Speaker | Time | Text |
---|---|---|
This is the primal scream of a dying regime. | ||
Pray for our enemies. | ||
unidentified
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Because we're going medieval on these people. | |
I got a free shot on 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 lie? | ||
unidentified
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MAGA Media. | |
I wish in my soul, I wish that any of these people had a conscience. | ||
unidentified
|
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
|
War Room, here's your host, Stephen K. Bass. | |
It's Thursday, 22nd February, the year of our Lord, 2024. | ||
Welcome to CPAC, War Room Posse! | ||
Hang on, hang on. | ||
unidentified
|
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. | |
Are you tired? | ||
Has it been a long day? | ||
I can't hear you. | ||
Okay, I want to give a big war room welcome. | ||
We have former Prime Minister Liz Truss from the United Kingdom. | ||
So, first off, Prime Minister, talk to us about your time as Prime Minister. | ||
It was intense. | ||
It was brutal. | ||
Did the deep state turf you out with knifing you in the back? | ||
Give us the inside details. | ||
This is your audience right here. | ||
They love Nigel Farage. | ||
We love the strong Tories. | ||
Not too crazy about the rhino Tories, right? | ||
Talk to us about it. | ||
unidentified
|
Look, I wanted to cut taxes. | |
I wanted to cut the size of the administrative state. | ||
And those people didn't like it. | ||
The economic establishment in Britain wanted to keep things the way they were. | ||
And they did. | ||
They got me. | ||
But I have learnt from that, Steve. | ||
I've learnt from that. | ||
Was it the economists that got you? | ||
Was it the Financial Times of London? | ||
Are these the people we got? | ||
This is the party at the City of London. | ||
Are they the ones that run the deal over there? | ||
unidentified
|
These are the friends of the bureaucratic establishment. | |
They are the friends of the deep state. | ||
And they work together with bureaucrats, of which we've got many more in Britain than you have here in the United States, to keep things the same. | ||
And people in Britain aren't happy about that. | ||
They want change. | ||
But it's being stopped. | ||
And that's why we need a bigger bazooka. | ||
Listen, last night, Prime Minister Liz Truss told me, I was talking about, we have 3,000 political appointees. | ||
Remember, Paul Dan's Project 2025, we're getting ready for it. | ||
We have 3,000 that can go on day one, 1,000 political, have to be confirmed by Mitch McConnell and Schumer in the Senate. | ||
So we get 4,000 total, over about 2.5 million bureaucrats and about 18 million consultants, so about 20 million. | ||
How many do you have? | ||
And I was sitting there whining about that and how tough it was. | ||
How many do you have in the United Kingdom? | ||
unidentified
|
In Britain, we only have 100 political appointees. | |
You only have 100 people when you come to power? | ||
unidentified
|
100 people. | |
100 people. | ||
And none of those people run government departments. | ||
So every government department, every agency is a permanent civil servant in Britain. | ||
That's how difficult it is. | ||
How can Britain be saved then? | ||
unidentified
|
Well we need to change that. | |
We need to change that. | ||
Because what I found out when I got into number 10, is I thought that if I got to the top of the tree, I would be able to implement those conservative policies. | ||
So you think once you're prime minister, as a little girl thinking if I get prime minister I'll be like Churchill, change the country. | ||
That's not how it works. | ||
unidentified
|
Exactly. | |
And what I discovered was that I was not holding the levers. | ||
The levers were held by the Bank of England, by the Office of Budget Responsibility. | ||
They weren't held by the Prime Minister or the Chancellor. | ||
And I think that's a massive... Hold on, hold on, hold on. | ||
That's a massive problem. | ||
Hang on, hang on. | ||
You're saying the Central Bank, the Bank of England is one of the things that controls... Are you a conspiracy theory person? | ||
You almost sound like Worm. | ||
You're MAGA. | ||
unidentified
|
What I'm saying, Steve, is that if the Bank of England Governor can't be sacked, and the Prime Minister can be sacked, then the Bank of England Governor is going to have more power than the Prime Minister. | |
And that is a problem in a democracy. | ||
Okay, can we put the cover of the book up? | ||
You just wrote a book. | ||
It's coming out in April. | ||
unidentified
|
It's go ten... April the 16th. | |
April the 16th. | ||
Ten years to save the West. | ||
What do you mean ten years? | ||
Our audience will say, hey, if we don't get Trump back in the White House on January 20th of 2025, the West is gone. | ||
Why do you say we have ten years? | ||
unidentified
|
Because getting the Republicans back in the White House is important, but it's not enough. | |
There's a huge job to do to win the battle. | ||
Because the fact is the left have succeeded in infiltrating our campuses, infiltrating our schools, our corporations. | ||
So it's not enough just to take the White House. | ||
It's not enough just to take the Senate. | ||
You've actually got to change a hell of a lot of what's going on in our countries. | ||
And we've got the same problem in Britain. | ||
Rather than pursuing making money and hiring people, corporations are pursuing Wokenomics. | ||
So there's a huge job of work to do to turn all that around. | ||
Is the City of London and the corporations headquartered in London with the Bank of England just have too much power for the politicians? | ||
It's all kind of a game you see on BBC. | ||
I mean, do you really have, do the people in England, this is one of the reasons Tory is probably not getting a lot of traction, do they have a real possibility at the ballot box to drive change? | ||
unidentified
|
Not enough. | |
Not enough. | ||
And there are too many Conservatives who just want to go along with the status quo. | ||
Because they want to be popular. | ||
They want to have friends at dinner parties in London. | ||
Do you want to be popular? | ||
Do you want to go to the cocktail parties in Georgetown? | ||
Do you want to hang out in Belgravia? | ||
unidentified
|
No! | |
You want to be awfully awfully? | ||
So how are you going to, I mean, you talk about the Party of Davos, the World Economic Forum. | ||
Talk to us about, I mean, how, in the book, tell us how you're going to do it, because it looks like in England, even more insurmountable odds. | ||
I mean, we have a Trump that's an armor-piercing shell, and we're developing now a cadre, literally, of millions and millions of people that are ready to serve, ready to do things, many of them veterans. | ||
