Speaker | Time | Text |
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This is the primal scream of a dying regime. | ||
unidentified
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Pray for our enemies, because we're going medieval on these people. | |
You're just not going to get a free shot at all these networks lying about the people. | ||
The people have had a belly full of it. | ||
I know you don't like hearing that. | ||
I know you try to do everything in the world to stop that, but you're not going to stop it. | ||
It's going to happen. | ||
And where do people like that go to share the big line? | ||
MAGA media. I wish in my soul, I wish that any of these people had a conscience. | ||
unidentified
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Ask yourself, what is my task and what is my purpose? | |
If that answer is to save my country, this country will be saved. | ||
unidentified
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War Room, here's your host, Stephen K. Bannon. | |
So, I will tell you first what feels different. | ||
As you mentioned, we're living in a post-Roe era, and that was something that was met with applause every time someone took to the stage to say just that. | ||
And then, of course, there's signs around here that say, I'm living in a post-Roe generation. | ||
And so for people who are here, these, of course, we know these are opponents to abortion rights. | ||
And for them, when we ask them, hey, Roe was overturned. | ||
We know that this was the platform for March for Life. | ||
It was started the year after Roe v. | ||
Wade as a way to protest Roe v. | ||
Wade. And so for them, my question was, so you're still here. | ||
What keeps you here? And so what I'm seeing from both sides is they say they were galvanized by Dobbs in very different ways. | ||
We had a chance to speak to both sides. | ||
Take a listen. Students for Life of America was founded as a post-Roe organization because we always envisioned this day when it would happen. | ||
Not if Roe would be reversed, but when. | ||
And now that it has, we've already mobilized thousands of students all over the country. | ||
And so to think that, oh, our work is done, well, our work just begun. | ||
Like, we've got 50 individual state-by-state battles that we need to tackle. | ||
And even so, this is a culture war. | ||
The mission of Students for Life is not just to make abortion illegal, it's to make abortion unthinkable. | ||
And so there is a reason why their march takes them to the Supreme Court and then right over here to the Capitol. | ||
Because for them, they say this is where the next step is. | ||
We know that abortion right now on a state level, roughly two dozen, we're approaching the two dozen level states that have either banned or severely limited abortion. | ||
We know that there are three. There is an ongoing legal battle. | ||
And the conversation around abortion and abortion access has dramatically changed. | ||
We know the FDA has changed their guidance around pharmacies being able to dispense abortion pills, which makes abortion access even easier. | ||
So when it comes to the wins and losses here, Roe was overturned as we know. | ||
But then with that FDA guidance change, that was something that was seen as, you know, a success for are proponents of abortion rights. | ||
So again, in terms of the mood here, Joe, I think the overall theme is that both sides are galvanized just in very different ways. | ||
The work is far from over for them. | ||
Both sides are galvanized. | ||
Saturday, 21 January, Year of Our Lord, 2023. | ||
We're going to go from the Vatican to Ukraine battlefield, to the RNC fight, to the vaccines, the death and destruction of the vax, all of it. Captain Bannon is going to... | ||
Co-host with me for a while, thank you, about the March for Life, also about the battle tanks in the Ukraine. | ||
Let's go first to Father Frank Pavone. | ||
Father Frank, you can't join us in studio this morning because you had to fly out of here last night, and you're at, I believe it's the second largest March for Life in the country. | ||
People will be very surprised where it is. | ||
Tell us where you are, sir. Hi, Steve. | ||
unidentified
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I'm in San Francisco. | |
We got in here late last night, and today, you're right, it's the second-largest March for Life in the country every year. | ||
It's called the West Coast Walk for Life, and it'll be getting underway in a few hours. | ||
Steve, what we're going to do first this morning is go to Planned Parenthood. | ||
As soon as I finish speaking with you, we'll be going over to Planned Parenthood, doing the protests there. | ||
Then we're going to have another one of those Silent No More gatherings, which concluded the march yesterday. | ||
Men and women who've lost children to abortion speaking out, sharing their stories. | ||
And then we'll have the rally, and we'll be walking tens of thousands through the streets of San Francisco doing exactly what we did yesterday in Washington, bearing witness to life. | ||
Talk to us, you know, yesterday, we've got Terry Schilling and Jason Jones who are going to come on a little later, but give me your perception of, because there's been this controversy, the March for Life has always been the biggest event in the calendar for the pro-life movement. | ||
What was your take on the energy yesterday and the commitment at the federal level? | ||
We understand people are talking about the states, but what is your assessment of where the March for Life, the annual event, goes from here? | ||
unidentified
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I think the energy level was similar to what it has been in past marches. | |
The folks that were marching realized that there's work to do on the federal level. | ||
At this point, a lot of it is defensive. | ||
We're creating a block to the extremism of what the Democrats want to do on abortion. | ||
They want to just get rid of all the state limits. | ||
I was talking with a number of the members of Congress yesterday who were marching. | ||
And we were talking exactly about that, that obviously we can't get any pro-life laws passed in the next two years. | ||
