Speaker | Time | Text |
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unidentified
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Well the virus has now killed more than a hundred people in China and new cases have been confirmed around the world. | |
You don't want to frighten the American public. | ||
France and South Korea have also got evacuation plans. | ||
But you need to prepare for and assume. | ||
Broadly warning Americans to avoid all non-essential travel to China. | ||
This is going to be a real serious problem. | ||
France, Australia, Canada, the US, Singapore, Cambodia, Vietnam, the list goes on. | ||
Health officials are investigating more than 100 possible cases in the US. | ||
Germany, a man has contracted the virus. | ||
The epidemic is a demon and we cannot let this demon hide. | ||
Japan, where a bus driver contracted the virus. | ||
Coronavirus has killed more than 100 people there and infected more than 4,500. | ||
We have to prepare for the worst, always. | ||
Because if you don't, and the worst happens... War Room. | ||
unidentified
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Pandemic. | |
Here's your host, Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
Okay, you're in the Lore Room. | ||
We're live. | ||
It is Friday, the 18th of June, the Year of Our Lord 2021. | ||
We've got an absolutely jammed show today. | ||
We're kicking off also Father's Day weekend with masculinity in America. | ||
We've got Mike Cernovich, a ton of people in the second hour of this show. | ||
Tomorrow we have a two-hour special with UFC fighters, boxers, warriors, etc. | ||
We've got Sean Parnell later. | ||
It's going to be incredible. | ||
We're going to get to breaking news all across the country on the voter fraud. | ||
We've got economics. | ||
We have the ape army. | ||
We've got so much going on. | ||
Big announcements in the book publishing business. | ||
But I want to start... Hang on, wait, wait, wait. | ||
You didn't call me for your testosterone special? | ||
No, they called me. | ||
unidentified
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Hold it. | |
I want to announce that I got Raheem Kassam, my wingman, my co-host. | ||
We've invited Ned Ryan for a kickoff masculinity weekend. | ||
We couldn't get Tom Fitton, so we got Ned Ryan from American Majority. | ||
Can you break that down? | ||
It's a peck show. | ||
unidentified
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Come on, it's the all-natural. | |
Hold it! | ||
unidentified
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Whoa! | |
Hang on a second. | ||
First off, Raheem, when we do Masculinity Weekend again next year for Father's Day, why are you in yachting attire? | ||
This is the ultimate masculine move. | ||
See, that's good. | ||
unidentified
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You're confident in your masculinity. | |
This is Nelson's Navy. | ||
I would call it yachting attire. | ||
Hold it. | ||
Thurston Howell III. | ||
And I couldn't get Tom Fitton, but I got the natural one. | ||
Tom, I'm just kidding. | ||
I'm just kidding. | ||
I'm only saying what Ned Ryan tells me all the time. | ||
unidentified
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Oh, come on. | |
Come on. | ||
American Majority. | ||
We got Ned in here. | ||
A lot on Wisconsin. | ||
A lot about grassroots. | ||
American Majority, one of the greatest grassroots organizations out there. | ||
I want to go to, talk about masculinity in America. | ||
I got a tough guy. | ||
This is like a Damon Runyon character. | ||
It's John Solomon, one of the best investigative reporters in the country. | ||
Actually, globally. | ||
Been doing it for 30 years. | ||
Working on a story that's got the nation's head blown up. | ||
And I gotta tell you, John, You're doing a good job. | ||
You know, the National Pulse and Georgia Star and Just the News, you guys are the tip of the spear and here's why. | ||
The mainstream media now is about to go through full, complete meltdown of what's happening in Georgia. | ||
Can you get us up to speed on what your investigation is showing about the cesspool that is an embarrassment to the citizens of Georgia about this voter, and you can't call it anything else, incompetence, fraud, you name it, sir. | ||
What's going on in Georgia, sir? | ||
And the good news is, too, we are seeing places like the Atlanta Journal-Constitution and the Associated Press now picking up on these latest revelations. | ||
Very important. | ||
So today, we have to take everybody back to January. | ||
Famous 60 Minutes interview, Brad Raffsenberger, Secretary of State, saying, we ran a perfect election in Georgia. | ||
Everything was perfect, nothing to worry about. | ||
And at that moment, he had sitting in his files for about two months at that point, Uh, a report from a contractor, Carter Jones, who had been sent there by Rauschenberger personally to observe what went on in Atlanta, in Fulton County, the largest voting center in the state of Georgia. | ||
And that report, 29 pages long, as Rahim and I began to talk about yesterday, is chock full of just, it literally, it reads like a diary of how not to run an election. | ||
There are ballots being double scanned. | ||
There are people talking in the elevators how they've come there to mess up the election. | ||
They use a lot more colorful words than that. | ||
But you get the impression you've got a chain of custody violations. | ||
He just said, I just saw a massive chain of custody violations. | ||
He sees too many votes coming in from boxes that couldn't hold that number of votes. | ||
And he's wondering, why do we have that many votes in boxes that aren't that big? | ||
There are all sorts of things he's observing over a seven day period that give us enormous pause on whether we can trust the vote count, the vote counting processes, the vote counters in Atlanta. | ||
It is a devastating document. | ||
It is chock full of human anecdotes of extraordinary bad behavior at the at the counting center. | ||
things disappearing, people walking out. There's a moment, a guy walks out with ballots and stuff and they're like, no one even knows who it is. That's a real problem. | ||
All day and night you see these revelations in that document. | ||
John, you know, at one point you've got the head of, who's supposed to be the head of the whole operation, he's got this spare ballot loose, and he's just trying to tuck it into the top of the thing, and the guy has to go back to it and say, no, let's do it properly. | ||
Let's do it the way it's supposed to be done. | ||
Let's not be losing any ballots here. | ||
He has to be corrected on that. | ||
As you say, you've got people disappearing out the door with things. | ||
You've got staffers who are identified as critical to the operation who are disappearing because they say they're exhausted, they're tired, they're not feeling well. | ||
Nobody's there to take over their jobs. | ||
You've got a temping agency who's providing people to the count and nobody knows who they are. | ||
