Speaker | Time | Text |
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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
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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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Thank you, Mr. Logan. | |
We only have a few seconds. | ||
You said you've been targeted over the last 10 years. | ||
unidentified
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Can you describe what precipitated your targeting? | |
Yes, I'm reporting the truth about Benghazi. | ||
I was attacked by one of those NGOs that masquerades as a non-partisan watchdog in violation of its 5013C status. | ||
It occupies a highly partisan position. | ||
I'm talking about Media Matters for America. | ||
I'm sure there's many doctors in this room, scientists who've been attacked by the same people. | ||
The same people that run that, David Brock, for example, another political assassin, now runs an organization called Facts First USA, which is designed to make sure that your research, Dr. Hasan, never reaches the people or the public. | ||
There are other organizations like Defeat Disinfo, which claims to be a PAC. | ||
That goes after disinformation, particularly set up to target COVID and throughout COVID with General Stanley McChrystal and the other people that advise that organization. | ||
But what, you know, Senator Johnson, it's not a secret that these organizations exist. | ||
What is not widely known and talked about is that it's paid for by us. | ||
It's paid for by the taxpayers in your omnibus spending bills that get shoved through the House and the Senate against the will of the people of this country. | ||
There are cutouts for these NGOs, and what they do is they launder this money, they pass it from one NGO to the next, and in the name of preventing the spread of disinformation, they censor, silence, intimidate, and punish. | ||
I said that this is a death sentence for journalists. | ||
It's how you murder a journalist without killing them. | ||
It's how you murder a scientist without killing them. | ||
It's how you murder a doctor without... | ||
That was Lara Logan. | ||
She joins us in studio. | ||
That was you yesterday at Senator Johnson's, I guess, pre-hearing. | ||
We should have one in the house, but I guess you can't force a hearing because he's in the minority. | ||
It was absolutely amazing. | ||
I think three or four hours. | ||
It was pretty mesmerizing. | ||
But what you talked about goes to many different things than just the COVID and everything like that. | ||
This NGO situation is killing us on the southern border, right? | ||
Because they're the ones. | ||
Walk us through this whole point about NGOs. | ||
You know them, and it's not just the disinformation and misinformation that the media matters and all this, that we're paying for part of this, but it's also what they're doing on the southern border. | ||
unidentified
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It's not disinformation at all. | |
In fact, one of the smartest things I ever heard someone say is that these are not non-governmental NGOs. | ||
That was a term that was made to hide the fact that these are really, you know, intergovernmental NGOs. | ||
They're working inside the government departments, carrying out the business of government, but they give them an extra layer, you know, so that when you try to unwrap this, it's harder to get to the people who are really responsible. | ||
And it's extraordinary to think that you could have, you know, ideological zealots who are doling out millions and millions of dollars of U.S. | ||
taxpayer money, either through the Department of Health and Human Services or you have them through the USAID or through the State Department. | ||
I mean, the State Department's Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, you know, is just doing, I mean, they're handing out hundreds of millions of dollars all over the world. | ||
And they pass it to contractors and the contractors hand it to NGOs and the NGOs hand it to another NGO. | ||
And they've figured out a system. | ||
You know, this goes back to 1913 to the Federal Reserve Act when they created 5013Cs and made them tax-exempt. | ||
And that's kind of, they operate almost as a shadow government, Steve. | ||
And we saw this when John Solomon, remember when he was so attacked over Ukraine during the Trump impeachment? | ||
Yes. | ||
Why did they go so crazy over that? | ||
Why, when they had the impeachment of Trump, was half the time on the floor spent attacking John Solomon? | ||
Because they knew John Solomon was on to the real deal. | ||
unidentified
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And what did John Solomon reveal, which I believe is still under the transparency feature on his website, Just the News, right? | |
He revealed that the Open Society Foundations had been working with the U.S. | ||
Ambassador in Ukraine and her embassy staff, and they were arranging meetings, directing meetings, directing the Ambassador. | ||
Open Society being Soros. | ||
unidentified
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Yes, they were directing their policy in Ukraine, and who they could investigate for corruption, who they couldn't investigate, and so on. | |
That's what, and John Solomon showed Open Society. | ||
You mean, not just taking it, not taking it from Trump's appointees at State Department, but really reporting to the Open Society guys, the source guys? | ||
unidentified
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Well, it was that woman, Maria, what was her name, Yovanovitch? | |
Yes. | ||
That horrible woman who was the ambassador there, who told the government of Ukraine when Trump was elected, oh, don't worry, he's not really in charge. | ||
You know, all these unelected bureaucrats, like Maria Yovanovitch, like that traitor, Vindman, disgusting human being. | ||
Currently running for Congress in Virginia. | ||
unidentified
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That's his brother. | |
They're twins, remember. | ||
They're both awful. | ||
Oh, I thought Vindman himself was running. | ||
Is he? | ||
Yeah, I think it's him. | ||
It's him. | ||
unidentified
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Well, the guy who didn't make colonel, who sat there saying to the President of the United States what his policy on Ukraine should be, because he knows best, right? | |
The guy who admitted on the floor of the House during the impeachment hearings that, oh, they offered me a position in the Ukrainian government as the Secretary of Defense, and I didn't report it. | ||
She knows not only how to put the knife in, but how to twist, right? | ||
unidentified
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I'm Sicilian. | |
You know, by birth. | ||
I got some Sicilian blood running in me. | ||
And now a Texican. | ||
unidentified
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Irish-Sicilian-African who now lives in Texas. | |
Watch out! | ||
Woo! | ||
That's next level. | ||
So, the NGOs have been all over in exhaustion. | ||
It's because the thing on the board is not chaos. | ||
It's very well thought through. | ||
unidentified
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Right by 100 percent. | |
Just look at what Biden did before he even took office. | ||
I was down on the border between the election and the inauguration. | ||
They were all across the southern border. | ||
They were building facilities ready to take in people because remember Border Patrol is not designed. | ||
