Speaker | Time | Text |
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unidentified
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The virus has now killed more than 100 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. | ||
unidentified
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War Room. | |
Pandemic. | ||
Here's your host, Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
Go ahead, Honolulu. | ||
to this important bulletin from the United Press. | ||
Flash, Washington. | ||
The White House announces Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. | ||
This is CBS in America calling Honolulu. | ||
Go ahead, Honolulu. | ||
This is CBS in America calling Honolulu. | ||
Go ahead, Honolulu. | ||
Go ahead, Honolulu. | ||
Click on the link in the description to watch the full video. | ||
Go ahead, Honolulu. | ||
We should like to now try to call in Manila, the capital of the Philippine Commonwealth. | ||
Go ahead, Manila. | ||
This is CBS in America calling Manila. | ||
Go ahead. | ||
We regret that we are unable to contact either Honolulu or Manila. | ||
We return you now to William L. Shirer in New York. | ||
The Japanese have attacked Pearl Harbor, Hawaii by air. | ||
President Roosevelt has just announced. | ||
The attack also was made on all naval and military activities on the principal island of Oahu. | ||
We take you now to Washington. | ||
The details are not available. | ||
They will be in a few minutes. | ||
The White House is now giving out a statement. | ||
The attack apparently was made on all naval and military activities on the principal island of Oahu. | ||
The President's brief statement was read to reporters by Stephen Early, the President's secretary. | ||
A Japanese attack upon Pearl Harbor naturally would mean war. | ||
Such an attack would naturally bring a counterattack. | ||
And hostilities of this kind would naturally mean that the President would ask Congress for a declaration of war. | ||
There is no doubt from the temper of Congress that such a declaration would be granted. | ||
This morning, Secretary Hull talked with the Secretaries of War and of the Navy. | ||
Now the two Special Japanese Envoys, Admiral Nomura and Special Envoy Kurusu, are at the State Department, engaged in conference with Secretary of State Hull. | ||
Their appearance at the State Department on this Sunday afternoon emphasizes the gravity of the Far Eastern situation, where hostilities now seem to be actually opening over the whole South Pacific. | ||
And just now comes the word from the President's office that a second air attack has been reported on Army and Navy bases in Manila. | ||
Thus, we have official announcements from the White House The Japanese airplanes have attacked Pearl Harbor in Hawaii and have now attacked Army and Navy bases in Manila. | ||
We return you now to New York and we'll give you later information as it comes along from the White House. | ||
Return you now to New York. | ||
Tuesday, 7 December, the year of our Lord, 2021. | ||
For many of our audience, we think that the country that we live in was born on 4 July 1776. | ||
I think there's some that would argue that the modern world, or at least the modern world of America, was born on 7 December 1941. | ||
80 years ago today, at dawn, we slept. | ||
That's the famous book that came out about it later. | ||
It's all kind of controversy about what we knew How we knew it who knew it? | ||
What was the entire situation? | ||
But we do know one thing this part of the war was about China and about the control of China I want to bring in now Rahim Kassam Rahim is a student of history in a particularly Churchill in a His mentor was Nigel Farage. | ||
She was one of the great great active I guess historians Rahim a lot of people what people don't realize is there a lot of people don't No, particularly younger people is by the time that The Japanese did the sneak attack at Pearl Harbor on 7 December in Manila that the the British and our allies had actually been at war in Europe and actually throughout Asia for a for a for a couple of years Yeah, that's right Steve. | ||
I mean, you know, this was a world war. | ||
This was a global conflict. | ||
And of course, this day made it even more so that. | ||
The war in and of itself and the war effort in and of itself had already been turning in that year, not least thanks to some of the fellowship and friendship from the United States and understanding despite its, you know, their two for neutrality in all the whole time. | ||
But the bigger part of all of the fighting that had been taking place from two years prior was not just the strategic gains that were being made in Africa and other places, and of course, Russia's intervention, but it was also what was going on at home in Britain. | ||
And what was going on at home in Britain was You'd seen in very short order this realization amongst the British intellectual class and the political elite and the strategic elite, you know, the war elite, that actually there was only one man with the force of character who had the audacity to believe in victory. | ||