We're going to have to do well in the 2024 elections. | ||
But we could certainly put a roadblock up to what the other side wants to do. | ||
And people, we can never tire of reminding people what it is they want to do. | ||
They want to not only codify, they say codify Roe v. | ||
Wade, they don't even know what they're talking about, because Roe v. | ||
Wade itself allowed the states to limit and even prohibit abortions at certain stages. | ||
But what they're trying to say is, we want abortion to be a fundamental right in the law, no exceptions, no restrictions, right through birth. | ||
And so the members in Congress, they need to be blocking that. | ||
And what they also want to do by means of those proposals is to take away all the pro-life measures that are out in the states, including parental involvement laws, which most states have, where a parent would be involved in an abortion decision of a minor-aged daughter. | ||
So the energy was high. | ||
There's still some need, I think. | ||
You know, people were asking me, what's the next step for the movement? | ||
I'll tell you what it is. We have to fully understand what Dobbs said, because I don't think that the pro-life movement has fully absorbed and fully analyzed what Dobbs did and didn't say. | ||
That's got to be the starting point. | ||
Once we know that, we go to work, and we are going to work in all the 50 states. | ||
Well, I tell you what, we want to get you on next week and take some time and explain that because that's the essential starting point. | ||
What exactly was the ruling? | ||
What's the implications? And then how do you combat this on a state-by-state basis and at the federal government? | ||
Father Brevon, we know you've got to go over to Planned Parenthood. | ||
Thank you so much. I know you got in late, and this is very early on the West Coast, but I think people are kind of surprised already. | ||
I can tell you in the chat that San Francisco has the second biggest pro-life movement in the country. | ||
That's old San Francisco. | ||
That's the original San Francisco we know and love. | ||
Father, how do people follow you today, and where do they go to get you at Priests for Life? | ||
unidentified
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Okay, so it's FRFrankPavone on all the major social media platforms, FRFrankPavone, and we broadcast at endabortion.tv, endabortion.tv. | |
Thanks, Steve. Thank you, Father. | ||
Appreciate it, Father Frank Pavone. | ||
I want to talk about the prayer service. By the way, let's bring in Terry Schilling. | ||
Terry, thank you, American Principles Project. | ||
Mo, you were actually at the prayer service yesterday. | ||
Was there a disruption? | ||
There were a few disruptions, and at first you thought that people were just being moved by the Holy Spirit, and then you realized when you actually listened to what they were saying that they were counter-protesters and trying to disturb the prayer service going on. | ||
unidentified
|
So first you thought they were testifying, or people thought they were testifying. | |
There were a few Catholic nurses actually that thought they were testifying as well. | ||
And then when they brought the words non-binary and transgender up, you knew that they weren't testifying, that they were trying to disrupt the service. | ||
And they were escorted out and nothing stopped us. | ||
They actually came into Constitution Hall and disrupted a prayer service? | ||
Mm-hmm. There were probably about four or five of them. | ||
Wow. Nothing too low. | ||
Terry, give us your assessment of what Father Parvon said. | ||
First off, is Father Parvon right? | ||
Does the life movement not fully understand exactly what the decision was to the Supreme Court and the implications of that, sir? No, that's exactly right. | ||
Thanks for having me, Steve. So there's a big debate right now across the country. | ||
Is abortion just a state's issue or is this a both and? | ||
Right? And I think that the real answer is that this is a both and. | ||
We need to use the states to protect as many lives as possible. | ||
But at the end of the day, this is a federal issue. | ||
Either you have a constitutional right to life or you don't. | ||
And the thing is, you know, Benedict XVI passed away. | ||
And he said that the right to life presupposes all other rights. | ||
It's baked into the cake. | ||
And so we need to reassess our federal strategy, our state strategy. | ||
I love what the states are doing. | ||
They're experimenting. | ||
They're pushing the limits. And I think there's a lot to learn at the federal level about this. | ||
The problem, though, Steve, is that these federal legislators are scared to death of this issue. | ||
They view it as a losing political issue, so much to the point where they don't even attack Democrats for their support of late-term abortion. | ||
One of the biggest problems for why we didn't have as big of wins in 2022 as we should have. | ||
But no, Father Pavone's right. | ||
There's a big question as to where the pro-life movement goes. | ||
But hang on. Ronna was on yesterday and said that, in fact, she was at the prayer service. | ||
She actually gave a short talk and saying that we're the pro-life party. | ||
Talk to me about, because even President Trump came out with that, you know, hey, it's, you know, it's rape, incest, the big three, I think he called it, is how did these politicians get spooked? | ||
Because President Trump's done more than any president ever about this issue since he got the three Supreme Court justices that have basically swung it. | ||
And those were not easy fights. | ||
He had every opportunity to back off and he would not. | ||
Why are people concerned? | ||
Are they not getting the message? | ||
Because you can definitely tell. | ||
They're definitely gun-shy. | ||
And I think it's guys like Lindsey Graham just coming in and dropping that thing that time he won the federal law. | ||
I think that that was done for other reasons than supporting this. | ||
So it looks like a mess up here in Capitol Hill. | ||
At least it looks for me as a... | ||
On the political side, there's no messaging. | ||
People are gun shy. They got, as they say about quarterbacks, they got happy feet. | ||
They don't really want to take a stand on this, which was not what it was before the ruling. | ||