Those facilities are not meant to be long-term. | ||
They're not designed to deal with a thousand, two thousand, fifteen thousand people a day. | ||
Get in, get out, right? | ||
And so what Biden had to do, because he knew he sent Jake Sullivan and another woman who was in a previous administration, he sent them all over Latin America. | ||
And they went out telling the cartels, telling everybody that they were going to open the border and the policy was going to be more humane. | ||
Everyone knew what that meant. | ||
And at the same time, he brought in three open border ideologues from the Open Society Foundation to run his open border policy. | ||
But, you know, Steve, this is the thing people keep missing. | ||
It drives me crazy. | ||
I've been saying this for years. | ||
Look at the United Nations. | ||
This is a globalist policy where they recognize the UN's 2018 Global Compact on Migration. | ||
They recognize migration as a human right. | ||
Walk our audience through why that's so powerful. | ||
It's a railhead type of document. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, because when you look at the Biden administration, one of the very first things they did when they took office was they removed the word illegal from our dialogue. | |
They told the Border Patrol and Customs and Border Protection and basically the entire federal government, you're no longer allowed to use the term illegal. | ||
Why? | ||
Because they are implementing the UN's policy on migration that has made migration a human right. | ||
And what do they preach? | ||
That there is no such thing as God. | ||
There is no such thing as unalienable rights that come from God. | ||
What we want is human rights that are made by men that are above the sovereignty of nations. | ||
From the French Revolution. | ||
The Declaration on the Human Rights of Man. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes, of course. | |
And that policy is a globalist policy, which is why you've got all these great journalists that are down on the border, that are doing extraordinary work, that are finding these manuals that are made by IOM, the International Office of Migration, or UNHCR, or other UN agencies, that give a step-by-step guide to people on how to cross the globe and reach the United States of America. | ||
Because now this is your human right. | ||
You're not, you know, doesn't matter that you're breaking the law. | ||
There's no illegal in this anymore. | ||
And if you look at from Jen Psaki to the moron that they've got there now in the White House, Karine Jean-Pierre, right, they use the language of the globalists because they talk about irregular, regular and irregular flows of migration. | ||
So it can't be illegal because we don't care about sovereign rights. | ||
We don't care about sovereignty of man or the sovereignty of nations. | ||
We care about our implementing a policy which is designed... I hear people say all the time, well, they're going to get them to vote for the Democrats. | ||
Let me tell you, you got people coming from the villages in Guatemala who don't even speak English, okay? | ||
They're not going to the polls. | ||
What they're doing is, in sanctuary states, they are providing the room that the pollsters need, that they need for the cheat. | ||
Because when you, for example, Eric, right? | ||
You know that's the electronic voter registration system. | ||
When you are in a sanctuary state, you've got the census. | ||
The ones that are supposed to make sure that all the voting rolls are perfect and interlocked to the states. | ||
unidentified
|
Supposed to be. | |
But they don't. | ||
What they do is you're not allowed. | ||
Say you're California. | ||
You're a member of Eric. | ||
You do a census. | ||
You count all the illegal people. | ||
You're not allowed to ask citizenship or status for censorship. | ||
Right? | ||
And then you send that to Eric. | ||
You tell them, this is how many registered voters we have. | ||
Eric puts them in their system. | ||
Now when you show up at the polls, oh, you're in the Eric system. | ||
There's no check there on your citizenship. | ||
What do they need more than anything else to cheat? | ||
Why did they have to stop the count on the day of voting? | ||
Because you cannot end up with more votes than registered voters. | ||
Then everybody knows you cheated. | ||
So when they pause that voting and they do the fake, you know, we've got a waterline break, we're out of paper, or we're too tired to count. | ||
Or in Philadelphia we're too tired, right. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, we're too tired to count. | |
You know, what they're really doing is pausing so that they have time. | ||
And who do they use? | ||
They use all of those people who they have registered to vote, who don't even know where to vote, how to vote, what they would be voting for, don't even know they can vote. | ||
And by the way, they can't because they're illegal. | ||
They use that as cover. | ||
And that's one of the many, many, many ways that they cheat. | ||
Long before you even get to the polls, they're registering those people and counting them. | ||
And that's also, by the way, how they increase their representation in Congress. | ||
Right. | ||
In the different districts. | ||
With the population. | ||
You're from Texas now. | ||
How do you solve this if you have a A house that even when they went through the woke and weaponized, you couldn't get all the Republicans on board to like gut, there's still money in this budget today. | ||
That's one of the reasons we're fighting so hard to shut the government down this Friday, at least partial, and then shut it all the way down on the 8th. | ||
How do you get, um, when people won't take the woke and weaponized out? | ||
Because this is now, because of your reporting and War Room and other places, this is kind of known that your taxpayers are paying for their own destruction. | ||
unidentified
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Yes. | |
Why is it, and even in Texas you see half the Republicans there are quite soft on the securing of the border. | ||
unidentified
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Yes, you're 100% right. | |
Well, first of all, I'm a journalist, right? | ||
So I believe in solving everything with the truth. | ||
I believe that when you get the truth out there, there are good people that do the right thing. | ||
And it's up to them to decide to do that. | ||
My job is not, I'm not an activist, and I'm not a politician, and I'm certainly not a lawyer in a court of law trying to prove a case. | ||
When are we going to get you to be a politician? | ||
unidentified
|
Never. | |
Why? | ||
unidentified
|
I'd rather stick needles in my eyes. | |
Why? | ||
For the good of your adopted country. | ||
You're the type of firebrand we need. | ||
You're the type of person we need up here banging heads. | ||
unidentified
|
No, because when you come up here, you get eaten alive by the machine. | |
You wouldn't get eaten. | ||
Laura Logan's going to get eaten alive, I don't think so. | ||
No, you're right. | ||
100% I'm right. | ||
unidentified
|
Because I'm never coming up to you. | |
No, you're going to get eaten by these guys and put the fear of God in them. | ||
I was born to be a journalist. | ||
No, MAGA is a female-driven, because it's the women that get stuff done. | ||
The guys are going to talk about it. | ||
You're going to come here and bang some heads. | ||
Seriously, why are you not running for Congress? | ||
unidentified
|