They're not vetted. | ||
They don't know necessarily what they're doing. | ||
They're called eager but not competent. | ||
John, I don't think I've ever seen anything like this. | ||
I've covered a lot of elections. | ||
Have you seen anything even remotely close to this much of a shambles? | ||
No, listen, for the people of Atlanta and Georgia, this is a public embarrassment to think in their state this is what went on. | ||
But listen, in that chaos, in that disorganization, in that mismanagement, the potential for someone with ill intent to create fraud or a bad act is so high. | ||
That's why this consultant, Carter Jones, was so concerned. | ||
There was so many bad things going on at once, you couldn't keep track of things. | ||
Things are walking out, things are walking in, nobody knows where they came from. | ||
Ballots are being put on a cart and wheeled in, they're supposed to be in sealed boxes, he calls out a major violation. | ||
I think the most important thing that he flagged as you look across the many revelations, it's very clear that throughout the process, these ballots were not in a secure position. | ||
If someone wanted to tip in ballots or remove ballots, it would be very easy to do in that environment that he has. | ||
Now, he didn't observe anyone doing that, but he was one guy trying to cover a 10,000 square foot hall. | ||
I think that, you know... | ||
First off, the auditors never looked at this level of problem. | ||
Somebody has to go into Georgia now and go back and really, really examine what went on and look, you know, like we talked about yesterday, there are missing sequences of ballots in the paper trail for the election. | ||
Where are those ballots? | ||
Someone has to go do that work and find out what's going on. | ||
You know, John, you raise a good point. | ||
What would we have found out if there had been three of these or four of these or five of these people roaming around State Farm Arena rather than one? | ||
I mean, for one person, that was an awful lot to catch alone. | ||
Imagine what a whole team of, you know, But the key part of the reporting is obviously the report, but that Raffensperger and these guys knew it immediately. | ||
They knew the problem. | ||
And here's what's so bad about it. | ||
They came forward every day mocking the president, mocking the MAGA movement that wanted to just get to a fair game. | ||
If we do this and Biden wins by one vote, he wins by one vote, right? | ||
But you got to get democracies, both the voting and the counting. | ||
And you had officials. | ||
That went out of their way, that's the thing with the 60 Minutes that John started with, went out of their way to say to the liberal media and to all of America on the big Sunday night show, hey, this was the best ever, the most serious ever. | ||
It's flat out a lie. | ||
It's flat out a lie. | ||
John, we've got to bounce. | ||
Tell us, tell the audience, because you kind of run the news operation at Real America's Voice and you're one of the top investigative reporters in the world. | ||
Where is your reporting? | ||
We always want to put people ahead of the program here. | ||
Where do you think your reporting is going to be heading in the next week or two? | ||
Happy Faces. | ||
I know that sounds like a strange term, but that is the name of the personnel agency that staffed the voting. | ||
And you see all these concerns raised about Happy Faces in this document. | ||
Overnight tomorrow, by the time people wake up tomorrow, we're going to do some interesting follow-the-money on who had connections to Happy Faces. | ||
I'll give you a little hint. | ||
Stacey Abrams' name is going to come up. | ||
We love you, brother. | ||
Okay, John Solomon, the site, let's get it up into the live chat on all the different platforms. | ||
Just The News, part of the Real America's Voice team, and I gotta tell you, it's cutting edge. | ||
It's cutting edge. | ||
This is the defining moment for this news channel. | ||
John, you've done an amazing job. | ||
Okay, everybody remember, Stacey Abrams. | ||
What does Vernon Jones say? | ||
Stacey's Law. | ||
Were you about to think, I think Solomon's gonna be breaking stories about Stacey's money and her reach. | ||
I think she's got it pretty well wired in Georgia. | ||
John Solomon. | ||
John, what's your Twitter feed? | ||
How do people follow you during the day? | ||
I like it because it says what I do. | ||
J Solomon Reports. | ||
I just report. | ||
So J Solomon Reports, Twitter, Facebook. | ||
That's how you follow me. | ||
And then JustinNews.com. | ||
Still waiting for that follow back, John. | ||
Love you, brother. | ||
Love you, brother. | ||
Whoa! | ||
unidentified
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Whoa! | |
All right. | ||
When you start... Come in with a wife. | ||
Come in with a wife beater. | ||
Okay, John, thank you very much. | ||
Let's go to Boris Epstein. | ||
Boris, so we're kicking off the Weekend of Masculinity in America. | ||
We've got a huge special tomorrow. | ||
That's right. | ||
That's why I'm here. | ||
No, no, but hang on for a second. | ||
Create the juxtaposition. | ||
unidentified
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Hang on. | |
I just want to say in the special tomorrow, I do have two... Posobiec is my co-host, right? | ||
And I've got Pastor Arthur Pawlowski. | ||
So I've got two Polish guys. | ||
I've got to even that out. | ||
I'm going to bring in a Russian. | ||
unidentified
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Okay, first of all, Eric Swalwell, take it easy, alright? | |
With your, you know, I don't like to be ethically targeted. | ||
I thought that's more of a Jackie Spier, Eric Swalwell movie. | ||
You know, after you shaved, you actually kind of look like President Swalwell today. | ||
Oh! | ||
Coming in hot! | ||
If you aged 100 years... | ||
It's definitely Friday. | ||
Hey, Denver, I don't think his mic is working. | ||
No, this is Boris. | ||
Boris, real quick, we've got so much to get through. | ||
Tell us, give me a quote. | ||
Where are we on the Army of the Apes? | ||
We've got an amazing artist coming on later in the show, Brittany Avery, who's the artist for the Ape Movement. | ||
Her billboards are in Times Square, right? | ||
We're not moving. | ||
We're not selling. | ||
She's got all the memes. | ||
Her art's incredible. | ||
She's going to be on Yeah, so tell us about, where's the stock right now on AMC? | ||
In all seriousness, Steve, before we go to that, you actually look very handsome. | ||
I like the shaven look I'm sure the audience likes. | ||
unidentified
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No, no, no, that's not going to work here. | |
Matt, great to see you actually bring some reasonability to the By the way, he was calling you before you came on the show, Wally Pipp. | ||
This is the Lou Gehrig right here. | ||
Just replacing Boris just for a day. | ||
unidentified
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No, no, no. | |