So this movement is getting more and more mature every day. | ||
unidentified
|
So we need a cadre of people as well in Britain who are prepared to serve. | |
We need Conservatives who are prepared to fight. | ||
And we need grassroots people, it's why I'm developing a new movement called Popular Conservatism, who are actually going to come and back real Conservatives and put pressure, popcorn, Popular Conservatism, but it's going to put real pressure on Conservative MPs to be Conservative. | ||
Because they need to change things. | ||
We've got a massive problem with immigration in Britain. | ||
But we cannot deport illegal immigrants because the left are fighting us in the courts. | ||
So we need Conservatives who are prepared to overturn that. | ||
And prepared to restore power to the people. | ||
Because that's the problem we've got. | ||
People in Britain want things to be different, but it can't be delivered. | ||
Can you deliver? | ||
You've got the Bank of England, you've got BBC, you've got state control. | ||
It seems insurmountable. | ||
Nigel Farage said yesterday that you're going to have a radical Islamic party have seats in Commons in the next election. | ||
Do you believe that's true? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, there's going to be a by-election in the next few weeks and it could be a radical Islamic party win in that by-election. | |
So that is a possibility. | ||
You're saying an Islamic radical party? | ||
In a couple of weeks, in a special election, is it one of these Midland urban areas? | ||
unidentified
|
It's Rochdale. | |
So it's an urban area in the north of England. | ||
But it's the one that's had the rape situation? | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
The grooming situation? | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
Hang on, I don't understand this. | ||
The grooming situation, Tommy Robinson, all these heroes fought it, the rape situation, and in that community, you're going to have a special election, and you may have a radical jihadist party send somebody to commons after all that problems? | ||
unidentified
|
That is correct. | |
Now how are you going to save a country where you have that chain of events? | ||
unidentified
|
Because the vast majority in Britain don't want this to happen. | |
They don't want to be a country that is subject to Islamic terrorism. | ||
They don't want to be a country that backs Hamas. | ||
They're not an anti-Semitic country. | ||
So what we have to do is make sure the people of Britain's views are actually reflected in the policies that are carried out in Britain. | ||
And that's what we need to take on these extreme leftists. | ||
Because the problem is these people have been appeased. | ||
We haven't done enough to crack down on the pro-Hamas marches. | ||
We haven't been doing enough to crack down on the environmental extremists that are gluing themselves to trains in London. | ||
We're not doing enough to crack down on these arguments and actually stand up to these people. | ||
You can't triangulate with terrorists. | ||
You've got to take them on. | ||
Can we, uh, by the way, what's your website, your social media, how did they get the book, all of it? | ||
I gotta tell ya. | ||
I really feel for the United Kingdom. | ||
unidentified
|
We are going to save it, Steve. | |
I'm not a pessimist like you. | ||
I'm an optimist. | ||
I know it can be saved. | ||
And I know the people of Britain want things to be different. | ||
I think I'm a realist. | ||
unidentified
|
And what we need to do, and this is what my book is about, my book is about telling people the truth about what's going on in Britain, why things aren't working. | |
Is she tough enough to turn England around? | ||
I think so. | ||
Hold it. | ||
Would you work with Nigel? | ||
unidentified
|
I need a few more friends, though, to be frank. | |
I need a few more people to help me. | ||
So, Steve, if you're willing to come over to Britain. | ||
Once you've sorted out America, you can come over to Britain and sort out Britain. | ||
I may be banning Britain. | ||
Would you think of working with Nigel on maybe restructuring the Tory party? | ||
unidentified
|
I will work with whoever it takes to make our country successful. | |
I will work with whoever. | ||
And Nigel, and I've done an interview with him already today, I would like him to become a member of the Conservative Party and help turn our country around. | ||
I've been telling Nigel that for a long time, so maybe we'll see it. | ||
unidentified
|
Maybe he'll listen to me then, Robin. | |
Woah! | ||
Woah. | ||
She's tough. | ||
She comes across as very sweet, but as tough as boot leather. | ||
Do we think Liz is tough enough to start to turn anyone around? | ||
Can we hear it for her? | ||
One more time. | ||
People want to find out more about you. | ||
Where do they go to find out? | ||
unidentified
|
So TrustLiz is my Twitter account. | |
You can read about my book on there. | ||
You can pre-order it on there. | ||
Ten years to save the West. | ||
And where do we go get the book and where do we go to PopCon? | ||
Where do you go to find out your new movement? | ||
unidentified
|
That's also on my Twitter account and you can go to www.popularconservatism.com. | |
Okay, let's give it a big shout out. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Our partner in Europe. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Jane Zirkle, what do you got? | ||
unidentified
|
Z-Posse, can you please tell me your name and what brings you to CPAC? | |
I'm Zachary Winooga and I came to CPAC today because I just want to fight for the conservative movement and I am really angry, Jane, of where Joe Biden is taking this country. | ||
I mean, for instance, we would much rather fund the Ukrainian border than fund our own border at home. | ||
Joe Biden would much rather send federal troops to go down and make sure that the border is not secured and use that taxpayer dollars instead of using it to try to make sure that our border is secured. | ||
He would much rather start a war with our own people of Texas who are patriots trying to secure the southern border rather than go down and secure it himself. | ||
Our tax dollars are going to things that do not benefit the American people at all. | ||
We're sending almost $200 billion to Ukraine. | ||
Anyone know the GDP of Ukraine? | ||
It's $200 billion. | ||
This is ridiculous. | ||
It costs, like, $20 billion to end homelessness. | ||
We could have ended homelessness, like, five times over if we just used that money towards the right things. | ||
Our politicians are failing us. | ||
They're spending your taxpayer dollars on things that do not benefit you, and they're getting handouts to do it. | ||
And it's honestly ridiculous. | ||
It should anger every single person here. | ||
