are going to do that is not going to the end of the first hour could you please give out your website again and let people know how to contact you or how to support you and what you are aiming at achieving is that anyway we can help you or. Well I just I've just recently started the website so I've been up for about a month or so now and I'm starting to to write more and more articles unfortunately I do work full time so my time that I write is is limited but I try and put on you know one or two a week eventually I want to get to a point where I can put on one every day so it could be a true fake story of the day if you just go to fake story of the day dot com. You'll not only find those fake stories but you'll also find i'm going to have a frequently asked question because one thing I find is people people don't know what cognitive dissonance is people don't really know the origins of the term false flag or the origins of the term conspiracy theory so it's going to kind of be a eventually a one stop shot for all things conspiracy related quote unquote. In the second hour i'm going to ask Alex about the how can you as a police officer advice other police officers that are in a situation where they want to make a difference that maybe they want to get out of a difficult. A position that they are in because they're starting to see things that are not the way they should be how to get out of that situation and what to do and so on so it's going to be really interesting to hear about that and many other false flags. From an experienced police officers point of view please remember Alex has been on duty on duty for some 24 years this is not just anyone who's got some opinions about these things this is somebody with a very sharp eye for details and so on so. So yeah it's going to be very interesting. Don't go anywhere will be.