Marcus, I'm good at lighting fires under people. | |
We need fires up here. | ||
We need fires up here. | ||
I'm being very serious. | ||
Your journalism is amazing. | ||
unidentified
|
I just want Alex Trebek's old job, right? | |
I just want to go and sit on a beach somewhere. | ||
But you understand. | ||
You would love to do that. | ||
And I would love to be in a sailboat going hanging out. | ||
At this time in history, you can't do that, right? | ||
unidentified
|
No, you cannot. | |
Because this is a unique time in history right now. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh no, no. | |
It's not even a unique time in history. | ||
We have literally never been here. | ||
We have never been at this point. | ||
We have a short window. | ||
You know how it is before an election? | ||
For six months before the election, they're going to get nothing done. | ||
Nothing. | ||
Because anything they're going to say, oh, we're too close to the election, that would be viewed as partisan. | ||
You know, that would be, you know, election interference. | ||
We couldn't possibly do that. | ||
So you've got a short window. | ||
Maybe, maybe inside 90 days, is that what we have to actually get something done? | ||
What has the Weaponization Committee done? | ||
Absolutely nothing. | ||
I mean, there's no chance that Jim Jordan would be speaking to me at this point if I was on the Hill. | ||
There's just no chance at all. | ||
You know, and... That's exactly why we need you on the Hill. | ||
No, but Steve, I don't... It's self-evident. | ||
I know the War Room chat is a thousand percent. | ||
You would raise an incredible amount of money to win immediately. | ||
unidentified
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I can't raise enough money to do my own job as a journalist. | |
No, no, you would be a global, you are a global international figure in journalism, but It's like, you know, Jack Kennedy was a journalist at one time, right? | ||
He started, he started, he wrote a book before the war. | ||
He covered the U.N. | ||
after the war, after his, after his time in the U.S. | ||
Navy, and then he went into politics. | ||
It's a natural segue, particularly your knowledge, your knowledge base and the way you can connect things and the way you can communicate. | ||
You're a communicator. | ||
In an increasingly complex world, we need communicators that can help people Understand or give them access to the kind of facts, which you are. | ||
You're very fact-based. | ||
You're quite unique. | ||
unidentified
|
I heard a woman say this once when a guy asked her out. | |
She said, I would rather shovel goat. | ||
And that's how I feel. | ||
You're a tough one. | ||
We're taking a short break. | ||
Clara Logan's in the house. | ||
She's not in the house yet because we haven't talked her into it. | ||
Texas would be proud to have you there. | ||
Short break. | ||
unidentified
|
Back in a moment. | |
Here's your host, Stephen K Vance. | ||
Let me take this in a different direction. | ||
When President Trump wins, and if he was to ask you to be head of DHS, would you say yes? | ||
unidentified
|
No! | |
I've got no business heading up Department of Homeland Security. | ||
First of all, I'd want to burn half of it to the ground. | ||
Hello? | ||
Okay, that's the one reason you should be here. | ||
It's serious as it could possibly be. | ||
I wouldn't waste... You're in D.C. | ||
very infrequently. | ||
Our audience loves you. | ||
I wouldn't be wasting precious time with you if I thought this was just some goof. | ||
I'm not goofing. | ||
You're exactly the type of person... Remember, I tell people all the time, the Tea Party movement and it's... | ||
And it's antecedent. | ||
The MAGA movement is a movement driven principally by women. | ||
And a lot of these women have not had any involvement in politics until after they had a couple of children, they had a family, became the CEO of the family, children. | ||
And they realize then, like in college or after college, they were not active. | ||
Now they're very active. | ||
Because why? | ||
Women get things done. | ||
Guys talk a lot of, you know, they talk, Women get things done, and that's why president. | ||
I'm a big advocate. | ||
It's not a gender thing It's a big advocate for a woman being president Trump's vice president because I see the killers that are there in these women They get five or six of my thing would be terrific vice presidents. | ||
I think you would be amazing as head of DHS you know why you have Guts, right? | ||
You've been in foreign battlefields all over the place, including when you were pregnant. | ||
You've got guts, you have moxie, you have street smarts, you're intellectually brilliant, and you're tough as boot leather. | ||
First off, you go into a place like DHS, as you know, because it's both anti-terrorism, of which you're kind of an expert, and the southern border. | ||
First off, The administrative state is playing the political appointees. | ||
They just want to tap you along. | ||
Like they said, we're in charge, not Trump's in charge. | ||
What Yanovich said. | ||
The apparatus, the deep state and the administrative state say, she's just here for a while, tap her along. | ||
You're not that person. | ||
What do you mean? | ||
You'd be blowing people up there every day. | ||
You're lying, that information's not correct. | ||
Plus, you would be down on the southern border. | ||
I've actually convinced myself now, you're the perfect pick. | ||
No, you're the perfect parent. | ||
What's holding you back? | ||
This is your adopted country, and you realize in your adopted country that we're in a crisis right now. | ||
Are we in a crisis? | ||
unidentified
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Yes or no? | |
We are in a crisis right now. | ||
And every patriot should be at the ramparts? | ||
Yes or no? | ||
unidentified
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Yes. | |
Okay. | ||
unidentified
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Every person. | |
Every person. | ||
unidentified
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Patriot or not. | |
And so if President Trump was to ask you to come in, or even go on the West Wing and be on the National Security Council, with something to do not just with anti-terrorism... The National Security Council has too many people. | ||
unidentified
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It should be slashed by 80%. | |
It's infiltrated by so many spies, it's outrageous. | ||
And part of the problem with government... We tried to do that with General Flynn. | ||
unidentified
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General Flynn would have done it. | |
That's one of the reasons we had to get rid of him. | ||
I asked General Flynn in the first day of the administration, when we were in the transition, I said, he went to D.C. | ||
with Jared and the president-elect, and I said, come back with the org chart for the National Security Council. | ||
Now, I had been a special assistant to the CNO on the day Reagan arrived. | ||
I came out of the fleet. | ||
National Security Council, I thought, was 25 people at the time. | ||
unidentified
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It should have been. | |
And the Pentagon was Kissinger and Brzezinski. | ||
And the Pentagon said, these guys run the world. | ||
And there were 25 of them. | ||
He brings back these charts, it's this thick, and General Flynn says, I didn't ask for the entire Pentagon. | ||
He says, no, Steve, there's 550 billets. | ||