And I'm very angry with where Joe Biden's taking this country, which is why I'm here, to support the conservative movement and Donald Trump. | ||
Wow! | ||
Wow! | ||
Talk about political prisoners. | ||
What's your name? | ||
unidentified
|
Where are you from? | |
Mary Sturgeon, Dillon, Montana. | ||
And your son? | ||
Isaac Sturgeon in prison in Ohio. | ||
For standing up for America? | ||
unidentified
|
For standing up for America out quietly outside the Capitol. | |
They arrested him. | ||
God bless you and God bless your son. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you. | |
Let me go over here. | ||
We're coming over here. | ||
We got stage fright over here. | ||
Hold it, hold it. | ||
Ben Burquham's got to be in the shot. | ||
I'm getting out of the shot because I want to show you this. | ||
unidentified
|
Look at this. | |
This is the MAGA hammocks guy and he has a hammock. | ||
Now, I don't think you could sit on this one, Steve. | ||
unidentified
|
It's a little one, but it's a war room hammock. | |
He's got a bigger one. | ||
Go ahead. | ||
unidentified
|
We got big hammocks. | |
We also do scarves. | ||
They're all handmade. | ||
I take an extra small. | ||
Okay, I want to introduce the finest political reporter of his generation, Breitbart's Matt Boyle. | ||
Matt, 30 seconds and we're going to go to break. | ||
Tell us, what are you seeing? | ||
What are you feeling here at CPAC? | ||
You've been coming for, what, 12 years? | ||
What are you seeing? | ||
What are you feeling? | ||
The energy is extremely high. | ||
This is the troops getting marshaled before the biggest fight of any of our lives. | ||
We always say the next election is the biggest one. | ||
This one really is, right? | ||
This one really is. | ||
The fate of Western civilization is on the line, and these troops are ready to go to war. | ||
So, no doubt about it. | ||
The hardest working, the smartest, and the best reporting on President Trump of anybody is Matt Bola Breitbart. | ||
Okay, we're going to take a short commercial break. | ||
Make sure you go to birchgold.com. | ||
Are those on sale? | ||
Are they going to be on sale? | ||
They're downstairs? | ||
Where do you go to get your, uh, where do you go downstairs? | ||
You go to Magahammocks.com. | ||
It's in the digital store. | ||
unidentified
|
Magahammocks. | |
But this is, this is for you, Steve. | ||
Dude, I love it. | ||
You gotta go to She's So Right. | ||
unidentified
|
Magahammocks. | |
Magahammocks. | ||
Okay. | ||
Birchgold.com. | ||
Slash Bannon. | ||
The end of the dollar empire. | ||
Go get it. | ||
We're gonna take a short break. | ||
Back in a moment with Matt Boyle. | ||
Breitbart's Matt Boyle! | ||
unidentified
|
We're no more, let's take down the CCB! | |
Here's your host, Stephen K. Bamm. | ||
Yo! | ||
It's almost happy hour. | ||
Just hang in there. | ||
We've got a little more work to do. | ||
We're gonna get through. | ||
Okay. | ||
I like that. | ||
It's always happy hour in the war room. | ||
Okay. | ||
The only human on earth that was mentored by, in order, Tucker Carlson, Andrew Breitbart and Stephen K. Bannon and live to tell about it is Matt Boyle. | ||
How was that experience? | ||
I learned a lot from each of you guys, all different mentors, so we'll put it that way. | ||
All different kind of mentors. | ||
Now hold it, Matt was on the show a month ago. | ||
You did amazing. | ||
Matt did a three-hour interview, I think, with President Trump, you and Alex Marlowe. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
And you broke it into 12, a dozen pieces are amazing. | ||
But Matt, when you were on a couple weeks ago, you didn't look like this. | ||
I mean, are you cleaned up, a haircut, the suit? | ||
The guys here running for VP are up there trying to make their best case to President Trump. | ||
Are you trying to be the comms director of the Trump White House? | ||
Look, if President Trump ever asked me to do that, I would definitely consider it. | ||
Is he our pick? | ||
Is Matt Boyle our pick? | ||
He's the best. | ||
We have a fight ahead of us, though, and the bright bar needs me where I'm at. | ||
The president needs me at bright bar for now. | ||
Okay, Boyle wrote a piece. | ||
Was it yesterday? | ||
Last night. | ||
Okay, this piece is very important. | ||
We always try to give you the The son of the United Kingdom, Murdoch's paper, the tabloid, wrote a great piece about yesterday's session we had on force multiplier. | ||
And they said the most important thing for the audience is that when you guys went out afterwards, the reporter was sitting there listening and said the people seemed like they got this secret knowledge, this inside baseball knowledge that empowered them. | ||
Is that right? | ||
Do you feel like that? | ||
One of the reasons we get the smartest people come on the show. | ||
Boyle's piece is amazing and here's why. | ||
He's telling you what they're already planning for when Trump wins. | ||
That even in a Trump victory, they're going to try to steal it from him again. | ||
More subtly, but yet powerfully, than they did in 16. | ||
Take it away. | ||
Yeah, so what we have uncovered, and people can read the whole document, we published it, it's a 66-page document. | ||
This is an internal board memo, marked confidential on every page. | ||
Uh, that walks through for, this is for an organization called the American Clean Power Association. | ||
For people who aren't familiar with what the American Clean Power Association is, what it is, is it's a trade association of all the green energy companies, companies that have gotten green energy subsidies from the federal government. | ||
Oh, you mean like the one trillion dollar boondoggle? | ||
That, what's the so-called inflation reduction act, right? | ||
which didn't reduce any inflation but spent billions and billions and billions of your dollars on these green energy projects from the Biden administration. So this is, this organization raises and spends tens of millions of dollars a year. We're talking $65 million a year annual budget. You mean lobbying to get more money. So they are, this is like the definition of the swamp. | ||
This is the definition of the swamp. | ||
They lay out throughout this 66-page document how they are going to spend seven figures, so $7 million, over the course of the next year. | ||
And they're going to increase this over the course of this year and the year afterwards on protecting these green energy subsidies in the Inflation Reduction Act. | ||
Now the key point is... You mean these things come to almost trillions of dollars when you count them all up? | ||
billions of dollars, all this special interest money, and these places wouldn't be in business if it wasn't for this government money. | ||
Now, the big takeaway is they lay out, the only scenario they lay out that they expect to happen this year is a big Republican red wave where there's a Republican in the White House, a Republican in control in both chambers of Congress. | ||
