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NEWS AND VIEWS THAT IMPACT LIMITED CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT

"There is danger from all men. The only maxim of a free government ought to be to trust no man living with
power to endanger the public liberty." - - - - John Adams

Thursday, October 8, 2015

Drudge: "Hillary Clinton’s brain in a jar could get elected"



The Internet Pioneer

  • With 8.6 Billions pageviews in the past year Matt Drudge drives the corrupt Elites insane.  They can no longer control the news.  But they are working overtime to find a way to inject "fairness" into the Internet and reduce freedom of speech.
  • But even with alternative Internet media available the American Sheeple still lap up the canned press releases from the Masters.


(Politico)  -  The American people are "sick" and "willing to be made over in the image of corporations," Matt Drudge said in a rare interview with InfoWars' Alex Jones published Tuesday evening. Not only that, but the powers that be could "put Hillary Clinton’s brain in a jar in the Oval Office and she would be elected."

The media needs to wake up and do its job before that happens, he said.

"If your calling is media, fine, if your calling is sports, whatever it is, but you've got to be the greatest you can be now, now, before this country is so completely altered and we're left with Hillary's brain in the Oval Office in a jar, 'cause that's what we're getting," Drudge said.

At the start of the segment, Jones said Drudge had surprised the Austin, Texas-based show with his appearance but only his voice is present throughout the 46-minute video, standing behind the camera holding a microphone. Drudge tore into Clinton at parts of the interview, calling her "old" and "sick" and only a contender because the media are making her so.

"They're making her a contender with these propped-up 'Saturday Night Live' things. It's like a head on a stick," he said. "She is not a viable, vibrant leader for this country of 300-including the illegals-380 million Americans. So the media is trying to put us asleep. You're not letting them, Alex."

Drudge also decried a "cover-up" on "seeing Hillary's lovers" and a variety of "so many issues that are suppressed on a daily basis."

“Where I’ve had a lot of success is I’m getting people from both sides of the aisle. They’ve always said, ‘Oh, he’s a right-wing gossip monger,’ mainly because of Lewinsky and those years–which, by the way, are back," he said.

On the Democratic candidacy of Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, who turned 74 in September, Drudge wondered aloud if Democrats could "find anybody under the age of 70."

"What is this oldness in a vibrant country that needs to go forward to a new century?" he asked.

Drudge also talked about the success of his website in sharing and spreading stories with a greater reach than Facebook or other social-media platforms, which he called "bogus."

"It's just a lot of gnats, a lot of confusion. The reality of the situation is life on Earth has not changed. We need facts, we need events, we need specifics on things. Not all this confusion. It’s almost, they’ve made the Internet over in their image, these corporations," he remarked, "and I think they’re failing."

Drudge also hinted that because of forthcoming court rulings on copyright, his site's days might be numbered.

He recounted an exchange with an unnamed Supreme Court justice who he says told him, "Matt, it's over for you. They’ve got the votes now to enforce copyright law. You’re out of there. They’re gonna make it so ... you can’t even use headlines."

"Wait until these copyright laws work their way up, and the Supreme Court decides you cannot have a website with news headlines linking across the board. Then that will end for me," Drudge said.

"Fine, I’ve had a hell of a run," he continued. "It’s 20 years next year or 20 years about now. Hell of a run. I couldn’t have gone any farther. I feel completely — I have gone as far out of the galaxy as I can on this. I still wanna stay out here. But I have gone pretty damn far for what one individual can do in this culture. But I’m talking about the future.



Drudge: I Don't Need to be "Liked"






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