And of course, you know, the famous V for victory sign that Churchill would put up became the embodiment of the British spirit in the war after Churchill's. | ||
You know, after his exuberance kind of permeated throughout British civil society, it was it was, you know, not obviously the man that won the war. | ||
We know so many people deserve so much credit. | ||
He said so himself for making those great shifts all around the world and keeping, you know, keeping freedom there for people. | ||
You know, what we've done with it is talk for another time. | ||
But Churchill himself sort of stood at the thwart an establishment, a political establishment who wanted to appease. | ||
They wanted to go along to get along. | ||
They wanted to compromise at every juncture. | ||
In many cases, of course, as we now know, sadly and shamefully, much of the British political establishment was actually more than willing to not just watch as Hitler marauded through Europe, but actually was quite keen for him to do so. | ||
So it was very much on the shoulders of Churchill that so much was placed. | ||
And then, of course, when America entered the war after Pearl Harbor, you know. | ||
Pearl Harbor, it's a... | ||
unidentified
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It's... | |
It's the reason this date's so important. | ||
People have to realize is that the British aristocracy, the British elite, not all of them, but the royal family particularly, right, and Lord Halifax and others, were fully prepared To cut a deal to save the empire, and by that I meant India, the jewel of the crown, right? | ||
And also Hong Kong. | ||
They had no problem with China at least being partitioned somehow with the Japanese control of Manchuria and parts of China, and they certainly had no problem with Germany having control of Central Europe and part of the Eurasian landmass, and that in the United States. | ||
This became about this became about Japanese expansion, Japan, you know, the co-prosperity sphere that and remember American industry. | ||
Essentially helped arm Japan in the 1930s. | ||
You know, all the scrap metal went on there, all the oil, until embargoes were put in. | ||
The American elites had no problem, and American industry had no problem of assisting the Japanese in their amazing climb to industrial power, and really to military supremacy, at least for a while. | ||
And I think that's the lesson there, that we're in a situation right now with China, right? | ||
I think it was Apple announced today, having gotten the whole Story some big joint venture over there, but you've got Wall Street. | ||
You got the global elites that are in bed with and in partnership with the Chinese Communist Party and we have a very rosy picture of what happened in World War two, but one of the things people got to remember is that. | ||
From the invasion of Manchuria, I think, in 1931. | ||
Brahimi had the Spanish Civil War in 1935. | ||
I think the Italians were in Africa, the fascists were in Africa, and it was Ethiopia in 1936 or 37. | ||
I mean, this war had been going on for 10 years. | ||
Then, obviously, the partnership of Hitler and Stalin in 1939, the attack into Poland in 1939. | ||
So, it was... | ||
You know, this thing had been going on for a while, and you look back over, you say, how could people miss it? | ||
I mean, one of the things about Pearl Harbor today is still the accusations about what people knew. | ||
I think even the family of Admiral Kimmel, I think it is still fight to clear his name. | ||
And by the way, Pearl Harbor You talk about 9-11, you talk about the Kennedy, the Warren Commission, I think Pearl Harbor had six or seven commissions, you know, naval review boards, congressional committees, etc. | ||
And so you see the other lesson, I think, is that Churchill was eviscerated by the establishment in the 1930s. | ||
They thought he was nuts. | ||
They thought he was crazy. | ||
And he was talking about the Japanese, too. | ||
He said the Japanese are coming are coming also, not just the not just Hitler, but you got the you got the Japanese, this imperial power that's almost like almost a religious cult. | ||
I mean, Hitler, he was all over that. | ||
He was very concerned about Singapore and the British holdings in the Far East. | ||
But he was treated as a he was treated as a nutcase. | ||
Well, he's treated as a nutcase again now, which I actually think that given who his critics are today, he'd rather enjoy. | ||
I also want to just bring people's minds back to what I mentioned a moment ago, which was specifically about the political elite in the United Kingdom and their approach to all of this. | ||
Because like you said, they didn't start the fire. | ||
This had been raging already in very many multifarious parts of the world. | ||
Hey, Raheem, could you hang on for one second? | ||
What I want to do is play, I want to go out with FDR's famous date that will live in infamy and I want to bring back and get your comments on the on the elites after After this because people forget is that Hitler? | ||