Hang on, hang on. | ||
I'll make sure people understand. | ||
You're saying the smart money in D.C., the lobbyist money, the official way the system works and the city works is saying Trump's going to win. | ||
We've got to figure out how to stop him after he wins. | ||
Correct. | ||
What they're doing, official Washington has made the determination that Donald J. Trump is going to be the next president of the United States. | ||
What they're doing is... That's the good news. | ||
And that Republicans will control Congress. | ||
We will control the House and the Senate. | ||
Correct. | ||
That's what this document very explicitly states. | ||
Now, their plan is, what they want to do, is they're going to spend this $7 million and they're going to increase that number beyond that as time goes on. | ||
They are going to spend tens of millions of dollars trying to flip, and they literally explicitly stated in here, 10% of Republicans on Capitol Hill into opposing efforts to repeal the green energy subsidies as part of the Inflation Reduction Act. | ||
Hang on, hang on, hang on. | ||
Then we know that's a fantasy. | ||
You could never flip Republicans to vote with Democrats. | ||
I'm like, come on, you know that. | ||
They're so tough. | ||
They literally say their business model depends on it. | ||
They literally say it in there, that their business model depends on being able to flip 10% of Republicans. | ||
There's more. | ||
They literally go on to name the targeted members that they are going after. | ||
They name a dozen plus Republican U.S. | ||
senators. | ||
They name 40 or 50 House Republicans that they intend to target as part of their pressure. | ||
None of these senators would be associates of Mitch McConnell, would they? | ||
Some of them are. | ||
So, one person who gets his own full paragraph is Senator John Cornyn of the great state of Texas. | ||
Hold it, John Cornyn. | ||
Hold it, hold it, hang on, hang on, hang on. | ||
John Cornyn, but John Cornyn's full MAGA. | ||
He couldn't possibly do that. | ||
They literally give a whole paragraph in this document where these green energy companies that get the money from Biden talk about how they have literally been donating to Cornyn and cultivating a relationship with him and having regular meetings with him as part of an effort. | ||
Now, some of these other senators, some of them I don't think will vote for this if I look at this list, but if I were to put together a list for the deep state on how to protect the Biden agenda, This is how I would put that, like, what they have is how I would have done it. | ||
So in a Trump presidency, like, so this is very, very smart how they put this. | ||
Do you think you're going to see more of this? | ||
You're going to see more documents of official Washington on how they're going to stop Trump? | ||
Yes. | ||
And you're already seeing it, too. | ||
And especially at, you know, look at the war that you're seeing between The New York Times and the Biden campaign in White House. | ||
They don't get along. | ||
That's because The New York Times can see down the field, too. | ||
So what you're going to start seeing is all of these places, they're going to start, it's, the fight is not, so, yes, there's going to be a fight over the election, like, don't get me wrong, like, don't take anything for granted, everybody, right? | ||
Like, don't take this for granted. | ||
But the real fight is going to come when Trump's president again, and Republicans are back in control of both chambers of Congress. | ||
Can Republicans execute the MAGA agenda when they get there? | ||
And they're gonna do everything they can to try to stop that from happening. | ||
They will spend all the money in the world, they will have every consultant on the planet working for it, and there's very few of us fighting back against it. | ||
Can we give it up for Matt Boyle? | ||
The single best reporter in this city. | ||
Matt Bohr, best political reporter. | ||
A warrior. | ||
Hold it. | ||
How do they get to Breitbart? | ||
How do you get to your radio show? | ||
By the way, he took my old slot. | ||
10 o'clock in the morning until noon on Saturday mornings. | ||
Or is it 1? | ||
10 a.m. | ||
to 1 p.m. | ||
on Saturday mornings on Sirius XM, 125, The Patriot Channel. | ||
And go to Breitbart.com. | ||
Breitbart.com? | ||
You know he's not on Twitter? | ||
But I do true social. | ||
True social. | ||
Ten years ago, I called him up in the middle of the night screaming, you gotta get off Twitter! | ||
He had done some crazy Twitter stuff. | ||
I think I was tweeting out some nasty stuff. | ||
I think you were. | ||
Yeah. | ||
We love Matt Boyle. | ||
Okay. | ||
Jane Zirkle, what do you got for us? | ||
unidentified
|
Can you please tell me your name and what brings you to CPAC? | |
Hi, I'm Jordan, and I'm a young conservative. | ||
I'm 16, and I came to CPAC because I want to not only expand my knowledge of what I already know about politics, but I also want to see what I can do as a young voice of Gen Z, that is a conservative, to see what I can do as a young voice, what I can do to this country, because I've seen from a young age, I mean from the time Obama was in office, that What these leaders, if you can even call them that, have been doing to our country. | ||
The Democrats have destroyed this country, how Joe Biden is destroying this country. | ||
Can you please tell me your name and what brings you to CPAC? | ||
Dawn, and what brings me to CPAC is I want to help save this country. | ||
I want to end child pornography, save the children from trafficking, and I want to make the woodchipper great again. | ||
Awesome, awesome. | ||
Make America Great Again, what brings you to CPAC? | ||
I am a MAGA War Wyrm posse deplorable from Annapolis, so I'm just pleased to be here and be with a lot of like-minded people. | ||
Awesome. | ||
Hang on, Ben Berkron, what do you got for us? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, no confederacy of trash over here to all the left wing out there. | |
We the people, we've got the Sisters of the Church of God. | ||
Ladies, tell me how important God is in our country. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, it's the most important thing, because he actually has all power. | |
And he's the one that we have to go to, right? | ||
And we have to beckon to. | ||
He can make the changes, but we have to also call upon him. | ||
He says, if you don't ask, you don't have anything. | ||
So, ultimately, he's the one that overrules all. | ||
I love it. | ||
God bless you. | ||
I love you, ladies. | ||
Thank you so much. | ||
God bless you. | ||
All right. | ||
Ben, hang on one second. | ||
Come right back there in one second. | ||
I want to introduce Jim Rickards, Currency Wars. | ||