I go, how many political appointees? | ||
He goes, about 30. | ||
I go, we have over 400 second deed from the agencies. | ||
He goes, yeah, it's terrible. | ||
I go, they're all plants. | ||
Every one of them is a plant. | ||
So you'd be a perfect person to go in there and crush that. | ||
unidentified
|
Steve, I think part of the problem... We're going to take an audience poll here. | |
No, I'm being serious. | ||
Would you take DHS? | ||
No. | ||
Let me ask you a different thing. | ||
If you were in charge, theoretically, from day one at DHS, what are the two or three things you would do immediately to make sure that your beloved Texas is not invaded? | ||
Ma'am. | ||
unidentified
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Well, I would enforce the law and uphold the Constitution. | |
Those are the first two things that I would do. | ||
And you can do that easily. | ||
I can't change the policy because I don't share policy. | ||
You're making the argument right now that Joe Biden has every executive power he needs to shut down the border immediately. | ||
unidentified
|
Everybody knows that. | |
100%. | ||
The only thing that's changed between 2016 and 2020 is the policy. | ||
It's the same people. | ||
It literally was the same people under Obama. | ||
I mean, if you look at Customs and Border Protection and Border Patrol and all of these agencies, they haven't shifted their mission. | ||
It remains exactly the same. | ||
Literally the same buildings. | ||
That's why when they were jumping up and down about Trump's putting people in cages, it was a joke. | ||
Because those facilities were built under Obama. | ||
They were not built under Trump. | ||
And Biden built more of them. | ||
But what Biden realized is that because of the optics of Trump, he had to make sure no one could see it. | ||
The only reason we're talking about this now is because there's an election coming up. | ||
I mean, if it weren't for that, the border would be as invisible as it was last year and the year before and the year before that, because literally nothing has changed except the numbers are going up. | ||
And that's not going to change unless you close the border. | ||
You opened your border. | ||
You literally moved agents from jobs where they were vetting people, trying to figure out, is this a father and a mother, and are these their children? | ||
Nah. | ||
Boom. | ||
We don't do any of that anymore. | ||
We just shove them out there, we hand them over to an NGO, and give them away. | ||
The reporting this morning, again, is confirmed. | ||
If you look at the state attorney generals, they confirmed that there's at least 85,000 That's just from the last fiscal year, right? | ||
unidentified
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That's from 21-22. | |
That's not even including 23-24. | ||
It doesn't even include that. | ||
There are 485,253, something like that. | ||
It's probably gone up now. | ||
Those are the official figures that were being given out by Customs and Border Protection since the beginning of the Biden administration. | ||
That's unaccompanied minors. | ||
450,000. | ||
Why do unaccompanied minors need sponsors if they're coming to reunite with their parents? | ||
Right. | ||
Good question. | ||
unidentified
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The reason they're being allowed into the country, they have an exception to immigration law, is because they're supposed to be reunited with their families. | |
Do you know that I work with America's Future with General Flynn and Mary Flynn? | ||
And we do a lot of work in counter-trafficking. | ||
One of the NGOs that we work with in Florida is a woman, Sylvia. | ||
She's from El Salvador. | ||
She's worked in this forever. | ||
She's finding girls on the street who are begging. | ||
They're trying to break the law with petty crime to be picked up by the police so they can be sent home. | ||
Because they are being trafficked and they want to go home. | ||
They're desperate. | ||
They've taken everything away from them. | ||
They don't speak the language. | ||
They don't know the culture. | ||
They've come here to be raped for money. | ||
You just answered a question. | ||
You can't turn this down. | ||
You could stop. | ||
You believe that children are being trafficked in here for sex. | ||
unidentified
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I know. | |
It's not I believe. | ||
I know. | ||
You know. | ||
Then you could stop that. | ||
Could you stop that in a week? | ||
unidentified
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We could absolutely make a massive dent in it, 100%. | |
But, you know, if I was law enforcement... So why are you not taking this job? | ||
unidentified
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Because if I was law enforcement, I would want someone who understood law enforcement to be in that job. | |
Okay, no, you're going to have people underneath you. | ||
You get all these great people underneath you. | ||
unidentified
|
Steve, they made General Petraeus head of the CIA. | |
What did that man know about intelligence? | ||
He'd never worked a day in intelligence in his life. | ||
We call him General Petraeus in my house, by the way. | ||
Just letting you know that. | ||
But he's part of the system, that's why they wanted him there, to make sure they had a safe pair of hands over there. | ||
Of course, that's what I mean. | ||
Trump is a disruptor. | ||
He wants people in there, not anarchy for anarchy's sake, to bring order back. | ||
unidentified
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There are good people who are also disruptors who are good for these jobs. | |
I am fighting to the death for journalism. | ||
That's what I'm fighting for. | ||
But in fighting for journalism, you're part of the information war. | ||
Okay? | ||
I'm saying that... | ||
unidentified
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No, I'm part of... | |
Yes, and the information war is... | ||
It's based on truth. | ||
unidentified
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However... | |
And it's the entire field of battle right now. | ||
It is the entire field of battle when you're out of power. | ||
Once you're in power, you have both information war. | ||
You have to make sure you put your narrative out, you put the facts out so people understand But then there is the nitty gritty of actually getting it done. | ||
President Trump's first term was stolen from him because, as you know, from Russian interference to all the administrative state. | ||
OK, now remember, we won and it come from behind. | ||
They never expected now. | ||
And this is why Project 2025 so important, et cetera. | ||
But they're waiting for us. | ||
Rachel Maddow, we started the show today with her kind of resignation last night. | ||
They took part of my speech from CPAC and they said, oh, Steve Bannon is Trump offensive, where I'm talking about how they stole the election from Trump. | ||
Because they understand right now, as it stands today, even if they try to steal it, we've got enough aspects out there to stop them, or at least to thwart most of it, that Trump will be president. | ||
And this time he's coming back. | ||
He understands the process. | ||
He understands the system. | ||
He's going to have people like you around him that are killers. | ||
unidentified
|
Steve, does the RNC, what are they doing about the fraud? | |
Nothing. | ||
Zero. | ||
But it's the same machine. | ||
That's where they get fined. | ||
unidentified
|
Same programs controlled by the same people. | |
