[00:00:07] The show is proudly made in the USA, but secretly owned by China and is motivated by oil interests in the Middle East.
[00:00:13] The Kate Dalley Show starts now.
[00:00:15] The quest for the new world order is in part a challenge to keep the dangers of disorder at bay.
[00:00:24] We must build on the successes of Desert Storm to give new shape and momentum to this new world order.
[00:00:30] Only when this transformation is complete will we be able to take full measure of the opportunities presented by this new and involving world order.
[00:00:41] The new world order really is a tool for addressing a new world of possibilities.
[00:00:46] This order gains its mission and shape not just from shared interests, but from shared ideals.
[00:00:53] Hi there. Welcome. Kate Dalley Show on a Monday.
[00:00:56] I hope you're doing well, and we're going to kick off the show today.
[00:00:59] I have a guest, and so I will get to her straight away.
[00:01:04] We have limited time today, so I want to say a big hello to Rebecca Koffler.
[00:01:10] How are you?
[00:01:11] Excellent. How are you, Kate?
[00:01:13] I'm good. I'm good.
[00:01:14] Let me tell people a little bit about you.
[00:01:15] You're a Russian-born U.S. intelligence expert who served as Russian Doctrine and Strategy Specialist in the Defense Intelligence Agency.
[00:01:23] And working with the DIA and CIA's National Clandestine Service, you've led red teams during war games and advised senior Pentagon officials.
[00:01:36] She's also delivered classified briefings to top U.S. military commanders, NATO ministers, and directors of the CIA and DIA and the White House National Security Council.
[00:01:45] She was also born and raised in the Soviet Union, and she came to America as a young woman.
[00:01:50] And after 9-11, she joined the Defense Intelligence Agency, devoting her career to protecting her new country, of course.
[00:01:58] And now she reveals in this chilling detail Putin's long-range plan, his playbook, to weaken and subdue the United States preparing for the war that he believes is inevitable.
[00:02:10] So the book is called Putin's playbook, Russia's secret plan to defeat America.
[00:02:16] Tell us a little bit more about his plans.
[00:02:19] And, of course, given the news over the weekend, what are your thoughts on the news with Assad in Syria?
[00:02:26] Rebecca?
[00:02:26] Sure. Well, I'll start with Putin's playbook.
[00:02:30] Basically, my book describes at the unclassified level Russia's warfighting strategy and Putin's plans.
[00:02:40] The Russian general staff about a decade ago decided that a war between the United States and Russia was, and I quote, inevitable.
[00:02:51] Why is that?
[00:02:52] It's because Moscow and Washington have been on the collision course ever since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991,
[00:03:02] whereas the United States wanted to democratize Russia's former Soviet states, such as Ukraine, Georgia, Moldova.
[00:03:14] And Russia wanted to keep them under its own influence because it views these countries as part of its strategic security perimeter.
[00:03:27] Basically, it's the Russian version of the Monroe Doctrine.
[00:03:31] And so what we see unfolding in Ukraine is a proxy war between the United States and Russia,
[00:03:39] and neither side is willing to de-escalate.
[00:03:44] And what happened in Syria over the weekend, it's another theater of combat operations in the same proxy war between Russia and the United States,
[00:03:54] who are on the opposite sides of that civil war.
[00:04:01] Okay.
[00:04:01] So this has been a struggle for over two years, and we still feel—so our proxy war is the war that's inevitable,
[00:04:13] or do you think it really involves actual United States here and Russia?
[00:04:22] So what the Russian intelligence has concluded is that the war will go kinetic.
[00:04:31] In other words, you know, missiles flying.
[00:04:34] Why is that?
[00:04:36] It's because they have watched the U.S. conducting military operations for the past quarter of a century,
[00:04:43] Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, Syria,
[00:04:47] and they concluded that eventually the U.S. deploys forces into the theater, right?
[00:04:53] And so the scope and scale of the weaponry that the U.S. provided to Ukraine has increased dramatically
[00:05:02] to the point where President Biden authorized Ukraine to strike deep into Russia using U.S. long-range missiles, attack us.
[00:05:14] And so Putin responded with lowering the nuclear threshold to give himself the flexibility to employ nuclear weapons,
[00:05:24] and he actually fired a new class hypersonic missile at Ukraine for which neither the United States nor NATO have any defenses
[00:05:35] and which is able to reach the entire Europe and west coast of the United States.
[00:05:43] So basically we are on the escalation ladder.