This is an original first edition when I first got, what, 2008? | ||
That's right. | ||
This is one of the smartest guys in the world on capital markets. | ||
This book's become a classic, right? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, it's over ten years old, but it talks about Ukraine, Russia, natural gas, war. | |
What did you say about Ukraine ten years ago? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, the point is they're still running Russian natural gas through Ukraine, through those pipelines. | |
So they're, they're, we're financing both sides of the war. | ||
They're paying for the natural gas, Russia's using the money, and, you know, Ukraine's surviving, but it's, uh, it's indispensable, um, but Russia knew how to use, it was called the blue weapon, because, you know, blue flame, and they knew how to use it as a weapon. | ||
Okay, we're gonna take a short, hang on for a second. | ||
Rickerts, you used to work at the CIA. | ||
You came in... Is this the Bond outfit? | ||
Yeah. | ||
It looks like you just came in from... His fire came in from the coma. | ||
unidentified
|
My flying jacket. | |
You still got some tendencies from the CIA? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, okay. | |
You wrote this as part of a war game, right? | ||
unidentified
|
That's right. | |
We hosted a war game for the Pentagon. | ||
It was the first ever financial war game. | ||
Now, they've done plenty of other types of war games. | ||
Putin says currency could be used. | ||
In Tucker's interview, he said currency could be used in war, but the United States is using it too much. | ||
unidentified
|
The sanctions. | |
Yes, using too much, printing too much, but we're using the sanctions too much. | ||
They work against small powers, but not against great powers. | ||
Okay, I want everybody to hang around. | ||
Are you guys waiting for a happy hour here? | ||
Hang on, hang on. | ||
Did management say we had to be quiet here? | ||
I thought they said we had to be quiet this morning. | ||
We were all loud. | ||
Okay, here's what we're going to do. | ||
We're going to take a short break. | ||
When we come back, we're going to get a little jacked up, okay? | ||
unidentified
|
We've got Rickards here. | |
It's been a long day, folks. | ||
We're in the War Room. | ||
If you want strategic intelligence, go to Paradigm Press. | ||
Strategic intelligence, a monthly newsletter from one of the smartest guys in the world, Jim Rickards. | ||
He's going to be on the other side. | ||
Tulsi Gabbard, Monica Crowley, everybody's coming to the War Room. | ||
unidentified
|
Here's your host, Stephen K. Bamm. | |
There we go. | ||
Gaylord Management's gonna be here in a moment. | ||
Ben Burquham, who do you got? | ||
unidentified
|
Allen West, what is he doing? | |
Yes, sir. | ||
My name is Amy Lee. | ||
I'm a precinct chair from Dallas County in Texas. | ||
And we have a problem with our lease at the top of our Dallas County party. | ||
So Lieutenant Colonel Allen B. West is going to run. | ||
He is currently on the ballot. | ||
The early voting is right now. | ||
He's running for the chair of Dallas County Republican Party. | ||
I love it. | ||
Thank you so much. | ||
unidentified
|
Allen West. | |
James Zirkle, who do you got? | ||
unidentified
|
Tell us about your book. | |
Hi. | ||
Well, I'm a congressional journalist, and I write for a Hispanic magazine. | ||
I got interested in when did we start having immigration laws, and how have they evolved? | ||
And I found out we've had two comprehensive immigration laws. | ||
One was in 1923, when it was the Quota Act, and everybody was supposed to be from a certain nationality. | ||
And then in 1964, we passed the Civil Rights Act. | ||
So they had to change the immigration law because it was based on nationality, Ken. | ||
So I wrote a book called... Did that law change America? | ||
That law changed the face... How did it change America, ma'am? | ||
unidentified
|
Face of America. | |
How did it change America? | ||
unidentified
|
Because it let everybody in equally. | |
There's no quotas. | ||
A lot of people think there's quotas. | ||
There's not. | ||
Everybody's on a quota. | ||
There's a thing called the 7% rule that I doubt any congressman has even heard of. | ||
But it's still in existence. | ||
Of the Voting Rights Act, the Civil Rights Act, was the Immigration Act the one that had the most impact, really, on America? | ||
unidentified
|
Absolutely. | |
No doubt. | ||
unidentified
|
And even David Leonhardt, believe it or not, he quoted my book because I said it was the most liberal immigration law in the world and now all the progressives want to change it because now they don't want it equal. | |
I'll tell you what we're going to do. | ||
We're going to get you on the show tomorrow. | ||
We'll figure it out. | ||
Can you hold the book up? | ||
This is the most untalked about topic, by the way. | ||
Net job increases from 2019 till today, 100% to foreign-born labor. | ||
Now, we have no problem with smart legal immigration, but this has been an invasion on our country to drive down wages and to impact the African-American and Hispanic citizen low-skilled labor and crush them. | ||
That's why so many African-American men are going to vote for Donald Trump, 50% vote for Trump. | ||
We'll sweep 45 states. | ||
Okay, Jim Rickards, Currency Wars, you've also got Strategic Intelligence, the monthly newsletter. | ||
You saw Tucker's interview with Putin. | ||
Putin gave a six-minute lecture on international finance, capital markets, and particularly the dollar, sanctions, trade war, whatever. | ||
Was he right? | ||
I mean, it's pretty smart how he said it. | ||
Talk, just break it down for why this audience should pay attention to what Putin, one of our greatest enemies, said. | ||
unidentified
|
Putin was exactly right. | |
He said two things. | ||
He pointed out, obviously, the sanctions don't work. | ||
I have to say, Janet Yellen, our Secretary of the Treasury, knows nothing about this. | ||
She's got a high IQ, but she's a statistics geek from Berkeley. | ||
She knows nothing about international finance. | ||
Her deputy understands... She's not a dealmaker. | ||
She's not Wall Street. | ||
She doesn't understand capital markets. | ||
unidentified
|
That's exactly right. | |
It's all theoretical. | ||
unidentified
|
That's exactly right. | |
She has a deputy, Wally Adeyemo. | ||
He knows sanctions but he doesn't know anything about the economy. | ||
He's never worked outside the government or the Obama Foundation in his life. | ||
Putin has a very good economic grasp and he says the sanctions won't work. | ||
They work against a small power, maybe North Korea or Cuba. | ||
Not a great power. | ||
unidentified
|
They don't work against Russia. | |
Absolutely not. | ||
The ruble is close to where it was when the war in Ukraine started. | ||