Do they have attorneys? | ||
You're a machine. | ||
unidentified
|
You're a machine. | |
Are the attorneys lined up and ready to go out there? | ||
You're a machine person, I remember. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes! | |
I know they use it to cheat. | ||
Because people think they vote on paper. | ||
They hand it to someone, they put it in a machine, it spits out a QR code. | ||
Who knows what that QR code says? | ||
How do you know if it matches that piece of paper? | ||
Once again, you've answered the question. | ||
Who's in charge of the security of the elections? | ||
At a federal level, at a working state, it's DHS. | ||
This is why... Okay, stop. | ||
You're the number one person, the smartest person about how you stop and shut down the border today. | ||
Number two, you're one of the leading people in the country about the trafficking of children from foreign countries. | ||
Number three, you're one of the biggest advocates of the cyber elements of stealing. | ||
One, two, three. | ||
That's your job. | ||
I'm not kidding. | ||
This is serious. | ||
Now I'm going to go on a jihad to make sure that you're on the short list. | ||
It's not going to happen. | ||
You should definitely be on the short list. | ||
unidentified
|
It's not going to happen. | |
First off, and I will then buy TV rights for your confirmation hearing. | ||
unidentified
|
Do you want to know? | |
Your confirmation hearing. | ||
Our longest confirmation hearing. | ||
unidentified
|
Wait, let me tell you where. | |
It'll be amazing. | ||
unidentified
|
Let me tell you where I depart from politics. | |
This is not politics. | ||
I'm not here to be a politician. | ||
I'm here to be a servant of the people. | ||
unidentified
|
I will never go out in front of the cameras and say something that isn't true. | |
Of course, that's why you're perfect for the job. | ||
unidentified
|
Government officials lie all the time. | |
That's not MAGA. | ||
This is total transparency. | ||
We want you to go in front of them. | ||
unidentified
|
And then they'll say, well, you know, maybe it's better if you don't kind of say that just yet because we got this thing going on and we got that going on and if you do that, it's going to do that. | |
No, no, no, no, no. | ||
I'm going to tell the truth. | ||
That's it. | ||
But this crisis demands action immediately. | ||
It's like we're in a war. | ||
This is a wartime, you're a wartime consigliere. | ||
unidentified
|
I'm going to be there making sure that the people who say they're going to do this, that they really do it. | |
You know, even if it's Trump, even if it's you, it doesn't matter. | ||
My job is to make sure you keep your word. | ||
No, your job is to save your adopted country. | ||
You're one of the few people bringing it all together. | ||
First off, you're one of the few people to be here that's essentially a combat veteran. | ||
You've been on every battlefield in the world. | ||
You were there for the Arab Spring. | ||
Right? | ||
You were in every hotspot. | ||
You had the courage to go to every hotspot in the world. | ||
You're kind of like our own Tara Dahl. | ||
You guys have been everywhere. | ||
You guys have not flinched. | ||
That's why the southern border is a war zone. | ||
Who better? | ||
I'm asking the audience. | ||
Who better to put down Lara Logan on the border? | ||
I put you in the rear of Grand Valley to get cleaned up. | ||
One of the problems we have is that there are a lot of officials on both sides that are taking money and looking the other way. | ||
unidentified
|
100%. | |
You know the movie Sicario? | ||
You're the person in Sicario I'd want to put in there and run the operation to take down the cartels. | ||
If Trump asks us, who's the best person to oversee more of the cartels we want to have? | ||
You would be one of the top two or three names. | ||
You have common sense, you have courage, and you're smart. | ||
Take a short break. | ||
She's going to stay over one more segment. | ||
I'll work on her. | ||
unidentified
|
We'll have her confirmation hearing rolling here shortly. | |
Here's your host, Stephen K Band. | ||
We're doing this segment right now sponsored by Media Matters, Madeleine Peltz. | ||
Madeleine, we love you. | ||
We hope you're... I'm marking you. | ||
No, somebody the other day, one of these guys were up there whining about media matters. | ||
I go, what do you mean media matters? | ||
And now they've got the whole... They just put the annual report out or something. | ||
It's got everybody's picture in there from the worm. | ||
So we'll make sure we talk about it. | ||
Fantastic. | ||
I'm being very serious about this. | ||
And I'm going to... We're actually doing actually... Lara had to leave at 1130 here, but she's agreed to stay for another segment. | ||
Because I can beat her up some more and say that you got to do... You just walked into the trap. | ||
Okay. | ||
Your life's work and your reporting, the center of gravity of that is things about, like, the southern border and the sophisticated way that the NGOs are working as part of a quasi-government entity. | ||
You've dedicated your life, along with General Flynn and Jim Caviezel and others, about this whole situation of trafficking of women for sex, but particularly children. | ||
Okay, human trafficking of women. | ||
You've also are one of the experts on voter integrity. | ||
And even though some people around Trump are saying, you can't talk about January 6th, you can't talk about this. | ||
Yes, no, you absolutely can talk about this. | ||
You got to talk about it. | ||
unidentified
|
You have to talk about it, because that's all they're going to talk about between now and November. | |
You have to talk about it. | ||
You have to refute it. | ||
unidentified
|
And you have to stand up for the truth. | |
In all those things, it leads to DHS, or an advisor to President Trump. | ||
He needs hammers. | ||
unidentified
|
I am not a political animal, Steve. | |
Donald Trump's not a political animal. | ||
This is why he's a disruptor. | ||
I understand that. | ||
The reason people love him, he's not a politician. | ||
No politician would ever say the stuff Trump says. | ||
unidentified
|
That's true. | |
But he speaks truth to power, just like you do. | ||
unidentified
|
But look at all the people in the party. | |
There's a major problem. | ||
Are you whining? | ||
Are you whining now? | ||
Are you whining now? | ||
Look at all the people. | ||
This is so hard. | ||
Look at all the people. | ||
Are they going to say bad things about you? | ||
unidentified
|
Is that what they're going to say? | |
They're going to say bad things about Laura Logan? | ||
They do every day! | ||
You're getting another brawler in here. | ||
Right? | ||
Another brawler. | ||
Of course you're a brawler. | ||
unidentified
|
I don't care if they say bad things about me. | |
Of course you don't. | ||
unidentified
|
But I do care about a party that isn't confronting the reality of the split in the party between the elites and the people. | |
That's what you need to be in there and be part of it. | ||
This is how it's going to get pulled together. | ||
You're, you're a, you're not, you were not born in the United States, but you understand the values of this country. | ||
You understand the, the, the, the, what the, the core source of the grit and, and stick-to-itiveness and just basic old cussed-ness that is the backbone of this republic about what free men and free women do. | ||
You understand that virtually better than anybody else I know in the world. | ||