Not true. | ||
Fake news. | ||
Fake news, Boris. | ||
You know, I've known Ned a long time. | ||
I kind of believe it, but I think it was more likely Captain Rahim over there throwing shade at me. | ||
I think that'd be more powerful. | ||
The stock at last look was $63.20. | ||
$63.20, the AMC stock. | ||
Disclosure, I am an owner in the stock. | ||
There's some hedge funds sweating right now, right? | ||
The Sweet Hour of Prayer is upon, what is it, a couple of these hedge funds, right? | ||
A couple of the bigger ones? | ||
Citadel is just a name, a random name. | ||
Citadel 63. | ||
The AMC stock is at 63 flat right now. | ||
Obviously, a huge rise in the stock over the last month. | ||
And it's actually, what I found interesting, it's sort of balanced out over the last week or so. | ||
It's been bumping around that 60 mark. | ||
A little down, a little up. | ||
That's where it's been. | ||
It seems to have stabilized there. | ||
This is not stock advice. | ||
I'm not telling people what to buy. | ||
What to sell, but it does seem like this is the threshold that the apes and the MAGA movement, the MAGA brain trust, that's the viewership audience of the show, that the MAGA posse have gotten it to. | ||
And you know, here's what's interesting. | ||
Out of all of these, what they call meme stock, they call them BANG stocks, acronym for Blackberry, AMC, Nokia, and GameStop. | ||
AMC is the one, to me, that actually makes a lot of sense, right? | ||
The world's reopening, people are going to go to movie theaters, and AMC has done some very smart things. | ||
They've recapitalized... Yeah, but I think it's beyond traditional... You're thinking of traditional corporate finance. | ||
I don't even think this is about stocks. | ||
I think this is about... There's a time... Ecclesiastes tells us there's a season for everything. | ||
I think this is the season for getting to the incompetence and corruption of Wall Street, and that's why I think the Ape Army is a populist revolt. | ||
I agree with Rush Limbaugh. | ||
Real quickly, before you go to break, talk to us about Georgia. | ||
You've got all this blowing up right now. | ||
Give us a minute on Georgia before you go to break. | ||
I know you were the first guy down there with Rudy. | ||
Tell us what your latest thoughts are on Georgia. | ||
My latest thoughts are that Georgia, in my mind, was always one of the two biggest messes. | ||
It was Georgia and Pennsylvania. | ||
Arizona, we all assumed, was going to be bad, but not as bad as Georgia and Pennsylvania in everything we're hearing. | ||
And when people say Fulton County, it's one thing. | ||
Keep in mind, this is Atlanta, right? | ||
This is the heart of Democrat cheating, the heart of Democrat machine. | ||
And that's what it's coming out of, no surprise whatsoever. | ||
Go back to, you know, six months ago, and ballots being wheeled out from under tables in these big crates and all. | ||
This is what we knew, this is what we expected, and much like Wuhan, right? | ||
The Democrats told people, the media told people, shut up, do not see what you see, you're idiots, sit down. | ||
The MAGA brain trust, the MAGA movement, the MAGA army said, how about this? | ||
No. | ||
We're standing up, we're fighting, and that's what's happening in Georgia, and I think you're going to see full Arizona-level audits throughout Georgia. | ||
Okay, we're going to come back. | ||
We've got Boris Epstein, we've got Raheem Kassam, Ned Ryan from American Majority next. | ||
unidentified
|
War Room. | |
Pandemic. | ||
With Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
The epidemic is a demon and we cannot let this demon hide. | ||
War Room. | ||
Pandemic. | ||
Here's your host, Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
Okay, Mike Lindell contacted me this morning and said he wanted to thank the Warren posse for pushing out whether it was the eight or nine minute tape we played from Daily Show trying to jump him, right? | ||
It calmed the Daily Show down. | ||
They actually had his segment on last night. | ||
He says it wasn't as bad as it would have been if he hadn't come on the show for two days and this posse had been the force multiplier and put it out there. | ||
So remember, support Mike Lindell and the team at MyPillow. | ||
Go to MyPillow.com right now. | ||
Okay, my two co-hosts, Thurston Howell III and Tom Fitton Jr. | ||
sleep system, 30% off, you get the advanced R&D mattress, you get the pillows, you get the sheets, you get all of it. Plus, there's sales on pillows, there's sales on the Giza sheets, on the moccasins, slippers, all of it. You get up to 66% discount, but you have to go there today. Take action, support the freedom fighters. MyPillow.com, promo code War Room. Okay, my two co-hosts, Thurston Helder III and Tom Fitton Jr. Tom Fitton's body double. | ||
Thank you. | ||
No, but it's all natural. | ||
unidentified
|
It is all natural. | |
This is the original. | ||
Ned Ryan is known in our posse as being the absolute beast. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, you know, it's one of those things that, yeah, Tom Fitton, he might have a little more bulk, he might have a little more strength, but again, it's all natural. | |
All natural. | ||
Tom, buddy, I've got your back on this one. | ||
Fitton went from actually a 98-pound weakling when I knew him. | ||
unidentified
|
Really? | |
Oh yeah. | ||
unidentified
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I used to be a long, my senior year in high school, when I graduated, 129 pounds, 5 feet 9 inches tall. | |
Wow. | ||
You're like Cameron Wallace. | ||
I was 6'4", 350 is a high school senior. | ||
How we doing now? | ||
unidentified
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I was a skinny little runt. | |
I was so fast, I was so fast I timed my 40 on a sundial. | ||
unidentified
|
I was just going to say, Boris, you said that Georgia and Pennsylvania were some of the more egregious states. | |
I would argue we've had staff in Wisconsin for the last 10-11 years. | ||
Hold it, hold it. | ||
Play that back for my ears. | ||
This is Steve Bannon's mantra from early November. | ||
Where did you have the staff looking at this? | ||
unidentified
|
In Wisconsin. | |
Thank you. | ||
unidentified
|
And specifically at the, what, five, six cities where Center for Tech and Civic Life dropped so much money into? | |
Wisconsin's one of the most progressive states, but they've got the tightest voter laws. | ||
This was the clerks. | ||
This is the one, Boris, I've been telling you. | ||
Arizona, people should understand, what they're finding in Arizona, I think Arizona's the least egregious of Georgia, but the most egregious to me, and the easiest to prove, is Wisconsin. | ||
unidentified
|
So, state law is very clear in Wisconsin that if it does, it's very clear. | |
If it does not have an absentee ballot, does not have an address, it's not valid. | ||
Right? | ||