Am I misperceiving this, sir? | ||
No, you know, it reminds me a lot of the Obamacare fight, right? | ||
Republicans in the House, I think they voted over 150 times to repeal Obamacare. | ||
But then when it was time to actually get the job done, they failed to do it. | ||
And I think that's very similar with abortion. | ||
When it didn't matter, Republicans were totally fine voting however way they had to. | ||
But the moment that the heat turns up and things start to get a little bit dicey, these guys are all pointing to their 100 % pro-life record and then saying, you know, but this just isn't the time to do it. | ||
And they want to punt back to the state. | ||
Steve, a pro-life movement without a federal solution is not a pro-life movement at all. | ||
And frankly, it's because the left will never stop trying to codify Roe. | ||
They'll never stop trying to force abortion access in all of the states, including the red states. | ||
This is ultimately a federal fight, regardless of what the political tactics are from these strategies. | ||
It's mostly the consultant class. | ||
They look at this issue of abortion as something that only works with the base. | ||
They don't believe it works with Latinos and Hispanics and voters that we really need to win back. | ||
But the reality is that Democrat voting people, they don't know how extreme their party is. | ||
They don't know that Democrats want Abortion in the ninth month when the baby's eight pounds in the womb funded by tax dollars. | ||
And we need to do a better job of making sure the American people know, voters know, just how extreme the Democratic Party is. | ||
When you talk about extreme, how does this inform their whole policy about coming after the family? | ||
Because I believe with you that the centerpiece of what we have to have going forward is the American family, the economics around it, the protection of it, the cultural aspects of it. | ||
The Democrats are radical in abortion, but they're even as radical about destruction of basically the nuclear family, sir? Yes, that's exactly right. | ||
Abortion is pivotal in their fight to abolish the family. | ||
Humanity has been built on unplanned pregnancies, to put it lightly. | ||
But what happens when you actually have a baby and you get married is you're forced to, for the first time in your life, to really grow up. | ||
Your life becomes much less about you and almost entirely about your spouse and your newborn child. | ||
And what the left is trying to do is they're trying to coddle Americans and extend our childhood You really can't understand life until you have children. | ||
You don't start living for other people. | ||
You don't start thinking about your community. | ||
All of this is tied together in the abolition of the family. | ||
Abortion is their premier sacrament in trying to destroy this country and trying to destroy the family. | ||
How do people get to American Principles Project and you, Terry? | ||
It's just americanprinciplesproject.org, or you can find us across the web on my social media at shilling1776. | ||
I have a pretty funny video on my Twitter right now. | ||
It's pinned to the top. The top five things I've had to apologize to my wife over. | ||
It's all true, and I think people will appreciate it. | ||
Terry Schilling, thank you very much. | ||
By the way, you had another great video the other day, too. | ||
We'll put it up later. Terry Schilling, thank you very much for joining us. | ||
unidentified
|
Thanks, Steve. Okay, we've got Mo Bannon. | |
We're going to add Jason Jones, John Fredericks, Naomi Wolf, Todd Benzman, Rebecca Koffler. Ben Harnwell and others. | ||
It's jammed. | ||
It's a workday here. | ||
Tell me about Henry Barber, his role in this, because he's a renowned never-Trumper, anti-Trumper. Is he in charge of what the audit or the candidate audit? | ||
Because I think he's a consultant also. | ||
Do you have consultants like that actually in charge of these things and reviewing this? | ||
Henry's an RNC member from Mississippi. | ||
I don't know of Henry as being a consultant, but he's a member of the RNC, and I don't think he's a never-Trumper either. | ||
unidentified
|
Let's bring in Henry Barber. | |
He's a Republican National Committee member. | ||
Yes, I'm proud on New Day to endorse Marco Rubio for president. | ||
Is that enough for Rubio to stop Donald Trump's momentum? | ||
At the end of the day, we've got to win the White House, and Marco Rubio is our best contrast with Hillary Clinton. | ||
The reason that President Trump lost those voters in the suburban areas was just the division. | ||
People got tired of it. | ||
Let's go. Henry's not an Ever-Trumper. | ||
unidentified
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Okay. I don't think so. | |
Nine states. I think there's Tennessee, Texas, and Arizona, among six others, have voted no confidence in that they either support Harmeet or they want a change of leadership. | ||
How does that set with you? | ||
You know, I think there's been a lot of misinformation put out from Harmeet's campaign. | ||
You say Harmeet's putting out false information. | ||
unidentified
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Can you give us a highlight reel of that? | |
I'm not going to go down to that level, but there's been a lot of false information out there. | ||
When you say false information, is she lying about you? | ||
I think there's been a lot of lies about me, yes. | ||
And the top one or two lies about you would be what? | ||
Well, I think just the beginning of that, a lot of the stuff about the spending has been misinterpreted. | ||
Do you believe that President Trump won in 2020 and was stolen, rightfully, since he got 74 million votes, that he is the rightful nominee and we've got to take another shot at this or we've lost everything, every purpose as a party? | ||
I mean, listen, I think there were all types of problems in 2020. | ||
You know, you have Carrie Lake on your show all the time, but coming out of her gubernatorial race, her opponent wouldn't endorse her. | ||
You had a Republican mayor in Mesa say, I'm not going to support her. | ||
You had the former state party chair in Arizona start a pack against her. | ||