That's Trump's core characteristic. This is why Trump, this is why they hate him and they consider him a traitor to the ruling class because as I say in this city if you're not in the room you're not in the deal. And the American people haven't been in the room for 40 years. You saw this at CBS. | ||
You went to one of the most, if not the legendary, news organization of Edward R. Murrow and Cronkite and all of them. | ||
Eric Severide, all those guys. | ||
And when you got there, you saw the way the deal ran. | ||
That's not what they're, they're not there to report the truth. | ||
They're there, they have a angle of attack to represent the apparatus, just like the New York Times does, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, Fox News, all of it. | ||
unidentified
|
I didn't realize at first, but yes, over time. | |
But after years, over time, you saw that. | ||
And particularly as you started getting As you went off the ranch on the narrative, you really found out. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, then you find out. | |
A lot of people, younger people may not know, you were a superstar at one time. | ||
For four or five years, you were the rock star in investigative reporting on broadcast television. | ||
On 60 Minutes. | ||
60 Minutes, the mother ship. | ||
unidentified
|
I mean, when Katie Couric opened the Evening News, first-time female anchor, they reported me embedded with the Taliban in Afghanistan. | |
Right? | ||
And no one was calling me a traitor, by the way. | ||
Well, no, and by the way, you took every tough assignment. | ||
That's the other thing. | ||
unidentified
|
I fought for every tough assignment. | |
OK, and so here we're going to have to fight for your confirmation, too. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes, you are. | |
I want to see you write a confirmation. | ||
First of all, but but the things you're working on, like yesterday, how did you end up at Senator Johnson's thing? | ||
Because you speak the truth to power. | ||
You realize early on there's something deeply wrong with the way this pandemic is being I knew from day one that U.S. | ||
unidentified
|
intelligence monitors every single biolab that the Chinese built, from day one. | |
I mean, when they're even thinking about building it, U.S. | ||
intelligence is already monitoring it. | ||
Wuhan has been the medical center of the PLA since the long march. | ||
I mean, it's not lost on them that that's not just biomedical centers at research universities, that's the heart of the People Liberation Army. | ||
It's like Walter Reed in Bethesda, right, in one central location. | ||
unidentified
|
And also, how many people do the Chinese save with their medical breakthroughs? | |
They're not developing drugs to help you, okay? | ||
Yeah, they're not in the business of saving people. | ||
unidentified
|
No, they're not in the business of saving people. | |
They still think they have too many, right? | ||
unidentified
|
That's right. | |
As Mel said. | ||
unidentified
|
And so, U.S. | |
intelligence, you from day one, but you couldn't report it because at the beginning of the, you know, the so-called pandemic, it was nuts. | ||
What do you think is going to happen? | ||
Like, Senator Johnson is in the minority, but what we saw yesterday was unique because they had the conference for two days, but the concentration Of intellect, experience and reputation that was there. | ||
And that was only about a third of the people that could come. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh yeah, there's a lot more. | |
There's like Dr. Aaron Cariotti. | ||
Yes. | ||
unidentified
|
Who was, you know, the head of medical ethics at UC Irvine in California. | |
I mean, that's the heart of the heart of the heart, right? | ||
Of the progressive machine. | ||
And he stood up and gave up everything. | ||
I mean, they fired him too because he said natural immunity is better. | ||
And by the way, as a medical ethics guy, you can't force people to have medical interventions. | ||
And, of course, they didn't want to say it yesterday, but why is nobody talking about the Nuremberg Code? | ||
Well, they don't want to talk about that, Steve. | ||
No, you're not allowed to talk about the Nuremberg Code, because then they're going to go all nuts. | ||
But the Nuremberg Code was instituted specifically to stop them doing what they're trying to do still with the vaccines and with these digital identities. | ||
Make sure you didn't have a reprise of the Nazi doctors. | ||
unidentified
|
Correct! | |
Because the whole world recognized that it was pure evil what the Nazis did. | ||
Absolutely pure evil what they did in the name of science and what they did in the name of medicine. | ||
But they don't want you to say that. | ||
Is what happened here with this public health what they did, is that just a difference in degree but not in kind when you talk about evil? | ||
unidentified
|
I don't think that when all is said and done, I don't think there's going to be really a difference in evil. | |
I mean, is it different maybe if I stab you right in the face or if I shoot you from a thousand yards away? | ||
You know, is it cleaner if I shoot you from a thousand yards? | ||
It's cleaner, but it's still the same thing. | ||
I still murdered you. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
And so, yes, in one sense, of course, it does feel extremely evil, the specter, you know, of someone, you know, taking a baby out of somebody's womb so they can do experiments on it. | ||
I mean, it's unbearable, right? | ||
We can't even imagine it. | ||
Versus putting something in a baby that you know there's a good chance it's going to harm that child or kill them. | ||
I mean, when you know you're giving young people myocarditis, when you know that young girls are never going to have a baby for the rest of their life, don't you think that's the embodiment of evil? | ||
As well? | ||
I mean, people like Fauci, they created AZT. | ||
Remember with HIV? | ||
That mimicked the progression of AIDS. | ||
So people thought they were dying of AIDS. | ||
But they were dying from AZT. | ||
Look what we did to gay people all over the world. | ||
I mean, I stood in the graveyards in South Africa when they would dig the graves for children who would die that coming week from HIV. | ||
Hundreds and hundreds and hundreds. | ||
They were pre-dig. | ||
unidentified
|
Yes, they had to. | |
Because there were so many. | ||
And I was in those orphanages where they had HIV babies that were born to moms with HIV and when of course for the moms your immune system goes down when you give birth and so that's when the HIV would take root. | ||
There were women in Malawi and all these countries who died of thrush because they had HIV and there was literally no, they didn't have medicine and they couldn't even afford salt which is what the Africans would use you know in places like Malawi when they didn't have money for medicines. | ||
Women died slow, agonizing deaths. | ||
We just don't, because they didn't all die in one place, like in a concentration camp. | ||
Or in front of the media, and they didn't die in the suburbs around New York City. | ||
unidentified
|
Nobody cares about African women dying in villages in Malawi, where they're poor. | |
Please, they don't care about that. | ||
They don't even care about the fact that Fauci did medical experiments on young black and Hispanic children. | ||
That was documented, well documented, with the HIV epidemic. | ||
Who did they take? | ||
They took children in the foster care system. | ||
