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You’re The Voice
yourethevoice@nostrcheck.me
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A podcast guiding you from red-pill awareness to orange-pill sovereignty. nostr:nprofile1qythwumn8ghj7un9d3shjtnswf5k6ctv9ehx2ap0qyvhwumn8ghj76rpwejkutnnd35kgetnw3ezumn9wshsqgr2xkv9ygudeyp2a5vlh0m2q40e40epc89gj9w3cn3875xl9u5smy6rthz5 & guests dive into health, economics, politics, money & bitcoin! 3m+ views. 👉🏼 Podcast: https://linktr.ee/yourethevoice 👉🏼 Newsletter: https://www.efrat.blog/
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YoureTheVoice 14 hours ago
Children are the most innocent people on earth and also the most abused, the most exploited, and the least protected. The Epstein files are just the surface — this is happening everywhere, the darkness is real, and too many people keep looking away because it is too painful to face. That silence is exactly what protects the predators. The people doing this need to be found, exposed, and put away for good and it starts with us being brave enough to seek the truth, demand answers, and refuse to stay quiet.
Personal branding is worth nothing without original content. A clip from my lecture "Personal Branding 101". Watch it on my blog, link in bio.
I Wanted To Be The Voice | A clip from my lecture "Personal Branding 101". Watch it on my blog, link in bio.
People accept censorship because they assume it’s protecting them. Until one day it’s their voice that disappears. Andrew Lowenthal in a new episode - out now.
“Trusted flaggers” sounds neutral. But many of them are NGOs funded to report speech for takedown. A quiet extension of state power. Andrew Lowenthal in a new episode - out now.
If your country doesn’t answer to voters… but to bondholders — what does your vote actually change? Simon Dixon breaks down how financial power, lobbying, energy, and military leverage quietly shape global decisions. If funding determines policy, resources determine survival, and force determines alignment then who is democracy really serving?
Digital ID is always introduced the same way: Don’t worry. It’s optional. It just makes life easier. @senatorantic outlines the pattern once embedded, the system quietly becomes mandatory for healthcare, for benefits, for everyday services. Add CBDCs to that architecture, and surveillance becomes programmable. When identity and money are wired into the same system, opting out won’t just be difficult. It won’t even feel possible.
Argentina has destroyed five different currencies in 50 years. Imagine your money becoming worthless again and again. @agustin_kassis explains how that kind of history changes people — they stop trusting banks, governments, and the system itself. In Argentina, being skeptical isn’t political… it’s survival. If your money kept collapsing, would you still trust the system?
Argentina has destroyed five different currencies in 50 years. Imagine your money becoming worthless again and again. @agustinkassis explains how that kind of history changes people — they stop trusting banks, governments, and the system itself. In Argentina, being skeptical isn’t political… it’s survival. If your money kept collapsing, would you still trust the system?
Argentina has destroyed five different currencies in 50 years. Imagine your money becoming worthless again and again. @agustinkassis explains how that kind of history changes people — they stop trusting banks, governments, and the system itself. In Argentina, being skeptical isn’t political… it’s survival. If your money kept collapsing, would you still trust the system?
We’re told wars are about values, security, and defense. But as Simon Dixon puts it, “war is actually a business plan.” After seeing how financial negotiations happen around conflict zones, he describes a system where peace only happens when it becomes more profitable than destruction. It’s not just politics — it’s incentives, it’s an equation — and if the incentives don’t change, neither does the outcome.
Citizens rarely benefit from wars. Governments, industries, and bankers do. Oct 7th was one of those hard to face inconvenient truth. I discuss this and much more with Chris Sullivan, new episode out now.
140+ pages of new speech restrictions framed as protection. But protection from what, exactly? As @senatorantic argues, “hate speech” is a phrase that shifts depending on who defines it. Illegal threats are already illegal. Expanding vague categories risks criminalizing dissent itself. When definitions blur, liberty narrows.
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YoureTheVoice 2 weeks ago
Is humanity numb? How can we snap out of it? I discuss with Chris Sullivan - new episode out now, link in bio.
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YoureTheVoice 2 weeks ago
People like to think one country runs the world. But according to Simon Dixon, nations themselves operate inside larger power structures. Governments don’t move in isolation. They sit within financial, intelligence, and military networks that stretch across borders. When power is built on leverage, control doesn’t always come from votes. Sometimes it comes from incentives, pressure, and influence behind the scenes.
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YoureTheVoice 2 weeks ago
What was dismissed as “conspiracy” five years ago now reads like policy. Digital ID frameworks. Expanding surveillance. Speech restrictions. @senatorantic warns that Western democracies are inching toward a model of governance that looks disturbingly familiar — centralized, monitored, permissioned. It doesn’t happen in one big move. It happens step by step. Does freedom ever disappear overnight? Or does it fade while we’re distracted?
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YoureTheVoice 2 weeks ago
Seeing how the system works can make you “black-pilled.” But ignorance doesn’t make you innocent it makes you complicit. As Simon Dixon explains, you can’t fully exit the system. You live inside it. But you can understand it well enough to reduce your participation and redirect your energy. Bitcoin won’t fix the world. It gives you a lever. What you do with it is the real question.
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YoureTheVoice 2 weeks ago
Before COVID, he trusted the system. He assumed the bureaucracy was acting in good faith. Then the pandemic hit and @senatorantic says he realized how easily power can be expanded, enforced, and defended without proper scrutiny. Now he asks the questions he once wouldn’t have. Show us the evidence. Explain the decision. Prove it’s necessary. He doesn’t mind if that makes him unpopular. If government affects your life, you’re entitled to answers.
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YoureTheVoice 2 weeks ago
To become a doctor, you have to be exceptional and obedient. Straight A’s. Well behaved. Well liked. As @marybowdenmd explains, nearly a decade of training then reinforces conformity — stay in line, stay in your lane, don’t deviate. Little control over time, little autonomy. And today, most physicians aren’t independent. They’re employed. When personality, training, and conformity all point in the same direction, it’s worth asking: How much space is left for independent thinking?