Categories
by Paul Jacob video

Watch: Now Is the Time to Praise John Brown

Name four famous men at random:

  • John Brown
  • Glenn Greenwald
  • Henry David Thoreau
  • Krist Novoselic

Well, we are cheating. That is not a random list. These are, instead, four of the fascinating people Paul Jacob talks about on his most recent podcast — the video version viewable on Rumble.

Bonus points if you know who is portrayed in the photo, above. Hint: it is not John Brown.

Categories
by Paul Jacob video

Watch: Follow the Bureaucrats!

Paul Jacob on Ray Bradbury, book-​burning, and today’s tyrants — ripped from the headlines of this site for last week!

Categories
by Paul Jacob video

Watch: The Last Person to Trust with Power!

Paul Jacob begins with Thomas Sowell and ends with government-​supported anarchists. In-​between? The big issues of the day: but you cannot watch it on YouTube:

Why? Well, YouTube has taken it down:

No specific claim was cited as in error, nor any medical authority cited to back up the accusation. Of course.

The video is now available on Rumble:

The audio podcast is still available via podcatcher and as hosted on SoundCloud. See yesterday’s post for the link.

Categories
by Paul Jacob video

Watch: La-​di-​da? No, La-la.

This weekend’s podcast has a video version, like usual. But the visual treatment is … not like usual. Check it out:

The innovations here were not made for reasons of artistic yearning, but out of necessity. That being said, much is said in this outing of This Week in Common Sense, and whether you watch or just listen (on SoundCloud or your favorite pod catcher), we are pretty sure you will get something out of it.

Categories
by Paul Jacob video

Watch: The People’s Crusade Won’t Be Led by Those Who Hate the People

Paul Jacob explains his basic take on democracy, defends initiative and referendum rights, and the people’s right to know the truth about COVID … and UFOs.

Categories
by Paul Jacob video

Watch: How do you know when democracy is breaking out?

Paul Jacob offers a good rule of thumb to answer this question.

Case in point? The California recall: