His body language and speech when he's out of his comfort zone like that is a far more engrossing tale than anything he's tried claiming on his shows.some of those depositions CM156 mentioned, for those interested:
His body language and speech when he's out of his comfort zone like that is a far more engrossing tale than anything he's tried claiming on his shows.some of those depositions CM156 mentioned, for those interested:
I'm not big on schadenfreude and such, but watching him squirm because he knows his usual schtick won't stick does have a certain je ne sais quoi. Not gonna watch all of it tho, since it is overall rather boring imo, and the 10 minutes I've given it is already more of my time than I should've.His body language and speech when he's out of his comfort zone like that is a far more engrossing tale than anything he's tried claiming on his shows.
Jones' whole system relies on him being able to speak without anyone being able to contradict him with hard fact.I'm not big on schadenfreude and such, but watching him squirm because he knows his usual schtick won't stick does have a certain je ne sais quoi. Not gonna watch all of it tho, since it is overall rather boring imo, and the 10 minutes I've given it is already more of my time than I should've.
Funny enough, he almost certainly genuinely has no memory of most of the things he says on air, he generally records while profoundly drunk."Did you say X?"
"I don't think I ever said X"
*Plays video of Alex Jones saying X"
"That looks edited"
As if an ego that big could resist needing to "tell the world how it is".Maybe next time he should watch what he says about others.
Oh who am I kidding?
A U.S. bankruptcy judge on Wednesday blocked a settlement between families who have sued Alex Jones over his false claims about the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School mass shooting, saying their attempt to divide the bankrupt conspiracy theorist's assets exceeded his court’s authority.
The decision complicates a proposed sale of Jones' Infowars platform, and could spur divisions between families who sued Jones and won nearly $1.3 billion in Connecticut court cases and those who won $50 million in Texas courts. The two groups of families had proposed a settlement that would guarantee the Texas families a 25% share of Jones' future payments made to the Sandy Hook families, with the Connecticut families taking 75%.
U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Christopher Lopez rejected the settlement at a hearing in Houston, saying the families were asking him to also divide up the assets of Infowars' parent company Free Speech Systems, despite the fact that the company had been dismissed from bankruptcy last year.
"I can't do that," Lopez said. “That case is closed."