We didn't clear war in Hitler was Hitler and Mussolini declared war on us a couple days later So we're gonna go now to the famous speech for a joint session of Congress by Franklin Delano Roosevelt Members of the Senate of the House of Representatives Yesterday December 7th 1941 a | ||
unidentified
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Date which will live in infamy Thank you. | |
The United States of America was suddenly and deliberately attacked by naval and air forces of the Empire of Japan. | ||
The United States was at peace with that nation. | ||
And, at the solicitation of Japan, was still in conversation with its government and its emperor, looking toward the maintenance of peace in the Pacific. | ||
Indeed, one hour after Japanese air squadrons had commenced bombing in the American island of Oahu, The Japanese ambassador to the United States and his colleague delivered to our Secretary of State a formal reply to a recent American message. | ||
Japan has therefore undertaken a surprise offensive extending throughout the Pacific area. | ||
The facts of yesterday and today speak for themselves. | ||
No matter how long it may take us to overcome this premeditated invasion, the American people in their righteous might will win through to absolute victory. | ||
With confidence in our armed forces, With the unbounding determination of our people, we will gain the inevitable triumph. | ||
So help us God! | ||
Subscribe to take a trip back in time. | ||
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. | ||
At dawn we slept 80 years ago and think of how much agony Working people in this country, the deplorables, the middle class in this country had to go through to fight through their horrific, horrific, horrific Second World War, the sacrifice, the blood, the agony. | ||
At dawn, we slept. | ||
Announced today as we came on air, Apple announces a $275 billion investment program, joint ventures with the Chinese Communist Party in China to develop their technological prowess. | ||
Apple's no different than the industrialists in the 1930s and the oil companies in the 1930s that were basically supplying the war machine that was gearing up, was already fighting in Manchuria, right? | ||
Everybody, I remember my dad, one of the photos he showed me early as a kid was, I think it was in Nanking, the little baby sitting on the famous black and white photograph, the little baby sitting on the railroad tracks, almost burned alive, the rape in Nanking, right? | ||
So the industrialists helped build that, helped build with the other Japanese companies, the Tojo's, the Junta's military, really juggernaut in Asia. | ||
And Apple announces today a $275 billion joint venture, basically to develop the technological prowess of the Chinese Communist Party. | ||
At the same time today, Evergrande, now it's outside its third window, the whole, as Miles Guo tells us, the whole sham real estate three-card money that the Chinese Communist Party is just skimming off the top and the American investment firms are financing, Evergrande announced, oops, didn't make the payment. | ||
So, hey, who knows? | ||
Between Beijing and D.C. | ||
now, it's all just funny money. | ||
In this holiday season, we really appreciate it. | ||
If you take a look, go to MyPillow.com, promo code War Room. | ||
Take a look at all the products, particularly the three-inch toppers. | ||
You've got the classic pillows for $19.98. | ||
You've got the towels for $39.99, the six-pack of towels. | ||
These sales are unbelievable. | ||
They're in the holiday season. | ||
Think about making MyPillow part of your giving this year as you think about gifts. | ||
Pete Buttigieg will not be in your life. | ||
Right? | ||
Mike Lindell guarantees you buy it from him, you're going to get it from him. | ||
Pete Buttigieg can stay on parental leave for a couple more weeks. | ||
Raheem, I want to come back to you about elites and about, remember, Churchill. | ||
The same group that got Brexit, the working class people from the Midlands of England were the same labor voters that had Churchill's back so he could make a government and actually stand up to the fascists and assist the United States in its fight against the Japanese. | ||
Yeah, and I think what we also have to recognize here are the historical parallels with those who were outwardly favorable to the Nazi Party in Germany, people who were willing to do deals with the Nazi Party in Germany, people who wanted perhaps a kind of elite merger with the Nazi Party in Germany. | ||
And it doesn't surprise me to learn that, you know, on this sort of same At the same time, we're talking about this and reflecting on this. | ||
You have the same situations here in Washington, D.C. | ||
You have the same situations on Wall Street. | ||
You have the same situations in Hollywood, where this elite merger is taking place between these two groups of people now. | ||
Obviously, on the one hand, we like to think that perhaps we're not that far gone yet, whereby the same types of people who are sympathizing, perhaps, with the Nazi Party, Today sympathizing with the Chinese Communist Party, but I think we very much are further down the path than a lot of those Nazi sympathizers actually got back in the late 1930s. | ||
