4.6 • 4.1K Ratings
🗓️ 22 July 2025
⏱️ 45 minutes
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0:00.0 | All right, you guys, happy Tuesday and listen up because it's official, Xavier Poussard, |
0:05.3 | the author of Becoming Brigitte, has officially been sued by Brigitte McCrone, and it's for cyberbullying. |
0:11.7 | Cyberbullying, huh? And in the official report that she's filed with the police, I get an honorable |
0:18.4 | mention, so I'm going to tell you all about that. Also, the Trump administration is all over the place right now. They're like, look over here, |
0:24.9 | the MLK files. We're releasing them today. Look over here. Have you guys been following the |
0:29.9 | Brian Colberg stabbing's in Idaho? Yeah, well, we're demanding answers. Look everywhere. |
0:36.7 | But over there. I don't know, guys, it's starting to feel like they're saying a lot of words. A lot of words to really just come out and say that they want us to move on from Jeffrey Epstein. And here's the thing. No. Just no. So today we continue our series looking into the Epstein Files. So look, this is going to be |
1:10.1 | controversial. My podcast is controversial, but I've got to tell you a story and you are going to want to listen to this. It's a story about a young Hungarian boy. His name is Miklos. Okay. Meiklos had a bit of misfortune in his life. And I'll be clear, that's putting it lightly, because |
1:28.6 | at just 15 years of age, in the midst of World War II, he and his family were sent into a |
1:36.8 | Polish work camp. I want to be clear, this was in April of 1944, so not long before the end of the war. But he and his family, along with 17,000 other |
1:48.4 | terror-stricken Hungarians, were forcefully made to commute into a camp which would later come |
1:55.9 | to be known as Auschwitz. Miklos was transferred alongside his brother, his mother, his father, and almost as soon as |
2:04.4 | they arrived, he recounts that his mother and his younger brother were separated from him and eventually |
2:10.0 | killed very quickly. He also recounts how he and his father were then made to shave their heads. |
2:17.4 | They were given white tags with numbers that |
2:19.9 | were on them, black numbers that were made out of cloth. Later on, he would tell that from that |
2:25.5 | day forward, he lost his identity. He was no longer meeklose. He became a number. That number was |
2:31.6 | 11104. Like I said, they were made to change into these working clothes, |
2:38.1 | and eventually they had those numbers tattooed upon their skin. Eventually, because of the working |
2:45.1 | conditions, his father just grew too weak. It was just the most insane things that they were |
2:50.4 | made to endure every day physically. |
2:52.8 | And so his father says to his son, look, I'm not going to make it. I'm not going to survive the labor |
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