The Russian economy is booming. | ||
It's outperforming the U.S. | ||
economy. | ||
They have labor shortages. | ||
They're on a war footing. | ||
They know how to go on a war footing. | ||
They're making millions of shells. | ||
Our arsenals are empty. | ||
We've used up all our shells. | ||
So everything that Russia's doing, by the way, they've got 25% of their reserves in gold bullion. | ||
25%? | ||
25%. | ||
Why are their central banks The central bank's buying gold? | ||
unidentified
|
Because you can't freeze it. | |
It's not digital. | ||
You can't freeze it. | ||
You can't seize it. | ||
It preserves value. | ||
Elvira Navyalina, who's the head of the central bank in Russia, I say, she's the only central banker who knows her job. | ||
She's done a very good job of building up the gold reserves. | ||
There were about $200 billion worth of reserves in gold. | ||
The U.S. | ||
can't touch the gold. | ||
That's the point. | ||
So, two things. | ||
Number one, today I was interviewed by Russian TV, I was interviewed by people from Ukraine, people from Germany, German TV, and they asked me about these new sanctions that Biden's going to put in. | ||
I thought we put all the sanctions, I thought we were on war footing against Russia's economy. | ||
Are you telling me that Biden failed to put in some sanctions on the Russians? | ||
What is he talking about? | ||
unidentified
|
Biden put in a ton of sanctions, but they don't work, and that's the point. | |
The European Union just put in their 13th round of sanctions. | ||
13th round. | ||
unidentified
|
13th round. | |
Now, if the first 12 rounds didn't work, why do you think the 13th round is going to do any better? | ||
Russia has found markets for its oil and natural gas in China, India. | ||
They're actually trading in some local currencies. | ||
They're not relying on the dollar. | ||
They're building an alternative payment system. | ||
We need them more than they need us. | ||
Get off the SWIFT system. | ||
unidentified
|
That's right. | |
This audience has been called the backing of Trump's anarchy and chaos, right? | ||
You're the agents of anarchy, agents of chaos. | ||
The Wall Street Journal, Paul Gigot and his group of clowns at the Wall Street Journal, excuse me, Murdoch's Wall Street Journal, Editorial page today said that we've got to take the $300 billion we have in money center banks of Russian treasury bills, treasury bonds, Russian assets that we've frozen as part of the sanctions. | ||
We have to convert those to cash. | ||
We ought to immediately say, screw the MAGA Republicans, and we ought to take that cash and give it to the Ukrainians today. | ||
Why is that the most radical idea that will destroy Bretton Woods? | ||
unidentified
|
I can't think of a bigger mistake. | |
Giving them nuclear warfighting codes might be less dangerous than doing exactly what you described. | ||
Actually giving them nuclear codes would be less dangerous than this? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, because mutual assured destruction works. | |
The point is, let's see what we're talking about. | ||
300 billion dollars, these are U.S. | ||
Treasury securities, U.S. | ||
debt in other words. | ||
Russia paid for them. | ||
They're owned by Russia. | ||
They're held in custody in European values. | ||
They're not our assets. | ||
We can freeze them. | ||
They're in our banks. | ||
unidentified
|
They're our liabilities. | |
We owe them. | ||
They're Russia's assets. | ||
OK, so we froze them. | ||
All right, that's one thing. | ||
Now what they're talking about is not freezing, but seizing, actually converting the property, turning it into U.S. | ||
property. | ||
I would say that's stealing. | ||
unidentified
|
I would say it's stealing. | |
I would also say it's default. | ||
That's a selective default on U.S. | ||
government debt. | ||
Don't tell me the U.S. | ||
never defaults on the debt. | ||
We do it all the time through inflation. | ||
But this would be an outright default. | ||
It would be outright theft. | ||
And now, first of all, it's not going to hurt Russia because, as is They've got $200 billion worth of gold, plus other assets. | ||
Will that end, if they do that, if the Wall Street Journal pushes this and the Biden regime does this, will this destroy Bretton Woods? | ||
Will that be the end of the dollar empire? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, now it takes time. | |
It doesn't happen overnight. | ||
But if you're any other country in the world, you're Saudi Arabia, China, South Korea, Taiwan, you're looking at that and say, hey, what if the U.S. | ||
doesn't like something I do? | ||
They don't understand the role of confidence. | ||
U.S. | ||
Treasury market. | ||
Why has it been going for 230 years? | ||
Started with Alexander Hamilton. | ||
It's all based on confidence. | ||
It's not magic. | ||
It's like, we actually think the U.S. | ||
are going to pay their debts. | ||
They might have to issue more debt to do it. | ||
If you take that money, convert it to Ukraine, to fight the war in Ukraine, Russia will carry on, but the U.S. | ||
Treasury market will be dead. | ||
But first of all, also, Congress has no war power. | ||
I mean, you've taken away by taking... Okay, I never asked... First of all, strategic intelligence. | ||
Why should people get it? | ||
Where do they get it? | ||
unidentified
|
Thanks, Steve. | |
That's our monthly newsletter. | ||
It's our flagship. | ||
We have some smaller ones, but Strategic Intelligence. | ||
Get your best thinking in it. | ||
unidentified
|
Absolutely. | |
We're always well ahead of the curve. | ||
We said things six months ago that are in the headlines today. | ||
We pride ourselves on really keeping our readers not just informed, but well ahead of the curve. | ||
And you can go to RickardsWarRoom.com to subscribe to Strategic Intelligence. | ||
Rickettswardroom.com. | ||
Go, you get a big discount. | ||
Go to Strategic Intelligence. | ||
Okay, folks, no, I never asked for this, but I've got to ask you to sign my first edition of Currency Wars right here. | ||
unidentified
|
My pleasure. | |
This guy, I gotta tell you, one of the smartest guys out there. | ||
Can we give it up for Jim Rickards, Strategic Intelligence? | ||
Make sure everybody goes to their site right now, check it out. | ||
You guys are gonna be, I know you love inside baseball, this guy's full of inside baseball. | ||
When you see this on eBay later tonight, do not tell Jim Rickards. | ||
Jim, thank you so much. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you, Steve. | |
We'll see you tonight. | ||
Jim Ricketts, let's give it up for him. | ||
Oh, hang on, Monica Crowley's in the house. | ||
unidentified
|
Hi guys! | |
Hi guys! | ||
Hold it, I have a special announcement to make. | ||
unidentified
|
Brick Suit Man has the brick suit on! | |