So I think it's a good day to take a kind of reflection about that and commit ourselves to doing something about that, whether it's exposing it, whether it's calling it out, whether it's demanding action on it. | ||
This audience can decide for itself, but it's important to recognize the parallels that are screaming at us in the face here. | ||
Yeah, I think if you look at today, look, let's go in 1939, you know, in the run-up to Pearl Harbor. | ||
You had Germany, Italy, they had a pact with Russia. | ||
Japan, they already had a secret treaty with Japan, and Japan was already in the mainland of China. | ||
In fact, controlled not just Manchuria, but was making incursions, had moved the capital to southern China. | ||
And what were they trying to do? | ||
They're trying to control the world island. | ||
They're trying to control the Eurasian landmass. | ||
He who controls the world island He who controls the central part of Asia controls the world island. | ||
He who controls the world island controls the world. | ||
That's Mackinder 101. | ||
Basic Fundamental Geopolitics. | ||
Look at today. | ||
And you look at what the Biden, the feckless Biden administration, between what's happened in the Ukraine, what's happened with the Persians or the Iranians on the nuclear weapons deal, what's happening with the Chinese as they both look towards taking over Taiwan, shutting down the South China Sea, and our allies in India and the Northwest frontier. | ||
It's the same thing. | ||
You've got in 39, you had Germany, Italy, Russia, In Japan, okay? | ||
In 2021, you've got China, Pakistan, Persia, Iran, Turkey, and Russia. | ||
And from the Ukraine, to the nuclear weapons deal, to what they're doing in India, China's doing in India, Afghanistan, and now the South China Sea. | ||
And hey, I'm not a neocon. | ||
All these endless wars, but trust me, you don't think, like Churchill and these guys talked about in the 30s, you don't think there's a storm on the horizon? | ||
There is a storm on the horizon. | ||
And you lose control of the Eurasian landmass. | ||
American foreign policy since 1914 has been very simple. | ||
We will never allow one power or a combination of power to control the Eurasian landmass. | ||
Because if you let one power control the Eurasian landmass, your life in Wichita will change. | ||
And that's the dilemma we sit today and people are still asleep about this. | ||
And our corporations, just like in the 30s, the businessmen look for profits. | ||
If you think this guy, by the way, there were a hundred times more patriotic than these guys today. | ||
The guys today are not patriotic at all. | ||
Right? | ||
They want the civic society you built, the safety you built, the deplorables, but they'll sell you out and they sell you out. | ||
Look at Apple right now. | ||
A joint $275 billion. | ||
Why don't they invest $275 billion in this place called the United States of America? | ||
Why don't we start in East St. | ||
Louis, Detroit, Baltimore. | ||
Let's have an economic renaissance here. | ||
Let me bring in Rahim just for a second because I know we've got other stuff to go through. | ||
I want to bring in Don Amon for a minute. | ||
Don, you've got a blend of coffee that's in support of my beloved United States Navy. | ||
Tell us about it. | ||
unidentified
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Hey, good morning, Steve. | |
I'm still in shock at this $275 billion. | ||
And I agree with you that it should be brought into the U.S. | ||
and to bring our country back. | ||
But, you know, it's sort of a somber day. | ||
As you know, both of us are Navy. | ||
The Navy flows deep in our hearts and through our souls. | ||
And this was one thing that I've been waiting for. | ||
The whole reason why I really started Minuteman Coffee was to launch this roast. | ||
And it is sort of a bittersweet. | ||
It's almost, you know, to me, this is like another 9-11. | ||
But, you know, today's sort of a struggling day for all of us, but history will always repeat itself, unless we appeal to heaven. | ||
We've launched our first organic medium roast. | ||
It is a single-farm, single-origin Nicaraguan. | ||
It is a beautiful medium roast. | ||
It is very bright, very sweet, and it's just an amazing coffee. | ||
But the whole purpose of an appeal to heaven, as you know, it was flown by the First Continental Navy between 1775 and 1778. | ||
And I felt that it was fitting to bring it and launch it today just to pay homage, not just to our Navy, but to all of our military. | ||
As you know, we're historically accurate. | ||
Everything we do is factually accurate. | ||
And our focus is to bring the Constitution back, bring Americana Back to not just the coffee world, but to America in general. | ||
Good, so how do people, we're kind of pressed for time, how do people get this today? | ||
The appeal to heaven in honor of our Navy and the great naval forces that won, eventually won the war. | ||
