Speaker | Time | Text |
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unidentified
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War Room. | |
Here's your host, Stephen K. Bamm. | ||
Hey, Peter K. Navarro in. | ||
We're going to bring in Congressman Matt Rosendale in the great state of Montana right away because he's got to bounce in about three and a half to four minutes. | ||
Congressman, can you tell me why over a hundred of your fellow Republicans helped our House Speaker Mike Johnson rule this country like Nancy Pelosi with that spending bill, sir? | ||
unidentified
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Weakness. | |
One word. | ||
Weakness. | ||
Okay? | ||
First, I have to shout out. | ||
March for Life Action addressed those folks this morning. | ||
God bless all the people from across our nation that are out marching today in the snow for the preservation of life in the womb. | ||
Okay. | ||
The guys yesterday, it was weakness. | ||
I continue to tell these people, stop looking at the waves, Peter. | ||
Take my hand. | ||
Take my hand and follow me. | ||
We know what is the right thing to do. | ||
We absolutely do. | ||
So stop being fearful of doing the right thing. | ||
They say, what are you going to do? | ||
You're going to shut the government down? | ||
If it means preserving our nation so that we can secure our border, which is an imminent national threat, yeah, we would. | ||
But guess what? | ||
We propose alternatives for funding the government in a transparent and responsible fashion, and they refuse to take us up on it because the Uniparty is real. | ||
They get together and they spend your money. | ||
They take your liberties. | ||
And there's only one way this is going to stop, and that is if we continue to put people in these offices that don't just speak conservatively, which a lot of them do, but they actually serve conservatively and try to really reduce the size and scope of government. | ||
Congressman Rosendale, is there an expiration date now on House Speaker Mike Johnson? | ||
unidentified
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I think that he has compromised his credibility dramatically, and there are more people having that discussion. | |
I am still, Peter, trying to do my very best to give him some latitude, but I'm telling you something. | ||
There's a difference. | ||
Kevin McCarthy, very shallow individual. | ||
Had no principles, no core principles whatsoever, so he was transactional. | ||
He'd walk into a room, make you a promise, he made it. | ||
But as soon as he went to the next room, he'd make another promise, and it would negate that promise, and so he went on. | ||
Mike Johnson knows the right thing to do, and he's taking bad counsel from bad staff, and he should fire all of them. | ||
Well, you know, I've seen this movie before. | ||
As soon as... | ||
Somebody like Johnson or McCarthy sits down in a room with McConnell and then Schumer and Pelosi. | ||
They shrink. | ||
Somehow they feel like they've got this seat at the table now that they don't want to jeopardize these other people who put their arms around the guy's shoulder and encourage him, you know, this is how the game must be played. | ||
We got to kind of, and he just, I mean, did you see any inkling, Matt, that this guy would fold? | ||
unidentified
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This is the problem. | |
We have to be brave. | ||
The time for timidity and half measures set sail 10 years ago. | ||
If we're going to preserve our nation, we have to have warriors. | ||
We need Spartans. | ||
We don't need people that are part-time bakers and clay makers and stuff like that, like the rest of the folks were that the Spartans won up against. | ||
We need full-time gladiators up here. | ||
God bless you, man. | ||
Thanks for having me on, but I've got to jump. | ||
Enjoy big sky country. | ||
I'm sure that you're on the right side of things in terms of your voters, but boy, when you get back to the swamp, you need to kick some ass, brother, because the posse is very unhappy right now. | ||
This country is very unhappy right now. | ||
And Congress is just going deeper and deeper down in the pool. | ||
unidentified
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And I say, watch what they do. | |
Don't listen to what they say. | ||
All right, my brother, you take care. | ||
Thanks. | ||
Safe travels. | ||
All right. | ||
Wow. | ||
unidentified
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Wow. | |
I mean, that's the problem here. | ||