And guess what? You didn't win that governorship. | ||
And it's mainly because of Republican on Republican infighting. | ||
Carrie Lake, I think, is one of the most magnificent candidates we've had. | ||
And there's no doubt, when you look at the math, she won. | ||
Did you have a conversation with Robeson? | ||
Did you ever tell Robeson and these people the exact speech? | ||
Did you give Robeson and say, Well, I certainly talked to Doug Ducey, but I didn't call every candidate across the country and say, are you going to do that? I'll do that going forward, sure. | ||
unidentified
|
Are you open to be in this debate that Harmeet and Michael Bell have already agreed to? | |
You know, this is such a ridiculous fake—this is another fake news lie. | ||
I have to conduct business at the RNC. I've got meetings all day. | ||
I mean, we're going from 7 in the morning until 11 at night every night, so that's what our schedule's going to be, and it's booked. Are you open to be in this debate? | ||
This is such a ridiculous fake. | ||
This is another fake news lie. | ||
This person put out a debate. | ||
John Frederick says, oh, we're going to do a debate. | ||
I have to conduct business at the RNC. I've got meetings all day. | ||
And he says, here's this time, and she's not doing it. | ||
They never asked me. | ||
They never cleared it with my schedule. | ||
So this is part of the misinformation, folks. | ||
Just pay attention. I was never, ever asked to be part of that debate. | ||
And I can't. If Real America Voice comes to you and says, hey, give us an hour on your schedule that's free no matter the time of day, would you be open to that? In California? | ||
No, we're going to have a forum there. | ||
This is gone. | ||
I've been on your show. We're going to have a forum and a process there in front of the members. | ||
But don't throw a debate on me at the last minute and say, oh, now she can't do it when it's already in a pre-scheduled meeting that I'm running. | ||
I mean, we're going from 7 in the morning till 11 at night every night that we're in Dana Point. | ||
So that's what our schedule is going to be, and it's booked. | ||
And I'm conducting. Okay. | ||
John Fredericks joins us now. | ||
John Fredericks, what a meanie. | ||
Did you actually call her or talk to her office and see the times available? | ||
Or did you just go ahead and do a typical John Fredericks move and just scheduled it, just booked it, sir? Of course we alerted her, Steve. | ||
So look, when you've lost five races in a row and you've spent an ungodly amount of money on nonsense and your donors are abandoning you on a daily basis like Bernie Marcus, etc., all you have... | ||
is a platform of lies. | ||
Of course, we reached out to her campaign. | ||
Of course, we reached out to Emma Vaughn. | ||
Of course, we reached out to Johanna Persing. | ||
We picked that time because National Committee woman from Virginia, Patty Lyman, said, here's the day and time where everybody is available because it's a meeting of executive directors of the states that no one has to be at. | ||
So that's why we picked the time. | ||
Of course we invited her, just like we invited Harmeet and Mike Lindell. | ||
Both of those accepted immediately. | ||
By the way, they had seemed to have no conflict. | ||
Now we're told, oh, they never got invited. | ||
Yes, they did. They never bothered to respond because they don't care about you or me or anybody listening to this show. | ||
They care about their Politburo handing out their favors, the consultants they paid money to, and that's what their reelection campaign is based on. | ||
And look, we're going to go forward with this debate. | ||
I talked to Harmeet the other day, and she's like, well, if Rana's not going to be there, I'm not going. | ||
I said, hey, Okay, you know what? | ||
Mike Lindell's going. | ||
Guess what? That's good enough for me. | ||
So we're going forward. | ||
We have this debate off-site. | ||
It's two miles away at the Marriott Residence Inn, 1 p.m. | ||
to 2.15 on Wednesday, pack time. | ||
And the reason why we're having it there, oh, it's off-site. | ||
You can't have it off-site. | ||
It's $75 to park. | ||
This is supposed to be about the grassroots. | ||
You go to the Marriott Residence Inn, two miles away, guess how much parking it is? | ||
Free! You park your car in the parking lot. | ||
You come in. Mike Lindell's gonna be there. | ||
We're open to the public. | ||
They want to send somebody fine. | ||
They don't. Fine. | ||
But we're going forward because our base, the grassroots, is sick and tired of being dictated to by the arrogance of these people and the elitism. | ||
And if you looked at her interview on your show, by the way, you were incredibly gracious in giving her three segments, 45 minutes at a time. | ||
Very gracious, Steve. | ||
Thank you for that. But the arrogance that she has, right? | ||
She doesn't have to answer to anybody. | ||
And hey, I came on War Room, therefore it is, is what she says. | ||
She's in a dogfight. | ||
Harmeet's gaining traction every day. | ||
And I tell you what, Mike Lindell has got votes. | ||
These people are going around saying, Mike Lindell's got one vote. | ||
That's a lie. Six people minimum had to nominate him. | ||
He's got a right. | ||
And The kind of guy Landell is, Steve, he said, hey, don't cancel this debate because Harmeet now doesn't want to go. | ||
I'll go. He said, tell you what, open the phone lines up, John. | ||
I'll take phone calls. | ||
I'll talk to anybody in America that's interested about what I'm going to do. | ||
Now I got the New York Times there, poof. | ||
Let it go there. Washington Post there. | ||
If Mike Lindell's the only guy there, Steve, God bless him. | ||
We're never going to get change if we tuck tail and run away because elitists are dictating to us what to do. | ||
Now, she thinks she's gonna win. | ||
She's got 110 votes, whatever. | ||
Hey, talk is cheap. | ||
Have the vote. Liddell's gonna be there. | ||
Maybe Harmeet, maybe not. | ||
I don't care. We're going forward. | ||
But what she said on your show about me, fake news? | ||
This is a total lie. | ||
I'm trying to give our base access to what is going on just like you are. | ||
And that's fake? | ||
Are you kidding me? That's the level of... | ||