And I'm honored to have been part of the 7th Fleet when I served in the Navy, the great 7th Fleet, the Pacific Fleet that beat the Japanese. | ||
How do people get appeal to heaven? | ||
unidentified
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Well, you can go to the website, MinuteMenCoffee.com. | |
We're going to go ahead and extend that coupon code that we started a few weeks ago for all of the Bannon listeners. | ||
The listeners are amazing. | ||
We can't thank them enough. | ||
From today until the 20th, it's Bannon20, B-A-N-N-O-N, 20. | ||
And that is for all of our coffee, including an Appeal to Heaven, including the new Trader Joe, which is unapologetically patriotic. | ||
What did our attorney say? | ||
It was politically incorrect, but factually accurate. | ||
That is a limited edition 104 bag, but MinutemenCoffee.com, use coupon code BANNON20 and that'll go on until December 20th. | ||
Don, thank you very much. | ||
Don, I appreciate it. | ||
Don, amen. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, thanks. | |
Thanks. | ||
Probably fantastic. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Let's play a table. | ||
Let's go out with, if we can go out with Sammy K's Remember Pearl Harbor. | ||
Folks of a certain age may remember this. | ||
Hold Raheem Kassam over for a minute. | ||
Remember Pearl Harbor from Sammy K. | ||
unidentified
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It's a great place. | |
History in every century Records an act that lives forevermore. | ||
Oh We'll recall, as into line we fall, the thing that happened on Hawaii shore. | ||
Let's remember Pearl Harbor. | ||
As we go to meet the foe Let's remember Pearl Harbor As we did the Alamo We will always remember How they died for liberty Let's remember Pearl Harbor And go on to victory Let's go to Pearl Harbor | ||
The Alamo | ||
... | ||
Let's remember Pearl Harbor As we go to meet the foe Let's remember Pearl Harbor ... | ||
It's an uncomfortable question. | ||
It makes me uncomfortable asking it. | ||
I don't know if you'll feel uncomfortable answering it. | ||
Ninety-seven, eighty-two percent of people who watch, who trust Fox News say the election was stolen. | ||
Ninety-seven percent who watch Farther Right, I guess that's OWN and Newsmax and stuff like that, believe the election was stolen. | ||
It is a litmus test question on the right in American politics. | ||
Do you believe the election was stolen? | ||
The only correct answer is yes. | ||
The election wasn't stolen. | ||
Bill Barr, the former top law enforcement official, said it was not. | ||
Should it be a litmus test question for American institutions like the FBI and DOJ for the answer under a polygraph to be, no, the election wasn't stolen? | ||
I mean, are the people in charge of protecting the rule of law definitely not in the 82% of the 97%? | ||
unidentified
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So here's where I'll take this. | |
I can tell you that with encouraging, you've mentioned the word polygraph, with regard to sensitive government positions, intelligence community positions, I can tell you that behind the scenes what's happening is a much more thorough vetting of who's coming into those very critical institutions. | ||
and where the security clearances are involved and polygraphs are permitted, yes, and social media is being vetted of these candidates. | ||
That's all very good news. | ||
Polygraphs are beginning to include questions about extremist ideology and membership in violent groups. | ||
That all needs to happen. | ||
Great. | ||
But what we're talking about right now is who's going to win elections. | ||
And so, you know, I'm convinced there are very good people at DOJ and FBI and in the intelligence community right now. | ||
They can do the right thing. | ||
It's not being done yet. | ||
And so the media and the public is going to have to ask that litmus test question that you're asking. | ||
Candidates. | ||
We can't polygraph candidates. | ||
Who's going to win elections? | ||
We're going to win elections. | ||
And then we're throwing you bums out. | ||
Understand that. | ||
We're cleaning house of this rat's nest that the FBI, the Justice Department, all these U.S. | ||
attorneys, all now politicized, okay? | ||
Right there, it's shocking. | ||
Rahim Ghassan, you wrote an amazing piece up on National Pulse. | ||
You could ride this polygraph quote all the way to election. | ||
And she's sitting there, by the way, she's got blood on her hands. | ||
She's stone cold lied to the American people every day of her life as a flunky for the Bush junta, right? | ||
Every day covering up and lying about the war crimes of Cheney Bush, Rahim Ghassan. | ||
On something like this, you know, we can all find polls that justify, you know, particularly authoritarian measures on either side. | ||
Public polling is such that you can kind of do anything you like with it, really. | ||
So let's play her game. | ||
It's a game I like. | ||
A CNN poll from 2017 found that 93% of Democrats believed the Russia hoax. | ||
They said that Donald Trump was not a legitimate president. | ||