We got rid of Kevin McCarthy. | ||
And when I say we, I mean you, because the posse basically can take the major credit for that. | ||
Because he was transactional, because to save his ass, he was going to try to govern from the middle, right? | ||
Command, you know, take some renegade Rogue Republicans away from the main of the party and together with some Democrats kind of rule the world. | ||
That didn't work. | ||
I just, you know, when Johnson came in, he was a blank slate to me. | ||
I thought, well, he seems like an earnest guy. | ||
I've seen these guys up close and personal, and there's no there there in that guy. | ||
He looks like a deer in the headlights of a Montana truck barreling down the road. | ||
And as a result, this economy... | ||
It's simply roadkill. | ||
What I want to do now, we're going to, in the next block, we're going to Europe and Davos and kind of get a more global perspective of everything that's going on in this world, which is what The War Room does so much better than so many other shows, forums in the media. | ||
But let's spend a few minutes now Talking about South Carolina, because that's the other part of the Nikki Haley trap I described earlier in the show. | ||
And I have a strong personal connection to the state of South Carolina based on my time in the White House. | ||
One of the things I spearheaded, and it was like my first experience Uh, really up close and personal with the deep administrative state, um, in Washington was when, um, Donald Trump was having difficulty getting his arms transfer sales through Congress and the state department. | ||
That's the key here. | ||
The state department was the, was the problem. | ||
And if you remember, one of the early victories Trump had was an arms transfer weapons sale. | ||
Let's call it what it is. | ||
They're weapons. | ||
They kill people. | ||
Our job is to use them to defend our values in this country. | ||
And Donald Trump's philosophy is it's better to transfer arms to our allies and let them put their people At risk, because then they'll have actual skin in the game rather than sending our troops off to end those wars. | ||
And by the way, these arms transfers sales, whether it's Patriot missiles or F-16s or whatever, anything in between, they create American jobs and strengthen our supply chain, particularly in the long term in case we have conflict. | ||
So my first encounter with the Deep State, there was these jerks in the State Department who were holding up some of the sales to the Saudis. | ||
And the boss told me, you fix that. | ||
And I demarched these guys over, and it was a woman who was primarily leading it, over to the White House. | ||
And over the ensuing months, we were able to get that going and a whole lot of other stuff. | ||
And the punchline is, at one point, I wound up going to South Carolina to a ribbon-cutting ceremony for an F-16 plant, a new plant in South Carolina, an F-16 plant that was going to create thousands of jobs in the state, which were very good jobs, high-wage jobs. | ||
And the reason why, the only reason why that factory opened was because of the success Of Donald Trump being able to sell those aircraft to countries which are our allies. | ||
And we did a very good job at that. | ||
And you know, when I got to know the state pretty well, and I was like, I was always puzzled by Mick Mulvaney. | ||
He was the guy who comes in With these little owl glasses acting like an intellectual who didn't know squat about anything. | ||
And I was wondering, how does this guy get here? | ||
He was a congressman from there. | ||
Who would elect this dweeb? | ||
And then sure enough, just as I thought he would, he turns on Donald Trump after Trump rescued that guy's political career. | ||
And I got to know that state really well. | ||
And one of the things that really bothered me, and I had a lot of conversations with the governor, Henry McMaster, about this, because he was frankly clueless before we began talking, There's a big difference between assembly plants, auto-assembly plants and auto-manufacturing plants. | ||
And what the foreigners love to do is come here and establish auto-assembly plants, preferably south of the Mason-Dixon line where there's non-union shops. | ||
Use cheap labor, pay low wages, and then import a bunch of parts from Germany or Korea or China to assemble these things. | ||
And it's like, I was telling the governor, it's like, no, no, no, no. | ||
That's not, that's not the way to have a prosperous state, dude. | ||
Okay. | ||
