Clayton Morris
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
It's the government. Yes. And I feel really terribly for the Portuguese people, who in many ways, and this is across Europe, they've really given up their power to Brussels. Yes. So 80% of all... The decisions that are really made in Portugal aren't made in Portugal. They're made in Brussels. So they have to fund the boondoggle in Ukraine.
They have to send the one tank that they have from the 1970s that may or may not still be working to Ukraine because of some dog and pony show propaganda campaign. So I saw— That's democracy?
They have to send the one tank that they have from the 1970s that may or may not still be working to Ukraine because of some dog and pony show propaganda campaign. So I saw— That's democracy?
They have to send the one tank that they have from the 1970s that may or may not still be working to Ukraine because of some dog and pony show propaganda campaign. So I saw— That's democracy?
No, no, and transact the way that they want to be able to transact in cash the way that they want. It's all outsourced, you know, to Christine Lagarde or Ursula von der Leyen in Brussels who get to tell them how to live their lives. And the Portuguese people do not like the European Union. Right.
No, no, and transact the way that they want to be able to transact in cash the way that they want. It's all outsourced, you know, to Christine Lagarde or Ursula von der Leyen in Brussels who get to tell them how to live their lives. And the Portuguese people do not like the European Union. Right.
No, no, and transact the way that they want to be able to transact in cash the way that they want. It's all outsourced, you know, to Christine Lagarde or Ursula von der Leyen in Brussels who get to tell them how to live their lives. And the Portuguese people do not like the European Union. Right.
I think most people in the European Union – I can't speak for everyone, of course – but you ask the common person, the worker, the laborer, the restaurant owner, the adega owner, do you like the European Union? They don't know them. They don't know the unelected people in Brussels. Yes. And no, they don't. They know their local, you know, local county representatives and those individuals.
I think most people in the European Union – I can't speak for everyone, of course – but you ask the common person, the worker, the laborer, the restaurant owner, the adega owner, do you like the European Union? They don't know them. They don't know the unelected people in Brussels. Yes. And no, they don't. They know their local, you know, local county representatives and those individuals.
I think most people in the European Union – I can't speak for everyone, of course – but you ask the common person, the worker, the laborer, the restaurant owner, the adega owner, do you like the European Union? They don't know them. They don't know the unelected people in Brussels. Yes. And no, they don't. They know their local, you know, local county representatives and those individuals.
But those people are all hamstrung by what happens in Brussels. Just to give you an idea, like, I don't know if you saw, I think it was last year, maybe a year and a half ago now, Christine Lagarde was, I think, punked but told some pretty open truths about Europeans being able to transact with cash, right?
But those people are all hamstrung by what happens in Brussels. Just to give you an idea, like, I don't know if you saw, I think it was last year, maybe a year and a half ago now, Christine Lagarde was, I think, punked but told some pretty open truths about Europeans being able to transact with cash, right?
But those people are all hamstrung by what happens in Brussels. Just to give you an idea, like, I don't know if you saw, I think it was last year, maybe a year and a half ago now, Christine Lagarde was, I think, punked but told some pretty open truths about Europeans being able to transact with cash, right?
And she said in this fake interview that on the gray market, if you spend more than a certain couple hundred dollars of euros, that you're considered part of the gray market, a.k.a. a terrorist. If you spend it on nuclear materials or small arms? No, no. Pay your gardener. You're a terrorist.
And she said in this fake interview that on the gray market, if you spend more than a certain couple hundred dollars of euros, that you're considered part of the gray market, a.k.a. a terrorist. If you spend it on nuclear materials or small arms? No, no. Pay your gardener. You're a terrorist.
And she said in this fake interview that on the gray market, if you spend more than a certain couple hundred dollars of euros, that you're considered part of the gray market, a.k.a. a terrorist. If you spend it on nuclear materials or small arms? No, no. Pay your gardener. You're a terrorist.
So, yeah, if you're buying plutonium to create the flux capacitor in order to travel back in time, you might be on the gray market. Yeah. But no, just to transact in cash. For anything. For anything. And if you look across Europe, every European country has a different threshold. So Spain, for instance, 1,000 euros.
So, yeah, if you're buying plutonium to create the flux capacitor in order to travel back in time, you might be on the gray market. Yeah. But no, just to transact in cash. For anything. For anything. And if you look across Europe, every European country has a different threshold. So Spain, for instance, 1,000 euros.
So, yeah, if you're buying plutonium to create the flux capacitor in order to travel back in time, you might be on the gray market. Yeah. But no, just to transact in cash. For anything. For anything. And if you look across Europe, every European country has a different threshold. So Spain, for instance, 1,000 euros.
If you spend more than 1,000 euros in cash, you're considered on the gray market, a.k.a. a terrorist. Every country is different. Some 500 euros, 800 euros, 1,500 euros. And across the board, the European threshold now is 10,000 euros to be able to transact in cash. And anything more than that, you're on the gray market. What's the idea there? The idea is that terrorists use cash.