Should at that point in time, by Nicole Wallace's own logic, should at that point in time the US government have interrogated people, polygraph tested them, to say, hey, if you, listen, if you believe in this thing that the election wasn't real and that Vladimir Putin was pulling the strings behind the election, if you're that level of a conspiracy theorist, unfortunately you can't work in the government anymore. | ||
I actually think, yeah, maybe we should have done that. | ||
I think we should have done, kicked all the bums out of the FBI, the DOJ, who are peddling this, what we now know as an outright hoax. | ||
Um, John Lewis, you know, the late John Lewis, he said at the time, quote, I don't see this president elect as a legitimate president. | ||
I think the Russians participated in helping this man get elected and they helped destroy the candidacy of Hillary Clinton, end quote. | ||
Well we all know that Hillary Clinton destroyed the candidacy of Hillary Clinton, but were there any calls to remove John Lewis, even from his committee assignments, let alone from the House of Representatives as a result of being an election denier in this way, shape or form, the very same way that Nicole Wallace is alleging? | ||
Except for the fact that the 2016 election and the 2020 election were nothing alike. | ||
They didn't take place against the same backdrop, they didn't have the same constitutional adherences, and they certainly didn't have the same remedies. | ||
I'm old enough to remember when the Democrats got up in the chamber on repeat on January 6, 2017, and objected over and over again to the reading of the results, and were heard, and were not called insurrectionists as a result, And this is where we are. | ||
So listen, you know, if Nicole Wallace wants to get this way about it, I think an incoming GOP majority in the House of Representatives can get very, very excited about some of her ideas. | ||
Well, I mean, a shift, you know, the father of the Russian hoax investigation. | ||
Swalwell, all these guys, they ought to be immediately, after we win, they ought to be immediately stripped of all their committee assignments. | ||
Immediately stripped. | ||
And investigations, I think personal lawsuits. | ||
I hope the President, I hope President Trump and others are getting ready for personal lawsuits about this. | ||
It's time to play Smash Mouth with these guys now. | ||
Look at the danger right now. | ||
They're saying, he's saying, hey, it's already going on. | ||
We're already getting the right guys in there. | ||
This national security apparatus is out of control and it's not defending us. | ||
It's kowtowing to the Chinese Communist Party, which is the existential threat to all mankind, as you can see from the CCP virus. | ||
Raheem, amazing job. | ||
How do people get to National Pulse, the podcast, and all your writings on social media? | ||
Yeah, we've got a bunch of stories up this morning already. | ||
It's thenationalpulse.com. | ||
And, you know, I implore people, if they like our work, they can support it at fundrealnews.com. | ||
I appreciate it. | ||
And what are you on? | ||
You're on Getter and Twitter. | ||
So you're still on Twitter and you're on Getter? | ||
I mess around on Twitter a little bit, but now I really focus on Getter. | ||
I really prefer that platform. | ||
So find me on Getter. | ||
It's at Raheem Kassam. | ||
And unfortunately, for the sake of publishing stories and reaching a wider audience, we still have to be on Twitter. | ||
But I don't spend much energy on there anymore. | ||
It's all Getter for me now. | ||
Rahim Ghassan, thank you for joining us today on Remembrance of Pearl Harbor. | ||
At dawn, we slept. | ||
Okay, I tell you somebody's not sleeping. | ||
It's the great Julie Kelly. | ||
We did a special on Saturday. | ||
MSNBC followed with a special on Sunday, and Julie Kelly's already responded. | ||
Julie, walk us through what this podcast special that MSNBC has been humping nonstop for the last week, and what's the reality in back of this? | ||
Five series. | ||
podcast, the first podcast episode dropped over the weekend. | ||
What this is setting up, Steve, is the vilification and demonization of Roseanne Boylan, who it is increasingly clear did not die of a drug overdose that day, as we were told by the hyper-partisan, dishonest DC coroner, but that she was attacked by police, like many people were inside this lower West Terrace tunnel that we keep talking about, where police | ||
unidentified
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were gassing protesters, were beating them with weapons, and in some cases their own fists. | |
And that is where Roseanne Boylan died. | ||
We have video evidence of her lifeless body outside of that tunnel. | ||
We see a police officer after some protesters tried to administer CPR to save her life. | ||
We see her body, lifeless body, face up, her top half of her body exposed, dragging her back through this tunnel where she is then hidden. | ||
Her body is hidden until paramedics arrive and of course she's pronounced dead shortly after six o'clock on January 6th. | ||