And so I'm telling you this because when I started to do my research about Nikki Haley, who I liken to, you know, young, Cassius has a lean and hungry look in the Shakespeare tragedy, because she's pure ambition. | ||
What I found out about her is before there was McMaster, there was Haley, and Haley was the first governor in this country, the first governor in this country, to welcome with open arms into her state An assembly plant for Communist China. | ||
Okay, think about that. | ||
An assembly plant for Communist China. | ||
And on top of that, it wasn't just open arms, it was an open wallet. | ||
And it wasn't her money, it was the South Carolina taxpayers' money. | ||
unidentified
|
Right? | |
So think about that. | ||
She offered hundreds of millions of dollars of taxpayers' subsidy money to the Communist Chinese By the way, I like the guy and he's got an epiphany on this. | ||
that they could import all their parts and have their American slaves put that stuff together and thereby earn the support of clueless politicians like McMaster. | ||
By the way, I like the guy and he's got an epiphany on this. | ||
I think he's a good governor, but I tell his story because that's the problem. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
With Nikki Haley. | ||
And South Carolina is weird. | ||
I mean, it is the land of weirdness. | ||
It's got Lindsey Graham. | ||
I wrote in one of my books, there should be a Lindsey Graham free zone established in the West Wing in any Trump second term. | ||
Because that guy gives the worst advice you can ever get. | ||
He's all over the lot. | ||
And all he wants to do is lick the boots of Donald Trump while he's playing golf with the guy. | ||
That's on Lindsey's bucket list. | ||
Every morning the guy wakes up. | ||
And then you got Mick Mulvaney. | ||
And then, look, Tim Scott. | ||
I mean, look. | ||
We figured out there's no there there for Tim Scott. | ||
Likeable dude, okay? | ||
But he turned out to be an empty vessel for dark coke network money. | ||
And when he couldn't make the grade, they chewed him up, spit him out, and they went on to DeSantis and Haley. | ||
It's like, I'm trying to think. | ||
Nancy Mace. | ||
Okay, like, I know Steve has her on, it's good. | ||
She's kind of gotten MAGA religion. | ||
But I don't trust her. | ||
I mean, particularly in my own situation, she did me no favors. | ||
I'll keep it at that. | ||
But more broadly, she voted for Trump's impeachment. | ||
She's not MAGA. | ||
So Mulvaney, Mace, Scott, Lindsey Graham, Tell me, tell me who in South Carolina stands out, and there are some, because I've met them. | ||
I don't have them on the top of my head. | ||
But anyway, that's the trap that Trump's walking into in South Carolina, and the Haley, Rhino, New Hampshire, South Carolina trap. | ||
You heard it here on The War Room. | ||
Peter Kay Navarro in for Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
We'll be back, and we're going to Davos. | ||
free miles grow. That guy you're seeing right now, that's brother miles grow rotten in an American prison because of Joe Biden. | ||
unidentified
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Here's your host, Stephen K. Bannon. | |
Hey, Peter K. Navarro in for the Admiral Stephen K. Bannon. | ||
We are going to get on our rocket ship right now and take you, the posse, right over to Davos, Switzerland. | ||
Spiritual home of every globalist around America and the second home of every Wall Street hedge fund manager. | ||
We're going to go right to Noor Bin Laden. | ||
She apparently was listening to the last segment and had a little bit to tell us about Nikki Haley before she's going to give us the Davos update. | ||
Noor, welcome back once again to the War Room. | ||
How are you today? | ||
unidentified
|
Good. | |
Thank you. | ||
Thanks for having me, Peter. | ||
No, I was thinking because you just mentioned that you don't trust Nikki Haley. | ||
And I wanted to say that nobody trusts Nikki Haley. | ||
She's not MAGA. | ||
She is a total globalist. | ||
And I'm actually surprised that she didn't fly out to Davos after her pathetic loss in Iowa earlier this week. | ||
And the reason is because her agenda is very much aligned with the Davos agenda. | ||
And while President Trump very strongly and brilliantly sent a firing shot to Davos two days ago about the fact that he was promising never to create a CBDC in America. | ||
I want to remind the audience that a few months ago Nikki Haley was on record in an interview stating that she believed that online anonymity was a national security threat. | ||