They took the most vulnerable children with no parents. | ||
When I exposed that, oh, I'm bad for attacking Fauci? | ||
Are you kidding me? | ||
There's reporters for NBC News and others. | ||
When they used to be real journalists and they did stories about this stuff, they were the ones who exposed it. | ||
You know? | ||
That was years ago! | ||
So how are you going to take what we saw yesterday, this kind of pre-hearing, and put that into so the city and the media can't look away? | ||
Because that's what needs to happen, right? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, that's a very good question. | |
And two things I want to draw people's attention to that I think is really significant about that hearing and what I said is, do people in America realize that we are funding atheist networks across the world? | ||
That the State Department is doing that and we're giving grants to NGOs that literally are attacking God and attacking faith and attacking religious freedom and attacking freedom of speech. | ||
That the rights that we say are, you know, inalienable, that are given to us by God. | ||
I know there's some moron that went from Politico, right, who went on TV and said that that was a crazy nationalist idea. | ||
I mean, do these people read the Constitution? | ||
Has she read the Declaration of Independence? | ||
Well, I think she believes that this is the cleavage, that we think that it's the Declaration of Independence and Jefferson's right that these aren't alienable rights, natural rights from God. | ||
She believes, as most of these radicals do in the French Revolution, which takes the exact opposite, says it all comes from the state. | ||
unidentified
|
But they haven't even done the basic thing of reading the Declaration of Independence. | |
Well, it's not important to them. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, they're zealots. | |
And our tax dollars are in their hands. | ||
When you say atheistic networks, are you going full Christian nationalist on me? | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, I don't even know what that term means. | |
It's a completely made-up term. | ||
That's information warfare at its finest, right? | ||
What do you mean? | ||
unidentified
|
It's BS. | |
That is absolute nonsense. | ||
Do you think it's to back off Christians from not coming into the public space and advocating their positions? | ||
unidentified
|
You can like it or you can not like it. | |
But this country was a Christian nation from the beginning. | ||
It was established as a Christian nation. | ||
It was established on the principles of Judeo-Christian civilization. | ||
And that guaranteed religious freedom. | ||
But there were not 400 religions in America at the time of its founding. | ||
There was one. | ||
And that was Christianity. | ||
Now, that doesn't mean that you're not welcoming and open to Muslims and Sikhs and Jewish people, whatever, whatever. | ||
Of course, I mean, Judaism is one of the oldest religions in the world. | ||
Of course, that's a fundamental and profound part of Judeo-Christian civilization, right? | ||
And so these are a part of who we are. | ||
But they want to rewrite that history now and make it that now suddenly, you know, God doesn't even exist. | ||
I mean, we are funding people who maintain that God does not exist. | ||
The hard left would say that there was actually a religion here beforehand, and that was the pantheistic beliefs of the Native Americans. | ||
The Indians have believed in spiritual and Gaia and all this, and that the white Protestant and their sidekick Catholics, European, came here and exploited this, and we're the colonizers, and we're just like they're saying the Israelis, the Israelis in Palestine. | ||
It's the same argument. | ||
unidentified
|
Well, it is true. | |
There was a type of paganism, right? | ||
And cultural religions and things that existed here and all over the world. | ||
And you know what? | ||
Those groups conquered other groups. | ||
And they massacred each other. | ||
They massacred each other. | ||
They did exactly the same thing. | ||
They just didn't win. | ||
And That's what no one talks about. | ||
They had very sophisticated alliances, very sophisticated geopolitics. | ||
Of course they did. | ||
This was a very sophisticated war that we stepped into the middle of. | ||
Exactly. | ||
Even from the first Thanksgiving. | ||
unidentified
|
I live in the state of Texas where we have, in my county, we have the only standing treaty with the Indians that still stands today, that has never been betrayed. | |
And why do you think there were so many alliances between different Indian tribes and white people? | ||
You know, whether they were Spanish people, by the way, whether they were from Mexico, whether they were from Germany, they came from everywhere. | ||
The Indians in Texas thought that the whites were the least of the problem. | ||
The problem was the Mexicans. | ||
That was a tough war, Comanches versus the Mexicans. | ||
It was tough. | ||
The Comanches were probably the toughest of all. | ||
How did people get to your content? | ||
unidentified
|
Well, the rest of the story with Lara Logan is on X, but I will say these days it's showing, you know, content not available. | |
Content not available when you click on the episodes. | ||
Can we hang through the commercial break? | ||
We've got a couple of minutes on the other side. | ||
When you say content not available, Elon Musk, the free speech absolutist, is taking down your content. | ||
Well, I don't know what's going on, but you can't watch it. | ||
We're banned in perpetuity. | ||
unidentified
|
You're banned on X? | |
In perpetuity. | ||
unidentified
|
Seriously? | |
Yeah, we're banned everywhere. | ||
unidentified
|
For what? | |
For what was that for? | ||
I think it was an election interrogation, or we said that we used the Thomas More quote that put Ray and Fauci's heads on pikes. | ||
They said, oh, they called for a beheading. | ||
I said, no, it was a metaphor. | ||
unidentified
|
But hey, who cares? | |
We only got two minutes for a jam, but as head of DHS, what would you do with the J6 prisoners? | ||
unidentified
|
I'd release them all, because it's a travesty of justice. | |
They were exercising their First Amendment rights. | ||
The judges are corrupt. | ||
There's not one single one of them that's had a fair trial. | ||
The 15-12, I hope the Supreme Court justices will do the right thing and get rid of that felony charge for obstruction of Congress, which doesn't apply to them. | ||
Obstruction of an official proceeding. | ||
unidentified
|
Obstruction of an official proceeding, yeah. | |
Where did people go to get all your content? | ||
Because the thing you were doing on the series was amazing, but where did they go? | ||
unidentified
|
The rest of the story with Lara Logan. | |
is supposed to be available on X. I mean we created that content. That's a multi-million dollar show. | ||
It's been suppressed on that? Well when you click on some of the episodes it says content is not available. | ||
He's a free speech absolutist. Well hopefully hopefully Elon and Kimball and James Musk, all the Musk boys, will fix it for a fellow South African. Okay and so you're on Twitter and where do you go? You go on X and you can also go to TruthinMedia.com to see all the episodes of the show. Yes but I am pretty noisy on Twitter. | ||
On X. You're pretty noisy everywhere except when you talk about being DHS. | ||
unidentified
|
There's so many mean people in this town. | |
The Republican Party has so many mean people. | ||
