Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
unidentified
|
with Lieutenant Governor John Fetterman in his first in-person interview since his stroke. | |
And look, I talked with him back in May, back before the primary, before the stroke, at his home in Braddock. | ||
That interview, very different from what we discussed, very different from the backdrop that we have here today. | ||
Same venue, we sat down with him at his home, but even the setup of the interview looked very different. | ||
He is still suffering from auditory processing issues, which means he has a hard time understanding what he's hearing. | ||
So NBC News agreed to closed captioning during this interview. | ||
You'll see in the clip that I'm about to play, he has a screen in front of him that is transcribing my questions as I ask them. | ||
He's reading those questions. | ||
Once he can read, he can fully understand what I'm asking. | ||
And he's also still suffering from some of those speech challenges. | ||
He's doing speech therapy every day. | ||
His campaign says he's recovering. | ||
And I'll tell you, we've been to several rallies since the stroke and it does seem that he is improving every day. | ||
We did press for medical records. | ||
We pressed for an interview with his medical team because right now we're really taking the campaign's word for his recovery. | ||
We have not received any of those records. | ||
We haven't been able to speak to anyone on his team. | ||
Katie, there's a lot that's changed between May and today. | ||
That also includes the Supreme Court decision to overturn Roe v. Wade, another topic we spoke with him about. | ||
Take a listen. | ||
On the issue of abortion, I just want to clarify your position there. | ||
Do you believe that the government should be able to set guardrails on abortion, or do you believe that this is a decision that should only be made between a woman and her doctor? | ||
I'm saying that Roe v. Wade should have never fallen, and that should be codified into law. | ||
That's my answer on it, to be absolutely clear. | ||
I always thought I was pretty empathetic, emphatic. | ||
I think I was very, excuse me, empathetic. | ||
Dude, Tuesday, 11 October, the year of the Lord, 2022. | ||
Okay. | ||
A guy has a stroke and people say, well, maybe he didn't keep himself in shape. | ||
Maybe so. | ||
I don't know. | ||
He was overweight. | ||
I don't know. | ||
But he had a stroke. | ||
After that stroke, you know, you're in God's hands and what you're trying to recover. | ||
But let me be brutally frank. | ||
This is not acceptable by the mainstream media. | ||
And Katie Turr and Hallie Jackson show Katie Turr sitting in should be humiliated by putting this up. | ||
In NBC, this is even, you understand how pathetic this looks to the American people? | ||
Auditory processing, speech challenges, quote, he does seem to be improving every day, but they won't give you a medical record. | ||
Do you understand if somebody gave, and I don't do whataboutism, if somebody on the right didn't give him a medical record? | ||
You should be in his grill every day. | ||
And no, it is unacceptable for a guy to be running for the United States Senate and you have to do closed captioning. | ||
And then he came and speak. | ||
This shows you how craven they are. | ||
This shows you how they don't care about this country. | ||
That they would have somebody that's clearly has massive, massive physical and mental problems that are now kind of beyond his control because the stroke's going to take you whatever stroke takes you. | ||
And people that have been around people who have stroke, it's heart-rendering to see it. | ||
Boris, I gotta bring you in. | ||
And this shows you why they're gonna get the tables run on them. | ||
And we got some amazing numbers. | ||
Because, no offense, Joe Biden's not at the top of his game. | ||
You've seen the numbers on that. | ||
I think 59% of the country thinks he's... You got Joe Biden's not at the top of the game. | ||
Fetterman is a stroke victim. | ||
You've got this around the country. | ||
And they don't care. | ||
They're gonna prop him up. | ||
Boris, before we get into the math in this, I gotta have your opinion. | ||
I asked you to change your schedule around because this Fetterman thing is starting to go viral. | ||
But I don't know how NBC News recovers from this. | ||
How do you put a screen up there with a closed caption so you can see it? | ||
Hey, you can either ask... Dude, you can either answer the question or you can't. | ||
Ask the question like you ask everybody else. | ||
Boris Epstein. | ||
Steve, it goes back... It's an honor to be with you. | ||
Honor to be with the posse. | ||
It goes back to the fact that we have two-tiered systems in this country. | ||
Two-tiered media system and definitely two-tiered unequal system of justice. | ||
The way that MAGA specifically, Republicans, and of course President Donald J. Trump are treated, is absolutely diametrically opposite. | ||
from the kid gloves that, let's be honest, Joe Biden, who's been an absolute walking disaster now ever since he illegitimately took office, and Sutterman, who's obviously not fit for office, he's obviously not fit for it. | ||
But these are just two of the examples. | ||
But there's nothing the media and the left will stop at to A, denigrate, prosecute, and persecute MAGA under the leadership of President Donald J. Trump, including a couple of the guys talking to each other right now. | ||
And there's nothing the media will stop at and the left wing will stop at to prop up anybody and everybody they can and to lie. | ||
To lie in the face of the American people, and pretend that, oh, nothing to see here, just move along. | ||
Look at the hoaxes. | ||
The Russia, Russia, Russia hoax. | ||
The impeachment hoaxes. | ||
The Doxman hoax. | ||
And when they blow up, you know, Adam Schiff, Shifty Schiff, Eric Swalwell, Swalwell and others, they just smile and, oh yeah, oh! | ||
How about this? | ||
We're moving on. | ||
This is what we're living with in this country. | ||
We don't have a single system anymore. | ||
We don't have a single system for MAGA and Democrats, Republicans and Democrats for MAGA. | ||
It is absolutely two-tiered. | ||
MAGA is under attack, and Democrats, including ones who don't know what day it is, don't know where they are. | ||