Parroting exactly the same words that these so-called elites in Davos are saying because they absolutely do want to end online anonymity. | ||
In fact, they want the exact opposite. | ||
They want all of us to be tied to a grid with digital identification. | ||
And they even said so this week under the cover of cyber security and all these cyber threats and these attacks that are increasing. | ||
We had The Secretary General of Interpol, during a panel this week, expanding and highlighting and fear-mongering the threats of cybercrime and cybercriminals. | ||
And one of the panelists on that, that was there, explicitly talked about digital IDs being a way to protect, obviously protect, Um, uh, and defend ourselves from, um, these, uh, these cyber criminals. | ||
So it's always the same playbook, Peter. | ||
They have these threats and these risks, these global risks that they're talking about all the time, and they want to bring forward the solutions and the solutions inevitably lead to loss of freedom for us, the people. | ||
And, um, today is Friday. | ||
It was the closing. | ||
Let me get a quick question in here. | ||
meeting and the agenda, as I just mentioned, the playbook is always the same. | ||
And if I had to add one more thing about... | ||
Let me get a quick question in here. | ||
Is there any controversial speakers there to challenge the tenets of the dark money globalism that we see? | ||
Or is this more like a cheerleader session for what they're doing in a way for these people to network to figure out collusively how to screw us? | ||
Is there any healthy dialogue or is it just the usual crap? | ||
Oh, it's very, very much the latter, with the exception of Dr. Roberts from the Heritage Foundation yesterday on a panel on the possible Republican administration coming up in 2024-2025, who brilliantly stood up to these insane globalists and gave him a piece of MAGA. | ||
of Magamind, which was great to see, but it caused a few heads to explode today because that panel was yesterday. | ||
And there was an important panel this morning, actually, entitled 4.2 billion people at the ballot box focusing On the year 2024 being critical in terms of elections worldwide, but obviously the focus was on the US elections and most notably on that panel you had Alex Soros and you also had Ian Bremmer from Eurasia Group. | ||
The first thing I'll say is that Alex Soros was completely high on something. | ||
I don't know what it was. | ||
Wait a minute. | ||
Stop the presses right here. | ||
You mean there's a spawn of George Soros who's going to inherit all that money and continue to try to steal our elections and fund attorneys general in states that are going to wreck this country? | ||
Tell me, is this the sun? | ||
Is this true? | ||
My head's exploding. | ||
The baton has been passed to his son, Alex Soros. | ||
I believe in 2023, a few months ago, he is the new chairman of the Ocean Societies Group. | ||
You buried the lead, Noor. | ||
You buried the lead. | ||
I mean, George Soros, Arguably. | ||
Well, I don't know. | ||
It's a toss up now between Rupert Murdoch, George Soros, Larry Fink, Steve Schwarzman, and a few others as to who's like the most destructive in terms of blue collar America. | ||
But anyway, why don't we do this? | ||
We've got to get Ben Harnwell in here now, but obviously the people out here in Real America's Voiceland I appreciate that you're getting us great information back from Davos. | ||
We're going to wish you some safe travels, and I think what you've done there also is give me my lead-in to Ben, because Ben, you've got this like hot article you want to talk about, about the Daily Telegraph, I think it is. | ||
Can you give us a little bit of taste of that, please? | ||
Absolutely, Dr. Navarro. | ||
Good morning. | ||
Good morning, Noor, as well, to you. | ||
So, look, on the war room, really, over the last sort of six months, we've really started to talk and to analyse now as we focus towards the European elections in the second week of June this year, those five yearly European elections. | ||
We've started to talk now about the various forces that are pushing The politics to what the mainstream media calls the far right. | ||
We've been drilling down on this and we've been talking as well. | ||
However, increasingly across the European Union, there's one issue above all of this that is now starting to edge into first place. | ||
Survey after survey is indicating this, and that is the issue of unrestrained Illegal migration into the European Union, which some people have, I think, quite legitimately termed not immigration, but an invasion. | ||