Hold it, hang on, hang on. | ||
As Brick Suit Man, why did not wear the brick suit to the academy yesterday? | ||
He was undercover! | ||
He was undercover! | ||
unidentified
|
I was trying to be a little bit low-key, just like, you know, under the radar. | |
It didn't work. | ||
Everybody sussed me out right away. | ||
It's an official, once you wear the brick suit in the front row, it's an official Trump event. | ||
unidentified
|
Absolutely. | |
Monica Crowley, we love Monica Crowley. | ||
Hi guys! | ||
You know what the problem with Monica is? | ||
She's not tough enough, not hard enough, not pointy enough. | ||
Hold it. | ||
You were on the Michelle Obama Kamala Harris with Boyle today. | ||
Yes. | ||
And I heard it got a little heated. | ||
You had Larry O'Connor, Monica Crowley, Matt Bossett. | ||
Who in the hell put that panel together? | ||
Those are fire breathers. | ||
I'm surprised the Gaylord didn't shut it down. | ||
What happened on that? | ||
So, I was making the point that two years ago, I saw our friend Joel Gilbert's documentary, and you had him on the other day, Michelle Obama 2024. | ||
And an alarm bell went off in my head, and the next week I came here to CPAC, and I was on the main stage, and the topic of 2024 came up, and I said, you know what guys? | ||
I was like, I don't want to be the skunk at the garden party, okay? | ||
But we need to deal in reality. | ||
And nobody is considering the possibility of Michelle Obama as the 2024 candidate. | ||
We like that, don't we? | ||
No, we do not want that. | ||
It's Obama's third term anyway, why do you have a fourth term? | ||
Well, wait a minute, Steve. | ||
I want to run against Joe Biden because he's such an abject catastrophe. | ||
We do not want to remove Joe Biden. | ||
What we want, what We also have to be very aware of what the left is capable of. | ||
We've seen that over many decades. | ||
And my feeling, and I hope I'm wrong, and I could be way off on this, but my feeling is that they have made way too much progress with the Great Reset eight years of Obama. | ||
They feel like they lost time four years under Donald Trump. | ||
They've regained the advantage under Joe Biden, who's a total puppet. | ||
So if this is Obama 3.0, they want Obama 4 and 5.0. | ||
And the only way that they are really going to get that as insured is by running Michelle. | ||
And again, I could be way off. | ||
How do you replace, you've got to replace both Biden and you have to replace Kamala Harris. | ||
Yes. | ||
How do you replace both? | ||
One is hard enough. | ||
How do you get rid of both? | ||
Especially when both of them are incredibly stubborn and they're holding on to the drapes in the White House. | ||
And not particularly bright. | ||
So this is the best gig they're ever going to have. | ||
That's right. | ||
That's right. | ||
Look, when the left's power brokers joined with the deep state, they can do whatever they want. | ||
And we are dealing with communists and globalists here, and we know what they're all capable of. | ||
So I don't put it past them to remove Joe Biden and then incentivize Kamala Harris to get out, whether it's a payoff, a lateral move to the Supreme Court, God help us, or some other way. | ||
But here's the critical point about Michelle. | ||
The most devoted activist base of the Democrat Party is black women. | ||
And so if they bounce Kamala, they're going to have to square that circle. | ||
And the only one who can really do it and keep that voting base intact is Michelle. | ||
Would you guys like to see Trump versus Biden or Trump versus Michelle Obama? | ||
Let's take Trump versus Biden first. | ||
Who wants a rematch? | ||
He's the weakest! | ||
We already beat Biden once. | ||
Who wants to see Trump vs. Michelle Obama? | ||
unidentified
|
Wow! | |
Wow! | ||
Come on! | ||
You wouldn't like to see him take on Michelle Obama and defeat her, win 40 states? | ||
Okay, you say take Biden. | ||
I tell you what, let's take a short commercial break. | ||
We're going to do a reset here. | ||
Is she a black woman? | ||
Which one? | ||
Michelle? | ||
Michelle is a black woman, yes. | ||
I saw the unedited copy of Joe Gilbert's. | ||
I'm just asking. | ||
I'm asking for a friend. | ||
She's a woman of color. | ||
I'm asking for a friend. | ||
Short commercial break. | ||
I think we'll be canceled off this. | ||
Short commercial break. | ||
Where are we back in the war room in just a moment? | ||
unidentified
|
Welcome! | |
We rejoice when there's no more, let's take down the C.C.P.! | ||
Here's your host, Stephen K. Babb. | ||
the world. | ||
I'm not going to be able to do that. | ||
Oh Welcome back to the War Room! | ||
Okay, we're gonna announce tomorrow. | ||
I've got to do something for President Trump at about 11 30 in the morning show. | ||
And so Natalie's gonna take over. | ||
We have a special announcement. | ||
Who's gonna be your co host? | ||
unidentified
|
Monica Crowley. | |
I can't wait. | ||
You know, President Trump always had a thing, he says, hey, am I going to be like Wally Pipp? | ||
That's the, that's the first baseman that, uh, that got replaced by Lou Gehrig. | ||
unidentified
|
So let's make sure. | |
I think I have honestly one of the hardest jobs. | ||
I have to fill in for you. | ||
Rush always had a great, a great thing. | ||
He was never replaced by a guy that was better than him. | ||
So I don't want to break the string here. | ||
We're very honored you're going to be back here tomorrow. | ||
Oh, my pleasure. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
Where do we get the podcast? | ||
Where do we get all the social? | ||
Don't we love Monica? | ||
unidentified
|
Yes. | |
Because she's tough. | ||
She's in President Trump's first term. | ||
She's going to be a big player in the second term. | ||
Do you want to be National Security Advisor? | ||
As I told President Trump, I stand ready to serve in whatever role he deems necessary. | ||
unidentified
|
I will do whatever he asks of me. | |
I think Monica ought to be on the ballot here for Vice President, right? | ||
I'm just saying. | ||
Thank you, Steve. | ||
I am available for the job. | ||
Just saying. | ||
You can tell the President. | ||
I'll slip that in there. | ||
Podcast, where to get all your writing, social media, all of it. | ||
Yes, thank you so much. | ||
The Monica Crowley Podcast. | ||
I hope all of you guys are listening. | ||
If you're not, you can find it wherever you get your podcasts. | ||
Apple, Google, Spotify, Stitcher, social media, Instagram, at Monica Crowley underscore, and on Twitter, and True Social, and Getter, at Monica Crowley. | ||
We'll see you back here at 11.30 tomorrow. | ||
I want everybody here to see Monica Crowley greet her when she co-hosts with Natalie Winters. | ||
Monica, thank you so much. | ||
Jane Zirkle, what do you got for us, girl? | ||
unidentified
