BNN - Brandenburg News Network

BNN 9/29/2025 Technocratic Tyranny - Vicky Davis

Published Sept. 29, 2025, 9:02 a.m.

9am Vicky Davis Technocratic Communism The United Nations as an organization is world communism. The strategy to impose world communism on the people of the United States (and the other countries in this hemisphere) has been economic rather than military as the people were led to believe it would be. It's our own leaders who were the Pied Pipers leading us to this demise of the U.S. I'm working on a timeline that shows the who, when and what. X/Twitter: https://x.com/i/broadcasts/1ynKOMXBDVZJR Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/636616148890812/videos/1102823665300836 Rumble: https://rumble.com/v6zmbly-bnn-brandenburg-news-network-9292025-technocratic-tyranny-vicky-davis.html https://rumble.com/v6zmbh8-bnn-brandenburg-news-network-9292025-technocratic-tyranny-vicky-davis.html Odysee: https://odysee.com/@BrandenburgNewsNetwork:d/bnn-2025-09-29-technocratic-tyranny-vicky-davis:3 BNN Live: https://Live.BrandenburgNewsNetwork.com Guests: Donna Brandenburg, Vicky Davis

Transcript in English (auto-generated)

Good morning and welcome to Brandenburg News Network. I am Donna Brandenburg and it's the twenty ninth day of September twenty twenty five. Wow, this year has gone fast. This is really amazing. I don't know if you're in Michigan right now, but the blue skies that are out there have been inspiringly, amazingly clear lately. And we were we were talking about that this morning. and how clear the skies actually are, which is a wonderful thing to wake up to. But I'm hoping we get into some rainy season, especially after this water wars things that we've been going through. We're going to be on immediately here with Vicki Davis and Tech and Credit Tyranny. So I'm just going to bring her on right now. Morning, Vicki. How are you doing? Good morning. Fine, thank you. Awesome. I'm still trying to get everything up and running. I think it's funny. I'm running like five different screens. So an extreme amount of multitasking. So how's your weekend? Oh, it was it was fine. I was happy I got my computer back. I had problems last week, my my machine was in the shop for a week. So I was going through withdrawals, you know, what do you do when you don't have a computer? Well, the only thing you can do is clean, right? So my week last week was just cleaning my office. Oh, man. You got to do that every once in a while, don't you? Yeah, yeah. I got to get a balance on that a little bit too. This weekend, I've got so many books that I've collected over the years that my entire house has got books like everywhere. So do I. It's almost like an obsession, you know? Well, and I think that this is an important thing to do is to both save things offline as well as to, um, if we ever have a shutdown, which I believe we're going to have a shutdown, it's just a matter of time. Some, somehow this is going to come to an end as far as the materialistic side of we're going to grow, grow, grow, grow. And nothing is, you know, nothing is going to ever come to an end mentality, which we have. And, uh, I really think that people need to come to terms with the fact that our whole economy, our society has been built on more, more, more, more, more, and there's going to be no end to it. It's insanity. I think that we're going to see things close down a little bit. It's not a matter of if, it's a matter of when, you know? Well, that's the way systems are. Once they started converting our systems of government, integrating them into what's called a federal enterprise architecture, systems, once you start one, it always expands to take whatever the next process into it is. And to your point, I went and did a little workout this morning. And as I was going down the street, I was noticing all this construction going on. But what really shocks me about it is realizing that our government is constantly expanding because the people that are in there, well, they make decisions on where the money is going to be spent. So they're going to spend money on the things that make their lives easier. and or that give them more money or more power. That's just the way most people are. They're not they don't think about the long range implications and the damage that's done by this constant bloat of government. And that that bubble is going to pop. It's not that they're trying to keep the union people busy. Exactly. And it was busy. And also they actually destroyed our economy. with globalization, allowing the import of Indians from India to take IT jobs and the export of call center jobs and tech support type jobs to primarily India. And they basically gutted our economy. And so they've been trying to keep it going and the way they've kept it going is through construction, which of course, you know, pacifies the people that would be the major opposition to what's going on in our economy. And that would be the union people. Well, when you watch how the building is going across the nation and how disturbing it is, I was in Detroit, this in the Detroit area. I count everything from Lansing, East Detroit, right? But I was in the Detroit area this weekend. And what really impacted me was as I was going to a friend's house, going through all of these areas with abandoned factories, with parking lots that go on for days, and no one ever reclaims the land. Now, when in the gas and oil pipeline industry, which I work in, you can't put a well in without having planned for remediation of the land so that if you destroy something or if you put a well in, it's got to be put back and made absolutely right. That's not how it's working in the building and construction industries right now. They go in. They build something. It's temporary. They do a crap job with crap materials. It's all temporary, disposable and throw away. And then when they're done making their money, when the money runs up through grants, the corporate welfare, whatever else they've got going on there, they just leave it. And they move on and they build something else shiny and new. And