[00:05:47] And unless, you know, either side is willing to de-escalate, and right now neither one is willing to,
[00:05:55] the war will continue climbing that escalation ladder,
[00:05:59] and we wargamed it back in the intelligence community,
[00:06:02] and every single time it ends up in the nuclear realm.
[00:06:05] What are your views of Putin?
[00:06:07] Have they changed throughout the years?
[00:06:09] You grew up in Russia.
[00:06:10] What are your views of him?
[00:06:13] Same.
[00:06:14] No, my views have not changed.
[00:06:16] Putin has not changed.
[00:06:17] Putin has always been a, you know, a former KGB operative,
[00:06:24] and that's a special, you know, class of people.
[00:06:28] Brutal.
[00:06:29] They believe in the primacy of the state,
[00:06:33] in the control by the state of individuals.
[00:06:39] And on the other hand, he is always, you know, pro-Russia.
[00:06:47] He defends Russian national interests.
[00:06:50] And so the Russians who live in Russia, they love their Putin.
[00:06:56] His approval rating is between 79 and 82 percent, which is incomprehensible for most Americans.
[00:07:06] But Americans, Russians rather, they don't think like Americans.
[00:07:11] So they basically, you know, they like him because he raised the standard of living.
[00:07:18] They have a different conception of what a leader should be.
[00:07:21] But no, Putin is the same, you know, type of dictator who is like a former KGB type officer.
[00:07:34] And he will do everything, including authorizing assassinations to preserve Russia's security.
[00:07:42] So if he, okay, so he wants Russia's security.
[00:07:46] Do you think he is a person that wants world dominance?
[00:07:53] Does he want dominance over the region?
[00:07:55] What do you think the goals are in his playbook?
[00:07:58] No, Putin is quite realistic about his own abilities and Russia's abilities.
[00:08:03] No, Putin does not want U.S. dominance.
[00:08:05] What he wants is he wants dominance in Eurasia and his own perceived sphere of influence, right, in Eurasia, of which Ukraine is part of.
[00:08:19] It's part of their strategic security perimeter, which reduced with the collapse of the Soviet Union from 1,000 miles to 100 miles.
[00:08:28] And he wants to restore that.
[00:08:29] And that's why he drew the red line over Ukraine.
[00:08:34] And to enforce that red line, he actually invaded Ukraine to prevent it from joining NATO.
[00:08:42] But he doesn't want world domination.
[00:08:45] He, however, wants to be perceived, Russia to be respected and perceived as a great power on par with the United States.
[00:08:56] And because the Russians view U.S. policy as anti-Russia, Putin decided to assemble a coalition of anti-U.S. states, China, Iran, North Korea.
[00:09:11] And that is because he believes that if the United States were to deploy forces into the theater in Ukraine, Putin will have to ratchet up tensions and bring in all these other actors so that he can win on Russia's terms.
[00:09:34] OK.
[00:09:35] What's his relationship with Syria right now?
[00:09:38] How has that changed?
[00:09:39] And with the events over the weekend?
[00:09:41] Russia has been the staunchest supporter of President Assad.
[00:09:48] They deployed the Russian forces into Syria in 2015 to prop up Assad.
[00:09:57] The United States, however, is on the opposite side.
[00:10:01] We prop up the opposition.
[00:10:04] And the CIA has been running a multi-year covert intelligence operation called Timbal Sycamore, right?
[00:10:19] Where we've been training and equipping anti-Assad forces.
[00:10:25] So what happened in Syria over the weekend, it was a collapse of the Assad regime.
[00:10:33] Assad was flown on an airplane with the transponders turned off so that it could be done clandestinely.
[00:10:42] He was flown into Russia where Putin gave him an asylum.
[00:10:48] So I know that Assad had a high approval rating, kind of like Putin does in his country.
[00:10:54] So what led to this?
[00:10:58] What led to our constructing these forces?
[00:11:02] What led to that?
[00:11:04] Well, the United States has a long-term policy of trying to conduct regime change in countries that are dominated by what we view as dictators with violations of human rights.
[00:11:24] Assad gassed his own people.
[00:11:28] About 1,400 of them have been the victim of poisonous gas attacks.
[00:11:36] And so for the longest time, we wanted Assad out.
[00:11:40] However, it wasn't possible to do because Russia was providing support to Assad to the point where they gave them very strong air defenses.