Weekend at Bernie's, like Biden at Settlement, full-on weekend at Bernie's, are being treated with kid gloves. | ||
It is unacceptable. | ||
It is un-American. | ||
It is wrong. | ||
The media shows their craveness. | ||
Katie Turr and Kayleigh Jackson, I don't know how you let that happen on your show. | ||
Katie Turr, how can you sit there? | ||
Of course, they got to ask, you know, she's the the the reporters got to come in with the got to come in with got to come in with abortion. | ||
Got it. | ||
Got to do that. | ||
Have to do that. | ||
He is and this shows you something else. | ||
If you if you go to the Hunter, if you look at the laptop from hell and you see the emails from Hunter to his dad, I mean, Hunter Biden is a sick individual. | ||
Right? | ||
Obviously, I'm not a fan of this guy, but he's a sick individual. | ||
He is consumed by drugs. | ||
He's just not an addict, and it's led to perversions all over the place. | ||
That being said, it's a guy kind of looking for help, and they keep putting the burden on him to, hey, you got to go make the meeting. | ||
You got to bring in, you got to, you got to go bring in the bacon. | ||
You got to drink what the client's drinking. | ||
They have done, and look at Fetterman. | ||
Fetterman, the media, Fetterman could die easily. | ||
He could have another stroke. | ||
The pressure put on him, they don't care. | ||
As long as they can prop up somebody like El Cid, right? | ||
To defeat the MAGA movement. | ||
This is a disgrace. | ||
And people in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania gotta step up here and say, hey, what are we doing? | ||
This is ridiculous. | ||
Could that guy, he should be doing, how's he gonna do a debate? | ||
They're gonna have closed caption on the debate? | ||
Is that what we have to do now? | ||
Closed caption on the debate for Fetterman? | ||
It's a disgrace. | ||
Boris, you've got, and this is one of the reasons, yeah, go ahead. | ||
So the campaign is one part, but how, how, if God forbid, Federman wins, how is this person going to be one of a hundred senators who oversee American foreign policy, who oversee budgeting, who oversee the way Americans live their lives, deal with inflation, gas prices? | ||
Does this look like a functioning No, no. | ||
How's it going to represent, how's it going to represent, how's it going to represent the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, one of the greatest states, one of the founding states, home of Valley Forge, Gettysburg, Independence Hall, the launching point across the Delaware for the, for the battle of, you know, the Christmas Eve battle. | ||
How could you, how could you, or Christmas night battle, how could you do any of that? | ||
You can't represent Pennsylvania. | ||
Trust me, they don't, they roll hard in the Senate. | ||
They roll hard in the Senate and they throw sharp elbows. | ||
You're in the, if you're not in the room, not in the deal, how can he, the only place he's going to be is in a recovery room. | ||
It's a disgrace. | ||
It shows you the craveness and how they don't care, how they don't care. | ||
I want to go, but it shows up in these numbers. | ||
Boris, the numbers you sent me this afternoon, and we have done this. | ||
By the way, go back and look at it. | ||
We take the good with the bad. | ||
Remember on the day of the inauguration, right, when they had 50 people show up, Boris, you had the CNN guy, the head guy saying how along the reflecting pole, it was like arms, They had the lights. | ||
It was like arms embracing America. | ||
His numbers were at 61%. | ||
We reported that. | ||
We said if we do our job, we're going to kill it in the crib and get that down to the, wait for it, 30s. | ||
I think we did our job. | ||
With a little assist from the radical Biden administration. | ||
But Boris, give me these numbers today because, and we keep telling you, when you look at the overall number, it's worse because the proxy, we're so partisan on either side, Republicans and Democrats. | ||
You gotta look at the independents. | ||
The independents is the proxy for where the American people are right now. | ||
Boris, walk me through some of this math. | ||
The new civics poll just came out, Steve, on 9 October, just two days ago. | ||
And it is absolutely staggering, terrible for Joe Biden. | ||
Overall, 39-52, approved 39, disapproved 52. | ||
But here, the independents, 29 approval, 59 disapproval. | ||
And state by state, you're looking at absolutely terrible numbers. | ||
Arizona, overall 37-55, independents 29-60. | ||
Independence 2960, Georgia 3555, Independence 3153, Nevada 4052, Independence 3153, Georgia 4052, Independence 3153, Nevada 4052, Independence 3153, Georgia 4052, Independence 3153, Nevada Independence, approved 26, disapproved 65. | ||
Pennsylvania, Independence, approved 33, disapproved 56. | ||
These numbers say exactly what we've been championing here, that the posse is putting shoulder to the wheel. | ||
and that American people have tuned out the Democrats. | ||
They know the Democrats are trying to sell them a bag of goods. | ||
They've turned them off, tuned them out, and they're backing MAGA candidates all across the country. | ||
Pennsylvania, Nevada, Georgia, Arizona, even Rhode Island. | ||
Alan Fung is up by eight in Rhode Island on SAT Magazine. | ||
By the way, he was up by six over the weekend, another two. | ||
Here's the thing I want to make sure people understand. | ||
This is why Joe Biden's not anywhere in the country campaigning right now. | ||
He can't even go into deep blue states. | ||
He can't go to Illinois, Maryland, Rhode Island, Oregon, New York State. | ||
New York Times has a date, nine congressional seats. | ||
New York's got the most in place seats of any state in the nation. | ||
This is also why, Boris, your opinion, Obama, they went to Obama and literally said, this was the article, I think it was in the New York Times, they said, they went to Obama and they said, this is existential. | ||
This election day is existential. | ||
We must have you, you must come out. | ||
He was hit by everybody. | ||
Every candidate said, we don't want Biden. | ||
Obama, you gotta come out and bring Michelle. | ||
Here's what Obama said. | ||
I'm washing my hair that night. | ||
I can't do it, right? | ||
No can do, not one. | ||
And here's the reason, Obama can do the math. | ||