So what the media is doing is setting up her as a villain. | ||
That she has been radicalized, that she's a domestic terrorist, radicalized by Donald Trump, Fox News, and the QAnon conspiracy theory. | ||
So when the truth about her death comes out, just like when it came out about Ashley Babbitt, they vilify these women so much that you have the media, Democratic lawmakers, some Republicans, justify her death Because she was a domestic terrorist and a threat to people at the Capitol on January 6th. | ||
So this is what MSNBC, this anchor person, anchorman, is doing. | ||
And this is a five-part series. | ||
But aren't they doing it just slightly different in that they're making her, the villains are Trump, The MAGA movement, the deplorables and the folks over at Q, right? | ||
They're saying that they, you know, because he says, hey, I had to go back to my hometown. | ||
She was a nice, sweet person, but then she got radicalized. | ||
She got radicalized. | ||
It's the radical version of her. | ||
So she's a victim. | ||
To all these bad forces around her, and they turned her into a bad person like them. | ||
And that's why she was a threat, because she didn't radicalize herself, they radicalized her. | ||
And it wasn't about her understanding really what was going on, and particularly how the steel went down, they radicalized her with all kinds of lies and nonsense and turned her into something different. | ||
And so, the people responsible for her death, Are the Trump movement, President Trump, MAGA, the deplorables, the Q people, etc. | ||
That's basically their thesis, correct? | ||
That's right. | ||
So this MSNBC reporter, Amin Malyaddin, I believe is how he pronounces it. | ||
He has covered terrorism, he says, for the past two decades, and he's worked primarily for NBC News and Al Jazeera. | ||
So he said, I never would have imagined that my beat on international terrorism would take me back to my hometown. | ||
So, he's comparing her to a terrorist. | ||
He's comparing the influences that allegedly radicalized her to the external forces that radicalized terrorist cells throughout the past few decades. | ||
And unfortunately, Steve, her family, for some reason, participated in this. | ||
And this interview with her family, including her parents, sort of goes along with this. | ||
Now, I'll write this off as You know, they're in the haze of anger and grief stricken after, you know, what happened to Roseanne. | ||
They're confused about what happened to her. | ||
They want some kind of reason for why this 34-year-old young woman, a recovering addict, led a clean life for the past seven years. | ||
By all accounts, an affectionate, attentive, kind woman who went with her friend Justin to watch the president's speech and go over to Capitol Hill and then was ensnared And this police brutality that occurred for hours outside and inside. | ||
Okay, but how do we know? | ||
How do we know the facts? | ||
I understand that they're trying to push for this three hours of tunnel tape. | ||
And I think you told us on the special, there's 14,000 hours of tape or video that has not been put forward yet. | ||
There's three hours and I believe they're going to have a preliminary decision on the 10th in a couple of days in a federal court here about whether it gets in the media companies, the 16 media companies are in back of letting that, of opening that up. | ||
But how do we know for a fact or how do you know for a fact actually how she died? | ||
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So we have firsthand witness accounts of people who saw what happened to her, who saw her lose consciousness. | |
There's video evidence that shows police continuing to attack her as she lies motionless on the ground as protesters outside are begging police to stop hitting her and other protesters. | ||
They are not trying to administer any kind of first aid to her. | ||
The protesters, Trump supporters, outside of this tunnel are doing it, while the cops inside this tunnel continue to attack people. | ||
So then what we see, video evidence of, and congressional testimony by Officer Gannell, Sergeant Gannell, and Officer Harry Dunn. | ||
These are two of the four officers who testified in July before the January 6th, the last committee. | ||
Officer Janelle admits to dragging Roseanne Boylan back through this tunnel where he meets up with Harry Dunn. | ||
Harry Dunn then takes her as well. | ||
They take her either inside or near the House Majority Leader's office and wait for paramedics to arrive. | ||
So this does not sound like a woman who suddenly died of a drug overdose. | ||
How did they come up with it? | ||
We got 30 seconds and we want you to hold over for your break. | ||
How did they come up with the drug overdose? | ||
Because the official record or the official party line is that she died of a drug overdose. | ||
How did they come up with that? | ||
I don't know. | ||
The D.C. | ||
coroner did. | ||
In fact, the very next day, reporters were saying that she died of a fentanyl overdose. | ||
The D.C. | ||
coroner came out in April and said she had an accidental amphetamine overdose. | ||
