Part 4 of 4 Tucker Carlson Monday October 13, 2025 | America’s Breaking Point: Inside Alex Jones’ Final Warning to Tucker Carlson — The Globalist Purge, Military Capture, and the Death of Justice
Alex Jones Warns of the Globalist Death Cult Fueling the Next Civil War and Rise of the Antichrist https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DDD_N6ZcCV4
Part 4 of 4
Tucker Carlson Monday October 13, 2025
Alex Jones Warns of the Globalist Death Cult Fueling the Next Civil War and Rise of the Antichrist
⚡️Red Blood Investigative Report
Title: America’s Breaking Point: Inside Alex Jones’ Final Warning to Tucker Carlson — The Globalist Purge, Military Capture, and the Death of Justice
Date: October 13, 2025
By Red Blood
I. Introduction: The Fourth Seal Breaks
In Part 4 of Tucker Carlson’s Monday Special with Alex Jones, the tone shifts from revelation to requiem. What began as a theoretical discussion about globalism, transhumanism, and spiritual decay descends into a blistering testimony about the collapse of American justice, the moral rot in military leadership, and the weaponization of law.
Jones calls it “the model”—a blueprint for silencing dissent through coordinated lawfare, fake verdicts, and the digital execution of free speech. Carlson calls it something darker: the end of due process itself.
II. The Military in Crisis: From John Wayne to Sociology Professors with Nukes
Carlson opens the conversation on military decay—praising the integrity of enlisted soldiers but blasting the Pentagon’s leadership as “sociology professors with nuclear weapons.”
“They’ve been groomed, indoctrinated, brainwashed,” Jones echoes. “They’re not warriors—they’re bureaucrats with delusions of grandeur.”
The segment traces how the Pentagon, under Obama and later Biden, allegedly purged “alpha males” and warfighters through COVID vaccine mandates, replacing them with “beta administrators” and ideologically compliant officers.
Jones argues this was no accident:
“The shot wasn’t about health. It was about filtering out independent men—those who question orders.”
Carlson expands on the thesis: a hollowed-out command class now populated by “self-hating ideologues” more loyal to political narratives than to the Constitution.
Their conclusion: America’s military hierarchy has become a globalist clergy—powerful, insecure, and faithless.
III. Female Leadership and the War Machine: Taboo Truths and Dangerous Data
Carlson and Jones tread into radioactive territory—the idea that modern female political leadership correlates with greater appetite for conflict.
They cite examples from history—the Bolshevik wives, Winnie Mandela, modern EU leadership under Ursula von der Leyen—and point to a disturbing pattern:
“When men abandon their role as protectors,” Carlson says, “women in power often channel a vengeance that society can’t absorb.”
Jones agrees but places blame squarely on the absence of male moral authority:
“Weak men invite chaos. When men retreat from leadership, women are forced into roles that twist nature itself.”
They call the EU’s female conscription policy—drafting women into combat—“a civilization-ending event.”
Jones summarizes the inversion:
“If you’re sending your daughters to die, your civilization’s already dead.”
IV. The Lawfare Machine: How the Globalists Learned to Kill Without Bullets
The conversation then explodes into the personal—Alex Jones recounts his ongoing legal annihilation, which he calls “the new model for silencing America.”
He describes being declared guilty without a trial in multiple courts, with judges allegedly coordinating with Democrat-linked law firms and federal operatives to bankrupt and seize Infowars.
“They don’t want money,” Jones tells Carlson. “They want silence. They want the domain, the voice, the symbol.”
He ties his persecution to a broader weaponization of law—referencing Mike Lindell’s recent default judgment as proof that “the algorithm has gone live.”
“They’re doing it to Lindell today, they’ll do it to Tucker tomorrow,” Jones warns.
Carlson responds with unflinching clarity:
“This isn’t justice—it’s excommunication.”
V. The DOJ Civil War: Todd Blanche vs. Ed Martin
Here lies the core of Part 4’s bombshell.
Jones claims that while Ed Martin, a Trump-aligned investigator, was probing DOJ corruption, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche—a former Democrat operative—personally intervened to kill the investigation.
He alleges Blanche bragged to the press about shutting down inquiries that linked Obama-era DOJ funding to coordinated lawsuits against Jones and others.
“Blanche is Bill Barr 2.0,” Jones insists. “He’s sabotaging Trump from the inside.”
Carlson, ever the skeptic, asks directly: “Can the DOJ shut you down?”
Jones replies without hesitation: “Yes. They already tried—with guns, without warrants. And they’ll do it again.”
Their shared question to Trump: Why is your own DOJ protecting the architects of your destruction?
VI. The Collapse of Justice: From Free Speech to Show Trials
Jones details how bankruptcy courts were twisted into instruments of censorship—where receivers and trustees move to seize his media assets not to repay debts but to eliminate dissenting voices.
He recounts that judges banned Infowars auctions, then attempted private transfers to Bloomberg-linked entities, calling it “a laundering of liberty.”
Carlson delivers the moral verdict:
“This isn’t America’s justice—it’s medieval punishment through process.”
Together, they define this as “judicial regime change”: using procedural guilt to eliminate political threats.
VII. The Philosophical Heart: The Death of the Individual
As Jones rages against bureaucratic tyranny, Carlson brings the dialogue home to first principles.
“I don’t think anything is bigger than the individual,” Carlson says. “That’s the Christian message—each person matters infinitely. Whenever someone says ‘it’s bigger than one person,’ that’s the language of tyranny.”
Jones nods, momentarily silent. “They’re ending the idea of you. Of me. Of the individual.”
Carlson continues:
“The Eastern view—the collectivist mindset—punishes groups, tribes, classes. But Western civilization was built on the sacredness of one human soul.”
Their consensus is chilling: the war is not left versus right—it’s collectivism versus individuality, God versus system.
VIII. Final Plea: Support Your Supporters—or Lose Everything
Jones delivers his last direct message to Trump:
“If you won’t defend those who defended you—Lindell, Infowars, the whistleblowers—then you will be alone. Because once they finish with us, they’ll come for you.”
He accuses Blanche and establishment holdovers of deliberately sabotaging populist justice efforts from within—echoing the deep frustration of Trump’s base.
“Trump, you can’t fix the country if you can’t fix your DOJ,” Jones declares. “Clean house—or the Republic dies.”
Carlson ends the broadcast soberly, urging viewers to stay alert as YouTube suppresses the episode, warning:
“They don’t just want silence. They want control over what you think silence means.”
IX. Red Blood Analysis: The Machinery of Suppression
Part 4 reads like the final testament of an American dissident system under siege.
Three patterns emerge:
Institutional Capture: The military, media, and judiciary now serve as ideological fortresses rather than constitutional organs.
Algorithmic Lawfare: Legal systems are being gamified to bankrupt and erase dissenters without due process.
Moral Fragmentation: The American experiment—rooted in conscience and individuality—is collapsing under collective punishment.
Jones’ rage is not without evidence, nor is Carlson’s despair without reason. Whether one agrees with their conclusions or not, the erosion of fairness, speech, and due process is undeniable.
And that—beyond all politics—is the true existential threat.
X. Conclusion: The Antichrist System Has No Horns—It Has Servers
If earlier episodes warned of a “death cult,” Part 4 exposes its enforcement arm: law, bureaucracy, and censorship masquerading as virtue.
The new Antichrist doesn’t stand on a pulpit.
It hides in court orders, “fact checks,” and default judgments.
Its mark is compliance, its weapon silence.
As Jones puts it, “If they can erase me, they can erase you.”
And Carlson closes with the same calm that has defined his rebellion:
“The truth has always been dangerous. That’s how you know it’s real.”