And we've been breaking down on The War Room how the In the UK, for example, we're potentially now coming to a situation where the Tory party, the Conservative Party, the world's oldest political party, might never form a government again because of the prospects faced by the Reform UK movement should Nigel Farage return to lead that party in the next general election and stand against the Conservatives. | ||
So those are the various dynamics. | ||
that we've been talking about. | ||
And in some cases, Dr Navarro, it seems that we're a lonely voice in the media, sort of analysing this and sort of drawing the graph between the data points. | ||
But that's where our analysis was indicating things are going. | ||
So today, totally out of the blue, you can imagine the International Bureau's surprise when we happened across this article here. | ||
I think Denver just put up on the screen with this headline. | ||
And it's from the mainstream media, Dr. Navarro. | ||
It's the mainstream media to the right of the spectrum, if you will. | ||
But it's definitely MSN headline. | ||
Mass migration is about to sweep away the West's blinkered ruling class. | ||
With the subheading, the political elite seems incapable of grasping the challenge posed by legal and illegal Immigration. | ||
Now, I just want to flag up four points of this and then attentive members of The War in Policy will be able to check them off because this is exactly what we have been saying now. | ||
And I think, you know, I would say that this indicates to some degree the war roomisation, if I could coin a verb, the war roomisation of the right, of the spectrum of the mainstream media, which is sort of month by month, You've got two minutes here, Ben, just so you know. | ||
Two minutes more than enough. | ||
Right, so he's talking here about tens if not hundreds of millions of people trying to enter the European continent from Asia, Latin America, and Africa. | ||
He's talking about politicians who are unable or unwilling to adapt being swept away, and you can think of basically a tsunami for that metaphor. | ||
It would be perfectly appropriate. | ||
And it also talks here towards the very end, which I think is quite an interesting expression. | ||
I'll just quote it directly. | ||
This is the conclusion of the article. | ||
It says, this is a Darwinian moment for the Tories and centre right parties everywhere. | ||
They must toughen up on immigration, legal and illegal. | ||
Dr. Navarro or face extinction. | ||
So this is an analysis that we have been pushing out on the wall room and it's now breaking through into the mainstream media. | ||
Yes, I mean, as bad as our crisis is here in America, and it is absolutely beyond horrific. | ||
I mean, literally millions and millions of illegal aliens flooding over our border, infiltrated by communist Chinese soldiers, Islamic terrorists, you name it, the European crisis. | ||
May well grow to be far worse, because they're surrounded by routes that are going to bring in all manner of illegal immigrants and totally upset and change the culture. | ||
I mean, it's going to make like the joining the EU for Britain look like child's play compared to what's going on. | ||
Stay here, Ben, and we'll get you right up at the top of the next segment to get your coordinates and give you a last word there. | ||
Peter K. Navarro in for Stephen K. Bannon here in the war room, the posse's war room. | ||
Peace Corps training going on 50 years ago. | ||
I was in Southeast Asia and one of our instructors said, when technology has a problem, it's like, don't flap, right? | ||
So we just had a little bit of an issue with our great technology. | ||
I think things are going fine now. | ||
And let's get back to where we're at. | ||
I don't know if we got Ben, but if not, I think what I wanted to do anyway, this segment, if Ben comes back, give me a holler here. | ||
I want to talk a little bit about an article I wrote In the Washington Times that first appeared in my substack. | ||
I haven't pitched my substack at all today, but let me just do that once. | ||
PeterNavarro.substack.com. | ||
PeterNavarro.substack.com. | ||
What I try to do on the substack is bring you three types of things. | ||
One, it's all things Donald Trump and the Trump 24 campaign. | ||
It's all things Communist China and how Communist China is screwing this country. | ||
And every Friday, such as today, I do a weekly financial market update, stocks, bonds, and things like that, from the perspective of a macro economist. | ||