Apparently she takes Adderall. | ||
She would have had to have taken about 25 times her normal dose. | ||
Fatal overdoses from Adderall are extremely rare. | ||
And we know the D.C. | ||
coroner's office is part of the D.C. | ||
establishment and has lied about a number of things. | ||
Julie, just hang on. | ||
We're going to take a short commercial break. | ||
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Julie Kelly, Peter Navarro, are going to join us in the next block. | |
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Julie, Kelly, your piece up on American Greatness is amazing. | ||
You're all over. | ||
Miss Boylan's what happened to her the he really exposed the misrepresentations and lies and spin of the MSNBC piece Real quickly McBride was McBride the lawyer. | ||
He's been on here the show before he was on Tucker last night He's now actively engaged. | ||
What did he say on Tucker last night? | ||
Do you did you see that? | ||
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I? | |
Did see it so he is talking about the surveillance video that he has asked the court to unseal the 16 Major news organizations who have joined that effort and want the court to remove the protective order on this three-hour slice of surveillance video. | ||
He also has evidence of suspected, at least four suspected federal informants who have been identified, yet not charged. | ||
But he also talked about another woman in that tunnel who he said was beaten within an inch of her life. | ||
I might have some interesting news on that later this week. | ||
And when the American people see what police did that day, the full accounting of what police did, D.C. | ||
and Capitol Police did to American citizens on Capitol grounds that day, they will be horrified. | ||
And so, this story is just getting started. | ||
There's a lot more to come. | ||
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Okay. | |
We're going to be all over this. | ||
Julie, how do people get you at American Greatness? | ||
How do they get you on social media? | ||
All my work can be found at American Greatness, amgreatness.com, and on Twitter, julie-kelly2. | ||
Julie Kelly, thank you very much for joining us. | ||
The intrepid Julie Kelly. | ||
She's all over the January 6th, the 6th of January. | ||
Thank you. | ||
I want to bring in Dr. Peter Navarro. | ||
He's going to take it for the second hour here. | ||
I have a previous engagement that I can't get out of. | ||
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Peter, you're going to be talking about— It's a master of the understatement. | |
You're going to be talking about— You got your wrist steady for the cuffs today. | ||
Let's keep it nice. | ||
Keep it between the lines, baby. | ||
Yeah, okay, we're gonna end we're gonna end it with a very special and the first hour the very special since is our commemoration of At dawn we slept Vera Lynn the fantastic English singer is going to take us out with the I guess the most the biggest song of the war until we meet again But you're gonna get us in the second hour the second Pearl Harbor. | ||
You got a minute Give us an again walk us through what you're gonna. | ||
What you're gonna walk in the second hour yeah for the You won't be able to see this, but I got the picture beside me of January 15th. | ||
I'm going to talk about why this was our second Cordell Hull moment. | ||
I'll talk about what this historical significance is at, as well as our third Pearl Harbor after the original and the Twin Towers. | ||
And the thing about it is, Steve, this day is so important because the consequences of what happened on January 15, 2020 Continue to this day, and will continue for decades to come. | ||
It is that serious. | ||
So I think on this solemn day, we need to get into that. | ||
Peter Navarro is going to do that in the second hour. | ||
By the way, if you go in Trump time, you'll be stunned about the details you'll find. | ||
In fact, the book starts with this amazing operatic scene right there in the East Room. | ||
Okay, we're gonna go out in our first hour with Vera Lynn and the most powerful and important song I think that came out of the Second World War Don't know where Don't know where But I know we meet again | ||
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some sunny day Smiling through just like you always Always do, till the blue skies drive the dark clouds far away. | |
So will you please say hello to the folks that I know? | ||
Tell them I won't be long. | ||
They'll be happy to know that as you saw me go, I was singing this song. | ||
We'll meet again, don't know when, don't know when, but I know we'll meet again some sunny day. | ||
We'll meet again, don't know where, don't know when, but I know we'll meet again some sunny day. | ||
Keep smiling through, just like you always do, till the blue skies dry and the dark clouds fall away. | ||
So will you please say hello to the folks that I know, tell them I won't be long. | ||
We'll be happy to know that as you saw me go, I was singing this song. | ||
We'll meet again, don't know when. |