[00:11:52] And the small contingent of forces that we had in Syria, about 900, they were really not in a position to do anything other than sort of sitting there like sitting ducks.
[00:12:09] But now that there was a rebellion where a conglomeration of various types of rebels, and these are not good rebels.
[00:12:22] There's no such a thing as a good rebel.
[00:12:25] These are all, they all have jihadist philosophy.
[00:12:28] These are all head choppers.
[00:12:30] But they just happened to be anti-Assad.
[00:12:36] And they conducted this regime change.
[00:12:38] And now what is likely going to happen, Syria is going to turn into a terrorist state where the Sunni ideology will be the dominant.
[00:12:47] We've got to go to break.
[00:12:49] Rebecca Kovler, thank you.
[00:12:51] And Putin's Playbook is her book.
[00:12:52] Be right back.
[00:13:01] Hey, everybody.
[00:13:01] You've asked for this, and we're going to deliver this now on the show.
[00:13:05] So you've asked me for an online pharmacy.
[00:13:07] So you don't have to go out of the country.
[00:13:09] You can get some pharma scripts and have them for storage or for right now, whatever you want to do.
[00:13:16] So you can actually take part right now this week in an Ivermectin Black Friday sale.
[00:13:22] If you go to allfamilypharma, not pharmacy, like I said on the show, but allfamilypharma.com forward slash Kate.
[00:13:32] You need to do that.
[00:13:34] Then it also helps the show too.
[00:13:37] Allfamilypharma.com forward slash Kate.
[00:13:41] Allfamilypharma.com forward slash Kate.
[00:13:43] Go there.
[00:13:44] You can get two for one on Ivermectin.
[00:13:46] You can get whatever your budget can allow.
[00:13:49] It's really nice because you can pick and choose what you want scripts for.
[00:13:52] You'll get a quick phone call from a doctor for like three minutes asking you a couple of very basic questions.
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[00:14:00] They're right here in the USA.
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[00:14:07] And so I'm telling you about it because these guys are amazing.
[00:14:10] I don't normally love pharma as you know on the show.
[00:14:13] But there are a couple of things I like to have around like a Z-Pak or some antibiotics.
[00:14:18] This is a great place to go for that.
[00:14:20] So make sure that you are taking part in this as a doctor prescribed.
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[00:14:52] Take part in their Black Friday.
[00:14:54] This is really important because it's only this week.
[00:14:56] You can get two for one on ivermectin.
[00:14:58] But you must go through this link.
[00:15:02] It's located on the website, katedalyradio.com.
[00:15:05] Click the link, familypharma.com forward slash kate.
[00:15:11] And then the Kate Daly show actually gets credit for that too, which is going to help the show too.
[00:15:17] But it's a good idea to stock up before January 10th comes.
[00:15:20] And we might have more port troubles on the way.
[00:15:22] For whatever comes our way, you will be able to barter with these, have them, whatever the case may be.
[00:15:29] All right.
[00:15:31] Allfamilypharma.com forward slash kate.
[00:15:34] If you share this on social media because this is a great place to get scripts and people want to be able to order these from home and online, order them online, share that link because it helps the show.
[00:15:46] So share that link with all your friends and family, allfamilypharma.com forward slash kate.
[00:15:53] And tell them to take part in that Black Friday sale.
[00:15:56] It's pretty amazing.
[00:16:06] This is the Kate Daly show.
[00:16:17] All right.
[00:16:18] Welcome back.
[00:16:18] You're listening to the Kate Daly show.
[00:16:20] And I have a special guest.
[00:16:22] I can't wait to talk with her.
[00:16:24] Can I just tell you?
[00:16:25] Yeah.
[00:16:25] So I'm excited to have her on.
[00:16:27] And I just wanted to make sure that you make sure and go to allfamilypharma, allfamilypharma.com.
[00:16:33] You know, I'm really anti-pharma, but there are a couple of things that I would have on hand.
[00:16:38] I would have on some antibiotics and of course, ivermectin and of course, hydroxychloroquine.
[00:16:44] So you can get a great rate on these.
[00:16:46] Just put in the code Kate 10.
[00:16:48] Now, normally the code is Kate, but now it's Kate 10 on allfamilypharma.com.
[00:16:53] Get those ordered.
[00:16:54] Get some scripts ordered.
[00:16:55] We have a January 15th.
[00:16:58] The port problem's coming back January 15th, I guess.
[00:17:01] And we've got all kinds of things going on.
[00:17:04] I think some surprises coming right after inauguration possibly.