And one of the pieces that I put out, because this one really sticks in my craw, It was about the stupidity and foolishness and hubris of the CEOs of two iconic American corporations, which are no longer American corporations. | ||
I'm talking, of course, about Apple and Tesla. | ||
And the CEOs, of course, implicated are Tim Cook and Elon Musk. | ||
Cook, of course, at Apple. | ||
At Tesla. | ||
I go back, unfortunately, I got a lot of miles on me. | ||
You know, back decades ago, when China first joined the World Trade Organization in 2001, what was a really disastrous historical event, because the WTO opened up essentially our markets to communist China with unfettered access, with no safeguards against what would | ||
be a very sustained economic aggression. | ||
And interestingly that same year 2001 that China Join the World Trade Organization, there was a guy named Jeff Emil, who took over from one of the great CEOs in American history, Jack Walsh, at the then iconic company, General Electric. | ||
And at the time, I mean, GE had a long and distinguished history in this country. | ||
Of being one of our top industrial producers, known around the world, source of great American jobs. | ||
And Immelt kind of reminded me of Kevin McCarthy, kind of an earlier version, you know, the blow-dried hair, the good-looking guy, the well-groomed guy, the charm the socks off anybody you talk to. | ||
And Emil made a big bet on Communist China when he took over the reins of GE. | ||
And it was essentially that he could go over there, take GE technology, and leverage the slave labor of China, the pollution havens, and the massive | ||
Illegal under WTO rules, subsidies that China was providing to any American corporation foolish enough to come over to communist China and bring their technology. | ||
Yeah, it's like, Emil was like the first guy to, big guy, to think, yeah, we can bring it over there and protect it, right? | ||
And I had this, several times I battled with him. | ||
One time I was on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. | ||
It was really interesting. | ||
And what that battle was about is I told Emil, I said, hey, you can't be so foolish as to think China's not going to steal your technology. | ||
Basically, set up their own factories in China, start producing your products with your technology, do it cheaper, and then once they start competing with you in their market, they're also going to go and start competing with you in your lucrative foreign markets. | ||
And Immelt didn't get the message. | ||
The rest is history. | ||
China stripped GE of all its technology and It turned a great American corporation into a pale shadow of itself. | ||
All right, I'm going to check in now with my crack team. | ||
I have no idea where we are. | ||
Team, we got Harnwell up. | ||
I don't see a clock here. | ||
Can you tell me how much time in the segment? | ||
Six minutes, great. | ||
All right, I'm going to come back to this story in a minute, but let's go back to Ben Hardenwell and just close up here. | ||
And Ben, you were talking about this incredible story in what appears to be somewhat the left-wing media, that there's a mass invasion of illegals that would threaten the very existence of the Tory leadership there. | ||
And I just want to say one thing about Great Britain. | ||
Somebody was telling me that if Great Britain were a state, they'd have a lower per capita income than Mississippi here. | ||
And a lot of that is because of what happened before Brexit was able to be achieved. | ||
So Ben, are you there? | ||
I am here, Dr. Navarro, I am here. | ||
Whether I'm loud and clear or not, I don't know. | ||
I'm a brother. | ||
But I'm definitely here. | ||
Okay, so finish up, tell us your final thoughts and your social media coordinates. | ||
Absolutely. | ||
Well, look, I just, and I'll be posting the links to this, you'll be able to get them From the article I will post later on today on Getter, but you'll also get the links in full on the Rumble page, which I'm not able, on the Bannon's War Room Rumble page to this video clip, which I just don't have enough space in the Getter post to put the links there on Getter, but I'll drop them all on Rumble. | ||
And I very much want people to come and read this Daily Telegraph article that you were just referring to. | ||
unidentified
|
It's very, very… We'll get that up. | |
We'll get that up on the War Room site. | ||
Ben, I've got a lot of static and chatter, so it's hard for me to hear you. | ||
I don't know if the audience has experienced that. | ||