elitist arrogance and ego this woman has. | ||
She needs to go down. | ||
Re-electing her as chairman is going to destroy the party because you've already heard major donors are out. | ||
They're not giving her any money. | ||
Nobody's going to give her a dime going forward. | ||
So look, President Trump says he's staying out of it. | ||
Good. Guess what? | ||
Not his fight. You know who's fight this is? | ||
Our fight. This is not his fight or somebody else's fight. | ||
This is our fight. This is the donor's fight. | ||
This is the grassroots fight. | ||
These are the same people with dirt under their fingernails and calluses on their hands, the blue-collar worker, Steve, of this country, who represent our movement. | ||
This is the core of our movement. | ||
And her attitude is, hey, Go let them eat cake. | ||
Go pound sand. I don't owe you crap. | ||
But hey, keep knocking on doors for me. | ||
Keep hanging out the stupid flyers that don't do anything. | ||
And hey, send that $25 a month. | ||
I want your money. I want your time. | ||
But it comes right down to it. | ||
I don't have an hour to speak to you. | ||
Go to hell. That's her message. | ||
What about her point about, you know, Mike Lindell's divisive, Harmeet is attacking her, she's divisive, that she's the only one that can unite, that she's the uniter to unite this. | ||
And you saw the answers to the questions about Robeson and what happened in Arizona around Kerry Lake. | ||
What are your thoughts about uniting all aspects of the Republican Party? | ||
It's the exact opposite, Steve. | ||
The only way to unite the Republican Party is by voting her out. | ||
If she's in, the party is automatically divided. | ||
She's already been abandoned by major donors of the party, led by the senior donor, kind of the grandfather of it all, Bernie Marcus and others. | ||
She's already abandoned that. There's so many people not going to give her any money. | ||
She's basically carved out The grassroots. | ||
She doesn't even understand what her movement is, right? | ||
It's all about, like, cosmetics and, you know, face jobs and how she looks on TV. That has nothing to do with us. | ||
We want to know how we're going to move this populist movement forward, which is made up, Steve, of working people that, guess what? | ||
They can't get to the Waldorf Astoria that's $1,000 a night. | ||
Why do they hold it there? | ||
So you can't go. | ||
Oh, you want to go in and see what's going on? | ||
You got to pay $75 to park your car, right? | ||
It's an exclusive resort. | ||
That's why I went to the residence at Marriott two miles away. | ||
That's where regular people go. | ||
That's our base state. These are people that tune you in every day. | ||
They tune me in every day. | ||
That is the soul and the heart of our movement. | ||
Ronna McDaniel doesn't understand even who her base is. | ||
That's the shame of this thing. | ||
She is the divisive candidate. | ||
Lindell will bring us together. | ||
Harmeet will bring us together. | ||
She will continue to divide based on her attitude. | ||
Here's her attitude. Screw you. | ||
I don't have an hour of my time. | ||
I'm working from 6 to 11. | ||
Oh, aren't I impressed? | ||
You and I do that every freaking day, Steve. | ||
I know you do and you know that I do. | ||
Every day. Hey, I got an idea. | ||
We'll have it at 6 a.m. | ||
That's 9 a.m. Eastern. | ||
Get up an hour early. | ||
Do it at 6. Get a plate of eggs. | ||
We'll do it at 6. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm going to get a biscuit. | |
Just stick right there. We're going to take a short break. | ||
Jason Jones, John Frederick on the other side. | ||
unidentified
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Your host, Stephen K. Vance. | |
Okay, we're already a little jammed up, but we got Naomi Wolf on deck, Jason Jones. | ||
I want to go quickly, John, back to you. | ||
Look, Ron is there. The 168 are the ones that voted at the end of the day, and I understand and our audience should continue to reach out. | ||
To their state representatives. | ||
And those numbers have been put up. | ||
I think Steve Stern's done it. We'll do it again this weekend. | ||
Put it up and get it. So everybody's got access to those people. | ||
But is she wrong in saying, hey, John, I love what you're doing and it's interesting, but I've done enough shows. | ||
I think there's going to be a candidate for him even there. | ||
But my focus that those couple of days of the 168, the Grand Dunes, you know, you know, the reality is that week the Grand Dunes don't count. | ||
unidentified
|
John Fredericks. Sure. | |
If you want the modern-day version of the Politburo, she's fine. | ||
If you want the reality of what our party is made up of and our movement, this is the exact wrong approach. | ||
How do you think that 168 got there, Steve? | ||
Hey, it starts in February now coming up. | ||
Guess what we have to do? Well, we have to go to a mass meeting on some Saturday, and God knows where, where we're going to get a cup of coffee. | ||
Mr. Coffee and a donut hole. | ||
That's a Saturday. Five hours of our time. | ||
Hey, that's fun. Then after that, we have to go to the county meeting. | ||
That's all day. Another stale cup of coffee and a Dunkin' Donuts. | ||
All day we give up our time. | ||
That's number two. Then number three, we got to go to your state convention, right? | ||
Drive there. Spend money in hotels. | ||
We're there all day. The air conditioner goes out. | ||
Doesn't matter what state you're in. | ||
It's all the same. So now it's just the third Saturday we have to give up voting for state committee man, state committee woman, and state chairman. | ||
So we've given up three Saturdays, spent our money, done the work, and now your attitude to us is even though it's us that voted these 168 people in, We're not interested in what you have to say. | ||
I'm only talking to them. | ||
By the way, I'm making my deals. | ||
I've got people on certain committees. | ||
They fly for free to certain things. | ||
Hey, I've got consultants that are on the phone helping me. | ||
It's all one big scam. | ||
And what we've done is we've exposed it. | ||
We've exposed the nonsense that they do. | ||
We've exposed the money they spend. | ||