[00:17:07] So just make sure you're ready for all of that.
[00:17:09] Okay.
[00:17:11] Allfamilypharma.com.
[00:17:11] You can just do it right online.
[00:17:12] It's so amazing to get scripts that way.
[00:17:15] And the company's in Florida.
[00:17:17] And the code is Kate 10.
[00:17:18] I have Stephanie Perucci with me.
[00:17:21] And the book is the books, I should say, because you need to introduce the books.
[00:17:26] But Sound the Alarm, the Maui disaster that sparked a global awakening.
[00:17:31] Stephanie, welcome to the program.
[00:17:34] Hi, Kate.
[00:17:35] Hi.
[00:17:36] I okay.
[00:17:37] So will you please kind of talk us through the books that you've done?
[00:17:42] Because you've kind of segued through them into this event and taking this piece by piece.
[00:17:47] Yeah, absolutely.
[00:17:48] So the first book, Burn Back Better, I started because I had a friend who left Lahaina that evening during the fire.
[00:17:58] And she was almost overtaken by fire because of the roadblock.
[00:18:04] And at the time I was traveling, I think I was in Portland, Oregon on August 8th.
[00:18:10] And she called and told me there was a fire and that she almost lost her life because the police were blocking people in and creating a human rotisserie.
[00:18:21] They were not letting people escape the fire.
[00:18:23] And she watched, unfortunately, a co-worker that she was with get consumed by the fire.
[00:18:31] We later found out she was able to jump over the seawall.
[00:18:36] And she lived and she made it by staying in the water for eight to ten hours.
[00:18:42] So right there, I thought, what's wrong with that police department?
[00:18:48] And I kind of chalked the whole thing up to a natural disaster.
[00:18:52] You know, the story that we were told was that Hurricane Dora, high winds, that whole thing.
[00:18:59] So I wrote a book about all the details that were suspicious, mostly regarding the emergency proclamation that had been signed into law three weeks before August 8th.
[00:19:16] Yes, three weeks before the fire.
[00:19:17] They created this emergency proclamation indicating that for all intents and purposes, if there were any disaster or even pandemic, that they could declare eminent domain if they felt it was necessary to rebuild the disaster area.
[00:19:34] So when I learned that there was so much mishandling and so many red flags just three weeks before the fire, I wrote a book about all the details.
[00:19:47] And it was called Burn Back Better.
[00:19:49] And at the end of the book, I said, look, there's going to be a land grab, but we can't say that this was anything like direct energy weapons.
[00:19:57] That's crazy.
[00:19:58] And I said, maybe there was maybe there was weather engineering to make the wind stronger.
[00:20:04] And so I took the role of a skeptic in my first book.
[00:20:08] And then I went to Maui and I met with a man from the 9-11 Commission.
[00:20:13] I met with the Maui Investigation Group.
[00:20:15] They've put in literally thousands and thousands of hours investigating this fire.
[00:20:21] And I walked around with engineers and meteorologists who talked about different oddities, red flags and anomalies.
[00:20:30] I looked at trees.
[00:20:31] I looked at, you know, cars.
[00:20:34] And I came up with a very different conclusion than the first book.
[00:20:38] Oh, wow.
[00:20:40] Wow.
[00:20:41] All right.
[00:20:41] And that's what we're going to get into as well.
[00:20:43] And people are taking your books into city council meeting.
[00:20:46] I mean, this is great.
[00:20:48] They're great.
[00:20:49] They're great, Stephanie.
[00:20:50] Yeah.
[00:20:52] Yeah.
[00:20:52] Yeah.
[00:20:52] People have filed lawsuits and put my first book as evidence because it was so impartial.
[00:21:01] It was so agnostic.
[00:21:03] I just gave details that came from mainstream news sources, Hawaii News Now and different news sources.
[00:21:12] And I also scoured different Senate bills and proclamations and motions in the Hawaii government, which is far and away the most corrupt government in the country.
[00:21:25] Oh, we got to come back on that note.
[00:21:27] OK, so we'll be right back.
[00:21:29] Stephanie Perucci is with me.
[00:21:30] The book is Sound the Alarm, the Maui disaster that sparked a global awakening.
[00:21:36] Be right back on the Kate Daly Show, katedalyradio.com.
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[00:23:06] This is the Kate Daly Show.
[00:23:13] Welcome back.
[00:23:14] You're listening to the Kate Daly Show.