But you're the man. | ||
You are our man in Europe. | ||
Real America's Voice thanks you. | ||
Posse thanks you. | ||
Bannon thanks you. | ||
We'll see you next week. | ||
And in the meantime, When we're 30 seconds out and I start hearing that music, I'll take us out. | ||
But I want to come back to the story I was telling you. | ||
The lesson of GE's Jeff Immelt going to China was simply that you don't do that, otherwise you're going to lose your company. | ||
And this was a lesson really lost on both Apple's Tim Cook, And now Elon Musk. | ||
And both of these companies have essentially moved what, for all practical purposes, is their entire production inside the border of a country, Communist China, which by government policy wants, over time, to just simply strip them of their technology and assets, kick them out of the | ||
country, and then become essentially Apple and Tesla without any, any flow back of anything to American companies or shareholders or whatever. And Tim Cook bugs the hell out of me because this guy, he's just slick. He's just, | ||
He's in the, all these CEOs are just, you know, the blow dry, big smile, handful of gimme, mouthful of much obliged. | ||
He'd come to the West Wing. | ||
When Donald Trump was imposing tariffs on communist China and he'd tell us over and over again, hey, we're too big in China to fail. | ||
Please don't put our tariffs on. | ||
And Trump would look him in the eye and say, hey, look, start moving that stuff out of there because your time's coming. | ||
We're not going to put up with this crap. | ||
And what Tim Cook did was just the opposite. | ||
He doubled down. | ||
He tripled down. | ||
He quadrupled down. | ||
And now That bill is coming due as it is coming due for Elon Musk. | ||
And I'm going to finish up this story. | ||
The other side of this break, don't don't go away. | ||
Don't miss it, because this is this is the story. | ||
And then we'll take you out from there. | ||
But you are in the war room. | ||
Don't flap. | ||
I'm in for Stephen K Ban and Peter K Navarro. | ||
We will be right back. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, Peter Kanemar in for Stephen K. | |
Bannon with the big finish, as they say in Pardon the Interruption land. | ||
I want to just quickly finish this story about Tesla and Apple. | ||
And it's a simple story. | ||
Tesla now Elon Musk had broken their promise to America. | ||
The promise was they were going to manufacture most of the Teslas in America. | ||
They weren't going to go to China and make cars to export back to us. | ||
They were just going to simply sell to that market. | ||
Elon Musk took one look at the slave labor, the massive subsidies, and the pollution havens in China and went, yeah, a big bet. | ||
He's all in. | ||
He's all in there. | ||
OK? | ||
And then he's going to start dumping Teslas from China into America. | ||
And the irony is he's the next Henry Ford, okay? | ||
Henry Ford loved the Nazis. | ||
He went over and set up all his plants in Nazi Germany. | ||
You know this history, right? | ||
And the next thing we know, Ford plants are getting seized by Hitler, and that production is being used on vehicles that would be used in the Blitzkrieg to kill people all over Europe, okay? | ||
Tesla? | ||
Tesla's gone, baby. | ||
They've already lost their market top share to BYD, the Chinese competitor that's stolen styles and designs. | ||
What China is doing now is just what I warned. | ||
They're putting bans on Teslas in parts of the country, just like they're putting bans on Apple iPhones and Apple products in parts of the country. | ||
And the whole game of Xi Jinping is to put those companies out of business in favor of Huawei instead of Apple. | ||
And BYD instead of Tesla. | ||
Okay. | ||
It's all about Chinese nationalism. | ||
And I, you know, Elon is supposed to be the smartest guy on the planet. | ||
Yeah, maybe, but he is the dumbest frigging CEO I've ever seen. | ||
Um, because he's given that company away to the Chinese and he doesn't even know it. | ||
Elon, what the hell were you thinking? | ||
Really. | ||
And by the way, I'm telling you this story because Twitter is going to be used to take Donald Trump down and Musk himself is going to do everything possible to take Trump down because Trump | ||
We'll not let Elon Musk export communist Chinese slave labor pollution haven Teslas back into this country. | ||
Ain't gonna happen. | ||
All right, enough of that soapbox. | ||
I want to bring in Chris Orr right now. | ||
unidentified
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My brother, the floor is yours. | |