And we're saying we're done with the elitist. | ||
This is our party. | ||
We're the movement. | ||
We're taking it over. | ||
And you're not our leader. | ||
That's what we're saying. And all we're saying is, hey, come and give us an hour of your time. | ||
She just said, oh, between seven and a.m., I've got to work all the time. | ||
Fine. I'll change your time to 6. | ||
Get up at 6. | ||
Get up an hour early. You can't get up an hour early for your entire grassroots base that supports the party, that wants to know what you have to say. | ||
That's not worth one hour of your time at 6 a.m.? | ||
Do you promise hot stale coffee in a Dunkin' Donut hole if she does that? | ||
We don't have the budget to buy them there. | ||
We'll have to go off-site and get two boxes of Dunkin' Donuts, but we can have it for $18 or whatever, not for $500. My son Joe and I had a cup of coffee in one of the big hotels. | ||
In Tennessee, we got the bill. | ||
It was $13. | ||
No, I can't do that. | ||
Look, do it at 6 a.m. | ||
Let's call out a bluff. | ||
Do it at 6 a.m. | ||
That's 9 a.m. Eastern. That's when my show's on. | ||
Anyway, we're good to go. | ||
You know who'd show up at 6? | ||
Mike Lindell. He'd show up. | ||
Big time. John, how do people get to your morning show now that precedes Worm on Saturday? | ||
How do they get to your regular show? | ||
All your content, because this week, John Fredericks will be on location, and it's going to be at Battle Royale at Dana Point, California, down there at the formerly the St. | ||
Regis. I think it's now called the Waldorf Astoria Sur. | ||
Just follow me, all platforms, at JFRadioShow, at JFRadioShow. | ||
This week, starting on Tuesday, I'm going to be on 3 to 5 p.m. | ||
Eastern. I've got other people covering for me in the a.m. | ||
because obviously we don't. It's too early there. | ||
So we're going to bring you all the action 3 to 5 p.m. | ||
Eastern, which is just leading into Steve Bannon. | ||
That'll be on my show. Plus, REV is going to be there, so we'll be giving you updates. | ||
Steve, at JF Radio Show, go to Godzilla wins today, my best bet of the weekend. | ||
I love the Cowboys. | ||
Plus four, I think they go into San Francisco, win that game. | ||
We don't know how good this team is. | ||
We know how good San Francisco is. | ||
They are what we thought they were. | ||
We don't know how good Dallas is. | ||
My favorite team in the National Football League is whoever's playing Dallas that week. | ||
Now, come on, Texans. | ||
Don't work with me on this. | ||
John Fredericks, thank you very much, brother. | ||
Appreciate it. Appreciate it. | ||
All right, Steve. Thank you. | ||
As an old Redskins fan. | ||
Can I even say that? Are we going to get pulled for saying Redskins? | ||
Okay, Jason Jones. | ||
We had Father Pavone on from San Francisco. | ||
He flew out there for the march on the west coast. | ||
Shilling, we've had Mo Bannon. | ||
What is your sense yesterday of the theories that you actually said, hey, I've been doing this for 25 years. | ||
This is my last march for life because I'm focused on the states. | ||
Do you agree with this now after seeing the energy here in the nation's capital for all these young people, sir? Yeah, I'm surrounded by young people now. | ||
I'm at the Students for Life of America Conference. | ||
Steve, that might be a promise that I break. | ||
But what I meant in that article was we really need to professionalize our state organizations. | ||
I'm going to be going to these blue states as we continue this battle to march to protect life from biological beginning from Maui to Maine. | ||
But you're right, Steve. | ||
The pro-life movement is the largest, most passionate social movement in the history of our country, and it is driven by young people, and it is especially driven by young women, and it's exciting to see. | ||
So the idea of this being my last March for Life after coming, really right when I got out of the military, I started coming as a young man in my early 20s. | ||
The idea of not coming again after yesterday, I don't know, but I guess if it conflicts with the March for Life and Michigan or the March for Life in Pennsylvania or the March for Life in Ohio, then I think I would have to choose attending the local March for Life. | ||
You know, we had Summer Smith on yesterday to kick off the show. | ||
Summer's from Liberty University of the Students for Life. | ||
Talk to us about the movement. | ||
What's always gotten me since I came here with Andrew back in, I think, 2011, what blew me away was the scale of this march and the youth of it, but particularly, it's essentially young women. | ||
I mean, I think 75%, two-thirds at least, are young women that are really at the tip of the spear of this. | ||
Talk to me about that. Yeah, in fact, right now, see if you can't see, they're off camera, but I'm surrounded by young, talented women who I'm fans of. | ||
They're all over social media, influencing folks. | ||
They're young, they're passionate. | ||
The left is going to try to astroturf us. | ||
They might be able to play that game for a year or two after a post-rope. | ||
But this is an organic movement. | ||
We're going to rope-a-dope them. | ||
They can throw at us what they want for the next two years, but it's on. | ||
And this generation, this fourth generation of pro-life movement is gonna, I say that we have giants standing on our shoulders. | ||
I'm at the Omni showroom right now. | ||
It's a hotel I was at with you and with Andrew Breitbart two weeks before he passed away. | ||
And he gave a pro-life speech at this very conference and talked about being adopted. | ||
And it's a youth movement. | ||
They're very creative. | ||
They're very talented. You know, as a filmmaker who's made films like Bella and Crescendo with Justin Bieber's mom, In all these films that I've made, I see how talented these young people are, and I kind of feel like, okay, what do I do now? | ||
The ball has been passed, and they're running toward the end zone. | ||
Fourth generation. Jason, how do people get to your podcast, all your writings over at Stream? | ||
Yeah, I write. I write at thestream.org. | ||
My podcast is The Jason Jones Show. | ||
And Steve, we have a petition that we're delivering to Pope Francis, freeourbishops.com. | ||