[00:23:16] KateDalyRadio.com.
[00:23:17] Over 27 million on podcast of this here live show that you're listening to all over the country.
[00:23:22] So glad you're with me.
[00:23:23] And I've got a special guest.
[00:23:25] You're going to want to hear what she has to say.
[00:23:27] Smart cookie.
[00:23:28] Stephanie Perucci.
[00:23:29] The book is, oh, I hope you guys go get the books.
[00:23:33] Sound the Alarm.
[00:23:35] The Maui Disaster that sparked a global awakening.
[00:23:38] And, of course, the other books as well.
[00:23:41] Because as you were going, Stephanie, you said things kept changing.
[00:23:45] It kept changing because then you visited.
[00:23:48] Then you were looking at the trees.
[00:23:50] You were looking at the cars on what happened on Maui.
[00:23:53] And you were saying, oh, my gosh.
[00:23:54] This was quite an awakening to what was going on.
[00:23:58] That's right.
[00:23:59] Yeah.
[00:24:00] When I went in January of 2024, now the fire was still pretty fresh.
[00:24:05] The burn zone was closed.
[00:24:07] I got in before any major news outlet was in the burn zone.
[00:24:13] And we kind of, I was there, you know, with a resident who had lost a home and a business,
[00:24:20] a very dear friend of mine.
[00:24:22] And we were dodging, you know, big black escalades just to try to walk around.
[00:24:27] So, you know, they didn't want people looking at what happened.
[00:24:32] They did not want these engineers.
[00:24:34] They didn't want my friend who worked on the 9-11 commission.
[00:24:37] They didn't want the mechanics and investigators in there to take pictures of what we saw.
[00:24:43] And so that is really what led me to the second book.
[00:24:46] When I left Maui in January, I said, if I don't write another book, I am assaulting the legacy
[00:24:56] of all these people who died unnecessarily.
[00:24:59] People want to know.
[00:25:01] And the government in Hawaii doesn't want people to know.
[00:25:06] But they are gaslighting the citizens, telling them it's climate change, your plastic straws
[00:25:13] are what caused this.
[00:25:14] But the people are ready now.
[00:25:18] Enough time has passed that there is a big movement in Hawaii to elect different officials
[00:25:26] into office.
[00:25:27] And so that's really what the trip in January was.
[00:25:32] I had already published Burn Back Better and Sound the Alarm came when I talked to the actual
[00:25:40] people on the ground who lost their mothers and fathers and siblings.
[00:25:45] And they said over and over every single person I talked to that week, hundreds of people,
[00:25:51] why didn't they sound the alarm?
[00:25:53] Why didn't they wake us up?
[00:25:55] And why didn't we run?
[00:25:57] We have the best alarm system in the world.
[00:26:01] And they sound it for other things successfully, but they didn't sound it for this horrific fire.
[00:26:08] It's a little too fishy, too strange.
[00:26:10] And I remember the fire being, it felt very targeted to certain areas.
[00:26:15] And it felt like the fire was very close to the water.
[00:26:19] And certain things were burnt and certain things weren't.
[00:26:23] Mm-hmm.
[00:26:24] Right?
[00:26:24] Very strange.
[00:26:26] Yeah.
[00:26:26] The majority of what burned was residential.
[00:26:29] And the reason that the only way to get these Hawaiians off their land so that it could be
[00:26:37] turned into a Disney World was because these were multi-generational homes that the families
[00:26:46] owned outright.
[00:26:47] Each one of them was like a museum of artifacts because Lahaina is the former capital of the
[00:26:55] kingdom of Hawaii.
[00:26:56] It's a very, very sacred place.
[00:26:58] And there was no way that any single person was going to abandon their home to let a hotel
[00:27:07] or a sustainable development community be erected in place of their home.
[00:27:12] They were not motivated by money.
[00:27:15] These were sacred homes.
[00:27:18] The people found the land to be very sacred.
[00:27:20] Lahaina has a lot of history.
[00:27:22] And so there was no amount of money that could buy the land.
[00:27:27] But the land is going to turn a big profit for some of the key stakeholders behind this.
[00:27:35] What are the plans?
[00:27:36] Do we have any idea what they truly want to do with this?
[00:27:41] You know, right now there has been a lot of kicking, kicking of the can, so to speak.
[00:27:49] There was the HECO lawsuit.
[00:27:51] The reason I think the HECO lawsuit has been taking so long isn't only because our court system is corrupt, but because they want to keep people silent.