|
Can you please tell me your name and what brings you to CPAC? | |
Yeah, my name's Grace Riley and I'm here because I think that Gen Z should be standing for conservative values strongly. | ||
Big time, big time. | ||
Name and what brings you to CPAC? | ||
Hi, I'm Edward X. Young from Brick, New Jersey. | ||
unidentified
|
It's my first CPAC. | |
I've been to a lot of Trump rallies, 71 of them, but it was time I came to this event. | ||
Wow! | ||
Well, happy first CPAC! | ||
Name and what brings you to CPAC? | ||
Hi, my name is Michael O'Neill. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm here to promote my book, Faith Over Fear, Force Through Fire. | |
Awesome! | ||
Name and what brings you to CPAC? | ||
My name is Gordon White from St. | ||
unidentified
|
Louis, and I came here to say hello to one of the War Room's biggest fans, and that's Mika. | |
Hi, Mika! | ||
Name what brings you to CPAC. | ||
unidentified
|
Hi, I'm Holly, and I'm just so excited to be here. | |
It's my first CPAC, and I live in San Antonio, and there are thwards of fighting-age males just walking around my neighborhood. | ||
Thank you so much. | ||
unidentified
|
Ben Burquam, take it away. | |
You're running for governor of California? | ||
Yes, sir. | ||
unidentified
|
When's the election? | |
2026, but we got to start now. | ||
You're starting early. | ||
unidentified
|
We can't save California. | |
We can't save this nation. | ||
When we can take back California, I've got the plans and the solutions to do it. | ||
What's the plan? | ||
Give it to me in 60 seconds. | ||
unidentified
|
We have to start with the water in California, and we have to address the homeless issue. | |
We have to focus on nonpartisan issues that affect everybody in California, fixing the key foundational issues, so we can actually bring the state together behind one candidate to save the nation. | ||
Is Gavin Newsom going to run for president? | ||
unidentified
|
It looks like he might. | |
The $79 billion deficit that's going to bankrupt California. | ||
Are the people of California turning against him? | ||
unidentified
|
Everybody's turned against him. | |
They know the root of the problem, and it's Gavin Newsom, and that's why we're excited to see him leave, and we hope he doesn't wind up in Washington. | ||
Where's your website? | ||
unidentified
|
This is like a four-year effort? | |
Absolutely. | ||
He'll be gone in two years, in 26, and you can learn more about me at leozacky.com. | ||
You're a brave man. | ||
What's your website and social media? | ||
unidentified
|
at Leo S. Zaki on the social media platforms and leozaki.com, Z-A-C-K-Y. | |
You're a brave man, sir. | ||
Thank you so much. | ||
Okay, Mike Lindell's in the house. | ||
unidentified
|
We love Mike! | |
Here's the question I have. | ||
Okay, come up here. | ||
Natalie Winters, is it Giza Dream Sheets for you or is it the flannel sheets? | ||
unidentified
|
Ha ha ha. | |
To be honest, I like silk sheets, but I feel like that goes against... But I will say... Natalie, you're beloved by this audience. | ||
Let me defend my honor. | ||
Your dog beds are fantastic. | ||
Thank you. | ||
It's funny, you have my pillow! | ||
unidentified
|
Well you're looking good, I knew you would! | |
You don't have a dog bed for one of those tiny dogs. | ||
You don't have a tiny dog. | ||
unidentified
|
I have a mid-sized dog. | |
We have all-size dog beds. | ||
unidentified
|
Whose name is Jefferson? | |
What about the dog beds? | ||
By the way, our dog beds are made with the patent until my pillow. | ||
Throw them right in the washer and dryer. | ||
Quick story, I was on, before QVC canceled me, we were on there with the dog beds and I said, you know, they come with a 10-year warranty. | ||
Your dog, even if your dog chews them up, and they're yelling in my ear going, you can't say that. | ||
I said, Of course I can, because the dogs love their bed, they don't chew them up! | ||
But we've got a great special, speaking of sheets, our per kill sheets. | ||
Hang on a second, hang on a second. | ||
Every article today tells me you're bankrupt again. | ||
Yeah, I know. | ||
20 more articles. | ||
Are we going to let Mike Lindell go bankrupt? | ||
Why all the articles saying you're bankrupt again? | ||
They love attacking me. | ||
It's a distraction, by the way. | ||
That'll be done by 2025. | ||
All these lawsuits, all these billions of dollars, they pile up like cordwood. | ||
They want me distracted from what I'm trying to do, secure our election platforms and save this country. | ||
And all of you have made that possible because of supporting MyPillow. | ||
And MyPillow is an employee-owned company, and they've attacked them because their CEO wants secure elections. | ||
That's disgusting. | ||
And that's exactly what happened this morning. | ||
I've been having media calling me from all over the world, and when they do that, at least I'm able to say, hey, we've got to get rid of the machines and go to paper ballots hand-counted. | ||
And you know, you're not going to see all this on the other networks like Fox. | ||
You know, you're not going to see them talk about elections. | ||
So at least I get attacked. | ||
There's a silver lining in there that I'm able to take the word out. | ||
So do we have some specials? | ||
Can we make some cash and make sure MyPillow is still there? | ||
Yeah, in my opinion, we're up for this. | ||
This is brand new. | ||
This is announced right now. | ||
In fact, I set it up 15 minutes before I got on. | ||
Speaking of sheets, our new percale sheets just came in yesterday. | ||
All of them, they're normally $69 for a queen size set. | ||
Ready for this? | ||
$34.98 for the warm room special. | ||
King size $39.98. | ||
Use the promo code War Room. | ||
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This is for the War Room posse. | ||
Still free shipping? | ||
Free shipping. | ||
We'll go free shipping too. | ||
Free shipping on the War Room to tie your order. | ||
Free shipping. | ||
800-873-1062. | ||
Make sure you use the War Room promo code. | ||
MyStore. | ||
How's MyStore doing? | ||
And MyStore. | ||
That's all the entrepreneurs. | ||
The USA entrepreneurs we have. | ||
I set this up. | ||
It's like a mini Amazon. | ||
Use the promo code WarRoom there. | ||
I have thousands of USA entrepreneurs and USA products there. | ||
You can shop there all day long. | ||
Get everything you need there. | ||
You're supporting USA. | ||
USA. | ||
unidentified
|
Okay. | |
We're going to take a very short commercial break. | ||
We're going to come back. | ||
We're going to go in the audience. | ||
Audience participation next hour. | ||
We want to hear where you're from, why you're here at CPAC, and your strongest recommendation to President Trump of what ought to be in his speech on Saturday. | ||
How about that? | ||
Short commercial break. |