Calling on the Vatican to lean on the CCP to demand the seven bishops, the Catholic bishops that have been arrested and disappeared or released. | ||
We are bishops.com. | ||
In fact, we're going to talk about this at 1130. | ||
I'm going to the Vatican. We got Harnwell to talk about this situation with McCarrick in the secret CCP deal, which I know, Jason, you're at the tip of the spear of. | ||
Thank you. We'll get the petition. | ||
We'll get it out broadly. | ||
Thank you very much, Jason. Appreciate it. | ||
All right. Thanks, Steve. Yesterday was, was, this is, is this your first or second March for Life? | ||
Was this your first? This is my first March for Life. | ||
And I highly encourage anyone, if there's a March for Life in your local city, local town, I highly encourage you to go. | ||
It was very moving. | ||
I will definitely be back again next year for the March for Life. | ||
And were you surprised by the, by the, it was, it's young people, right? | ||
unidentified
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It's, I think that's tied to technology. | |
It didn't surprise me, but it did surprise me how it spanned multiple generations. | ||
It wasn't just young people out there marching. | ||
It was across multiple generations. | ||
And there were a lot of families... | ||
Around my age, Millennials, that had actually their young children there marching with them. | ||
I saw this one father look to be about my age, and then his daughter was probably three years old, and she had a baby doll wrapped like you'd carry a baby, and she was marching too. | ||
So that was very moving to see, that there were young kids out there marching too. | ||
Wow. Do we have the call open for Naomi? | ||
Let's play the call open from Naomi. | ||
Let's go ahead and play that, and then we'll bring on Naomi Wolf. | ||
unidentified
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You need to know who's been vaccinated and who hasn't been. | |
Some of the vaccines that will come on down the line will be multiple shots. | ||
So you've got to have, for reasons to do with the healthcare more generally, but certainly for a pandemic or for vaccines, you've got to have a proper digital infrastructure. | ||
Naomi Wolf, thank you for joining us. | ||
Boy, you warned us about this. | ||
I think it was... | ||
I'm going to pick a random date. | ||
I think it was in 2020. | ||
That was Tony Blair yesterday. | ||
We had Nur bin Laden and Joe Allen on yesterday because this is one of the more important of all the panels and all the talks at Davos. | ||
Naomi, it was a cold shot by you. | ||
Tell us what Tony Blair laid out yesterday, ma'am. | ||
Well, he laid out something that's been in their map since before the pandemic. | ||
They have planned for this digital infrastructure that would track everyone everywhere forever since the late 20 teens. | ||
They planned a digital ID for Europe, you know, some years ago. | ||
And what is obvious, and I made this case in the bodies of others and in this viral video you're referencing as well, The pandemic and the lockdowns and the only way out of lockdown is the vaccine and the only way to make sure you've had your vaccine and to let you back into society is to give you a digital passport. | ||
That's all pretext to lock people into this matrix, this digital matrix, which is the China style social credit score. | ||
And they are not giving up. | ||
And you heard him say, you know, I hope you picked up the body language of these people now is fascinating. | ||
You know, he's nervous. No one believes what they're saying anymore. | ||
He knows it's nonsense, but they're barreling ahead. | ||
You heard him say future vaccines will be multiple injections. | ||
Well, we know now the reason for the multiple injections of this mRNA vaccine, and it's to increasingly debilitate people. | ||
There's no physiological need that we've seen anywhere in the Pfizer documents for multiple injections except the studies out of Hong Kong That the second one and then the third one are progressively damaging. | ||
So they're determined to herd us into smart cities, into the Internet of Things, and into a healthcare-based rationale for a social credit system like China, where literally they can turn off your, as we see in China, they can turn off your credit card, they can turn off your savings, they can turn off your access to food, access to schooling, and they're not giving up. | ||
This is the fight of our lifetimes. | ||
Real quickly, we've got 30 seconds. | ||
I'm holding you through the break. Tony Blair as the pitchman. | ||
You don't have a technology person. | ||
You don't have a medical person. Why did they pick Tony Blair to be the pitchman for this man? | ||
Well, he took a lot of money from, I believe he took money from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. | ||
I'll need to check. But money is flowing to these WEF spokespeople from many unaccountable Front organizations, basically, as well as from McKinsey, as well as from many nonprofits. | ||
So he's bought and paid. | ||
But there's no good reason, right? | ||
He's just an ex-world leader who does his bidding, the bidding of the others. | ||
Naomi, just hang her for one second. | ||
We're going to take a short commercial break. | ||
We're going to be back in a moment. | ||
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That's Mike Lindell, the great American manufacturing company that is MyPillow, and of course your humble servants here at the WARROOM. Naomi, what is Tony Blair specific? | ||
Because they kind of downplayed this a little bit, although it's main battery for them. | ||
You know, they had to have climate change, mental health, artificial intelligence. | ||
But trust me, the vax is where they're at. | ||
So what is Tony Blair? | ||
You called it out two years ago. | ||
What is he specifically telling the hedge funds, the venture capital people, all the media, and, of course, Davos, ma'am? | ||
Okay. Well, first of all, it took me 10 seconds to find a chunk of the money that is behind his pronouncement. | ||
The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation gave the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change $3.472 million for just one region. | ||