[00:28:02] Because if they speak out, they are worried they're not going to get a settlement from HECO.
[00:28:08] So right now people think, oh, well, Hawaiian Electric is going to be the scapegoat.
[00:28:13] My family is going to get a million or two million dollars.
[00:28:16] And so I'm going to shut up and I'm not going to be a whistleblower about what I've seen because I need to get this settlement.
[00:28:24] So a lot of our citizen journalists and a lot of the people who helped me craft the first book will no longer speak or let their name in writing because they're afraid of not getting the HECO settlement, the Hawaiian Electric settlements.
[00:28:39] There are a lot of people behind the Maui Strong organization who are in tourism and banking.
[00:28:48] And the Maui Strong Foundation has, you know, some pretty odd ties to things like the UN.
[00:28:59] A lot of the people involved in Maui Strong are also involved with the UN.
[00:29:04] And, you know, they were raising money.
[00:29:07] They're managed by the Hawaii Community Foundation.
[00:29:10] And if you look at their board, it's all people in banking and tourism.
[00:29:16] There's even someone from Hawaiian Electric on that board.
[00:29:19] So Hawaiian Electric, maybe they'll lose two million, two billion dollars in the Hawaiian Electric lawsuit.
[00:29:25] But they stand to make so much more if they play the scapegoat and then rebuild Lahaina as a, you know, I call it Las Vegas and Lahaina.
[00:29:35] And which is ironic if you read my books, because not only the Maui police chief, but also a police chief on Kauai curiously came illegally into their positions.
[00:29:47] They violated all of the requirements or many of the requirements, even falsified their applications to become police chiefs.
[00:29:57] And one of them is from the Mandalay Bay shooting.
[00:29:59] Yes, that I knew.
[00:30:01] And I was shocked when I saw that.
[00:30:03] I was shocked.
[00:30:05] Yeah, he'll go along and do whatever they want.
[00:30:08] Sounds like.
[00:30:09] Wow.
[00:30:09] Only 3.6% of what was donated to Maui Strong by people all over the world has made it into the hands of the people.
[00:30:21] 3%?
[00:30:23] 3.
[00:30:23] 3.
[00:30:24] Yeah.
[00:30:25] 1, 2, 3.
[00:30:27] That's it.
[00:30:27] And here's Oprah, you know, shedding her little tears and shaming people into giving money.
[00:30:36] 3%.
[00:30:36] 3%.
[00:30:37] Wow.
[00:30:38] That's.
[00:30:38] Yeah.
[00:30:39] And the rest of it, when their hand was held to the fire, the Hawaii Community Foundation, who manages Maui Strong, they said, well, we're earmarking this for future long-term development.
[00:30:55] Oh, my gosh.
[00:30:57] And these people, here's what's really tragic.
[00:31:01] Over 12,000 people lost their homes.
[00:31:04] Wow.
[00:31:05] Wow.
[00:31:05] And most likely 1,500 people died, maybe more.
[00:31:10] I think the official news report is up to 102 or something.
[00:31:16] Yep, 102 with two missing, and that's all they're saying?
[00:31:19] But there was many more.
[00:31:19] Oh, yeah.
[00:31:22] And there's no way we will ever know how many people passed because so many of them were undocumented.
[00:31:32] And that's a whole rabbit trail, really, in and of itself with the foster kids, et cetera.
[00:31:37] But what's really tragic is of the 12,000 people who lost their homes, a lot of them were not, you know, tourists, second homeowners.
[00:31:49] A lot of these were residents.
[00:31:50] That's what Lahaina was.
[00:31:52] Lahaina is a working town.
[00:31:54] It's not Waikiki.
[00:31:56] Well, it's about to be Waikiki.
[00:31:59] But what's tragic about the money being withheld from these families is that they can no longer afford to stay in their home.
[00:32:09] And they are leaving the island.
[00:32:11] They're in Utah.
[00:32:12] They're in Tennessee.
[00:32:13] They're in Illinois.
[00:32:14] They're gone.
[00:32:14] They cannot live in their home, like in their homeland.
[00:32:20] Oh, it just makes me sick.
[00:32:22] It makes my stomach turn.
[00:32:24] We're going to come right back.
[00:32:26] It does.
[00:32:27] It just, it's disgusting.
[00:32:29] It's sound the alarm, the Maui disaster that sparked a global awakening.
[00:32:34] Stephanie Perucci is with me, and we'll be right back.
