🔍 Roger Stone pulls back the curtain on Big Tech's censorship machine and reveals shocking details about how social media platforms really control what you see. In this explosive interview, Stone shares first-hand experiences with platform bans and exp
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A
Has the left always been this crazy and sporadic in your experience?
B
No, I think that they have been turbocharged. First of all, they are dealing with billions of dollars of dark money received millions of fraudulent contributions. This is simple. Prosecute them. It's very provable. No trial in dc. Let's try you in Florida.
A
Right.
B
The woman who ran for the Senate In Florida raised 37 million. I can prove you. 30 million of that is illegal. She should be arrested tomorrow morning and prosecuted. She would be if she were a republic.
A
Wow.
B
You got some product placement here.
A
Yes, Organic chips. And the lovers.
B
All you. Thank you.
A
Awesome. How's the conference been so far for you?
B
Great, Mabel. I got in really, really late last night. Oh, yeah. I was surprised. At 1:30 in the morning, it was so dead. Yeah, because I was ready to, you know, have a few cocktails and relax. Everybody was dead. Which is good because I slept and I worked pretty hard on my speech.
A
I love it.
B
Which I was happy with. Nice.
A
Are you speaking tonight?
B
I spoke at noon.
A
Oh, you already spoke.
B
Yeah, it was nice.
A
What'd you talk about?
B
What just happened? What do we need to do to keep it going? The kind of. The history of this movement, and it was. You always get to address the question. Well, you think the people who broke the law in the Russian collusion hoax, is that retribution? Is that revenge? No, that's. That's rebalancing the scales of justice. People engaged in treason, why should they get a free pass? Yeah, why should they get a free pass?
A
Agreed. You've seen a lot in politics, working with so many campaigns. Does anything surprise you anymore?
B
No, not at all.
A
I mean, you've seen a lot under Nixon, Reagan, Trump.
B
The left has no rules. The Constitution doesn't matter. Legal precedent doesn't matter. Law doesn't matter. They just do whatever they want. And they will until somebody stops them. Right.
A
Has the left always been this crazy and sporadic in your experience?
B
No, I think that they have been turbocharged.
A
What do you think fueled that recently?
B
Well, first of all, they are dealing with billions of dollars of dark money. Democrat Senate candidates in 2022 received millions of fraudulent contributions. This is simple. Prosecute them. It's very provable. And by the way, this let them stand in their home state. No trial in D.C. let's try you in Florida.
A
Right.
B
The woman who ran for the Senate in Florida raised 37 million. I can prove you. 30 million of that is illegal. She should be arrested tomorrow morning and prosecuted. She would be if she were a Republican.
A
Wow. I did not know it Was that bad? So when you say dark money, what is that looking like?
B
George Soros gives money to blue. They take your name and they show that you got. You sent 50 contributions.
A
Right?
B
Now when we go to your doorstep and say, hey, what about these contributions showing that you. I didn't give any contributions. What are you talking about? Yeah, it's called smurfing.
A
ActBlue just got exposed. Do you think any legal repercussions will come from that?
B
I have 19 individual attorney generals investigating them. Yes, people need to be prosecuted and sent to jail.
A
How long were they operating?
B
Certainly in the 22 and 24 cycles, big time. I was fighting criminal charges that were cooked up against me in 2020. We now know where fraud that was. But.
A
And was that coming from Soros too?
B
I think there was more coming from the Clintons. I exposed the Clintons in my book the Clintons War on Women, and let's just say Hillary was not crazy about that.
A
They have a lot of power, right?
B
They did then. They have very little power today.
A
I mean, there were theories they were pulling the strings under Obama too.
B
Well, the Obamas and the Clintons hate each other more than we hate them.
A
Oh, really?
B
Oh, yeah, very clearly.
A
When did that hatred start?
B
Well, you see, Hillary was anointed. It was hers. She had a deal with her husband that after him she would be president. Along comes this completely unknown senator from Illinois that no one has ever heard of. And she and her husband know more about presidential elections than anybody. But Obama beats her. Let's remember what Bill Clinton said to Ted Kennedy. You know, Ted, in the old days, this boy would be out fetching our coffee, so there's no blood, there's no love. Blast that Bill Clinton, the guy who went to the Supreme Court to argue that Arkansas state troopers should be able to pull people aside for the crime of driving while black.
A
Crazy. Anyway, which election victory felt the most fulfilling, felt the best for you?
B
Was it this? This one, without any question. Why? Well, because it's not just Trump winning an election campaign. He had to defeat a tsunami of lawfare in which they used the full authority of the. Of the judicial branch of government to try to. To. To bankrupt him, try to keep him off the ballot, tried to try to incarcerate him. So he had come not to. He not just overcome a regular election in which, you know, the voting, vote counting process in some questions is at a minimum questionable in terms of its integrity. But he had to overcome that tsunami of lawfare. And the fake news media supported drumbeating to try to make it real.