Tell this audience about your wonderful, wonderful technology and why we should be interested. | ||
Well, Peter, thanks so much for having me on, mate. | ||
Satellite phones are a part of the solution for what you've been talking about when it comes to government tracking and privacy. | ||
We all know, and the war on positivity knows full well, that a cell phone is basically a government tracking device. | ||
It knows where you are at all times, it's listening to you and your phone is watching you. | ||
And that's a problem because that information is being used against all of us for the benefit of big tech and the government. | ||
Satellite phones do not have cameras, so you can't be watched. | ||
Satellite phones cannot be tracked like a cell phone. | ||
The best you can get on a satellite phone is you can locate someone within 50 square miles. | ||
And Peter, I can't even, I lose my remote control on my couch, so finding someone in a 50 square mile radius is, you know, just ridiculous. | ||
It's not going to happen. | ||
So, if you want privacy, which you're entitled to, no matter what the government tells you, we are entitled to our privacy. | ||
We are protected, supposedly, by the Constitution, under the Fourth Amendment, from illegal search and seizure. | ||
But that's what's going on on your cell phones every single day. | ||
We're all being tracked and listened to. | ||
Chris, tell me a few things, because we've never had a conversation before, on or offline. | ||
Where are your satellite phones made? | ||
Well, they're put together here in the U.S. | ||
We do. | ||
They do use components from around the world, but they're put together right here in the U.S. | ||
And so, you know, this is the same phone, Peter, that's used by the U.S. | ||
military first responders. | ||
Because these phones work when cell towers don't. | ||
So when the cell towers go down, which has been happening a lot this week with these horrific temperatures we've all been living through, the power comes out and the cell towers go down. | ||
So if you don't have a satellite phone, you will be stuck. | ||
But a satellite phone is... Now, let me ask you this question. | ||
Can you call somebody who has a cell phone on a satellite phone? | ||
That's a great question. | ||
Yes, you can. | ||
You can call any other cell phone landline in the world, and they could call you. | ||
And at sat123.com, you can see the phone you're getting. | ||
It's this one right here, which is an Iridium 9555 sat phone. | ||
This phone is normally $1,400. | ||
Today, they're free with activation at just 99 bucks a month, and you get 100 minutes per month that roll over if you don't use them. | ||
And we can also give you- Where do they go to? | ||
Where do they go to take advantage of that? | ||
What's the website? | ||
It's SAT123.com. | ||
That's SAT123.com. | ||
SAT123.com. | ||
SAT123.com or they can call us Peter at 941-955-1020. | ||
It's 941-955-1020. | ||
But this offer is limited, Peter. | ||
It's a $1,500 value. | ||
You're getting it for free today if you call us at 941-955-1020. | ||
But this phone can save your life and it can protect you from illegal government searches and tracking. | ||
Let me ask you another question. | ||
Is there a lot of software updates you have to do or anything like that? | ||
How is it mechanically? | ||
Is it once you got it, that's it? | ||
Or do you have to update it? | ||
No, it's not like, you know, your computer these days and your phone every five minutes is telling you need an update, you know, for your own good and of course. | ||
Yeah. | ||
But no, you don't. | ||
This is a much more basic device, Peter. | ||
This is, there's no video or photos on this or no camera or anything like that. | ||
This is designed to keep you in touch privately when you cannot use your cell phone or you just want to have a private conversation that we're all entitled to. | ||
And you can have that on a cell phone. | ||
All right. | ||
I think we got it. | ||
I got 30 seconds here to say goodbye to my beloved posse. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Nice to meet you, sir. | ||
Grab that phone. | ||
Peter K. Navarro, you can reach me at peternavarro.substack.com. | ||
peternavarro.substack.com. | ||
When I'm here in the studio, I always got to thank these great Real America's Voice Techs. | ||
They did a great job today. | ||
I love it. | ||
I purposely tested them a little bit with that tech stuff like that. | ||
They performed admirably. | ||
All right, Peter K. Navarro. |