[00:32:36] So don't miss this.
[00:32:37] And also, she'll be with me in the first segment of the next hour as well.
[00:32:40] Be right back.
[00:32:42] Kate Daly Show.
[00:33:04] This is the Kate Daly Show.
[00:33:18] Welcome back.
[00:33:18] You're listening to the Kate Daly Show.
[00:33:21] So glad you are, too.
[00:33:22] Go to Patriot.tv and you forward slash Kate.
[00:33:26] Patriot.tv.
[00:33:28] So instead of .com, it's .tv.
[00:33:29] Patriot.tv forward slash Kate.
[00:33:31] There's lots of Kate Daly gear you could get.
[00:33:34] Hats and sweatshirts and T-shirts and all kinds of things.
[00:33:37] Mugs, you name it.
[00:33:38] And with some of the slogans from the show.
[00:33:40] And, of course, you can also get the skincare I use.
[00:33:44] People always ask me about that.
[00:33:46] And, yes, I love it.
[00:33:48] It's called Nimi.
[00:33:49] It's N-I-M-I.
[00:33:50] But it's pronounced Nimi.
[00:33:52] And you can actually order that and try it out.
[00:33:55] The vitamin C scrub and also the night cream is what I use.
[00:33:58] And I love their products.
[00:34:00] They have a fantastic product line, but they're a great company that is actually invested into values.
[00:34:05] Conservative Christian values are just awesome.
[00:34:08] So Patriot.tv.
[00:34:10] You can actually follow the link right at my website, katedalyradio.com.
[00:34:14] Okay?
[00:34:14] And get there really easily.
[00:34:16] So order up.
[00:34:17] It's really fun to have that.
[00:34:19] To have some gear finally, right?
[00:34:21] You guys have been asking for that for so long.
[00:34:24] So there's things.
[00:34:26] I just want to get to the truth.
[00:34:27] Like, what's really going on?
[00:34:28] Because when I hear things like, well, he gassed his people, so therefore we have to go in and help, as John Kerry said.
[00:34:36] Right.
[00:34:37] And rescue.
[00:34:38] Uh-huh.
[00:34:39] Right.
[00:34:39] And go in and do the things we're doing.
[00:34:42] Because remember, forever, Assad, Syria was fine.
[00:34:48] You know, they wanted to just have their own country, a little bit more like Russia.
[00:34:53] Russia wanted their nationalists.
[00:34:55] They liked their country.
[00:34:56] Okay?
[00:34:56] And so I did find it very strange when you look at the timeline of things about this event with Jeannie oil and gas that no one ever talks about.
[00:35:08] This is just not talked about, which is kind of amazing, because this is really the instigator of these events of Obama regime, then bringing Syria into the headlines and telling us that we had to go to war to take out or at least do a clean regime change because of what a threat he was to his people.
[00:35:29] But his people.
[00:35:31] But his people duly elected him and liked him.
[00:35:34] So some other people in Jeannie oil, Dick Cheney, of course, I mentioned, and Rupert Murdoch, I mentioned.
[00:35:41] James Woolsey, former CIA director.
[00:35:44] Larry Summers, former head of U.S. Treasury.
[00:35:46] It's a tight little club, guys.
[00:35:49] Mary Laundro, United States senator from Louisiana.
[00:35:52] And then, of course, Jacob Rothschild and Michael Steinhardt.
[00:35:57] A lot of names.
[00:35:58] Okay?
[00:35:58] And these are just some of them.
[00:36:00] And so they took over the Golan Heights.
[00:36:05] Then clear into 2019, Trump granted these, this, this, well, sanctioned this event.
[00:36:14] But this really happened under Obama.
[00:36:17] This was really that.
[00:36:18] It was that.
[00:36:19] It was during the Obama regime.
[00:36:20] And so in February, February 18th, 2013, Obama, there was an article about him and it said he was running out of ways to speed up Mr. Assad's exit.
[00:36:35] Okay?
[00:36:36] With things continuing to deteriorate.
[00:36:38] So all along this timeline of 2011 to 2013, all this was happening with Golan Heights and all of these different things.
[00:36:48] And then all of a sudden we came out with this 2013 article in August, months later, and said the United States has now concluded that Syria carried out chemical weapons attacks against its people.
[00:37:02] And this is what Barack Obama said Wednesday, President Barack Obama, and a claim that comes amid a looming diplomatic showdown over whether to strike against Assad's military.
