
"But what do we have on our side? We have the truth. We have the truth on our side."
Human Events Daily host and Senior Editor Jack Posobiec appeared at CPAC Poland on Tuesday, explaining how conservatives have the "truth on our side" in their fight against globalists.
Panel host Michal Rachon of TV Republika asked about the rise of conservative media and what this meant for the world. Posobiec said, "the globalists don’t want us to have an event like this where we get together and we make connections and we have these conversations. And here’s the dirty little secret that the globalists don’t want anyone to know." He said that the right does not usually have big corporate sponsors, like George Soros or the CCP.
"But what do we have on our side? We have the truth. We have the truth on our side. And if the truth is given the ability to be heard through distribution, as you just said, if we have the ability to speak the truth to the public, then it will grow, and our numbers will grow, because there is always going to be a market."
"There is always going to be ears that want to hear the truth. Because we are not telling people what to believe. We are telling people that what they believe is actually shared, not just by us, but by so many other people. Because one of the main tactics that you’ll see from New York Times and their affiliates abroad, they want you to think that your beliefs as a conservative, you are far-right. You are an extremist. You are so atomized, no one thinks like you. You’re an individual. No one else shares your beliefs."
"Well, look around this room, and I would say to everybody who’s watching online, look at the numbers on here. There are more of us than there are of them who believe in the truth. Who believe in borders, language, culture, and believe in the faith of Almighty God, and that is the thing the globalists want to defeat."
Posobiec later said that to fight the worldwide threat of globalism, there needs to be "an international alliance of anti-globalists. So this is a paradox here, and so the issue is quite simple." He said that people around the world have differences in language, religion, and beliefs, "but what we share is a rejection of this idea that everyone can be the same, that all things, all people, are interchangeable, that there is no God, that you should allow your borders to be open to international migrants from the third world and have them run over your country."
"No. Poland is Poland because of the Polish people. The same with America. The same with every country in the world. And if we can all agree on those basic key issues, then it doesn’t matter if you’re in Japan, if you’re in Korea, if you’re in Mexico, if you’re in Poland, you’re in America."
The panel also featured Washington Reporter Editor in Chief Matthew Foldi said that small conservative outlets are seeing massive viewerships because "the content is unavailable in the mainstream media because they don’t want to cover it."
He explained that "in media, you can't actually have objectivity. You can have accuracy." He said that " a lot of the liberal, a lot of the legacy media in America and in Poland gets the benefit of the doubt from well-meaning audiences who don’t have the time to realize, oh, they need to fact check everything they read in your, as you said, bullsh*t version of the New York Times."
"Most people in America don’t either. A growing amount of people in America, as evidenced by the fact that all of us write or work for outlets that are conservative in America, want that because people realize, okay, now we have choices. And people vote with their feet, they vote with their eyeballs, and they say, okay, we don’t need to read the New York Times to know what’s going on.
"In fact, I’d argue if you read the New York Times, you’re less informed than if you don’t read anything. And the same thing is happening in Poland.
Source link