He sees that Biden, when you get a two handle in front of it, Even as bad as it gets, even when Nixon was 20, Nixon's walking to the helicopter. | ||
I think it's 26%, isn't it? | ||
But Boris, it's like 26%. | ||
You never get, a guy's got approval of 29% to get below a third of the American people. | ||
They hate you, right? | ||
They don't want to hear you. | ||
They don't want to see it. | ||
And it turns them off. | ||
Boris, how does that translate now into, we've been talking 30, 40, maybe 50 seats. | ||
Can this actually blow out higher? | ||
Can you get Oregon? | ||
Can you get these seats, Joe Kent in Washington? | ||
Can you get these California seats, these nine in New York? | ||
Tell me where this is going to head. | ||
Kylie in New Jersey. | ||
You've got, you know, you've got, as you just said, Rhode Island. | ||
You've got Washington. | ||
You've got Oregon. | ||
You've got Smiley in the Senate in Washington. | ||
This is going to be a wave that blows 1994, that blows 2010 out of the water in terms of a party taking over. | ||
Defeat is with MAGA like never before. | ||
You're seeing it in all the numbers in disapproval for Biden, in approval for MAGA, and in what the American people are enthusiastic about. | ||
It's dealing with inflation. | ||
It's dealing with sky high gas prices. | ||
It's fighting against weaponization of law enforcement. | ||
Every issue is upside down for Democrats and right side up for MAGA and Republicans. | ||
I'm looking at 70 seats and I'm looking at a four to five seat pickup for Republicans in the Senate on November 8th. | ||
Okay, 70 seats and four to five pickups. | ||
Hold everything and pick up four or five. | ||
Real quickly, everybody remember this. | ||
In 1994 and in 2010, our base was about 174. | ||
So those historic years were off 174. | ||
Trump picked up, what, 14 or 15 seats in 2020. | ||
This is why we know they stole it. | ||
You're going to add another 40, 50. | ||
You're talking about Democrats having Below 160 seats, we can crush this party as a national political institution. | ||
It's all in front of us. | ||
We got to get out the vote massively, got to own it, and we have to make sure they don't steal it. | ||
And they're going to be all over stealing it. | ||
Boris, what is your social media so people can get your email and follow you on social media? | ||
Steve, no doubt about it. | ||
Let's keep bringing the heat day in, day out. | ||
Shoulder to the wheel. | ||
We're fighting and we're winning. | ||
BorisCP.com is the website. | ||
Hot on BorisCP.com. | ||
Hot on Getter at BorisCP. | ||
Twitter at BorisCP. | ||
Hot on Truth Social at Boris. | ||
Hottest on the Gram. | ||
Boris on the Scrubs time. | ||
Stay strong. | ||
God bless and I'll talk to you tomorrow. | ||
Thanks, Boris. | ||
By the way, Nigel Farage will be with us later, where he gave a great interview at CNBC. | ||
We had the German professor, the doctor, on from Alternative Deutschland. | ||
We're going to walk through energy and how it's going to impact your life next in the War Room. | ||
unidentified
|
We will fight till they're all gone. | |
We rejoice when there is no more. | ||
Let's take down the CC. | ||
No more. Let's take down the CC. | ||
What we're seeing in Germany right now is a kind of belated implementation of the Morgenthau plan, namely to kind of attempt to transform the whole country into some kind of green agrarian. | ||
Thank you again. | ||
You too? | ||
Is this? | ||
unidentified
|
Is this? | |
Hang on. | ||
Is this? | ||
You've hit the key point. | ||
After the war. | ||
Let me have it. | ||
OK. | ||
This this is. | ||
There's no other way that you can think about this. | ||
Because this is the decisions being made by your betters are so radical. | ||
So outside the norm and so not backed up by a thing called mathematics, which is essentially when you make decisions in the world that have, you know, policy, impact, business, you got to look at the math. | ||
You can use your gut, you can use instincts. | ||
I always tell people that you can do that, but you got to at least understand what this means. | ||
In this You know, normally it's just in culture with what they're doing with this radical gender ideology and all that, but here in something that's so basic to society and culture of energy. | ||
Remember, Trump's policy was full spectrum energy dominance and get us out of things like in Paris, all this nonsense, this crap that is all bizarrely meaningless, except for the fact to constrain the United States and let the Chinese Communist Party run free. | ||
And the polluters run free. | ||
In Germany, we're talking massive industrial powers. | ||
Germany, France, the United Kingdom, the United States of America. | ||
I think I'd name four of the top five or I'm close. | ||
They are basing their policies and I mean taking dramatic action. | ||
That is only based on fantasy. | ||
We had Dr. I want everybody to see that he's a smart guy, PhD, I think, from Oxford, member of the European Parliament, elected alternative for Deutschland. | ||
I think he's a lawyer, very smart guy. | ||
And he said, hey, these things are not based in reality. | ||
And Germany are hurtling towards these guys are hurtling towards a cold and hungry winter in the 21st century. | ||
What are we talking about? | ||
Because the elites and the decisions are being made here too. | ||
Dave Walsh, the more we get into this energy thing, the more that is a dangerous fantasy, not based upon anything in the physical world that these are based upon. | ||
And they're lying and misrepresenting all the time. | ||
This is one of the top orders of business after we destroyed these guys at the polls on November 8th. | ||
Energy policy has got to be sorted out. | ||
Dave Walsh, walk me through what we're talking about. | ||
Well, Gunnar Beck made some great points, and he has an even better than I way of describing things. | ||
A trip back to medieval times, which I think is the way he used basically referring to the renewable binge in Germany in terms of energy density and effectiveness. | ||
I had one slide, I think Denver might have it, on the solar usefulness per day in Germany. | ||
There's a series of charts on German solar utilization. | ||
I don't know if they might throw that up. | ||
There you go. | ||