So the commission came, Wisconsin Elections Commission came in and basically twisted the law to tell the city clerks, as soon as ballots come in, you can go ahead and cure them. | ||
Violation of state law. | ||
Twisted it. | ||
But the other thing that was interesting to me, Steve, in all this, a couple different things, dynamics that obviously are kind of red flags. | ||
Historical rate of rejection of absentee ballots in Wisconsin is typically about 1.64 percent. | ||
It was 0.2 percent. | ||
0.2. | ||
But my guy, Matt Bates, who runs the state for American majority, went up to Green Bay and thought he would do his own audit and go through some of these absentee ballots and found off of his rather significant audit of absentee ballots in Green Bay that 4.5% were cured. | ||
All right, so this all starts out, but I'll tell you that the other interesting thing that we're finding out about Green Bay, Where they didn't have people coming in to basically support the clerks on curing these problems. | ||
They just kicked them out. | ||
They had Center for Tech and Civic Life staff coming in and actually running the elections in Green Bay. | ||
And I think the thing that's interesting about the audit that's taking place up there with Robin Voss and who he's hired, he has the power of subpoena to basically disclose the record. | ||
I really give people, because this is the first time they've heard the word audit in Wisconsin related to the actual thing. | ||
Give us 60 seconds. | ||
There's actually action taking place in Wisconsin that's not getting covered. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, no, Robin Voss, Speaker of the House. | |
Again, the only way we're actually going to get to real election integrity in some of these states, we've got the State House, we've got the State Senate in Wisconsin, we've got to win the Governor's race next year. | ||
The only way you get to it is to get to the bottom of November 3rd. | ||
No, absolutely. | ||
unidentified
|
I agree, but then to correct it, to ultimately correct it... I got a correction. | |
Here's a correction. | ||
De-certify. | ||
How about de-certify? | ||
De-certify the electorates. | ||
Just saying. | ||
But that's a conversation for another day. | ||
unidentified
|
Really, really quick. | |
I mean, Robin Voss has hired somebody named Michael Sandvik, who's actually known for uncovering systematic voter fraud. | ||
He's been brought in to actually lead the investigation for Speaker of the House Robin Voss on this audit. | ||
And I was making this point to you, Steve, before the show. | ||
I think what we're going to do is be able to show systematic collusion between the clerks and Center for Tech and Civic Life. | ||
like. | ||
You want to talk systematic collusion, go look at Wisconsin. | ||
Amen. | ||
What's interesting, Steve, remember that was a long call that took place I think, you know, January 3rd or something, you know, somewhere around that date with all the state reps. | ||
And there was a state rep out of Wisconsin specifically talked about a Milwaukee election official who quit. | ||
And she didn't really give a reason. | ||
She was sort of being dramatic about it and, you know, didn't want to really go forward with or come forward with what the reason was. | ||
And then it came out months later. | ||
The reason was because she was bullied and abused by the senior official over there who was effectively on Zuckerberg's payroll. | ||
Look, that's right. | ||
The law... Go ahead, sir. | ||
I'm sorry. | ||
Go ahead. | ||
The interesting difference is this. | ||
Where Georgia and Pennsylvania are just disasters, a mess, typical Democrat machine, nothing is in order, Wisconsin is the cleanest systematic fraud. | ||
I agree with you. | ||
Remember when we said the President, and Lindsey Graham talked him out of it, when we said the President in the impeachment trial should put forth, and let's argue the receipts, I told Reince Priebus, I said, hey dude, if we started with three hours and just started with Wisconsin, What would happen? | ||
He said people's head would blow up. | ||
It's a progressive state, but the folks, the way they run things up there is high and tight. | ||
It's probably the tightest election loss in the country, and the violations were so egregious. | ||
unidentified
|
Matt Bajel, my staff up in Wisconsin, think this Wisconsin audit is more important and could have more impact than the Arizona audit. | |
So put that in for perspective. | ||
Slow down. | ||
Hit the rewind. | ||
Take that slow. | ||
I want this audience to hear. | ||
Hang on. | ||
Give me that again. | ||
Hang on, Boris. | ||
Give me that again. | ||
unidentified
|
My staff, who have been in Wisconsin for over a decade, think that the Wisconsin audit could have more of an impact and really more of a long-lasting than Arizona audit. | |
Note to Chris Hayes and Rachel Maddow's staff and Madeline Peltz over at Media Matters. | ||
Take the number two pencil out and write that down. | ||
Okay, write that down. | ||
Wisconsin. | ||
You're hearing it from a guy that's a grassroots guy and he's not a crazy guy, right? | ||
More important, more impactful. | ||
Then Arizona and potentially Georgia. | ||
That's how big it's going to be in Wisconsin. | ||
unidentified
|
And the point being to show through this audit a truly a nonpartisan, again people are going to say, ah, Robin Voss, Republican, but he's coming in, he's bringing in these investigators who are well respected, who've been doing this for decades to show an independent audit that state laws were violated not just once, twice, but hundreds, thousands of times in a very systematic way. | |
Very good. | ||
And intentionally, I have to say this really quick, really quick. | ||
Center for Tech and Civic Life. | ||
I run a non-profit. | ||
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, exactly. | |
You know what? | ||
Hey, I gotta hold the floor for a second. | ||
I'm a non-profit. | ||
He's on here every night, Boris. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I'm a non-profit. | |
I'm a C3, C4. | ||
If I'd done what Center for Tech and Civic Life did, I wouldn't be here. | ||
I'd be in jail. | ||
Exactly. | ||
So, Zuckerberg, we're gonna get to the bottom of all that. | ||
Boris, we've got a couple minutes. | ||
I actually have a question for Ned. | ||
For what I understand, Robin Voss, who's the Speaker, and Chris Capanego, who's the President of the Senate, There's pressure being put out there to go further, right? | ||
To issue subpoenas and to go further in having a more Arizona-level audit in Wisconsin than is being conducted now. | ||
Is that the case? | ||
What's the truth on the ground? | ||
Can the Speaker of the House, the President of the Senate, move faster, go further, as Karen Fann has done in Arizona? | ||
unidentified
|
I have been led to believe, yes, that they have that power of subpoena. | |
They can do some of these things. | ||
The question is, do they have, really, the political will to do it? | ||
The political will. | ||
That's what this posse's got to saddle up. | ||