A
Right.
B
And the American people saw through all of it, every bit of it.
A
I think they saw through it in part due to social media. Right.
B
That's without any question. That's why they're so apoplectic against Eli. You lost your monopoly on social media.
A
Right.
B
Okay. Now the Trump Justice Department needs to look at Facebook because they're violating antitrust laws. Pam Bondi, this is not. Not difficult. Yeah, well, not. Not difficult.
A
Well, Mark just donated a million. Do you think that's more of an apology?
B
He's 449 million short of what he spent to steal the election. He's a criminal and he should be prosecuted.
A
Yeah. When I saw that donation, I was like, he's doing that to get favors.
B
Just going to buy him nothing. Trump's laughing at him while taking his money.
A
I mean, they banned him. They banned you, right? Facebook.
B
I'm completely banned on Facebook.
A
And you're still not back?
B
No.
A
Would you ever go back?
B
Well, it's hard to say. There are at least five Roger Stones right now on Facebook. There's one guy, I was in a restaurant the other night, a guy said, hey, Stone, where's that crypto I bought from you? Oh, my God. What are you talking about? The crypto I bought from you on Facebook. There's. There's no crypto. Yeah.
A
That's terrible. I mean, they should be held accountable for that.
B
I totally agree.
A
They're doing that to every known figure, not just you.
B
Yeah, that's what I got.
A
Fake Sean Kelly's. I've seen fake Trumps.
B
It happens every day. There's a fake. There's a fake Roger Stone. There's many actually on Twitter, but there's one who's. Or X1 who's particularly obnoxious. And they're clever. So they take what you post and they post it so it looks like it's you, but then they intersperse their crap within it.
A
Yeah. Have you reached out to Twitter to get them?
B
Yes, but it takes forever.
A
Wow. Even someone with your authority. That's pretty crazy, right?
B
And what happens is when they are ordered to. To. To delete, they just pop up again a few days later. Yeah, with a slightly different. You know, that's crazy.
A
Do you see any big similarities with Nixon, Reagan and Trump, their leadership styles?
B
Very much so, but different. Like Reagan, Trump is more of a big picture guy. More interested in the big picture, less interested in the details. But they were both particularly Nixon. They were a threat to the deep state. Nixon was taken down as we now know from declassified documents by the CIA, who knew well in advance about the break in at the Watergate. Tucker Carlson had a great show on this because he was going to dismantle the CIA. First of all, he was upset that they would not give him the records about the assassination to jfk. And secondarily, they were spying on his foreign policy. If you read his biography and you read his chief of staff's diary, he was plenty. A complete overhaul of the CIA and that's why they took him out.
A
Crazy. And jfk, right?
B
Yes, same thing.
A
Same with you think those files will ever get released for jfk?
B
Yes, I do.
A
I hope they do, because I think it's really important information.
B
They definitely will.
A
Do you think Trump has the potential to eradicate the deep state once and for all?
B
He has the power to do it. I believe he has the will to do it. Now the question is, will he get the people around him to do it? I think in Cash Patel, he has that. The rest remains to be seen. I mean, we need Tulsi Gabbard.
A
Yeah.
B
The reason they're trying to smear her Reuters story. Eight senators have reservations. That's bullshit. Bullshit. I can count votes. It's three and they're not even decided. But you see, they try to make it a self fulfilling prophecy. I don't get my news from Reuters. The same reason I don't eat out of the toilet. They just lie. That's a lie. That reporter is a liar. People should go on social media and confront them in a polite way, but it's just not true. They're upset that Tulsi Gabbard would be at the nexus of all of our social, pardon me, of all of our intelligence agencies. And she will be able to prove that they're not impartial, they're not non political and they're not honest. They're weaponized.
A
That being said, which news outlets do you trust do you consume information from these days?
B
Well, let's see. I like resist the mainstream. I like Breitbart, obviously. I like Gateway Pundit a lot. I like Infowars. I don't agree with Alex Jones about everything, but I agree with him about many, many things. Probably most things. The whole point of course is that X is the fountain of all truth. If you spend time there, you will learn things you didn't know. I feel sorry for the people who are running around still thinking the COVID 19 vaccination was both safe and effective.
A
I mean, because there are people who believe that. Yeah, but you see, these news outlets are struggling now. MSNBC might go bankrupt. ABC is struggling, because I think people.
B
People are. They're just not buying the lies anymore. First of all, pharmaceutical companies should be banned from advertising on television and on cable. Just like alcohol and just like cigarettes. Why not?