This is a month-by-month solar value for power generation in Germany. | ||
Three takeaways on this. | ||
The average time per day that it's useful is three hours. | ||
That's a range of between bad days one hour, good days five hours. | ||
Average three. | ||
The second point is you get three and a half to four whole months here November, December, January, half of February, where it's close to useless. | ||
Way, way below the three hours, more like an hour and a half. | ||
The third issue, though, is the variability of it. | ||
These parabolas by month, you're looking at the daily differential one day to the next. | ||
Inside of each month, you get a 76% variation per day of the solar availability for energy production. | ||
76% variation per day, one day to the next, even inside the best months. | ||
And this is where you cannot rely on this as base load energy, as basic energy. | ||
Again, average three hours a day. | ||
Germany has invested over $200 billion in solar farms alone. | ||
to provide a three-hour-a-day resource massively intermittently, and that's 76% swing day in and day out. That's one issue. He's exactly right. | ||
Depending on this, and displacing coal, nuclear power for this is a trip into prehistory. These are advanced energy forms that the Germans have been very involved in highly developing. | ||
Advanced frame gas turbines and developing sophisticated clean coal plants with the scrubbers, the FGD systems, the bag houses, companies again like Siemens and Largi on back-end environmental controls to make coal plants very, very clean. | ||
Germany has been at the forefront of that, developing that technology, and here it's being completely abandoned for three hour a day, three hour a day, highly intermittent resource. | ||
There's another one here on, if we maybe just jump to it, fertilizer, ammonia plants in Europe. | ||
Europe has, we scale ahead by chart, if Denver can move ahead. | ||
There we go. | ||
24 major ammonia plants in Europe. | ||
Of the 24, at this point in time, 17 have had their production curtailed by 65% and 7 have been closed completely. | ||
Ammonia, the feedstock to make ammonia fertilizers is natural gas. | ||
This crisis, and we've talked about it quite a bit in this forum, as it's going to affect the food supply, come next year especially, about half of the impact of this will be seen already in the fall harvest going on now. | ||
Next year it's going to be all the worse. | ||
Again, seven of these plants closed completely, 17 throttled back by 65% because of the cost of and lack of availability of natural gas to make ammonia fertilizers. | ||
And this is the European continent, who by the way also export. | ||
a lot of ammonia to the third world, developing world for use in fertilizers. So this becomes a huge side effect of the lack of production of natural gas. | ||
Germany has in the lower Saxony about a 30 year supply that would offset the 34% they were recently importing from Russia. | ||
The Groningen gas field in Holland being shuttered between 2025 and 2028, a massive producer, and the North Sea has seen 10 million barrels a day of oil and gas drop to 3.5 million, mainly the UK's efforts, although new Prime Minister bringing back permits for drilling in the North Norway has remained very active there. | ||
England, a huge deficit of 65% of its 10-year-ago production. | ||
So even in Europe, in Western Europe, we have abundant enough gas supplies to go ahead and offset a large enough portion of the Russian supply disturbance. | ||
There might be one more on that. | ||
Hang on for one second. | ||
We'll get to that in a second. | ||
I want to go to the Bank of England just announced that said, hey, they're going to do three more days of quantitative easing, three more days of bailing out the pension funds. | ||
And they told pension funds, that's it. | ||
This is the governor of the Bank of England. | ||
You got till, I think, Thursday. | ||
Friday, you're going to be on your own. | ||
Or excuse me, Friday's the last day. | ||
So you got to figure it out. | ||
The underpinnings of all this is the basic economy and energy that, yes, they've spent too much. | ||
They have too much debt. | ||
They had too much deficits. | ||
But the underpinnings that you could work yourself out of it if you had a real energy plan that supported manufacturing. | ||
Boris Johnson, I think he was wind. | ||
He said when he left, when they threw him out of 10 Downing, he gave that speech. | ||
He said, I'm so proud that 50 percent, 50 percent of our total power for the United Kingdom, by 2030 will be wind power. | ||
That is a danger. | ||
First off, that's a lie, correct? | ||
And number two, it's a dangerous fantasy to base things on that, Dave Walsh. | ||
It is an inflated number, but here's what that's done for them from 2000 to now. | ||
Because of over-dependence on solar that works in the UK, again, like Germany, three hours a day, and wind that's an eight hour a day, highly intermittent, renewable. | ||
You've seen in England since 2000 a 27% per capita reduction in all-in energy supply consumption per person. | ||
Because of this fetish with part-time, intermittent resources that don't produce continuous daily power for industry. | ||
And so in that time period, GDP growth in the UK has been roughly one-half of the percentage since then of the US. | ||
Just an example of the devastation that's wreaked on their economy throughout the whole time period. | ||
England was, as recently as 2004, totally self-sufficient all in on energy. | ||
Transportation, home heating, and electricity. | ||
All in, 100% self-sufficient. | ||
Today, 36% dependent on imported energy, largely now from the U.S. in terms of LNG, a little bit more from Norway in terms of natural gas and oil. | ||
They've basically stopped using coal for power generation, a completely indigenous source that they've got. | ||
They've shut about half, about 40% of their nuclear plants closed. | ||
All about this dependence on intermittent, non-baseload, non-continuous duty sources. | ||
It's often like it won't. | ||
Horrible one. | ||
Horrible one. | ||
You had Dr. Gunnar Beck sitting there talking about the Morgenthau plan at the end of World War II. | ||
Secretary of Treasury Morgenthau. | ||
Some guys kind of planned to take all the industrial production, just take it out brick by brick, factory by factory, and turn it into a pasture. | ||