We're going to give you all the... How do you get to American majority? | ||
You get Ned Ryan. | ||
Are you going to run for governor? | ||
I'm teasing that. | ||
unidentified
|
You had a good idea. | |
We ran a rally up in 2011 to support Scott Walker's union reforms. | ||
Yes, big time. | ||
unidentified
|
We might have to do another state rally. | |
You've got to do that. | ||
Andrew Breitbart came. | ||
You have to do that. | ||
Wisconsin was the big fight with Walker. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay, Boris, you've got a couple of minutes. | |
Are they issuing subpoenas in Pennsylvania? | ||
Am I hearing this correctly? | ||
That's what I'm hearing too. | ||
10 seconds of Wisconsin, just to the MAGA posse, the MAGA brain trust, always call within the lines, but hear me loud and clear. | ||
It is vital to let Robin Voss, the Speaker of the House in Wisconsin, and Chris Capanega, the President of the Senate, hear your voice, and that subpoenas are necessary in Wisconsin to get to the bottom of November 3rd. | ||
Subpoenas are needed and necessary, and it is time for these elected Republicans to step fully up. | ||
And that's exactly what I'm hearing is happening in Pennsylvania as soon as the next 48 business hours. | ||
I believe that the subpoenas are being prepared as we speak and may be dropping as soon as next week again for a full Arizona-level audit in several counties in Pennsylvania. | ||
Pennsylvania. | ||
Keep in mind, and we need to be very clear on this, we called the Arizona audit because it sounds good, right? | ||
But this is actually the Maricopa County audit. | ||
There are a million other ballots in Arizona not being audited right now. | ||
2.1 being audited, a million not being audited. | ||
So in Pennsylvania, you're going to see some counties be audited. | ||
I believe in Arizona, in Georgia, in Pennsylvania, vitally in Wisconsin, every single county, every single county, Has to have a full forensic audit. | ||
That is the freight train of audits. | ||
It's not one county there, one county here. | ||
It's gotta be every single one. | ||
Boris, give us your social media. | ||
People have got to be on Boris on the Gram and on social media because news is breaking all weekend long. | ||
Boris, what is it? | ||
I can't just have Madeline Peltz following me, right? | ||
I need more. | ||
Madeline Peltz, Pam Vogel for Media Matters. | ||
Thanks for the PR, but I need more than that. | ||
Boris underscore Epstein. | ||
Boris underscore E-P-S-H-D-E-Y-N on the gram. | ||
Always coming in hot. | ||
At BorisCPU on Twitter. | ||
God bless. | ||
Stay strong. | ||
And good Shabbos. | ||
Happy Father's Day. | ||
Give Solomon a big hug. | ||
He's a great kid. | ||
Happy Father's Day. | ||
You're a great dad. | ||
Thank you, sir. | ||
We try. | ||
We've got to talk about Wisconsin in a bad rally. | ||
Because you guys fired up. | ||
People forget what you guys did with Scott Walker. | ||
People are just new to this movement. | ||
Forget what it is. | ||
We've got to pounce. | ||
We're going to do it when we come back. | ||
Short commercial break. | ||
Ned Reiner, Hinka Sons, Stephen K. Bannon, you're in the War Room. | ||
We're going to talk about getting books out next. | ||
unidentified
|
War Room. | |
Pandemic. | ||
With Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
The epidemic is a demon, and we cannot let this demon hide. | ||
War Room. | ||
Pandemic. | ||
Here's your host, Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
We're not doing the cold open with, um... Okay, I guess we're not doing the cold open. | ||
Next time I want the cold open, I guess we only had that for 24 hours? | ||
We're not going to do that? | ||
Okay, can we play clip one? | ||
Can I hit this right here? | ||
unidentified
|
Can I produce this show? | |
That's what the audience asked for! | ||
Can we have more Ned Ryan? | ||
Can I play the Tucker clip? | ||
Can I produce the show? | ||
Do you want me to just stand up and flex? | ||
Do you want me to stand up and flex? | ||
That's what the audience asked for. | ||
The audience asked for, can we have more Ned Ryan? | ||
Right? Ned, look at this. | ||
Okay, can I play the Tucker clip? Let's do it. | ||
In January, Simon & Schuster, the gargantuan publishing house, cancelled a book by a senator from Missouri, Josh Hawley, because a mob of Democratic activists told them to. | ||
It wasn't the first time they'd done something like this. | ||
They did the same thing to Milo Yiannopoulos several years before. | ||
They neglected to take a second book from best-selling author Candace Owens, because they didn't like her politics. | ||
Simon & Schuster did that. | ||
It's all in a new book that I have just written, coming out in August, published by Simon & Schuster. | ||
Which you might want to check out. | ||
But in the meantime, in the face of this kind of censorship, this digital book burning, there is a new option in publishing that we want to tell you about tonight. | ||
It's called All Seasons Press. | ||
Louise Burke is the co-founder. | ||
She used to work at Simon & Schuster, the publisher. | ||
Kate Hartson is the co-founder and editor-in-chief. | ||
Together, they will offer this option to the country. | ||
Louise and Kate, congratulations! | ||
Okay, they kick off on the Great Tucker Carlson Show last night, and as you know, the War Room Posse, we are book people. | ||
Everybody, all the publishers in the industry, who by the way, obviously hate the show, they will tell you, no one moves the needle on selling books, non-fiction books, than War Room Posse. | ||
You guys are incredible. | ||
You've taken virtually every book we've had and driven it up to number one. | ||
From the paper of record, New York Times yesterday, a new publisher invites Trump allies To tell their stories. | ||
It's an article in the paper of record. | ||
We're going to get it up into the live chat. | ||
New York Times does, I don't know, a couple thousand words on Louise Burke. | ||
And Kate Hartson and All Seasons Press, which is here to kind of the Calvary, has arrived. | ||
You've got some other, listen, you've got Adam Bella, you've got some great guys out there publishing books. | ||
We're going to talk in a minute. | ||
With Ned Ryan about his new book, but you've now got a another player in there another alternative for the conservative movement another alternative for Trump movement and also For I think for the Naomi Wolf's of the world the Greg Greenwald's for people that have you know I'm not saying being red-pilled, but I'm saying that are part of the Great Awakening So I want to come in and bring both these and talk about what they're gonna do when we bring in Louise Burke first Thank both of you for joining us Louise, you were one of the rock stars at Simon & Schuster. | ||
You and Kate combined have the greatest publishing list of conservative superstars. | ||
I know you had the Milo book, had some difficulties at Simon & Schuster. | ||