[00:37:15] Okay?
[00:37:15] So he goes on PBS, Obama, and, and talks about this and, and talks about Russia and China and a UN Security Council meeting and, and that they had a reasonable cause to suspect that he did this.
[00:37:33] They never really tell you what he actually did.
[00:37:36] They just kept talking about it as, and this is what the headlines were, reasonable, a reasonable, not evidence.
[00:37:45] They never said that.
[00:37:46] Just an, a reasonable conclusion that he gassed his people and that therefore, um, he killed 75 people.
[00:37:56] And therefore this, all this stuff had to happen to Assad.
[00:38:00] It's a really weird dialogue.
[00:38:03] It's a really strange story.
[00:38:04] And nobody ever talks about this part of it.
[00:38:08] Um, so they have this 13 year conflict is what we call it in our news.
[00:38:14] Cause this is AP news.
[00:38:15] Remember?
[00:38:16] And, uh, Assad backed by Iran and Russia, uh, gradually regained control of more than two thirds of Syria, leaving the rebels with one stronghold in the Northwest part of the country.
[00:38:27] And this is them talking about it.
[00:38:29] Okay.
[00:38:29] This is a AP news.
[00:38:31] And they really, um, do not go into why all of the sudden we are painting this picture of Syria in America.
[00:38:42] Nobody's nobody goes there.
[00:38:43] They only go into, Oh, he gassed his people.
[00:38:46] So therefore we have to go in.
[00:38:48] It was really, really strange.
[00:38:50] And, uh, reasonable grounds to believe then became the statement after that reasonable grounds to believe no evidence, just reasonable grounds.
[00:39:00] See how they word play change the meaning of words.
[00:39:04] Okay.
[00:39:05] And so, um, Mattis came out and actually said that the U S had no evidence that the Syrian government used this nerve agent, sarin against its own people.
[00:39:16] Mattis said that he came out and he said, Nope.
[00:39:19] Um, so then what they had, what they wrote was, well, this flies in the face of the white house memorandum, um, which was rapidly produced and declassified to justify this American Tomahawk missile strike against the air base in Syria.
[00:39:37] So a lot of games, uh, are being played in the press right now.
[00:39:41] Now, all of a sudden, all of a sudden there's no cause, no reason, nothing.
[00:39:45] Now, all of a sudden Assad has to go to Moscow for asylum and he gives over a transfer, uh, a transfer of power.
[00:39:56] I don't believe that for a second, but okay.
[00:39:58] We're supposed to believe that for no apparent reason.
[00:40:02] Although the escalation of war seems to be happening, isn't it?
[00:40:07] And it seems to be a regional taking over of land in this area.
[00:40:12] The uptick from my, you know, in Iran speak, right?
[00:40:16] Iran war.
[00:40:17] And of course, um, just this total uptick.
[00:40:21] You guys feel it.
[00:40:22] I feel it.
[00:40:22] We're seeing it in the press.
[00:40:24] Now with Syria.
[00:40:28] I worry.
[00:40:29] I worry because people fall for these narratives that come out of the AP news and Reuters and they don't think about it.
[00:40:35] Well, why did that happen?
[00:40:36] Why would he suddenly do that?
[00:40:37] What, what's, what's really going on here?
[00:40:39] They just go with the narrative as published.
[00:40:43] Oh gosh.
[00:40:44] Well, we got to go get that bad guy.
[00:40:45] We got to go save the people of Syria.
[00:40:47] The Syria, Syrian people don't want us anywhere around our government.
[00:40:53] But John Kerry's out there saying, well, we have to go save people.
[00:40:56] So we have to skirt around the law to go in to save people on a, on a premise that's not legal, but we're going to go in because we're fighting ISIL.
[00:41:04] ISIL, the other creation.
[00:41:05] They had to just change the name.
[00:41:08] I guess ISIS got old.
[00:41:09] So then it was ISIL.
[00:41:10] And so very, very weird stuff going on.
[00:41:14] And I don't, I don't take any of the narratives that come out of the AP and Reuters as fact because there's so many holes in it.
[00:41:22] They never, ever talk about the real beginnings of anything.
[00:41:26] It's just based on just, just narrative.
[00:41:30] But there's plenty of evidence to 100% say that that narrative is not true.
[00:41:36] So very interesting.
[00:41:38] I'll come right back with Dr. Pesta, Daniel Penny, and of course the CEO, Hiller.