Pastoral. | ||
To turn it back to, like, the 9th century. | ||
That's what people thought. | ||
And it was ruled, no, you can't do that. | ||
It's absurd. | ||
We can't do it. | ||
He said the German elites are essentially doing that today. | ||
They're doing that today. | ||
My concern, and that's our ally in the third biggest industrial power, we're on that spectrum. | ||
We're not as radical as they are, but where are we on that spectrum right now, Dave Walsh? | ||
And this is the conversation that has to be had about the lunacy of what is being put forward, sir. | ||
I'm going to suggest already that one-fourth of the American population, and about 20% of its industry and commercial activity, has been damaged by part-time intermittent power resources stemming from the over-adoption of renewables that are part-time and intermittent in California, in Colorado, in Minnesota, and Texas. | ||
You can count 80 million people already impaired by part-time intermittent resources causing reserve margins to be negative in California, only 8.6 to 9 percent in Texas. Colorado, 40 percent dependent on wind. Minnesota, moving in the same direction. So you've got 80 million people out of 330 million already impacted by power outages, by service curtailments announced over in the Kaiso region of California, in Ericott in Texas, periodically now in Colorado because | ||
of shortages already impacting this country. I'm gonna keep you through the break. | ||
And the question I want you to answer, on those indices, isn't that kind of a developing nation? | ||
Kind of a third world nation? | ||
Their energy? | ||
Short commercial break. | ||
Dave Walsh. | ||
Mike Cernovich and Dave Walsh joins. | ||
Hang on, Dave. | ||
See, after the break, Cernovich joins us also. | ||
And Tina Peters. | ||
unidentified
|
Spread the word all through Hong Kong. | |
We will fight till they're all gone. | ||
We rejoice when there's no more. | ||
Let's take down the CCP. | ||
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, welcome back. | ||
MyPillow.com, promo code WARROOM. | ||
Go there today, support the armor-piercing shell. | ||
Also, your humble servants at War Room and, of course, the great manufacturing company up in Minnesota that we now just found out has third-world power supply. | ||
MyPillow.com promo code Warren. | ||
We got the 2988, the sheet set, but it's so much more. | ||
Go check it out. | ||
You got the buy one get ones free. | ||
You got bathrobes, towels, sheets, pillows, slippers, moccasins, all of it. | ||
All of your holiday and Christmas needs. | ||
Did I say that before? | ||
I'm always on people about that. | ||
Did I actually say that before Halloween? | ||
Let me withdraw that. | ||
Just go to MyPillow.com. | ||
I'm getting bad as Walmart. | ||
Remember, Walmart pulled Portland down. | ||
Okay, Walsh. | ||
I want to make sure, and this is a theme that we're building for this audience, so you become knowledgeable, because this is going to be a big deal. | ||
We have to break this insanity, and it's insanity. | ||
The indices you just showed me of power generation, the ability to, you know, continuous base load, right? | ||
And I'm not talking, I love Maryland, but I think 3% of the total GDP of Maryland's manufacturing, Delaware same. | ||
These are not manufacturing states. | ||
So I'm not talking about Delaware and Maryland and other states that are more service oriented and smaller in population. | ||
I'm talking about California, which I think is the seventh biggest economy in the world individually, and the center of the greatest tech center, Silicon Valley, and Texas, which is now the new Silicon Valley around Austin. | ||
Are you telling me when I compare an apple to apple because of policies and what, what, uh, our leaders have done is that these 80 million people, including Texas and California are essentially living in what you would describe as a third world power generation country, sir? | ||
Yes, they are. | ||
I mean, California, California imports about 35% of its electrical energy today. | ||
So it's already 35% short and of what it uses, 37% are renewable part-time resources, wind, mainly solar more than wind, which provides out there about eight to eight and a half hours a day of utilizable power terminating at 4 p.m. | ||
when their load curve shoots through the roof when everyone gets home. | ||
So that's why you had the brownouts and service curtailments in Southern Cal just a few weeks ago when it got hot. | ||
And a resilient, robust energy system is supposed to be in place, utilities to support the peak times of heat and cold. | ||
And we can't do that anymore. | ||
OK, look, I understand Newsom because he's going to be putting forward the California model. | ||
And this is, by the way, we're having Peter McCulloch on next hour. | ||
Talk about the Vax. | ||
The underlying is not just the economy and crime. | ||
It's all that. | ||
But there's something else. | ||
People, this energy thing is big. | ||
I'm telling you, it's eating on people all over. | ||
And it ain't just they say, oh, the psychology of seeing a gas eight bucks. | ||
It's it's it's more than that. | ||
I'm telling you, you can't be doing these rolling brownouts in the United States of America. | ||
It's not going to work. | ||
People are sitting there going, what in the hell are we doing? | ||
I understand Newsom and the California model. | ||
Just walk our audience through the great state of Texas, which is the bastion of so much freedom, like the free state of Florida. | ||
The Texas folks down there, they got their own way of rolling. | ||
How did Texas get hooked up into the third world power generation program, Dave Walsh? | ||
Well, several, several administrations ago, the Texas has its own grid. | ||
It's called Aircon. | ||
It's a, it's a small grid cause it's only one state. | ||
Most of the grids are seven, eight states in one large grid, like Miso is eight states. | ||
Texas has its own grid. | ||
Texas, uh, policymakers decided, uh, 10 to 15 years ago to get completely on board with deregulation. | ||
They separated the retail electricity sales distribution from generation totally. | ||