I know that they're not open to the kind of publishing Trump-type titles or MAGA titles or America's First titles, but why did you decide to go ahead and start this venture? | ||
unidentified
|
Steve, for having us on. | |
Basically, we started this to combat the silencing of opposing views. | ||
We find it outrageous that in this country we have to worry about censorship. | ||
This is America. | ||
So that said, we form this imprint as an independent imprint. | ||
So we're not going to be beholden to the mass media in the way that we were with our other publishing, when we were mainstream publishing. | ||
So they can't cancel us. | ||
We've been canceled, is our approach. | ||
And we're creating what Dan Bongino would call an alternate, a virtual, or rather a parallel economy. | ||
And a parallel economy, you've heard the expression before I'm sure, is that we go out, when they cancel us, we, for instance, Goya, they went after the immigrant Powerhouse that ran Goya. | ||
We all went out and bought Goya products. | ||
I'm sure you're all doing things like that now. | ||
We have to keep doing it. | ||
We cannot allow people who hate our opinions, our viewpoints to silence us and we cannot allow them to bully us into submission. | ||
So that's the approach we have. | ||
If I can use a vernacular, and I want to bring in Kate now, if we can use a vernacular from Damon Runyon. | ||
It's a couple of tough broads here that are not going to back down to anything. | ||
Kate, I want to say something. | ||
Louise said, hey, we're creating alternative economies and alternatives to be a parallel. | ||
The one thing about this, though, you guys, it looks like you're going to take on big books and big authors. | ||
I see you announced you've got Peter Navarro, who's a beloved You know, one of our stock company, also guys now starting to host and co-host. | ||
Mark Meadows, the Chief of Staff. | ||
I love the title of the book, The Chief's Chief. | ||
You've got Bo Snurdley, James Golden, Rush Limbaugh's right-hand man. | ||
So these are big books. | ||
These are not small titles. | ||
Tell us, how are you going to compete against the big guys? | ||
Aren't you going to be shut down everywhere? | ||
Isn't Amazon going to shut you down? | ||
Aren't all these places, as Louise says, hey, we're going to be alternative, but aren't you going to get shut down everywhere? | ||
Or how are you going to punch your way out of this? | ||
unidentified
|
We have a plan. | |
We know how to publish. | ||
We've been in the business for 40 years, and we're setting up our company. | ||
We're doing our own distribution. | ||
We're not relying on big publishers to distribute us. | ||
We have our own warehousing, our own sales team, and we know where to go. | ||
We're going to go to all the traditional channels, but we're also protecting ourselves so that We can't be shut down by if Amazon decides they don't want a book, for instance. | ||
You know, the Times reported that the publishing executives are saying it would be morally unacceptable, morally unacceptable to publish Trump administration officials. | ||
How outrageous is that? | ||
You know, we find that morally unacceptable and we're proud that we're going to be publishing Chief Mark Meadows and Dr. Peter Navarro, two really important public servants who did so much during the Trump administration. | ||
And they've got so much to share with conservative readers. | ||
And, you know, that's why we're here. | ||
I mean, we, we believe, I mean, we've always loved our jobs in publishing. | ||
We've always loved being in a business where Authors are invited to share their knowledge and share their ideas, and now they're only invited to share some ideas. | ||
There are others that are not allowed. | ||
There are topics that are taboo, such as everything that you discussed in your last segment. | ||
Do not talk about the election results. | ||
That's why we're here. | ||
Louise, let me come back to you for a second and then I'll come back to Kate. | ||
Both of you have dedicated your life to books and to authors and making sure to get out there and that's where you've been so successful and kind of legends in this business. | ||
One of the things I found interesting, I think you guys were telling me, is that the publishing houses were actually, one of the questions I think the Times asked, would you publish Donald Trump's book? | ||
And the other day when Trump said something about it, I think the four big houses, of which Simon & Schuster and Herschettes won, said absolutely not, wouldn't even touch it. | ||
Given your history in the business, where are we, ma'am, when we have a President of the United States that got a hugely successful first term, but gets 74 million votes, right? | ||
And we're going to determine how this whole thing turns out, but it gets 74 million votes that got counted, right? | ||
And the four major public houses says we wouldn't touch the book. | ||
How did that happen, ma'am? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, first of all, I think it shows how much they fear him. | |
And, you know, this idea that he doesn't have the right is outrageous. | ||
I mean, first of all, don't we have the right and the need to hear from our elected officials in long form? | ||
I know of no recent president who hasn't published a book, and I'm sure that a lot of people on either side didn't buy them or read them. | ||
That's fine. | ||
That's your right. | ||
But to tell us They can't publish him is really ridiculous. | ||
A lot of the snark involved, well, we will never get the truth from him. | ||
And I can point to a lot of books they publish where the truth is hidden. | ||
So we just don't understand it. | ||
And that's why we created this. | ||
I feel that they will go for, for instance, they went for the Pence book. | ||
But I think we'll see if that ends up happening. | ||
But I think that they're going to insist he addressed certain issues in a way that they can accept. | ||
So right away, he's giving up, in my opinion, he's giving up his right to a, you know, a book that really is true. | ||
So I can't explain it except to say that it's been happening and it's been coming, it's been eroding now for at least the last five, six years, and it's really at a point of no return. | ||
They are afraid of Donald Trump and his books. | ||
Kate, by the way, I want to tell people that these two are tough as boot leather. | ||
They have been rock stars inside these big organizations to promote. | ||
Before they either left or were let go, depending on whose story you believe, they fought tooth and nail these big operations. | ||
This has been going on for a while. | ||
People forget this council culture has really been going on for a while. | ||
You and Louise are beloved figures for people that know books and love books, and that's why we're so happy to be a friend of the company and have you guys on here all the time, because our audience loves books, and they love authors, and they love, particularly, they see Meadows, and they see Navarro, and they see Bo Snurly. | ||