A
No, that would put a lot of them in. In financial struggle.
B
There's no question, because they're half that. Secondarily. If it's true, as I read yesterday, that. That Pfizer switched out the formula for their COVID 19 vaccination, which had been approved for emergency use for a more toxic formula, people need to go to prison.
A
Wow. I didn't know that.
B
I read that. I read a pretty good report. If it is accurate, and I'm not. I'm not certain, but it appears to be true, then somebody should be prosecuted.
A
I mean, the more time that goes on, the more health issues you're seeing from that vaccine.
B
Yes, but there are those on the left who don't even. All right, let's put it this way. There are those among the American people who don't see that. How does it. It's because where they're watching, if you're watching cnn, if you're watching msnbc, if you're reading the New York Times and the Washington Post, you are brain dead.
A
I just don't get it, though. They must know someone that has had issues from it. How are they putting these outlets before. Just logic? It doesn't make sense to me. Right. What do you got planned next?
B
Man, I'm going to. I have to finish the book about the ordeal of being persecuted and squeezed to bear false witness against Trump. I passed three polygraph tests that proved everything the government alleged about me was a lie. The judge would not give us Mueller's final report. We know why. Because once we got it through a federal lawsuit, Mueller himself admits that he found no evidence of Russian collusion or WikiLeaks collaboration or even says it or any other crime on Stone's part. But the judge withheld that from my defense attorneys, which is why I deserve the pardon. I really did nothing wrong. To violate the False Statements act. Your false statement has to be willful, but more importantly, has to be material. What underlying crime was I hiding? The Russian collusion. There is no Russian collusion.
A
Crazy.
B
So, yeah, it is. It's Kafkaesque. It's so bizarre.
A
Yeah, they pull you against Trump and it affects your relationship.
B
But the prosecutor who dreamed this up, Andrew Weissman, this is a guy who lied to cover up mob murders. When he was a prosecutor in Brooklyn. This is a guy who destroyed Enron and Arthur Anderson. And his award winning verdicts in those trials were unanimously overturned by the Supreme Court and he was tongue lashed for prosecutorial misconduct. Now he ran the Mueller investigation. When the cell phones of the Mueller prosecutors were under subpoena by, by the special counsel, he, he erased their memories. Why has he not been arrested? That is obstructive justice. And, and it is, it is a destruction of evidence. One standard of justice. One standard. Mr. Weissman, we know where we are, where you are. We know what you have done. It is provable to a grand jury. It's your turn.
A
It's crazy to me because a lot of people don't have the money to fight stuff like this, you know, you saw what happened to the J6ers.
B
Well, in my case, I was bankrupted. I had to go out and raise every dollar for my legal defense. Thank God for the prayers and the small contributions of hundreds of thousands of Americans. And even then, D.C. is a killing field. 0 chance of a fair trial. In my trial, the jury forewoman testified during jury selection and during the trial. I never heard of Roger Stone. I know nothing about his case. But she'd been attacking me on Twitter and Facebook for a year before the trial about the very case in which she was picked as a juror. But she had it on a private setting so could not be found. She should have. The first of all, the verdict should have been thrown out and she should.
A
Have been prosecuted 100%.
B
But. And if it had been any place other than D.C. she might have been.
A
D.C. and New York are screwed. Those two are the probably the worst.
B
It's true. We need to do. Trump needs to do away with the entire D.C. federal jurisdiction. It's not provided for in the Constitution. There is no D.C. prosecutor. D.C. is not a state and they.
A
Spent hundreds of millions trying to put him in prison.
B
Yes.
A
I mean, it's mind blowing, the stress that comes from that and scare tactics. It's not fair.
B
Yes.
A
Well, where can people watch your show, man?
B
You go to. Well, the most important place to go is stone zone.com from there you can learn everything. I do a daily show on rumble@rumble.com Rogerstone the Stone Zone every day at 8pm Eastern. On the weekends, I do a radio show at 77 WABC Radio New York, the largest, most powerful AM radio signal in the country. Three hours every Sunday from 3 to 6. It doesn't matter where you live live. You can listen by going to wabcradio.com awesome.
A
We'll link it below. Thanks for coming on.
B
Great to be here.
Podcast Information:
In episode #1019 of Digital Social Hour, host Sean Kelly engages in a robust conversation with political consultant and strategist Roger Stone. The dialogue delves deep into topics such as Big Tech censorship, dark money in politics, media bias, legal challenges faced by conservatives, and comparisons of contemporary political figures with historical leaders. The episode provides listeners with Stone's perspectives on the current political climate, the influence of money in elections, and the role of media in shaping public opinion.