and let the free market decide that it wouldn't, the state, the ERCOT wouldn't provide what are known as capacity payments to provide some of the funding of fixed cost of a new base load generating facility. So they abandoned the notion of capacity payments. Between not having capacity payments and all of the incentives on renewables, investment tax credit and other, developers invested only in renewables. | ||
So you've landed at a massive growth in wind power, now 27% of their total capacity, and very limited to almost nil the last 10 years, new base load plant building, combined cycle, Coal. | ||
Coal was going to be a big player in and around Dallas in the late part of up through 2010. | ||
Eight coal plants were going to be built. | ||
They were all canceled. | ||
But the lack of capacity payments to finance major new baseload continuous duty plants led to this solar binge, wind binge, along with the fact of the constrained grid, because it doesn't really have strong interconnection with Nebraska, with Oklahoma, with Louisiana, that minor interconnect with New Mexico, a little bit with Louisiana in the east. | ||
Mainly it's a self-contained grid, so it needs 30% reserve margin. | ||
It has about nine. | ||
So you've got a massive shortfall of generation in Texas, in the Texas market. | ||
Easily addressed. | ||
Okay, talk to me about that. | ||
How are they going to easily address this? | ||
I'm going to go to Tina Peters here in a second, but I'm telling you folks, this is going to be big firestorms over this energy thing to get back to full spectrum energy dominance, which is the Trump plan. | ||
And we're going to get to full spectrum energy dominance. | ||
So how's Texas going to unwind from this situation? | ||
Very simply, they need to provide, like in the Upper Midwest and Northeast, a capacity payment structure to facilitate an incent. | ||
Uh, independent money to invest in building several large combined cycle plants, possibly several coal plants, add about 5,000 megawatts of base load generation that would mainly solve their issues for the next 15 years going forward. | ||
Is the woke, you're telling me out of Austin, Texas, the University of Texas, all the woke-ism they got in all these universities, they're going to allow Texas to start building coal plants? | ||
Is that your, that, that's your plan? | ||
Coal is clean, Steve, and great German and American technology and Japanese technology have made it so. | ||
I went to school down in Appalachia. | ||
I'm all for coal. | ||
I'm saying you're going to sell that to the University of Texas? | ||
Well, to the extent we don't, they can build combined cycle plants, which are equally cost-effective, but they too are fossil fuel. | ||
But that's the state-of-the-art technology today. | ||
Actually, combined cycle, which is naturally gas-fired, they have a ton of to go ahead and solve their issues. | ||
Plus, embellish their interconnect with Oklahoma and Nebraska and with Louisiana. | ||
I get it. | ||
I get it. | ||
As you see it right now, You've been dead right on this for a year now. | ||
Europe's going to have a cold and hungry winter. | ||
What's going to happen? | ||
Give me 60 seconds. | ||
And by the way, he said it first. | ||
He said it six months ago. | ||
It's going to roll down to the third world. | ||
This is where you're going to have famine. | ||
This is where you're going to have famine. | ||
This is all going to roll down the thing on the fertilizer. | ||
What's going to happen? | ||
Give me 60 seconds on America. | ||
What's going to happen here? | ||
If our, even on the Republican side, if our folks don't wake up to the fact of, even though when they take polls, solar seems to be popular, wind popular, because of the notion of, well, it's free. | ||
It's not free. | ||
As our guys come to the realization on the Republican side also that You need baseload continuous-duty electricity because there really is no load bank or meaningful storage of any kind for a city, a township, a county, a state. | ||
It hasn't been invented yet. | ||
Scalable, cost-effective storage. | ||
Even renewables. | ||
Only 1.5% of installed renewables are backed up by battery storage. | ||
Zero percentage of big plant capacity. | ||
One, it doesn't need to be. | ||
But secondly, it really hasn't been invented. | ||
You know, a whole 5,000 square miles of battery. | ||
You can't get the battery right. | ||
You can't get the battery right for the car. | ||
You're not getting the load bank. | ||
Right. | ||
Anyway, Dave, you've been fabulous. | ||
There is no such thing. | ||
It's another fantasy. | ||
They're living in fantasy land. | ||
The physics here does not match the policy of where they're taking us. | ||
Where do people go to get you on social media now? | ||
Dave Vongetter at Dave Walsh Energy. | ||
Appreciate it. | ||
Walsh, thank you very much. | ||
Fantastic. | ||
I got Cernovich. | ||
Let me bring Mike Cernovich up. | ||
Mike is one of the leaders, obviously, in social media. | ||
Mike, I wanted to have you on today. | ||
We're four weeks away, and I realize you've kind of stepped back from the day-to-day practicality of hardball politics, which in 2016 you were in the middle of. | ||
But just where do you think the country is, and where do you think we stand four weeks from this midterm election, sir? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, it's hard to know because you can't trust any polling. | |
You can't trust any data that you're seeing, right? | ||
Because remember, we gotta remember past this prologue. | ||
Remember in 2020, the most historic election of my lifetime and yours, we were told that the Republicans were going to lose, I think, seven Senate seats and 20-something House seats. | ||
I don't know if people ever went back because there was so much focus on Trump. | ||
People didn't go back and look at all the predictions on all the races that Republicans were supposed to lose. | ||
And I believe, you would know better than me, there were 37 toss-up elections and Republicans were 37-0, I think. | ||
Someone can fact check. | ||
No, no, you're right. | ||
The Cook report we did yesterday, you're right. | ||
37-0. | ||
We picked up 15 House seats and a couple of Senate seats. | ||
unidentified
|
Right, right. | |
You think we're in the same jam now? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, so the polls are saying Republicans are barely going to scrape by or maybe not take it. | |