They're saying, hey, this is the kind of stuff I'm looking for. | ||
How do people get to you? | ||
We know there's a lot of people out there in the conservative movement, and there's a lot of unknown people that are coming up that have book ideas. | ||
So how can they get to you guys at All Seasons, Kate? | ||
How can they reach you guys? | ||
unidentified
|
We just launched this week, and the best way to reach us is through our publicist, Jean Anne, at allseasonspublicity.com. | |
We are about to launch our website, which will be allseasonspress.com. | ||
Okay, so we'll get this in the live chat. | ||
You get to Jean Anne, who's the publicist. | ||
We'll get up in the live chat. | ||
Anybody who thinks they've got a book idea should be coming to you guys. | ||
I've got to tell you, it's a great day. | ||
It's another option out there. | ||
This is what we need. | ||
We need optionality. | ||
We need more options. | ||
And I hope, by the way, I hope there's more We want you to have our authors back. | ||
That's what we want. | ||
in the book of everything. You guys are competitors. In fact, you're fierce competitors. So we're looking for some great competition. I can't speak highly enough of what warriors you are. | ||
Everybody's got to get to all seasons, see the books they got out there. We look forward to having you back or having your authors back as they start rolling out these books. | ||
unidentified
|
That's what we want. We're going to stay for our offer. | |
We can't get Navarro off of here. | ||
I mean, the guy's now become a host, a fulfilling host, you can't get rid of him. | ||
unidentified
|
Louise Burke. | |
We're so excited also about publishing Rush on the Radio by James Golden, and that's going to be such a wonderful book, and James, I'm sure you're going to love having him on. | ||
I'm saying this right now. | ||
I think that that will be one of the biggest books of the Christmas season. | ||
Rush Limbaugh is a beloved cultural figure and Bo Snodley, James Golden, has been with him for 30 years. | ||
You're going to get the inside scoop. | ||
Guys, thank you very much. | ||
Honored to have you on. | ||
unidentified
|
Thanks, Steve. | |
I want to turn now, before we get back to this, Ryan's one of my guys. | ||
Can we get Ned Ryan's book up? | ||
So we had Patrick K. O'Donnell on yesterday, wrote The Indispensables, talk about the Battle of Bunker Hill, but you decided on the 246, why of all the things out there, Ned Ryan, why did you pick Bunker Hill to write this book about? | ||
unidentified
|
So it really started with the Genesis. | |
I've always been fascinated by Dr. Joseph Warren, who, fascinating figure, Reagan in his first inaugural address actually said, Dr. Joseph Warren might have been one of the greatest of the Founding Fathers, and then he quotes from his oration on March 6, 1775, but really wanted to talk about this principled defiance in the face of this arbitrary and overwhelming authoritarianism. | ||
And the last nine or ten months before Bunker Hill, obviously featuring Dr. Joseph Warren and then a young British officer by the name of Francis Lord Rodden. | ||
And they're the adversaries, but also the conflict between Englishmen. | ||
And why did they stop talking to each other and all of a sudden start shooting each other on Bunker Hill? | ||
So there's some really interesting themes that I think apply to today of who governs, right? | ||
Where do laws come from? | ||
And are we actually required to follow unjust laws and those who are pushing unjust laws? | ||
You know, maybe that might be the true insurrection. | ||
How many years did you research this before you started writing? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, we wrote about this with my dad back in a book called Heroes Among Us back in 2002. | |
We spent a chapter on Dr. Joseph Warren, so you could argue it's been 18, 19 years that I've been thinking about it. | ||
Started doing some research probably about two years ago, got serious. | ||
Spring of 2020, and then really started writing this specific book in October of last year. | ||
Wow. | ||
Okay, we're going to take a short commercial break. | ||
In return, we've got Ned Ryan. | ||
We're going to talk about masculinity in America, talk about his father, one of the greatest Americans out there, a hero of mine when I was a kid, and we're going to talk, we're going to have the artist of the apes, the ape army's great artist, Brittany, is going to be with us as we're going to discuss her art when we return to the War Room. | ||
unidentified
|
War Room. | |
Pandemic. | ||
With Stephen K. Banham. | ||
The epidemic is a demon and we cannot let this demon hide. | ||
War Room. | ||
Pandemic. | ||
Here's your host, Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
and go well. | ||
No tears. | ||
This is a no-tears segment. | ||
There's no fighting in the war room and there's no crying or whining in the war room either. | ||
Okay. | ||
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He'll give you all your money back in six months, within six months. | ||
So go see Total Sleep System, plus you get pillows, sheets, everything's on sale. | ||
Go there today, up to 66% off. | ||
Okay, I want to come back to Ned Ryan, I guess, because the last segment we're going to have Brittany Avery is going to join us from Montana. | ||
Hopefully in either this segment or the next, I'm going to talk about her art. | ||
She's one of the artists for the Ape Army. | ||
You see her billboards in Times Square all the time, a magnificent artist. | ||
We're going to get to Brittany Avery in a second. | ||
Okay, Real quickly, first off, this weekend is Masculinity in America for our Father's Day special. | ||
Next hour we're going to have Sean Parnell, Mike Cernovich, a whole group of folks. | ||
Your father was one of my heroes growing up, right? | ||
He was one of the great Americans. | ||
Real quickly, for the audience that doesn't know who your dad was, explain in a minute or so who your dad was and why he's a hero to so many kids my age. | ||
unidentified
|
Jim Ryan ran in the 60s and 70s, obviously was world record holder on the mile, 1500 meters, 800. | |
From Kansas? | ||
unidentified
|
From Kansas, Wichita, Kansas. | |
His coach pulled him aside when he was a sophomore in high school and said, I think you could actually break the four-minute mile in high school. | ||
My dad thought he was crazy. | ||
The next year he breaks four minutes in the mile as a junior in high school, which Roger Bannister had only done about 10 years before. | ||
So he goes from there, goes on to become the American record holder in the mile, beats Peter Snell in really an epic race as a senior in high school, goes on to set the world record as a 19-year-old in the mile, three Olympics, ran his first Olympics when he was a junior in high school in 1964. | ||
Just a truly incredible career. | ||
I tell people all the time, you know that you were made for a purpose. | ||
When you see someone who only started running seriously 18 months before he broke the 4-minute mile, he was made to run. | ||