unidentified
|
What are you? | |
You're going to give me a room upstairs, Steve? | ||
We can do anything. | ||
We've got houses all over here. | ||
We'll put you in a safe house. | ||
Laura Logan, thank you so much. | ||
Thank you for staying so long. | ||
unidentified
|
Good to be here. | |
Thank you, Cameron, your silent partner. | ||
Mike Lindell, you had a real ally here today on the machines. | ||
Tell us what's going on at MyPillow, sir. | ||
Well, we got a lot going on. | ||
We got the war room policy covered. | ||
If you go to the war room square, you guys, we're extending. | ||
All the percale sheets that came in last week, the whole new line, $34.98 for the queen size. | ||
We're doing this for the war room policy. | ||
Now, hold on. | ||
I heard the percale sheets you announced on, I think, Thursday or Friday, CPAC. | ||
This was a blowout. | ||
People just loved them. | ||
Is that true? | ||
Yeah, it's what the price to it. | ||
They're the best sheets ever best per kill sheets in history and the king size $39.98. | ||
Yeah, everybody I love giving all the specials to the War Room Posse before anybody else gets them. | ||
This is one that's it's exclusive and you guys so go to the go to the website scroll down click on the War Room Square and And get these percale sheets, but we put all the other specials that are up there, too. | ||
We've got the blankets that we're keeping on sale. | ||
There's some of the flannel left, everybody. | ||
And then there's the famous Giza Dream Sheets. | ||
These are all exclusive War Room specials. | ||
The down comforters, they're going to be closing out there. | ||
They're 60% off. | ||
And then you have the famous MyPillow 2.0, saving 50%. | ||
The MyStore, I do want to say this, the MyStore, you guys can also use your promo code at the MyStore. | ||
And these are thousands of USA made products. | ||
Steve, I got a couple of them right here. | ||
This is the Ashwagandha gummies and the apple cider gummies. | ||
These, I take them every day. | ||
These are absolutely amazing. | ||
I've got just a couple of the products here. | ||
I've got Bleed Stop. | ||
This was actually developed by a friend of mine. | ||
I got to be a friend of his. | ||
They use them in hospitals and stuff. | ||
We use them here at MyPillow. | ||
If any cut, you put this on there and it seals it. | ||
FDA cleared. | ||
And you've got the Made in America socks, which I wear every day. | ||
All these entrepreneurs, they all have a story behind them. | ||
Mike, I had so many of these entrepreneurs. | ||
I had some of these entrepreneurs come up to me at CPAC and said you had given them a shot to get to a vast audience that people could actually get to their products. | ||
And so I think it's absolutely, this is an alternative economy. | ||
Stop giving your money to people that hate you. | ||
You know Mike Lindell is 1,000% MAGA and a great patriot. | ||
Now he's given a platform, mystore.com, promo code Warren McGinney, get all the sales, go right there. | ||
How many, how many do you have? | ||
We've got to jump, Mike, but how many, how many thousands of people do you have signed up right now delivering products and services? | ||
For the products, we've got probably a couple thousand entrepreneurs on there, and I believe there's over 3,000 products. | ||
And that's just on the mystore.com site. | ||
And you guys can use the same 1-800 number to order. | ||
All the operators are standing by. | ||
A lot of these entrepreneurs, you know, that they have their own story, just like I did when I invented my pillow. | ||
And you can get that, go to the mystore.com and check out their stories. | ||
So your promo code Warbird works on both. | ||
Call that 1-800 number. | ||
Steve, I don't have that in front of me. | ||
8-800-873-1062. | ||
I've memorized that. | ||
Go there and tell the operators we got their back. | ||
Mike, we'll see you on this afternoon, Mike Lindell. | ||
Thank you very much. | ||
And by the way, Lara Logan is probably your biggest supporter. | ||
It's unbelievable, the support she had for you on the machine. | ||
So we'll talk about it this afternoon, on the afternoon of 5 o'clock. | ||
I've got a big report on that, too. | ||
Our paper ballot campaign is great. | ||
We'll talk about it at 5. | ||
Mike Lindell, MyPillow.com, promo code WORM. | ||
Miles Grimler, the CEO of Field of Greens. | ||
People are asking me at CPAC, how do I keep the energy up for, you know, four days, four hours a day doing everything? | ||
I do it through Field of Greens, brother. | ||
Tell me why that works. | ||
Why does that give me energy? | ||
unidentified
|
The main thing with the first time people take it, and I'm sure you felt the lasting effects of it, is Yeah, America's we don't really eat well, it's no secret. | |
So over time, it's like filling a high performance car with cheap gas, you start to think that right here is normal. | ||
And then one time, if you have an empty tank, and you put the premium in on accident, all of a sudden you hit the gas after putting the good stuff in. | ||
And so People get used to the normal being kind of like groggy. | ||
So putting in the extra field of greens, fruits and vegetables, you get that added boost. | ||
And it's not just the first time you do it, but over time that the doctors put in each fruit and vegetable to affect each different part of your body. | ||
So the longer you take it, the more you're going to start to increase your normal, your level playing field is going to be higher up. | ||
And so that's probably why, you know, when you first take it, you get that initial boost, but Four days, you know, it's a lot. | ||
And so probably built up those field of greens in your system. | ||
Where do people go? | ||
What we'd like to do is immerse this audience in information. | ||
They love it. | ||
They're into the details. | ||
Where do they go to find out everything about this? | ||
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Fieldofgreens.com. | |
And we've put everything on that product page. | ||
So you can click into each individual fruit and vegetable inside the product. | ||
And it gives you a background of why it's in there, why the doctors put it in there. | ||
And they're always working to make it better. | ||
Right now, something we're dealing with internally, like Miles was saying, I think if we add two grams to this product, we can make new claims with adding additional servings of each specific fruit. | ||
Wow. | ||
And it's something that we're working to do. | ||
Wow. | ||
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And so, the doctors are always making it better, and we're always working. | |
Right now, we have 32 different farms that we work with, and always trying to get the best. | ||
It's all organic, whole foods, so it's safe for the whole family. | ||
It's amazing. | ||
It's not a supplement. | ||
This is how I get the... Don't take the one that's got all the advertising. | ||
This is the real deal. | ||
Miles, thank you so much, brother. | ||
Appreciate it. | ||
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Thanks, Steve. | |
Appreciate your time. | ||
Thanks for having me back. | ||
Charlie Kirk. | ||
Charlie Kirk's got amazing information about what they held last night with the evangelical pastors. | ||
Charlie Kirk, two hours on populist nationalism. | ||
Jack Masovic after that. | ||
You got Tara. | ||
And, uh, Ms. | ||
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Khan, leading back to here at 5 o'clock on Real American Voice. | |
See you back here at 5. |