And I think, well, I can't look at that data objectively because I remember that Republicans were going to lose all these seats and they were 37-0 or whatever in 2020, so I don't believe any of that. | ||
I do know, and I talked about this yesterday, I'm getting a lot of messaging from people who are saying, I can't believe how Biden is. | ||
And you can confirm that I said this. | ||
You know, people who are listening might not agree with my point of view, but what I told you and other people in 2020 was, I don't care who wins. | ||
And people got really mad. | ||
Why not? | ||
I said, because if Trump wins, we'll have four more good years. | ||
And if Biden wins, then morally, I feel like with a clean conscience, I don't have to feel bad for what happens, right? | ||
Because so much about life and about trying to follow God and live a good life is knowing when am I just wasting my time with people. | ||
And if people don't want to vote for Blake Masters and Joe Kent and JD Vance after two years of Biden, Then I, when things get even worse than they are now, which, oh, they're going to get worse than double digit inflation, $7 gas, potential for World War III. | ||
At the very least, there's environmental catastrophe Nord Stream 2, right? | ||
It's like, where's Greta to talk about all that methane gas being pumped out through the ocean? | ||
Suddenly we don't care about environmental catastrophes anymore. | ||
And if people don't want to vote for these gold standard candidates, then I don't care, man. | ||
I'm just telling you that personally, as a matter of karma, as a matter of destiny, I believe that people want to live in nihilism. | ||
Because they have Blake Masters, they have Joe, they have gold standard people. | ||
You can say, oh, well, it doesn't matter who you vote for when your choice is Mitt Romney. | ||
Yeah, I agree with that. | ||
If you're talking about the difference between Ben Sasse, and Mitt Romney or that Spencer Cox guy out of Utah with the pronouns in his bio, sure if those are your choices then I completely understand your point of view, but if you can't get out to vote for Joe Kent and Blake Masters and JD Vance and these gold standard candidates then how am I supposed to feel bad when things get even worse? | ||
So that's how I feel analytically. | ||
I think that the polls are even more off now than they were in 2020. | ||
And spiritually, I think that 2022 is the most important spiritual election maybe of our life or maybe 2016 was because It's come to Jesus moment for everybody. | ||
Are you going to vote for these people? | ||
Are you going to get out to vote for people? | ||
Are you going to be out there whining at a tea party? | ||
It doesn't matter! | ||
It doesn't matter who you vote for! | ||
Then get off Twitter! | ||
I'm so tired of that! | ||
Get off Twitter! | ||
Get away from me! | ||
It doesn't matter what you tell me to do! | ||
Fine! | ||
Go be like, you know, my three-year-old who throws a tantrum. | ||
And I just, when my kid throws a tantrum, I go, you know, you can throw tantrums. | ||
I don't mind. | ||
But you got to do it in the other room. | ||
That's how I feel. | ||
We have real candidates on the ballot. | ||
JD Vance smoked Tim Ryan. | ||
Tim Ryan, I don't know if you saw the video clip Don Jr. | ||
posted where J.D. | ||
said, hey man, the only reason 10-year-olds are getting raped is because of you and because of your immigration policy. | ||
And Ryan, you can see the life draining from his face. | ||
He had no response. | ||
How can people not be amped, right? | ||
These are the kind of people you get to vote for in November, and more importantly, bring people out to vote for, and more importantly, register people to vote for. | ||
So I think people should be really hyped for November. | ||
Uh, Mike, hang over a second. | ||
We had a little tough time getting you up. | ||
I got Tina Peters. | ||
I got the Mike Cernovich. | ||
Gonna take a short commercial break. | ||
I guess that's the guerrilla mindset. | ||
Joe Kent, Blake Masters, JD Vance. | ||
I agree. | ||
I watched the debate last night. | ||
He owned Tim Ryan from start to finish. | ||
Short commercial break. | ||
return with mike cernovich in a moment okay everybody i want everybody to go together You can get the immersive experience. | ||
It's all free. | ||
Go to Getter. | ||
Download the app. | ||
We got the whole contributor team. | ||
Dave Walsh, Navarro, Cortez, myself, everybody. | ||
Go check it out. | ||
Also, Turning Point USA slash Worm. | ||
Go there. | ||
They got this huge event in mid-December. | ||
Charlie Kirk, Jack Posobiec, the entire team. | ||
Plus, you can see Kirk's book, The College Scam. | ||
Remember, Charlie didn't go to college. | ||
You'll see why and why this trillion dollars being dumped on your shoulders all comes from the college cartel. | ||
I want to go back. | ||
Mike, I want to have you back and develop this theme I've seen in your social media about DeSantis and Trump and all of it because people don't, a lot of people may not realize today, President Trump, one of the reasons he's President of the United States in 16, Cernovich was the cutting edge of social media about that. | ||
But everybody asked me, we only got a couple of minutes. | ||
Everybody asked me, what is Cernovich reading? | ||
Where is he spending his time? | ||
Give me a minute or two on that. | ||
You said the data's all wrong, but where are you spending your time? | ||
What are you reading right now? | ||
unidentified
|
One of the best things that people can do is watch the really far extreme areas and see where they're tilting, right? | |
Because it's hard to know where the middle wobblers are going to go. | ||
And one race, one election to watch is Los Angeles. | ||
Rick Ruse is a Republican, and you know, he's in the game. | ||
He's not what we would consider A MAGA guy or an America First guy, but just the fact that a Republican is putting on a competitive race in Los Angeles. | ||
And by the way, the LA City Council thing, maybe there's a whole other segment to talk about because that's really interesting. | ||
Lee Zeldin is in the game in New York! | ||
Is he going to win? | ||
I don't know, but he's in the game. | ||
That would have been unthinkable, right? | ||
Can you imagine in 2016 to say Lee Zeldin is in the game in a gubernatorial race in New York, far left wing extremist New York. | ||