they leave somebody else to clean up their mess. And that's what I see with all of the development going on is that this is great. It provides jobs. But why don't they finish the job and have to be held accountable like the rest of us are not to just leave there? crap pile of toxic mess for somebody maybe in who knows how long to go back and clean up and remediate. That should be part of the agreement. It's just like with them building in Byron Township in the water wars. They're destroying the water on a local level in order to force everybody to hook up to their municipal water systems and sell the water back to us that they've already stolen. Yeah, it's really crazy what's going on in the economy if you look at it below the surface level. It's kind of like a balancing act. How do we keep these people busy Because as you say, they destroyed entire towns by allowing the export of the business to another country, but then allowing them to re-import as if they were doing business here in the United States. I mean, that's like putting a tube in your artery, letting the blood run out and then and then trying to plug some more blood in on the other side. It doesn't work out so well. I've got a big problem right now that just came through. I've got a horse that looks like he blew his tendon. Uh-oh. Oh, that's bad. Hang on a second. Can you talk for a minute? I need to make a call here because it looks like one of the horses blew his tendon. And so I've had this before and what happens is they're supposed to walk like this is the toe and he's like walking like this on the joint. So this is kind of a catastrophic failure. Let me, if you can talk for just a minute, I will be back in just a minute, but I do need to make a call to find out what's going on here. Okay. Yep. I can tell people what I've been working on. And that is the rise of the socialist international. Essentially, As I see it, our country, our economy was globalized under the socialist international. And the reason why I say that is because in, uh, Nineteen eighty-three, uh, Gro Harlem Brundtland was, uh, I think chairman or president of the, uh, I forget what the country was, Norway. Anyway, she started a project and she produced a report for the United Nations, which is dubbed the Brundtland Report. It has a formal name. But what Brundtland did, that report was published about in the year of nineteen eighty-six or nineteen eighty-seven. When Clinton came into office, What happened is that Brundtland, Gro Harlem Brundtland, started a think tank over in Switzerland and it was called Common Future or something like that. When Clinton came into office and he and Al Gore quote, reinvented government, they were following the guidelines of this think tank over in Switzerland, and they were using a report called Agenda for Change. Everybody thought that it was Agenda XXI they were using, but it wasn't really. I mean, the Agenda for Change was and what you would call an applied version of Agenda XXI. I tell you what I'm going to do, Vicki. I have to go take a look at this horse because it looks like he blew a tendon. Can you keep going, and I will join as a guest when I get to the barn? Oh, my gosh. I've never done solo, but, yeah, I'll try. You'll be fine. I mean, just talking about whatever it is, it looks like if this is what I think it is, it's catastrophic failure for this horse. I need to, I need to go see what's going on with them. It's my, my daughter's first horse. So this is, and she can't walk right now. So it's all on me. And so we can, we can actually, we can either end it or you can go on for a little bit and I can join you at the barn and show everybody what's going on with the horse. Okay. Well, why don't we end it then? Because you probably won't make it back in time for the end of the show. So. Well, what I can do is I can talk on, on my mobile phone. I'll just join as a third person and show people. So, I mean, I can do that, but I need to look at this horse's leg a minute and see what we got going on. And either I get the vet there to fix it, or I hate to say it. He's he's, it looks like he might have to be put down today. That's how catastrophic it is, which is, is very sad. He's he's a, he's a very old horse. He's he's been with us for many, many, many years. and uh he's a he's a he's a great horse but things i hate to say it it's like it's going to be very sad if we have to put him down but but those things happen in life and it's a life cycle and i i don't think we could have ever provided him with a better with a better life so i need to go see if i can fix it or or if i have to make that hard choice and that would mean you know getting my daughter there who can't walk to say goodbye to her horse so That's that's life, you know. All right. So this could end up being really complicated today. So I just hope everybody knows that. Love you very much. And, you know, it's it's going to be the day is going to be what it's going to be. And things happen. And it's very sad. But but we have to as adults, we have to do the right thing. And I won't watch an animal suffer. Yeah, I do. I always do my crying later. In a crisis, I just sit there and go into think mode, and then the tears come later. So anyhow, I'm going to say a quick prayer. Dear God, please bless Amadeus. help this not to be catastrophic. And I ask for your blessings and your help and your provision for this day. For everyone out there, let them know that you are walking us through all situations, both good and bad, and that we can trust you to always do the right thing in all situations, even when there's great loss involved in our lives. I ask for joy and peace today that passes understanding and that you would truly be walking with everyone. People are under so much duress and stress. I ask that you would give everybody grace and peace as we walk through this day. In Jesus' precious name we pray. Amen. So I'm just going to go to, we love you. God bless you all. God bless all those whom you love and God bless America. Have a great day. Make it so. It's a choice. It's always a choice.