I say this about my dad. | ||
I dedicated the book to him. | ||
A great runner and a noble man. | ||
A noble man. | ||
Member of Congress. | ||
I think we put up President Trump gave him the Presidential Medal of Freedom last year. | ||
unidentified
|
He was one of those guys, when you set up the first meeting with him back in, it was Memorial Day 2017. | |
Yes. | ||
We spent the first probably 10 minutes talking about my dad because President Trump said, you know, I've always been a huge fan of your dad's. | ||
I'm legitimately a huge fan of your dad. | ||
I watched him, you know, his whole career. | ||
And so we talked about my dad for the first 10 or 15 minutes. | ||
And then this really was December of 2019. | ||
He called me. | ||
He was a little irritated because I called him out on signing of the omnibus bill. | ||
Oh, he watches. | ||
unidentified
|
We had a great talk. | |
It was on the Tucker. | ||
It was on Tucker's show. | ||
He watches. | ||
unidentified
|
Started talking about my dad and he said, you gave me a great idea. | |
I said, what's the great idea? | ||
He's like, I'm going to give your dad the Presidential Medal of Freedom. | ||
Like, you know what? | ||
I'm not sure I gave you that idea, but that is a fantastic idea. | ||
That's Donald J. Trump right there. | ||
I got to tell you, that first meeting we had in the Oval, when you came in, I got to tell you, there was a bonding there. | ||
Trump respected your father so much, it was incredible. | ||
unidentified
|
I want to tell you one quick story and then we'll get to the book. | |
When he actually signed the letter in which he officially acknowledged he was going to give my dad the Medal of Freedom, it was on my birthday. | ||
I wanted to go see him on my birthday. | ||
We had a great time for about 20 minutes in the Oval Office. | ||
He shows me the letter, I read it, I'm getting a little choked up because it's a big deal. | ||
Right? | ||
So I slide the letter back across the desk and he goes, no, no, no. | ||
I want you to take it. | ||
I want you to give it to your dad so that he knows that you're giving to him and that he knows he is going to get the Presidential Medal of Freedom. | ||
It was awesome. | ||
It was an incredible moment. | ||
That's the parts of Trump people don't see. | ||
unidentified
|
No, I know. | |
And I wish they did. | ||
But that's why I told that story. | ||
People think, oh, he's this big, tough guy. | ||
He's actually an incredibly caring guy. | ||
This book is an important book. | ||
Once again, tell me about the thesis and background, particularly Dr. Warren, who's, to me, one of the great members of the revolutionary generation. | ||
unidentified
|
Truly one of the greatest. | |
He was a young Harvard-educated doctor, protege of Sam Adams, truly became a leader in Boston, the colony of Massachusetts, I would argue across the colonies, President of the Provincial Congress, a major general in the Army, but truly one of the leaders in the political resistance to acts of Parliament and the King's ministers, in which he said We're not going to submit. | ||
And there's two really interesting things I want to make, you know, in the time that we have. | ||
First of all, kind of exploring, why did we fight? | ||
Right? | ||
And so one of the last living survivors of Lexington Concord, and I include some of these themes in the book, well, did you fight because of the Stamp Act? | ||
I never saw a stamp in my life. | ||
Well, did you fight because of the Tea Act? | ||
I never drank tea. | ||
I didn't know anybody else who drank tea. | ||
Well, did you fight because you were inspired by John Locke and some of these other great philosophers? | ||
I didn't read them. | ||
I only read the Bible, Isaac Watt's Hymns, and the Catechism. | ||
And this person you can see is perplexed. | ||
So why did you fight? | ||
I thought because we'd always governed ourselves and always meant to, and Parliament and the King's ministers meant that we shouldn't. | ||
It was about who governs, and then how are you to govern? | ||
This is the second point I want to make. | ||
These Englishmen, 85% of Massachusetts at the time was direct English lineage. | ||
Wasn't Scottish, wasn't Irish. | ||
These Englishmen brought to the shores of America these English ideas of the Magna Carta, 1628 Petition of Right, 1689 Bill of Rights, they had the Charter of Massachusetts, all either passed by Parliament or sent of the English Kings, in which they felt these were in black and white, these are the rights we are guaranteed, free elections, free speech, the right to govern ourselves, in harmony with natural higher law. | ||
And Parliament really in those days leading into the revolution kind of looked at those as more of a series of suggestions. | ||
Yes. | ||
And the ruling class, the ruling class in England looked at the American colonists as backwards and regressive and a sinkhole of prejudice and hatred because of their charters and covenants. | ||
And they said, no, we believe that these are rights guaranteed to us and we will fight for them. | ||
You got to get these books. | ||
How do people get to the books? | ||
unidentified
|
Go to Amazon, snag a copy, you might be able to get one in time for Father's Day. | |
I did it in such a way, I wanted to do it on the launch, launch it on Bunker Hill. | ||
Yes. | ||
I mean this is one of the... 246th anniversary today. | ||
unidentified
|
That's right, this is what, yesterday, it was one of the, the first set battle of the revolution in which the Americans said, alright, words are over and we're going to fight. | |
Real quickly, American Majority, you're going to get up there about the voter situation. | ||
You've got 30 seconds. | ||
Tell us about that. | ||
unidentified
|
My staff in Wisconsin is probably going to hate me, but I think it's probably time for another rally like we did back in February 2011 for Scott Walker. | |
We do another rally in support of this audit and really push it. | ||
How do people get to you? | ||
How do they get to social media? | ||
How do they get to the website? | ||
unidentified
|
First of all, go The Adversaries, A Story of Boston and Bunker Hill. | |
Amazon. | ||
Snag a copy today. | ||
AmericanMajority.org. | ||
And then on social media, it's at Ned Ryan. | ||
N-E-D-R-Y-U-N. | ||
Same thing on Instagram as well. | ||
It's hot. | ||
It's on fire. | ||
I wrote this wonderful blurb. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, you know what? | |
It's in the printed copy. | ||
It's in the printed copy. | ||
We have a revolutionary generation now. | ||
And a young member of that revolutionary generation is going to join us in the next segment. | ||
Brittany Avery. | ||
An amazing young artist is going to join us here. | ||
The new revolutionary generation of the Army of the Apes. | ||
All next, along with Mike Cernovich, Sean Parnell, and a cast of characters on Masculinity in America. | ||
Kicking off Father's Day weekend. | ||
All next in the War Room. |