And that's what I'm watching. | ||
I'm watching these really crazy far left wing places. | ||
Where you can't go out to eat now, you might get mugged. | ||
You might be in a stroller and get sucker punched. | ||
If you're Jewish and you walk in the streets of New York, you might get literally murdered by people. | ||
You might get stabbed in the subway. | ||
Right? | ||
That's what the Democrats are ushering in. | ||
And AOC and the far left, they are chaos demons and they want that. | ||
But most people, there are some sensible Democrats, and I think that we're going to see a big push towards the middle. | ||
So that's what I'm watching, those local Mike, how do people get to you on social media? | ||
What's the easiest way to follow you? | ||
Website? | ||
Books? | ||
So Zeldin might lose, but he's still moving the needle and that's worth watching. | ||
Huge. | ||
I think the Zeldin race, we're going to actually have some people on about that Zeldin race tomorrow, Thursday and Friday. | ||
Mike, how do people get to you on social media? | ||
What's the easiest way to follow you? | ||
Website, books, all of it? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, just at Cernovich at Twitter, also on Telegram, also at Cernovich. | |
And I'm still reading all this stuff, man, even if I'm not in the game, so to speak. | ||
I'm still watching. | ||
The spiritual guru of ours, Mike Cernovich. | ||
By the way, you got to go to his Twitter account. | ||
It's quite insightful and it comes in a little hot. | ||
Cernovich, thank you very much for being on today. | ||
unidentified
|
Always a pleasure. | |
Let's go Tina Peters today, Associated Press broke this story. | ||
30, Jenna Griswold and Tina Peters warn the nation about this woman. | ||
30,000 applications to vote going out to non-citizens in the state of Colorado because of a technical glitch. | ||
Tina Peters, what do we know from this morning? | ||
What is going on in Colorado? | ||
And is the woman who quote unquote beat you in the primary, is she putting, is she holding Jenna Griswold's feet to the fire. | ||
unidentified
|
She is doing nothing, Steve. | |
She has not even run since she won so-called run the primary, which we know did not happen because that was up 47% in a three-way race. | ||
So we know the fix was in. | ||
We saw that play out with report numbers three, the Mason County Report Number 3. | ||
So that was all the fix was in. | ||
I was actually should have been her opponent, but I was such a threat to her. | ||
But this is what's happening. | ||
So there is an issue with eligible, but unregistered EBU mailing done by the state for their agreement with Eric. | ||
And as many people know, Eric, the Electronic Registration Information Center that controls the voter registration is was founded and by a man David Becker. | ||
Just do your homework on David Becker. | ||
He hates America. | ||
He hates conservatives. | ||
I mean, to the point where it's just vile. | ||
But this mailing goes to people that Eric identifies as potentially eligible to register to vote, but that are not currently registered. | ||
So these reports include individuals who have driver's license, ID cards, And it's protected by the Driver's Privacy Protection Act of 1990. | ||
We've got to bounce, but hang on, we got to bounce just real quickly. | ||
Are any of these people going to get registered to vote in this election cycle in the next four weeks, to your knowledge? | ||
unidentified
|
You know, anything is possible in this corrupt, in this corrupt administration in this state. | |
You know, it's obvious from them feeding in elections already. | ||
We've identified that they delete the evidence. | ||
Somebody just went to prison because in another state that happened to say something bad about Jenna Griswold. | ||
What I want to know is why isn't she in prison for deleting election records and having these remote devices? | ||
And then, I mean, there's so much. | ||
Steve, that's going on in Colorado. | ||
We have to get this recount done that I paid for. | ||
And so we're going to the Supreme Court. | ||
We need to get it done. | ||
Where do people go right now to find out the status of all this, to recount your case, all of it? | ||
Where do they go? | ||
unidentified
|
OK, they can go on Getter, Tina Peters 2022, or the real Tina Peters on Telegram. | |
I'm updating it moment by moment. | ||
And so they can go there and social at Tina Peters. | ||
And of course, my website. | ||
We're going to have you back on. | ||
This is an explosive story, and Tina Peters warned us about Griswold. | ||
Tina, thank you. | ||
Let me go to Arizona. | ||
Another big breaking story. | ||
Catholics for Catholics, a new group. | ||
John, yep. | ||
John, we got about a minute. | ||
Tell us what you got going on. | ||
It's going to be a big event this week. | ||
unidentified
|
Steve, October 13th, Feast of Our Lady of Fatima. | |
We have a situation in Arizona where we have the five most important races, governor, secretary of state, Senate and two key congressionals, and all of them are running up, all the GOP are running up against those Democrats who declare themselves as Catholics, which begs the question, what is a Catholic? | ||
What does it mean? | ||
How is it possible that so many people can use that term and move voters, it's a key voting segment, to the polls to vote for them by just throwing out that word? | ||
And as a Catholic, Steve, you're Catholic too, we have to reclaim what that word actually means. | ||
So we're doing an event, there's Thursday night, Blake Masters, Mark Fincham, The team and General Michael Flynn, and a favorite of yours as well, Father James Altman, will be spearheading this event and rallying the troops here in Arizona. | ||
More to follow. | ||
That is hardcore. | ||
Okay, where do you go on social media? | ||
We'll have you back on tomorrow. | ||
Where do they go tonight on social media to find out about this? | ||
unidentified
|
C4C.com. | |
That's the letter C. F-O-R-C.com. | ||
John, yep. | ||
Catholics for Catholics. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
Look forward to having you back on tomorrow. | ||
OK, we are going to talk about a debate that's going to take place in Washington, D.C. | ||
this week about the walkaway movement. | ||
It's going to be incredible. | ||
And Dr. Peter McCullough next. |