Roger Stone begins by addressing the pervasive issue of Big Tech censorship, emphasizing how it disproportionately affects conservative voices. He argues that the left has been "turbocharged" by substantial financial support and manipulative tactics that suppress dissenting opinions.
Notable Quote:
"The left has no rules. The Constitution doesn't matter. Legal precedent doesn't matter. Law doesn't matter. They just do whatever they want."
— Roger Stone [00:04]
Stone asserts that Big Tech platforms like Facebook and Twitter are biased against conservatives, leading to the silencing of alternative viewpoints. He highlights the strategy of "smurfing", where political groups disguise the true source of their funding to manipulate public perception.
Notable Quote:
"Now when we go to your doorstep and say, hey, what about these contributions showing that you I didn't give any contributions... it's called smurfing."
— Roger Stone [02:44]
A significant portion of the discussion centers around the influence of dark money in political campaigns, particularly within the Democratic Party. Stone alleges that Democrat Senate candidates have received "billions of dollars" in illicit contributions, which he describes as "dark money".
Notable Quote:
"The woman who ran for the Senate in Florida raised 37 million. I can prove you. 30 million of that is illegal. She should be arrested tomorrow morning and prosecuted."
— Roger Stone [02:29]
Stone calls for legal action against those involved in these financial irregularities, arguing that prosecution is both necessary and feasible in states like Florida, as opposed to the more protected environment of Washington D.C.
Stone critiques mainstream media outlets, labeling them as biased and unreliable. He contends that platforms like CNN, MSNBC, The New York Times, and The Washington Post propagate false narratives that mislead the public and undermine conservative viewpoints.
Notable Quote:
"If you're watching CNN, if you're watching MSNBC, if you're reading the New York Times and the Washington Post, you are brain dead."
— Roger Stone [10:43]
He also discusses the proliferation of fake social media accounts that impersonate public figures, complicating efforts to maintain authentic online discourse.
Roger Stone shares his personal experiences with legal battles, asserting that he has been unjustly targeted due to his political affiliations. He criticizes the judicial system and specific prosecutors for their roles in what he describes as politically motivated prosecutions.
Notable Quote:
"The judge would not give us Mueller's final report, which is why I deserve the pardon. I really did nothing wrong."
— Roger Stone [11:09]
Stone highlights the obstacles conservatives face in the legal arena, including biased juries and obstructive legal practices that hinder fair trials.
The conversation explores the concept of "lawfare", where legal tools are used strategically to defeat political opponents. Stone praises Donald Trump's electoral successes, attributing them to overcoming a "tsunami of lawfare" aimed at discrediting and dismantling his campaigns.
Notable Quote:
"Trump had to defeat a tsunami of lawfare... The American people saw through all of it."
— Roger Stone [05:26]
He emphasizes that Trump's ability to navigate these legal challenges demonstrates the resilience and effectiveness of his support base.
Stone draws parallels between contemporary leaders like Donald Trump and historical figures such as Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan. He points out similarities in their confrontations with entrenched governmental institutions and "the deep state."
Notable Quote:
"Trump has the power to do it [eradicate the deep state]. I believe he has the will to do it."
— Roger Stone [08:15]
Stone suggests that, much like Nixon's battle against the CIA, Trump's efforts are a continuation of a long-standing struggle between populist leaders and established political machinery.
When discussing reliable sources of information, Stone recommends alternative media platforms that align with conservative ideologies, such as Breitbart, Gateway Pundit, and Infowars. While he expresses some reservations about figures like Alex Jones, he acknowledges the overall value these platforms provide to their audience.
Notable Quote:
"The whole point of course is that X is the fountain of all truth. If you spend time there, you will learn things you didn't know."
— Roger Stone [09:17]
He criticizes mainstream outlets for disseminating what he considers false information, particularly regarding topics like the COVID-19 vaccination.
Towards the end of the episode, Stone outlines his ongoing efforts, including completing a book that details his experiences with political persecution. He advocates for systemic changes in the legal jurisdiction of Washington D.C., arguing that federal authority should not override state governance.
Notable Quote:
"I have to finish the book about the ordeal of being persecuted and squeezed to bear false witness against Trump."
— Roger Stone [11:09]
Stone also highlights his strategies for combating biased legal practices and promoting transparency within the judicial system.
The episode concludes with Stone promoting his various platforms, such as his website and radio shows, encouraging listeners to engage with his content for further information and support.
Notable Quote:
"You go to stonezone.com... You can listen by going to wabcradio.com awesome."
— Roger Stone [14:20]
This episode of Digital Social Hour offers listeners an in-depth look into Roger Stone's views on the intersection of politics, finance, and media. By addressing contentious issues like Big Tech censorship, dark money, and legal persecution, Stone provides a perspective that challenges mainstream narratives and calls for accountability within established institutions.