And presumably, if I keep searching, I'll find similar cash flows for other regions around the world. | ||
for global health infrastructure implementation. | ||
So let me take a minute as a nerdy CEO of a tech company to explain to everyone the lockdowns were pretext for the vaccine. | ||
The vaccine's a pretext for this digital matrix. | ||
What are they signaling with the commitment to the digital matrix? | ||
Right now, you have a certain amount of free will. | ||
And in those 33 states where we fought so hard to pass legislation, To ban vaccine passports, you have a lot of free will. | ||
You can choose what kind of health care you want or not to get health insurance. | ||
You can choose, you know, where to drive. | ||
You can choose to be untracked when you drive in a fossil fuel-based car as opposed to an electric car, which tracks everything. You can choose, you know, whom to see without your contacts being swept up and tabulated as this is a group of dissidents. | ||
We want to keep an eye on them. | ||
We want to, you know, ramp up following their social media, mining their social media. | ||
So and especially HIPAA, the law that protects your health care records, it's a federal law, is the enemy of the people who want this matrix. | ||
Now, if you're a hedge fund manager or if you're Chase or if you're Gosh, you know, the Rockefeller Foundation, right now you're at the mercy of history and you're at the mercy of human beings' free will. | ||
And so there's risk in your investments, right? | ||
But if you create a matrix like this, there's no more risk. | ||
You can make people buy what you want them to buy. | ||
You can make people go where you want them to go. | ||
And you can switch them off and on. | ||
And you saw the results of this by the way I track this. | ||
This is a central argument in the bodies of others. | ||
By locking us down and keeping us, tracking us, preventing us from assembling, for instance, certain sectors like Amazon, like Nintendo, like Zoom, were up 23 % net revenue over the course of the lockdown. | ||
So that's predictable. | ||
So if you're a hedge fund person, you know there's going to be a lockdown, you invest in Amazon, right? | ||
Because Main Street is going to be unavailable. | ||
Well, why would you ever give that up, right? | ||
You'd want to do that if you're a capitalist, At a macro major level for the rest of human history. | ||
Why give people back their free will? | ||
Why let them start their own businesses? | ||
Why let them launch their own movements? | ||
Why let them assemble freely? | ||
So what has been happening, especially with healthcare, is that HIPAA, which protects this last giant piece of human autonomy and privacy, is under attack. | ||
And it's under attack from many, many directions. | ||
One direction is, oh, let's let 12-year-olds decide for themselves if they want a vaccine. | ||
Then the parents don't have the right to prevent them from being entered into this healthcare matrix, right? But another example I'll give you very quickly is that I avoided seeing a doctor even for a checkup for two and a half years because I've lost all faith in organized medicine. | ||
I finally went for a checkup with this entity called One Medical. | ||
One Medical is a classic kind of The kinds of digital companies you're seeing now that have a super lovely, easy user interface, fabulous app. | ||
All of their RNs are very attractive and do yoga. | ||
You know, they've got highly styled postmodern waiting rooms. | ||
It's only $120 a year. | ||
Well, the numbers don't add up. | ||
I know this is a tech CEO. You're not going to make back your money for that kind of high-end service at $120 per person a year. | ||
But what the business model is, is they're going after your healthcare data. | ||
So when I was in my checkup with the RN, she said, oh, look, you know, your file has lost your family medical history and we've lost a bunch of stuff from an ER visit. | ||
You'll need to sign a release so that we can fill that in again. | ||
Well, I'm telling you as a tech CEO, that is impossible, right? | ||
It's not like the database drops things like out of a file folder when you're going from New York to Massachusetts, as I did. It's all one database. | ||
And you can't drop chunks of a field of an account unless there's a virus or an attack from a hacker. | ||
It's just not possible. | ||
But what the release would do if I was ill-informed enough, as most people are, to sign it Is it bypasses HIPAA? And then I right away went back to read the terms and conditions. | ||
And I know this is nerdy, but bear with me, it's very important. | ||
And the terms and conditions, which no one reads, but which it's my job to read as a tech CEO, clearly state that they're working with quote unquote partners. | ||
And then I found this in their pitch deck from 2020, right the middle of the lockdown when no one knew what was happening allegedly. | ||
And their partners are all of these giant healthcare networks, giant hospital networks, giant for-profit networks that I never realized, because I didn't read the terms and conditions foolishly when I just used that cute app, that all of my data is being sent to. | ||
And those people are going to own our data, our healthcare data, and quickly One Medical is branching into pediatrics and mental health. | ||
And so these people are going to be able to funnel your mental health issues, right, or your addiction issues or whatever issues they want to create about you. | ||
Are you under stress? You know, I'm sure that's going to be a question they'll start to ask. | ||
Is there any addiction in your family? | ||
You know, any bipolar illness? | ||
They're going to funnel that. They'll be able to funnel it to the government or funnel it to Twitter or funnel it to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, whoever wants it. | ||
And then there's going to be a profile of you that can be used to kind of criminalize your thought, switch you off, call you a terrorist, call you a danger to the Republic. | ||
But also just it's vastly valuable for them in tracking everything you're doing and in kind of intimidating you if you don't have any medical privacy. | ||
Naomi, hang on for one second. | ||
90-second break. We have Naomi Worth with us. |